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A67073 The history of the creation as it is written by Moses in the first and second chapters of Genesis : plainly opened and expounded in severall sermons preached in London : whereunto is added a short treatise of Gods actuall Providence in ruling, ordering, and governing the world and all things therein / by G.W. Walker, George, 1581?-1651. 1641 (1641) Wing W359; ESTC R23584 255,374 304

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THE HISTORY OF THE CREATION AS IT IS WRITTEN BY MOSES in the first and second CHAPTERS of GENESIS plainly opened and expounded in severall Sermons preached in London Whereunto is added a short Treatise of GODS actuall Providence in ruling ordering and governing the world and all things therein By G. W. Batchelour of Divinity and Pastour of St. Iohn Evangelist LONDON Printed for John Bartlet at the signe of the gilt Cup neare St. Austins-gate in Pauls Church-yard 1641. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE AND NOBLE Lords FRANCIS Earle of BEDFORD Robert Earle of Warwick William Viscount Say and Seale Edward Viscount Mandevilc Robert Lord Brooke John Lord Roberts and the rest of the Honourable Lords Committees in the upper nou●e of the high Court of Parliament Grace and Peace with multiplicity of all Blessings temporall and eternall Most Noble LORDS THat which the learned Doctours of the Jews doe say of their Masorah to wit That it is an hedge or defence to the Law We Christians may more truly say of our weekly Sabbath the Lords day that it is the hedge of defence to true Christian Religion For as their Masorah which was their Annotations upon all the Scriptures of the old Testament shewing the genuine reading and signification of every word in the Hebrew text with what pricks vowels and accents it ought to be and was anciently written and read by Moses and the Prophets and by tradition from Ezra and other succeeding Fathers in all ages delivered over unto them did serve as an hedge and fence to keep the Scriptures of the old Testament pure from all corruption and alteration so that if any Scribe did in writing any copy of them omit or adde one word or letter or alter and change any vowell point or accent his errour might easily by the notes and rules of their Masorah be discerned and amended So the Lords holy weekly Sabbath being rightly observed according to the Law of God and the first institution and sanctification of it that is First by cessation and rest from all worldly cares and all secular affairs in respect wherof it is called in Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sabbath that is rest and cessation Secondly by devoting it only to the worship and service of God and by sanctifying it with preaching reading and hearing of the word prayer meditation and other works of piety and exercises of true Religion in which respect it is called the Lords day that is the day of the Lord Christ consecrated to his honor and to the service and wor●hip of God in his name It is most certainly as we find by experience a strong hedge and fence to true Christian Religion by which true piety and the true knowledge and worship of God and true Faith in Christ are upheld maintained increased and continued among all Christian nations from generation to generation Without observation of this weekly Sabbath and keeping this day of the Lord Christ holy by holy assemblies the publik and private worship of God the knowledge of Christ the memory of our Redemption by him and of his finishing and perfecting that great work and resting from it in his resurrection the publike preaching reading and hearing of the word and all other exercises of Christian religion which are the most effectuall ordinary meanes of grace and furtherances to eternall life and blessednesse would undoubtedly grow out of use and at length utterly decay and vanish This consideration did move me to insist more largely upon this subject and to make many Sermons upon that Text Gen. 2. 2 3. which briefly relates the first institution of the Sabbath on the seventh day in the first weeke of the world and Gods blessing and sanctifying of every seventh day in every week to be an holy Sabbath to his people Out of which Sermons first publikly preached to mine owne peculiar flocke I did afterwards compose this Treatise at the importunity of some of my best affected hearers and imparted severall written copies of it unto divers of them having at that time no hope to get it licensed for the Presse For by Gods speciall providence I having handled the doctrine of the Creation out of the 1. Chap. of Genesis was by my order of preaching and expounding of that Scripture led along and brought to this Text concerning Gods sanctifying of the seventh day at that very time when a book of liberty for sports on the Lords day was by the Bishops in every Diocesse sent to every Parish Church and commanded to be publickly read by every Minister in time of divine Service in the audience of all the people And because I proceeded to handle this subject as the order of my text did lead me and durst not balk that part of Gods word I was three severall times convented before my Ordinary and admonished under paine of suspension to proceed no further in this doctrine not for any errour which could be objected against any part or passage in it but only because the times would not beare it And because I did not hold it fit nor safe for me to obey man rather then God by concealing from my flock any part of Gods truth and shunning to declare unto them the whole counsell of God I have undergone the high displeasure of that Primate to whose jurisdiction my Church doth belong who upon divers false informations of catchers which have bin imployed to entrap me in my words that they might have something wherof to accuse me hath caused me to be convented before the Kings Majesty and the Lords of his Honourable Privy Counsell and hath charged and accused me to be a Preacher of factious and seditious Doctrine and for many years the great troubler of the City of London Wherupon I was committed close prisoner for two and twenty weeks and through close custody was by sicknesse brought neare unto death and could not obtain so much liberty as to be confined to the limits of my brothers house for the safety of my life upon bayle of a 1000 pound given untill by the testimony of fifty five Neighbour Ministers of best report in and about the City I was declared to be innocent and free from all the crimes of which I was accused Now blessed be God for your happy Assembly in this most hopefull Parliament by which I have been eased of my strait bonds and the times are so changed that this Treatise and divers others of my labours are licensed to passe by the Presse into the publik view of the world I should not have dared to commend it to the sight and grave Judgement of your Honours If your godly Zeale for the sanctifying of the Lords day and for the honouring of the name of the Sabbath which appeared most evidently to us all who of late were present at the time when that scandalous libell intituled Sunday no Sabbath was most accurately and judiciously sifted and examined by your Honours and justly censured and condemned to the fire had
this shewes the infinite power and omnipotency of God that he can make the most excellent immortall and glorious creatures greatest in power and strength meerly out of nothing by his owne hand immediately The wisest and most able and skilfull Artificers and Master-workmen in all the world and among all the sons of men doe stand in need of divers helps and instruments for the effecting and perfecting of any good worke and without them he can doe little or nothing He must have servants and inferiour workmen under him he must have good tooles and instruments fitted for his hand and he must have also good materials to worke upon for he can frame and make no good worke out of course stuffe and base metalls But lo here an admirable Artificer and Work-master before whom all the art and skill of all creatures is as vanity and nothing The Lord God the Creatour and Former of all things he alone hath made all the world and he hath not onely made his owne materials out of which he framed this great fabrick of the visible world and all this without any instruments or working-tooles but also hee hath made in a moment in the first beginning together with the glorious highest heavens the Palace and Throne of his glorious and infinite Majesty the most glorious and excellent of all his creatures the Angels and that out of nothing which are great in power wonderfull in strength and admirable in swiftnesse immortall spirits able to destroy a whole army of men in a night and to overturne kingdomes and cities in one day at whose sight and presence valiant Gideon a mighty man of warre and the great Captaine of Israel was so affraid and astonished that he cried Aha Lord God I shall die Zachary an holy Priest was stricken dumbe for a time And the hardy Roman souldiers which watched Christs sepulchre were astonished and became as dead men Who therefore can sufficiently admire this mighty Creatour What heart is able to conceive or tongue to expresse his wisdome power and omnipotency Let us in silence adore him and tremble and feare before him not with servile and slavish horrour but with holy feare and reverence Let us flee to him for all help succour and strength in all distresses for supply of all our wants for guidance and direction in all our waies If we be assured of his favour and that he is with us and on our side and that we stand for his cause let us not care who be against us nor feare what men and Divels can doe unto us If we want meanes and instruments let vs not be dismayed for he can worke without them If we want necessary matter he can make it or worke without it and bring things most excellent out of nothing For this very end the Lord hath shewed himselfe and his divine power in the creation and by the creatures that we might know and acknowledge love and honour serve and worship him and upon all occasions give him the glory due to his name and tell the people what great and wonderfull things he hath done and how by his owne arme and power he hath brought great and strange things to passe Secondly this Doctrine serves to discover the errour and falshood of divers opinions published and maintained by men of learning As first that of Origen Basil and other Greek fathers who dreamed that the Angels were created many ages before the corporeall and visible world 2. And that held by some others That they were created after the creation of Adam 3. That the creation of Angels is not mentioned by Moses in the history of the creation but the time thereof is altogether concealed which is the opinion of Pererius and of some Fathers and Schoolmen 4. That opinion of some Ancients who held That God by the ministery of Angels created this visible world This Doctrine proves them all to be vaine dreames and fictions in that it shewes plainly by plaine testimonies and solid arguments out of Gods holy Word that the Angels were created in and with the highest heavens neither before nor after them and are the inhabitants and host of those heavens mentioned Gen. 2. 1. and that expresly by Moses 5. Also for that opinion of the Popish Schoolmen and of their Master Aristotle who hold that Angels move the spheres of the visible heavens and guide the severall motions of the Sun Moon and Starres it is in no case to be allowed For as the Scriptures doe expresly ascribe the creation of all things to God alone and to his eternall Word and Spirit and never mention Angels as creators working with God in the creation but as creatures first made in and with the highest heavens and rejoycing at Gods founding of the earth So they affirme that in God all things move and have their being and he gives the law and rule of motion to the Sun Moon and Starres guides them by his hand causeth them to rise and set and brings forth all their host by number Isa. 40. 26. and 45. 12. And this Doctrine which teacheth us that the Angels were made to dwell in the highest heavens and there they have their residence not in the spheres of the visible heavens it overthrowes all such conceipts makes them vanish like smoak and drives them away like chaffe before the wind Wherefore let us all acknowledge that as God created Angels of nothing by himselfe alone and did give motion to the heavens so without help of Angels he doth continue the same motion and did create all other inferiour things Let us take heed that we give not Gods glory to any other but let us confesse that all thankes for all blessings are due to him in him things live move and have their being and he turneth about the spheres of heaven by his counsels that they may doe whatsoever he commandeth them upon the face of the world in the earth Job 37. 12. From the use of this Doctrine I proceed to the Conclusions which necessarily flow from it 1. Corollary or Conclusion The first is That Angels by creation and in their nature and substance are the first and chiefest of all Gods creatures far more excellent then man in his best naturall being in the state of innocency this Doctrine floweth necessarily from the former For first God in wisdome hath made all things the best and chiefest of creatures for the best places and inferiour creatures for inferiour p●aces as we see by experience in all things visible And therefore undoubtedly the Angels which were created to be the naturall inhabitants of the highest and best place must needs be the chiefest creatures and the most excellent in nature and substance Secondly those creatures which God framed in the creation to dwell nearest to his glorious presence even with his heavenly Majesty and to stand before his Throne in the heaven of heavens must needs be in their nature and substance most excellent and farre
judge any that is by his owne proper act of judgement but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne that he may have a hand in all judgements together with himselfe and Iohn 16. 13 14. speaking of that speciall illumination of mens hearts and inward teaching which seemes most proper to the Spirit he saith it is not of himselfe alone but it is what he hath heard and received from the Father and the Sonne And therefore the second Branch is manifest that the doer of the outward workes of God is Jehovah our God and all the three Persons in God The third Branch comprehends in it the outward moving cause of all these outward workes namely Gods owne will and pleasure for he is said to do them according to his eternall purpose and after the counsell of his owne will This is expressed in the description and in the words of the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whatsoever the Lord pleased that is whatsoever is according to the Lords will and pleasure that he hath done and this is testified in other Scriptures as Psal. 115. 3. where it is said that the Lord doth whatsoever pleaseth him and Isa. 46. 10. where the Lo 〈…〉 saith I will do all my pleasure and Ionah 1. 14. All which places shew that first the Lord hath a mind and pleasure to doe such things and therupon he doth them Also Ephes. 1. 11. It is said he doth worke all things after the counsell of his will And Acts 2. 23. 4. 28. the worke of our Redemption by Christ and all that he did and suffered is said to be done by the determinate counsell of God Therfore this Branch is manifest namely That Gods will and pleasure is the only inward mooving cause of all his outward works and that they are nothing but the execution of his eternall will and decree The fourth Branch by which these outward works are specially distinguished from his inward operation comprehends in it the subject wherein these workes do subsist and the circumstance of time and place wherein they are done For these workes are not done within God himselfe neither doe they subsist in his Essence as his inward operations do but they are Extra Dei essentiam without Gods essence they are done in all the world and upon the creatures some in Heaven and some in Earth others in the Sea and all deepe places as my Text saith and they have their circumstances of time and place as God hath appointed from all eternity The Creation was in the first beginning of time in the first six dayes of the world Gen. 1. The Redemption wrought by Christ in the midst of yeares betweene the Law and the Gospell Hab. 3. 2. and upon the mountaine where Hierusalem stood Isa. 25. 6 7. The great execution shall be at the end of the world in the last day of Judgement and the works of Gods governement and actuall providence as they are divers so they are done at divers times and in divers places of the world as experience teacheth on the very day which the Lord appointed did the flood come upon the old world Gen. 7. 11. In the same day which God had fore-told was Israel delivered out of Aegypt Exod. 21. 41. And howsoever the words of the Apostle Act. 17. 18. intimate that in God and not without him We live moove and have our being yet we are not thus to understand that these things are and that we subsist in Gods Essence and that we are so in God as his inward operations and eternall decrees are But that we all are compassed about with Gods presence and essentiall power which are every where and by him as by the chiefe efficient cause and authour of life motion and being are sustained and upheld in life being and motion continually For to be in God that is to subsist in his essence doth necessarily imply coeternity and consubstantiality with God Quicquid est in Deo Deus est nothing can be within his Essence but it must be coeternall with God and of the same Substance with him Hee who denies this must needes deny God to be immutable and most simple free from all composition Therfore this Branch also is most manifest and doth containe in it nothing but solid Truth The fifth Branch containes in it the manner of Gods outward works to wit that in respect of God himselfe they are done with such power as cannot be resisted and in respect of the event they are certaine infallible and cannot faile This is truely collected from the Text For it is said that all Whatsoever the Lord pleaseth hee doth or hath done which shewes that not one jot of his will and pleasure failes but comes to passe If his will or pleasure could be resisted or any thing prevented which he willeth to worke surely the Divell who is so cunning watchfull and malitious would in some things have defeated God or this either by himselfe or some of his instruments But this Text affirmes the contrary that whatsoever the Lord pleased he hath done in all the world Therfore in respect of God they are all unresistable and in respect of the event infallible And this David testifieth Psal. 115. 3. saying The Lord doth whatsoever pleaseth him And Isa. 46. 10. my counsell shall stand and I will performe all my pleasure yea because these are voluntary workes of God and are willed and decreed in his secret counsell from all eternity as I have noted before therefore they must needs be unresistable for Who can resist his will Rom. 9. 19. The sixth Branch containes the principall use and effects of Gods outward workes namely the making of himselfe knowne in his nature and essentiall attributes and so communicating himselfe to his elect That Gods externall workes doe all serve for this use and doe worke this effect we may gather from the dependance and inference of this Text. For the Psalmist having professed that he knows the Lord to be great and that he is the onely true God above all gods that is who hath all the essentiall properties of the true God he proves it by and from his workes and sheweth that by meanes of them he knoweth it And other Scriptures and experience confirme the same Psal. 19. 1. It is said that the heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy worke day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledge and Rom. 1. 20. The visible things of God are seene from the creation of the world clearly being understood by the things which were made Even his divine Power and God-head So the works of Gods actual providence in governing and upholding the world and in mooving the Heavens and the starres in order doe shew his infinite wisdome and supercelestia'l glory Psal. 8. 1. His overthrowing of his enemies and the persecutors of his Church as in the stood of Noah and in the drowning of Pharaoh and his host do shew his power His
innocency I have proved in this Doctrine And yet Christ taking upon him our nature which was far inferiour to the Angels and uniting it personally to himselfe as he is the eternall Sonne of God hath dignified and exalted and crowned it with glory and excellency farre above all Angels Principalities Thrones and Dominions Hebr. 2. 7. so that the holy elect and blessed Angels exalted above their best naturall estate to the immutable estate of supernaturall life immortality and glory doe adore and worship him as David fore-told Psal. 97. 7. and the Apostle affirmes Heb. 1. 6. He is the head of all and they all are made subject to him 1 Pet. 3. 22. And so wonderfull is Gods bounty to man in Christ and so powerfull and excellent is Christs mediation for the elect of mankind that by Christs mediation concurring and working together with Gods bounty according to wisdome and for the satisfaction of Gods justice a ready way is made for them into the Holy of holies the Heaven of heavens and they are not onely exalted and elevated farre above their best naturall being unto the blessed state of the glorious Angels but also the holy Angels with whom they shine in heavenly glory hereafter in the life to come are made of God ministring spirits whom Christ hath procured to minister for their good here in this world in the state of grace so that upon him as upon the Ladder in Jacobs dreame the Angels of God descend from heaven to earth and ascend from earth to heaven and doe encamp round about them to save and deliver them as David saith Psal. 34. 7. Yea and when the evill Angels shall be judged at the last day they shall through Gods infinite bounty and for the merit and worthinesse of Christ be advanced to sit upon Thrones with him and to judge and give sentence against the Divell and all his Angels as wee reade 1 Corinth 6. 3. And therefore if wee had the tongues of men and Angels we are never able to utter or expresse the infinite excellency worth and dignity of the person and mediation of Christ nor sufficiently to extoll laud and magnifie the bounty of God to poore mankind in Christ. And here we see that truly verified which the Prophet fore-told Isa. 64. 4. And the Apostle proclaimed 1 Cor. 2. 9. that since the beginning of the world the eye of man hath not seen nor his eare heard neither hath it ever entered into the heart of man what good things God hath prepared for them that love him Thirdly this Doctrine serves to worke in us a true love and reverent respect of the Angels of God as being the chiefest of Gods creatures and by nature more excellent then man in his best naturall estate and great in power able to help us more then all other creatures when God offers occasion and opportunity and gives them charge over us Every man is bound to thinke better and more reverently of other men who are in any gifts more excellent then himselfe though they be all of one nature and kind and of the same flesh and bloud And God hath put upon the beasts of the field by nature a feare and respect of man because he is a more excellent creature Now the Angels are by nature and creation more excellent then man in his best naturall estate and man in the supernaturall estate of glory shall be but equall to the elect and holy Angels And therefore as we must ever labour to decline that servile superstition and base will-worship of Angels which is condemned Colos. 2. 18. and must beware of giving divine and religious worship to them which they themselves reject and refuse being our fellow-servants and have utterly detested and forbidden when it hath been offered as appeares Revel 19. 10. and 21. 9. so we must take heed that we doe not thinke meanly of them as if they were but our servants because they minister for our good For in guarding us and encamping about us and in ministring for us they are not our servants which owe us service neither have we power to command them nor ability to requite them for the least service but they are the servants of God and of our Lord Christ and fellow-servants with all Kings Prophets and Holy men of God and as Gods Embassadors and Princely Courtiers Ministers we ought to esteem and respect them with all love and hearty affection And as in all places where there are Embassadors and noble Princes and Courtiers of great Emperours and Monarchs men will have a care to beare themselves orderly and to doe all things decently and will be affraid and ashamed to commit any absurdity or beare themselves immodestly So let us in the publick assemblies of the Saints and in holy congregations of Gods-Church where Angels are supposed sometimes to guard us and to over-look us as the words of the Preacher seem to import Eccles. 5. 6. and of the Apostle also 1 Cor. 10. 11. beare our selves reverently and beware of all vaine words filthy behaviour and beastly drowzinesse and sleepinesse as if we came to the Church like uncleane dogges for company only or to lye snorting and sleeping which is the evill custome and practice of many carnall people Fourthly this Doctrine is matter of comfort to Gods poore despised servants in that it doth assure them that the Angels which love them and as friends rejoyce in their conversion and as guardians protect and watch over them are great excellent and glorious above all earthly men And therefore though the great men of the world scorne and despise them and among such they can find no favour help or defence yet let them comfort themselves and rejoyce in this that he who is higher then the highest hath a guard to whose care and charge he hath committed them and that not of mighty men in whom there is no help but of Angels which in power strength and glory far exceed the most excellent among the sons of men 2. Corollary Secondly in that Angels were created in and with the highest heaven to be the naturall inhabitants sutable to the place hence we may gather a definition of Angels to wit that Angels are heavenly Spirits or pure and entire spirituall substances created in the beginning by God after his owne image every one of which is distinct from another by a speciall existence or proper particular being of his owne which God hath given to have in himselfe for ever First in that Angels were not made and created out of the rude masse without forme and void which is called earth and the deep nor of any other matter before made by God but in the first beginning of all things were created perfect creatures in and with the highest heavens the lively and proper inhabitants of them Hence it necessarily followes that they are pure heavenly spirits and intire spirituall substances not parts of any body or person not compounded of any
our perfection and happinesse in the sight and knowledge of him Fourthly we may hence observe divers singular prerogatives of the first day which is now by the resurrection of Christ the Lords holy day and the Sabbath of all true Christians That by many speciall prerogatives God did in the creation foreshew his eternall counsell and purpose to make this day his holy day in the dayes of Christ and in the time of the Gospell under the Kingdome of grace 1. This is the first fruits of all time 2. In it was created the glorious frame of the heavens and the first light of the visible World 3. In this day God first shewed by his eternall Word the Son his eternall counsell and purpose and by his Word and Spirit began to bring his purposes to passe and produce things into being 4. In this day darknesse and light were so separated and divided that while the night lasted there was no day in all the inferiour World and while it was day there was no night over all the face of the earth the deep but light in all the World which was then created and brought into forme and perfect being 5. In this day God first shewed his approbation and his pleasure that he approved for good the things which by his eternall Word the Son he did forme and bring into being Therefore without doubt most fit to bee the day of the Lord Christ and sanctified and kept holy to the honour and glory of him who is the first borne of God and the first fruits of them that sleep and the light of the World and in whom God sheweth his counsell and is in him well pleased and by him turnes night into day and brings light out of darknesse and brings us to eternall rest in the highest heavens which were created in the beginning of the first day CHAP. VII The second dayes worke Of the skie and things now created All made by the power of God in Christ. The use of the firmament How called heaven All was created wisely and orderly Vse ANd God said Let there bee a Firmament in the midst of the waters and let it divide the waters from the waters 7. And God made the Firmament and divided the waters which were under the Firmament from the waters which were above the Firmament and it was so 8. And God called the Firmament heaven and the evening and the morning were the second day In these words wee have abriefe historie of the second dayes worke in the creation of the World wherein wee are to consider these five things 1. The thing created 2. The creation and bringing of it into being 3. The use of it 4. The name which God gave unto it 5. How by this worke there came in an evening and a morning which where the second day First for the thing created it is in the originall text called by a generall name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may signifie any thing which is spread abroad or stretched farre and wide according to the etymologie of it For the Hebrew verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which it is derived in all Scriptures wheresoever it is used doth signifie the act of spreading any thing abroad stretching it out and laying it wide-open to view as Exod. 39. 3. Numb 16 38. and Ier. 10. 9 it signifies beating out of gold silver or brasse into thinne broad plates that is spreading them broad by violent beating Exod. 40. 19 It is used to signifie the spreading abroad of the tent over the Tabernacle Psalme 139. 6. and Isa. 42. 5. and 44. 24. It is used to signifie the stretching out of the earth above the waters farre and wide Iob 37. 18. it signifies the spreading out of the skie and of the thinne cloudes and 2 Sam. 22. 43. it is used to signifie spreading abroad as a man spreads clay by stamping it with his feet and by a Metonymic of the effect it is used to signifie stamping with the feet as men stamp clay and spread it abroad Ezech. 6. 11. and 25. 6. These are the places of Scriptures in which onely that word is used So then this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being derived of it must needs signifie a thing which is stretched out like a tent or canopie or spread abroad as plates of gold and silver are by beating and clay by stamping The Greeke Septuagints transiate this Word every where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a thing which though it bee farre stretched out yet it is so surely established that it abides still in the place which God hath appointed for it And the vulgar Latine with divers later translaters following the Greeke Septuagints translate it Firmamentum the firmament that is a thing firmely set and established in a place which cannot from thence bee driven out and leave the place empty And although this word may according to the notation of it signifie any thing stretched out or spread abroad or laid wide open and is once onely used to signifie broad plates of brasse beaten out for a covering and that in the plurall number Num. 16. 38. yet in all other places of Scripture it is used in the singular number for the skie which God hath from the beginning stretched out over the globe of the Earth and the Sea as here in this Chapter and Psalme 19. 1. and 150. 1. and Dan. 12. 3. and Ezech. 1. 22. and 10. 1. Now what this skie or firmament is that is a great question among the learned Divers of the Ancients as Basil Ambrose Beda and others doe by this firmament understand the starry heavens First because it is said in the 8. verse that God called this firmament heaven Secondly because it is said that when God made the Sun Moone Starres hee set them in the firmament of heaven vers 17. Thirdly because they doe imagine that there is a watery heaven above the starry heaven which consists of water congealed like to Cristall and doth temper the heat of the Sun Moone and Stars and out of this heaven they conceive that God poured the waters which drowned the old World because it is said Gen. 7. 11. that the windowes of heaven were opened and God rained on the earth But others doe hold that by the firmament here is meant the whole heavens that is both the first heavens the spacious regions of the aire and also the middle that is the firie and starry heavens and the third that is the highest heavens First because it is said that God called the firmament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heaven and this word is used in the Scriptures to signifie all these three heavens And as the highest heaven is called by this name Psalme 11. 4. the Lords throne is in heaven and Psalme 148. where it is said Praise Him O heaven of heavens So the middle and starry heavens as Gen. 22. 17. where wee read of the Starres of heaven and also
be good and gracious and to make us know him so great and glorious a God as he is In the second place for the wordes themselves they are plaine and easie to be understood at the first hearing without any laborious interpretation They run thus in the Hebrew All which the Lord pleaseth he hath done in Heaven Earth Sea and all deepe places This word all shewes that he speakes not of some particular workes but of all in that kind The word Jehovah is the proper name of God considered in the unity of his essence with all his essentiall Attributes and every one of the 3. Persons is called by this name as they are of the same essence and all one God The enumeration of all the notable places in the world wherein these workes are done discovers the workes which he here speakes off to be outward workes which doe not abide in Gods essence and there onely subsist as his eternall counsell decrees and inward operations do but are done in time and place and have their subsistance in and among the creatures such as are creating ruling ordering upholding of all things and also redeeming and restoring of all man-kinde The word pleaseth limits the generall note or particle all unto all workes which in themselves are good or else serve for good use and so are pleasing to the Lord for the use sake Hee doth not say that the Lord doth all things which are done but all things which he pleaseth that is he doth not make men sinnefull and wicked neither doth he worke rebellion in men which is displeasing unto him but he doth whatsoever is pleasing that is all things which are agreeable to his nature And whatsoever is according to his will and good pleasure that he doth none can hinder it This is the true sense and meaning of the wordes Now from the text thus opened and the circumstances observed wee may gather a perfect description of them in generall shewing the nature and use of them The description of Gods outward Workes The outward workes of God in generall are all things whatsoever the Lord God Jehovah that one infinite and eternall God 3. Persons Father Son and Holy Ghost doth according to his eternall purpose and after the counsell and good pleasure of his will work and bring to passe not within but without himselfe in all the world and upon all creatures therein and that certainely and irresistably in due time and place to the communicating and making of himself known to men and Angels in his infinite and eternall nature and in his goodnesse grace glory power and all other essentiall properties for the salvation and eternall blessednes of his elect in Christ. This description truely gathered from this Text and the scope and order of it and discovering plainely the nature and use of Gods outward workes in generall I will proove in every part and branch orderly and will conclude with some application The first thing in it is the generall matter of Gods externall workes they are things done that is not onely actions working and operations such as Creation Redemption and the like but also things or works made eff●cted and done by those actions as Heaven Earth Angels and other things created For all these are things done and wrought by God This Branch is plainly expressed in this word of my Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath done or doth or hath made for the Hebrew word signifies all these And that Gods outward worl●s consist in doing and are things not spoken or promised but done and wrought Divers testimonies of Scripture doe shew Psal. 44. 1. David cals them workes which he hath done And Isa. 28. 21. The Prophet saith that the Lord doth his worke his strange worke And not to stand in repeating many Scriptures in a point so plaine This is one word is sufficient that the two Hebrew words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are used in the Scriptures to signifie Gods outward works are both derived of verbs which signifie doing The second branch in this description comprehends in it the Author of these works to wit the Lord God Jehovah that one infinite eternall God and three Persons Father Sonne and Holy Ghost This Branch doth distinguish these workes First from the workes of creatures which are proper to them Secondly from the personall operations of God as the eternall begetting of the Sonne which is proper to the Father and is his worke onely That God considered in the unity of his essence as he comprehends all the three Persons is the Authour of these workes and that they are common to the Father Son and Holy Ghost and every one of them hath an hand in every work of this kind though one more immediately than another The word Jehovah here used in the Text doth plainly shew where it is said Whatsoever Jehovah pleased or was willing to do that he hath done which word is so proper to God and signifies One God that it also agrees to every person in that one God And this is also confirmed by divers other testimonies of Gods word which shew that in divers of these outward actions or workes the Father workes by the Sonne and the Sonne by the Father with and by the Spirit The first great work of this kind even the work of Creation which sometimes is attributed to the Father as more peculiar to him because terminatur in Patr● as the Schoolemen speak that is it is bounded and termined in the Father and he is principium summus terminus creationis the first beginning and utmost bound of creation from whom it first proceeded even this is attributed to the Sonne and Spirit also as being common to all the Persons as Psal. 33. 6. By the word of the Lord that is the Sonne were the Heavens made and all the host of them by the Spirit of his mouth 'To which adde Job 33. 4. The Spirit of God made me John 1. 3 10. Colos. 1. 16. where it is said that by the eternall word the Sonne all things were made both in Heaven and Earth visible and invisible and without him was made nothing of all that was made So likewise in that outward worke of Judgement executed on Sodome and Gomorrah Gen. 19. 24. Jehovah is said to raine downe from Jehovah out of Heaven fire and brimstone that is Jehovah the Son from Jehovah the Father who are both one and the same God Jehovah yea that these externall workes of God are not divided some to one Person and some to another in the Trinity but are common to all the Persons and proceed from that one common essence according to that saying of the School-men opera Trinitatis ad extra suns indivisa Our Saviour sheweth most plainly Ioh. 5. 19 22. where he saith that as the Sonne cannot worke of himselfe alone without the Father but he must have and see the Father working with him so the Father doth not
it demonstrated in all the parts The Manner of Creation in foure things Angels had no hand in the Creation Foure uses of the Point THe first thing now to be stood upon is the creation in generall as it is described in the generall nature of it by the name the Author or causes and the time when it first began and when it was done and that chiefely in this first verse First Creation is here set forth by the name of it in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 created Secondly by the Author or sole efficient cause of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God Thirdly by the time when God began the creation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning and wherein he perfected that worke in six dayes Fourthly by the forme and manner of it vers 3 God said and it was done First the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 created if it bee rightly understood according to the true and proper signification of it in this place may give great light to the matter in hand I will therefore first distinguish it according to the severall significations in which it is used in the Scriptures and will shew in what sense it is here to be taken and then will come neere to the matter First it signifies properly that extraordinary miraculous worke of God by which he gives a substance and substantiall being to things which before were not and doth make them either of nothing or of some matter which hath in it selfe no naturall fitnesse or disposition to receive such a forme or to be turned into such a substance thus it is used Deut. 4. 32. in these words from the day that God created man And Psal. 148. 5. He commanded and they were created Secondly by a metaphore this word signifies the extraordinary works of God which are very like unto the creation because they are done by a supernaturall power and suddenly brought forth as it were out of nothing when there was no meanes or naturall disposition going before Thus the 〈◊〉 of regeneration in which the wicked corrupt heart of man 〈◊〉 by nature is unfit for any holinesse and most prone to wickednesse is changed in a moment by the Spirit of God and becomes a cleane creature and a new man is called creating Psal. 51. 12. Thus are all great and miraculous works of God called creating When hee raiseth up wonderfull strength out of weakenesse and by them who are as nothing doth overthrow mighty gyants and strong armies this is called creating Exod 34. 10. When God of a stubborne stiff-necked nation and of a people scattered despised and counted worse than nothing raiseth up and maketh a most holy people and glorious Church as he will doe in the last conversion of the Jewes this is called commonly in the Prophets by the name of Creation as Psal. 102. 18. and Isa. 43. 7. and 65. 18. And when the Lord in his just wrath doth raise up evill and destruction to the wicked out of good things which naturally turne to good this is called creating Isa. 45. 7. and 〈◊〉 ●●ery raysing up of things without meanes as Psal. 104. 30● When God suddenly beyond meanes or expectation by the supernatur●ll power of his Spirit reneweth the face of the earth it is called creating But in this place the word is to be taken in the proper sense for making thing● either of nothing or of matter made of nothing and of it selfe unfit and without naturall disposition for receiving any such forme as that which God doth give unto it The word thus expounded sheweth what creation is even a making of things out of nothing or of rude matter undisposed for such a forme and being as God in an instant frameth one of it And so it differs from all other kindes of making and producing things as from naturall generation of living cr●atures and of clowds raine thunder and the rest which are made by an ordinary power out of matter fitted for the forme of things produced and from all artificall making of thing● as house and other things made by art of matter fitted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The second thing by which creat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the author and cause of it expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word is not here used metaphorically to signifie Angels false Gods and men who are ministers and vicegerents under God as it is sometimes used in Scripture but it is here taken in the sense which is most common and frequent in the originall that is for the true God and is one of his sacred Names And it is a word of the plurall number and in many places is joyned with verbes of the plurall number and that for this end to teach us that though God whose name this is bee but one in nature and essence yet in that unity of essence and in that one eternall Jehovah there is a pluralitie that is a Trinity of Persons This word therefore doth here plainely intimate unto us that Creation is an action of the whole Trinity and that it is the joint worke of all the three Persons even of God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost and this shewes that neither Angels nor false Gods but Jehovah the true God is the Author of the Creation as appeares Cap. 2. 7. The third thing by which the Creation is described is the time of it both the first time in which God began to create and did create the highest heaven and the rude masse the earth and also the progresse of time in which God created all visible things in order and finished the whole frame of the visible world This is expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning and in other parts of the Chapter which mention the particular dayes in which every thing was made For this word though sometimes it signifies Eternity and intimates unto us the eternall being of the Son of God together with the Father from all eternity and before all worlds as Prov. 8. 22. where eternall Wisdome saith The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his works of old and John 1. 1. In the beginning was the Word yet most commonly and frequently in the Scriptures being laid downe absolutely as in this place it signifies either the first moment and beginning of all time as in this verse or else the first six dayes of the creation or any one of them in which dayes God made finished the whole frame of heaven and earth and all the host of them as Isa. 46. 10. where God is said to declare and foretell the end of all things from the beginning that is from the six dayes of the creation in which God began to speake to man and foretell 〈◊〉 end and Joh. 8. 44. where the Divell is called a ●urtherer from the beginning that is from the last day of the Creatiō in which God made the Divell marred man and brought him
commandement bringing all things to passe out of meere nothing or that which was as nothing made of nothing without any instruments toile labour alteration or delay for the revelation of himselfe and for the communion of his goodnesse and glory This description truely gathered from this text and this historie is in whole and in every part confirmed by other testimonies of Gods holy infallible Word First creation is an outward act or work because it is not within God himselfe but his making of things and giving to them a being different from his own essence Secondly it is Gods first outward act because it was the giving of the first being to all kindes of creatures in which and upon which hee exerciseth all other outward works these two points are manifest and need no further proofe But as for the third point the Author or first cause God the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost wee have manifest proofe of it in Scripture able to satisfie any reasonable mind First that the Lord Jehovah the only true God not Angels is alone the Creatour of all things Holy Job testifieth saying that hee alone spreadeth out the heavens and treadeth upon the waves of the Sea Job 9. 8. And Isa. 44. 24. I saith Jehovah am the Lord that maketh all things that stretcheth forth the heavens alone that spreadeth abroad the earth by my selfe Secondly that all the three Persons are equall in this worke and as they all are one God so are one Creatour of all things it is manifest Job 35. 10. Where the Creatour of all things is called in the plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my makers that is more Persons than one even three Persons in one God and Psal. 149. 2. Let Israel rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them that made him and Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creators 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Isa. 54. 5. The Lord thy makers is thine husbands the Lord of hostes is his name For the Father in particular there is no doubt all confesse him to be the Creatour and so the Scriptures testifie Prov. 8. 22 23. and Heb. 1. 2 3. For the Son also we have plaine texts that by him all things were made and nothing without him John 13. 10. and Joh. 5. 17 19. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Col. 1. 16. Heb. 1. 10. And as the Spirit is one God with the Father and the Sonne so his hand wrought with them in the Creation as appeares Gen. 1. 2. Where it is said the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters that is cherished the rude masse as the Hen doth her egges by sitting on them and so gave forming vertue to them so the Hebrew word signifieth and Job 26. 13. God is said by his spirit to have garnished the heavens and Job 33. 4. The spirit of God hath made me saith Elihu and Psal. 33. 6. By the Word of the Lord that is the Sonne were the heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth that is his spirit Fourthly for the time of the Creation we need not stand much upon proofe of it This Text sheweth that it began in the beginning or first moment of time And in six dayes it was perfected and fully finished as the rest of the Chapter sheweth It was of old that God founded the earth and made the heavens as the Psalmist testifieth Psal. 102. 25. that is in the first beginning of times And reason tells us that time being a circumstance and inseparable companion of creatures visible must of necessity begin together with their being Yet one thing is worthy to be noted in the time namely That whereas God was able in the first moment to create all things as he did the highest heavens and the rude masse which is called the earth in my Text and which was the common matter of all the visible world yet he did distribute and divide the creation into divers acts which are distinguished one from another by the effects that is the creatures made and by the severall times and dayes also wherein they were performed Which point wee will insist upon as it well deserves when we come to the several acts performed particularly in severall dayes of the Creation The fifth point in the description is the generall object and effect of creation to wit all things and the first being of them For here the object and effect concurre and are altogether the same The world and all things therein and the first matter of which they were made as they are the onely things about which the act of creation is exercised so they are the object of creation And as they are things made by the creation so they are effects of it Now this generall object and effect as it is truly gathered from the enumeration of all the kindes of things created which are numbred in this Chapter and the next and is plainely expressed in the description so it is abundantly testified in all the Scriptures as Isa. 44. 24. and Coloss. 1. 16. and Exod. 20. 11. where all things in heaven and earth visible and invisible are said to bee made created and formed by God Yea the first rude matter it selfe out of which the inferior world was made is here in my Text said to be created by God And this is confirmed by reason drawn from the nature of God and his Name Jehovah For God as this Name signifieth is an absolute essence of himselfe and the first being of all and the Author of all being Therefore every thing which is or hath being must needs be of him and be his creature The sixth point in the description is the matter out of which God created all things under which we comprehend two things First the matter improperly so called or Terminum à quo from whence God brought the first being of all things immediately And that was either negative even nothing or their not being at all or positive their being in Gods eternall purpose onely This was the first matter which God had to worke upon in the first immediate act of creation Secondly the matter properly so called that is either the rude masse made of nothing which was without forme and void or the foure Elements which had in them no forme or being of the things created and so were as nothing in respect of that being which God gave to every particular thing which he made of them For proofe of this we have a plain testimonie Heb. 11. 3. where the Apostle saith By faith we underst and that the worlds were framed by the word of God So that the things which are seen were not made of things which doe appeare Here it is plaine that hee speakes 1. Of creation in generall in that hee saith The worlds were framed 2. In that he denies the visible world to be made of any naturall things which doe appeare to any sense hereby hee shewes that their first matter was made of
created in time but was from eternity or that it was created of a matter which was uncreated and had a being before the creation even without beginning 2. Of those doting Jewes and others who held that the inferiour visible world was created by the ministerie of Angels 3. Of Heretikes who denied God the Father of Christ preached in the Gospel to be the Creatour of the World and feigned another God Creatour inferiour to him 4. Of the Papists who teach that there be other Creatours besides God even that every Masse-Priest can create of Bread and Wine the true bodie and bloud of the Lord Christ our Creatour and Redeemer yea that same body which is already which was made of a woman borne ●nd crucified and is glorified at Gods right hand in heaven a strange contradiction and horrible blasphemy which God ab●orres as a thing impossible For nothing can be made that which it is already nor receive that being which it hath before-hand 5. Of Atheists and Mockers who deny God and scoffe at the last resurrection and at the ending of this World in the last day all which are manifestly proved by the creation Lastly of all Idolaters who esteem and worship that for God their Creatour which is but the image of a creature and in nature and forme far inferiour to the least creature formed by God Thirdly it serves for reprehension and just reproofe First of them who thinke that God can be worshipped and pleased by mens giving of outward things to him immediately for his owne use as gold silver meat drinke clothes and curious ornaments all which God rejecteth as things unusefull for him upon this very ground and for this reason because hee created the whole World and all things therein are his owne already Psal. 50. and Act. 17. 25. Secondly of them who fret and grudge and too much repine and grieve for the overthrow and destruction of Kingdomes Countries Nations Cities Men or Beasts which God at his pleasure and in his justice doth destroy for mens sins and over-turne withall their glory and being Who is he that in such a case dare mutter against God For hee may doe with his owne what he pleaseth if they offend him he may destroy them and magnifie his justice and glorifie his power in their destruction and he can repaire them at his pleasure Lastly here is for all that trust in God love and serve him plentifull matter of comfort against poverty and all calamities and persecuting enemies No poverty ought to pinch or vexe them for God their portion is more worth then all the world all riches and other things are but the worke of his hands and he can give them when hee will and will give what hee in his wisedome knowes to be necessary and profitable All strength is of him and he can weaken all enemies in a moment so that if he be for us none can stand against us hee can raise sweet out of bitternesse Thus much for creation in generall CHAP. II. Of the creature in generall Names of the creature expounded to shew their nature Instructions concerning the creatures Five Uses made thereof BEfore I passe to the speciall acts or branches of Creation I hold it fit to insist upon the creature in generall which comprehends under it every speciall kind of thing created by any act of creation This History of the Creation though not in any one word yet in one sentence doth expresse the creature in generall that is the whole frame and collection of all things created Chapt. 2. 1. in these words Thus were the heavens and the earth finished and all the host of them or all their furniture that is whatsoever is in them rightly ordered and disposed like an Army well marshalled so the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie And other Scriptures both in the Old and New Testament doe oftentimes in one word propound to us the generall consideration of all joyntly together I will therefore first speake of the creature in generall as it comprehends in it the heavens and the earth and all things in them and that in such words and phrases as Gods Spirit in this and other Scriptures is pleased to use for our instruction and for the help and illumination of our weake understandings And in this generall description I will first consider the words and phrases by which the creature in generall is called and will shew what they doe import in their signification Secondly I will from thence and other Scriptures note such instructions as may direct us to the knowledge of the creature in generall And lastly will make some use and application fit and convenient The first name by which the creature in generall is called in the Old Testament is the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an universality or perfect comprehension of all things By this name the whole universality of things created is called Pro. 16. 4. where it is said that the Lord hath made all things for himselfe not so much as the wicked man is excepted who is made for the day of evill Also Isa. 44. 24. the Lord saith I am Jehovah that maketh all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Answerable to this are the Greeke words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by the Greeke Philosophers to signifie the whole universall world or the universality of all things and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is commonly used in the New Testament where there is mention made of the creation and the creature in generall as John 1. 3. By him were all things made And Rom. 11. ult Of him and by him and for him are all things And Colos. 1. 16. and Revel 4. 11. But yet as the Apostle 1 Cor. 15. 27. speaking of Gods putting all things in subjection under Christ saith that hee must be excepted who hath put all things under him so here though the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doe signifie an universality and comprehension of all things yet it is manifest by the word joyned with them that God the Creatour who is said to make and create them is excepted and all other things besides him are included Another name by which the Spirit calls the universality of creatures is the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which answers to the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is alwaies used by Septuagints in their translation of the Old Testament to expresse it By this name the creature in generall is called Heb. 1. 2. and 11. 3. where it is said that God by his Son made the worlds and that the worlds were framed by the word of God And in the Syriack and Hebrew translations the words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and according to their originall and true notation they all doe signifie not onely an eternall duration and continuance from the first
death is seventy sevens of yeares Daniel 9. that is 490. yeares all which make 3960. yeares from the creation Now from Christs death which was in the 33. yeare of his age or 33. after his birth it is in this present yeare 1623. the full number of 1590. yeares which being added to 3960. before Christs death make from the creation 5550. yeares Now this computation of yeares together with the clearing of the former question may serve First to discover unto us divers waies the admirable providence of God in that he doth so order all things that the time of the incarnation of Christ the second Adam should fall in the same moneth with the creation of the first Adam and the day of redemption from sinne and death should be the same day of the week and of the moneth with the day of Adams falling into sin and bringing all mankind into bondage to hell and death And that in the holy Scriptures which were written by holy men of God in severall ages the true computation of times and yeares should be put upon record and reserved and kept safe through all ages untill this day in the midst of so many dangers and among so many alterations and changes which have happened in the world Surely he who is so provident in ordering the circumstance of times and preserving the records of them even his holy Oracles when the Nation of Jewes to whom they were committed in trust is cast off and scattered over all the earth will much more keep his promises and fulfill all prophecies and predictions every one in the set time and season which he hath appointed Secondly this exact record of times and of the very moneth of the creation and of the redemption serves to confirme us in the verity and truth of those things which are written concerning the beginning and creation of the world and the redemption of mankind by Jesus Christ comming in the exact fulnesse of time to redeem the world according to Gods promises when severall witnesses or writers who never conferred nor consulted one with another doe agree in their relations not only in the maine matters but in the circumstances of time also no man can have any least pretence or colour of doubting And thus doe the writers of the holy Scriptures who lived in severall ages they exactly agree in the histories of creation and redemption even to the circumstances of times the very daies and moneths wherein they were performed And therefore let us firmly beleeve them and rest on the truth of them for we have sure grounds of beleeving but not any pretence or colour of doubting Thirdly hereby it is made manifest that the world being created in time and onely so long ago as is before shewed was made onely for us and for our benefit who live under time and not for the eternall God to adde any good or any blessednesse to him who was all-sufficient and most blessed in himselfe from all eternity and both could and would have made the world millions of yeares before if it might have been profitable to himselfe Wherefore let us hereby be stirred up to use the world as a gift and as talents given to us by God to be well imployed and study to honour him by all worldly things created Fourthly hereby we may justly be moved to admire the eternity of God when we see the whole time of the world to be but 5550. yeares which are before him but as 5. daies and an halfe For a thousand yeares with him are but as one day 2 Pet. 3. 8. Wherefore as holy David when hee compared Gods eternity with the temporary being of the heavens and the earth and their inclining to decay and changes like a vesture and wearing garment did admire Gods infinite and eternall Majesty So let us all be after the same manner affected with reverence of God and admiration of his eternity when we compare the ages of the world even the longest of them the thousands of yeares since the creation to be but as so many daies with the Lord who liveth and abideth the same for ever The fourth thing in this Text is the object and effect of Gods first worke of creation to wit the heavens and the earth First the Heavens come to be considered together with the creatures here comprehended under that name and that these things may more plainly appeare to our understanding we must first search and sift out the true sense and signification of the word Heaven in this Text and then come to the instructions which doe thence naturally arise The name by which it hath pleased the Spirit of God in this place to call the Heavens is in the Originall Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shamajim concerning the signification and Etymologie whereof the learned much differ among themselves Some make it a compound of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth there and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth waters because above in the aire which is the lowest and nearest heaven and in the clouds water is engendered and in showres distills from thence Some compound it of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is fire and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters because the heavens seem to be made of both the Sun Moon and Starres resemble fire and the rest of the heavens resemble calme and still waters Some derive this name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies astonishment because if a man doe stedfastly behold and consider either the glory or the wonderfull height and compasse of the heavens they are things which will dazle his eyes and make his heart astonished But the best derivation of the word which is grounded upon the best reasons is that which some late Writers have observed to wit that it is derived of the simple Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth there and is never used but when we speake of being in a place which is remote and distant from us For as the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here signifies the place present so this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there signifies a place remote and distant from us and the being of things there in that place Now the heavens are the utmost and most remote place from the earth which is set in the middle and about the center of the round world and upon which men doe live in this world Therefore this derivation doth agree very aptly to the heavens Secondly of a place which is most excellent wee are wont to say There there is the best being and in a kind of vehement and affectionate speech we use to double the word And heaven is the most excellent place and therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is of the duall number and signifies as much as There there or there double is most fitly derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there Thirdly the heavens are divided most properly into two heavens
let not us grudge but rejoyce to minister for the poorest of the Saints and the little ones of Christs flocke our brethren The fifth point of Doctrine is That the Angels were created in and with the highest heavens and by creation were made to inhabit those heavens as the naturall and proper place of their being and habitation This Doctrine is confirmed first by the expresse words of Moses himselfe in the first words of the next Chapter viz. Gen. 2. 1. Thus the heavens and the earth were finished and all the host of them In which words he plainly affirmes That not onely the heavens and the earth but also all the host of them were thus created and perfectly finished that is in that order and maner as he hath before related in my Text the rest of this first Chapter Now in this Chapter we have not one word which can be understood of the creation of the host of the highest heaven that is the Angels but onely these words of my Text which affirme that in the beginning that is in the first moment when God began to give being to his first creatures he created the heavens that is the highest heavens distinct from the earth which was the common matter of all the visible world and with those heavens the host of them that is the Angels which are the host and inhabitants of them For it is an usuall thing in the Scriptures to signifie by the name of a place the proper inhabitants of the place together with the place it selfe as I have before shewed by divers examples Yea the word heavens is used to signifie the Angels as I have shewed from Job 15. 15. Therfore it is a thing most clear manifest that the Angels were created together with the highest heavens as the host naturall inhabitants of them and those heavens by the law of creation are the naturall and proper place of their being and habitation Secondly the Scriptures fully prove this point which call the Angels the Angels of heaven as Matthew 24. 36. and Galat. 1. 8. and the heavenly host as Luke 2. 13. and name the Angels among the hosts of the Lord which from the heavens and in the heights sing Halleluiah and praise to him as Psal. 148. 1 2. Thirdly this doctrine is confirmed by divers reasons grounded on the Word of God The first is builded upon the Doctrines before proved by plaine testimonies of holy Scripture to wit that the Angels were not from all eternity but were created by Elohim that is the true God who is one God and three persons as is plainly restified Psal. 104. 4. and 148. 5. and Colos. 1. 16. upon this infallible ground I thus argue That Angels being creatures created and made by God must of necessity be created either before the heavens or in and with the highest heavens or else together with the Elements and the creatures of the inferiour visible world which were all made out of that rude masse called earth which was without forme and void But they were not made before the heavens For the heavens were made in the beginning that is in the first moment when God began first to make and to give being to creatures before which beginning there could be no creation of Angels or any other things Neither indeed was there any place wherein Angels could subsist before the heavens were made Certainly no finite creature can subsist in it selfe without a place in meer nothing it is proper to God onely to subsist in and of himselfe Neither were they created together with the earth and other elements and creatures of the visible world For it is plainly testified Job 38. 7. that when God laid the foundations of the earth and stretched the lines upon it and laid the corner-stone thereof then the sons of God shouted for joy that is the Angels for they are called the sons of God Job 1. 7. and there were no other living creatures then made Therefore the Angels were undoubtedly created before the earth or else they could not have shouted and sung together when the earth was made David also testifieth that the Angels were made spirits first Psal. 104. 4. and after them God laid the foundation of the earth Verse 5. Therefore it followeth necessarily that the Angels were created in and with the highest heaven and are the host and proper inhabitants thereof Secondly that place from which the evill Angels were cast downe and did fall when they sinned and left their first estate and habitation is their naturall proper place in which God created them and they by creation are the proper inhabitants thereof Now that is the highest heaven for when some of the Angels to wit proud Lucifer the Divell and his Angels sinned and left their habitation as Saint Jude speakes Jude 6. then they were cast downe to hell 2 Pet. 2. 4. even from heaven as the Prophet Isaiah testifieth Isa. 14. 12. saying How art thou fallen from heaven O Lucifer Therefore undoubtedly the Angels in their creation were made in and with the highest heavens and had them given for their proper and naturall habitation The third reason is drawne from the order which God observed in the creation For as soone as God had fitted any part or place of the world for the creatures which were to dwell and to have their being in it he made those creatures and replenished the place with them So soon as the airie heavens were made and the waters separated from the earth and place made for the Sun Moone and Starres and for their beames to be stretched out from heaven to earth then the host of the visible heavens the Sunne Moon and Starres were created and placed in them And so soon as the sea was fitted for living and moving creatures God created them out of it and so likewise when the earth was made to stand out of the waters and furnished with herbs plants and trees for the use of living creatures God created birds and beasts and when it was furnished with all creatures fit for mans use then he created man and the woman also an help meet for him Therefore undoubtedly so soon as he created the highest heavens the proper and naturall place of the Angels then and together with those heavens he did create the Angels which are the heavenly host and suffered them not to remaine one houre empty without their furniture and inhabitants This Doctrine thus laid downe and proved besides some speciall use which we may make of it for affection and practice is a ground and foundation of many other Doctrines concerning Angels which flow as Conclusions and Corollaries from it and an occasion of questions to be discussed First let me make some briefe application of it and then proceed to the Doctrines and Questions First in that Angels were created in and with the highest heaven by Gods powerfull Word and by his simple and absolute act of creation
there is no helpe in them Psalme 146. 3. and that of the Prophet Ieremie Cursed is the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme Ier. 17. 5. Secondly though there happen many changes and great confusion in the World yet let us here take notice that they come not by chance and allwayes acknowledge that they are in the will and power of God and are ordered and disposed by his over-ruling wisedome If to the wicked enemies and persecutors of Gods Church changes come for worse to their confusion and overturning of their power let us see Gods hand therein and let us give him the praise for working our deliverance and avenging our cause on our enemies If changes come to our selves and our peace bee turned into trouble and danger let us humble our selves as under Gods hand If our adversity bee turned into prosperity let God have all the thankes If wee see just cause to feare great changes in Church or State let us flie to God for helpe strength courage and patience and betake our selves to his protection that wee may rest safely under the shadowes of his wings The third point of doctrine which wee may observe from the Spirit of God moving upon the waters cherishing and fitting the unformed masse to receive a perfect being and perfect formes of visible creatures doth shew the concord and perfect similitude which is between the worke of creation by which God formed all things by his word and Spirit and the worke of restauration and redemption of mankind by which he reformes them by Christ and by his Spirit and brings them to supernaturall perfection and blessednesse As in the creation God by his Spirit cherishing the rude masse did prepare and fit every part thereof to receive a perfect forme and naturall being so in the restoring of man kind being deprived of his image and deformed God doth by his Word and by his Spirit shed on us through Christ regenerate renue reforme and prepare us for the fruition of himselfe and doth fit and prepare us for supernaturall perfection and blessednesse As in Ezechiels vision the wind from God did move and shake the drie bones scattered upon the face of the earth and fitted them by flesh and skinne to receive life and to stand up living men in perfect strength and stature So by the word and Spirit of God men dead and rotten in sinnes and sinfull corruption are by the Spirit of God breathed through Christ renued after his image and fitted by the life of grace for the eternall life of glory Ezech. 37. The Spirit of God as our Saviour testifieth is like the wind which bloweth where it listeth it is hee which doth frame us after Gods image in our new birth Ioh. 3. 5 8. and fits us for the Kingdome of glory Wee are as farre from God and from Christ and as void of his image and of all Spirituall life as the rude masse was of all forme in the first creation untill the Spirit of God bee given to us in Christ to dwell in us and renue us as the Apostle sheweth Rom. 8. 9. 13. Ephes. 2. 18. 22. and Tit. 3. 5. 6. Wherefore as wee desire to be made like unto Christ in the image of glory and to see and enjoy God in his heavenly Kingdom where all fulnesse of perfection and blessednesse is to bee found So let us by the consideration of this Doctrine bee stirred up to thirst after the river of the water of life even the gifts and graces of the holy Ghost and never rest satisfied till wee feele within us the testimony of the Spirit of Christ witnessing with our Spirits that wee are the children of God and till wee feele our selves sanctified throughout both in soule and body and holinesse engraven upon our hearts without which none can see God Secondly seeing the Spirit of God is he who prepares men for supernaturall perfection and there is no communion to be had with Christ nor participation of his merits and saving benefits to salvation except men have the Spirit of God dwelling in them and of profane and carnall sons of Adam making them holy and spirituall sons of God Let us not count it any shame or reproach to us that profane mockers of these last times doe in mockery and derision call us spirituall men who ascribe all good motions which are in us to the Spirit of God dwelling in us directing us in all our wayes We doe not deny but that all Enthusiasts and other men of fanaticall Spirit doe most profanely and sacrilegiously Father their owne fansies and lustfull motions on the Spirit of God and therein deserve reproach and derision but let men take heed that they doe not by loathing their hypocrisie and arrogancy runne into Atheisme and blasphemous impiety by rejecting and denying the Spirits dwelling in all Gods regenerate children working in them all saving graces and moving them to walke in the holy wayes of God which lead unto supernaturall perfection and eternall blessednesse For most certaine it is that as the first rude matter of the visible World was sustained and cherished by the Spirit of God moving upon the face of it and was not otherwise able to subsist or to bee formed into divers creatures every one made perfect in their kind with naturall perfection so the perfect stabilitie of man in an happie unchangable estate yea the perfection of the visible World made for mans use is the work of the holy Ghost uniting man to to God in Christ and gathering and reconciling all things unto God in him who is the head over all Although man and all creatures as appeares in the last verse of this Chapter were created every one good and perfect in his kind with naturall perfection yet man the chiefe and the Lord of them all having not as yet the holy Ghost shed on him through Christ as all the regenerate and faithfull have was mutable and in that honourable estate of innocency hee did not stand and abide but did full from it very quickly after that the Woman was created and given to him as wee read Chap. 3. yea hee did not lodge one night therein Psalme 49. 12. and by Mans sinfull fall and corruption the whole frame of the visible World was made subject to vanity and groaneth under it as under an intolerable burden and with earnest longing waiteth for deliverance and restitution to an higher estate in the glorious libertie of the sons of God Rom. 8. 19. 20. And although the eternall Word the Son of God had undertaken for man in the eternall counsell of the blessed Trinitie and did step in to mediate for man and in the first promise made upon mans fall was proclaimed to bee the onely and all-sufficient Redeemer and was fully exhibited in the flesh and became a perfect Redeemer in his death and resurrection so that in him is plenteous redemption and matter sufficient to merit more then
third dayes worke that is the creation of grasse herbes plants and trees Where note onely these two things First what were these things created Secondly how they were created and brought into being The first is grasse or greene herbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is that which of it selfe springs up without setting or sowing The second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 herbe bearing seed that is all herbes which are set or sowne and increase by mans industry The third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is trees and plants which are of a woodie substance which beare fruit and have their seed which turns to fruit in themselves they are not multiplied onely by sowing of seed but live all the year and many yeares without sowing and multiply by rootes slips graffes and the like These were the things which God is here said by his creating Word and power to bring out of the earth every one perfect in their kind Secondly for the manner of creating them they were not created immediatly of nothing nor of any other element besides the earth and then put into the earth there to grow But God by his powerfull Word without any help of mans tillage Raine or Sun did make them immediatly out of the earth and every one perfect in their kind grasse and heroes with flowers and seeds and trees with large bodies branches leaves and fruits growing up suddenly as it were in a moment by Gods Word and power And thus much I gather not onely from the words of the text which run thus God said Let the Earth bring forth grasse herbes and trees but also from the words Chap. 2. 5 6. where it is said that God formed every plant when yet it was not in the Earth and every herb when as yet it grew not up that is before they had any seed or roote hidden or sowne in the earth from whence they might spring and grow up and also without help of raine or dew or any culture or tillage Now all these things being thus formed by the word of God were approved by God for good and perfect in their kind And so the evening that is the time of darknesse over the earth while the waters covered it and before the drie land appeared above the waters which was about twelve houres a nights space and the morning that is the time of light after the drie land appeared and the light of the firie heavens shined upon it through the aire which as yet was most pure and cleare without clouds mists or vapours which time of light was other twelve houres made up a third day Thus we see that in the three first daies before the creation of the Sun Moon and Starres the night was a time of darknes and the day a time of light in all that part of the World where night and day are said to have been and in respect of which part of the World they are called evening and morning as for example After that the light the firie heavens were created and made out of the rude masse full of darknesse there was no more night or darknesse but all light in the heavens ever since for they are a day and light to themselves and that which is night and day with us is all alike with them even cleare day light So likewise after the creation of the light all was darknesse in the rest of the rude masse which was not yet formed and the time that it lay in darknesse before the airy heaven was perfectly purified and made is called the evening or night but after that the firmament that is the spacious element of the aire was created and brought into perfect being and puritie it received into it the light of the firie heavens which shined through it and the time of that shining into the aire is called the morning or day light and this day light shines still in the highest region of the aire above the ascent of the clouds and there is no more night of darknesse in that region but as cleare light as that of the second and third day onely in the rest of the rude masse there did remaine darknesse untill God created out of it at once the two lowest elements the waters and the earth and the time while the waters covered the earth and kept the light of heaven from it is called the evening or night of the third day but when the drie land and the hils and mountaines of the earth were raised up above the waters and the great vast hollow valley which is the place of the Sea and receptacle of the waters was made in it then the light of the heavens did shine through the aire unto the upper face of the earth and of the waters and so continued untill the herbes plants and trees were made no clouds or mists or vapours made the lower region of the aire darke and this was the time of morning or day light on earth the third day Thus much for the opening of the third dayes work of creation and how the times of light and darknesse that is the evening and morning did make up the third day From this dayes work and from the things created and the manner of creation divers things may bee observed for our instruction First wee see that the two lowest elements Earth and Sea though they appeare to bee great and huge vast things yet to God working by his eternall Word the making and separating of them was but a peece of a dayes work and all the grasse herbes plants and trees which are innumerable and full of all admirable variety they were but another peece of a dayes worke they were not onely made and brought into being but also to their perfect growth full of flowers seed and fruite in a little time as it were in a moment Hence we may learne that all this World here below wherein the sonnes of men live together with all creatures which se●ve for their use it is as nothing in the hand of God and of small moment All the herbes plants and trees which Solomon with all his wisedome could scarcely come to know were with the Earth Sea and all Waters made perfect in one day This is that which the Lord proclaimes by the Prophet Isa. 40. 15 17. where it is said that all nations are as a drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the balance before him All nations are before him as nothing and they are counted to him lesse then nothing and vanity Which Doctrine serves to admonish us to despise all earthly riches and possessions in comparison of God who is the portion of the godly and faithfull also it serves to confound and put to shame all proud carnall worldlings who glory and boast in a little nothing and to make glad and fill with joy Gods people who have a true right and interest in God by their spirituall union and communion which they have with Christ by one
earth And although the Moone being the lowest and nearest of all the heavenly lights unto the earth and therefore more dimme in it selfe and of a more impure bodie and substance as appeares by the cloudy specks in it shining very little of it selfe may in that respect bee called one of the least lights yet because it borrowes light from the Sun shining in the face of it as in a looking glasse and because it is 18. times lower then the Sun and nearer to us then the earth is lower then it as Mathematicians have observed and so it is nearer to the earth then the Sun almost 18. hundred thousand miles therefore in our eyes it appeares the greatest of all the lights next to the Sun And Moses here speaking according to the capacity of the vulgar and our outward senses and the sensible effects of light which the Moone gives to the earth cals it one of the two great lights And as hee gives to the Sun the office and prerogative of ruling the day because the sight and presence of the Sun makes the day light and smoothers and obscures all other lights in the day time so hee gives to the Moone the office of ruling the night because when it appeares in the night it giveth more light to us here on earth then all the other Starres Thus wee see that as God said so every thing which was made in the fourth day came to passe God himselfe made every thing by his eternall Word according to his owne eternall Counsell minde and will And therefore no marvell though hee gives approbation to this dayes worke also which is the third maine thing in the text expressed in these words And God saw that it was good And so the Sun having shined for the space of twelve houres till it had passed through one Hemisphaere or halfe of heaven that time or morning of light together with the evening or time of darknesse going before it and caused by clouds mists and vapours over-shadowing the Earth is called the fourth day Now this History of the fourth dayes worke as I have expounded it affords us some points of instruction First in that herbes grasse plants and trees were made perfect in their kinde before any Raine or Dew or Sun Moone and Starres were created Hence wee may learne that God used no instruments nor helpe of any creatures in the creation of any thing but made and formed every creature himselfe by his eternall Word and Spirit who are with him one and the same Iehovah infinite almighty and omnipotent For further proofe whereof there are many testimonies in the holy Scriptures as Isa. 40. 21. 22. and 66. 2. where the Lord appropriateth to himselfe and to his owne hand the creating and making of heaven and earth and Ioh. 1. 3. and Colos. 1. 16. where all things are said to bee created by the eternall Word the Son and also by the Spirit Psalme 33. 6. This Doctrine admonisheth us to give all the glory of the wisedome power and goodnesse shewed in the creation to God alone and to acknowledge that all things created even the whole World and all things therein are the Lords also to make us admire his rich bountie to render all thanks to his holy Majesty for all the profit benefit and comforts which wee receive from any of Gods creatures Secondly wee may hence learne and observe the wisedome and wise providence of God in making every thing in due season and nothing before there was need of it for the creatures which were next in order to bee made for hee did not create the lights of Sun Moone and Starres together with the starry heavens which is the place of them untill hee was about to create living things which could not well bee nor move according to their kinde without such lights shining in the earth and in the waters Which wise providence of God is a patterne and direction to us to doe all things in order in the first place things necessarie and usefull for the well-being and bringing to passe of things which are afterwards to bee done and nothing which may bee and remaine without use and profit As God would not make the Sun Moone and Starres together with the first light the firie heavens on the first day because then there was no use nor necessitie of them but deferred the creation of them untill the fourth day when there was use and necessity to make a cleare day-light and living creatures endued with life sense and sight were to bee made in the two next dayes following whose life without such cleare day light would have beene but like the shadow of death So let us bee carefull then to provide things necessary and usefull when wee see and perceive that wee shall have present use of them and not bee like foolish prodigall and fantasticall builders who build stately houses like palaces with large barnes stables and stals when neither they nor theirs are in any way or possibility to furnish them with corne horses or cattell or to make use of them for fit and necessary habitation Thirdly though the glory of God doth more appeare in light of day then in darknesse of night and it was and is in Gods power to make more great lights and divers Sunnes in severall places of the heaven to shine in all the World at once and to make a perpetuall day on earth yet hee made them so that on the earth in this lower and inferiour World there should bee as much night as day and darknesse as light whereby hee teacheth us even from the creation that this earthly World was not made to bee the place of mans immutable perfection and blessednesse but a place of changes and alterations wherein by reason of darknesse the Prince of darknesse may rule rage and tyrannise by himselfe and his wicked instruments and drive us to seeke a better rest and an incorruptible and undefiled inheritance reserved in heaven in the place of perpetuall light The whole booke of the wise Preacher is an ample testimony of this truth and a large commentary upon this Doctrine for it wholy tends to make men loath this inferiour World under the Sun wherein there is nothing but changes and vanity of vanities and all is vanitie Wherefore let us not seeke for immutability nor unchangable peace and prosperity here on earth lest wee bee found as foolish as those builders who build and set up goodly houses on a sandy foundation which may easily bee beaten downe and ruined with every wind wave and tempest They who settle their rest on earth and here seeke perfect felicity and immutable blessednesse they trust under the shadow and shelter of a gourd which may grow up in one night and in the next night wither away and perish and bring much griefe and sorrow to them which will vex them and drive them like Ionah to impatiency and anger against God their Creatour
15. In a word common sense and reason teach us that if the Woman be made in the image of the Man and the Man is made in Gods image then Women must needs beare Gods image and likenesse But the truth is God being still the same both in the creation of the Man and of the Woman and creating both by the same wisedome and power hee needed not to take Adam for his paterne whereby to make the Woman but made her in his owne image as hee did man and so in all things like to man the different sexe onely excepted This serves to admonish and stirre up women to bee carefull diligent and industrious so to beare themselves as they that are made after Gods image so to order their lives conversation as they who expect the glory of heaven and must by passing through the state of grace here and by conforming themselves to Christ both in his death by mortification and in his life by sanctification come to the fulnesse of glory in Heaven and bee made conformable and like to Christ in his glorious body and coheires of God with him Secondly it serves to reprove the wicked and profane men of the World whose wickednesse is transcendent and their profanenesse most horrible and impious in that base esteeme which they have of the female sexe and the vile account which they make of woman-kind who thinke and speake of women that they have no soules nor any part in Gods image and are utterly uncapable either of grace in this World or glory in the World to come Like and equall unto which in their profane impiety are common strumpets and whorish women the shame and staine of woman-kind who prostitute themselves to all filthinesse and so live as if they were made onely to serve the lusts of unreasonable men of bruitish lust I proceed to the more speciall things which are more distinctly laid downe concerning the creation of mankind where I will first insist upon the creation of the male and female and the matter of which they were made and of the manner and order in which God formed them Which that wee may distinctly understand wee must looke forward to the 7. Verse of the 2. Chapter where the creation of mankind is more particularly rehearsed in these words and the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nosthrils the breath of life and man became a living soule In the Hebrew text the man is here called Adam not as by his proper name but as it is the common name of all mankind for so much the article which is prefixed before it doth shew and therefore as the Greeke so also our English Translators doe translate this word not Adam but Man God formed man of the dust For in the first creation the man comprehended in him all mankind even the Woman who then was a Rib in his side and afterward was taken out and formed into a Woman The matter of which God formed Adam is said to bee the dust of the ground and here he useth another word not used before in the creation of other things that is the word formed for hee doth not say that God made or created but formed man and true it is that whole man was not made of dust but onely the substance of his bodie and therefore it is said that God formed man to wit in respect of his body of the dust of the ground that is hee framed and fashioned it of dust as a potter formes a pot of clay and brought it into that forme and shape which all perfect bodies of mankind doe beare untill this day And this is the first beginning of the being both of the Man and also of the Woman who was created here a Rib at the first in Mans side and afterwards taken out and made into a Woman First in that Iehovah Elohim the Lord God is here said to forme man that is to frame his body of dust and to bring it into the forme and shape which it beares in all mankind Hereby wee are taught that God did neither consult with Angels about mans creation nor assume them or any other creatures into the fellowship of this worke but God himselfe alone who is Iehovah one God in essence and substance and yet Elohim that is more Persons even three Persons in that one undivided essence did forme the very body of man and brought it into that forme and temper that it might bee a fit subject of the soule which is a spirituall substance And this all other Scriptures confirme which attribute the creation of mankind to God alone as Deut. 4. 32. and Isa. 45. 12. with many other places where the creation of man upon earth is ascribed unto God onely and where holy and faithfull men speaking as they were moved by the holy Ghost confesse themselves the worke of Gods hands as Iob 10. 3. and God their maker and former Iob 36. 3. and Malac. 2. 10. and God the potter and themselves his formed worke Isa. 64. 8. This Doctrine well weighed is of excellent use First to make us ascribe all our excellency and all our well being to God that wee may give him the glory of them and that wee may beare our selves before God as before our creatour and may ever remember that whatsoever service wee are able to performe either with our soules or bodies it is wholy due to God and none other but onely in him and by commandement and warrant from his holy and infallible Word Seeing God alone hath created us and given us all our being even the forme and shape of our bodies wee must not thinke it enough to keepe our selves to God and to serve him in spirit onely but wee must serve and worship him with our bodies also and with all parts and members of our bodies Although God many times makes men instruments and meanes to convey health life being and well being to us as naturall Parents to bring us into being and life and to nourish and bring us up and as Kings and Rulers and wise Magistrates to bee Saviours of our bodily lives from death and other dangers and to procure safety peace and well being to us and in this respect and for these causes wee doe owe love honour and service to them in and under God yet in no case may wee in things which tend not to the honour but dishonour of God and are contrary to his Word and Will and offensive to his Majesty obey serve and honour them In such cases let us say as the Apostles did to the high-Priests and Rulers of the Iewes We ought to obey God rather then men and whether it be right and lawfull to obey you more then God judge yee Act. 4. 19. and 5. 29. All Potentates Kings and Rulers because they are men and have no power but from God must not looke that any should serve and obey them rather then God or
is knowne and discerned to bee his image and in it his shape is plainely seene Both these are here to bee understood in this word image and Gods image containes in it both the similitude or resemblance by which man is said to bee like unto God in all his naturall properties gifts and endowments and also his nature and substance which though it differs from Gods nature and substance Yet is a fit subject of such properties gifts and endowments which resemble Gods attributes and properties Secondly the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demuth which is here translated likenesse is used in a twofold sense First it signifies the similitude and likenesse by which one thing resembles another in all the speciall properties of it thus it is used Psalme 58. 4. where the poison rancour and malice of the wicked is said to have the likenesse of the poison of aspes and Ezech. 1. 10. the likenesse of the faces of the foure living creatures in Ezechiels vision is said to bee like the face of a man and of a Lyon and of an Oxe and of an Eagle and Dan. 10. 16. one is said to touch Daniel who had the likenesse of the Sons of men Secondly it signifieth the same that the word image doth that is a thing which is made like to another and is the very patterne which resembleth it in all parts and properties as 2 King 16. 10. where the patterne of the Altar of Damascus which Ahaz sent to Vriah the Priest is called the image of it And 2 Chron. 4. 3. the images of Oxen which Solomon made under the brasen Sea are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demuth the likenesse of Oxen and Isa. 40. 18. an image made to represent God according to that conceipt of him which men frame in their mindes is thus called Here in this text the word is used in the latter sense and signifies the same that the word image doth in effect but in a diver and manner For the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Image signifies first a creature and then the likenesse by which that creature so resembles God the Creatour in all the speciall properties of it that it becomes his image And the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 likenesse signifies first the similitude and then the creature that is such a similitude and resemblance of God stamped upon the nature and being of a creature as makes it the very image of God and so these two words Zelem Image and Demuth Likenesse are as the best learned and most judicious expositors of this text doe affirme the one the exposition of the other The word Image sheweth that the creature barely considered is not Gods image but by the naturall properties and gifts by which it resembles God And the word likenesse sheweth that the similitude alone is not the image but as it subsists in a fit subject and flowes from the nature and properties which God gave it in the creation Vpon these grounds wee may easily understand that the phrase of creating man in Gods owne image and likenesse signifies Gods creating man of such a nature and endowed with such naturall properties gifts and endowments that hee doth in them all resemble himselfe and is his lively image very like to him shewing forth his divine properties and attributes of goodnesse wisedome power knowledge and in all things conformable to his just will Thus much for the opening of the words The next thing to bee considered is the Image it selfe and the speciall things wherein it doth consist And here I hold it necessary first to distinguish the image of God and his likenesse into two kinds The first is naturall formed in the creation The second is supernaturall and spirituall formed in man by the holy Ghost dwelling in him This distinction though divers people lead by custome and humane authority more then the word of God doe reject as a meere device of mine owne yet I finde it plainely laid downe in the word of God For the holy Apostle Saint Paul 1 Cor. 15. 49. doth in expresse words affirme that as there is both a first Adam made of the Earth earthy who by Gods breathing into him the breath of life became a living soule in the first creation and also a second Adam made a quickening Spirit even the Lord Christ from Heaven heavenly So there is a twofold image of God in man the first The image of the earthy Adam in which hee was created which though hee forfeited and lost by the law of justice yet by Gods common and generall indulgence in Christ hee did so farre retaine and communicate it though grievously mangled defaced that we are said to have borne it who are Adams naturall progenie and were created upright in his loynes The other is the image of the heavenly Adam the Lord Christ who being in the forme of God equall with God did humble himselfe to descend from Heaven by taking our nature upon him and framing to himselfe out of the seed of the woman by the operation of the holy Ghost a most pure and holy manhood which did beare over and above the image of the first Adam deformed with many frailties and all our infirmities sin onely excepted Rom. 8. 3. Philip. 2. 7. an holy and heavenly image created and framed in his humane nature by the working of the holy Ghost which is given to him not by measure Ioh. 3. 34. even from his first conception Luk. 1. 35. And this image as the elect regenerate and faithfull doe beare in part in the state of grace while they are by the inward worke of the Spirit conformed to the image of Christ Rom. 8. 29. and Christ is formed in them Gal. 4. 19. So they shall fully and perfectly beare it in heaven after the last resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 49. And as the holy Apostle doth distinguish these two images and doth oppose the one to the other making the one the image of the first Adam who was of the Earth earthy the other proper to Christ the second Adam who is the Lord from Heaven heavenly so hee doth shew divers differences betweene them in his divine Epistles which are confirmed also by other Scriptures First the image of God in the first Adam was naturall it was that which was given him in the creation so my text here saith God created man in his owne image But the image of God in the second Adam was supernaturall and spirituall for hee was conceived and formed in the wombe by the holy Ghost Luk. 1. 35. and his image is communicated to men and they are changed into it by the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 3. 18. Secondly the image of God in the first Adam was mutable and Adam did forfeit it together with his life and naturall being by his sin and disobedience And although God out of his common favour and indulgence in Christ doth still continue it in some degree to Adams posterity yet
age of the World which God doth not over-rule and order by his providence For as hee is infinite in wisedome and power able to decree and ordaine from all eternity all things most wisely and to create and bring to passe all things according to the counsell of his will by a mighty hand of power which cannot bee resisted So also hee is wonderfull in goodnesse and bounty to provide most carefully all things needfull in aboundance for the being and welbeing of his creatures and to order governe and dispose all things good and evill most wisely to the good of his elect the iust punishment and destruction of the wicked and to his owne glory Wherefore that wee may better understand this point and proceed profitably in the handling of it We are first to consider the signification of the name and the true sense of the word And after to insist upon the thing it selfe and to define and describe this actuall providence of God The word providence is sometimes taken in a large sense and signifies Gods care and respect of all creatures both in decreeing and ordaining their being and all things which befall them and in executing his eternall decree according to the counsell of his owne will for in all these things God did shew a provident care and respect Sometimes the word is used more strictly and that three wayes First for the provident care and respect of God in decreeing things for the best that they should so come to passe as they have done or shall doe at any time hereafter of this providence the Apostle speakes Hebr. 11. 40. where hee saith God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not bee made perfect this may bee called Gods providence in willing and decreeing Secondly it signifies Gods provident care which hee shewed in the creation of the World and all things therein For hee first created things above which could subsist and bee perfect by themselves without the inferiour elements and the creatures in them as the highest heavens and their inhabitants the Angels then hee created the visible heavens which might bee ready by their light to bee of use for other th●ngs below in such measure as was needfull then hee created the spacious regions of the aire through which that light might shine to other elements and all creatures which hee was about to create in them and before hee created any living creatures which could not well subsist nor move themselves without greater light then that of the naked heavens hee created the Sun Moone and Starres which might both give light sufficient to those creatures and also might cherish and comfort them and all other things which were made to serve for their use And before hee created mankind male and female in his owne image fit to rule under him in the inferiour World hee prepared and made ready for them all creatures which they might rule over all kinds of delicate food in great variety and aboundance and a Lordly palace and place of pleasure wherein to dwell in which he put them so soone as they were created As God in all this shewed his provident care for man and all creatures to make them every one perfect in their kind with naturall perfection in the creation so I have noted this his actuall providence in the severall passages of the creation and have unfolded it so farre as for the present was necessary Thirdly this word is frequently used to signifie Gods provident care in ordering and governing the whole created World and preserving all creatures therein and in disposing every thing which doth befall them and come to passe in the World to some good end according to the counsell of his owne will This is the actuall providence which now comes to bee distinctly handled and unfolded in the next place after the creation But before I come to describe this providence of God and to lay open the nature object severall parts and kinds of it I hold it necessary to prove clearly out of the holy Scriptures that there is in God such a providence and provident care which hee doth shew and exercise in the ruling and governing of the whole World and ordering and disposing all things to their severall ends And that God is not a carelesse sleepie and slumbering one who doth neglect and not see regard and care for any things here below as some blind fooles desperate Atheists and wicked Men have imagined and spoken as the Psalmist sheweth Psalme 10. 11. 13. and 94. 7. who say that the Lord doth not see God hath forgotten ●ee hideth his face hee will never see nor regard nor require what is done among men in the World For the manifest proofe of Gods providence I will first rehearse some notable testimonies even plaine texts of holy Scripture which being laid together may minister to us sufficient matter and occasion to describe and set forth the actuall providence of God and all things wherein it doth consist and which thereto belong Psalme 14. 2. The Lord looketh downe from heaven upon the Children of men to see if there bee any that doe understand and seeke after God Psalme 33. 13 14 15. The Lord loooketh from heaven hee beholdeth all the Sons of men from the place of his habitation hee looketh upon all the inhabitants of the Earth Hee fashioneth all their hearts alike hee considereth all their works Psalme 34. 15 16. The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and his eares are open unto their cry The face of the Lord is against them that doe evill to cut off the remembrance of them from the Earth Psalme 36. 6. Thy iudgments O Lord are a great deepe thou preservest man and beasts Psalme 104. 27 28 29 30. All living things wait upon the Lord that hee may give them their meat in due season Hee giveth to them and they gather it hee openeth his hand and they are filled with good when he hideth his face they are troubled when hee taketh away their breath they dye and returne to their dust when hee sendeth forth his Spirit they are created and hee renueth the face of the Earth Psalme 113. 5. Who is like unto the Lord our God who dwelleth on high 6. Who humbleth himselfe to behold the things that are in Heaven and in Earth 7. He raiseth the poore out of the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill that he may set him with Princes Psalme 138. 6. Though the Lord b● high yet he hath respect to the lowly Job 13. 7. But aske now the beasts and they shall teach and the fowles of the Aire and they shall tell thee 8. Or speake to the Earth and it shall teach thee and the fishes of the Sea shall declare unto thee 9. Who knoweth not in all these that the hand of the Lord hath wrought this 10 In whose hand is the soule of every living thing and the breath of
point in the Description of Gods actuall providence Now the meanes which God hath ordained for the manifestation of the glory of his grace and goodnesse in the eternall blessednesse of his elect they goe before in execution though the end is first in Gods intention And therefore they come to bee handled in the first place And they all may be reduced to two maine heads The first is mans fall The second is mans restauration In the fall of man sive things come to bee considered● First the Commandement of God at which man stumbled and which the Divell made the occasion of mans fall The second is the fall it selfe what it was and wherein it did consist The third is the state of rebellion into which man did fall The fourth is the multitude of evils which did accompany and follow mans sin and fall The fifth is the small reliques of good which remained in mans nature after his fall The Commandement of God is plainely laid downe Gen. 2. 16 17. And therefore I will first insist upon that portion of Scripture and after will proceed to the description of the fall as it is laid downe in the third Chapter But before I proceed further let me conclude this Doctrine of Gods actuall providence with some use and application First it is matter of admirable comfort to all true Christians and faithfull people of God in that the Lord whom they have chosen for their God their rocke and confidence is so wise and provident above all ordering and disposing all things which come to passe in the World in wonderfull wisedome and by an omnipotent hand to his owne glory and the salvation of his elect in Christ. Whatsoever good commeth at any time it is the gift of God and all good blessings and benefits which they receive and enjoy from any hand or by any meanes they are so many tokens and pledges of his love and fatherly care and of his eye of providence watching over them for good And whatsoever evils of any kind breake into the World by the malice of the Divell and the outrage of wicked men they are no other nor no more but such as God in his wisedome and goodnesse is pleased willingly to permit and suffer for a far greater good to his own people and as he over-rules them all and hath set them their bounds beyond which they cannot passe so he disposeth and turneth them all to his owne glory and the manifestation of his justice and power in saving of his Church and people and in confounding and destroying all his and their enemies wherefore in times of peace plenty and prosperity when all good things and blessings of all sorts abound Let us rejoyce and glory in the Lord and give him the praise of all and offer up daily and continuall sacrifices of thankfulnesse with cheerefull hearts and willing minds studying and striving with all our might and to the utmost of our power to use and employ all his blessings to the best advantage for his glory the good of his Church and the profit of our owne soules being well assured that these are his talents committed to our trust which if wee by our faithfulnesse doe increase wee shall in the day of account and reckoning receive the reward of good stewards and faithfull servants and bee received into the joy of our Lord. But on the contrary in evill and perillous time when iniquity aboundeth sinnes of all sorts are increased piety and charity are waxen cold religion is skorned the godly persecuted and oppressed justice judgement and truth troden downe and trampled Let us not faint nor feare nor bee dejected as men without hope For the Lord our God and our keeper is a provident God his eyes neither slumber nor sleep hee seeth and observeth all these things and without his will and knowledge no evill can come to passe As the Scripture saith of Pharaoh to may wee say in this case that even for this same purpose God hath raised up these wicked persecutors and outrageous sinners that is in his just wrath hath given them up to Satan and their owne lusts to multiply sin and oppression that he may shew his power in them and make his justice glorious and name famous throughout all the earth When the nations rage and the Kingdomes are moved God can give his voice and the earth shall melt and all the works of the wicked shall bee dissolved Secondly here is matter of terrour to the wicked both them who commit sins in secret and presume to goe on in their lewd courses with a conceipt that none seeth nor taketh notice of their abominations and also them who multiply their sins openly and without feare increase their persecutions and oppressions and vex and afflict the meeke of the Earth and breake Gods people in pieces thinking that they shall never bee called to account and putting farre from them the day of reckoning Behold here the Lord who is the judge all the earth is a most provident God all their doings are naked and opened to his eyes and he observes all their wayes and wicked workes their power strength and greatnesse is from him and he wittingly and willingly suffers them to abuse them to sin and to oppression and wrong and onely so long as he pleaseth that when they have filled up their measure hee may bring them to judgement and may make them a skorne derision and footestole to the righteous whom they have skorned hated and oppressed Thus much for the actuall providence of God FINIS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Masoreth sepes legi Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Use 5. Creation 1 2 Creatures To create what 1. 2. Author of creation Time Object Forme What word it was 1 2 3 A large description of Creation Taken into parts and proved 1. Opus ad extra Heb. 11. 3. opened 7. Manner of creation in foure things Rom. 1. 20. None but God wrought in the creation Arguments 1 2 3. 4. 8. Use 1. By creatures ascend to know God And his soveraignty over all Use 2. Confutation of six sorts of men Use 3. Rep●oofe to ●vo sorts Use 4. Comfort for the godly Names of the creatures 1 2 3. 4. Instructions concerning the creatures Use 1. The world not eternall Use 2. Admire Gods eternity Use 3. Overlove not the world now degenerate Use 4. Not God but we need the world Use 5. Hare sin Motives The words expounded I. The beginning of time here meant Argum. 1. 2 II. III. IV. V. Doct. 1. By the creation God is seen to be infinitely wise and powerfull Use 1. Look up to the omnipotencie of the Creatour To rejoyce and ●est in him Use 2. Bewaile the contrary negligence Use 3. Checks all Atheisticall thoughts of Gods power Doct. 2. The three persons● are equal Use 1. Against Antitrinitaries Use 2. Trust in Christ the holy Spirit John 1. The time In the beginning Doctr. The world and all in it