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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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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
not whether to referre it and God created not accidents without subjects The worke of the second day were two-fold 1. That most vast firmament viz. that space between the earth and skie the Hebrew word signifieth the extending of any thing or the thing it selfe 2. The division of the waters above from the Waters below that is of the clouds which are in the middle Region of the Aire from the Fountaines Rivers and Sea which remain under the lowest Region But by the name of Clouds and Waters above the firmament we may understand all the Meteors both waterie and fiery which were created then in their causes Jer. 10. 13. The approb●tion given of other dayes is here omitted in the Hebrew not because Hell was created on this day as the Hebrews say but because this work of distguishing the waters was yet imperfect and finished on the third day The worke of the third day was three-fold 1. The conflux or gathering of the waters below into one place in regard of the greater part of them called Sea that so they might not over-flow the earth and by this command of Gods they still continve so Luther said well that all a mans life upon the earth is as great a miracle as the Israelites passing through the red sea 2. The drying of the earth to make it habitable and fit for nourishing plants and living creatures 3. The producing of Herbes and Trees of all kinds The works of the fourth day were the Lights both greater as Sun and Moon and lesser as the other starres placed in the Heavens as certaine receptacles or vessells wherein the Lord did gather light which before was scattered in the whole body of the heavens 2. The use of them they were to give light to the world to distinguish the night from the day the day from the week as also to distinguish seasons Summer and Winter Spring Autumne Seed-time and Harvest They are Signes 1. Naturall by them we may guesse of the Weather Matth. 16. 2 3. from the colour and figure of the Moon some will conjecture what weather is like to be 2. Civill Husbandmen Gardners Fishermen Mariners gather observations from them 3. Ecclesiasticall to know the New Moons and spirituall st●ange apparitions in them are signes of Gods anger as extraordinary Eclipses Blazing-starres The works of the fifth day were The Fishes of the Sea and Fowles of the Aire divers i● nature shape qualities vertues and manners of living the fishes were appointed to increase multiply and fill the waters and the fowles to increase multiply and flie in the aire The worke of the sixt day is two-fold 1. All terrestriall bruite creatures Beasts Cattle and every thing which creepeth upon the earth in their kinde having vertue and power from God to increase and multiply 2. Man male and Female Adams body of the dust of the earth viz. that hee might have in his owne bosome an argument and incentive of humility left for his excellency he should waxe proud against God Eves body out of a rib of Adam for a signe of most neare conjunction and love betwixt man and wife The Creation ceased in man as in the Master-piece of Gods skil and as in the end to which all other things were destinate For all other Creatures by the bountie of the Creator were to serve Adam as their Lord and Prince CHAP. III. I Shall now insist more largely on the particular Creatures and draw some Consectaries from them saying little of the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men because I intend more fully to treat of them by themselves The Creation of the Heavens is a great and wonderfull worke of God the Heavens were not alwayes neither came they by chance or any other way but by the wonderfull power of God creating them So the Scripture telleth us often Psal. 102. 15. Esay 40. 12. and 22. and 42. 5. and 45. 2. and 48. 13. God frequently challengeth to himselfe the glory of this exceeding great worke alleadging it as an effect of his wonderfull power and greatnesse The excellency and greatnesse of this worke appeares in divers things 1. The abstrusenesse of the matter 2. The perfection of the forme 3. The exceeding hugenesse of its quantity 4. The height of it 5. It s swift motion Lastly the excellent usefulnesse of if for the Creatures here below and all other things contained in it First the matter of the Heavens is darke and hidden and goes beyond the power of mortall creatures certainly to determine of it Philosophers know not what to say here some of them doe thinke that the upper heavens are made of the same matter with these inseriour bodies and some againe do deny it and thinke it consists of another which they call the fifth E●sence because they perceive it to bee of such different working and qualities front the things below 2. The perfection of the Figure of the heavens and all the Starres of heaven doth marvellously grace it for it is of an Orbicular or round forme a Circle encompassing the earth and waters round which is of it selfe also for the maine Orbicular and this concerning the Starres our senses do declare and concerning the whole Heavens the motions of the Starres which our eye doth tell us for the Sunne riseth every morning over against the place it did set the evening before and so evinceth that its course is round The round figure is the most beautifull strong perfect and capacions figure and this may minde us of Gods Inf●●itenesse Perfection and unchangeablenesse 3. Consider the hugenesse of its quantity for who can measure the back-side of heaven or tell how many miles space that mighty Circle doth containe the Globe of Earth and water is very great but all that is as it were an undiscernable Point compared to the whole Globe of heaven how incomprehen●●bly great is he which hath made a building so great The whole circuit of the heavens wherein are the fixed Staus is reckoned by Astronomers to be a thousand and 17. millions of miles at least 4. It is a high and stately building Job 22. 1● 160. millions of miles high from earth to heaven it is so farre by the Astronomers rules It is a wonder saith one that we can look up to so admirable a height and that the very eye is not tired in the way If this ascending line could be drawne right forward some that have calculated curiously have found it five hundred yeares journey unto the starrie heaven This putteth us in minde of the infinite mercy and goodnesse of God Psalme 103. 3. and of his Majestie the highest heavens are a fit Palace for the most High Psal. 104. 3. 5. It s admirable swift motion and revolution in 24. hours which our conceits cannot follow teacheth us that God is farre more swift and ready to helpe us in our need A Bullet out of a Musquet flies swiftly
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
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
our election sure by our calling Rom. 8. 29 30. and our effectuall calling by two things 1. by a new light 2. a new life 2 Cor. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. John 12. 36. Ephes. 5. 8. We have a new knowledge wrought in us of our selves we see our miserie by sin and our inability to help our selves Rom. 2. 23. 2 of God God in Jesus Christ is discovered to us 2 Pet. 1. 3. We see our need of Christ and know him to be a mediatour who must reconcile God and us 2. a new life is wrought in us Ephes. 2. 1. We now die to sin and live to God 1. By faith Rev. 17. 14. These three are put together faithfull chosen and called 2. By new obedience CHAP. II. 2. The Execution of Gods Decree GOD executes his Decree by Actions Creation and Providence Gods workes are in time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Governement and preservation Creation is taken 1. Strictly when God makes any Creature of nothing meerly of nothing not as if nothing were the matter but the terme so the souls of men and Angels are created of nothing 2. Largely when of some prejasent matter but very unfit and indisposed a creature is made as Adam of the earth Creation is the action of God whereby out of nothing he brought forth nature it selfe and all things in nature both substances and accidents in and with the substances and finished them in the space of sixe dayes both to his owne glory and the salvation of the Elect. Or it is an action whereby God the Father by his word and holy Spirit made all things exceeding good for the glory of his name Or thus Creation is a transient or externall action of God whereby in the beginning He made the world by a meere command out of his owne free will in sixe dayes space to the glory of his name 1. An action not a motion or change motion argueth some succession but in the things created the fieri factum esse is all one nor is it a change because that supposeth some alteration in the Agent 2. Transient it passeth from the Agent to the thing created whereas in immanent actions as Gods will decrees and personall actions they abide in himselfe 3. Of God The efficient cause of Creation is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Creation is the proper worke of God alone so that He is God which created the world and he created the world who is God Jer. 10. 11. It is without controversie that the worke of creation agrees to God the Father the same is expressely given to the Sonne John 1 3. Col. 1. 16. and to the Holy Ghost also Psal. 33. 6. 4. In the beginning By the Scripture it is a matter of faith to hold that the world was not from all eternity in the beginning that notes not that there was time first and then God created the world for time is a creature and concreated but it denotes orde that is at first 5. The world that is the Heaven and Earth and all things contained in them Acts 4. 4. and 17. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that well ordered decent beautifull and comely frame of heaven and earth 6. By his meere command as appeares Gen. 1. Let there be light let there be heavens w●ich argues his omnipotencie 7. Out of his owne free will for God did not need the world and therefore he created it no sooner 8. The finall cause to the glorie of his name Rom. 2. 20. Three Attrbiutes especially manifest themselves in this work of Creation Gods power wisedome goodnesse his power in that he made all thing● by a word and of nothing his wisedome is seene in the order and exceeding wonderfull and particular uses all creatures have his goodnesse in that he would communicate being to the creatures He needed not the world but was happie enough in himselfe without men or Angels The worke of Creation say some set out generally in a generall proposition In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth Which proposition He after explains by its parts That the world was not from eternity but was made by God these arguments may perswade First and principally Faith Heb. 11. 3. which is grounded upon divers places of Scripture as the first and second chapters of Genesis 38 and 39 chapters of Job and some Psalmes almost whole as 104. and 136. this also is the first Article of our Creede that the world was created in time by God The Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. and 17. 24. doth point out God to the Heathen by this worke above others Secondly and probably the light of nature shining in these reasons 1. The originall of Nations laid downe by Moses Gen. 10. and else where which could not be fained by him since some memorie of them was then extant among many which yet in progresse of time was extinguished 2. The beginning of Arts the first inventers whereof are known and in what time they flourished for it is not probable that so many ages before mankind lived without arts and that in these last times they were all both invented perfected 3. The newnesse of all Heathenish histories the ancientest of which tell of nothing before Noah's flood or the beginning of the Assyrian Empire under Ninus The holy history it selfe is only of 4000. yeares or thereabout which neverthelesse i● the greatest monument of antiquity Now it would be a most unworthy reproach and contumelie cast upon all those men who had lived so many infinite ages agoe to say that they were so ignorant that they could not or so sloathfull that they would not deliver in writing what was done in their times 4. The decay of mans bodie and age which from a great strength quantity bignesse and time of life is now come down to a narrow scantling which if had decreased so alwais in infinite ages it would by this time have been brought almost to nothing The certaine series and order of causes and impossibility of their proceeding in infinitum for it must needs be that there should be one first which is the universall cause but first it is not unlesse it be one nor one except it be God 6. As a thing is so it workes but God doth not depend upon another in his being therefore neither in working doth he require a pre-existent matter 7. Art presupposeth nature and nature matter but God in working is a more excellent cause then art or nature therefore presupposeth nothing in working 8. The first cause viz. God is infinite therefore he can do whatsoever implyeth not a contradiction but the Creation of things in time implyeth it not 9. Whatsoever perisheth hath a beginning the world doth perish because all its parts decay and are subject to corruption therefore the whole The Angels and soules of men are changeable by nature as appears by the
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
pleasant a place was Paradise and what made it so but the artificiall order fashion and growing of all sorts of trees fit for food and shadow Wee must observe our owne faultinesse with sorrow and humiliation for that we have not observed more seriously and usefully this worke of God Wee have perpetuall use of Timber and fuell we eate much fruit from these trees we reape the benefit of this work of God from time to time We sit upon wood we feed upon wood we dwell under wood under trees cut downe and fitted for our use wee cannot step out of doors but our eyes are fixed upon some tree or other great or small but we take not notice of God in this worke and praise his name that made all these trees Let us mend this fault and stir up our selves to consider God in this worke praise him for fruitfull trees and all other kinds of trees Let us acknowledge his power wisdome goodnesse in them his exceeding bounty tender care to man that hath so furnished the world with innumerable sorts of trees Let us bee carefull of preserving these workes of nature for our owne use and the use of Posterity let us set and plant trees for after ages CHAP. V. ON the fourth day were made the Sunne Moone and Starres which are as it were certaine Vessells wherein the Lord did gather the light which before was scattered in the whole body of the Heavens The Hebrew word translated Lights signifieth Lamps Torches or other things which shine forth and give light It was a great work of God in making and ordering the Sun Moone and other heavenly bodies This worke is often spoken of in Scripture Gen. 1. 14. Psalm 104. 19. 20. 21 22 23. Psalme 136. 7. 8. 9. Psalm 148. He calleth upon the Sunne Moone and Starres of light to praise God and Psal. 19. Hee saith of the Sun God hath set a Tabernacle for the Sun In another place he saith he guideth the stars and calleth them by their names The wonderfulnesse of these works of God is seene First in the very matter and substance of them which is wonderfull and inexplicable who can tell what the Sunne is made of 2. In their quantity both in respect of multitude greatnesse For multitude they be innumerable and for magnitude many of the starres are farre greater then the earth 3. In their qualities which are principally three 1. Their figure the fittest for motion and use round and orbicular 2. Their brightnesse and shining especially the splendour of the Sun and Moon 3. Their durablenesse they doe not change 4. In their motion which is very swift and regular 5. In their effects working so constantly and variously in the seasons of the yeare The most beautifull bodies of the Starres which we see fastned in Heaven are not Gods as Plato in Timaeo called the Starres by the worshipping of which the blinde Gentiles and the Jewes also horribly polluted themselves but excellent workes of God by the contemplation of which wee ought to be stirred up to acknowledge and celebrate the Majestie glory wisedome and power of the Creator Psal. 8. 3. 4. First for the Sunne that is called the greatest light and that most truly and properly both for the body and substance of it and also for the brightnesse and abundance of light which is in it For the most skilfull Mathematicians have demonstrated that the very body of the Sunne doth exceed the whole earth in bignesse 166. times King David did aptly compare the Sun to a Giant for strength refreshed with wine for the heate to run his course for his swift motion The Sun is the glorious servant of all the world therefore it hath its name in Hebrew from serving The continuall motion great swiftnesse exceeding heate admirable brightnsse of the Sun doth utter the praise of God Psal. 19. 3 4 5. The Sun is the fountaine of heate and light the life of the Universe the great Torch of the world and the Ornament of Heaven The Sun is fitly scituated being in the midst of the sixe other Planets neither too high nor too low Altins egressus coelestia tecta cremabit Inferius terras medio tutissimus ibis Ovid. lib. 2. de Metamorph. See Dr. Brownes Enquiries lib. 6. chap. 5. Secondly the Moone is also called a great light not for the bignesse of the body of it but because it is the lowest of all the Planets nearest unto the earth and therfore appears biggest of all next unto the Sunne and gives to the earth a greater light then any of the starres which are farre greater in substance and brighter in light Some say it is the cause of the ebbing and flowing of the Sea for it agreeth exactly with the revolution of the Moon it causeth it 1. by its motion as it brings its beames 2. by its beame as that brings the influence 3. by infusion as that stirs the waters It is called in Latine Luna à lucendo saith Tullie or because solâ lucet nocte saith Varro In Hebrew Jareach Jerech which words signifie a month because it is renewed every moneth A starre is the thicker part of Heaven round and full of light In the day the glistering light of the Sunne obscures all the stars but in the night how many hundred thousand of them doe we see besides those that are hidden from us in the other part of the Sphere which is not seene by us The number of stars set upon the Globe are 1025. and divers of them have proper names All the stars of the Heaven are not numbred nor cannot since divers of them are so small but these 1025. are the principallest amongst them and all that have ever beene accounted of Philosophers distinguish them into fixed stars and Planets The Planets are apparently 7. Saturn Jupiter Mars then the Sun in the midst as it were the King of all after Venus Mercury and the Moone Neither Moses Job nor the Psalmes the most frequent in Astronomicall observations mention any of the Planets but the Sun and Moone Of these stars some are greater then other and are distinguished into sixe sorts of bignesses Their proportions are thus delivered viz. A star of the first bignesse or magnitude is 107 times bigger then the earth A Starre of the second magnitude ninety times bigger then the Earth A Starre of the third bignesse 72. times bigger then the Earth A Star of the fourth bignesse is 54. times bigger then the globe of the earth A starre of the fift magnitude is 36. times bigger then the Earth A starre of the sixt bignesse is eighteene times bigger then the globe of the earth We are to bewaile our own great folly and blindness that wee have not more admired honoured feared loved that great worker to whom these Creatures doe point us We do not often enough tell our selves this Moone this Sunne these stars could not nor
made and adorned so it is probable that the Angels were made together in a great multitude After the Heavens their habitation was finished Chemnit in loc commun Gen. 2. 1. The Heavens and all the host of them It is plain from Job 38. 7. that they were made before the Earth When God laid the foundations of the earth and laid the Corner-stone thereof then the Sons of God that is the Angels Job 1. 7. Snouted for joy An Element is that whereof any thing is compounded and it selfe uncompoun●ed Each element is superiour to other not more in place then dignitie The dry land is called earth which is a firme cold dry Element round and heavie hanging unmoveably in the midst of the world fit for habitation The Psalmist describes the creation of the earth Psal. 104. vers 5 Who hath laid the foundation of the earth or founded the earth upon his Basis that it should not be removed for ever The earth is the heaviest and lowest element It is so made that it doth stand firme in its place so that neither the whole earth is moved out of its place nor yet the great parts of it This is an exceeding wonderfull worke of God to settle the earth so upon certaine foundations that it is not shaken out of its place Take a little piece of earth not bigger then ones fist nay then ones eye or the apple of it hold it up in the aire let it fall it will never cease moving till come to lye upon some solid bodie that it may hold it up stay the motiō of it Now how is it that this whole lump of earth the whole body I say of the earth hangeth fast in the wide and open aire and doth not sway and move now hither and now thither what is it that holdeth it up so stedfast in the very midst of the aire It is Gods worke who hath founded it on his Basis that it cannot be moved This worke is often mentioned in the Scripture Joh 26. 7. There is nothing which might hold it up yet behold it hangeth still and quiet as if it had some pillar or base upon which to rest it selfe The Lord doth in larger words commend it to the consideration of Job when himselfe comes to speake with him Job 38. 4. 6. God there compareth himselfe to a builder that layes the foundation and then sets up the building by line and measure and convinceth Job of his weaknes that knoweth not how this earth should be set up or founded whereas the Lord himself effected this building long before Job was David telleth of it Psal. 24. 2. as a ground of Gods right unto it and to all things that are in it for saith he He hath founded it upon the seas and established it upon the flouds And Solomon mentions it Prov. 8. 29. and 30. 4. Eccl. 1. 4. This is a great work because it is both necessary and unsearcheable It is necessary for it is the cause of the order of things in all the world and of their not being jumbled and confounded together If the lowest part of any building be not firme all that is built upon it will totter and tumble and come downe quickly so if the earth this lowest part of the world should shake or reele and be apt to move hither and thither the things that be upon it by nature or that are built upon it by the workmanship of man could not possibly subsist or endure Rivers and Channels would be daily altered dry ground would ever and anon become Sea and Sea dry ground trees would often totter and fall or else be changed from place to place building and houses would still bee falling and tumbling down off the earth did it not keepe its own room nay heaven earth would come together utter confusion would overturne the face of the earth and men beasts and all things below would come to nothing So needfull it was for this great Architect to set the Corner-stone of the earth fast firm and immoveable But the cause of it is unsearcheable who can find out to the full the reason of this so necessary a work Every heavy thing we see must have something to keepe it up something on which to rest it selfe that it may goe no further but abide where it is but what doth this earth rest on How is it held so even in the very midst and sweyed neither one way nor another who can tell me a full just satisfactory reason in nature We must not thinke that God doth hold it up by an immediate violent supernaturall or miraculous working but in a naturall way by ordering the principles of nature so that they shall necessarily concurre to effect this setlednesse Philosophers give this reason of it they say the simple bodies were made some of a light subtill thin and spirituall nature and their propertie is to ascend to goe upward still so as the light still flies higher and some of a more grosse thicke and heavie nature and the property of these is to move downward and still the heavier to make it selfe a way through the lighter and to presse toward the Center that is the middle point of the whole round of the world for it must bee confessed that the world is round Wherefore seeing every part and portion of the earth presseth toward the very middle point of all it cannot be but that all must stand fast in the midst seeing each part thronging the other and leaning upon the other toward the very middle all will bee quiet if the parts be even poised But now how heavie things should be made so to move toward the Center and how each part should so evenly move and a number of other questions more let them answer that are able especially seeing the earth doth not carry in it selfe to sense a perfect even and smooth roundnesse it is hard then to answer to the question which God propounded to Job upon what bee the sockets of it fastned It is a worke of God exceeding our capacitie and must therefore quicken and call up our admiration We should blame our selves for so seldom putting our selves in mind of this great work to stir up our selves to magnifie the Author of it and make it an argument of our blessing his name for which David speaketh of it Psal. 104. or of humbling our selves before him in acknowledgment of his power and wisdome and of our weaknesse and follie to which end it is mentioned in other places or indeed to any good purpose of informing our selves the better either of his nature or our dutie Oh how brutish and blockish are we So strange so mightie a worke is done and continued in our sight here it was done before I was here and here it will remaine and bee continually done after I am gone hence I enjoy the benefit of it as well as any other and with all others and yet
did not make themselves They could not possibly be without any beginning at all for they are but parts of the whole world and no part of any whole can be eternall because there must be something before that did unite those parts together wherfore they were made by some superiour essence and more excellent then themselves and that is God How great how wise how good how infinitely excellent is He whose hand framed and ordered these things The Sunne ariseth to us constantly the Moone also keepes her course with like constancie Doth not that mighty armie of stars which in a cleare night shew themselves even speake to us as it were to consider of his incomprehensible excellencie which made and rules them Let us accustome our selves hereafter to these meditations if God had not beautified heaven with these excellent bodies light and heate could not have been equally and in due quantity conveyed into all the quarters of the world We must observe this worke so as to praise God for it to informe our selves of his nature and strive to worke more love feare obedience and confidence in our selves towards him The Apostle saith that in the times before the Gospell the Gentiles might have found God as it were by groping Acts 17. 27. Now we that have the Scripture to direct us as in the day-light shall not wee finde God out by these illustrious works of his CHAP. VI. THe fift dayes worke was the Creation of all living creatures which live and move in the two moist Elements the water and the aire viz. Fishes and moving creatures which live and move in the waters and all kinde of Fowles which flye in the open Region of the aire divers in nature shape qualities and manner of living The Hebrew verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated the moving creature is derived is used as here so in other Scriptures frequently first to signifie creeping or moving forward without feete as Genes 7. 21. and Levit. 11. 19. and secondly also to bring forth abundantly as here and also Exod. 1. 7. Fishes breed and bring forth young in great abundance more then any other creatures do by the multitude of spawn they would encrease beyond all measure and number if by one meanes or other the spawne were not devoured and consumed Who can render a reason of their ability to swim so in the waters to support themselves in the midst of the waters convey themselves up and down in it Fishes are in Scripture termed Reptilia Psal. 104. 25. In the great and wide Sea there are things creeping innumerable both small and great so called because things when they swim seeme to creep along in the water As birds have their wings and traines by meanes whereof they cut their way and make smooth passage through the aire so fishes are furnished with finnes wherewith they guide themselves in their swimming and cut the current of the streames aud waves for their more easie passage wherein their course is directed by their taile as shtps are conducted by their Helm The Sea gives more and greater dainties then the earth those that did most affect to please their pallate of olde set great store by fishes and paid dearer for them then flesh God hath furnished them with a strong power of encreasing Birds bring forth some foure or five in a nest some three and some but two the most but twenty as the little Wren for being so little the kinde would bee consumed by the things which devoure such weake creatures if those that be did not bring forth very many but every fish brings forth a great multitude many hundreds as we may see in their spawne That God should give unto these things a power to multiply so very fast is wonderfull and it is agreeable to reason too for the fishes doe more devoure one another then the beasts doe the greater being much more ravenous then any beast as being bigger and their stomacks by an antiperistasis of the cold water more vehement in digesting They are said to bee without number Psal. 104. 25. not simply but to us for wee cannot tell the number of them though God which made them doe know the particular number of them Hee can tell how many fishes there bee in the Sea though to us they exceed the power of counting yet he hath the precise and exact number of them We know not the kinds of fishes how much lesse the particulars There be saith Plinie of fishes and other creatures living in the Sea one hundred seventy and sixe severall and distinct kindes What Philosopher can tel how many Dolphins Herrings Whales sword-fishes there be in the Sea The Echeneis Remora or stop-ship but halfe a foot long is able to stay the greatest ship under saile Keckermannus humori frigido à Remora fuso adscribere videtur qui aquam circa gubernaculum conglaciet in Disput. Phisic The Cramp-fish Torpedo is able to benum and mortifie the armes of the lustiest and strongest Fishers that be by touching onely the end of any part of an angle-rod which they hold in their hands although they stand aloft and a great way from her hence it hath its name quod torpore manus afficiat because it benummeth the hands The Naturalists tell us of one fish which they call the Uranoscope which hath but one eye and that in a verticall point on the top of the head directly upward by which it avoids all rocks and dangers There have been known Whales sixe hundred foot long and three hundred 60. foot broad some like mountains some like Islands God himselfe speaking of his owne power of all the creatures rehearseth onely two the Behemoth Job 40. 15. to the end that is the Elephant and the Leviathan Job 41. per totum that is the Whale this being the greatest among the Fishes as that among the beasts The Sword-fish hath a beake or bill sharp pointed wherewith hee will drive through the sides and planks of a shippe and bore them so that they shall sink withall The Dolphin is said to bee a fish of such exceeding great swiftnesse as that oftentimes he outstrippeth a ship under sail in the greatest ruffe and merriest wind in swiftness of course In this fish is propounded to us an example of charity and kind affection toward our Children as Plinie in his description of the nature of this fish sheweth and Aelianus l. 5. c. 18 As also of his singular love toward man whereof Aelianus produceth strange examples It may seeme strange that it should please the Pope to forbid flesh to men rather then fish i. the lesse dainty and luxurious before the more for what is of some alleadged that the curse fell upon the earth and not the Seas is fondly affirmed seeing when it is said cursed bee the earth By earth is meant the whole globe of the earth consisting