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A50400 The beauty and order of the creation together with natural and allegorical meditations on the six dayes works of the creation : with the addition of two compendious discourses : I. of the creation of man after the image of God, II. of the creation of angels, with a description of their several properties / by ... Mr. John Maynard ... ; published by William Gearing ... Maynard, John, 1600-1665.; Gearing, William. 1668 (1668) Wing M1448; ESTC R14885 107,977 226

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should learn to bless God for every faculty of our souls we are too unthankful for all sorts of mercies but yet more apt to give thanks at least outwardly for things without us than for those more excellent things within us Thus many a one saith I thank God for health for meat and drink c. that never not so much as in words doth give him thanks for his soul and the several faculties of it How seldome hath God any praise for our understandings our judgments our memories our reason wills and affections how lame would our souls be without the will and affections how blind without reason memory or understanding yet how unthankful are we to him that made them we should r●ckon these among the chiefest of Gods blessings next to the sanctifying graces of Gods spirit and accordingly shew our thankfulness for them to his glory SECT 2. II. IN as much as the Soul is more excellent by its Creation than the Body this sheweth that our care should be greater for the soul than for the body Nature it self might teach even a natural man to be more careful of the natural good of the soul than of the body which yet is contrary to the practice of man You will say the Natural man perceiveth not the things of the spirit neither can he discern them because they are spiritually discerned But I speak now of such natural good things as tend to the enriching and perfecting of the soul and mind of man namely such knowledg in Arts and Sciences as concerneth the things of this life How many do preferre the things of the body above these But the principal thing is that which concerneth the spiritual happiness heavenly perfection of the soul. These things which are the most excellent endowments of the most excellent part of man are less regarded and sought for than those that are the meanest appurtenances of the body which is the meanest part The least saving grace being a thing belonging to the perfection of the soul is worth more than the whole body which without the soul is but a dead lump of earth Can a Maid forget her ornament o● a Bride her attire yet my people have forgotten me days without number saith the Lord Ier. 2.32 what a shameful indignity is this to the Majesty of God when ornaments of the body toyes head-tyres or the like serving to dress up an earthly carkass shal● be better remembred than God himself yea shall be remembred when he is forgotten Thus every thing belonging to the body is thought of but the soul is forgotten the eye must be pleased the ear must be tickled the palate must be delighted great ado must be made for back and belly but where is the care for the soul we can starve that yet never feel any hunger we can let it pine away yet never complain of weakness we can suffer mortal diseases most dangerous corruptions to grow upon our souls and never see our need of spiritual physick How many a soul is swollen with pride and over-grown with vile affections and yet no care is taken of it but it is let alone as if all were well yea what deadly wounds do men daily give to their consciences by swearing lying drunkenness by unjust and indirect dealings with others yet all this is esteemed as nothing no care is used to have it cured nay he that shall desire to cure it or perswade them from these desperate courses tending to the destruction of their souls shall be hated as an enemy Our very creation should make us ashamed of this folly that all the care is taken for the body framed out of the dust and the soul is utterly neglected which the Lord himself breathed into the body F●ar not them saith our Saviour Mat. 10.28 which after they have killed the body can do no more but fear bim which can cast the body and soul into hell-fire Yet he that shall follow our Saviours counsel in this shall be thought to be a fool by many men he that will rather suffer harm in his body or loss in his goods and such things as concern the body than hazard his soul upon any sin which is death to the soul is thought to do it in simplicity for want of wit whereas even reason might teach us that the soul is a thousand times better than the body and the misery of the soul incomparably beyond the punishments that can befall the body in this life Let us then labour to prevent the everlasting destruction of the soul and fear it more than a thousand deaths of the body if it could possibly endure so many Think that a precious thing that weigheth more than the whole earth in the ballance of the sanctuary and the judgment of Christ. What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul Oh learn to prize thy soul a precious Creature and immortal Spirit and make it appear thou makest more reckoning of it than of thy body thy body is but a small piece of earth but the whole earth is not able to bring forth or yeild matter for one soul which is of an higher nature SECT 3. III. THis should teach us also that the greatest good which one man can do for another is that which is done for his soul. The feeding cloathing and refreshing of anothers body is a good work if rightly performed but the good which is done to the soul is a better work as the soul is better than the body This therefore should reform a gross folly among us whereby it is conceived that there is no good work in a manner besides that which is done to the body It is true that he who hath this worlds good and yet doth no good in this kind doth not truly perform any other good work but yet this on the otherside is a gross errour to conceive that the best thing that a man can do is to help the outward man and that the doing of this is enough to excuse him from doing good to the souls of others This is a gross carnal conceit it is as much as to affirm that the body is better than the soul earth than heaven mortality more excellent than immortality and a lump of flesh more worth than a spiritual being Now men are so far from esteeming that best which is done for the good of the soul that they account those admonitions and reproofs which are tendered to them for this purpose the greatest signs of ill-will that any man can shew to others no man is accounted a worse neighbour than he that will seek to pluck mens souls as brands out of the fire of Gods wrath by shewing them the danger of their sins If men want for the body what outcrys are there made against the hardness of others hearts men are so hard-hearted now a days that they will not give a poor man a bit of bread they will see him starve first and somtimes
for Man's use and refreshment before Man himself should be Created it behoveth that first there be an House and all things necessary then that an Inhabitant be brought into it 4 ●ecause God would communicate himself to Man and acquiesce in him When God created Heaven Earth he rested not in Heaven nor in any Heavenly thing neither in the Earth nor any Earthly thing but only in Man because he is an Heavenly thing for his Soul Earthly in regard of his body 5. If God had first of all made Man before any other of his Creatures then Man might have had some colourable excuse to have spent his time in idleness but God created Man after he had made his other ●reatures that Man might forthwith be employed in the works of his Creator Zanchy of late and some of the Antients are of opinion that when God created Adam ●hrist did then assume an humane body and made Adam's body after the pattern of that Munster doth well observe on Genes 2.7 that the word in the Original which signifieth formed is written with a double 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is said he formed the Beasts it is written with a single 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noting out to us that Man was partly from the dust of the ground in regard of his body partly from Heaven in regard of his Soul but the Beasts were only created of the dust of the ground The Antients called the fabrick of Man's body Librum Dei the Book of God because much knowledge is taught to Man out of Man And Man's being created after the Image of God is to put him in remembrance that he should continually work after that Original Copy which God gave him from Heaven I shall discourse no farther upon these things because this ensuing Treatise of our Reverend Author will furnish you with variety of most excellent Meditations upon the whole Story of the Creation Much honoured in the Lord I do not here present you with any thing that is altogether new I know among Men the newness of the matter doth chiefly commend the Books being like the Indian Elephants which at their first sight in Asia were so admired that Antiochus having but two named the one Ajax the other Patroclus but afterwards growing common in every Consuls Tryumph they were called in contempt Lucanian Oxen So it is with Books they are now little regarded because of the commonness of them I confess many Books now adays are like Mythridate's Sword whose Scabbard was more costly than the Blade and so their swelling Titles do make more shew than all the Book affordeth sub●tance and in prefixing great Titles to babling Books Men do but deceive the buyer like unto some Vintners that hang out new Ioy●bushes when they have nothing within but old musly Wine as Seneca speaketh But the substance of this Treatise doth correspond with the Title and as it is stuffed with many choice notions both natural and allegorical together with many practical and usefull inferences so it is also written in a pleasant style and so the more delightfull to the pious and ingenious Reader Good words are the garment of truth and although truth is so glorious within that it needeth no outward decking yet if she doth appear in a Rayment of Needle-work 't is but for a more excellent comeliness not gaud● gayness The worthy Author in this Treatise dealeth with you like Nurses who feed their Babes with milk fir●t concocted within them That voice that August heard from Heaven is my humble advice to you ●olle et lege tolle et lege Take up and read take up and Read So say I to you Take up this Book take up this Book and read it and do therein as an antient Knight spake of his reading good Books viz. the first time to read both to see and like the second time to note and observe the matter and method and the third time to carry away and make use thereof Thus not doubting but this Treatise will finde acceptance at your hands and receive protection under your shadow I humbly take my leave and am Yours in all Gospel-Services to be commanded William Gearing Cransden in Sussex August 10. 1667. Books Printed for Henry Eversden and are to be sold at his Shop under the Crown-Tavern in West-Smithfield 1. THe Sphere of Gentry deduced from the Principles of Nature an Historical and Genealogical work of Armes and Blazon by Sylvanus Morgan in Folio 2. The History of the late Civil Wars of England in Folio 3. Riverius his Universal Body of Physick in five Books c. in Folio 4. The Language of Arms by the Colours and Metals in quarto by Sylvanus Morgan 5. Scepsis Scientifica or Confest Ignorance the way to Science c. by Ioseph Glanvil Fellow of the Royal Society 6. The Gospel-Physitian in quarto 7. The Mistery of Rhetorique Unveil'd Eminently delightfull and profitable for young Scholars and others of all sorts enabling them to discern and imitate the Elegancy in any other Author they read c. by Iohn Smith Gent. 8. A Crew of kinde London Gossips all met to be merry to which is added ingenious Poems or Wit and Drollery in Octavo at 1 s. bound 9. The Natural Rarities of England Scotland and Wales according as they are to be found in every Shire very usefull for all ingenious Men of what profession or Quality soever by I. Childrey in Octavo 10. Pearls of Eloquence or the School of Complements very usefull for all young Ladies Gentlewomen and Scholars who are desirous to adorn their speech with gentile Ceremonies complemental amorous and high expressions of speaking or writing at 1 s. bound 11. Hodges Directions for true Writing in Octavo 12. Theodulia or a just defence of hearing the Sermons and other teaching of the present Ministers of England c. by Iohn Tombes B. D. 13. Speculum Patrum a Looking-Glass of the Fathers wherein you may see each of them drawn characteriz'd and displa●'d in their Colours to which are added the Characters of some of the chief Phylosophers Historians Grammarians Orators and Poets by Edward Larkyn Fellow of Kings Colledge in Cambridge in Octavo 13. Wisdome justified by her Children being the substance of two Sermons Preached by Will. Gearing in Octavo 14. A Cluster of sweetest Grapes for Saints brought from the Heavenly Canaan or the Saints assurance gotten and to be had in this life by the several means specified in this Tract upon 1 Pet. 1.9 c. by Christopher Ielinger M. A. in Octavo In the Press 15. A Cap of gray Haires for a green Head being advice to a Son an Apprentice in London 16. A serious Examination of the Independants Catechisme lately Printed in large Octavo by Benj. Camfield Price 2 s. 6 d. THE BEAUTY and ORDER OF THE CREATION CHAP. I. Genesis 1.1 In the beginning God Created the Heaven and the Earth BEing about to speak of the Works of
according to their kinds but those that were brought forth since by the Creatures as His Instruments have degenerated and lost much of their first excellency So the swee●ness and comfort that is to be had immediately from God in a spiritual communion with Him and in beholding by faith his loving countenance th●ough Jesus Christ is incomparably beyond all the sweetness which is instrumentally conveyed to us by the Creatures Therefore let our Souls long and labour to drink immediatly out of the Fountain to tast and see rather how good the Creator is than to glut our selves with a sensual sweetness of the Creature Oh the pure Waters of the Sanctuary which flow immediately from the presence of God into the souls of the faithful The Spouse in the Canti●les saith The Name of Christ is like a precious oyntment poured forth full of fragrant swee●ness and therefore she begins her Song of love thus Let him kiss me with the kisses of his Mouth She desireth immediate communion with him A Love-Letter wi●l not satisfy Her but his Mouth to her Mouth Himself by his blessed Spirit imparted and communicated to Her So tell a faithfull Soul longing after immediate communion with God here is weal●h honours pleasures c. His Answer will be What talk yee of this dross and dung of these shadows Away with these muddy trifles give me God himself and take from me all the World it is the Creator whom I love it is this All-sufficient God with whom the whole World is not worthy once to be compared Give me Him and take from me what you will CHAP. VIII Use 10. SEeing God made all things of nothing when being nothing they could deserve nothing at his hands and being made they could not help or profit him in any kind this should move us in imi●ation of his free goodness to do for those that cannot deserve any thing from us who are not likely to be able either to help or hurt us or to make us any requital The Lo●d did this when no Law bound Him to his Creature but we are bound to do for our fellow Creatures by the L●w and will of our Soveraign Creator It is great shame for us to grudge at this and hang back saying it is but cast away I shall have nothing for it God gave Beeing to that which was nothing and which could add nothing unto him but the most unable Man may possibly do us some good in some case or other and though he should be unable yet God is able and ●eady abundantly to r●wa●d u● whereas none could ●ecompense his wo●k which he did in giving Beeing to the Creatu●es which were nothing yea all Men a●e of one and the s●me blood with our selves our bone and flesh of our Kinred issuing out of o●e stock as branches of one Ro●t all the blood that runneth in the V●ins of all Fl●sh it st●e●med down from one Fountain even Adam ●ur common Father and therefore there is 〈◊〉 reason that we should one do for ano●he● But what kin was the infinite Iehovah unto meer nothing to emptiness it self what neerness was there between him and it that he should bestow so much upon it even the whole World none at all but rather an infinite distance between an infinite Beeing and meer nothing yet thus did the Lord give Beeing to nothing and made that to be which was nothing How then should we blush at our unnatural churlishness in this behalf and learn of God to do for them that cannot do for us ●or recompense that which we do for them that we may be like our great Creator and our Father which is in Heaven CHAP. I. Colos. 1.16 For by Him were all things Created that are in Heaven and that are in Earth visible and invisible c. SECT 1. HAving spoken of the Creation in general I come now to the Creatures in special which are as learned Zanch divideth them of three sorts 1. Visible 2. Invisible 3. Partly visible partly invisible Of the two former sorts the Text in hand speaketh and under them both includeth the third also which partaketh of both the other kinds but I have chosen his Text purposely for the first and second kinds intending upon a more peculiar Text to speak more largely of the third By the Creatures visible I mean all substances meet bodily though some of them cannot be seen as the Ayr and Spirits in sensible Creatures yet under visible these I comprehend by a Synecdoche because sensible and such as may be discerned by some sense or other By invisible I understand all Creatures meerly spiritual f●●e from all bodily substance as the Angels By those partly visible partly invisible I understand Man-kind consisting of his Body which is a gross material substance and his soul which is of an intellectual and spiritual nature Of the first Moses writeth at large in the first Chapter of Genesis And therefore in the first place observing that God made all bodily creatures I will fetch the explication of this point out of the Holy Story the most ancient that ever was penned the Original Diary of the World and Chronicle of the Universe where first you have the Creation of the whole in the first Day and therein two things 1. Passive 2. A●●ve The passive substance was the huge unwrought Mass of things without any distinct form or shape not yet distinguished and dig●sted into several kinds of Creatures not qualified with those several perfections of natural goodness which afterward the All 〈◊〉 Creator b●stowed upon its se●eral parts Moses tells us it was without form without any special or distinct form or shape and void like a ruinous confused heap void of beauty void of perfection void of such qualifications as should make it very good Again it was dark And darkness was This confused lump lay wrapped up in the thickest Mantle of utter darkness without any the least glimpse of light that can be imagined most dreadfull and hideous but that there was no Creature then made to be aff●ighted by it This darkness was upon the ●ace of it or the superficies it was not only a dark Mass within but the very surface or out-side of it was void of all glimpse of light shining on it Again it was deep An ●●ge Mass of wonderfull and extraordinary bigness which yielded stuff and materials for the framing all bodily substances afterwards except the Heavens if at least they are to be excepted as for my part I think they are and as I conceive the Text makes it cleer For In the beginning it is said that God made the Heaven and the Earth And the next words are And the Earth was without form c. So that by the Earth before I understand the rude Mass of things out of which was brought Earth Waters and other Creatures compounded of these and this Earth was distinguished from Heaven and as this Earth was without fo●m so the Heaven was without
wisdome of the Lord in stretching out the huge and far-spreading body of the Heavens encompassing all the rest of the Creatures after-mentioned And let the wonderful circuit of this Creature make thee with much holy admiration to look upon that infinite Iehovah by whom it was created and if the Heavens be so great that they exceed thine imagination how great is He of whom it is truly said that Neither the Heaven nor the Heaven of Heavens can contain Him if the Heavens be so glorious how unspeakable is His glory and Majesty who hath the whole Heaven for his Throne and treade●h upon the Ear●h as his Foot-stool yea consider that if Gods wisdome power greatness c. be so notably manifested in these Earthly Creatures which we see it is much more gloriously apparent in the wonderful frame of the Heavens which we can scarcely see by reason of their distance not doubting but that the Heaven doth as far excell these lower Creatures in the excellent perfections of its nature as it is above them in height of scituation 2. Again let this make thee wonder at the goodness of God with a thankfull heart who hath not only given Man a pleasant dwelling here on Earth plentifully furnished and a Lordship over other Creatures b●ought out of the same common Mass with himself but also offereth him a place in the highest Heaven that he may dwell for ever in his glorious presence yea that he may sit down with him in his Throne as it is said in the Revelations so that Man who is but dust and ashes even a very piece of this lower Earth shall be exalted above the rest of the Creatures and made to dwell for ever before the face of God seeing then the Lord hath made Heaven for Man to possess let not the Earth then so steal away thy heart O Christian as if there were no better thing than the Earth for thee to enjoy let the Heaven be of greater force to raise and lift up thy heart toward it than the Earth to sink it down-ward see thine own folly and bewail it that thou hast spent more precious hours employed more serious thoughts upon some few spans of the Earth or in gathering some few pieces of white and red Earth than in seeking an ass●●ed title of an inheritance in those glorious and spacious Heavens Think with thy self that no pains can be too much no service too hard no endeavours too constant no affection too eager in seeking Gods Kingdome and its righteousness When God would comfort Abraham in hope of the promised inheritance and so make it a motive to him that he might be stirred unto obedience and strengthened in the faith Look saith the Lord East-ward and West-ward North-ward and South-ward for all the Land which thou se●●t to thee will I give it and to thy Seed for ever Genes 13.14 15. So wouldest thou have encouragements for obedience wouldest thou know why thou shouldest do these and these duties and shun these and these sins then look up to Heaven ha●e an eye to the glorious inheritance which God hath provided for thee Wouldest thou fain be above the reach of malicious tongues or other injuries look up to Heaven they shall not touch thee there Wouldst thou learn contentedness with thy portion look up to Heaven Thou ar● apt to think thou hast not enough here but when once thou shalt take hold of that Heavenly Kingdome thou shalt say I have enough Look up to Heaven and remember that Christ is there in the same nature of Man wherein now thou walkest up and down making intercession for thee and that thou hast a sure friend a Sure●y and Advocate a Spokesman one that is thine Head and to whom thou art united as a Member now in the highest part of the whole C●eation Consider the dignity and priviledge of a Christian whose happiness is as far above that of the Worldling as the Heaven is above the Earth 3. Consider the restless motions of the Heavens never at a stop never abating in any degree the swiftness of their motion and learn both the perfection of God whose providence is in a continual course by which as well the Heavens as the lowest Creatures are carried about all in him moving and having their Beeing and on the other side take notice of thy duty and learn to go on in a restless course of godliness as one carryed about by the power of the spirit as the first mover in all the ways and works of God whereby the heart as the first wheel is stirred and the whole outward Man carried about by that motion from which proceedeth both to will and to do according to his good pleasure In the second place to the first Nights work belongeth the Creation of that first confused lump and mass of things here called Earth but having in it as it were the stuff and materials of all these lower Bodies 1. Consider what a rude mishapen lump this was at the first and in thy thoughts strip the Earth of all its glory consider it bare and naked without Grass Trees Herbs Men Beasts Light or any thing that belongeth to its comeliness furniture or perfection and then remember that as it had Beeing so all its excellency and beauty was from the Lord and therefore suffer not any thing belonging to the Earth not any thing that partaketh of it or is of kin unto it to draw away thy heart from him who gave it all that it hath let not that which is wholly God's d●aw thee from God but rather lead thee to him Take the Earth as it was of it self and it was nothing take it as it was in the beginning of its Beeing and it was as good as nothing it had not any excellency of Beeing to draw thine heart after it if then thou hadst been Created and then conclude it were a madness to conceive it thus to be decked and dressed up by the Lord himself for this purpose that it might draw thy heart from him and move thee to prefer it above him 2. Learn here to see a Picture of thy state of unregeneration thy body of sin what is it b●t a very Chaos a rude confused lump of disordered lusts Earthly affections and muddy distempered passions Is it not without its proper form Doubtless the Soul hath lost that beautiful shape and Image of its Maker consisting in wisdome righteousness and true holiness darkness is upon the face of it What a misty Night shadoweth the understanding of every natural Man so that h● can●ot di●cern the things of God Alas he hath no Light the Day is not dawned neither is the Day-star ris●n upon his Soul he speaketh readeth heareth of God of his love in Christ b●t hath no cleer sanctified a●●re●ension of any Heavenly mystery he looketh blindly upon his sins upon his afflicti●ns upon his crosses upon his comfor●s upon all or many of these that which the faithful Soul sees whose eyes have been
conve●se with others it is not to be imagined how many wants and inconveniencies the loss of this Creature would bring upon thee for among other things it hath a cherishing warmth and lively heat accompanying it whereby it giveth life and preserveth life motion and natural heat in Men and other Creatures and therefore conclude Oh Lord our God! how wonderfull are thy works and especially this first-born Creature the Light which upon this first day thou diddest cause to shine out of utter darkness and when thy heart is covered wi●h a dark night of sad uncomfortable thoughts then look up to him who can cause the light to shine out of darkness and joy and comfort to arise out of sorrow and heaviness CHAP. IV. Meditations on the second Days Work FRom the fi●st come we to the second day which we ord●narily call Monday Here you are to consider the wisdome and wonderfull power of God in making a division between the huge heap of the Waters spreading the Firmament of the Ayr between its parts raising the Clouds above and there making treasuries for Rain Hail Snow and other m●teors Oh consider the goodness of God in giving thee this admirable Creature of the Ayr wh●ch feedeth thee with Breath continually whereof the poorest Beggar hath as large a portion as the greatest Monarch Consider that the least draught of this Ayr is more than thou canst deserve at the hands of God who yet art apt to repine and murmur when thou hast not fulness of Bread and art abridged in some small degree of the plenty which thou hadst at other times 1. Consider that as without this Ayr the natural Man cannot live so neither can the spiritual Man without the blessed spirit which giveth an heavenly breathing to the Soul regenerated as the Ayr doth to the Body And as the Ayr doth pass unseen into the Body but then is breathed out again in a visible manner so the spirit of God worketh and conveyeth his heavenly influence in an hidden invisible manner into the minds of the faithfull but is visibly breathed forth again as it were in regard of its fruits in holy speeches and heavenly actions that Men may see the good works which he bringeth forth in the godly and glorify their Father who is in Heaven Wonderfull are the effects of the Ayr and according to it our Bodies are usually enclined and disposed yea and our Souls too in some respect by reason of the neer Neighbourhood between the Soul and the Body and the special affinity between the Ayr and the Spirits in the Body which are the immediate instruments of the Soul We of this Kingdome have special cause to bless God for one of the sweetest and most temperate Ayres in the World se●ving much for delight for health for our furtherance even in the best things if we were car●full to make the best use of such a blessing a quick and kindly Ayr being no small help to the spirits even in the service of God 2. We may further consider that as such stoppings as hinder the Ayr from passing too and fro do endanger the natural life so those sins that stop the lively working moving and breathing of the sanctifying spirit do endanger the spiritual life The Wind which is the Ayr stirred and moved and is as it were the same in the Ayr which the Waves are in the Sea is of wonderful force and strength it beareth down Trees Buildings and things of wonderfull strength and bigness it tosseth the Seas and rouleth in the Waves and worketh wonders in the deep hereby magnifying the Almighty Power of its Creator W●o as the Psalmist saith rideth upon the Wings of the Wind. And yet you must remember that the Winds and Seas obey him who sent a calm when Ionas was cast out of the Ship and at another time when Christ came into the Ship so when sin is cast out of the Soul and Christ received and embraced then the tempest of an accusing conscience is calmed and a swe●● peace followeth upon it which passeth all understanding 3. As the Ayr is sometimes more sometimes less stir●ed by the Winds so the blessed spirit of God blowing when where and how he listeth doth sometimes as it were breath more st●ongly and sometimes impart a l●ss measure of h●s heavenly vertue In the second Chapter of the Acts at the Feast of Pentecost he cam● down like a mighty rushing Wind upon the Apostles who were gathered together and so they were carried mightily in the Power of the spirit to spread the Gospel of Christ throughout the World But ordinarily the blasts of the spirit are not so strong and to our pace is but ●low in the ways of God and therefore should we pray with the Spouse in that song of Songs Arise O North-wind and come O South and blow upon my Garden that the s●ic●s thereof may fl●w forth 4. But in this Days work we are especially to consider the Clouds above which are those Waters above the Firmament and in these admire those store-houses of sweet refreshing showres which water the Earth with a fa●tening dew and fruitfull moisture that it may yield encrease for the use of Man and Beast which should make us to admire his goodness and on the other side to tremble at his displeasure who once did open the flood-gates of Heaven so as to overwhelm the World of the ungodly destroying all that breathed those only excepted which were contained within ●he compass of one Ark where also we are ●o admire his patience who thus long forbeareth sinners being continually provoked al●hough he hath not only flood-gates of Rain and Water but also store-houses of Hail-shot mortal Thunder-bolts treasuries of Fire and ●●imstone c. whereby he could in a moment many thousand ways avenge himself of his Enemies 5. Consider that as that ground is neer unto cursing which drinketh of the dew of Heaven and receiveth the Rain and yet 〈◊〉 forth no encrease so that case is dreadfull when the Heavenly dew of the Word falleth continually upon the heart and yet it remaineth altogether bar●en and fruitless to●a●d God 6. Consider also how the Lord giveth snow like wool c●ste●h forth his Ice like morsels ●●●●ereth the ●oar● first like ashes In this Ayr are to be admired the hideous claps of ●●under the dreadfull flashes of lightening whereby the Lord sheweth his Almighty Power and Majesty and as he made shew of these terrible things in the delivery of his Law so even common sense may teach us that he will be much more dreadfull when he calleth to account the impenitent transgressors of his Law yea we should consider that the same reverence is to be yielded to Him when he speaketh in the soft still voice of the Gospel which was due unto his voice when it was attended with thunder and lightning 7. Learn to acknowledge Him in the different change of weather be it seasonable or unseasonable and to call upon Him and give Him
first but to beware and tremble at that venemous and smarting sting which it leaveth behind Again as flies are most busie in the sun so are temptations in prosperity and as the flies are apt to light upon that part of the body where there is a fore so is Satan wont to assault the soul where it is weakest and to take advantage of those corruptions that do most prevail in in the heart And as when flies are beaten away they come again very speedily so when Satans temptations are resisted and put back another swarm of flies is at hand other temptations are ready to assault and of this especially Christians have experience when they are pestered with blasphemous thoughts cast into their minds by Satan against which they must take comfort in that by the power of the spirit they are enabled to renew their resistance even as the assaults are renewed SECT 3. THe other sort of Creatures made this day were the Fishes wherewith the sea and rivers were wonderfully stored Admirable were these works of the Lord and his wonders in the deep and it is thought that of all sensible creatures in the world there is the greatest numbers of fishes yea and some kinds of them of the greatest Bulk and bigness of any other creature that liveth and moveth their abundance appeareth in the story of the Creation Gen. 1.20 And God said let the Waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature that hath life and ver 21. it is said the Waters brought forth abundantly And again v. 22. Be fruitful and multiply and fill the waters in the seas He saith of the fouls let them multiply but he doth not say let them fill the air as he biddeth the fishes to fill the Waters And as the Lord gave this extraordinary power of multiplication to the fishes of the sea so they enjoy this grant of his unto this day and as may be seen by the rowes of fishes they bring forth thousands at once insomuch that it hath been used as a Phrase of speech To encrease as the Fish imploying an extraordinary encrease Here admire the wonderfull goodness of God in providing so abundantly for us not only by these Creatures which we daily see walking in the fields or flying in the air but also by an innumerable multititudes of fishes covered under water abounding in the seas and rivers SECT 4. 1. THe greatness of some fishes is as admirable as the multitude Pliny in his Natural History reporteth that about Arabia have Whales been found six hundred foot in length and three hundred and sixty foot in breadth so that if his report be true the length should seem to be above the sixth part of a mile six hundred foot making two hundred paces and a thousand paces making a mile Howsoever the greatness of these fishes is admirable as the experience sheweth of our Merchants daily trafficking toward Greenland to take them and they are far greater than any other living creature in the world which should make us to magnifie the admirable power and infinite greatness of him that made them Oh Lord our God how wonderful are thy works in all the world And the holy Text it self takes notice in special of this creatures greatness Gen. 1.21 God created great Whales Admirable it is in these fishes that whereas the Beasts and Birds cannot live if they be kept any long time under water These on the other side cannot live unless they be under water So whereas a Christian liveth by the spirit and it is the life of his life and the joy of his heart to partake of the spirit and to be conversant in the ordinances of God on the other side it is even death to a Carnal heart to be exercised this way and he thinketh not himself a free man untill he is let loose from these The fish though it live yet it is not lively but lieth almost for dead when it is in the open air out of the waters and the natural man though he be alive not yet dead yet is he not lively but like one as good as dead when he is taken out of his element and restrained by any means from his beloved sins and tyed to holy duties in publick or in private He hath no life in these things his heart is dead toward them 2. And as the fish living in the salt waters remaineth fresh so a carnal man living in the Church and in the middest of the means of grace remaineth in his unsavoury natural condition not having the salt of mortification whereby to eat out his corruptions and dead flesh and make him an acceptable sacrifice unto God as it is said every sacrifice must be salted with salt though he live under the word yet he carrieth no relish of the word in his heart and life Therefore we must not onely look what means we have but how these means do work upon us whether we be transformed into the word for a man to imagine that he is therefore a Christian because he heareth Christ preached is as idle as to say the fish must needs be salt because it liveth in the salt waters 3. Again in that the Lord feedeth such innumerable multitudes of Fishes in the waters by what means we cannot imagine so should we be confident that he will provide for us though the means as yet seem to be hidden from us for though some of the greater fishes do feed upon the lesser yet it cannot be imagined how such an admirable number of them should be continually supplied but the Lord Al-sufficient openeth his hand of bounty and filleth them with good things 4. Wonderful is the work of God in the strange variety of kinds in the strange shapes of these creatures insomuch that it is thought there be few Beasts on earth but that there be fishes in the sea which resemble them so they speak of sea-calves sea-horses c. Wonderful strange are the properties of some fishes which the Al-mighty Creator hath given them Pliny speaketh of a little fish like a great snail which by cleaving to a Ship under sail and driven with strong winds will stay it that it shall not be able to go forward and that even about his own time the Gally of the Emperour Caligula was held fast by one of these against the uttermost endeavour of four hundred Mariners with their Oars It were strange that a Man of his dignity and place in the Common-wealth should expose himself as a laughing-stock to the Common people in reporting so notorious a lie concerning a thing done in his own time and his own countrey Therefore for my part I conceive it to be true and being supposed to be true how wonderfully doth it set forth the admirable power and wisdom of God! and in this particular example it is to be thought that the great God did purposely befool the madness of this arrogant Emperour who would take upon him to be God and required among other
make us admire his infinite power in curbing them his infinite-goodness in preserving us 4. Consider of what use many of these creatures are to us especially those which are most common among us What supply of Milk do the Kine afford us what Fleeces of Wool do the Sheep yeild us what store of strong wholesome and pleasant nourishment do their bodies yeild us and what labour is bestowed about these when we have eaten of these and are full when we are cloathed by these and are warm then should we take heed lest we forget God of whom we have received all 5. Among other things we should observe the Lords goodness in giving us divers of these creatures to do our work to carry our burthens to bear our selves What benefits do we daily receive by the labour of the Oxe plowing our ground and doing us necessary services many ways How serviceable is the Horse unto us both for speed and ease carrying us from place to place wonderful is the goodness of God in making these creatures far stronger than our selves to yeild to us not using their strength to resist us but to do us service Therefore we should not at any time use any of these creatures but that we should be moved to lift up thankful hearts to God for this mercy which we would think worthy of much admiration if they were not so common among us but on the other side we should think the more we have of them the more thankfulness we owe to God for them 6. Consider that as a man hath in him the senses of a Beast and somthing more excellent as Reason and Understanding so a Christian hath Nature in him and somthing above Nature even the Spirit of Regeneration And as some Beasts have some things in them wherein they excel man as the Lion in strength the Horse in swiftness c. yet the meanest man is naturally more excellent than the most excellent among the Beasts so though the children of this world do in some thi●gs outstrip the children of light as many times in beauty strength wit outward carriage policy civil deportment c. yet the meanest true Christian is more excellent than his best carnal neighbour in regard of the Image of God restored to him 7. Again seeing the Beasts have those pleasures whereof the senses are capable this should perswade us that these are not the most excellent delights but that there are purer higher more heavenly delights which suit better with an intellectual immortal soul and this should teach us to bewail our brutish affections which carry us so strongly after sensual delights of the eye the ear the taste c. as if we had no better souls than the Beasts Solomon saith The spirit of a beast goeth downward and the spirit of a man goeth ●pward Eccles. 3.21 So it should be in our affections our souls should go upward reaching toward the things above and not go down-ward enthralling themselves to these sensual things here below like the spirits of the Beasts 8. As the Beasts do bear our burthens so should we willingly bear those burthens and do those services which God requireth How wouldest thou rage if thy Beast should continually fling and cast thee and those things which thou layest upon it and are not we herein worse than Beasts that perish when with froward spirits we fling and kick at the Lords commandements and do not willingly and obediently submit unto them Of the Creation of Man CHAP. I. Gen. 1.27 So God Created man in his own Image in the Image of God Created he Him Male and Female Created he them SECT 1. THe rest of the Creatures being made the supream Lord of heaven and earth was pleased to make Man after his own Image to be his Deputy here on earth and under him a Lord of the other creatures which being a principal work requiring special attention the holy Ghost setteth down the consultation of the Trinity about it and sheweth us how it was accordingly performed in these words where you may take notice of three things which you may take as so many several points of doctrine I. That God created Man II. That God created both Sexes Man and Woman Male and Female III. That God made man in his own Image For the first that God Created Man this is that kind of creature as we have said partly visible partly invisible and so his Creation is to be considered according to his several parts first then consider the creation of mans body and then of his soul. The Creation of mans body is but briefly laid down Gen. 2.7 And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground that is his body where though the dust of the ground be mentioned yet I conceive that the matter of mans body was tempered with the other elements although the earth was that which bare the greatest bulk and made up the greatest part of the substance in the body Now to set forth the excellency of the Creatour it may not be amiss briefly to consider of the notable workmanship of mans body whereof the Psalmist speaketh Psal. 139.14 15 c. and in it may be considered The general frame The particular parts 1. In the general frame is to be observed a notable and excellent temper of body consistin●●f divers humours admirably composed and mixed together and fitted so as to be a serviceable Instrument of the soul this was in full perfection when God made it for we mus● not judge of it according to those distempers whereunto the body now is subject yet now in some tempers above others there is some degree of evenness which giveth us a shadow of that exactness that was at the first But in that state of ●reation there was not the least defect nor disorder in the temper of the body nothing which a man could have wished to have been otherwise than it was the constitution and complexion of the body and so the colour and appearance of it was perfect and exact For as every thing w●s good in its kind so man especially had his due natural perfection every way 2. As there was this perfect temper and so an excellent constitution so there was a just and due proportion the whole body had its just stature and every part its due measure it was exactly shaped and framed nothing wanting nothing exceeding nothing beyond nothing short of the due size And this exactness both of temper and proportion made up the perfect beauty and comliness which God gave to the body of man in his Creation 3. In the general frame also we may consider the upright and erected posture of mans body in which regard he was permitted to look up to heaven and an excellent Majesty was given him as a Lord and Ruler over the other Creatures who were made to bow down their back in subjection unto him and by the very stooping of their body to do him homage and acknowledge his dominion
over them and thus much for the general frame SECT 2. NOw come we to the particular parts and therein let us consider I. Those that are contained in the rest namely the Blood and Spirits 1. For the blood you know it is an excellent part of the body and of absolute necessity insomuch that the blood is said to be the life of the body which must not be understood directly as the words seem to imply as if the life of a man were nothing but his blood for that is not possible if that were so then nothing could live which hath no blood but this is certain that Bees and many other like Creatures have no blood and yet have life it would also follow that so many drops of a mans blood as he loseth so much he loseth of his life whereas many times the evacuation of blood is the preservation of life And that which is most absurd it would follow that a mans life might be severed from him and yet remain for a time after such separation for so you see that the blood of men and of other creatures may be kept a long time in vessels after it is severed from the body And besides all this the Angels who have neither blood nor other bodily parts have life in greater perfection than a man Thus then we understand these places that speak of the the Blood that it is a special instrument of the soul whereby life is convayed to the several parts of the body by reason of the spirits which are a kind of airy invisible substance yet bodily arising like vapours ●rom the purest part of the blood for although it be said the life is in the blood yet this is because the blood is a thing which is more obvious to the senses than the spirits and again because it is the nursery and as it were the fuel of the spirits whereby as by a precious oyl the lamp and flame of life is cherished and maintained so that life is more immediately in the spirits than in the blood Again life is lost by the shedding of the blood because the spirits the immediate Instruments of the soul whereby it communicateth life to the body are extinguished by the shedding of the blood even as the flame goeth out when the wood is qui●e taken away and so in this respect also the blood is said to be the life of the Creature Moreover consider the spirits whereof somewhat hath already been spoken by the way These are called spirits not but that they are bodily substances but because they have the least grossness in them of all other parts of the body and come nearest to a spiritual nature And these are indeed the immediate instruments of the soul and being as it were of a middle nature between the soul and body they are a common tye or bond between them both uniting both together These are of most excellent use in the body throughout the parts they convay life sence and motion to them all they are in special manner employed in the more retired and spiritual actions of the soul in the exercise of reason and understanding in the serious thoughts and meditations of the heart by it the pain or delight of one part of the body is convayed and imparted to the rest and a sympathy or fellow feeling is derived from one to the other and in these the singular wisdome of the Creator is notably manifested SECT 3. THe parts containing these are in the next place to be considered where first the Head is that which is set in the highest place and is full of most curious workmanship it is the seat both of the outward and inward senses and as all the outward senses are placed there so none of the five are to be found in any other part of the body except that of the touch or feeling which is the lowest and grossest of the rest There is the Eye of a singular and most curious making which is the instrument of seeing the very window of this house that letteth in light to the soul which otherwise would dwell in a dark dungeon It is an admirable thing to consider how by the wonderful power and wisdome of God all colours have his property to caff sorth a resemblance and image of themselves whic● by the air is convayed into the Eye if this were well considered and understood it would be found one of the most wonderful works of the Creation setting forth the Creators glory But ye may conceive it thus When a Looking-glass is held before the face instantly there is an image of the face in the glass now the glass cannot frame such an image in it self for then it should be there as well when the face is turned away wherefore it must be of necessity that the face doth at all times in the light cast forth an image of it self and the glass doth only hold it by reason of the lead at the backside whereby this image is stayed and not suffered to pass through and vanish And so doth every thing that hath colour cast forth an image of it self at all times which being received into the eye presently the thing is seen and perceived by the eye which is an admirable thing to consider that all things that are Trees Plants Men Beasts c. whatsoever can be seen do every way cast forth Images of themselves into the air and that these are severally and distinctly conveyed to the eye and discerned by it There are the Ears whereby we hear which take in sounds and noises in a wonderful manner wherein also the admirable power and wisdome of God appeareth in that one voice issuing out of one mouth should enter in at many hundred ears for this must needs be granted that we cannot hear any voice or noise unless it truly enter into our ears for if the noise could be heard without such an entrance then were those open passages needless which are in the ears but these open passages are as needful to let in sounds as a door is to let a man into an house Now one man cannot enter in at many doors at once and so one voice remaining one cannot enter in at many hundred ears at the same moment and therefore it must needs be multiplied in the air and so that which is but one in the mouth of the speaker is manifold in the air and is taken in by many ears There is also the Nose which is the instrument of smelling another part of the body which serveth us both for necessity and delight it is a means to prove the wholsomness or unwholsomness of many things which are good and which are hurtful to us and yeildeth delight and refreshment in presenting us with many pleasing and fragrant smells There is also the Tongue and Palate the instruments of Tast but especially the palate or upper part of the mouth the Tongue having another and more proper use This is a sense of greatest use for
the nourishment of the body and so for the preservation of life and this also yeildeth abundant matter of delight and refreshment Iob saith Doth not the ear try words and the mouth or palate tast his meat Iob 12.11 That is doth it not by tasting try it for God hath given this ability to the Creatures to try what is agreeable to their bodies and what is displeasing In the last place the Touch or Feeling is may rise again an incorruptible immortal spiritual glorious body like the body of Christ at his comming through his mighty working whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself SECT 4. IV. EVen this earthly frame of the body proveth it an hard thing to put off earthly affections and therefore care and striving should be used in it The body being made of dust it will return to dust again not onely in the final dissolution but also in the present inclination it now leaneth to the earth and resteth on the earth Man is deeply in love with his own Element and strongly tyed to it in his affections It is said of one that being one of Three who demanded of the Orracle which should be chief and hearing that he should be the man that first should kiss his Mother he fell down and kissed the earth as accounting it the common mother of all men are so in love with the Earth that they embrace it and as it were kiss it in their affections as a Mother out of whose womb they had their beginning although the Oracles of Gods word condemn this folly and teach them that thus doing they shall be least in the Kingdom of God and that this doting love of the world is enmity with God Therefore we should pray earnestly to God that he would change this earthly temper of our souls into heavenly affections How needful is it for us to practise that of our Saviour even to forsake our selves our selves being earth we must renounce our earthly selves and deny our selves for though we could restrain our selves somwhat from outward earthly courses yet so long as we keep our earthly affections our hearts will cleave to the earth Special cause we have to study that book of the Wise man throughout which teacheth us the vanity and vexation of spirit that is in earthly things and to see and admire the treasures and riches of Gods Kingdome that apprehending better things we may make better account of these SECT 5. V. IN as much as God made our bodies we must yeild up our bodies to his service for God made all things for himself saith the Scripture He made not the body for the Devil nor for the world nor for lust nor for drunkenness but for Himself let us well consider this and learn to give God his due The Idolater will bow with his body to Idols and say that he keepeth his heart to God but he must know that God made the body as well as the soul and if he made all things for himself then the body as well as any other thing The prophane person that abuseth his Tongue to swearing wanton wicked discourses to railing scoffing c. the Adulterer which sinneth against the whole body as the Apostle sheweth the Drunkard who abuseth his body to excess of swilling and drinking the wanton that abuseth his eye to careless wandring and openeth his ear to vanity he that pleaseth his palate and loveth his pleasures more than God he that thinketh his body given him for no other purpose but either to drudge about earthly things or to ●ast of earthly delights even such a one is apt to say he hath a good heart toward God But be not deceived God made this Body for Himself and therefore we must not abuse any part of the Body to his dishonour nor make any member of it an Instrument of unrighteousness but to give up the members of our bodies as Instruments of righteousness unto holiness let us not think a little pains of the body too much to bestow in the service of God in hearing the word in prayer in humiliation c. but let us glorifie God as in our souls especially so in our bodies also for they are Gods as well as our souls SECT 6. VI. IN that God made the body care must be used to preserve and not to destroy thine own body or thy brothers we must not pull down this tabernacle which God himself hath pitched but must leave it to his disposing using all lawful means to keep it up and to preserve it strong untill he please to dissolve it shun intemperancy and excess in things that please the appetite in meats and drinks c. Use those means which God hath given thee to repair this house which God Himself hath builded for thy soul to dwell in let the life and body of another be precious in thy sight and do thy endeavour to preserve it And let us know that in some case not to save life is to destroy viz. when there is special means calling and opportunity to do it in times of necessity some means must be used to prevent the famishing of many therefore at such times we should freely give without grudging to the relief of others Remember that it is for the preservation of those bodies which God hath made And let this keep thee from laying violent hands on thine own body it is a loud crying sin to destroy anothers body because God hath made it but most horrible to destroy thine own sith God hath made it and hath given thee a special charge to keep it Moreover sith God hath made the body let us rely upon Him for the maintenance of the body He hath made it and he will keep it he hath given a mouth and he will give meat he hath given a back and he will cloath it Thus may a Christian that hath recovered his forfeiture in Christ reason from the love and promise of God And therefore in hard times our wants should be special motives to drive us home to God through Christ that being in him we might assure our selves of all needful supply for the body from his hand that made it there is not the poorest among us but if they would effectually turn to God and depend upon him they should find they have no cause to despair in regard of bodily helps they should find him supplying or supporting and one way or other providing for them SECT 7. VII HAth God made thy body upright and looking up toward heaven this should teach thee to mind the things that are above to be heavenly-minded It is a great shame that the body should look upward and the soul and affections bend downward to the things of the earth There is many times an upright body and Curva interras anima a Crook-backed soul leaning toward the earth so that whereas the soul should raise the body and make it the better because of its Union with an immortal Spirit it rather
pulleth it down and makes it the worse the more earthly and fleshly An earthly mind maketh the very posture of the body raised toward heaven to become hypocritical and counterfeit sith God hath given thee the body of a man looking upward towards heaven do not take to thy self the spirit of a Beast grovelling on the earth here below VIII Seeing God at the first gave man perfect beauty in regard both of temper and proportion then let all defects or deformities which thou seest in any not move thee to contemn their persons but rather to lament the common misery of mans nature fallen into sin the fruits whereof do rather appear in some particular persons in this kind than they do in some others And think with thy self that by the law of Creation he that is most deformed was to be as beautiful as any that excelleth most and he that is most beautiful by the Fall was as subject to deformity as any other CHAP III. SECT 1. MOreover from the particular parts divers Meditations may be raised I. As the Head is to the Body so Christ is to his Church Ephes. 4.15.16 1. As the Head is the Guid to the whole Body so is Christ to the Church every member followeth the direction of the Head Christ is the wisdom of the Father and He as he is made unto us an Head so also is he our wisdome our guide and directtour he is the great Prophet He by his Spirit revealeth the mysteries of grace and sheweth the way of life unto his Members and all must 3. Neither doth any member despise or scorn another the eye doth not scorn the lowest member in the body neither should any one whom God hath raised highest in gifts calling place dignity wealth or any other way scorn the poorest and meanest in any respect but rather seek their good as being members of the same body 4. As the principal parts of the body have need of the meanest so the greatest in the Church have need of meaner Christians in many respects if the whole body were eye where were hearing Thus much for the first part of the first point viz. the Creation of mans body CHAP. 4. Of the Creation of Mans Soul I Now come to speak of the Creation of mans Soul the story whereof is briefly laid down in Gen. 2.7 And breathed into his nostrills the breath of life and man became a living soul. Where you must not conceive that the Lord did breath like a man but the intent of the Holy Ghost I conceive is to shew that Man had another kind of Soul than the Beasts or Birds they were brought forth out of the material Elements but Man though his Body were drawn out of the Dust yet his soul was in a peculier manner given him of God and not composed of any earthly waterish or aiery substance but that it was a spiritual substance immediately created of God and further this breathing in of the soul implieth as may seem that the soul was not first created without the body and then put into the body but that at once it was both created and infused into the body SECT 1. NOw let us here speak a little of the nature of the Soul and then of its powers and faculties 1. For the nature of the soul it is a spirit and herein most like unto the Angels of any other Creature and though the wise man doth communicate this name to the life of a beast yet he sheweth a great difference between these two sorts of spirits saying The spirit of a Man that goeth upward and the spirit of a Beast that goeth downward The spirit of a Beast or that which giveth it life vanisheth and dyeth with the body being a principle that riseth out of material or bodily substances tempered and composed together but the spirit of a man being of an higher nature than any of these gross material bodies and not rising out of them but being created immediately of God the Father of Spirits it goeth upward it is presented before the Lord in judgment after its departure from the body 2. It is such a spirit as can subsist alone of it self out of the body so the Apostle maketh mention of the spirits of just men made perfect Heb. 12. the Spirits of the Saints now in heaven whose bodies rest in the dust and this sheweth the excellent matter of mans spirit far above the life of the beast or any unreasonable Creature that it can subsist when it is severed from the body This sheweth that it doth not depend upon the body nor was extracted out of it but rather that the perfection of the body dependeth on it it can live without the body but the body without it rotteth putrifieth and mouldereth away into dust Dust returneth to Dust as it was saith the wise man and the Spirit returneth to him that gave it Eccles. 12. 3. It is an immortal Spirit so this very place sheweth that when dust returneth to dust when the body dissolveth then the spirit liveth and yieldeth up it self into the hands of God And so the Scripture sheweth both in the case of the godly and of the wicked the one shall go into life eternal and the other into everlasting punishment SECT 2. IN the next place let us speak of the powers and faculties of the soul here I shall speak first of those which are common to it with other Creatures viz. those which they call vegetative and sensitive which are found in the beasts and birds These I call faculties of the soul although for mine own part I concieve them not to be properly inherent in the reasonable soul but rather in the temper of the body for the intellectual soul being a Spirit I cannot see how these brutish affections such as many of these are can be inherent in it especially because many of them as the faculties of attraction retention expulsion augmentation c. are ordinarily exercised not only without the command but also without the knowledg of the reasonable soul which I know not how it could be if they were inherent in it immediately it being a single spiritual and intellectual being Now these faculties are many which the Lord hath given and shewed his admirable wisdom in them 1. Of the Vegetative part There is a nutritive or nourishing property to which diverse others are serviceable as that of hunger and thirst which is properly a branch of the sensitive yet insensible Creatures are a servant to the vegetative for by these the appetite is provoked to seek for nourishment There is a digesting faculty to concoct that nourishment that is received first in the stomach then in the liver turning it into blood then in each several part turning it into substance in particular To these also belongeth these three inferiour faculties Attractive Retentive Expulsive 1. Attractive whereby every part hath a power to draw nourishment unto it self so the Head and upper parts of the
body have a power to draw blood from the Liver which is far below them as well as the lower parts And in this the wonderful wisdom of God is clearly manifested 2. There is a Retentive faculty or a power of keeping that nourishment a convenient time till it may be so wrought upon and perfected as to turn into one substance with the body and to refresh its parts But l●st nature should suck poison insteed of nourishment or digest that into its substance which is hurtfull 3. The Lord hath added for its farther security and benefit an Expulsive faculty or a power of casting out such matter as is superfluous and burdensome and not fit for nourishment whence come many fluxes from the Head and sweats over the whole body besides those gross excrements whereof nature is daily ●ased In these also the admirable wisdome of God is manifested and when we enjoy the use of any faculty of the soul we should glorifie him that made them Moreover there is also a generative faculty or power of propagation which God gave to Trees Plants Beasts Birds Fishes Men blessing them and bidding them to encrease and multiply SECT 3. 2. Of the sensitive part THere are both the senses and the affections the senses outward and inward of the outward senses somewhat was briefly spoken when we spake of those parts of the body that are Instruments of those senses The inward senses are conceived to be three The Common Sense The Fancy The Memory 1. The Common Sense which is said to receive the objects of all the outward senses and to be seated in the former part of the Brain 2. The Fancy or Imagination which worketh upon those things that are received into the former and is thought to be placed in the middle part of the Brain 3. The Memory which keepeth those things that are received in by the other and layeth them up as in a treasury and the seat of this is in the hindermost part of the brain And in this most admirable is the wisdom and power of God that certain images of things long sithens seen or heard should be laid up in a corner of the Brain and there preserved many years and called to mind though they be the resemblances of many thousand several things Some Memories are far worse than other yet even the meanest ordinary Memory is wonderful if we did rightly consider that in so narrow a compass the shapes and likenesses of so many several things should be preserved yea even this is notable that the Images of so many mens faces as one man can remember should be there ingraven in so small a table as is the Memory SECT 4. Of the Affections AS for the Affections they are seated in the heart and these are many as 1. Love which is an affection of the soul uniting it self to some thing apprehended as good for so whatsoever is beloved either is good or seemeth to have some good in it to him that loveth it contrary to which is a second affection sc. Hatred and that is an affection of the heart shuning and separating it self from that which is so hated as supposed hurtful for though good things are often hated yet there is an apprehension of evil in them and if we speak of the affections as created of God then nothing was beloved but that which was truly good nor hated but that which was truly evil But of the integrity of the affections we may speak when we come to speak of the Image of God in Man Desire is an affection of the heart reaching after some good thing which is absent Contrary to which is Detestation or abhorring of that which may hereafter happen being conceived to be evil These two may be expressed by hunger and thirst on the one side and on the other a loathing of meat in the Stomach when the heart riseth with dislike at some thing which as yet is absent but is tendered to it or may hereafter be presented to it When our Saviour told Peter that he would fall into that fearful sin of denying his Lord and Master his heart rose against it and he detested it this was not only a simple and meer hatred of it as a thing evil which is directly contrary to love but also a detestation of it as an evil that might happen or was foretold should happen to him though now he were free from it which is an affection contrary to desire In the next place is Ioy which is an affection of the heart pleasing and resting it self in some good thing Enjoyed In this affection there must be some good true or seeming in possession which doth so affect the heart as to rest it self with some contentment in it opposite to this is Sorrow which is an affection of the heart distasting some evil already felt Now I cannot see how this affection should be exercised in the state of innocense because man had no cause of sorrow unless it may be supposed that he knew of the Angels fall and rebellion against the Lord which is not likely Howsoever the faculty no doubt was then given unto man by the Lord who foresaw a world of woe and sorrow which man would fall into who knew that of all affections this of sorrow could not want work nor be idle for want of matter to work upon There is also Hope which is an affection of the heart looking for some good or the avoiding some evil that is to come for that which a man hath already why doth he yet hope for Contrary to which is Fear which is an affection of the heart trembling at some evil to come or at the loss or missing of some good Then there is Courage which is as it were a degree beyond hope and is a more assured expectation of some good or of the overcoming of some evil contrary whereunto is Desperation a sinking of the heart under the expectation of some evil to come Anger seemeth to be an affection mixed of Sorrow and Hatred which by Tragedians is somtime called Dolor These I call faculties of the soul because of their near union with the spirit of a Man and because the soul hath some government over them CHAP. V. SECT 1. BUt the most proper and peculiar qualities and faculties of the soul are the Understanding and the Will and such as are seated in these or compounded of these The Understanding is the prime faculty of the soul that guideth the whole man and giveth light to all hi● actions 1. In it there is an act of discerning whereby it seeth into the nature and qualities of things knowing both those things more perfectly than the Senses which the Senses discern and other things also which they cannot reach And this is that faculty whereby man is become acq●ainted with God his Maker whom no unreasonable Creature can discern God is a spirit and cannot be discerned by any
that is true which is said though often false But on the other side one is ignorant he hath a blind soul Another hath a graceless profane and unsanctified soul laden with many sins in great danger to perish for ever but when shall ye hear such a one complain of his neighbours for hard-heartedness toward his soul in not pittying his spiritual misery in not instructing him in his ignorance When shall ye hear one of these complain oh I have a neighbour that hath knowledg he knoweth that I am ignorant of God but alas he is hard-hearted he doth not pitty my soul he will sooner see me damned in my ignorance than once open his mouth to instruct me in any matter of salvation Or when shall we hear one that goeth on in sin cry out of another in this respect I have a neighbour seeth my soul in a fearful case he perceiveth me to go on in the stubbornness of my heart and he knoweth that the wrath of God will one day smoak against me for it and yet his heart is hard he hath no pitty upon me he did never once open his lips to bring me into the right way to reprove me for my sin Nay if any in zeal to Gods glory and love to the souls of such shall labour to do them good what is their answer meddle with your own business I shall answer for my self you shall not answer for my sin I pray mark what sensles speeches these be it is as if a man should see another fallen into a dangerous pit where he could not live without help and should go to help him out or to direct one that is going in some dangerous place in in the dark where he is like to break his neck or to succour one that is in need and like to starve and should have such an answer from him as this Why do ye trouble me look to your self if I perish I perish you shall not perish with me Why do ye feed my body if I starve it is nothing to you you shall not be famished by it No verily this help is for the body and therefore it is welcome at all times but the other that is for the soul that is distasted as unseasonable and troublesome SECT 4. IV. THis sheweth us also the greatest harm which a man can do to another is that which is done to the soul men may receive wrong many ways but the greatest injury and mischief that one man can do another is that which falleth upon the soul the best part Is not a blow in the eye worse than one upon the arm he that woundeth thy soul doth he not worse than if he smote thy body and yet what deadly malice doth one bear to another for a box of the ear or some such wrong done to the body whereas they account them their best friends that work the greatest mischief to their souls He that will drink to them when they have drunk too much already he that will flatter and humour them in their sins He that will entice them unto sin he is the only friend and good fellow whereas indeed such a one is a most dangerous enemy He that threatneth to be revenged of thee that saith he wil have thy blood that raileth at thee slandereth thee doth not hurt thee so much as such a one who seeketh to draw thee into that or by joyning with thee to encourage thee in that which tendeth to the destruction of thy soul such a one endangereth thine everlasting life and taketh a course to wound thee so that thou mayst die for ever Therefore when thou hearest that no Drunkard shall inherit the Kingdome of God and one pu●leth thee by the sleeve and another enticeth thee c. answer him thus I perceive you are none of my friends what are ye loth to have me go to heaven would ye have my soul perish would ye seek my destruction you seek to draw me into such a sin as will shut me out of heaven If thou wouldest answer them so now and then thou wouldest be well rid of such companions and not be so much pestered with these troublesome flies But most lamentable is the sin of such in this case whose care is onely for the bodies of their Children but care not how they betray their souls how they leave them in their sins which they see to grow upon them and use no means to cure them of these deadly evils Oh do not deal with thy child as with thy beast as if it had onely a body to be fed and clothed and not a soul to be saved SECT 5. V. SIth God did Create our Souls let us conceive that he made them for Himself therefore let every faculty be given up to his service 1. As for thine Imagination let it be dedicated to the service of God let thy thoughts and meditations be directed unto God and his Word and Kingdome The fancy of a man is a working stirring thing always medling with something or other now let it be turned toward God and his Word and when thou findest it busie with other things call it home and think with thy self I must go about my Fathers business this faculty of my soul must mind him that made it So for thy memory it is God's treasury he made it and therefore you must lay up the riches and treasures of his Kingdome in it and not the trash of the world you must store it with holy instructions and meditations Promises Precepts c. out of his word and not stuff it with idle Tales wa●ton Songs or meer earthly Vanities and nothings else This Cabinet of the Soul was not made for such base uses When thou comest to hear the word thou must not think it enough to take it in with thine Ear that is not the onely part which God made but labour to lay it up in thy memory that thou maist be rich in all saving knowledge of the word A man may have a great deal of money come through his hands yet be never the richer if he spend it idlely as fast as it cometh and lay up none A man may have many a Sermon entring in at his outward ears and yet never prove rich in knowledge if he suffer all to be lost again and treasure up none in his memory 2 Thy Understanding that most excellent faculty of the Soul how carefully should it be improved that the Lord may be honoured by it let him have the best that made the whole It is strange to think that men should be excused by ignorance what is that but to rob God of the principal endowment of thy Soul even thine understanding It is a miserable folly when men labour for skill in earthly things and would be wise every way except in heavenly things and in the mean time least of all regard to Know the Lord as if the top of the Soul the Head of the inward man were made to be a
sin And that is the reason why Men hate the light and those that hold it forth because it maketh their sin cast shadow it maketh the shame of their sin to appear which was hidden before in the dark CHAP. 8. Of the Creation of Man after the Image of God SECT 1. THus much of the second point sc. Gods Creation of both Sexes I now proceed to the third viz. That God made Man in his own Image which cleerly appeareth both in the story of the consultation between the glorious persons of the blessed Trinity and also in the relation of the execution of his consultation here in my Text. Now for the opening this point two things are to be considered 1. What is an Image in General 2. Wherein this Image of God in Man consisteth An Image is such a likeness of a thing as doth bear a special relation to the thing resembled by it either as flowing from its Beeing or framed according to it so that every Image of a thing is like unto the thing whose Image it is but every thing that is like another is not an Image of it Any thing that is of the same colour wi●h another thing may be said to be like unto it but not an Image of it But in an Image besides likeness there is required one of these two things either that it be expressed by the essence of that whose Image it is or els that it be purposely fashioned according to it In the former sense none but the Eternal son of God is the true Image of God the father as he is called the Brightness of his Glory and the express Image of his person And so a Son may be said to be the Image of his Father as Adam is said after his fall to have begotten a Son in his own likeness after his Image In the other sense an Image is that which is made like to another framed of purpose to resemble it So is a picture or a statue made by Art to represent some person and such was the Image of God in Man for the Lord did purposely as you see by the consultation make Man like himself to resemble him and to bear his Image SECT 2. IN the second place I come to shew wherein this Image of God in Man consisteth and what it is This was in general that Perfection which God gave unto Man in his first Creation for God is a most perfect Beeing infinite in all divine perfection therefore that perfection which Man had above all other Creatures here below was the Image of God in Man Now this perfection was two-fold Principal Less Principal Principal in the Soul this is fully laid down unto us in these two places Colos. 3 10. Yee have put off the old Man and have put on the new Man which is renewed in knowledge after the Image of him that created him and that Ephes. 4.24 That yee put on the new Man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness where we see the several powers of the Soul had their several perfections and there is no faculty of the Soul which may not be made perfect by these so that in these did the Image of God consist Object But it may be said that in those two places St Paul speaks of regeneration or the new birth and not of that old and first Creation in the beginning Sol. It is true and this maketh for our purpose for the Apostle sheweth here that the Image of God consisteth in these perfections now the Image of God restored by regeneration is the same which was given by Creation at the first and that building which Adam pulled down by his sin our Saviour built up again by his obedience and mediation As in Adam all die even so by Christ shall all be made alive 1 Cor. 15.22 That is Christ shall make up that which was undone by Adam there cannot be any thing named for matter of substance that Adam lost but Christ restored it and therefore he is called the second Adam and in the comparison between them and the first Adam it is said the first Man Adam was made a living Soul and the second Adam was made a quickning Spirit ver 45. That is the first Adam was made a living soul by Creation living the life of nature by the substance and faculties of his Soul united to his Body and a supernatural life too by the Image of God in his Soul and had he continued in that estate he should have conveyed the same life both natural and supernatural to his posterity but losing that supernatural life consisting in the Image of God he remained a meer living Soul and no better one that had but only the life of nature left him arising out of the essence and natural powers of the Soul and so could only convey this natural life to his posterity whose Souls were dead in sin to whom he could not impart any quickening vertue to raise them unto that supernatural life in holiness and righteousness But Christ was a quickening Spirit not only having this supernatural life in himself but also quickening those with a new principle of supernatural life to whom he is joyned by the Spirit and so he is called a second Adam as being the founder of a new generation of Men for as all Men by nature do spring of the first Adam so all Christians by grace do come of the second Adam and receive that spiritual life from him again which the first Adam received but lost Now if the first Adam had continued in his first estate and kept the Image of God there had been no need of the second Adam for all Men by their natural birth should have received from him that supernatural life together with the natural But this first Adam having lost the Image of God was now but the Author of an imperfect generation of Men naturally alive but spiritually dead and therefore there was need of a second Adam who should be the Author of a new birth and should give a new a second a spiritual life and Beeing to those who were naturally dead in trespasses and sins so that by this it is plain that that new Beeing and spiritual life which Christ by his spirit restoreth to his Members is that very Image of God which God made in Man at the first and this you see doth principally consist in knowledge holiness and righteousness which are the perfections of the understanding judgment conscience will and affections CHAP. 8. SECT 1. 1. FOr his understanding he had all knowledge needfull for a perfect Man both concerning the Creator and the Creatures his Creator he knew perfectly perfectly I say not in regard of the object or person known who is infinite but in regard of the subject or person knowing Mans understanding was not infinite and therefore could not have such a knowledge of God as was a full declaration and apprehension of an infinite God but
and breath And that upright posture of his Body was a fit resemblance of the Majesty of God that made it 2. Now without the Body there were these two things 1. The sweet and happy habitation which Adam had in the Garden of Eden such as now no place with the greatest cost and art in the World can possibly afford hereby resembling God who hath the glorious Heavens for his dwelling place wherein he doth especially manifest his divine and glorious presence 2. His Dominion over the Earth Ayr and Waters with all the Creatures in them whereby as an Under-officer or Deputy he did represent the Person of God who is the Supream Lord of all CHAP. IX Use 1. LEarn here then to admire this wonderfull Work of God and to magnify Him for that admirable perfection which he gave to Man within him and without him in Soul Body habitation and dignity having made him a little lower than the Angels and Crowned him with glory and honour What an excellent Creature was Man when he came newly out of the Hands of God until Sathan ●●rred him with his foul hands A Body without any blemish a Soul without the least defect without all impurity an understanding and wit without all dimness or dulness a judgment without error a memo●y free from leaks o● failing an heart without the least distemper always carryed even not swayed or stirred out of place on the one side o● the other 2. Learn here not to think God the Author of any sinfull disposition in thee Remember how he made thee and condemn thy self justifying his purity and holiness by whom thou wast made upright 3. Learn to lament thine own misery who art so far from that perfection which God gave to Man at the first look upon thy defects every way within and without and see the fruits of Sin in thy self and give no rest to thy self till thou seest thy self new-made again until thou art become a new Creature and hast the Image of God restored unto thee So far as we come short of Adam's perfection so far we come short of that which we should be of that which we must continually seek for But you will say all in the World come short of Adam's perfection True and therefore all must strive to grow in grace more and more and none must condemn another that goeth beyond himself but yet there is a great difference in this case for some are not sensible of their failings at least not so as to be carefull to reform them but rather dislike those that give them the best examples and keep themselves most close to the Rule of the Word These have not the Image of God at all restored to them they have no part of that spiritual life which Adam had But others there be whom the Lord hath new-molded and once again by his Spirit hath breathed into them the breath of spiritual life who see themselves to come short of that perfection which Adam had and mourn and strive and pray and use all holy means and helps to this purpose who are willing to be shewed wherein they come short of this Image of God in Adam wherein they are unlike unto it willing to be reproved by the Word These have some degrees of his Image renewed in them and these strive after farther perfection But now compare thy self with this Image of God in Adam before his Fall and see what thou hast to do how much is amiss in thee and must be amended When a Man hath lost a great estate and by some means beginneth to recover again he will scarce think he hath enough until he hath gotten as much as he had before he would fain be as rich as ever he was Men are too greedy of these things but as the Apostle saith so say I Covet yee the best things Thou wast rich in Adam our first Parent had abundance of riches to leave us but he committed Treason and so all was forfeited into the hands of the Lord. Now we should never think our selves well until we have recovered the same degree of excellency which we lost Thou that thinkest thou knowest enough consider how far thou comest short of Adam who knew the Lord perfectly but thou art ignorant of many things in the Word of God and those things which thou dost know thou knowest it very imperfectly How far art thou from that full purpose of heart in obeying God and cleaving to him that was in Adam How far from that uprightness that perfection of holiness those Heavenly affections that strong love to God that ravishing constant joy in him which Adam had How unsetled are thy affections How dead is thy heart How little art thou affected toward Heavenly things How far in love with the Earth and Earthly things Therefore think with thy self in these and these things I am unlike to God I bear not his Image I am contrary to his purity and so resolve upon present reformation And beware thou art not of the number of those who instead of the Image of God do bear the very Visage of Sathan Oh let all the Children of God labour to be more and more conformed to the Image of their Heavenly Father and to become Holy as he is Holy that they may for ever be happy as he is happy CHAP. 1. Of the Creation of Angels and of their Properties Colos. 1.16 For by him were all things Created that are in Heaven and that are in Earth visible and invisible c. THus much of Visible or Corporeal Creatures now let us speak something of the Invisible or Spiritual where observe from the Text that God Created all Invisible substances These are called Spirits or Angels and all of them I conceive have the same natural Essence or Beeing though in regard of their present moral enclinations to good or evil there be a wonderfull difference between them 1. For their nature they are called Spirits so the good Angels are called He hath made his Angels Spirits Psal. 104. So the evil Angels are often called unclean Spirits in the Holy story of the Evangelists and in that story of Ahab 1 King ult there is mention made of a lying Spirit Now in that they have appeared in a Bodily shape this is no proof that their nature is not spiritual but this they might do sometimes by the Lords command sometime by his sufferance for special ends for if some excellent Artificers can amaze the minds of others with strange inventions and artificial performances how easie is it for these excellent Creatures even of any matter Ayr or Water c. to frame shapes for any purpose 2. For their Original here you see they were created as the Text maketh it manifest but not as many other Creatures so as to propagate others of their own kind but all those that now are we suppose were at first created and their number shall not be encreased to the end of the World for the Day when
Feed my Sheep and so his sanctified Conscience made application of it on all particular occasions Therefore when a multitude were gathered together wondring at the miraculous gifts of Tongues bestowed on the Disciples his Conscience tells him now Thou must practise what thy Master hath commanded and so at that time he gathered some three thousand lost sheep into the fold of Christ. In the second place Conscience by vertue of the Will Stirreth up the faculties of the soul to practise this particular duty which is thus found agreeable to the general rules of duty and goodness Now in that these things are not practised this commeth from that disorder which sin hath made in the soul and that preposterous confusion of the affections leading Conscience in a slavish captivity under the power of lust so on the other side it is for evils not yet done The world promiseth a fair reward many times if men will use foul means to obtain it if riches begin to trade with the world about the matter covetousness like Iudas saith to the world What wilt thou give me and I will betray my Masters honour profane his Day defraud my neighbour oppress my poor brother c But now Conscience cometh in and laboureth to ma● the bargain and having laid up this general rule That it shall not profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own soul it applieth this to the case in hand therefore it will be a most miserable bargain for me to gain this which is now proposed with the hazard of my soul. This doth conscience by vertue of the understanding and then calleth up the powers of the will to help which withdraweth from the thing as unlawful and dangerous and riseth against it and disliketh it with reluctancy So Ioseph had laid up this in his heart that adultery must not be committed no not in secret because it is a sin against the All-seeing eye of God therefore when his Mistriss tempteth him he applieth this General to the particular occasion and by the force of a sanctified conscience biddeth defiance to her temptations How shall I do this great wickedness and so sin against God so David having laid up in his heart that precept in General Honour thy Father and thy Mother and knowing that under this Title of father was comprehended the King and other Magistrates and then again Thou shalt do no murther now he happeneth to come into a cave and there meeteth with Saul and hath him at advantage Saul sought to murther him pursuing him without cause against his own Conscience who was to succeed him in his Kingdome and one that was annointed by the special appointment of the King of Kings yet David will not touch him nor suffer Abishai to fall upon him who was ready to have slain him had David given way to it for against all these provocations conscience cries out God forbid that I should lay my hand upon the Lords Annointed and so prevaileth notably against all these motives So David stayed his servants with these words not suffering them to rise against Saul 1 Sam. 24.7 It is in the original he clave his men asunder it seemeth his followers began to run together desiring every one to lend his helping-hand to dispatch the mortal enemy of their Master David but David by the force of an upright conscience brake through them all and put them aside not suffering them to accomplish their bloody intendment But another time ye shall see when Nabal had dealt currishly with Davids Messengers the news of this base abuse came it seemeth somwhat unseasonably to David and found his Conscience not well awakened and so while Conscience slumbereth and mindeth not what is in hand passion condemneth Nabal and all his family to present death And whiles Anger maketh an hasty march for blood and whetteth it self as it goeth Abigail meeteth it upon the way and with a well-tempered voice not so loud and violent as to enrage fury more than already it was yet loud enough to awake Conscience she sheweth him his errour and presently Conscience being awakened soundeth a retreat maketh all lay down arms thanketh the Instrument by whom it was shaken out of slumber and kept from wallowing in innocent blood or encroaching on Gods Office by self-revenge But with wicked men Conscience many times prevaileth not in such cases she cannot be heard or being heard is not regarded Satan the flesh the world stop her mouth Now besides all this Conscience hath its employment also about the things already past if good it excuseth and acquitteth the party cheareth comforteth and is peaceable unless mis-informed so in performing good actions and so in overcomming sinfull temptations so Abigail telleth David that when he should be King he should have no trouble of Conscience for not shedding blood if according to her petition he would spare Nabals family Conscience should never accuse him for it but should hold him guiltless So you see Psal. 7. when he was falsly accused by a Benjamite for an evil he never committed how boldly conscience pleadeth his cause before the Lord and proclaimeth him innocent Again for evils done or good duties omitted Conscience accuseth yea somtimes wonderfully rageth and terrifieth it accused David Psal. 51. I have sinned c. yea it breaketh his bones as it were and grievously afflicteth his soul. But when it meeteth wi●h Iudas a son of perdition oh how it tormenteth him it driveth him out of his Meditations wherein he might please himself in the price of blood lately gained it chaseth him cut of the company of his fellows who had been his assistants in apprehending our Saviour i● driveth him into the presence of the Priests it forceth him to accuse himself to throw down his money and to hang himself never ceasing to pursue him till it had driven him quite out of the world Now besides this it recordeth and keepeth a Register and Day-book of mens actions and omissions which though now adays men will not read over by self examination yet at the last day God shall open it be-before the eyes of men and Angels Thus much for the faculties of the soul. CHAP VI. SECT 1. Use 1. HEre by way of Application we may in the first place take notice of the soul of man in a special manner as of one of the principal works of God wherein his glory is no●ably manifested He is the Father of Spirits who of himself immediately did bring forth the spirit and soul of man an excellent Creature which no sence can discern the eye cannot see it nor the ear hear it c. and as it is said no man hath seen God at any time yet God whom none in the world can see gave being to the whole world and now governeth it so the soul whom no sense of the body can discern giveth life to the whole body and governeth the body An excellent Creature it is endowed with notable faculties and we