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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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it will fly 180 miles an hour according to its motion The Sun moves swifter 1160000 miles in one houre the fixed stars some of them 42 millions of miles each houre 6. The use of it is admirable the motion of the heavenly bodies is the cause of generation and corruption here below if they should cease moving the being of sublunary bodies would cease The inferior heavens are fitted for the generation of Meteors Raine Snow Thunder Lightning by its fit distance as it were from the Earth and Starres Here is room for the making and shewing of them all The lower part of it also by reason of its thinnesse and subtilty is fit for the flying of Birds and for the breathing and the living of man and beast and it is fitted to be enlightned by the Sun-beames and to receive that illumination and heat without which the Creatures here below could not subsist and the starres c●iefly the Sunne are placed at a convenient distance and it is fitted for the swift motion of the heavenly bodies in regard of its raritie and subtilnesse which if it were thick grosse could not have so speedy a passage through or about the same especially the highest heavens are fitted for the inhabitation of those immortall persons some of which doe and others shall inhabite a being so spacious bright and every way glorious that the multitude of those happy persons may have space enough to see the beauty of GOD. The Philosophers divide the Regions of the world into two Regions the Celestiall and Elementary Region The Celestiall they divide into divers Orbes or Globes for the Heaven of heavens sedes Beatorum the feat of the blessed Saints and Angels they had little knowledge of if any at all The first moveable as they termed it the highest Orbe by the unspeakable swift circumrotation of which they thought all the other Orbes were carried from East to West in the space of 24. houres This is the tenth Globe or Orbe the next they call the Chrystalline or watry Orbe because it is cleare bright and apt to to shine through as water The next is the Starrie heaven which hath eight Spheares one for the fixed Stars and seven other for the Planets each Planet having as they say his distinct Orbe Saturne is the uppermost next Jupiter then Mars in the middest the Sunne then Venus next Mercurie the la●t and lowest of all is the Moon So is the division of the heavenly Region the Elementary they divide into the region of fire next to the Moone and of aire next to that and that they distinguish into three Regions the highest middle and lowest then that of the Water and Earth compounded together so they But now the Scriptures divide the World into two parts Heaven and Earth as you read in the first words of the Bible In the beginning God made heaven and earth By Earth it meaneth this Globe of Earth and Water where men Beasts and Fishes are By Heaven all the space from the Earth upward and of this heaven it maketh three parts 1. The highest Heaven the heaven of Heavens 1 Kings 8. 27. the habitation of God himself and all his Saints Angels Job 14. where God reveals his glorious presence to them for ever This is called by Paul the third Heaven 2 Cor. 12. 4. for its scituation above the Aire and skie both which have the name of Heaven and Paradise 2 C●r 12. 4. because the earthly Paradise was a figure of it and because it is a place of endlesse joy pleasure 2. The Starry Skie where the Starres are it is described in Job to be firme as a molten Looking-glasse 3. The lower Heavens all that place above our heads to the Starrie Heaven Hence the Clouds are called the clouds of Heaven and the Fowles of Heaven and Birds are said to flie in the face of the Heavens Every one is to fall out with himselfe and blame himselfe for slighting and neglecting the consideration of this work that offers it selfe so constantly to our eyes even this so curiously wrought Curtaine which God hath spread forth especially let us blame our selves for not seeing God in the workman-ship of heaven that wee take not notice of him as the Author of it and raise our hearts higher than the heavens to him that measures them forth as with a Span we should beleeve that he is so Great Good and Wise as this Heaven proclaimeth him the Maker thereof to bee Let us see and bewaile this blindnesse there is no place in the earth which hath not the Heavens spread over it Oh that we could put our selves in minde of him that did spread out the Heavens and remember that he sees us every where for where any worke of his is to be seen surely the●e is himselfe to be seen and there he sees all things that are there especially let us learne to presse this knowledge upon our will and affections that it may beget in us obedience love feare joy confidence and other holy vertues without which all talking yea and thinking of God is idle and fruitlesse Let us presse our selves to become subject to him who hath the heavens at command because he made them to love him that hath formed for our use so excellent an house so richly vaulted above see the invisible things of him that made all in these things which you behold thy conversation should bee there where Christ is Col. 3 There is thy Fathers house thine owne Countrey thy inheritance It is a great deale of comfort to Gods people that have such a Father who can so easily stretch out Heaven trust in him for house-roome that can build a world with so much ease For the Angels because I intend to speak more largely of them afterwards I shall here only answer one question athem Why are they not spoken of in the Creation where man and beasts are mentioned and why is not the speciall day named wherein they were made Answ. Not so much for feare the Jewes a people prone to Idolatrie should have worshipped them for then by the same reason Moses should have forborne to have mentioned them in the whole story of Genesis which was publisht at the same time and to the same people that the first part of it but it may be to give us to understand that God did not use any of their help in the Creation and had no need of them at all but made the whole world without them or because hee relates the making of sensible things only but that they were created appears Coloss. 1. 16. The Scripture hath not so clearly expressed the precise time and day of their Creation therefore Ambrose and Danaeus confesse that they know not when they were created But it is probable they were made with the Heavens which some say were made the first others the second day As man was then first made after his habitation the earth was
aloft in the aire Zanchius saith there are foure sorts of Meteors others make but 3. sorts 1. Fiery which in the Supreame Region of the aire are so enflamed by the fire that they are of a fiery nature as Comets Thunder 2. Airy which being begotten of dry vapours of the earth come neare the nature of aire as winds 3. Waterie which retaine the nature of the water as snow and raine 4. Earthly which being begot of earthly vapours are also digged out of the Earth as metals stones The efficient cause is God according to that of the Psalmist haile snow ice winde and storme doe his will The remote matter of the Meteors are Elements the next matter are exhalations which are two-fold fumus et vapor smoake is of a middle nature between earth and fire vapour betweene water and aire If it come from the earth or some sandy place it is fumus a fume or kind of smoak if it come from the water or some watery place it is a vapour Vapours or exhallations are fumes raised from the water earth by the heavenly bodies into one of the 3. Regions of the aire whence divers impressions are formed according to the quality and quantity of the exhalations Thunder is a sound heard out of a thick or close compacted Cloud which sound is procured by reason of hot and dry exhalations shut within the cloud which seeking to get out with great violence rend the cloud from whence proceedes the tumbling noise which we call Thunder The Earth sends out partly by its owne innate heate and partly by the externall heate and attraction of the Sun certain hot and dry steames which the Philosopher calls exhalations and these going up in some abundance are at last enclosed within some thicke cloud consisting of cold and moist vapours which finding themselves straightned do with violence seeke a vent and breake through the sides or low part of the cloude There is first a great conflict and combate there of the contrary qualities a great rumbling and tumbling and striving of the exhalations within the cloud untill it breake forth into a loud and fearfull cracke Then the exhalation by its heate incensed in the strife proves all on a flame as it comes in the aire and that is Lightning Lastly the exhalation falling downe upon the earth is so violent that sometimes it breakes trees sometimes it singeth and burneth what it meetes mith it kills men and living creatures and in the most abundance of it there is a Thunder bolt begotten through exceeding great heate hardning the earthy parts of it God hath power over the Thunder He commands it rules it orders it for time place manner of working and all circumstances the Thunder in Egypt at the delivering of the Law proves this Therefore in the Scripture it is called the voyce of God and the fearefulnesse and terriblenesse thereof is made an argument of the exceeding greatnesse of God that can at his pleasure destroy his enemies even by the chiding of his voyce in Egypt he smote them with haile lightning thunder and with stormy tempest At the delivering of the Law mighty thunder-claps made way to the Lords appearance and were his harbingers to tell of his comming and prepare the hearts of the people with exceeding great awfulnesse and obedience to receive directions from him The Lord puts down Job 40. 9. with this question Canst thou thunder with a voyce like God speake terribly and with as big and loud a voice as thou canst and if thy voyce be answerable to loud thunder either in terriblenesse or loudnesse then will I confesse my selfe to be thy equall and Elihu reasoned for God by consideration of this great worke David Psal. 29. sheweth the greatnesse of God in the greatnesse of this mighty sound But it pleaseth God to effect this worke not immediately but mediately using naturall and ordinary causes according to his owne good will and pleasure for the eff●cting thereof There doe arise from the ends of the earth as the Scripture speaks that is from all quarters of this inferiour part of the world consisting of earth and water certain steams or fumes partly drawn up thence by the heate and influence of the Sun and other Planets or constellations partly breathed out of the earth by the naturall heate thereof Whereof some are hot and moist being as it were of a middle nature betwixt water and aire some hot and dry being of a middle nature betwixt fire and aire as some Philosophers thinke of which two as of the matter are brought forth these strange things which wee see in the aire and among the rest Thunder Though thunder bee first in nature being by the violent eruption it makes out of the cloud the cause of fulgurations yet we see first the lightning before wee heare the Thunder because of the swiftnesse of the fire above the aire and because the eye is quicker in perceiving its object then the eare This is done for the benefit of the world that by shaking of the aire it might bee purged and made fit for the use of man and beast being cleansed from those ill and pestilent vapours which otherwise would make it too thicke grosse and unwholsome for our bodies for this is one speciall end of winds thunders and the like vehement works that are in the aire besides the particular work for which God assigneth them and therefore with thunder likely is joyned much raine because the cloud is dissolved at the same time and sometimes violent winds and tempests because the exhalation inflamed snatcheth with it selfe such windy fumes as it meetes withall in the aire and so by violent stirring the aire purgeth it and openeth the parts of the earth by shaking and moving it 1. We must turne all this to a spirituall use viz. to instruct us in the feare of him that is Lord of Hoasis who shews his greatnesse in these mighty deedes of his hand to which purpose alwayes the Scripture speakes of it exhorting the mighty to give unto the Lord glory and strength in regard of this 2. We must observe God so in this and all his great works as to cause our mindes to encrease in the knowledge of his excellencie and our hearts in the love and feare of him All his works are therefore exhorted to praise him because wee by all should learn his praise and greatnesse How able is God to destroy sinners how quickely and in a moment can hee bring them to ruine let him but speake to the thunder haile tempest and they will beate downe and consume his adversaries before his face ô then tremble before him 3. We must learn to put our confidence in God and boldly to promise our selves deliverance when he promiseth it God is wonderfull in making and ruling the clouds This is a work which God doth often alleadge in Scripture to prove his greatnesse Job 37. 26. Hee bindes
the waters in a garment Prov. 30. 4. that is makes the Clouds How as it were by an even poysing of one part with the other God makes these Clouds to hover a great while over the earth before they bee dissolved is a thing worthy admiration and greatly surpasseth our knowledge Job 38. 34. Psal. 14. 78. and Prov. 8. 28. Psal. 104. 3. The cloud is water rarified drawn upward till it come to a cold place and then it is thicke and drops downe They are but nine miles say some from the earth but they are of unequall height and are lower in Winter then in Summer when the Sun hath the greater force then they ascend higher and in his smaller force they hang the lower Let us consider the causes of these clouds and the uses of them The efficient causes are thought to be the heate influence of the Sun and the Stars which doth rarifie the water draw thence the matter of the clouds as you shall perceive if you hold a wet cloath before the fire that a thicke steame will come out of it because the fire makes thin the thickness of the water and turns it into a kind of moist vapour and the earth hath some heate mixed with it through a certain quantity of fire that is dispersed in the bowels of it which causeth such like steames to ascend out of it and the coldnsse of the middle region doth condensate and thicken these steames or breaths and turne them againe into water at length and at last to thicke clouds 2. The matter is the steams that the waters and earth doe yeeld forth by this heate The uses of it are to make rain and snow snow is nothing but rain condensated whi●ened by the excessive cold in the winter time as it is in descending for the watering of the earth and making it fruitfull or else for the excessive moistning of the earth to hinder the fruitfulnesse of it if God see fit to punish The earth without moysture cannot bring forth the fruit● that it should and some parts of the earth have so little water neare them below that they could not else be sufficiently moystened to the making of them fruitfull God hath therefore commanded the Sunne among other offices to make the vapours ascend from the Sea and Earth that he may powre it down again upon the forsaken wildernesse or other places whether for punishment or otherwise Ob. How can it be conceived that the clouds above being heavy with water should not fall to the Earth seeing every heavy thing naturally descendeth and tendeth down-ward Sol. No man by wit or reason can resolve this doubt but only from the word of God which teacheth that it is by vertue of Gods Commandement given in the Creation that the Cloudes fall not Gen. 1. 6. Let the Firmament separate the waters from the waters by force of which commanding word the water hangeth in the clouds and the clouds in the aire and need no other supporters Job 26. 7 8. setting out the Majestie and greatnesse of God in his workes here beginneth that He hangeth the Earth upon nothing be bindeth the waters in the Clouds and the Cloud is not rent under them Philosophie is too defective to yeeld the true reason of this great work of God which commonly attributeth too much to natura naturata nature and too little to natura naturans the God of nature Now we must here also blame our own carelesnesse and folly which forbeare to consider of this worke that hangs over our heads The clouds are carried from place to place in our sight and cover the Sun from us They hinder the over-vehement heate of the Sunne from scorching the earth and yet wee never thinke what strange things they be and what a mercifull Creator is he that prepared them Not seeing God in the workes of nature shewes great stupidity and should make us lament Let us endeavour to revive the thoughts of God in our mindes by his workes When wee see the clouds carried up and downe as wee doe sometimes one way sometimes another swiftly then let us set our heart a worke to thinke there goes Gods Coach as it were here he rides above our heads to marke our way and to reward or punish our good or bad courses with seasonable raine for our comfort or excessive showers for our terrour O seeke to him and labour to please him that hee may not finde matter of anger provocation against us When the Clouds either favour or chastise us let us take notice of Gods hand in these either comfortable or discomfortable effects and not impute it all to the course of nature By meanes of the Clouds God waters the earth yea the drye wildernesse without moysture there can be no fruitfulnesse without Clouds no raine without that no corne or grasse and so no man or beast Raine is as it were the melting of a Cloude turned into water Psal. 104. 13. It is a great work of God to make raine and cause it fitly and seasonably to descend upon the earth It is a work often named in Scripture Deut 11. 14. and 28. 12. Levit. 26. 4. Jer. 5. 24. It is noted in Job divers times 36. 27. He maketh small the drops of water God propounds this worke to Job as a demonstration of his greatnesse Job 38. 25. 34. See Jer 30. 13. Psalm 137. 8. Now this work is the more to be observed in these respects 1. The necessity of it in regard of the good it bringeth if it be seasonable and moderate and the evill which followes the want excesse or untimelinesse of it 2. In regard of mans utter inability to procure or hinder it as in the dayes of Noah all the world could not hinder it and in the dayes of Ahab none could procure it 3. In regard of the greatnesse of the worke in the course of nature for the effecting of which so many wonders concurre First without this drinke afforded to the fields we should soone finde the world pined and sterved and man and beast consumed out of it for want of foode to eate It is the cause of fruitfulnesse and the want of it causeth barrennesse and so destruction of all living creatures that are maintained by the encrease of the earth As mischievous and terrible a thing as a famine is so good and beneficiall a thing is raine which keepeth off famine Secondly It procureth plenty of all necessaries when the Heavens give their drops in fit time and measure the earth also sends forth her off-spring in great store and fit season so both men and beasts enjoy all things according to their naturall desire this so comfortable a thing as plenty is so worthy a work of God is the effect of raine I meane raine in due season and proportion Lastly The greatnesse of the workes which must meet together for making and distributing of
another and sometimes distinguished Anger is a boyling of the blood about the heart causing a commotion of the spirits that are neere Wrath is the manifestation of that inward distemper by lookes gestures or actions tending to revenge but rage is the extremity of both the former Prov. 27. 4. This may humble and astonish impenitent sinners Hos. 8. 5. Psal. 90. 11. We must quench Gods wrath as men doe fire at the first by casting in water and taking away the fewell by repentance and reformation poure out water 1 Sam. 7. 8. Jerem. 4. 14. Psal. 6. 8. Pray earnestly to him Zeph. 3. 3. Moses by prayer turned away Gods hot anger from Aaron and Israel 2. Let us take heed of sinning and so provoking God to anger and let us be angry with all sin as he is He is angry sometimes at the best people Israel his peculiar treasure Judges 2. Numb 11. 2 At the best of his people with Moses Aaron and Miriam Mi● 6. 4. Exod. 4. 14. 3 At the best of their performances their prayers Psal. 80. 4. Gods Meeknesse or Clemency is a property in him whereby he doth so moderate his anger that it doth not exceed yea it doth not match the hainousnesse of the offence or it is a property whereby the Lord in judgement remembreth mercy not laying such grievous punishments or of so long continuance upon his creatures as their sinnes deserve no not when he doth correct them 2 Sam. 7. 14. Jer. 3. 5. Joel 2. 13. Jon. 3. 9 10. Queen Elizabeth said next the Scripture she knew no Booke did her so much good as Seneca de Clementia Her clemency was such that her brother King Edward was wont commonly to call her His sweet sister Temperance Magistrates and Ministers and all Christians should labour for this grace they should be slow to anger and moderate wrath Magistrates should rule and Ministers instruct in meeknesse No vertue is so generally commended 1 Tim. 6. 11. Titus 3. 2. JAmes 3. 17 18. Humblenesse of mind and meeknesse of spirit are often in Scripture set downe together Ephes. 4. 2. Coloss. 3. 2. God takes to himselfe also Griefe and Joy Gods griefe is his aptnesse to be displeased with a thing as a man is with that which grieves him Joy is the excellency of his nature by which he is well pleased with other things So God attributes to himselfe desire and detestation hope and feare Desire is that whereby he useth fit meanes to effect any thing Detestation is that whereby he useth fit and due meanes to prevent any thing God is said to expect or hope for that which he hath used due meanes to effect and therefore requireth that it should be To feare what he hath used due meanes to prevent and so will order the meanes that it may not be CHAP. X. SO much concerning the affections attributed to God his vertues follow which as they have their seate in man in the will and affections so it is not inconvenient for methods sake to referre them to the same in God Gods vertues are his essence considered as it alwaies worketh orderly fitly and agreeable to perfect reason They are not things differing from his essence as in us but we must conceive of them according to our capacity and handle them distinctly By vertues we understand first in generall the idea of vertue or the chiefest morall perfection by which God is in himselfe absolutely the best and in respect of which all the vertues of Angels and men are onely slender shadowes and representations For God is Summum bonum the chiefest good and most perfect goodnesse both metaphysically and morally so that his nature and will is the first rule of goodnesse and rectitude with which as farre as things agree so farre they are and are called good 2. He is the cause of all goodnesse in the creatures which have so much goodnesse as God works and keeps in them Gods Goodnesse is an essentiall property whereby he is infinitely and of himselfe good and the authour and cause of all goodnesse in the creature Goodnesse is the perfection of thiugs for which they are desirable good and appetible are convertible what is good is to be desired God is to be desired of all he is the chiefest good The properties of which are these 1. It is propter se amabile to be desired for it selfe so onely God 2. It is able to satisfie the soule and that satisfaction which it gives is perpetuall In God there is both satiety and stability satisfaction of the appetite and continuance of that satisfaction 2. God is causally good worketh all goodnesse in the creature and doth good to them Psal. 33. 5. 3. Eminently and absolutely good the onely good There is a goodnesse in the creature its nature is good but goodnesse is not its nature so there is none good but God viz. essentially originally Our Saviour Matth. 19. 17. reproved one for calling him good Not that he is not so essentially but because he thinking him to be no more then a Prophet did yet call him so God is onely good essentially independently comparatively to God the creature is not good as a drop is no water compared to the Ocean The Scripture proveth Gods goodnesse 1. Affirmatively when it affirmeth that God is good and commends his goodnesse 2. Negatively when it denieth that there is any evill in him Psal. 92. 16. Deut. 32. 4. 3. Symbolically when it celebrateth the riches of his goodnsse Rom. 2. 4. 4. Effectively when it affirmes that all the workes of God are good Gen. 1. 31. It was said of every thing particularly when it was made The Lord saw that it was good and in the conclusion of the whole creation God saw all his workes that they were good yea very good that is commodious for the comfort of man and all other creatures He made all things good therefore he is good himselfe This may be proved by the godnesse which still remaines in the creatures each creature hath yet remaining in him a power and fitnesse to doe much good and bring much comfort to man as daily experience proves therefore he that notwithstanding the rebellion of man hath continued yet much good in the world is surely good the beasts doe good to their young man to his children this power they received from God 5. God is to be loved honoured praised and served by man therefore he is good or else he were not worthy this respect from the creature The goodnesse of God is either considered ad intra and absolutely or else ad extra and respectively For the first God in himselfe is good This appeares 1. In reckoning up all the kinds of good things that are for there is 1. Bonum utile the profitable good now how happy must they needs be who have him which can command all things if thou hast him thou hast all things else
at the parts of any man if borne lame or deformed this is to despise the Workman to murmure at the Potter 3. It shewes that God hath first chiefe absolute and perpetuall soveraignty over all his creatures so that hee can use command and doe with them as in equity seems good to his heavenly wisedome 4. When we behold the Heavens the Earth Aire and Sea how they are filled what use and commodities they have we should contemplate God in these things we see with our eyes 2. We should learne what a one God is 1. Eternall Hee that made heaven and earth is ancienter than both 2. Almighty Great works cannot be brought to passe without great strength he must needs be Infinite in power which made heaven and earth and hangs the earth as a Ball without any pillar to support it 3. Most wise strength separated from wisedome is little worth God knowes all things the nature of the Heavens Earth Water perfectly because he put such a nature into them tell your selves that God is a wise understanding Essence can order all to the best 4. Exceeding good hee hath infused goodnesse into the Heavens Waters Earth they are helpfull and and serviceable to man how much more goodnes is there in God he is good and doth good 5. See his love in making man best of the Creatures here below we should honour God in our mindes account him the chiefest and onely good and his favour the chiefest felicity bring our wills to long after him to desire him above all other things chusing him as our happinesse loving him and desiring to enjoy himfully Learne to feare him above all not daring to offend him and obey and please him what more agreeable to reason then that the Maker of all should be Ruler of all we are more his than a childe his Parents a servant his Masters Wee should also acknowledge that he made us Psalme 100. and praise him Gods great workes call for great praise commend him with our tongues and speak good of his Name Psalme 19. 2. The heavens declare the glory of God i.e. give occasion to man of declaring it 5. This is a comfort to those who acknowledge God to be such a one as hee is is not he rich enough to maintaine them wise enough to direct them strong enough to protect them If thou want goodnesse he can create in thee a new heart it may comfort the godly in regard of the resurrection● God can raise them up at the last day 6. It is a great terrour to the wicked which doe not feare but despise him God will hate despise and destroy them God can doe it he made heaven and earth and he will doe it because he is true he hath threatned it oh the misery of that man which hath him for his enemy 7. We may learne from all the Creatures in generall 1. to bewaile our Rebellion against God which all of them reprove for they all stand in their kinde and station in which God set them at first The Sun rejoyceth to runne his course the Sea keepeth her bounds the earth stands upon her foundation the heavens keep their motion and declare Gods glorie the very windes and seas obey him 2. All of them teach the invisible things of God Rom. 1. 20. as was before shewed 8. We should make a right use of the creatures use them first devoutly 1 Tim. 4. 5. in faith Rom. 14. 14. and ult with Prayer and Thanksgiving Matth. 15. 36. Acts 27. 35. Secondly soberly 1 Cor. 10. 31. 3. thankfully 1 Tim. 4. 4. Having handled the works of Creation in generall I now proceed according to Moses his Method to a more particular enarration of each dayes worke The whole first Chapter of Genesis may be thus divided 1. The Author of the worlds Creation God 2. The Worke. 3. The approbation of it 1. verse In the beginning of time or being therefore the World was not eternall John begins so and took it hence but beginning there may meane from Eternity or as here Christ did not begin then but was then Prov. 8. 22. Bara Elohim Gods Created That difference between the Noune Plurall and Verbe Singular saith Rivet signifieth not the mysterie of the Trinity but is an id●otisme of the Hebrew tongue in which such enallages are frequent as Numb 32. 25. How ever there is no difference in the thing it selfe for the name of Gods being taken here essentially not personally is common to the 3. Persons Gods created is as much as the Father the Son and Holy Ghost created for elsewhere it is manifest from Scripture that not onely the Father but the Sonne and Holy Ghost also created the world Created signifieth an act of infinite power and is not communicable to any creature 1. Ex nihilo fecit quidem potentissime ac magnificentissimè Junius Heaven and Earth In the first day were created Heaven and Earth as it were the foundation and roofe of the building Psalme 104. 5. Esay 40. 21 22. The worke of the first day was 1 Heaven under which name are comprehended partly the Empyr●an first and immoveable Heaven which is called in Scripture the third Heaven and Heaven of Heavens Ephes. 4 10. 2 Chron. 6. 18. Acts 1. 11. partly the Celestiall Spheres which it is probable were made the first day but without those lights of the Starres with which at length in the fourth day they were adorned the Hebrew word for Heaven being of the Duall number may imply both The heavenly Intelligences or Angels the Inhabitants of the Invisible Heaven were then made as is probable saith Chemnitius Coelum id est extimum illum hujus universitatis ambitum cum super Caelestibus incolis illius spiritualibus formis atque intelligentiis Gen 2. 1. Job 38. 7. Junius in loc 2. The foure first simple things or elements as some think Earth Water Aire Fire and the fitting of them for use by making day and night Though other hold that the aire and fire are comprehended under Firmament the worke of the second day For the earth there is he emphaticall this earth which we dwell in though then unpolished The earth is described in the second verse it was without forme and void informitie and vacuity in the originall without inhabitants and without ornament the earth and waters were joyned together among themselves the waters at first did encompasse and cover the earth round about as it were a cloathing and garment Psalme 104. 6. Darknesse was on the face of the deep that is the waters which inclosed the earth in themselves 3. v. There is an extraordinary light mentioned the ordinary fountaine of light is the Sunne which in what subject it did inhere is not certaine some say water in the thinner parts of the superficies some the Heavenly Spheres others say the Element of fire for that say they is either included under light or we know
region of the aire is cold in respect of the two other because it cannot follow the motions of the Heavens as the upper region doth being hindered by the tops of mountains 2. being free from the reflex beames of the Sun by which the lower region of the aire is made hot The Aire is most thin without light or colour but apt to receive heate light and cold heavier then the fire lighter then the earth or water placed in the midst of them fit for breathing seeing smelling and moving This Element also leades us to God For 1. It t●uly and really subsisteth though it be not seene So also the Lord the maker of it hath a reall but invisible existence 2. It is every where within and without us so is God every where present 3. It is the preserver of my life and we may say of it truly as the Apostle of God himselfe in it under God we live move and have our being 4. Fire which is some say to be understood in light an adjunct and quality of it Scaliger would prove a fiery Element because fire tends thither First God made the Elements of the earth and water which in Geography make one globe Others say light neither is that Element nor proceedes from it but the Sun however I shall handle it here among the workes of the first day Without light Gods other works could not have been discovered by men Light is an excellent worke of God tending to manifest his excellency to men it is a comfortable thing to behold the light Psalm 104. 2. Who coverest thy selfe with light as with a garment that is createdst the light thereby shewing his excellencie as a man doth by making and wearing a rich and glorious suite of cloths hee made and doth maintaine the light in its perfection God expresseth his greatnesse above Job in that hee could not make light nor knew not what it was q. d. Job thou art a meane Creature thou dost not create nor order the light neither dost thou know the nature and working of it The greatnesse of this worke appeares principally by two considerations 1. The hidden abstruse and difficult nature of it Philosophers cannot tell what to say of it whether it be a substance or accident and if a substance whether corporeall or incorporeall and spirituall it is a quality say they which makes other things visible that is the effect of it This word light in English signifieth both that which the Latines call lux and that which they call lumen which yet are two distinct things The first being in the Sunn● or Moone properly the second in the Aire and an effect of the other Some thinke that it is a substance one of the simple substances which they call Elements of which compounded substances are made by mixing them together and is nothing but the Element of fire which Philosophers speake of being more subtill then the Aire And as the water compassed the earth and the aire the water so did light the aire and was far greater then the aire as that was then the water and earth so as this is the highest of all the Elements 2. It is very usefull needfull and beneficiall For first it carrieth heate in it and conveigheth heate and the co●lestiall influences unto all other things 2. It distinguisheth day and night each from other without it what were the world but a dungeon 3. It is exceeding necessary for the dispatch of all businesse 4. To make the beautifull workes of God visible Heaven and Earth and dissipate those sad thoughts and sorrowes which the darknesse both begetteth and maintaineth 1. We cannot see light without light nor know God without his teaching 2. This serves to condemne our selves which cannot see God in this light though we see it with content and lament this blindnesse When the day begins to peepe in at your windowes let God come into your thoughts hee comes clothed thus attired tell your selves how beautiful excellent he is 3. It may exhort us to labour to raise up our hearts to God in hearty thankfulnesse for the light how mercifull and gracious art thou who givest me light and the sight of it take heed of abusing it to sinne and thy eyes whereby thou discernest it especially magnifie God that giveth you spirituall light and sight Christ is the light of the world naturall darknesse is terrible light comfortable what is spirituall Light is so pure faire and cleare that nothing can pollute it a resemblance of Gods infinite purity The creation of day and night and the distinction and vicissitude of both is the last thing in the first dayes work Day is the presence of light in one halfe of the world and night the absence of it in the other So that the dispute whether day or night were first seems superfluous seeing they must needes be both together for at what time the light is in one halfe of the world it must needes bee absent from the other and contrarily for all darknesse is not night nor all light day but darkness distinguished from light that is night light distinguished from darknesse that is day unlesse we wil take day for the naturall not the artificiall day that is the space of 24. houres in which the Sun accomplisheth hi● diurnall motion about the Earth Darknesse is nothing but the absence of light Night is the space of time in every place when the light is absent from them Day is the space of time in every place when the light is present with them it is not simply the presence of light but presence of light in one halfe of the world when the other is destitute of it and Night is not simply the absence of light but the absence of it from one halfe of the world when the other halfe enjoyeth it God made the Sun the chiefe instrument of continuing the course of day and night forever by its diurnall and constant motion This is a wonderfull worke of God and to be admired The Scripture notes it the day is thine and the night also is thine saith the Psalmist the ordinances of day and night cannot be changed The greatnesse of this worke appeareth in the cause of it the beneficiall effects First for the cause it is the incredibly swift motion of the Sunne which goeth round about the world in the space of 24. houres that is the space of 60. miles every houre in the earth but how many thousand 60. miles in its own circle or circumference for the Earth is a very small thing compared to the Sun The bodie of the Sunne is 166. times as it is thought greater then the Earth therefore the circumference that it goes must needs be at least so much larger then the compasse of the Earth therefore its course must needs be at least so much larger then the compasse of the Earth therefore its course
God doth so plainly and so many waies discover himselfe to us yet blind wretches we perceive him not We are now to stirre up our mindes to the consideration of God in this his mighty worke See him walking through the earth and visiting it in the swift wings of this creature It hath also an apt resemblance and image of God in it 1. In the subtilnesse and invisible nature of it the swiftnesse of the winde may note his omnipresence who is said to ride on the wings of the winde 2. In its powerfull motion efficacie which no man can hinder or resist 3. In the freedome of its motion John 3. 7. 4. In the secresie of his working of mighty workes the windes are invisible The consideration of the windes leades us into our selves and that 1. For humiliation for who knoweth the nature of the winde the place of the winde the way of the winde to see in it our owne vanity Job 7. 7. Psal. 78. 39. 2. Instruction shall so fierce a creature be at a becke and shall not I 2. See the miserable estate of wicked men on whom destruction and feare shall come as a whirle-wind Prov. 27. 18. They shall be as stubble or chaffe before the winde Psal. 1. Metalls are minerall substances susible and malleable They are commonly distinguished into perfect and imperfect perfect because they have lesse impurity or heterogen●ity in them as gold and silver imperfect because they are full of impurities as iron copper tin and lead Gold of all metalls is the most solid and therefore the most heavie It will loose none of his substance neither by fire nor water therefore it will not make broth more cordiall being boyled in it Silver is next in purity to gold but it is inferiour unto it Precious stones in Latine Gemmae are esteemed for their rarity or for some vertue fancied to be in them or for their purenesse and transparentnesse The Psalmist declares the great worke of God in distinguishing the waters from the earth and making Sea and dry land The waters at the first did encompasse and cover the earth round about as it were a garment and overflow the highest parts of it altogether so that no dry ground was seene or could be seene in the world this was the first constitution of them as Moses relateth Gen. 1. 2. The deepe was the whole Orbe of waters which inclosed the earth in themselves But then God pleased to divide the waters from the earth so as to make dry land appeare and for that end 1. He drave the waters into one place spreading the earth over them and founding it upon them Psal. 104. v. 6. 7. God by his mighty power compared there to a thundering voyce did make the waters to gather together into the place that hee had appointed for them under the earth and that by raising up hills and mountaines and causing dales and valleyes then God appointed the waters their bounds that they should still continue in these hollowes under the earth and not returne to cover the earth as else of their owne nature they would have done There are divers profitable questions about these things 1. Whether the Sea would not naturally overflow the land as it did at the first creation were it not with-held within his bankes by divine power The answer is affirmative and the reason is evident the water is lighter then the earth and heavier things are apt to pierce through the light and the light will take to themselves an higher place and give way to the heavier things to descend through them mixe a great deale of dirt and water and let it stand a while and take its owne proper course and the dirt will sinke to the bottome leaving the water above it selfe Aristotle and others say that the Sea is higher then the earth and they can render no reason why it being apt to runne abroad should be kept from over-flowing the land whence he proves Gods providence 2. Whether there be more Sea or Land The multitude of waters made by God at first did cover the earth and inclose it round the Sea therefore must needs be farre greater then the Earth The Mapps shew it to be greater in quantity then the Earth 3. Whether the deepnesse of the Sea doth exceed the height of the mountaines It was a great worke of God to make mountaine vallies hils dales The Scripture often mentions it Pro. 8. 25. Psal. 65. 6. and 95. 4. and 90. 2. Psalm 104. 8. Amos 4. 13. Therfore are the mountaines exhorted to praise God Psal. 146. 9. Esay 40. 12. Hee is said to have weighed the mountaines in scales and the hils in ballances that is to have poised them even so that the earth might remain unmoveably in the parts of it as well as in the whole The greatnesse of this worke appeares 1. In the strangenesse and hiddennesse of it How should so heavy a thing as the earth thus heave up it selfe into so great ascents to give place unto the waters under it the immediate power of God is the cause of it Ps. 24. 2. 136. Psalm It may bee some hills were made by the furie and violent motion of the waves of the waters of Noah's flood but the most and greatest were created on the third day 2. In the usefulnesse of it 1. For beauty and ornament it gives a more delightfull prospect to see hills and dales then to looke upon all one even and flat piece of ground without any such risings 2. It conduceth to the fruitfulnsse of the earth The vales are much more fruitfull then if they were flats without hills because of the dew and moysture that descendeth upon them from the hills and some things grow better upon the higher places on the sides or tops of the mountaines 3. Without these hills and mountaines there could not have been roome for the waters which before did swallow up the earth in its bowels neither could the dry land have appeared 4. Without such hills and dales there could not have beene rivers and springs running with so constant a course 5. Hills and mountaines are the receptacles of the principall mines for metalls and quarries for all kinde of usefull stones Deut. 8. 9. and 33. 15. They are for boundaries betwixt Countrey and countrey Kingdome and Kingdome We should tell our selves how admirable and usefull this kind of frame and scituation the earth is 4. Whether Islands came since the flood 5. What is the cause of the saltnesse of the Sea The water of the Sea is salt not by nature but by accident Aristotle refers the saltish quality of the Sea-water to the Sun as the chiefe cause for it drawes up the thinner and fresher parts of the water leaving the thicker and lower water to suffer adustion of the Sun-beames and so consequently to become salt two things chiefely concurre to the generation of
saltishnesse drowth adustion Our Uurine and excrements for the same reason are also salt the purest part of our nourishment being employed in and upon the body Lydiat attributes it to under-earth or rather under-sea fires of a bituminous nature causing both the motion and saltnesse of the Sea Aristotle affirmeth that the Sea in Summer toward the South is more salt then else-where and is fresher toward the bottome then top The Sea is salt 1. to keepe it from putrifaction which is not necessary in the floods because of their swift motion 2. for the breeding and nourishing of great Fishes being both hotter and thicker 7. What is the cause of the ebbing and flowing of the Sea There have been many opinions of the cause of the ebbing and flowing of the Sea De quo plura pro ingeniis differentium quam pro veritatis fide expressa Some say it is the breathing or blowing of the world as Strabo Albertus Magn. One said it was because the waters getting into certaine holes of the earth were forced out again by Spirits remaining within the earth Macrobius said it was by meeting the East West Ocean Cicero seems to ascribe it only to the power of God others for the most part ascribe it to the various light or influences of the moone which rules over all moist bodies Some attribute it to certaine subterranean or under-Sea fires The final cause of the Seas motion is the preserving and purging of the waters as the aire is purged by windes Coelius Rhodiginus Antiq. lect l. 29. c. 8. writeth of Aristotle that when he had studied long about it at the last being weary he dyed through tediousnesse of such an intricate doubt Some say he drowned himselfe in Euripus because hee could finde no reason why it had so various a fluxion and refluxion seven times a day at least adding before that his praecipitation quoniam Aristoteles non cepit Euripum Euripus capiat Aristotelem Since Aristotle could not comprehend Euripus it should comprehend him But Doctor Brown in his Enquiries seemes to doubt of the truth of this story Other questions there are concerning r●vers What is the originall of springs and Rivers what manner of motion the running of the rivers is whether straight or circular As one part of the waters and the farre greater part is gathered into one place and much of it hidden in the bowels of the earth and there as it were imprisoned or treasured up by making the Sea and dry land so another part of them was appointed to runne up down within the earth and upon it in springs rivers which rivers are nothing but the assembling of the waters into divers great channells from the fountains and springs which the Psalmist describeth by its matter and use or effect He sendeth the springs into the valleyes which run along the hills that is He made the springs and fountaines to conveigh waters from place to place the use of this is to give drinke unto the beasts even to the wilde asses who quench their thirst there There be many other uses of springs and rivers but this is noted as the most manifest and evident Another use is for the fowles which have their habitation in the trees which grow neere and by meanes of these springs there they sit and sing These spring bring up so much moisture to the upper parts of the earth as causeth trees to grow also for fowles to build and sing in Some of the waters also were drawn up into the middle region of the world changed into Clouds that so they may be dissolved and powred downe againe from thence upon the hills also and other places which cannot be watered by the Springs that so the whole earth may be satisfied with the fruit of Gods works The Poets faigned that Jupiter Neptune and Pluto divided the Universe and that Neptune had the Sea for his part which is called Neptunus either à nando from navigation or a nubendo from covering because the Sea covers the earth and Pontus the nations about Pontus thought no Sea in the world like unto their owne and doubted whether there were any other Sea but that whence Pontus was used for the Sea in generall The Sea is a wide and spacious place Psal. 104. 25. The great deepe the wombe of moisture the well of fountains the great Pond of the world The reason of the greatnesse and widenesse of it is the multitude of waters which were made by God at the first which because they did cover the earth and inclose it round it must needs be farre greater then the earth and therefore when God saw fit to distinguish the dry land from the earth must needs have very great ditches cut for it in the earth and caverns made to hold it therefore the earth in Scripture is said to be spread out upon the Sea because a great part of it is so in respect of the waters that are under it Again the use the principall use of the Sea waters therof was that it might supply vapours for making of the clouds by the attraction of the Sunne and native heate of the Sea in respect of some fire which God hath mixed with the earth and waters that they may be more fit to give life to living things Now if the superficies of the Sea were not very large and wide the Sunne could not have power enough by its attractive heate and warmth by which it doth attenuate make thin the waters into vapours which after the cold of the aire when they come into the middle region of it doth againe thicken and turne it into waters I say the Sunne could not else have power to draw out of the Sea sufficient store of these vapours for watering of the earth with showers So the multitude of the waters and the necessity of having much of them drawn up for raine required that they should not have little receptacles but one so great and spacious a receptacle which we call the Sea Oceanus the Ocean is that generall collection of all waters which environeth the world on every side Mare the Sea is a part of the Ocean to which we cannot come but by some streight In the Sea are innumerable creatures small and great there walke the Shipps there play the Leviathans What living mountaines such are the Whales some of which have beene found 600. foote long and 360. foote broad rowle up and downe in those fearfull billowes for greatnesse of number hugenesse of quantity strangenesse of shapes variety of fashions neither aire nor earth can compare with the waters Another use of the Sea is that there goe the Ships as the Prophet speakes in a kind of wonderment The whole art of Navigation is a strange art the Lord sitted the Sea for this purpose that it might be usefull to transport men from place to place and other things
of Sea and dry land Some fishes are exceeding small and for their smalnesse workmanship bestowed upon them admirable In the Sea the Cockles a little kinde of shel-fish yet in its kinde very artistciall some-what resembling a Cre-fish which are dainties for rich men Those little and small things are made with so many joynts and parts and turnings such a proportion and shape and every thing so exact and suitable as would stirre up astonishment in any beholder Gods power is likewise in the greatnesse of some fishes as the Whale some of which are 80 yards long their eyes are as bigge as an hogshead and their mouth so wide that a man sitting on horse-backe might bee held in it God hath created the Fowles of heaven among other creatures Psalm 104. 12. Gen. 1. 20 21. The things wherein the Foules differ from other creatures are 1. That they be winged having feathers and wings by which they are covered and by which they doe passe through the aire and the place wherein they flye viz. in the open firmament in this lower heaven Their creation is wonderfull in divers respects First their making is wonderful far differing from that of beasts fishes and men 2. They have great variety of kindes some wilde some tame some great some little some Sea or water birds some land birds 3. Their manner of breeding they lay egges and hatch them out of a kind of confused substance that to us seems void of life by the heate of their bodies they doe bring forth their young naked at first which after by the same cherishing of warmth do bring forth feathers to cover them Many of them are so beautifully adorned with their feathers for colour and are so glorious as a man cannot but looke upon them with wondring and delight for where doth nature shew more variety and a pleasinger composition of colours then in Doves necke a Peacocks taile and some other like birds 4. For their swiftnesse of flying that they can with such celerity passe through the aire 5. They are many wayes serviceable to many they are a dainty foode for weake stomacks they pull up many kindes of wormes and vermine that else would bee very harmefull to us Fowles or birds are more worthy than Fishes because they do more participate of aire and fire the two noblest Elements than of water and earth All birds are mustered under the name of Fowles as under their Genus There are examples of vertues in the fowls propounded for us to imitate and of vices for us to shun In the Phaenixe an example of the Resurrection in the Storke of loving affection in the Dove of innocencie conjugall faith in the Crows and Estridges of unnaturalnesse We should imitate the Stork Crane Swallow in acknowledging the seasonable time of our repentance The Storke hath her name from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love the * Hebrew word is neer of kin with another which signifieth bowells of compassion as which indeed are most tender in her A story whereof wee have in the description of the Netherlands viz. of a Storke that when the house was on fire where her nest was kept the fire off from her young ones with her owne bodie and wings so long till she was burnt her selfe It is loving to mankind delightfull to build in the tops of houses and chimneys as is usuall to be seen in Germany It is the embleme of a gratefull man for at her departure from the house where she builds as some report she usually leaveth a young one behinde her Aelian writeth of a Storke which bred on the house of one which had a very beautifull wife which in her Husbands absence used to commit adultery with one of her base servants which the Storke observing in gratitude to him who freely gave him house-roome flying in the villans face strucke out both his eyes The Eagle is reckoned the Soveraigne Queen of all Fowls as the Lion is reputed the King of all beasts It is Altivolans avis an high soaring bird that sometime flyeth so high a pitch as she transcendeth the view of man she hath a tender care of her young when they be flush and ready for flight then she stirreth up her nest and fluttereth over them yea she taketh them on her wings and so soareth with them through the aire and carieth them aloft and so freeth them from all danger In that she carrieth her young ones rather upon her wings then in her tallons she sheweth her tender care and love that she beareth unto them The Hebrew name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated Fowle Gen. 1. 26. signifieth in generall every living thing which by helpe of wings flyeth above the earth in the aire so that not only birds but also bees wasps hornets and all other winged things may here be understood Bees are notable Deut. 32. 11. 1. For their good husbandry she is very painfull shee flies to every herb and flower and seekes and searches into every corner of the same Shee so abhors idlenesse that she punisheth the idle drone and will not give it any quiet harbour in the hive 2. She is thrifty which is another part of good husbandry what she hath gotten in the Summer she charily laies up in her Cells and doth not spend it till she must needs 2. For their care of the common good she is an admirable lover of that she labours eates fights in common and all her paines is directed to the common good she will with unresistable courage assaile any enemie though neuer so strong which shall offer to wrong the common body 3. For their concord Bees of the same hive are linked together in the bond of amity though they be many of them yet they know love each other keep peace among themselves and flye domesticall sedition unless the rulers be multiplyed and by their disorders set the rest of the Bees at variance 4. For their dutifulnesse to their King or Prince they are most loyall subjects to him they labour for him build him more then one palace and that more large and sta●ely then their owne they fight for him and goe abroade with him Wee see and use the fowles and eate their flesh and lye upon their soft feathers and yet contemplate not the goodnesse of God in them We have divers kinds of tame fowle in our back-sides they bring us young and we kill and dresse them and set them upon our Tables and feast with them They lay egges and we eate of them they sit and hatch and cherish their young and we see that admirable manner of drawing actuall life out of a potentiall life by the working of heate And we have many wilde fowle but who seeth Gods wisedome power bounty in giving them to us Let us stirre up our selves to give God his due glory in respect of this kinde of creature Amongst other creatures the
Good and Omniscient as hee wherefore they must bee made by some Maker because they cannot bee Eternall and if made then either by themselves or some other thing besides themselves not by themselves because that implies and absolute contradiction if by some other thing then by a better or worse thing not by a more meane for the lesse perfect cannot give being to a more perfect thing for then it should communicate more to the effect then it hath in it selfe any way which is impossible that any efficient cause should doe not by any better thing then themselves for excepting the Divine Majestie which is the first and best there is no better thing then the Angels save the humanity of our Lord Jesus Christ which could not bee the Maker of them because they were created some thousands of yeares before the humanity was formed in the Virgins womb or united to the second person in Trinity Wee are not able to conceive of their Essence they are simple incorporeall Spirituall substances therefore incorruptible An Angell is a Spirituall Created compleat substance indued with an understanding and will and excellent power of working An Angel is a substance 1. Spirituall that is void of all corporeall and sensible matter whence in Scripture Angels are called Spirits Psal. 104. 4. Heb. 1. 14. Therefore the bodies in which either good or evill Angels appeared were not naturall to them but only assumed for a time and laid by when they pleased as a man doth his garments not substentiall but aeriall bodies they were not Essentially or personally but only locally united to them so that the body was moved but not quickned by them 2. Created by which name hee is distinguished from the Creator 3. Compleate by which an Angel is distinguished from the reasonable soule of man which also is a spirituall substance but incompleate because it is the essentiall part of man 4. Indued with 1. an understanding by which an Angel knoweth God and his works 2. a will by which he desires or refuseth the things understood 3. An excellent power of working by which hee effects what the will commands this is great in them Psalm 103. 20. See 2 Kings 19. 35. The Angels are most excellent creatures when the highest praise is given of any thing it is taken from the excellencie of Angels Psal. 78. 25. 1 Cor. 13. 1. They are called holy Angels Luke 9. 26. Marke 8. 36. therefore they are cloathed with linnen Dan. 11. 4. to signifie their purity and are called Angels of light 2 Cor. 12. 14. to note the purity wherein they were created All the Individuall Angels were made at once and as God made Adam perfect at the first so they were made of a perfect constitution They have all our faculties save such as be badges of our weakenesse they have no body therefore not the faculties of generation nut●ition augmentation They have reason conscience will can understand as much as we doe and better too they have a will whereby they can refuse evill and chuse good a conscience reasonable affections though not such as depend upon the bodie They are endowed with excellent abilities know more of God themselves us and other things then we doe love God themselves and men are obedient to God The good Angels obey God 1. Universally in all things Psalme 103. 20. 2. Freely and readily make hast to doe what hee would have done therefore they are said to have Harps Revel 15. 2. as a signe of their chearfull mind 3. With all their might they serve God with diligence sedulity therefore they are said to have wings to flie 4. Constantly Rev. 7. 15. and 14. 4. They have incredible strength and therefore by an excellencie they are called strong in strength Psal. 103. 20. Angels of the power of the Lord Jesus 2 Thess. 1. 7. Powers Rom. 1. 38. One Angel is able to destroy all the men beasts birds and fishes and all the creatures in the world and to overturne the whole course of nature if God should permit it to drowne the earth againe and make the waters overflow it to pull the Sunne Moone and Starres out of their places and make all a Chaos therefore we reade of wonderfull things done by them they stopt the mouths of Lions that they could not touch Daniel they quencht the violence of the fire that it could not touch so much as a haire of the three Childrens heads nor a threed of their garments they made Peters chaines in an instant fall from his hands and feet they can move and stir the earth say the Schoolemen as appears Matth. 28. 2. The Angels shooke the foundation of the Prison where Paul and Silas lay and caused the doores to flie open and every mans bands to fal from him They destroyed the first borne of Aegypt Sodome and Gomorrah One Angel slew in one night in the host of Senacherib and hundred fourscore and 5000. men Reas. Their nature in respect of bodily things is wholy active not passive they are of a spirituall nature what great things can a whirl-wind or flash of lightning doe They are swift and of great agility they have no bodies therefore fill not up any place neither is there any resistance to them they move with a most quick motion they can be where they will they move like the winde irresistibly aud easily without molestation and in an unperceivable time they move more swiftly then the Sun can dispatch that space in as few minuts which the Sun doth in 24. hours They have admirable wisedome 1 Sam. 18. 14. and 14. 20. the knowledge of the good Angels is increased since their Creation for besides their natural knowledg they know many things by revelation Dan. 9. 22 23. Matth. 1. 20. Luke 1. 30. either immediately from God or from his Word Ephes. 3. 9 10. 1 Pet. 1. 12. Luke 15. 18. by experience and conjecture How an Angel doth understand is much disputed their understanding is not infinite they know not all things Mar. 13. of that day the Angells know not againe they cannot know future contingent things any farther then God reveales these things to them neither can they know the secrets of mans heart 1 Kings 8. 39. Psal. 7. 10. for that is proper to the Lord alone They are said indeed to rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner but that is no further then their inward conversion puts it selfe forth into outward actions They do not know the number of the Elect nor the nature of spirituall desertions the manner of mortifying sin unlesse by the Church and Ministry of the word So againe for the manner of their knowledge that of the Schooles about their morning and evening knowledge is vaine but it is plain they know discursivè as well as intuitivè though some say they are creaturae intelligentes but not ratiocinantes There are three degrees of their knowledg say the Schoolmen
Paul cals it the riches of Gods goodnesse Rom. ● 4. and maketh this use of it that it should lead us to repentance to consider 1. What we were originally good the Creator being so the creature must needs be and ● what we are now unlike him Esay 5. 25. Luke 6. 36. Gods bounty God is like a most liberall housholder which takes order that nothing in his house or about it shall want that which is necessary further then the fault is in it selfe He gives more then we aske and before we aske Vb●rior gratia quam precatio 2 Chron. ●0 7. Esay 41 8 James 2. 23. * Gratia est qua Deus in seipso est ama●il●s sua●que creaturae favet benefacit unde hoc respectu gratia Dei est favor quo creaturas suas inprimis hemi●●es prosequitur Wendelinus * Dr. Jackson of Gods Attributes l. 1. c. 14. Consectaries of Gods graciousnesse Psalm 103. 8 9. 1 Pet. 5. 16. Nehe. 9. 17 31. Rom. 5. 20 21. Ephes. 2. 9. 2 Tim. l. 9. B●na mea 〈◊〉 Aug. l. 10. confess c. 4. Every one is born with a Pope in his belly men had rather be saved by something of their own then be beholding to Christ for salvation Ignorant people say they hope to be ●aved by their good deeds and meaning * Dr. Twisse in a Manuscript In Johannem tract 81. Exod. 33. 19. 34. 6. Psalm 103. ● Exod. 22. 22. Esay 30. 18. Lament 3. 22. Titus 3. 5. Exod. 34. 6 7. Ephes. 2. 4. Rom. 4. 19. 11. 30 31. * Misericordia est qua propensus est Deus ad succurrendum su●● creaturis in aliqua miseria constitutis iisque re ipsa succurrit Wendelinus The Scripture hath three notable words to expresse the fulnesse of Gods mercy in Christ Ephes. 2. 7. Rom. 5. 20. 1 Tim. 1. 14. 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put upon Gods mercy Luke 1. 50. 54. Psalm 48. 2 3. 89. 28. * Ephes. ● 4. 1 Pet. 1. 3. Mercy and compassion d●ffer onely in the ex●rinsecall denominations taken from different objects Compassion is good will toward othe●s provoked from notice of their misery mercy is an excesse of bounty not estranged from ill deserves in distresse That God hath mercy in h●m He is ready to forgive more sinnes th●n we can imagine Luke 6. 11. * Exod. 20. 6. The mercy of God which reacheth to the pardon of sin is peculiar to the Catholick Church Esay 33. 24. Luk● 16. 24 ●5 Titus 3. 5. Luke 1. 77 78. Lament 3. 2● On what terms God will shew mercy 2 To whom he will shew mercie E●si omnes h●m●nes Deus damnaret un● excepto tame● adhuc major esset misericordia quam judicium nimirum quia nullum 〈◊〉 judicii divini effectum ●isi propter merita eorum qui damnantu● at miseric●rdia nulla invenit merita Chamier 〈◊〉 3. lib. 7. c. 8. Misericordia justitia Dei in se quatenu● in Deo sunt pares sunt respectu effect●rum objectorum major est miseri●ordia Wendelinus Matth. 18. 30. * The Papists s●ek● to the Virgin Mary and other Saints Maria mater gra●iae mater miserioo●diae Tu nos ab hoste protege horâ mortis suscipe Psalm 106. 3. Luke 1. 46 50. Luke 6. 36. * Justiti● est ●ua De●● in se justus est extra se constanti voluntate suum cuique ●ribuit Wen●●linus Genes 18. 25. Justitia disp●nens qua Deu● univ●rsa ●ingula jus●●o ordine disp●●it gu●ernat Deut. 32. 4. Psalm 11. 7. 48. 11. 145. 17. 1 Pet. 1. 17. Rom. 2. from th● 6. to the 12. 2 Cor. 5. 10. Col. 3. 25. Rev. 22. 12. Justitia Distribuens est gratiae v●l irae illa ●st 〈◊〉 v●●untas praestandi promiss●s is●a volunt●● implendi comminati●nes Wendelinus Matth. 19. 29. God assigns fit rewards for wel and evill doing Rom. 1. 18. * Gods justice is not a quality or accident in him but his very natu●e essentiall to him A man may be a man and yet be unjust but God can not be God and be unjust Ge●h loc com●un * The righteou●nesse of God is taken divers wa●es in Scripture sometimes for the essentiall Attribute of G●d sometimes for the righteousnesse of faith which is called the righteousn●sse of God because it is such a righteousnesse as God doth app●ove of and with which we may appeale boldly in his presence againe righteousnesse is taken for his truth and faithfulnesse in promises David praies God to do good to him for his righteousnesse he means his faithfulnesse in his promises See Mr Bu●●howes on Matth. 5. 6. Consectaries from Gods justice ● Chron. 2. 5. Nehem. 9. 33. Psal. 119. 137. Dan. 9. 7. Rom. 3. 16. Rev. 19. 1. John 14. 6. God is aet●rna veritas vera aetern●as If God said one were to be corporeall he would have light for his body and truth for his soule Truth is originally from God the first Ide● rule or standard of truth is Gods will which is veritas Dei Whereby he is what he is essentially simply immutably by which he wils all things to be what indeed they are and knows them to be such as they are most certainly Veritas rei entitatis whereby things are such as God would have them to be and so are true and good An Idoll is nothing in the world Matth 24. 35. John 17. 17. Which truth of God in his promises may be referred to justice because it is just to performe what thou hast promised 2 Tim. 4. 8. * If I speake falshood out of errour and mistake I am weake if wilfully I am wicked If I keep not promise it is either because I cannot and then I am weake or will not then I am wicked therefore God cannot possibly lie 1 Kings 22. 23. Ezek. 14. 9. Consectaries from Gods truth Ephes. 4. 25. Heb. 20. 23. Consectaries from Gods faithfulnesse Heb. ● 15. Heb. 3. 5. What faithfulnesse is Nahum 1. 3. Esay 30. 18. * Patientia est qua ita iram suam moderatu● Deus erga creaturas ut vel poenas differat vel iram un●●●mento non effundat Wendelinus * God is sensible of the wrong offered to him and provoked to wrath thereby 2 Pet. 3. 13. he not onely restraines his anger but gives them time to repent A lea●ned Divine saith if but any tender hearted man should sit one hou●e in the Throne of God Almighty and looke down upon the earth as God doth continually and see what abominations are done in that houre he would undoubtedly in the next set all the world on fire Mr. Bol●●n Matth. 26. 39. This is in eff●ct the same with Patience Num. 14. 18. Nehem. 9. 17. 2 Pet. 3. 9. 15 20. Longan●mity is toward them of whom we can patience toward them of whom we can not be revenged Consectaries from Gods patience and long suffering Posse noll● nobile What patience is It is a
f The Beasts of the earth are here distinguished into three ranks 1. Catell that is all tame domestical Beasts 2. Creeping things whereby are understood those which have no feet as Serpents those which have but very short as Wormes Ants. 3. Beasts whereby are understood all wilde Beasts which have their name from life in the Hebrew All Philosophy is in the first●Chapter of Gen●sis Ba●sil Ambrose Zanchie Polanus have drawn discourses of Philosophy hence Of the Heavens the Angels Elements and Light the Creation of days nights 1. Of the Heavens g Among all Geometricall Figures the sphaericall or the round is the most perfect and amongst all naturall bodies the heaven is the most excellent It was therefore good reason the most beautifull body should have the most perfect and exquisite shape Mr. Pemble h The earth is round but not precisely There are Hills like Warts and Vallies like Wrinkles in a mans body Exact roundnesse is not found in any body but the Heavens i How else could it containe the Sun Moon and Starres in convenient distance from the earth one from another k Mr. Greenhil on Ezek. p. 104. l Bishop Hall in his Contemplations on the Creation The Heavens for height Prov. Vide Fullers Miscellanea l. 1. c. 15. Insita à Deo vis quae in scripturis saepe appellatur praeceptum Domini est causa motus * Mr. Greenhil ubi supra Philosophers say the Heavens worke upon Inferiour bodies by three instruments viz. Light Motion Influence a Some say the Orbes are contiguous each ●o other clo●ely infold each other as the skinnes of an on●on containe one another and others thinke there is no such var●ety or maltitude of Orbes but alone one first moveab●e in which they conceive the fixed starres to be placed and they think the planets move not in Orbes but of themselves as birds flie in the ayre b It is called the Paradise of God Rev. 2. 7 c It is called by the Greeks ●ast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is altogether shining because of the great number of Starres in it a Psal. 104. 2. There he alludes to Gen. 1. 6. ●et there be a Firmament or stretching forth God made the heavens with as great ease as one can stretch out a curtaine when it is folded up How beautifull art thou that hast adorned the heavens saith Job Consectaries from the Angels * Quia Moses ruditatise nostrae accommodare voluit ideo quae a●tiora nostro captu erant praetermissis ea tantùm commemoravit quae sub oculis sunt Zanchius de S●mb Apost Ego Mosen puto voluisse populo creationem rerum aspectabilium proponere nihil de invisibilibus dicere unde in toto sex dierum opere ne unius quidem invisibilis Creaturae mentionem fecit Mercerus in Gen. 1. 1. idem habet in caput secundum versum primum idem habet Pareus Of the four Elements 1. ●f the earth A Base is the lowest part of a pillar The dry land appearing firm above the waters God called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 erets of which our English name Earth is derived and hath the sound of it Nec circumfuso pendebat in aere tellus ponderibus librata suis Ovid met Carpenter in his first booke of Geog. ch 4. saith the earths circular motion is probable Copernicus said that the earth moved the heavens ●ood still See more of this after about day and night Aristotle would have Earth-quakes to proceede from a spirit or vapour included in the bowels of the earth 2d. of his mereors 7. ch which finding no way to passe out is enforced to tutne backe barred any passage outseeks every corner and while it labours to breake open some place for going forth it makes a tumultuous motion which is the Earthquak It is 1. universall which shakes the whole earth in every part at least in the upper face the cause whereof is not naturall but the immediate and miraculous power of God such a one hapned at our Saviours passion 2. particular that which is limited to some one or more particular places What Thunder is in the clouds the Earthquake is in the Earth Exod. 17. 6. Numb 20. 2. 2 King 3. 16. 20. The qualities and use of the Aire Acts 17. 28. Fire is a most subtill Element most light most hot most simple immi●t Therfore the Persians worshipped fire as a God the Chaldeans adored Ur and the Romans worshipped holy fire Job 38. 19. 24. See Sir Walter Ralegihs history of the world l. 1. c. 1. Sect. 7. If this light be not spirituall it approacheth nearest unto spirituality and if it have any corporality then of all other the most subtil pure for as it is of all things seen the most beautifull and of swiftest motion so it is most necessary and beneficial Sir Walter Raleigh It is a great paradoxe to think light to bee a bodie which yet is maintained by Sir Kenelm Digbie in a Booke lately set forth But that light should be a spirituall substance is much more absurd for how then should it be visible Consectaries The eye cannot see any thing without a double light Lumine innato an inward light in the Christalline humour of the eye 2. Lumine illato an outward light in the aire and on the object Gen. 1. 4. 5. * The da● is in Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gentle or tame because it is appointed for tame creatures or of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I desire because it is to be desired In Latine it is dies à Deo of God as a divine thing The night is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to strike as in latine nox à nocen do of hurting Dies Diem docet Alpham Beta Corrigit * It runs say Astronomers a●ove a 1000. miles within the compa●e of every minute this incredible swiftness gave occas●o● to Copernicus and others to conceive the globe of the earth did rather move the Sun stand still See Dr. Hackwels Apologie and Carpenters Geography Some thinke there is a greater probability the earth should move round once a day then that the heavens should move with such an incredible swiftness scarce compatible to an● naturall bodie Others deny it grounding their opinion upon Scripture which affirmes the earth to stand fast so as it cannot be moved and upon sense because we perceive it not to move and lastly upon reasons drawn from things hurled up and let fall upon the Earth Maste● Pemble in his briefe introduction to Geography page 12. * The night easeth the burthen of the day the day driveth away the terrour of the night Consectaries from day and night Night is the time of rest Sleepe is the paranthesis of our troubles Psal. 104. 20. 21 22 23. Spiritual blindness Sol exprobrat dormientem Erasm. Esay 40. 5. * Meteora à loco quia
in sublimi regione pendent Brierwood There are 3. sorts of Meteors one of fire and hot the other of aire or water and cold the other mingled Hee sendeth snow like wool * Vapor est calidus humidus oriturque ex aere et aqua exhalatio calida et sicca oriturque ex igne terra Zab. a Like chesnuts or egges breaking in the fire b Cum exhalatio Calida sicca in nubibus ocurrit humidae frigidae illam violenta eruptione perrumpit atque ex hac collisi●ne fragor oritur qui tonitrudicitur atque accensio inflammatio exhalationis quae fulgur nominatur Arist. l. 2. Meteor c. 2. 8. Job 37. 4. 1 Sam. 7. 10. 29. Psal. per tot 18. 1● A winters thunder is a summers wonder In Autumne or Spring are oftner meteor seen then in the summer and winter except in such places where the Summer Winter are of the temper of Spring Autumne Job 37. 1 to 6. Plutarch in the life of Flaminius reporteth that there was such a noyse made by the Grecians after their liberty was restored that the birds of the aire that flew over them were seen to fal down by reason that the aire divided by their cry was made so thinue that there was no strength in it to bear them up therefore the thunder must needs rarifie make thin the aire If it bee a great cloud it is called nubes it but a little one it is called nubecula Ab obnubendo operiendo coelum The clouds are called the bottles of heaven Job 38. 37. The windowes and flood-gates of heaven Gen 7. 11. Mal. 3. 10. the fountaines of the deep Prov. 8. 28. the watery roofe of Gods chambers Psal. 104. 3. The pavilion chariot and treasure of the Lord Psal. 18. 11. 2. Sam. 22. 12. swadling bands for the Sea Job 38. 9. The cloud is a thicke moist vapour drawne up from the earth by the heat of the Sun to the middle region of the aire and by the coldnesse there further thickened so that it hangeth untill ether the weight or some resolution cause it to fall downe Mr. Perkins on Jude 12. Consectaries Job 37. 11. to 17. Job 36. 32. Psalme 91. 1. Psalme 104. 3. a Great raine is called nimbus small raine imber Amos 4. 8. b Though all men should unite all their wits purses hands together to make or to hinder one showr of raine they are unable Rich men great wise men have not these waters at command the lesse a creature can do to effect it the more doth the greatness of God shine forth in it In Egypt there is seldom rain it is made fruitf●l by the inundation of Ni●us In India raine is not so frequēt as with us Jerome saith hee never saw rain there in the months of June July hence raine in harvest was there unusuall Pro. 26. 1. 1 Sam. 12. 16. * as they do in the Ind●● Verbum Dei comparatur pluviae Deutr. 32. 2. Ideoque Hebraei uno verbo jorah doctrinam pluviam efferunt Mollerus Thaumantis filiam dixere Iridem Poetae Colores ejus tam exacti ut vix artificis possit exprimere manus Consectaries from the raine Raine bow Job 5. 8 9 10. James 5. 17 18. See Gen. 9. 13. Hosea 14. 5. Valessus de sa●ra philosophia a lib. 37. ch 2 * lib. 2. chap. 1. b Psal. 104. 24 and 135. 7. It is a dry and hot fume ascending upward beaten backe againe by the coldne●se of the middle region some comes downeward againe sideling with more or lesse violence as the sume is larger or subtiler and the cold more or lesse Ventus à violentia vehementia nomen habet quod veniat abundè magna vi irruat in unum aliquem locum mag Ph. Some think the Angells cause the windes to blew Revel 7. 1. but that is but a conceire Prov. 30. 4. Amos 4. 13. c The profit of the wind Dr. Fulke of meteors It made Adam tremble when God came in the winde 1 Cor. 12. 11. Matth. 8. 26. Jer. 18. 17. * Metalla i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is which is ingendred or bred about or with some other thing as gold about silver and silv●r abo●● brass Plinis l. 33. chap. 6. Third dayes worke Psal. 104. 89. * It is called mare either frō the Latine Amarum or the Chaldee marath signifying also bitter because the Sea-water is bitter and salt For the use of man and all other living creatures God made a separation of the earth and water causing the water to sinke down into huge hollow channells prepared to receive it that so the dry land might appeare above it We must consider the earth and waters 1. absolutely as they are Elements and solid bodies so the water hath the higher place being lighter 2. In respect of the superficies of either so the superficie of the earth is higher Carp Geog. If wee compare the Coasts and the neerest Sea then the land is higher then the Sea but if wee compare the land and the maine Sea then the Sea is higher then the Land and therefore the Sea is called Altum where ships flye faster to the shore then from it * Carpenter in his 2d book of Geographie c. 10. saith the perpendicular height of the highest mountaines seldome exceeds ●en fur longs See Sir Walter Raleighs Historie of the world l. 1. c 7 Sect. 11. * Insulae portiones terrae sunt oceano cinctae ortus varia habent principia Emersere quaedam ex mari a continenti av●lsae quaedam aggesta nonnullis ortum dedit materia Johnstoni Thaumato graphia naturalis Duo maxima quae mari tribuuntur mira salsedo reciprocatio Johnstoni Thaumat● graphia naturalis De Origine Fontium c. 8. 9. See Plinies booke of natural history from ch 97. to 100. * It is called reciprocatio aestus maris because it is caused by a hot exhalation boiling in the Sea or because the Sea suffers as if it boyled again with heate Brierwood de meteoris * l. 7. ch 13. a See Doctor Jorden of Bathes ch 3. Rivers are said to be ingendred in the hollow concavities of the earth and derive both their birth and continuall sustenance from the aire which penetrati●g the open chinks of the earth being congealed by the extream cold of that element dissolves into water as the aire in winter nights is melted in a pearly dew sticking on our glass windows Doctor Halls Contemplation It must be large to containe so many creatures Amos 5. 8. and 9. 6. Psal. 104. 25. 107. 23 24 25 26 27 28. Dr. Halls Contemplat Psalm 104. 1 Kings 19. 26 10. 22. Consectaries rom the Sea See the history of Canutus in Cambden The safety of this Kingdo●e consists much in its wooden walls The ●s. Navv exceedes all others in the world in beauty strength safety *