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A70514 A theological systeme upon the presupposition, that men were before Adam the first part.; Systerna theologicum ex praeadamitarum hypothesi. English La Peyrère, Isaac de, 1594-1676. 1655 (1655) Wing L427; ESTC R7377 191,723 375

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spiritly which consists of most faculties As for example The soul of a brute is more sprightly than the soul of a Plant because a Brute surpasses a Plant in its sensitive faculty The soul of a Man is more sprightly than the soul of a Brute because he surpasses it by his reasonable faculty Therfore the souls of the Elect are most spiritly above the souls of all other men because the Elect surpasse all other men by the Spirit of Christ by the Spirit of Regeneration and that Spirit which proceeds from God Which for that cause the Kingly Prophet called the principal Spirit Psalm 51. By vertue of which the Elect are called Spiritual yea spiritual in their bodies by a resurrection to a spiritual and eternal life The manner of composition of matter and conposition of Spirit is utterly different For that matter which hath most materials cast upon it swells to be bigger but that Spirit becomes more pure and clear which is compos'd of most Spirits And as in Arithmetick to multiply a minute is to to diminish it and divide it into subtiller parts so that Spirit which is multiplyed and rarified by more Spirits becomes more subtil The Spirit of Christ is added yea multiplyed and substracted in the Elect as it was multiplyed in Elisha and as it was taken from Moses and added to the sevent ● men of the Elders of Israel Numb 11. But these things are not belonging to the present discourse Truly I beleeve that Spirit of Christ which is infus'd into the Elect to have been that Leven laid up into three measures of meal of which speaks the Gospel according to St. Matthew Chap. 14. I say that Leven because it increases and is multiplyed in the Elect because it is mix'd with those three faculties of the soul which are in men the rational sensitive and vegetative The Spirit of Christ who from eternity is in the Elect by an eternal election without difference of Nations is in them the strength and power of regeneration resurrection and eternal life That strength is show'd forth and that power is brought unto act by a mystical election and mystical dispensations of time by which the Jews were first elected the Nations being refus'd and rejected which Jews by turn being ejected and neglected the Gentiles were taken into the place of the Jews and by which afterwards the Jews and the Gentiles in one body shall be joyn'd together in one Election and by whch at last the regeneration of both shall be perfected that at the end of time God may grant unto them both resurrection and life eternal without difference of Jew or Gentile which shall be the return from that mystical Election to eternal Election the end and consummation of all mysteries The end then of this Systeme which I must handle and bring about is set down in that mystical Election which was first fram'd to the Jews and into which the Gentiles came thrusting out the Jews that both Jews and Gentiles at last might come into one full salvation I say all this dispute shall be concerning the Jews and the Gentiles Of the Jews who without controversie sprung from Adam and of the Gentiles which according to my supposition I hold to be created before Adam Of the Adamite Jews and of the Gentiles before Adam The second Book of this SYSTEME OF DIVINITY CHAP. I. Of the election of the Jews The election of the Jews began from Adam the first father of the Jews The Jews the first-born because first elected They were not elected of their own deserving but of the meer bounty of God who willed and chused them Made of the same common earth of which other men were created God joyn'd in marriage to the church of the Israelites Father of the Jews The Jews esteem God because the sons of God God the Mother of the Jews Friend of the Jews The Jews the friends of God WE shall understand that the Gentiles are not sprung from the Linage and Kindred of the Jews by that which shall be spoken of the Election of the Jews and Gentiles of both a part We shall begin from the Election of the Jews The Election of the Jews is extolled in the 10 Ch. of Deut. above all things where Moses spoke to the people of the Jews Behold the heavens belong to the Lord and the heaven of heavens the earth and all therein yet the Lord was joyned to your fathers and chused their seed after them Deuteronomy agrees in this with the Epistle of the Hebrews where you may read this That Christ no where chose the Angels but the seed of Abraham For I placed the Foundation of the mystical Election on Christ inasmuch as he was made a Jew and of the seed of Abraham But Adam is but a Type of Christ chief of the seed of Abraham and of the Jews I say a type going before his prototype in order and time By which the mystery of Adam ●s finning is a presupposition of that mystery in which Christ died for the sin of Adam and in which the mystery of election is perfected Therefore we must review the Original of that mystical Election according to the order and dispensation of time from Adam the first Father of the Jews And by the same argument that salvation is from the Jews salvation will appear to come from Adam the first Father of the Jews I say from the very same Adam from whom likewise came condemnation Which salvation being propounded to all men in Adam men never had received it if Adam had not lost it Certainly Regeneration which is the second Creation the Salvation of men and their Election took its Original from the Law which was given to Adam and from that death which from the transgression of that Law did arise I say from the death of Christ which is an abolition of the first Creation and which from Adam himself entred into force But of this more exactly another time But by the same mystery that the Original of Election flowed from Adam upon all Men it was propagated by the same Adam as from his Off-spring upon his Sons and Grand-children all the branches of the Jews For for that cause did God chuse the seed of the Jews because he was before joyned to their Fathers in the forementioned 10 Chap. of Deuteronomy or which is the same because God chose the Father of the Jews For that Glew by which God clave unto the Fathers of the Jews was their Election for it is written in Exodus The God of Abraham the God of Isaac the God of Jacob. This is my Name for ever and this my memorial from generation to generation Yet take notice of what Laban sayes to Jacob Genesis 31. The God of Abraham the God of Nachar judge betwixt us and the God of their Fathers Where observe that God was not onely the God of Abraham but the God of Nachar Abraham's Brother and the God of Thare Abraham and Nachar's Father
God so intimate with the Jews that he entrusted them with his laws and decrees that they were admitted to the secrets of God that they were called a wise and understanding people Deut. 4. Nor was there any other Nation so honourable which had those Ceremonies just Judgements and the whole Law In the same Chapter What is all flesh that it should hear the voice of the living God which speaks out of the fire and can live cries out Moses Deut. 5. where observe the prerogative of the chosen Jews and of the second creation of men which is not granted unto flesh that is to say to the first creation for flesh the first creation consumes at the hearing and sight of God here the same Moses in the same Ch. Behold the Lord our God shews unto us his Majesty and his greatness ye have heard his voice from the middle of the fire we have found this day that a man can speak with God and live The holy Prophet could not be satisfied thinking upon the beginnings and first fruits of the Jews regeneration what should be their full election by force of which they received the fery words of God into their eyes and ears and by which they shone and did not burn with that holy lightning Enquire of the days of old which were before thee from that day on which God created man upon the earth from the height of heaven to the foundation of it if at any time there was such a thing done or was ever known that a people should hear the voice of God speaking out of the middle of the fire as thou hast heard and l●v'd Hence it is that they were the chief and choice in Gods esteem that the Jews were called a Nation drawing near unto God that they were stiled a great Nation nor that there was any other Nation so great which had Gods drawing near to it Ch. 4. For this cause you shall read That God carryed them upon Eagles wings Exod. 9. and very often that he freed them and took them with a strong hand and stretched out arm What Nation is like thy people Israel for whom thou hast done so great and horrible things upon earth to redeem them Sam. 2. Chap. 7. And that was the matter that God appointed the Jews to be the head and not the rail of the Nations Nor did God only chuse the Jews for a time according to the distiny of empires and people but God did chuse his people for ever Thou hast confirmed Israel to thy self for an eternal people As David prophecies Sam. 2. Chap. 7. And many things to that sense we read in the Prophets which I must handle another time and which was a special token of their election The Lord would not have the Jews defil'd by mixture of Nations but set them apart for an inheritance out of all the Nations of the earth 1 Kings Chap. 8. I have set you aside from all people that you might be mine Lev. 20. Hence it is that God is said to have hedg'd enclos'd and as it were with a wall of fence surrounded Israel his possession his land his vine Hence it is that the Church and the Israelitish Spouse is called a fenced garden and a sealed fountain in the Canticles least being plac'd in the high-way it might be trodden by passengers nor the South wind spoyl her flowers nor the Boar spoil her waters Because the Nations were not partakers of that mystical Election by which God had elected the Jews Neither would God that the Jews should enter into fellowship with the Nations either in body or mind either in Matrimony or Religion either in civil affairs or in divine Thou shalt not enter into a league with the Nations or joyn thy self in marriage with them Deut. 7. Thou shalt not give thy daughter to his son nor take his daughter to thy son that the Jews might not be mingled with other Nations who taught the worshipping of Idols CHAP. III. To the elected Iews an elected Land was given A holy Land because the Land of the holy And the land of Promise because it was promised with an Oath to the Fathers of the Iews A description of the Holy Land That was a choice Land not of its own nature but according to the pleasure of God who bless'd and chus'd it The land of the Iews And for the Iews only to dwell in TO the elected Jews God gave elected ground which was likewise called holy because the Land of the Holy That there is elected and blessed earth as likewise rejected and cursed earth is witnessed in the Epistle to the Hebrews Chap. 6. A land says he drinking the shower that comes upon it and bearing seasonable fruit to them who tills it receives a blessing from God But that which brings forth thorns and bryars is rejected and almost curs'd the end of which is to be burnt Which the Gospel according to St. Matthew express'd in these words Chap. 13. God loves not that earth which is in the way that is commune trodden and unclean nor that which is full of briars but he loves good ground in which the son of man may sow good seed Nor am I ignorant that these things are allegorically spoken of the hearts of the Elect but we must likewise know that Christ here meant literally the Holy Land in which the sanctified Jews who are meant by good seed shall be sown by Jesus Christ which sowing we shall have occasion to set forth more at large That the Land of Canaan which the Jews inhabited was that choice blessed earth and belov'd of the Lord is set down in the 8. of Deuteronomy where Moses call'd it A Land of rivers waters and fountains in the fields of which should break out pools of water A Land of corn barley and vines in which grow olives and pomgranats A Land of oyl and honey where the Iews should eat their bread without want and should enjoy abundance of all things A Land which Ezechiel Chap. 20. calls An excellent Land amongst all Lands and chief of all Lands Which therefore God call'd a high land Deut. Chapt. 32. God hath plac'd Israel upon a high land to eat the fruit of the field to suck honey out of the rock and oyl out of the most hard rock butter from the heard and milk from the sheep with the fat of the Lambs and Rams of the sons of Basan with the marrow of wheat and that he might drink the most choice bloud of the grape Canaan was call'd a high land not for the lying of it for it is a Valley according to that in Numb 14. The Canaanite and Amalekite dwell in the valleys which he had said in the former and thirteenth Chapter By the Sea and near the streams of Iordan For which cause Esdras called that Land a Furrow Book 4. cha 5. Thou hast saies he of all the world chosen one furrow that is Canaan which is a valley Therefore it was
brought to Adam all the creatures of the earth and all the fowls of heaven Which it is not likely he did in half a day For thither must the Elephants come from the furthest parts of India and Africk who are of a heavy and a slow pace What shall I speak of so many several species of creatures and fowls unknown to our Hemisphere who must swim so much Sea pass over so much Land to come from America to Mesopotamia and there receive their names Seventhly He saw what he would call them He saw that is that he took notice that he should fitly call every one of them and in every name he disputed with himself that is he had those operations of mind which are distinguishable discursively and in time Nor is it possible that Adam could in one half of a day see all the creatures of the earth and the fowls of heaven and then premeditately give every one of them a convenient name which neither in pronouncing of their names not in a continual rehearsing of them he could have perform'd in so short a time Eighthly God sent a deep steep upon Adam and when he had slept a long and deep sleep God took one of his ribs and filled up the flesh for it Ninthly He made a ●oman of the rib Nor did the Grecian Jews believe that the rib of Adam was made a woman the same day that Adam was made for they affirm That Adam was made in the New Moon that is the first day of the Moon But Eve was made the second day of the Moon Which the famous Salmasius has mentioned in his Climacterical years and refuted the superstition of the Jews and withall has cleared their Opinion who believ'd that there was the distance of a day betwixt their creation Tenthly God brought Eve to Adam If you all reckon these things severally not half a day not a week not a moneth will suffice for half of them Nor is it to be overslip'd that Adam called that Female a woman as being taken out of a man nor call'd her man as the females were in the first creation He created them male and female For this man in the second creation did so much excell all other men who were created before and begotten till his time for which cause he was to be the first and the Father of a Nation chosen by God and by which he was to represent by Gods decree all mankind That he could find no fit helper for him amongst all the women of the former creation But a woman must be fram'd for him more excellent than all oother women And hence it comes to passe that Marriages with the rest of the Nations are strictly forbidden the Jews and that the marriages of the sons of God must not be made with the daughters of men left the holy and elect people should be defiled with the prophane Nations and those that were created altogether in a huddle CHAP. III. Of the marvellous framing of Adam Of the marvellous conceptions of Isaac and Christ Adam was made a type of Christ in all things like him but his justice Eve the wife of Adam was likewise a figure of the Church who was the spouse of Christ THey which take pains in reading of the holy Scripture and are serious in the perusal of them find three men marvellously and peculiarly brought forth The first is Adam The second Isaac The third Jesus Christ The first was Adam whose mother was the Earth God his father The second Isaac whose father was Abraham God was his mother for it left off with Sarah to be according to the manner of women Gen. 18. To which God alluding Isa 46. speaking to the Jews the sons of Isaac says he carryed them in his womb The third is Jesus Christ whose mother was a Virgin and whose father God God was father both to Adam and Christ under whose imputation all the world was sometimes to fall God was the father Adam was the son of God Christ was the son of God and God the son Adam was a sinner Christ was just In all other things Adam and Christ were alike Adam was a type of Christ and opposite to Christ Isaac was a type of Christ and in the middle 'twixt Adam and Christ Christ was a Prototype of Isaac and an Antitype of Adam The common Opinion is That Adam was created by God of a full age of the perfect stature of a man and that the day wherein he was created he might be a man of thirty yeers of age at which age Christ died Truely I shall rather think that Adam was in all things like Christ except the justice of Christ as Christ was made in all things like Adam except the sin of Adam and that Adam not streight nor the first day but by leisure and by several ages successively grew from infancy and youth to man's estate by as many degrees as Christ arived at the same state at which Isaac arived at it being himself likewise miraculously brought forth and as other men begotten after the ordinary manner arise from children to be men And he shall finde this to be most probable whosoever shall seriously peruse the History of Adam from the framing of him till the framing of his wife Eve for God framed Adam out of Paradise whom he afterwards carried into Paradise that he might manure it sayes Genesis Hence I gather that Adam was framed an Infant without Paradise because I read that he was carried into Paradise to till it at such time of his age and strength as he was able to perform it Again I believe that that Paradise was that place of the Holy Land which is called Arabia felix for it is bounded Chap. 2. Genesis By Tigris and Euphrates two Rivers joining their streams in their course towards Arabia fall into the Bay of Persia Arabia felix is likewise to be understood the Paradise of the Lord in that place of Gen. 12. where Lot lifting up his eyes saw all the Region about Jordan which was altogether watered like the Paradise of the Lord and like Egypt as thou comest from Segor for it is probable that Genesis has compared and joyned to Arabia felix and Egypt two neighbouring Regions and two of the most pleasant I think that Adam was brought to that Holy Land even as I finde Abraham led to the same Land that Adam might have the first natural possession of it the first and the father of all the Jews and which by a stricter title and a more peculiar obligation God might afterwards promise give Abraham and to the Jews his posterity being Adam's seed and his own Adam being a young man and cultivating of Paradise God thought of giving him a Wife and being as it were uncertain whom he should bestow upon him he brought unto him all the creatures of the earth and all the Fowls of heaven that he might see what he would call them for every thing whatsoever Adam called it
water 's nigh That is 〈◊〉 suffers thirst God could indeed by his miracle in which he is wonderfully powerfull have done all that that the Jews should not be hungry nor dry nor their clothes be worn nor their shoes be spent And there ha●●●en need of these miracles if they had had no wool nor no leather but they wanted none of these things nor was any such miracle needfull Yea this miracle would rather have manifestly evidenced the want of clothes and shoes if for want of clothes and shoes and by the virtue of that miracle they had always put on the same clothes and the same shoes which could never wear out On the other side it shew'd the abundance of clothes and shoes which they had because neither their clothes nor shoes grew old because they chang'd both so often And ascribe this to the providence and care of the Lord by which all things which were necessary for the Jews were provided for them because he led them sometimes through pleasant and plentifull places from whose Inhabitants Deut. 2. and elsewhere They bought m●at for money and did eat and bought water for money and did drink for which the Israelites were beholding to the Edomites and Moabites And when Sehon forbad them this privilege they smote him with all his people and all his Cities and took the prey and spoil of his Towns Deuteronomie Chap. 2. And in the third Chapter they destroyed Og the King of Basan And that time they took the land from the Amorites which is beyond Jordan Moses himself would have said On this side Jordan which observe And that amongst the prey and spoils of these two Kings there were garments and shooes found and more than enough of materials to make both clothes and shooes This you may imagin also of the Amalekites oververcom by the Jews Exodus Chap. 17. before the Law given in Sinai To this you may add that the Jews for many years compassed Mount Seir inhabited by the Edomites from whom they bought victuals and water which I made now appear and from whose Cities they had clothes and shooes at a price CHAP. VII That the Flood of Noah was not upon the whole earth but only upon the Land of the Jews Not to destroy all men but only the Jews GIve us leave to discusse this last miracle of the flood of Noah which is believ'd to have overflow'd the kingdoms of the earth with most mighty overflowings and which I rather believe overflow'd only Palestine and the Land of the Jews The causes of this conjecture are chiefly the causes of the Deluge which here I shall mention from their beginnings I show'd you before that the Jews were framed in Adam and esteem'd the peculiar sons of God that they were separated from all other Nations which God had created in the beginning And that those Nations were call'd the sons of men in many places of holy writ I have set forth at large The Lord likewise set the Jews apart from all Nations when he plac'd them in his holy Land as in a fenced garden whither it should not be granted to other Nations to come God then had forbidden the Jews to make any mixture with other Nations Chiefly he suffer'd them not to defile their sons with the daughters of men Against the command of God the Jews had admitted the Gentiles into their land Who sayes Genesis when they began to multiply upon the earth the sons of God seeing the daughters of men that they were fair or which is the same the sons of Adam who were after called Jews seeing the daughters of the Gentiles took to themselves wives of all which they chose and by that copulation Giants were begotten For the Jews being made strong and lively by Gods late framing of them and going in to the daughters of men as strong men are begot by strong and divine seed mix'd with humane begets Heroes the sons of God lying with the daughters of men begat Heroes valiant men as they are set down in that same place by valiant and famous men in their age It repented God being angry at the wickednesse of the Jews that he had made men and wrought the clay of which he fram'd Adam of whom the Jews were born an earthie and corrupt generation of men The cogitation of whose heart was bent upon evil continually at all times that is from their first beginning both in Adam their Father who had transgressed the commandement of God and in themselves who had likewise broken the covenant of God I will cut off saith the Lord in that place man whom I have created from the face of the earth from the man to the beast from the creeping thing to the fowl of the heaven for I repent my self that I have made them Here take notice that by earth we understand Palestine according to the Hebrew who by earth simply express'd mean their own As I observ'd of the darknesse before in the death of the Lord. God then had decreed to destroy man whom he had created from the face of the earth By the man whom he had created understand the Jews the posterity of Adam I say of that Adam whom he had created or fram'd for creation and framing here is the same By living creatures understand also the Gentiles mingled amongst the Jews and causes of the sins of the Jews according to what I formerly set down at large where I made it appear that the Jews are simply call'd men in comparison of the Gentiles that the Gentiles on the other side compar'd to the Jews were call'd beasts and a people which was not a people in holy Scripture And such was Gods anger that he resolved not only to destroy all those Jews and Gentiles but all the men of that Land and all the cattel of it from the creeping things to the birds of the air except only Noe the Jew who according to Gods command fram'd an Ark to escape the violence of the Deluge The treasures of the great depth were opened sayes Genesis and the windows of heaven were opened and it rained upon the earth forty dayes and forty nights And there was a deluge upon the earth and the waters were multiplyed and they lifted up the Ark high from the earth for they increas'd exceedingly and fill'd all things upon the face of the earth And the waters preval'd exceedingly upon the earth And all the high hils were cover'd under the whole heaven The water was fifteen cubits above the mountaines which it had cover'd And all flesh upon the earth was destroyed birds living creatures and beasts and all creeping things All men and all things wherein is the breath of life died And he destroyed all things that was upon the earth from the man to the beast as well creeping things as fowls of the heaven and they were cut off from the earth Only Noe remained and those that were with him in the Ark. All which Genesis prophetically expressing and opening
there be an end says St. Paul when he shall resign the Kingdom to his Father The Kingdom of Christ was from eternity it shall likewise end within age and eternity For this cause all times were made by Christ Heb. 1. and Christ was called the Prince of time Timothy 1. cap. 1. Yea the Kingdom of Christ is called the Kingdom of all ages Psal 144. For which cause St. Paul calls Christ Blessed unto all ages God the Father reign'd before ages before the times of eternity before he had ordained wisdom and had given her command over all things God the Father shall likewise reign after ages after that wisdom who is Christ the Son hath yeilded up the Kingdom to the Father in the end of ages God the Father reigned before eternity and shall after eternity God the Son reign'd from eternity and shall to eternity In which sense understand that in the 90 Psalm From age to age thou art God As also which David sings 4 Chron. chap. 16. Blessed be the Lord from eternity to eternity CHAP. XII Eternity uses to be understood in Scripture by the duration of the Sun and Moon Of an age Of eternal times St. Paul expounded Eternity indefinite JEremie to signifie the eternity of that Law ●nd Covenant by which God had taken the Jews to himself to eternity as also the eternity of that Covenant which God had made with Messias and with his servant David by things undoubted and very well known If says he the Laws of the Sun and Moon and the Stars fail then the seed of Israel shall fail before him And again If the Covenant of the Lord with the day and night can be frustrate then can the Covenant of the Lord be frustrate with David his servant Therefore both of them are set down indubitable and unmoveable the eternity of the seed of Israel as also of the Kingdom of Messias as also the eternity of the Sun and Moon Stars Days and Nights And as they are conveniently joyned so are they conveniently convertible thus The seed of Israel shall never fail before the Lord for the Sun and Moon and Stars can never fail before him It is impossible that the Covenant of God should be in vain which he made with his Servant David that he should be and remain for ever It is likewise impossible that the Covenant which God made with the Day and Night should fail but they should be to eternity and remain continually God meant that impossibility of his Law which should never perish and of his Covenant never to be broken In the 6 chapter of the Gospel according to St. Luke It is easier for the heaven and earth to passe away than that one tittle of the Law should passe away Of the Law that is of the Co●enant which God made with Israel and with his Messias The whole world is here understood by the heaven and the earth and that impossibility he clears by another as great an impossibility that is the least tittle of the Law shall never passe away nor shall ever the world passe away Such is that which we read Psalm 72. The Messias shall endure with the Sun and Moon unto eternity Which is convertible thus The Sun and Moon shall endure together with Messias for ever It is written Genesis 1. Let us make lights in the midst of heaven that they may divide the day and night and be for signs and times for days and years Which the author of Ecclesiasticus rehearses in these words chap. 43. The Sun and Mo●n shew the time and appoint the age Times are made up of days and nights months and years and ages which the Sun and Moon divide and dispense and appoint the measure of them especially the Sun who for excellency is called the Father of times and ages by the ancients For which cause holy Writ measures out the eternity of ages by the Sun It is common in holy authors to reckon weeks of years months of years years of years and with them you have many times also ages of ages which comprehend many myriads of years of which an eternity is made up Which you may well call the year of the world or the great world whose times ages are reckon'd innumerable Which you shall not need to wonder at if you wonder that the day of days the year of years the age of ages and all ages of ages have descended from eternal times and shall endure to eternity I thought upon the days of old I have the eternal years in remembrance I have counted the years which were from the beginning says David Psalm 76. The Prophet counted those days but could ne●er find the number of them For there is no remembrance of things past Ecclesiast chap. 1. And truly For the memory of men being finite and fading can no way extend it ●eif to the knowledge of those former things which are infinite and derived from years eternal As if St. Paul had meant in those places which I mentioned before in the former chapters where he said that the mysterie of the Gospel was hid from eternal times and ages to expresse a thing so much secret and remote that the mystery had been hidden since the world was made with Adam from whom to the Apostle was not above four thousand years That had been indeed to have thrown four drops of water into the midst of the Sea or to have thrown four grains of sand upon the Sea shore according to what is written in the 18 chapter of Ecclus. As a drop of the water of the Sea or a grain of sand so little are a thousand years in the days of eternity The author of the Ecclesiasticus here meant that whatsoever proportion a drop has to the who●e Sea or a grain of Sand to the whole shore a thousand years should have the same proportion to the day of eternity which contain● the beginning and ending of all things created in the endlesse volums of years For eternity here is taken in the second acception which is from eternity and shall remain to eternity Which times are compounded of ages which ages are accounted by years Nor think here that age to be the first and pure eternity which admits of no distinction of years of no composition or comparison with this second eternity which is secular compounded For although the author of Ecclesiasticus seems to have taken this out of the 88 Psalm where it is said A thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday It is to be observ'd that the Psalmist in that place meant that there could be no proportion or comparison betwixt 1000 years Gods eternity which 1000 years he compar'd with a day that is past with that which is not For there is no proportion betwixt an entity and a non entity But in this place the author of Ecclesiasticus admits a perfect proportion betwixt a thousand years and the day of eternity betwixt a drop of water and
deriv'd to his own time We know certainly That the Phoenicians had the use of Letters long before Moses and that the Phoenicians spake the same language as the Hebrews did A clear proof of which Samuel Petit hath given us in his Miscellanea and the famous Bouchard in his Phaleg But if the Phoenicians learn'd to speak from the Hebrews Why should not we think they learn'd likewise to write from them Therefore the Hebrews wrote before Moses But what should the Hebrews rather write than their own historie and what hinders us to believe that Moses receiv'd the Jewish Chronicle from them which he w●ot Truly I think that Moses whose end it was to write chiefly his own History and the History of the times wherin he liv'd wrote very briefly all the things which were before his own time especially such things as concern'd the first creation And those which were the gatherers of Copies touch'd a great deal more briefly the heads of the Jews and the universal creation And hence I think it has come to passe that the creation of the world is ended in one in the first Chapter of Genesis and that afterward the framing of Adam and building of Eve are a little more particularly set down and that after all that time which was betwixt Cam and Noah is run over in the 4. and 5. Chap. Let any reasonable man judge whether or no in those 4 and 5 Chapters which are very short and full of Genealogies all could be comprehended which was acted or invented upon the face of the earth for a thousand six hundred yeares and more And whether in any reason we can deny such things as without violation of Mysteries of Faith by natural and right demonstrations can be made appear only for this cause because these two short Chapters make no mention of them Thus I seriously considering and diligently weighing all those things which I at large have spoken concerning those most antient times both out of prophane and sacred history as also which I shall speak hereafter of that Eternal age since which the world is said to have been framed by the Prophets and Apostles I doubted not to recall the creation of the first men to the beginnings of things long before Adams time Nor does it trouble me that Genesis makes ●o mention of those men Yea I thought it enough that it had not expre●ly denyed such men Yet although Genesis have so briefly nothing more brief gone over the originals of things yet we may gather from the same book that the creation of the first men was far different which is hinted at in the first Chapter from the fashioning of Adam the first father of the Jews which is more largely set down in the second Chapter They argue ordinarily We hear no men named before Adam in Genesis Therefore there were none before Adam And yet we deny that that there was no men before Adam because there are none nam'd in Genes's For it is well known that all things are nor ●et down in Genesis nor that all things must be denyed which Genesis mentions not whose intention it was not to write the History of the first men but of the first Jews only On the same account they affirm that the Ark of Noah was the first of all ships because we read of never another in Genesis As if Adam who according to their supposition was taught all arts at his making should have been ignorant of Navigation the most excellent of all arts and most necessarie for the societie of men They also tell us the same story of Noahs plan●ing the first Vine because Moses tells us of no Vine planted before it as if the earth when it it was created in the youth of the world had not brought forth any Vines the giver of mirth and restorer of youth Adam being an excellent Husbandman should have neglected the planting of Vines the sweetest part of agriculture and abandon'd wine which according to the Scripture glads God and man But they talk of a Man-monster not of a man who think that Melchisedech was really without Father or Mother or without Original neither having any beginning of dayes nor end of life only for that reason because Moses in no place makes mention either of the Parents birth or death of Melchisedech They doe not mind that which Iohn Cameron a most learned and acute Divine has observ'd That these things were by Moses mystically pass'd over and mystically observ'd by Moses to shew that the Priesthood of Melchisedech was eternal according to the Priesthood of Christ not temporal like the Legal and Mosaical Priesthood which beginning from Fathers begat sonnes in the same order and taking its rise from Moses ended in Christ But Melchisedech's Priesthood neither came from the Fathers of it which were Priests nor was deriv'd upon the Sons which were Priests but such a one it was as had no known beginning and was like to have no known ending Reason and Faith perswade us to understand these things so least the mysterie of silence should pervert the order of nature according to which Melchisedech who had both Father and Mother might naturally beget children and naturally have an original and an end But say they Genesis does not set these things down so Nay these things are not against Genesis these agree with Faith and Reason And these things show that Genesis wrote mysteries not monstrous things Therefore these things are so because so to be understood And with like negligence they believe that there was no men before Adam because there is none before him read of in Moses Nor is it taken notice of that the design of Moses in setting down Adam was not to mention the first of mankinde but the Father of the Jews whose peculiar Historie he wrote and not the History of all Nations Truly the beginning of the Jews in Moses and in Josephus both is with Adam After that Moses has told us the beginning of men and of the Gentiles in the first Chapter with the beginning of the world and has set down the Gentiles different in stock and original from the Jews The Gentiles I say the births of divine creation from the beginning and the Jews the sons of divine architecture in Adam CHAP. III. Men erre as often as they understand any thing more generally which ought to be more particularly taken The darkness at the death of our Saviour was over the whole Land of the Jews not over all the world The Star which appear'd to the Wise men was a stream of light in the ayr not a star in heaven THere is great errour in reading the Scripture many times when that is taken more more generally which ought to be particularly understood as that of Adam whom Moses made first Father of the Jews and whom we hyberbolically call the first Father of all men That which is believ'd of the darknesse in the death of our Saviour is of the same strain For the
the light of the Sun upon the dyal should be taken for the Sun it self as Strato of Sydon was saluted and proclaimed King without any dispute because first of all the Sydonians on the top of all their City he shew'd not the Sun it self but the light of the Sun over against the East and found first of all the rising of the sun in the West others in vain expecting towards the East to see the Sun which Justin relates out of Troyus Pompeius in his 18th book Right reason therefore and approved authority joyn themselves with these places and the word● of the Scripture that this miracle should only be understood of the dyal of Achaz In which the Sun running his course as he uses to doe the dyal standing in his own place and the gnomon of the dyal not being stirr'd against the custom order and natural effect of the Sun and shadow by a miracle and way to men unknown the shadow was brought back ten degrees and that they are deceiv'd who think that the heaven and the Sun went backward I say that they are deceiv'd because they have averr'd it as a general miracle in the heaven and Sun which was to be understood particularly and in the dyal of Achaz CHAP. V. How the Sun stood still in Gabaon in the miracle of Joshua That long day should not extend it self beyond the Country of Gabaon LEt us try if any such thing may be understood in the miracle of Joshua in whose wrath the Sun was stop'd Ecclus. Chap. 20. As also stood stil and obey'd the voice of a man Joshua 10. God had routed the Amorrhites before Israel who being beaten from the top of Gabaon to the descents of Bethoron sought for shelter in the valleys Joshua was resolv'd to destroy them utterly whom least the night should rescue from his sword and revenge he said in the sight of Israel Thou Sun stirr not from Gabaon nor thou Moon from the valley of Ajalon And the Sun Moon stood stil til the people had reveng'd themselves on their enemies And in the same place The Sun stood still for the space of a whole day and made no hast to go down There is none but upon the first sight of these words will affirm that the Sun stood still in heaven But if any one weigh more attentively the force of the miracle and contain the miracle within its own bounds he shall easily find that the light and rayes of the Sun are understood not the Sun it self It gives us boldnesse to conjecture so because it is said That the Sun stood still in the midst of heaven For the Sun was then going down when Joshua bid it stand still Nor could the Sun then stand in the middle of heaven where he was not for the going down of the Sun is distant from the middle of the heaven a whole Quadrant Therefore this miracle is so to be understood That when the Sun was really going down the light of the Sun without the Sun it self by a great miracle remain'd as yet in the Atmosphaere or region of vapours which is over the middle of the air and the skie And that light of the Sun without the Sun it self did beat upon the City of Gabaon and the mountain of Gabaon so that those rayes which came from that light being reverberated from that mountain shone through all the valley insomuch as the Amorrhites who fled could not eschew Joshua who pursued them which was the cause of the miracle I began to be of this opinion long ago living in a very pleasant valley amongst the Cadurcian Mountaines whence a little of the heaven appearing allow'd us the sight of the Sun about six hours in the Summer in the foresaid valley But the Sun in the mean time who to my thinking was set before through the distances and openings betwixt the hills did beat upon and guild the high ground over against it with which light the whole valley shone till the Sun was under the Horizon So it came to passe that in the hill over against me I saw a Sun without a Sun for many hours together which was to me like a miracle which so often as I saw I bethought my self of the miracle of Ioshua that God by a greater miracle could retain the light of the Sun without the Sun than that by which I had seen the Sun over against me upon the mountain As far as my reason could serve me I thought I was arrived to a conjecture because it is written Thou Sun upon Gabaon move not for the Sun at his going down did enlighten the opposite Mountain of Gabaon and not every Region of the Horizon which no doubt it had look'd upon had it stood still in the midst of heaven God therefore retain'd in the Mountain of Gabaon and not in all the places of the Horizon by a memorable miracle that light by which the Sun going down shone in that Mountain and the neighbouring places Or whether it were better to believe that the similitude of the Sun going down by the Atmosphaere and refractions which are ordinary in it did appear after the Sun was down As the Hollanders in Nova Zembla after a night of 2 moneths and a half long say that they saw the Sun a little sooner than they could expect him because the Atmosphaere represented the light of the Sun to them some days before they saw the Sun it self which Petrus Gassendus a famous man and a great Philosopher known over all the World hath related and taken special notice of 1 Book Chap. 19. Of his Inst●tution of Astronomy It is like wise written in Josua And the Sun hastened not to goe down for the space of a whole day Which is expounded in the 46 Chapter of Ecclesiasticus And one day was made as two The space of one day which Josua observed not a whole day but to be understood For that light of the Sun which gilded the hill of Gabaon vanished by little and little and a light like that of the Moon did succeed till the Israelites had revenged themselves of their enemies In which sense those places in Iosua are taken Thou Moon move not beyond the Valley of Ajalon Also in the same place of Iosua There was not before nor shall there be hereafter so long a day And truly that one day is made as two It will take but little time up and it will be worth while to relate a contention betwixt a Minorite Frier and a Mathematician The Mathematician was shewing that there were days which extended the length of many according to the obliquitie of the Sphaere yea a day of six moneths with them who live under the parallel The Divine at this wax'd angry crying it was impious and to be punished with a branding Iron with which Hereticks are marked to affirm that there could be any longer days than in the miracle of Iosua where one day was made as two Especially since it is
directly set down There has not been nor shall be so long a day Than which there is nothing more expresse nothing more clear And we should sayes he makes the holy Scripture a liar a thing horrid and not to be thought of if that were true which the Mathematician did demonstrate and therefore that Princes did very well who did banish Mathematicians out of Christendom My little Priest says the Mathematician be not so fierce Your zeal carries you beyond your wit For both the word of God is true and that Mathematical demonstration is likewise true It is true that neither before that time nor since could there be so long a day in Gabaon as there was by the command of Ioshua But extend not that miracle and that length of day beyond Gabaon to Neighbouring Nations For it is true nor can there be any thing more true that in those Countries which are near the poles those days are and shall always be longer than that day in which according to the command of Joshua the Sun made not hast to goe down upon Gabaon for the space of one whole day and one was made as two For they are really days under the pole not of two days but of a hundred and eighty two days and more which the Mathematician by irrefragable arguments made clear But the Divine being here baffled did wrangle to no purpose But that our speech may return whence it begun The miracle of Joshua must in effect not be placed in heaven but upon the earth nor upon all the earth neither but only in the Country of Gabaon In which there never was before nor shall be after so long a day for that could not be made good every wher else There will not be wanting men of ill conceits who will either render me suspitious as having an ill opinion of the faith in miracles or think me mad or desperately bold that I depart so far and wide from the received opinion who undoubtedly believe that the Sun upon the command of Joshua stood still in heaven as they also think that in the recovery of Eze. it went back They will detract from my conjectures defame them as rising from bad Principles that wil offer to overcloud the Scripture where it seems to speak so clearly saying that in the miracle of Ioshua It stood still in the midst of heaven and upon the prayer of Isaiah it returned ten lines Such men as these think all things that people wil not believe Religion Divinity miracles with them have the greater repute of sanctity the more incredible they are and which is a strange thing the more they are past belief the more they believe them I Ingenuously confesse I doe not give in my name amongst those enormous upholders of miracles who put all reason out of square I am reasonable and any thing that is belonging to reason I pretend an interest in it I believe those miracles of Iosua and Isaiah and doe very much magnifie God in them but think them not greater than they were nor as is agreeable to reason therefore I have contained them within their own limits And I beseech the Reader will not be so rash in his judgement concerning those those things which I have here written For I have written far from any ambition not to triumph over mens common errors but to search them out for the love which I bear to truth and whosoever is a friend to reason and truth let him judge of my observations CHAP. VI. Where the miracle is of the Iews garments not worn out in the Wildernesse and the not wearing of their shooes SUch another wonder that is thought indeed not a miracle which is read in the 29 Chapter of Deuteronomie where Moses rehearses this miracle and bounty of God to the Jews The Lord says he led you forty years through the Desart Thy clothes were not worn nor thy shoes wax'd not old It is cōmonly thought that the clothes of the Israelites therefore were not worn out because God had made their clothes incorruptible as also one occult facultie of growing bigger that the clothes which the Israelites put on so soon as they grew they grew likewise which they also wore Concerning their shooes that could not be spent nor grow old and so soon as they put shooes upon their childrens feet as the childrens feet grew so the shooes grew likewise This they believe because they consider not that the force of this miracle was nor placed in those idle fancies and childish stories but in that wonderfull providence by which God led the Israelites forty years through the Desart destitute of all things notwithstanding they had such abundance that they wanted not materials to make clothes shooes of that their clothes were not worn out because they had several changes that their shooes were not spent because they found new ones to put on that they fed a thousand Flocks in the desart of whose wool they made cloth and rayment and of their skins and leather made shoes and wanted besides no Weavers Taylors Curriers and Shoemakers God says moreover in that place Bread ye did not eat Wine or strong drink you did not drink in the Desart that you might know that I was the Lord your God Manna had reign'd down to them out of Heaven Water flow'd to them out of the Rock both by a miracle from God that they might eat drink Manna Water in lieu of Bread and strong drink It was likewise a miracle from God that their Flocks should find whereupon to feed and what to drink in the barren and dry Wildernesse This was then the force of the miracle meant by Moses to shew that the Jews wanted nothing for forty years which by several ways but always to the same sence he expressed He opened himself more clear in the 2 Chapter of Deuteronomie The Lord knows thy journey how thou pass'd through this great Desert dwelling with thee forty years and thou lacked'st nothing In which sense understand the 8 Chapter of the same Deuteronomie Thy clothes was not worn out with age and thy feet were not beaten behold this is now the fortieth year The Garments of the Israelites might grow old but not fail them with antiquity God not suffering them to want new garments to repair the losse of the old Their shooes might burst in their upper leather but their feet not to be gall'd because they had leather enough in the Desert so that they could not be bruis'd either with a worn or cobled shooe So understand that place where t is said The Jews did not thirst in the Desert For the Jews might thirst in the Desert but they wanted not water wherewith to quench their thirst Yea whatsoever the words of Isay may seem to imporr The Children of Israel must needs be dry in the Desert or else they had drink in the Desert for none drinks water but he that is dry The fool is dry when
as by inspiration sets forth to declare that all the beasts of the land of Iudah perish'd when Palestine was drown'd which words if you take only the literal sence of them seem to intimate that all the earth or both Hemispheres round about which the Sun takes his course were overflow'd Nor is it material to me that which is said that the treasures of the great deep were broke up and the windows of heaven opened For that great Abysse was the sea of Palestine from which all the fountains spring Which Genesis sets down to us were to have been broken up to represent to us that all Palestine was dissolv'd in water and did sweat out all the moisture in its veins But there are some who to adde force to such things as are hyperbolically written interpret the Cataracts of heaven The waterie heaven disgorg'd upon the whole earth which is a meer soppery For these things were written in a high stile to expresse the abundance of rain by which the Land of the Jews was overflow'd The mountains were covered under the whole heaven must be understood of the high mountains of Palestine as also the whole heaven was that which covered Palestine For it is ordinary to assign every Country it s own heaven In the same sense understand the 2 Chapter of Deutr. where God casting a fear upon all the nations of the Holy Land to which he was to lead his people Israel exhorts them in these words To day I will begin to send thy fear and terrour upon the Nations which dwell under the whole heaven All the heaven is here understood which was over the whole Land of Palestine For God did not that time send the fear of the Jews upon the Nations that dwelt in China America the South or Greenland But if we will take notice of the thing and not of the words it will appear that the Deluge came only upon the Land of the Jews and not upon the whole world Both from the causes of the Deluge which I now spoke of and which I now told you were the sins of the Jews As also by Noe the Jew and his sons the reliques of the Jews as also from the place upon which the Ark stood upon the decay of the waters upon the mountains of Armenia sayes Genesis Which mountains of Armenia as they look toward Palestme make up a part of Syria next to Palestine But certainly Iosephus me●nt that that was a particular Deiuge where writing against Appion lib. 2. he speaks of all the authors Gentiles who have made mention of the Jews amongst whom he mentions Berosus Berosus says he hath ●ritten of the Ark in which the chief of our Family was pr●served He said not in which the chief of mankind was saved but the chief of our stock or linage that is of the Jews For there he speaks of the J●ws whom Iosephus calls his own and his own stick b●ing a Jew himself Who I say was the chief of the people of the Jews after the F●oud for Iosephus derives the first kinred of the Jews before the Flood from Adam by which it is very clear that only the reliques of the Jews were sav'd in the Ark and that the Family of the Jews was restor'd by Noe who was the second beginner of that kinred after the Deluge CHAP. VIII The same which was prov'd in the former Chapter by the Dove sent out by Noe and by the natural descent of waters IT is clear that this Deluge was peculiar to the Jews not universal in all Nations by that which is written of the Dove which Noe sent out and she return'd to him at night For that branch with green leaves which the Dove pull'd from the tree was not of those Olives which the Deluge had overwhelm'd and for a whole year buried them in mudd Therefore it is more probable to say That that Dove being sent from the mountains of Armenia flew over all the waters of the Deluge and in the higher fields of Asia gather'd from an 〈◊〉 free from dirt and slime that branch with green leaves to shew to Noe a flourishing not a wither'd hope of his deliverance Which that we may more clearly perceive let us consider and recollect that violence with which the showers of the flood in great bodies of water broke out and did beat the whole earth without rest or interruption day or night Let us bethink us how great muddy streams fell from the mountains into the valleys And that deluge made up and sweld with those torrents was nothing else but Water mix'd with slime and clay which being afterwards macerated for a whole year in which it was upon the highest mountains and fifteen cubits above them the dregs of that slime falling down to the bottom stuck in the branches of the trees and every leaf of them For this we are taught by dayly experience where troubled and clayie rivers break over their banks For after the●e waters are driven off we see the reeds and the trees with which these banks are planted pressed down with the weight of the slime and defil'd with most filthy clay As also all the Olives were drown'd at the Flood of Noah As likewise we may very well read that all those Olives for a whole year in which the deluge is said to have whelm'd them to have been altogether spoil'd and destroyed and to have rotted at last And thus I conceive that the fields of upper Asia are higher than the Mountains of Armenia because I think the lowest earth lies always to the Sea side and those grounds are higher which are the farthest from the Sea and are higher raised within the uppermost and continued Globe of the earth which we see clearly when we see famous and swift rivers through great and long tracts of land hasten to the sea according to that reason by which they flow down from upper ground to a continued descent Nor shall I omit to relate what a most experienced Geometrician related to me That he had try'd the descent by which the river of Garonne run from Tholouse through the land of Burdeaux into the Ocean and measuring a hundred rods he found many tim●s a whole rod of de●cent for this swift course to the Sea I perswaded my self that it had been so accounted by Ausonius in his Mosella Smooth Loyrs and swift Rhoans strong Garonns stream If you will not grant such a declination as the Geometrician said the Garonne run into the Ocean take the Danow that famous and swift River which runns six hundred miles of continual descent from its own so●ntain into the Euxine sea And let us know his de●cent not in a hundred but six hundred ro●s measuring as also that after the measuring of●●x hundred miles there is found one mile of descent By which reason the fountain of the River Danew may be found higher than the shore of the Euxine sea one whole mile Grant also that dec●i●itie not to be hindred
the whole Sea betwixt a grain of sand and all the sand in the shore For a drop of water and the whole Sea are things omogeneal as also a grain of Sand and the whole shore as also these are here compared according to their habitude of number and measure by which they have relation one to another But there can be no proportion betwixt a thousand years which is a body of years and a Homogeneous body These are likewise compared together according to the habitude of number and measure which have relation one to another but there can be no proportion betwixt the eternity of God and a thousand years because they are of different kinds A thousand years and that pure eternity are of several kinds because that eternity consists not of years nor is compounded of ages or times and they cannot be compared according to their habitudes and measures for they have none common to both The things which I mentioned before of the beginnings of things and of the creation of the world from eternity out of Diodorus agree very well wi●h these testimonies of holy Scripture That the ancient Physiologists and Historians did believe that the world was eternal as also affirm'd that men were from eternity which Diodorus peaking of the Chaldeans expounds thus That they believed that the world was eternal having no certain determinate beginning for they did not deny the beginning of the world but thought it unknown and uncertain according to that of Ecclesiasticus There is no remembrance of former things That eternity was uncertain and undeterminate Wherefore in the Bible eternity is often undeterminate As it is read Genesis 6. My spirit shall not contend with man always Eternity in that place is long after undetermin●d which appears by what follows And his days shall be a hundred and twenty years For God determined here the age of man a hundred and twenty years which before was far longer and undetermined so it is to be understood of that servant whose ear his Master pierced with an Awl Deut. 5. He shall se●ve thee for ever that is undeterminately and so long as he li●es I passe by a great many places of this same sor● Let it therefore be taken for good that the creation of the world which is said from eternity by the authority of both Testaments could by no means be unders●ood since Adam was made according to the definition of both ages Whether you call eternity which is reckoned from many ages and times Or whether you understand it indefinitely or undeterminatly For it is known that the time betwixt ●s and Adam is within account For the times from Adam are of a known period without the account of ages Besides there is a great deal of difference betwixt those things that preceeded the beginning of all things and those things which were before 〈◊〉 Adam Of these there is neither mention nor knowledge Of the other there is certain knowledge and memory CHAP. XIII Of the ages of creatures describ●d by Hesiod and Ausonius Why the Histories of the first men were not known Out of Plato By the change of the Epoche The Aboriginal Nations of the world are not known I Often have wondred at the ages of creatures which Hesiod relates That the just age of a man is Ninety six The age of a Crow eight hundred and sixty four The age of a Hart three thousand three hundred and fifty six The Rooks ten thousand three hundred and sixty eight The Phoenixes ninety three thousand three hundred and twelve The Nymphs live Nine hundred thirty three thousand a hundred and twenty For he put those very ages into a Verse from a tradition far more antient as we may conjecture than Hesiod There Hesiod was antienter than Ausonius who since that time a long while did translate them in Latine Verses But Plinie thinks that but a Fable which he writes concerning the Phoenix and the Nymphs Well grant they bee fabulous notwitstanding it appears by this that Hesiod receiv'd them of a fabulous and most ancient tradition I say from that tradition which had set down the ages of Crows Harts and Rooks of which the Antients doubted not and which they could not affirm the certainty of without many and frequent experiments Neither had Hesiod a most learned and elegant old Poet vouchsaf'd to have describ'd such idle stories in such excellent Verses nor Ausonius after him a sweet and acute Poet translated them if both of them had thought that the beginning of things was to be reckon'd from Adam from whom to H●siod there was not as yet passed the age of an Hart. Those Poets set down such ages such bounds to the lives of Beasts but thought that God the Judge of eternity knew all other ages namely that of the world heaven and stars Of eternity I say which in that place Ausonius sets down as a secret and known to God alone The knowledge of those eternal ages which were from the beginning was hid from men according to that decree by which he has hindred men to know all things and through which he thought it fit in his wisdom that they should be ignorant of the dispensations of time According to that of the Lord when he was ascending to heaven It is not for you to know the times which the father has put in his own power Acts. ch 1. The Egyptians according to Plato ascrib'd the cause of this ignorance to the several destructions of men of which the greatest were by fire and water the lesser by many other several ways They said in some long tract of time there were some changes and differences of things in motion both in heaven earth in some long tract of time Whence higher Countries either were consum'd with too much fire or the lower drown'd by too large effusion of showrs But the Egyptians were free from fire and floud Nile saving them from fire And such was the temper of their climate that no showr from above had ever water'd them or ever should Nor were they water'd at any time with any other water than which either flow'd over from Nilus or sprung out of the bowels of the earth And for that cause being not much subject to fire nor overwhelm'd with water some men were always preserv'd with them sometimes more sometimes lesse but never a general desolation For which reasons they reser●'d alone the most antient Records And that both their own actions and the actions of other Nations which were memorable were diligently set down and written in the Records kept in their Temples That the Greeks and other Nations either by Plagues sent down from heaven or being des●royed either by water or fire in certain space of time had lost both letters and knowledge and enter'd as it were again into their childhood beginning at their Alphabet nor knew what had been at home or abroad but through a cloud and by hear-say Therefore they believe that the head of all