Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n goodness_n great_a sin_n 6,173 5 4.6117 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

and after their likenesse to bee Lord over all other creatures the fishes of the Sea the fowles of the aire and all living things on earth In the creation of all other things God said onely Let them bee and so they were made but in the creation of mankind hee calls a councell as being now about a greater worke and saith Let us make Man which is a speciall point not lightly to bee passed over without due consideration First hee who thus enters into consultation is said to bee Elohim that is God the Creatour who is more persons then one or two even three Persons in one essence as the Hebrew word being plurall doth imply And hee who here saith Let us make man and in the next verse is said to create man in his owne image hee is the same God which created the heavens and the earth Verse 1. and the light and the firmament and all other things mentioned before in this Chapter They with whom hee conferres are not the Angels as some have vainely imagined nor the foure elements which God here calls together that hee may frame Mans body of them being compounded and tempered together as others have dreamed For the text shewes plainely divers strong reasons to the contrary First it is said that God created man not by the ministery of Angels or the elements but by his owne selfe as it followes in the next Verse and Chap. 2. 7. Secondly God created man in his owne image not in the image of Angels or elements and therefore it is most ridiculous to imagine that God spake to them or of making man in their image Thirdly it is shewed that man was made to rule over the earth and the fowles of the aire and the fishes of the Sea and therefore it is absurd to thinkethat the earth or any elements were fellow-makers of man together with God And lastly it is both foolish and impious to thinke that God who made heaven earth the heavenly host the Angels of nothing should call upon others to helpe him and to share with him in the honour of mans creation seeing hee doth so often in Scripture challenge this honour of creating all things to himselfe and professeth that hee will not give this glory to another Here therefore God the Creatour is brought in by Moses as it were consulting within himselfe even the eternall Father with the eternall Word the Son who is called the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse image of his Person by whom hee made the World of which man is a part Hebr. 1. 2. and with the eternall Spirit And here hee brings in God consulting about mans creation to bee Lord over other creatures for 3. speciall reasons and to teach us three things which are reasons of consultations among men when they are about a worke The first is to shew not that God needed any advice or helpe but that the worke which hee was about was a speciall worke even the making of man the chiefest of all visible creatures one that should bee Lord over all the rest being made in Gods owne image indued with reason understanding wisedome and liberty of will The second to shew that man was to bee made a creature in whom God should have occasion given to shew himselfe a mighty and wise Creatour and Governour a just Iudge and revenger of wickednesse and sin which doe provoke him to wrath and revenge a mercifull Redeemer and Saviour of sinners seduced and an holy sanctifier of them by his Spirit If wee consider man as a creature which might fall and have Gods image defaced in him and by his many provoking sins might give God cause to repent that hee had made him as is said Gen. 6. then there appeares some reason why God should as it were consult whether hee should make him or no. Also if wee consider that man being fallen and brought under the bondage and slavery of death and the Divell and under eternall condemnation could not possibly bee redeemed but by the Son of God undertaking to become man and to suffer and satisfie in mans nature and that man cannot bee made partaker of Christs benefits for redemption without the holy Ghost the eternall spirit of God infused into man and descending to dwell in man as in an earthly tabernacle There will appeare to us great cause of consultation that God the Father should consult with the Son and the Spirit and this consulting about mans creation doth intimate all these things But in that this consultation is with a resolution all things considered to make man with a joynt consent this shewes that God foresaw how mans fall and corruption and all the evils which by it were to come into the World howsoever to our understanding and in our reason they may seeme just impediments to hinder God from creating mankind yet might by his wisedome bee turned to the greater advancement of his glory and might give him occasion to shew all his goodnesse wisedome power perfect purity and holinesse in hating sin his infinite justice in the destruction and damnation of wicked reprobates and in exacting a full satisfaction for the sins of them that are saved his infinite mercy love and free grace in giving his Son to redeeme and save his elect from sin death and hell and his unspeakeable bounty in giving his Spirit to sanctifie them to unite them to Christ and to conforme them to his image and so to bring them to the full fruition of himselfe in glory God in consulting within himselfe and thereupon resolving to create mankind and saying Let us make man and then immediatly creating him as the text sheweth did in the creation of man shew before-hand that in mankind hee would manifest and make knowne all his goodnesse more then in all other creatures The third reason of Gods consultation is to manifest more plainely in mans creation then in any other creature the mystery of the blessed Trinity that in the one infinite eternall God the Creatour there are more even three Persons of one and the same undivided nature and substance For such consultations and resolutions as are expressed in this forme of words Let us make man in our image and after our likenesse doe necessarily imply that there are more Persons then one consenting and concurring in the worke And that these three Persons are all but one and the same God it is●manifest by the words following which speake of these Persons as of one God for it is said that God created man in his owne image and not they created man in their image Thus much for the intent and meaning of the Spirit of God in these words Let us make man in our image and after our liknesse From which words thus expounded wee learne First that the creation of mankind was a speciall worke of God and that man is by nature the chiefest and most excellent of all creatures which God made in all the
Ioseph professeth ascribing all his piety and charity which hee shewed in nourishing his bretheren and their families to God And all naturall good things God worketh either immediatly by his owne hand alone as in the creation wherein hee gave being to all things without any meanes at all or by instruments and meanes which hee himselfe hath first created hee giveth light by the Sun Moone and Starres and by them and the whole Heavens which are turned about by his counsels and by their influ●nce hee refresheth and nourisheth all creatures on Earth and also doth by them both use correction and shew mercy Iob 37. 12 13. and Matth. 5. 45. There are besides these other things which are good and profitable not simply in their owne nature but by accident and in some respect as for example for men to abstaine from marriage and from begetting children for the increase of mankind is not a thing naturally or morally good in it selfe being a refraining from the use of Gods ordinance but yet in case of urgent necessity when Gods Ministers and Servants doe live in times and places of persecution and are driven to flee and wander from place to place naked and destitute of meanes whereby to maintaine Wives and Children Saint Paul tells us it is good for a Man to live single and not to touch a Woman 1 Cor. 7. 1 35. for by this meanes he shall avoid much distraction and more freely attend the service of God Also for men to fast and afflict their bodies by abstaining from comfortable nourishment and necessary food for a time is not simply good in it selfe but yet it is profitable for taming the proud and rebellious flesh and for furthering of our humiliation in times of private and publike calamities when Gods hand is heavy upon us or upon our Land and the feare of his threatning judgments which hang over our heads doe terrifie us these and such like are called good things that is profitable expedient and by accident and in some respect and condition good Other things there bee which in their owne nature are evill and hurtfull and evils of affliction and punishment as crosses of Gods people and plagues which though they hurt and destroy the outward man and the flesh yet by God grac● they worke to the saving of their soules and the amendment of their lives as wee read Psalme 119. 67 71. and 1 Cor. 5. 5. and 11. 32. and in that respect are called good And the plagues and destructions which befall the wicked which to them are dreadfull and wofull evils and curses but as they tend to the deliverance of Gods Church from their 〈…〉 rsecutions and oppressions to the purging of his land and the magnifying of Gods justice and power so they are good in the issue and event and in respect of Gods purpose intending good by them Now in all these God hath an active and working band as well as a permitting will and his actuall providence ruleth in them Hee gives men the gift of continency and power over their owne wils to live single and to make themselves Eunuches for his Kingdomes sake as our Saviours words shew Matth. 19. 11 12. and the words of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 37. Hee cals upon men in his word and by his grace stirres them up to fasting weeping mourning and afflicting of their bodies for the greater humiliation of their soules Joel 1. 14. and 2. 12. and Zach. 12. 10. Hee doth sometimes by his owne hand afflict his people when hee sends among them sore diseases which are the stroke of his hand Job 36. 18. and Psalme 39. 10. and by his owne immediate hand hee strikes and consumes the wicked Iob 34. 25 26. as wee see in the drowning of the old World in the destruction of Pharaoh Ananias and Saphyra and divers others Sometimes hee doth by good instruments afflict and punish his people and plague and consume the wicked as by his Angell hee punished Israels sin and Davids pride 2 Sam. 24. 17. and destroyed the host of Senacherib 2 King 19. and smotte Herod Act. 12. And by Joshua Moses David destroyed the Canaanites and the Philistines and other enemies of his Church Sometimes by evill instruments hee afflicteth and punisheth his owne people and plagueth and destroyeth the wicked by Absalom and Shimei hee punished David and by wicked Jehu hee destroyed the wicked family of Ahab by Satan and the wicked Sabaeans and Chald●ans hee afflicted and tryed Job and by the proud King of Ashur hee punished Israel and Judah and destroyed the Idolatrous nations as appeares Isa. 10. where hee is called the rod of Gods wrath and proud Nebuchadnezar is called his servant in punishing his people the Iewes and destroying the obstinate among them and in crushing the wicked nations Ier. 25. 9. For he in whom all doe live move and have all being Act. 17. 28. gave to those wicked Kings power and might and though their owne lusts and unsatiable desire and ambition stirred them up and so ●he act was in the wicked themselves yet hee over-ruled and disposed their malice to performe his purpose and to execute his most just judgements And thus wee see that Gods actions are most wise and just in those evils which hee executeth by wicked instruments and that which they doe with a wicked mind and for an evill end God doth justly give them power to doe and permits them to abuse his power to their owne ends when hee purposeth to direct all to a good end and so doth And therefore though no evill is done in the World but by his providence yet is hee no author or efficient cause of sin the sinfulnesse of the action is of the evill instruments and the power of it and the disposing of it to good that onely is Gods And although men who are limited by Gods law may doe no least sin or evill for a good end that greatest good may come thereof and if they doe it is sin in them yet God who is supreme Lord of all and whose will is the rule of all righteousnesse and who by his omnipotency can raise out of the greatest evill a farre greater good and can make the Divels malice and mans fall the occasion of bringing Christ into the World and a way to shew his infinite goodnesse and mercy in saving and redeeming his elect and to magnifie his glorious power and justice in their eyes by destroying the wicked with eternall destruction the sight whereof brings them to a more full fruition of his glory and makes them farre more sensible of his goodnesse to them and of their owne eternall blessednesse hee may doe what seemes good to his heavenly wisedome and evill so farre as he willeth it and hath an hand in the ordering of it is no sin but doth more shew his goodnesse and unspotted purity and holinesse The third thing is that God by his actuall providence disposeth all things which are done in the World
giving of Christ his Son for a Redeemer aboundantly testifieth his infinite goodnesse and bounty his punishing our sins in Christ to the full shews his infinite Justice and his pardoning of beleevers by Christs satisfaction freely given and communicated to them shewes his infinite mercy and free grace as the Scriptures often testifie and our own consciences within us do witnesse and our daily sense and experience do proove And in our Redemption and application of it we see discovered the Trinity of Persons in one God And while wee in these things as in a glasse behold the glory of God with open face the vaile of ignorance being remooved we are changed into the same Image from glory to glory and so come to have communion with God and the fruition of him 2 Cor. 3. 18. The seventh and last Branch sets before us the utmost end of all Gods outward works to wit the eternall blessednesse of the elect by the communion vision and fruition of God in all his glorious attributes as wisedome power goodnesse mercy justice and the rest The Text it selfe intimates this Truth to us saying that all these workes of God proceed from his good will and pleasure For the good pleasure and will of God consists chiefly and principally in willing that his elect shall be brought to perfect communion of himselfe and of his glory for their eternall happinesse And what God willeth according to his owne good pleasure and doth because he is pleased so to do it must needs aime at the blessednesse of his elect by the sight and fruition of him and his glory Now therfore all Gods outward workes proceeding fiem Gods pleasure must needs tend to this end and this is confirmed Rom. 8. 28. 1 Cor. 3. 21 22 23. where we read that all things worke together for good to them that love God and are the called according to his purpose and that all things are the elects the world life and death things present and things to come and they are Christs and Christ is Gods also Col. 1. 16. all things visible and invisible were created as by Christ so for him that they might serve him for the salvation of his elect and for this end and purpose Angells principalities and powers are said to be made subject to Christ 1 Pet. 3. 22. And their office and ministery and the great wonders which God doth by them are said to be for them who shall be heires of salvation Heb. 1. 14. To these testimonies many reasons might be added I will onely call to mind that which I have else where abundantly declared and prooved to wit that for this end the world is upheld by Christ and for his sake and through his mediation ever since mans fall and for this end the wicked live even the barbarous and savage nations either that they may serve for some use to Gods people or for the elects sake whom God will raise up out of them or that God may shew his justice and power on them being sitted for destruction to the greater glory of his elect even the judgements of God on the wicked and their damnation serve for this end to increase the blessednesse of the Saints The doctrine of this description serves for to stirre us up in imitation of God our Creator not to content our selves with saying purposing and promising or with making a shew of doing good workes but to be reall true constant and faithfull in performance of them I or so doth God whatsoever he promiseth or purposeth or is pleased to doc that he doth in Heaven and Earth Sluggards who delight in idlenesse doing nothing and Hypocrites who say and promise and make great shew of doing but are barren of the fruites of good workes as they are most unlike to God and contrary to him so they are hatefull and abhominable in the sight of God and they onely are accepted of God who are active Christians alwayes doing good and abounding in the worke of the Lord their labour shall not be in vaine but every one shall receive reward according to his workes which are evidences of his communion with Christ and of his faith justification and sanctification wherefore seeing God is alwayes reaching forth his mighty hand to worke in Heaven in Earth in the Sea and all deep places for our profit let us be alwayes doing and studying to do good for his glory Secondly it serves to move and direct us in and through the outward workes of God to see and behold the infinite eternall and omnipotent God and his divine power and Godhead and in the unity of Gods essence the sacred Trinity of persons because all the persons have a hand in every worke and that one God who is three persons is the author and worker of every divine outward worke as this doctrine teacheth It is a common custome among men when they see and behold the handy worke of any person to remember the person to bee put in minde of him by the worke especially if he have knowne the person before and beare the love and affection to him of a friend and a beloved one So let it be with us so often as we see and behold the visible outward workes of God let us in them behold the face of God and remember his glorious attributes Let us in the great workes of Creation behold the wisedome and power of God the Creator in the worke of Redemption the mercy bounty and love of God in our Sanctification the love and the holinesse of God and in them all let us behold the three glorious Persons in that one God who worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will The Father by his eternall Word and Spirit creating all things The Sonne sent forth by the Father in our nature and sanctified by the Spirit redeeming us and paying our ransome The Holy Ghost shed on us by God the Father through the Sonne Christ in our regeneration And all three conspiring together to purge sanctifie and justifie us and to make us eternally blessed in our communion with them and in our fruition of God in grace and glory And let us take heed and beware of idle and vaine speculation of Gods great workes which shew his glory and proclaime his glorious Attributes Wisdome Power and Goodnesse lest by such idle negligence wee become guilty of taking the name of the Lord our God in vaine Thirdly from this description we may easily gather and conclude that sinnefull actions as they are evill and sinnefull are not Gods workes for God is pleased with those things which he doth and his workes are according to his pleasure but God is not pleased with sinnefull actions and evill workes he hath no pleasure in iniquity Psal. 5. 4. If any aske How then can it be done if he will not and be not pleased I answer That in them there is to be considered 1. A naturall motion or action proceeding from some created power
above man in innocency whose best dwelling was but an earthly Paradise or Garden furnished with fruits which might be eaten up and consumed and such were the Angels as the former Doctrine hath plainly proved Therefore this conclusion necessarily flowes from that Doctrine and is proved and confirmed by it But we have for further confirmation both plaine testimonies and arguments in the holy Scriptures The royall Prophet David being ravished with the contemplation of the supercelestiall glory appearing in the secondary beames thereof which shine in the visible heavens and in the Sun Moon and Starres cries out in admiration and wonders that God dwelling in such admirable glory and having such excellent and glorious company and attendants about him should vouchsafe to look upon man or have any regard of him What is man saith he that thou art mindfull of him or the sonne of man that thou visitest him Psal. 8. 4. But in the next words he goeth further and speaks fully to the point and shewes that Christ himselfe according to his humanity though conceived and borne most pure and holy was made lower then the Angels thou hast made him saith he a little or for a little while lower then the Angels that is Christ in the nature of man which he took upon him for so the Apostle expounds these words of David Hebr. 2. 6. And Psal. 103. 20. Yee Angels saith he which excell in power Our Saviour also in the Gospel sheweth plainly that the Angels in heaven are so excellent in nature and substance as the elect Saints glorified shall be after the last resurrection and their most glorious and blessed condition which farre excels Adam in innocency shall be like unto the Ange's Matth. 22. 30. Saint Peter in plaine words saith that Angels are farre greater then men in power and might 2 Pet. 2. 11. Saint Paul calls them Angels of light 2 Corinth 11. 14 and the Angels of Gods power 2 Thes. 1. 7. he numbers them with principalities and powers which farre excell the nature of man Rom. 8. 38. Whensoever he sets forth the greatest excellency of things created greater then in men he doth instance in Angels as 1 Cor. 13. 1. though I speak with tongues of men and Angels And Galat. 1. 8. If I or an Angell from heaven and 4. 14. Ye received me as an Angell of God yea as Christ Jesus In a word whereas man is an earthly creature framed out of dust in respect of his visible part his body Angels are pure heavenly spirituall substances framed immediately out of nothing by the simple and absolute act of creation And whereas mans better part the soule though it be a spirit yet was not created a perfect compleat creature but made to subsist in the body and cannot be in full perfection without it Angels are spirits complete and perfect in themselves without subsistence in any other creature as shall appeare hereafter And therefore Angels are by creation and in nature and substance farre above man in his best naturall estate even in the state of innocency First this shewes most clearly that all the love and favour which God extends to man in Christ and in giving Christ to be mans Saviour and Redeemer by taking mans nature upon him and making full satisfaction therein to justice for him and in saving man from hell and damnation and exalting him to heavenly glory is on Gods part most free and voluntary arising meerly and wholly from the good pleasure of his owne will and not from any merit worth and excellency which he at first created or since found in mans nature If the naturall excellency of any creature could procure Gods speciall favour or deserve his bountie or move him to shew mercy to any creature which hath sinned and by sin is fallen into misery surely the Angelicall nature should have been more respected of God then the nature of man and Angels being fallen should more easily have found mercy at his hand For as this Doctrine hath proved Angels are by creation and in nature and substance the chiefest and most excellent of all Gods creatures far excelling man in power might purity and being And yet when Angels and man were both fallen and found guilty charged with folly and involved in misery God passed by the Angels and shewed no mercy to them neither gave his Son to take upon him the nature of Angels and to be their Saviour and Redeemer but so many of them as sinned and kept not their first estate but left their habitation he hath reserved in everlasting chaines of darknesse unto the judgement of the great day 2 Pet. 2. Jud. 6. But for man who is of lesse worth and farre inferiour by nature he hath given his Sonne to take mans nature upon him to be incarnate and made flesh and hath sent him forth in the forme of fraile and sinfull flesh made of a woman and made under the Law and hath delivered him up to a cursed death and to hellish agonies pangs and sorrowes that he might redeem this fraile worme of the earth miserable and sinfull man from hell and damnation unto which the Angels which sinned are reserved under darknesse and to exalt him far above the state of innocency in which he was created and his best naturall estate in Paradise unto the high estate of heavenly glory with the elect holy and blessed Angels which is farre above that mutable state of glory in which the Angels were first created and from which so many of them did fali Wherefore let us admire this free grace of God and stand amazed at his wonderfull and supertranscendent bounty to mankind And whatsoever mercy we receive from him in our deliverance from any evill or whatsoever blessing and benefit of bounty and goodnesse in advancing us to this state of grace or glory let us wholly ascribe it to the good pleasure of his owne free will and not to any merit in our selves or any excellency created in our nature And let no man glory in his naturall wit or wisdome and knowledge gotten by learning and study nor boast in his owne strength but as it is written Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord and triumph in this that he knoweth Gods free grace and aboundant mercy in Jesus Christ and hath the sweet taste and experience of it in his owne soule Secondly this serves to magnifie in our eyes both the large measure of Gods bounty to his elect in Christ and also the infinite power and excellency of Christ his mediation and the dignity and worth of his person in which hee hath so dignified our fraile nature by assuming it upon himselfe and uniting it personally to his Godhead that hee hath exalted it farre above the most glorious and excellent state of the Angels in heaven That Angels are the best and chiefest of all Gods creatures by creation and in nature and substance farre more excellent then man in his best naturall estate of
fit for the use of man and other living things that is rehearsed Verse 25. Nor Gods bare direction of men and beasts to eat of these nor a naturall appetite and inclination given to Man and other creatures to affect and desire these things but the words doe expresse thus much that God the Creatour is the onely Lord and all power and right is in him to dispose and give them and the use of them and man and beasts had no right to the herbes trees fruits and grasse but of the free gift of God The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I give or have given doth fully expresse a free gift In that hee saith that herbes bearing seed and trees yeelding fruit shall bee to mankind for meat and greene herbe or grasse shall bee meat to the beasts and fowles and creeping things which live on earth This shewes that man in innocency was to feed onely on such things and as yet hee had no other meat allowed and other living creatures did all feed on grasse Hereby also it is manifest that all herbes bearing seed and all fruits of trees were wholsome food for man and all green grasse for all other living creatures which move on the face of the earth Otherwise God would not have given them to man and other creatures for meat From the words thus opened wee may observe some profitable instructions From all the words joyntly together which shew the Dominion which God gave to man and the food which he allowed both to man and other creatures Wee may learne that God is the onely absolute and supreme Lord of all creatures and no creature hath right to rule over others or to meddle one with another but by Gods free gift our meat our drink and whatsoever wee have in this World God gives it freely to us and wee have no right to any thing but from him If mans wisedome power knowledge and ability to rule the creatures and their fitnesse and inclination to obey him had intituled him sufficiently and given him a true right there had beene no need of Gods giving this Dominion and so if his appetite to herbes and fruits and their fitnesse to feed and delight him and the concord betweene the appetite of living creatures and the greene grasse had given them a true right to it what need had there beene of this gift and that God should say Behold I give to you every herbe and fruit for meat c. In that therefore these two are here recorded as free gifts of God this doctrine flowes naturally from hence And this is aboundantly confirmed by other Scriptures as Gen. 14. 19. where Melchisedeck Gods high and royall Priest in blessing Abraham cals God the possessour of Heaven and Earth that is such a Lord as holds in his hand and possession by an absolute right Heaven and Earth and all that is in them so that none hath any right to any thing in them but of his free gift And Deut. 10. 14. it is said that the Heaven and the heaven of heavens is the Lords the Earth also with all that therein is Also Psalme 24. 1. the Earth is said to bee the Lords and the fulnesse thereof the round World and they that dwell therein and Psalme 50. 12. the beasts of the fi●ld yea and the whole World is mine saith the Lord the same also is testified Psalme 89. 11. and Iob 41. 11. And Iob confesseth that all that hee had was Gods to give and take away at his pleasure Iob 1. 21. We have also a strong argument to prove this from the quit-rent which God requires and men are bound to pay to God and to whom hee assignes it in testimony of their homage and that they possesse nothing but of his gift as tenants at will that is the tythes of the fruite of the Land and of the Cattell and of all increase all are the Lords quit-rent and were paid to God by all the faithfull even to his Priests and Ministers who Minister before him and have him for their portion Levit. 27. 30. Gen. 14. 20. and 28. 22. and Num. 18. 20. This shewes that God may lawfully take away from wicked men and appoint others to take from them whatsoever they have if he be so pleased at any time and it is no injustice neither have they cause to complaine because they doe not acknowledge him their Lord nor pay due rent nor doe homage to him by honouring him with their wealth and substance It is held to bee no wrong but just and lawfull for earthly land-Lords to seaze into their owne hands and take away from their tenants the houses lands and farmes for which they wilfully refuse to pay the due rent and wilfully deteine it much more is it justice in God the chiefe and absolute Lord of all the earth and the creatures therein to cast men out of those houses and lands and to deprive them of all their increase and revenues for which they refuse to pay their due homage tythe and quit-rent to him and to his Ministers and Servants whom hee hath assigned to receive them for his use and service Secondly this admonisheth us to acknowledge that all wee have is Gods and all our houses lands goods and riches are but his talents lent to us to bee employed as for our owne benefit so for his glory chiefely and the good of his Church Also it justly serves to incite and stirre us up to render thanks praise and due service to him for all and to pray to him daily for a blessing on our meat drinke and all necessaries and to begge at his hand the free use of his creatures and a true right unto them Thirdly it serves to shew Gods great mercy bounty and fatherly indulgence to us in suffering us to have and enjoy so many blessings and good creatures which wee have forfeited by our sinnes and doe daily forfeit by not using them aright but abusing them and neglecting to pay a tenth at least for our quit-rent to God yea and all or the most part if hee requires it at our hands for the necessity of his Church and the maintainance of his truth I feare and justly suspect that if we examine our selves few will bee found among us not deeply guilty in this kind as many other wayes so especially for sacrilegious detaining of tythes and due maintenance which God hath separated to himselfe for the upholding of his publike worship and the preaching of his word and continuing of a learned and faithfull laborious ministery in his Church Secondly wee hence learne that in the state of innocency man had no power over living creatures to kill and eat them Neither did one beast devoure another and feed on his flesh but the food of man was onely herbes and fruits of trees and the food of beasts and birds was the greene herbe and grasse of the field the words of the text shew this plainely And other Scriptures intimate
second Adam Christ in which hee was formed by the holy Ghost and into which all the elect are changed and renued when they are regenerate and made new creatures in him may serve for excellent use as I shall shew when I have described the image of God wherein our first Parents were created and have laid downe by way of Doctrine the particulars wherein it doth consist But before I can distinctly describe the Image of which my text here speakes I must yet a little more distinctly shew the severall sorts of images which are images of God and of other things There are images which are essentiall and perfect to wit every person begotten by another of his owne nature and images which are accidentall and imperfect An essentiall image is either absolute and most perfect or lesse perfect The essentiall image which is most perfect and absolute is one person begotten by another of the same undivided substance and being in all essentiall properties equall and alike distinct onely by personall properties and subsistence Thus the eternall Son of God is the image of the Father of whom he is begotten from all eternity of the same nature and individuall substance For the second person the Son considered according to his divinity simply as God before his assuming of our fraile nature is said to bee in the forme of God that is his person is of the same essence glory and majesty with the Father and hee thought it no robbery to bee equall with God that is to have all essentiall properties of God equall which the Father as the Apostle testifieth Philip. 2. 6. and in this respect hee is called the image of the invisible God Coloss. 1. 15. and the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse image of his person Hebr. 1. 3. which words though they have respect to Christ as hee is the Word made flesh and God incarnate revealing God in his goodnesse wisedome justice mercy power and the like yet they must not bee limited to his incarnation but are extended to his deity as hee is the eternall Word the Son the second Person by whom the Father created all things and who with the Father doth uphold and sustaine all things as the words immediatly following doe shew For indeed the eternall Word the Son is in the forme of God one and the same God of the same substance glory and majesty with the Father and onely distinguished in personall properties relatiom and subsistence And therefore hee alone can truely bee called the image of God in this sense which is most perfect and absolute The essentiall or substantiall image which is lesse perfect then the other is either naturall or supernaturall A naturall essentiall image is one person begotten by another of the same nature and kind of substance and equall and alike in the same kind of naturall properties but not of the same singular substance and individuall properties thus every Son of man is the image of the Father which begets him for though hee hath a severall soule and body and severall properties which are of the same kind but not the same singular with those of his Father yet because his body and soule and all the faculties of it are of the same kind and in the outward forme resembles his Father and his Father may bee seene as it were in him therefore hee is his Fathers image and made in his likenesse A supernaturall essentiall image is a nature or person who is so begotten of God by the holy Ghost given to bee and abide in him as the immortall seed of God that hee is made partaker of the divine nature that is hath not onely supernaturall and spirituall gifts wrought in him by which hee is made fit to see and enjoy God but also is united to God and God becomes his portion for ever This image is either primary or secondary The primary image of this kind is onely Christ as hee is man or the humane nature of Christ which God formed and made in the womb of the virgin so pure and holy by the holy Ghost from the first conception in which the holy Ghost came upon her and the power of the Almighty over-shadowed her Luk. 1. that it was not onely most pure and holy and full of the holy Ghost from the first being of it but also was personally assumed and united to the eternall Son of God the second Person in the blessed Trinity and so became the first borne of every creature Coloss. 1. 15. and the first fruits which doe sanctifie the whole masse of the elect 1 Cor. 15. 23. and hee head from whom the Spirit is derived unto all the elect Ephes. 4. 15 so that they become a kind of first fruits of Gods creatures Iam. 1. 18. The secondary supernaturall image is every elect regenerate child of God begotten and borne of his Spirit shed on them through Christ Tit. 3. 6. and so created a new man after God in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth and made partakers of the divine nature one with God in Christ and by Christ Ioh. 17. 23. I call this a secondary image because the elect become this image not immediatly but after a secondary manner by deriving the Spirit from Christ and by union with God in him I call it a supernaturall image because it is above mans nature and belongs not to him in the creation nor consists in any naturall properties or resemblance And I call it an essentiall image because every regenerate man hath in him the holy Ghost dwelling as the soule of his soule quickning the whole man which Spirit is of the same essence with the Father and the Son And in respect of this Spirit and his gifts dwelling in his tabernacles their bodies and furnishing them throughout they are truely called and are indeed a new image of God and new creatures All these sorts of images are to bee excluded out of this text for our first parents are not here said to bee created after God essentially or supernaturally but onely in the accidentall and naturall image of God as I have in part shewed before and shall also hereafter more fully shew in all the particulars The accidentall or imperfect image of a thing or of a person is a thing or person so framed and made by another as by a paterne and after the likenesse of that paterne that it doth very much resemble it in likenesse and similitude but yet is not every way equall nor in all things fully alike nor of the same nature and substance with it In an image of this kind there are required two things necessarily First that the thing which is the image bee very like that whereof it is the image yea so like that it must resemble and represent either the nature and essentiall forme of it or the outward forme and figure or some speciall properties and proper qualities of it or all these together and yet in
a different substance Secondly that it bee formed and made by that whereof it is the image and according to the paterne of it Where any of these two is wanting there can bee no image at all as for example One egge is like another in nature substance and all naturall properties yet that egge is not the image of the other because the one is not made by the other as the paterne of it so wee may say of an apple or a figge and of many other things but the forme of an egge or apple made in chalke or paste or wax is the image of an egge or apple though not so like it as another egge or apple and farre different in nature and substance because it is formed by it as by a paterne And againe though an egge bee formed in the body and of the naturall substance of a bird and sometimes wormes are bred in the bodies of men and beasts and the egge resembles the bird in whitenesse or in variety of other colours and the wormes seeme like mans flesh in whom they are bred both in colour and substance and in life sense and motion yet they cannot bee called images because they are not like in shape nor outward forme nor in any property but onely in some qualities and small resemblance But the picture or statue made after a man and in many things like him though more like another man then him yet it is his image and not the image and picture of another so the figure of a man appearing in a glasse when hee stands before it though it differs in nature and substance and is but a vanishing shadow yet because in outward shape forme and colour it is very like and is expressed in the glasse by him looking in it therefore is his image And the impression of a stamp or seale made in wax or well tempered clay is the image of that stampe or seale though it bee not perfectly like by reason of some small defects in the wax clay or stamping and the impression of another seale engraven with the same figure or letters may bee in all points more like and yet not the image of it because it was not made after it but by another seale engraven with the same figure Now then that wee may plainely see that man was created and how hee was created in the image of God and made after his likenesse and that hee is a true accidentall image of God his Creatour Wee are to observe and take notice of these two things First that God did frame mans nature even his whole soule and body after himselfe with intent that both his substance and naturall properties and endowments might take their patterne from him his Creatour that is in a word God himselfe was the originall and chiefe patterne by which alone man was made and formed Secondly that though divers other creatures had in divers things more resemblance of God then man had as the heavens in large comprehension of the visible World the Sun in glorious brightnesse beauty and Majesty the highest heaven in glory and immutability And all creatures as they have essence and being and were made good and perfect in their kind have some more some fewer impressions and resemblance of God in his essence and attributes yet none can bee called the image of God among all visible creatures but onely man because though God formed all things after his owne will wisedome and goodnesse yet hee made no visible creature living or without life so farre resembling himselfe in his nature and essentiall properties that it might justly or with good reason bee called his image but onely man As man alone of all creatures under heaven was made in the image of God so man alone doth so plainely resemble God is so stamped with the impression of Gods properties and in his whole nature and frame is made so fit a subject for God to dwell in and to bee conformed to God and wherein God may shew his wisedome power goodnesse liberty of will justice mercy and other attributes that hee onely of all visible creatures can truely bee called the image of God Let us now therefore in the next place come to the things wherein this image of God did consist and in respect of which things man is said to bee created in the image of God and to bee the image of God his creatour First it is a most certaine truth that the image of God in which man was created is nothing else but the conformity of man unto God and man is truly called the image of God in respect of all those things wherein hee doth more then any other visible creatures resemble God in his divine essence and properties Now this conformity of man unto God is twofold primary or secondary Primarie conformity is seated in the Soule of man or in man according to his soule the chiefe part of his substance Secondary conformitie is that which is in man according to his bodie and consists in the body and in things which belong to his body Conformitie of Man to God in his Soule is either in the Nature of substance of his Soule or in the naturall Faculties Properties and Endowments of it First conformity to God in the Substance of his Soule is the similitude which mans Soule hath unto the nature and substance of God in that mans Soule is not a Corporeall substance as all visible Creatures are nor a Materiall body created of any former matter but it is a pure Spirit even a spirituall incorporeall invisible and living substance and so it is called 1 Cor. 2 11. Heb. 12. 23. and both here in my text and 1 Cor 15. 45. a Living Soule which lives and gives life to the body and in these things it is like unto God who in his nature and being is a Spirit or a spirituall substance as our Saviour affirmes Joh. 4. 24. is called the Invisible God Coloss. 1. 15. Tim. 1. 17. and the Living God Psal. 42. 2. Ier. 10. 10. Ioh. 6. 96. and his Eternall power and Godhead are called Invisible things Rom 1. 20. yea as God saith of himselfe Isa 40. 18. So wee may truely say of mans Soule that it cannot truely be likened to any visible thing neither can any bodily substance resemble it Conformity to God in the naturall faculties properties and indowments of his Soule is the likenesse and similitude which man in respect of his reason understanding liberty of will desires and affections all upright and perfect had unto Gods wisedome knowledge goodnesse libertie justice mercy and the like First man in his perfect understanding naturall light wisedome and knowledge did resemble Gods wisedome and knowledge of all things For man in his creation and naturall integritie did rightly know God and himselfe and did perfectly understand all the workes and the nature of all the creatures of God and what was good both
all mankind 2 Chron 16. 9. The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the Earth to shew himselfe strong for them whose Heart is perfect Isa. 41. 22. and 4● 8 9. The Lord proveth himselfe to bee the onely true God by his provident care over all things and his foresight and prediction of things which afterwards hee bringeth to passe and that Idols are no Gods because they cannot do any such things Matth. 6. 26. Behold the fowles of the Aire they sow not neither doe they reap nor gather into barnes yet your heavenly Father feedeth them Matth. 10. 29 30. Are not two sparrowes sold for a farthing and not one of them shall fall on the ground without your Father But the very haires of your head are all numbred Hebr. 4. 13. All things are naked and opened to his eyes neither is there any creature which is not manifest in his sight 1 Pet. 5. 7. Cast your care upon him for hee careth for you These texts laid together doe aboundantly shew Gods actuall providence and the extent of it to all things created and doe Minister to us every Doctrine which concernes the object parts and kinds of it And besides these Scriptures wee have strong Arguments to prove the actuall providence of God First hee who is the Omnipotent Creatour Lord and Possessor of Heaven and Earth and all things therein infinite in wisedome knowledge goodnesse mercy justice must needs have a provident care to order rule dispose and preserve all things which belong to him Now such a one is God as I have aboundantly proved before in unfolding his attributes hee is infinite in power wisedome knowledge goodnesse and the like the Creatour and supreme Lord of all things The whole World is his and all things therein belong to him Psalme 50. 12. Therefore undoubtedly hee hath a provident care of all and an eye and hand in ordering all things Secondly the workes which God doth and the things which hee brings to passe in the World doe shew his wi●e care and providence Hee giveth raine in due season for a blessing to his obedient people he withholdeth it from the wicked for a iust punishment makes their heaven as brasse their Earth as iron he blesseth men in their basket and store in the increase of their cattell and the fruite of their ground and he againe for sin maketh fruitfull lands barren and destroyes their cattell with murraine and with thunderbolts Levit. 26. Deut. 28. Iob 12. 12. Psalm 107. 34. By him Kings are set up to rule and Princes and Iudges to execute iustice and to judge not for themselves but for him Prov. 8. 15. 2 Chron. 19. 6. He breaketh downe and shutteth up and none can resist him hee leadeth counsellors away spoiled and maketh Iudges fooles Hee looseth the band of Kings and poureth contempt upon Princes Hee increaseth he nations and destroyeth them hee enlargeth the nations and straiteneth them Job 12. 14 and all Kingdomes are disposed by him Dan. 2. 37. Thirdly the miracles which God worketh by them who call upon his name and the extraordinary things which come to passe whereof there is no naturall cause nor any cause at all but his owne will and pleasure and provident hand do prove the same The miracles and wonders which hee shewed in Egypt and the wildernesse so often as Moses called and prayed unto him His staying of the Sun for a whole day at Iosh●ah's prayer Iosh. 10. His thundering on the Philistines at the prayer of Samuel 1 Sam. 7. 10. His raising of the dead at the prayer of his Prophets and Apostles 1 King 17. 2 King 4. and Act. 9. His giving of heroicall gifts strength and courage beyond all humane reason to some men for the deliverance of his oppressed People as to Samson David and his worthies and divers others All these shew Gods watchfull care over the World and his actuall providence ordering and disposing all things This point thus proved as it serves to discover the impiety profanenesse and desperate blindnesse of Epicures who utterly reiect and deny the whole providence of God and those desperate Atheists such as Caligula Nere and others who scoffed and derided all them who taught and beleeved it and those heathen Philosophers who held that God had no care or respect of things u●der heaven but blind fortune ruled here below and all things here are casuall and come by chance So it admonisheth us all men to beware of giving way to such doubts and feares of infirmity which their owne corrupt flesh or Satan by mears thereof doth suggest into their hearts to weaken destroy their faith in Gods Providence Let no man admit such a thought into his heart That God hath forgotten to be gracious and that it is in vaine to serve God there is no profit in walking humbly before him in keeping his ordinance in mens purging their hearts and washing their hands in innocency because they that worke wickednesse and tempt God doe prosper and they who deale trecherously are set up and exalted But above all let us abhorre all presuming conceipts that all things come to passe by blind chance and God doth not see nor regard our wicked thoughts purposes and practises neither will hee call us to account for them For what is this but to deny the Lord to be God It is even the way to pull speedy wrath and vengeance on our owne heads Gods providence being proved that it is I proceed to shew by way of plaine description what it is and wherein it doth consist The summe of which description is this The actuall providence of God is Gods exercise of his wisedome power goodnesse iustice and mercy in ruling ordering and governing the whole World in watching over all his creatures with a carefull eye in doing all good and permitting all evill which are done in the World and in disposing all things good and evill to the manifestation of his glory and the eternall salvation of his elect in Christ according to his owne eternall purpose and the counsell of his will This description consists of two maine and principall parts The first sheweth what Gods actuall providence is in generall in these words Gods exercise of his wisedome power goodnesse iustice and mercy The second sheweth the speciall nature of it and the speciall things wherein it doth consist and whereby it is distinguished from all Gods other outward actions and exercises of his wisedome power and goodnesse This is comprised in the rest of the words First it is Gods exercise of his wisedome power goodnesse mercy and iustice and in this it agreeth with the creation and all other outward actions of God for every such action is either an exercise of his wisedome or of his power or of his goodnesse or of his mercy or of his justice or of all or the most part of them all together And indeed Gods actuall providence beareth sway
in all his outward actions which hee doth either immediatly by himselfe or mediatly by the ministery of his subordinate instruments and it also over-ruleth and disposeth things which are evill which are not done by God himselfe moving the doers of them but come to passe by the permission and sufferance of him wittingly and willingly suffering his creatures to abuse the power which they have from him This point is manifest by the Lords owne words Isa. 45. 7. where hee saith I forme the light and create darknesse I make peace and create evill I the Lord do all these things And by that speech of the Prophet Amos. Chap. 3. 6. Shall there be evill in a City and the Lord hath not done it The true sense and meaning of which words Saint Augustine doth notably expresse where he saith nothing is done unlesse God omnipotent doth will that it be done either by doing it himselfe or suffering it to be done for it could not be done if he did not suffer it neither verily doth he unwillingly without or against his will but willingly and with his will suffer every thing to be To which purpose hee hath divers other speeches as that God being good would not suffer any evill to be done unlesse as he is omnipotent he could bring good out of them neither is that done without Gods will which is done against his will that is his word and approbation In the second maine part there are divers speciall branches shewing the speciall things whereby Gods actuall providence is distinguished from his other outward actions The first is that it consists in Gods ruling ordering and governing the whole World and watching over his creatures with a carefull eye The second that it comprehends in it Gods doing of all good and his permission and suffering of all evill The third that by it God disposeth all things which are done in the World to the manifestation of his glory and the eternall salvation of his elect in Christ. The fourth and last is that it is no other exercise of wisedome power goodnesse mercy and justice but in executing things which hee hath decreed from all eternity even ruling ordering and disposing all things wisely after the counsell of his owne will For the first point to wit that God exerciseth his actuall providence in ruling ordering and disposing the whole World and all therein as supreme Lord King Iudge and Ruler thereof the Scriptures aboundantly testifie as Gen. 18. 25. and Psalm 50. 6. Psalm 82. 1. and 2. Chron. 19. 6. where God is said to bee the Iudge of all the Earth yea the Iudge both in Heaven and Earth who sitteth chiefe among all Iudges and is with them in the iudgement Also in those places where the Kingdome Dominion and Rule over all is said to belong to God and hee is said to bee the King which reigneth and ruleth all to the utmost ends of the Earth yea to be a great King above all Gods and the onely potentate King of Kings and Lord of Lords as I Chron. 29. 10. 11. Psalm 10. 16. and 29. 10. and 4. 27. and 95. 3. and his Kingdome is said to rule over all Psalm 103 19 and that not for a time but from generation to generation Psalm 145. 13. It is he who setteth bounds to the tumultuous Seas beyond which they cannot passe Iob 38. 8. Psalm 104. 9. and ruleth over the raging waves Psalm 89. 9. and stilleth th●● when they arise And that hee hath a watchfull eye over all creatures even to preserve man and beast it appeares Psalm 36. 6. and that as his eyes are upon them that feare him and hope in his mercy to deliver their soule from death and to keep● them alive in famine Psalm 33. 18. 19 So his face is against them that do evill to cut off the remembrance of them Psalm 34. 16. The second point is that Gods providence is exercised both in the doing of all good and in permitting and suffering wittingly and willingly all evill which commeth to passe in the World and so it consists of two parts action and permission This also is fully proved and confirmed Isa. 41. 23. and 45. 7. where the Lord proves himselfe to bee the onely true God by disposing all things both forming the light and making peace by his active hand and power and also creating evill and darknesse by permitting and giving up the Divell and his wicked instruments to abuse his power which hee hath given them to doe evill and to worke wickednesse as wee see in Pharaoh whose heart hee is said to harden yea and to raise him up by giving him up to his owne lusts and into the hand of Satan who hardened him and made his heart obdurate so that the more God plagued him with great plagues which naturally tend to breake a stout heart and to pull downe pride the more did his corruption rise up and rebell and the more did Satan stirre him up against God and his people and made him run desperatly into the devouring gulfe of destruction Wee see this also in Gods permitting Satan to afflict Iob and to tempt him to blasphemy by stripping him naked of all that hee had tormenting his body and battering his soule with sore temptations of his wife and friends and with skaring dreames and terrible visions as wee read Iob 1. and 2. and 7. 14. Also the Apostle in expresse words affirmeth that God being provoked by mens wilfull sins doth in just wrath give them to uncleanesse through the lusts of their owne hearts and to vile affections and a reprobate minde to worke all iniquity with greedinesse Rom. 1. 24 26 28. and doth give them the Spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and eares that they should not heare Rom. 11. 8. not by putting such a Spirit into them so as hee sheddeth his Spirit on men through Christ but by suffering Satan the Spirit of lying and of all blindnesse and wickednesse to enter into them which hee would doe into all men if God did not restraine him and by casting them out of his protection as wee see in the evill Spirit which vexed Saul and in the lying Spirit which deceived Ahab by entering into his Prophets and speaking lyes by their mouths 1 Sam. 16. 14. and 2 King 22. 22. And thus wee see that in all evils of sin Gods providence is exercised by way of voluntary permission But as for all good things which come to passe God hath in them an approving will and a working hand and worketh in men both to will and to doe yea every thought and purpose of good 2 Cor. 3. 5. Philip. 2. 13. and without him we can doe nothing Ioh. 15. 5. So that in all morall duties and in all good and godly workes God worketh in men by his Spirit immediatly and giveth them hearts will and power to doe them and they are but his instruments to performe these good things as