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A47629 A treatise of divinity consisting of three bookes : The first of which handling the Scripture or Word of God, treateth of its divine authority, the canonicall bookes, the authenticall edition, and severall versions, the end, properties, and interpretation of Scripture : The second handling God sheweth that there is a God, and what he is, in his essence and several attributes, and likewise the distinction of persons in the divine essence : The third handleth the three principall works of God, decree, creation and providence / by Edward Leigh ... Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing L1011; ESTC R39008 467,641 520

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not whether to referre it and God created not accidents without subjects The worke of the second day were two-fold 1. That most vast firmament viz. that space between the earth and skie the Hebrew word signifieth the extending of any thing or the thing it selfe 2. The division of the waters above from the Waters below that is of the clouds which are in the middle Region of the Aire from the Fountaines Rivers and Sea which remain under the lowest Region But by the name of Clouds and Waters above the firmament we may understand all the Meteors both waterie and fiery which were created then in their causes Jer. 10. 13. The approb●tion given of other dayes is here omitted in the Hebrew not because Hell was created on this day as the Hebrews say but because this work of distguishing the waters was yet imperfect and finished on the third day The worke of the third day was three-fold 1. The conflux or gathering of the waters below into one place in regard of the greater part of them called Sea that so they might not over-flow the earth and by this command of Gods they still continve so Luther said well that all a mans life upon the earth is as great a miracle as the Israelites passing through the red sea 2. The drying of the earth to make it habitable and fit for nourishing plants and living creatures 3. The producing of Herbes and Trees of all kinds The works of the fourth day were the Lights both greater as Sun and Moon and lesser as the other starres placed in the Heavens as certaine receptacles or vessells wherein the Lord did gather light which before was scattered in the whole body of the heavens 2. The use of them they were to give light to the world to distinguish the night from the day the day from the week as also to distinguish seasons Summer and Winter Spring Autumne Seed-time and Harvest They are Signes 1. Naturall by them we may guesse of the Weather Matth. 16. 2 3. from the colour and figure of the Moon some will conjecture what weather is like to be 2. Civill Husbandmen Gardners Fishermen Mariners gather observations from them 3. Ecclesiasticall to know the New Moons and spirituall st●ange apparitions in them are signes of Gods anger as extraordinary Eclipses Blazing-starres The works of the fifth day were The Fishes of the Sea and Fowles of the Aire divers i● nature shape qualities vertues and manners of living the fishes were appointed to increase multiply and fill the waters and the fowles to increase multiply and flie in the aire The worke of the sixt day is two-fold 1. All terrestriall bruite creatures Beasts Cattle and every thing which creepeth upon the earth in their kinde having vertue and power from God to increase and multiply 2. Man male and Female Adams body of the dust of the earth viz. that hee might have in his owne bosome an argument and incentive of humility left for his excellency he should waxe proud against God Eves body out of a rib of Adam for a signe of most neare conjunction and love betwixt man and wife The Creation ceased in man as in the Master-piece of Gods skil and as in the end to which all other things were destinate For all other Creatures by the bountie of the Creator were to serve Adam as their Lord and Prince CHAP. III. I Shall now insist more largely on the particular Creatures and draw some Consectaries from them saying little of the reasonable Creatures Angels and Men because I intend more fully to treat of them by themselves The Creation of the Heavens is a great and wonderfull worke of God the Heavens were not alwayes neither came they by chance or any other way but by the wonderfull power of God creating them So the Scripture telleth us often Psal. 102. 15. Esay 40. 12. and 22. and 42. 5. and 45. 2. and 48. 13. God frequently challengeth to himselfe the glory of this exceeding great worke alleadging it as an effect of his wonderfull power and greatnesse The excellency and greatnesse of this worke appeares in divers things 1. The abstrusenesse of the matter 2. The perfection of the forme 3. The exceeding hugenesse of its quantity 4. The height of it 5. It s swift motion Lastly the excellent usefulnesse of if for the Creatures here below and all other things contained in it First the matter of the Heavens is darke and hidden and goes beyond the power of mortall creatures certainly to determine of it Philosophers know not what to say here some of them doe thinke that the upper heavens are made of the same matter with these inseriour bodies and some againe do deny it and thinke it consists of another which they call the fifth E●sence because they perceive it to bee of such different working and qualities front the things below 2. The perfection of the Figure of the heavens and all the Starres of heaven doth marvellously grace it for it is of an Orbicular or round forme a Circle encompassing the earth and waters round which is of it selfe also for the maine Orbicular and this concerning the Starres our senses do declare and concerning the whole Heavens the motions of the Starres which our eye doth tell us for the Sunne riseth every morning over against the place it did set the evening before and so evinceth that its course is round The round figure is the most beautifull strong perfect and capacions figure and this may minde us of Gods Inf●●itenesse Perfection and unchangeablenesse 3. Consider the hugenesse of its quantity for who can measure the back-side of heaven or tell how many miles space that mighty Circle doth containe the Globe of Earth and water is very great but all that is as it were an undiscernable Point compared to the whole Globe of heaven how incomprehen●●bly great is he which hath made a building so great The whole circuit of the heavens wherein are the fixed Staus is reckoned by Astronomers to be a thousand and 17. millions of miles at least 4. It is a high and stately building Job 22. 1● 160. millions of miles high from earth to heaven it is so farre by the Astronomers rules It is a wonder saith one that we can look up to so admirable a height and that the very eye is not tired in the way If this ascending line could be drawne right forward some that have calculated curiously have found it five hundred yeares journey unto the starrie heaven This putteth us in minde of the infinite mercy and goodnesse of God Psalme 103. 3. and of his Majestie the highest heavens are a fit Palace for the most High Psal. 104. 3. 5. It s admirable swift motion and revolution in 24. hours which our conceits cannot follow teacheth us that God is farre more swift and ready to helpe us in our need A Bullet out of a Musquet flies swiftly
did not make themselves They could not possibly be without any beginning at all for they are but parts of the whole world and no part of any whole can be eternall because there must be something before that did unite those parts together wherfore they were made by some superiour essence and more excellent then themselves and that is God How great how wise how good how infinitely excellent is He whose hand framed and ordered these things The Sunne ariseth to us constantly the Moone also keepes her course with like constancie Doth not that mighty armie of stars which in a cleare night shew themselves even speake to us as it were to consider of his incomprehensible excellencie which made and rules them Let us accustome our selves hereafter to these meditations if God had not beautified heaven with these excellent bodies light and heate could not have been equally and in due quantity conveyed into all the quarters of the world We must observe this worke so as to praise God for it to informe our selves of his nature and strive to worke more love feare obedience and confidence in our selves towards him The Apostle saith that in the times before the Gospell the Gentiles might have found God as it were by groping Acts 17. 27. Now we that have the Scripture to direct us as in the day-light shall not wee finde God out by these illustrious works of his CHAP. VI. THe fift dayes worke was the Creation of all living creatures which live and move in the two moist Elements the water and the aire viz. Fishes and moving creatures which live and move in the waters and all kinde of Fowles which flye in the open Region of the aire divers in nature shape qualities and manner of living The Hebrew verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated the moving creature is derived is used as here so in other Scriptures frequently first to signifie creeping or moving forward without feete as Genes 7. 21. and Levit. 11. 19. and secondly also to bring forth abundantly as here and also Exod. 1. 7. Fishes breed and bring forth young in great abundance more then any other creatures do by the multitude of spawn they would encrease beyond all measure and number if by one meanes or other the spawne were not devoured and consumed Who can render a reason of their ability to swim so in the waters to support themselves in the midst of the waters convey themselves up and down in it Fishes are in Scripture termed Reptilia Psal. 104. 25. In the great and wide Sea there are things creeping innumerable both small and great so called because things when they swim seeme to creep along in the water As birds have their wings and traines by meanes whereof they cut their way and make smooth passage through the aire so fishes are furnished with finnes wherewith they guide themselves in their swimming and cut the current of the streames aud waves for their more easie passage wherein their course is directed by their taile as shtps are conducted by their Helm The Sea gives more and greater dainties then the earth those that did most affect to please their pallate of olde set great store by fishes and paid dearer for them then flesh God hath furnished them with a strong power of encreasing Birds bring forth some foure or five in a nest some three and some but two the most but twenty as the little Wren for being so little the kinde would bee consumed by the things which devoure such weake creatures if those that be did not bring forth very many but every fish brings forth a great multitude many hundreds as we may see in their spawne That God should give unto these things a power to multiply so very fast is wonderfull and it is agreeable to reason too for the fishes doe more devoure one another then the beasts doe the greater being much more ravenous then any beast as being bigger and their stomacks by an antiperistasis of the cold water more vehement in digesting They are said to bee without number Psal. 104. 25. not simply but to us for wee cannot tell the number of them though God which made them doe know the particular number of them Hee can tell how many fishes there bee in the Sea though to us they exceed the power of counting yet he hath the precise and exact number of them We know not the kinds of fishes how much lesse the particulars There be saith Plinie of fishes and other creatures living in the Sea one hundred seventy and sixe severall and distinct kindes What Philosopher can tel how many Dolphins Herrings Whales sword-fishes there be in the Sea The Echeneis Remora or stop-ship but halfe a foot long is able to stay the greatest ship under saile Keckermannus humori frigido à Remora fuso adscribere videtur qui aquam circa gubernaculum conglaciet in Disput. Phisic The Cramp-fish Torpedo is able to benum and mortifie the armes of the lustiest and strongest Fishers that be by touching onely the end of any part of an angle-rod which they hold in their hands although they stand aloft and a great way from her hence it hath its name quod torpore manus afficiat because it benummeth the hands The Naturalists tell us of one fish which they call the Uranoscope which hath but one eye and that in a verticall point on the top of the head directly upward by which it avoids all rocks and dangers There have been known Whales sixe hundred foot long and three hundred 60. foot broad some like mountains some like Islands God himselfe speaking of his owne power of all the creatures rehearseth onely two the Behemoth Job 40. 15. to the end that is the Elephant and the Leviathan Job 41. per totum that is the Whale this being the greatest among the Fishes as that among the beasts The Sword-fish hath a beake or bill sharp pointed wherewith hee will drive through the sides and planks of a shippe and bore them so that they shall sink withall The Dolphin is said to bee a fish of such exceeding great swiftnesse as that oftentimes he outstrippeth a ship under sail in the greatest ruffe and merriest wind in swiftness of course In this fish is propounded to us an example of charity and kind affection toward our Children as Plinie in his description of the nature of this fish sheweth and Aelianus l. 5. c. 18 As also of his singular love toward man whereof Aelianus produceth strange examples It may seeme strange that it should please the Pope to forbid flesh to men rather then fish i. the lesse dainty and luxurious before the more for what is of some alleadged that the curse fell upon the earth and not the Seas is fondly affirmed seeing when it is said cursed bee the earth By earth is meant the whole globe of the earth consisting
of Sea and dry land Some fishes are exceeding small and for their smalnesse workmanship bestowed upon them admirable In the Sea the Cockles a little kinde of shel-fish yet in its kinde very artistciall some-what resembling a Cre-fish which are dainties for rich men Those little and small things are made with so many joynts and parts and turnings such a proportion and shape and every thing so exact and suitable as would stirre up astonishment in any beholder Gods power is likewise in the greatnesse of some fishes as the Whale some of which are 80 yards long their eyes are as bigge as an hogshead and their mouth so wide that a man sitting on horse-backe might bee held in it God hath created the Fowles of heaven among other creatures Psalm 104. 12. Gen. 1. 20 21. The things wherein the Foules differ from other creatures are 1. That they be winged having feathers and wings by which they are covered and by which they doe passe through the aire and the place wherein they flye viz. in the open firmament in this lower heaven Their creation is wonderfull in divers respects First their making is wonderful far differing from that of beasts fishes and men 2. They have great variety of kindes some wilde some tame some great some little some Sea or water birds some land birds 3. Their manner of breeding they lay egges and hatch them out of a kind of confused substance that to us seems void of life by the heate of their bodies they doe bring forth their young naked at first which after by the same cherishing of warmth do bring forth feathers to cover them Many of them are so beautifully adorned with their feathers for colour and are so glorious as a man cannot but looke upon them with wondring and delight for where doth nature shew more variety and a pleasinger composition of colours then in Doves necke a Peacocks taile and some other like birds 4. For their swiftnesse of flying that they can with such celerity passe through the aire 5. They are many wayes serviceable to many they are a dainty foode for weake stomacks they pull up many kindes of wormes and vermine that else would bee very harmefull to us Fowles or birds are more worthy than Fishes because they do more participate of aire and fire the two noblest Elements than of water and earth All birds are mustered under the name of Fowles as under their Genus There are examples of vertues in the fowls propounded for us to imitate and of vices for us to shun In the Phaenixe an example of the Resurrection in the Storke of loving affection in the Dove of innocencie conjugall faith in the Crows and Estridges of unnaturalnesse We should imitate the Stork Crane Swallow in acknowledging the seasonable time of our repentance The Storke hath her name from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 love the * Hebrew word is neer of kin with another which signifieth bowells of compassion as which indeed are most tender in her A story whereof wee have in the description of the Netherlands viz. of a Storke that when the house was on fire where her nest was kept the fire off from her young ones with her owne bodie and wings so long till she was burnt her selfe It is loving to mankind delightfull to build in the tops of houses and chimneys as is usuall to be seen in Germany It is the embleme of a gratefull man for at her departure from the house where she builds as some report she usually leaveth a young one behinde her Aelian writeth of a Storke which bred on the house of one which had a very beautifull wife which in her Husbands absence used to commit adultery with one of her base servants which the Storke observing in gratitude to him who freely gave him house-roome flying in the villans face strucke out both his eyes The Eagle is reckoned the Soveraigne Queen of all Fowls as the Lion is reputed the King of all beasts It is Altivolans avis an high soaring bird that sometime flyeth so high a pitch as she transcendeth the view of man she hath a tender care of her young when they be flush and ready for flight then she stirreth up her nest and fluttereth over them yea she taketh them on her wings and so soareth with them through the aire and carieth them aloft and so freeth them from all danger In that she carrieth her young ones rather upon her wings then in her tallons she sheweth her tender care and love that she beareth unto them The Hebrew name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated Fowle Gen. 1. 26. signifieth in generall every living thing which by helpe of wings flyeth above the earth in the aire so that not only birds but also bees wasps hornets and all other winged things may here be understood Bees are notable Deut. 32. 11. 1. For their good husbandry she is very painfull shee flies to every herb and flower and seekes and searches into every corner of the same Shee so abhors idlenesse that she punisheth the idle drone and will not give it any quiet harbour in the hive 2. She is thrifty which is another part of good husbandry what she hath gotten in the Summer she charily laies up in her Cells and doth not spend it till she must needs 2. For their care of the common good she is an admirable lover of that she labours eates fights in common and all her paines is directed to the common good she will with unresistable courage assaile any enemie though neuer so strong which shall offer to wrong the common body 3. For their concord Bees of the same hive are linked together in the bond of amity though they be many of them yet they know love each other keep peace among themselves and flye domesticall sedition unless the rulers be multiplyed and by their disorders set the rest of the Bees at variance 4. For their dutifulnesse to their King or Prince they are most loyall subjects to him they labour for him build him more then one palace and that more large and sta●ely then their owne they fight for him and goe abroade with him Wee see and use the fowles and eate their flesh and lye upon their soft feathers and yet contemplate not the goodnesse of God in them We have divers kinds of tame fowle in our back-sides they bring us young and we kill and dresse them and set them upon our Tables and feast with them They lay egges and we eate of them they sit and hatch and cherish their young and we see that admirable manner of drawing actuall life out of a potentiall life by the working of heate And we have many wilde fowle but who seeth Gods wisedome power bounty in giving them to us Let us stirre up our selves to give God his due glory in respect of this kinde of creature Amongst other creatures the
God doth so plainly and so many waies discover himselfe to us yet blind wretches we perceive him not We are now to stirre up our mindes to the consideration of God in this his mighty worke See him walking through the earth and visiting it in the swift wings of this creature It hath also an apt resemblance and image of God in it 1. In the subtilnesse and invisible nature of it the swiftnesse of the winde may note his omnipresence who is said to ride on the wings of the winde 2. In its powerfull motion efficacie which no man can hinder or resist 3. In the freedome of its motion John 3. 7. 4. In the secresie of his working of mighty workes the windes are invisible The consideration of the windes leades us into our selves and that 1. For humiliation for who knoweth the nature of the winde the place of the winde the way of the winde to see in it our owne vanity Job 7. 7. Psal. 78. 39. 2. Instruction shall so fierce a creature be at a becke and shall not I 2. See the miserable estate of wicked men on whom destruction and feare shall come as a whirle-wind Prov. 27. 18. They shall be as stubble or chaffe before the winde Psal. 1. Metalls are minerall substances susible and malleable They are commonly distinguished into perfect and imperfect perfect because they have lesse impurity or heterogen●ity in them as gold and silver imperfect because they are full of impurities as iron copper tin and lead Gold of all metalls is the most solid and therefore the most heavie It will loose none of his substance neither by fire nor water therefore it will not make broth more cordiall being boyled in it Silver is next in purity to gold but it is inferiour unto it Precious stones in Latine Gemmae are esteemed for their rarity or for some vertue fancied to be in them or for their purenesse and transparentnesse The Psalmist declares the great worke of God in distinguishing the waters from the earth and making Sea and dry land The waters at the first did encompasse and cover the earth round about as it were a garment and overflow the highest parts of it altogether so that no dry ground was seene or could be seene in the world this was the first constitution of them as Moses relateth Gen. 1. 2. The deepe was the whole Orbe of waters which inclosed the earth in themselves But then God pleased to divide the waters from the earth so as to make dry land appeare and for that end 1. He drave the waters into one place spreading the earth over them and founding it upon them Psal. 104. v. 6. 7. God by his mighty power compared there to a thundering voyce did make the waters to gather together into the place that hee had appointed for them under the earth and that by raising up hills and mountaines and causing dales and valleyes then God appointed the waters their bounds that they should still continue in these hollowes under the earth and not returne to cover the earth as else of their owne nature they would have done There are divers profitable questions about these things 1. Whether the Sea would not naturally overflow the land as it did at the first creation were it not with-held within his bankes by divine power The answer is affirmative and the reason is evident the water is lighter then the earth and heavier things are apt to pierce through the light and the light will take to themselves an higher place and give way to the heavier things to descend through them mixe a great deale of dirt and water and let it stand a while and take its owne proper course and the dirt will sinke to the bottome leaving the water above it selfe Aristotle and others say that the Sea is higher then the earth and they can render no reason why it being apt to runne abroad should be kept from over-flowing the land whence he proves Gods providence 2. Whether there be more Sea or Land The multitude of waters made by God at first did cover the earth and inclose it round the Sea therefore must needs be farre greater then the Earth The Mapps shew it to be greater in quantity then the Earth 3. Whether the deepnesse of the Sea doth exceed the height of the mountaines It was a great worke of God to make mountaine vallies hils dales The Scripture often mentions it Pro. 8. 25. Psal. 65. 6. and 95. 4. and 90. 2. Psalm 104. 8. Amos 4. 13. Therfore are the mountaines exhorted to praise God Psal. 146. 9. Esay 40. 12. Hee is said to have weighed the mountaines in scales and the hils in ballances that is to have poised them even so that the earth might remain unmoveably in the parts of it as well as in the whole The greatnesse of this worke appeares 1. In the strangenesse and hiddennesse of it How should so heavy a thing as the earth thus heave up it selfe into so great ascents to give place unto the waters under it the immediate power of God is the cause of it Ps. 24. 2. 136. Psalm It may bee some hills were made by the furie and violent motion of the waves of the waters of Noah's flood but the most and greatest were created on the third day 2. In the usefulnesse of it 1. For beauty and ornament it gives a more delightfull prospect to see hills and dales then to looke upon all one even and flat piece of ground without any such risings 2. It conduceth to the fruitfulnsse of the earth The vales are much more fruitfull then if they were flats without hills because of the dew and moysture that descendeth upon them from the hills and some things grow better upon the higher places on the sides or tops of the mountaines 3. Without these hills and mountaines there could not have been roome for the waters which before did swallow up the earth in its bowels neither could the dry land have appeared 4. Without such hills and dales there could not have beene rivers and springs running with so constant a course 5. Hills and mountaines are the receptacles of the principall mines for metalls and quarries for all kinde of usefull stones Deut. 8. 9. and 33. 15. They are for boundaries betwixt Countrey and countrey Kingdome and Kingdome We should tell our selves how admirable and usefull this kind of frame and scituation the earth is 4. Whether Islands came since the flood 5. What is the cause of the saltnesse of the Sea The water of the Sea is salt not by nature but by accident Aristotle refers the saltish quality of the Sea-water to the Sun as the chiefe cause for it drawes up the thinner and fresher parts of the water leaving the thicker and lower water to suffer adustion of the Sun-beames and so consequently to become salt two things chiefely concurre to the generation of
saltishnesse drowth adustion Our Uurine and excrements for the same reason are also salt the purest part of our nourishment being employed in and upon the body Lydiat attributes it to under-earth or rather under-sea fires of a bituminous nature causing both the motion and saltnesse of the Sea Aristotle affirmeth that the Sea in Summer toward the South is more salt then else-where and is fresher toward the bottome then top The Sea is salt 1. to keepe it from putrifaction which is not necessary in the floods because of their swift motion 2. for the breeding and nourishing of great Fishes being both hotter and thicker 7. What is the cause of the ebbing and flowing of the Sea There have been many opinions of the cause of the ebbing and flowing of the Sea De quo plura pro ingeniis differentium quam pro veritatis fide expressa Some say it is the breathing or blowing of the world as Strabo Albertus Magn. One said it was because the waters getting into certaine holes of the earth were forced out again by Spirits remaining within the earth Macrobius said it was by meeting the East West Ocean Cicero seems to ascribe it only to the power of God others for the most part ascribe it to the various light or influences of the moone which rules over all moist bodies Some attribute it to certaine subterranean or under-Sea fires The final cause of the Seas motion is the preserving and purging of the waters as the aire is purged by windes Coelius Rhodiginus Antiq. lect l. 29. c. 8. writeth of Aristotle that when he had studied long about it at the last being weary he dyed through tediousnesse of such an intricate doubt Some say he drowned himselfe in Euripus because hee could finde no reason why it had so various a fluxion and refluxion seven times a day at least adding before that his praecipitation quoniam Aristoteles non cepit Euripum Euripus capiat Aristotelem Since Aristotle could not comprehend Euripus it should comprehend him But Doctor Brown in his Enquiries seemes to doubt of the truth of this story Other questions there are concerning r●vers What is the originall of springs and Rivers what manner of motion the running of the rivers is whether straight or circular As one part of the waters and the farre greater part is gathered into one place and much of it hidden in the bowels of the earth and there as it were imprisoned or treasured up by making the Sea and dry land so another part of them was appointed to runne up down within the earth and upon it in springs rivers which rivers are nothing but the assembling of the waters into divers great channells from the fountains and springs which the Psalmist describeth by its matter and use or effect He sendeth the springs into the valleyes which run along the hills that is He made the springs and fountaines to conveigh waters from place to place the use of this is to give drinke unto the beasts even to the wilde asses who quench their thirst there There be many other uses of springs and rivers but this is noted as the most manifest and evident Another use is for the fowles which have their habitation in the trees which grow neere and by meanes of these springs there they sit and sing These spring bring up so much moisture to the upper parts of the earth as causeth trees to grow also for fowles to build and sing in Some of the waters also were drawn up into the middle region of the world changed into Clouds that so they may be dissolved and powred downe againe from thence upon the hills also and other places which cannot be watered by the Springs that so the whole earth may be satisfied with the fruit of Gods works The Poets faigned that Jupiter Neptune and Pluto divided the Universe and that Neptune had the Sea for his part which is called Neptunus either à nando from navigation or a nubendo from covering because the Sea covers the earth and Pontus the nations about Pontus thought no Sea in the world like unto their owne and doubted whether there were any other Sea but that whence Pontus was used for the Sea in generall The Sea is a wide and spacious place Psal. 104. 25. The great deepe the wombe of moisture the well of fountains the great Pond of the world The reason of the greatnesse and widenesse of it is the multitude of waters which were made by God at the first which because they did cover the earth and inclose it round it must needs be farre greater then the earth and therefore when God saw fit to distinguish the dry land from the earth must needs have very great ditches cut for it in the earth and caverns made to hold it therefore the earth in Scripture is said to be spread out upon the Sea because a great part of it is so in respect of the waters that are under it Again the use the principall use of the Sea waters therof was that it might supply vapours for making of the clouds by the attraction of the Sunne and native heate of the Sea in respect of some fire which God hath mixed with the earth and waters that they may be more fit to give life to living things Now if the superficies of the Sea were not very large and wide the Sunne could not have power enough by its attractive heate and warmth by which it doth attenuate make thin the waters into vapours which after the cold of the aire when they come into the middle region of it doth againe thicken and turne it into waters I say the Sunne could not else have power to draw out of the Sea sufficient store of these vapours for watering of the earth with showers So the multitude of the waters and the necessity of having much of them drawn up for raine required that they should not have little receptacles but one so great and spacious a receptacle which we call the Sea Oceanus the Ocean is that generall collection of all waters which environeth the world on every side Mare the Sea is a part of the Ocean to which we cannot come but by some streight In the Sea are innumerable creatures small and great there walke the Shipps there play the Leviathans What living mountaines such are the Whales some of which have beene found 600. foote long and 360. foote broad rowle up and downe in those fearfull billowes for greatnesse of number hugenesse of quantity strangenesse of shapes variety of fashions neither aire nor earth can compare with the waters Another use of the Sea is that there goe the Ships as the Prophet speakes in a kind of wonderment The whole art of Navigation is a strange art the Lord sitted the Sea for this purpose that it might be usefull to transport men from place to place and other things
from countrey to countrey Men build moveable houses and so goe through the waters on dry ground they flye through the Sea by the helpe of windes gathered in fitly with sails as birds do through the aire and having learnt of birds to steere themselves in the Sea they have an helme at the which the Master sitting doth turne about the whole bodie of his ship at his pleasure The swiftnesse of the motion of a ship is strange some say that with a strong winde they will goe as fast and faster then an arrow out of a bow The Lord hath given understanding to man to frame a huge vessell of wood cut into s●t pieces and to joyne it so close with pitch and rozin and other things mixt together that it shall let in none or but a little water and it shall carry a very great burden within yet will not sinke under water and hath given wisedome also to man to make sailes to receive the strength of the winde and cords to move them up and down at pleasure and to make masts to hang on those sails hath given men a dexteterity to run up to the tops of these masts by means of a cord framed in fashion of a ladder that can but even amuze an ordinary beholder and all this for a most excellent use viz. of maintaining commerce betwixt Nation and Nation and of conveighing things needfull from one place to another that all places might enjoy the commodities one of another To this art of Navigation do Kingdoms owe most of their riches delights and choise curiosities a great part of Solomons riches came in this way it is the easiest safest and quickest way of transportation of goods How obnoxious are we to God therefore we should not be bold to offend him how much danger do we stand in if he should let the waters take their own naturall course and exalt themselves above the mountaines At the flood he gave leave to the great Deeps to break their bounds and permitted the waters to take their own place the waters were some 7. yards higher then the tops of highest mountaines He can doe as much now for the demonstration of his just wrath for though He hath promised that the waters shall never overflow the whole earth yet not that they shall never overflow England which stands also in the Sea 2. Let us praise the goodnesse of God which preserveth the whole world alive by a kind of miracle even by keeping the water from overflowing the earth God would convince us that we live of his meere favour and that his speciall power and goodnesse keeps us the waters if they were left to their own naturall propensity would soone overwhelm the earth againe but that God locked them up in the places provided for them This worke is mentioned in divers places Job 38. 8. and 26. 10. Psalme 37. 7. Prov. 8. 29. Jer. 5. 22. First it is absolutely needfull for the preservation of the lives of all things that live and breath out of the Sea 2. It is a strange and hidden work God effecteth it by some setled reason in the course of nature but we cannot by searching find it out Perhaps this may be it the naturall motion of every heavy thing is toward the Center and then it will rest when it hath attained to its own proper place Now the earth is stretched over the flouds and it may seeme that a great part of them doth fill the very bowells concavity of the earth in the very place where the Center or middle point of it is seated Hence it is that they will not be drawne up againe nor follow the upper parts which tosse themselves up and downe but rather pull down those rising graves againe especially seeing it is most evident in nature by many experiments every day that it is utterly impossible there should be any vacuum as they call it any meere empty place in which nothing at all is contained because that would divide the contiguity of things and so cause that the world should bee no longer an orderly frame of divers things together for the parts would not be contiguous and united together if such a vacuum should fall out therefore water will ascend aire will descend and all things wil even loose their own nature and doe quite contrary to their nature rather then such a thing should be Now it may seeme the Lord hath hidden the water in the earth with such turnings and windings some places in which it is being larger some lesse large that the larger places having no open vent for aire to succeed the water cannot be so soone filled from below as they would emptie themselves upward and so there must needs be vacuity if they should not returne back againe and stop their course and therefore they must needs stop as it were in the midst of their carriere And this also may seeme to be a great and principall cause of the fluxe and refluxe of the Sea which if it were not the waters having their course alwayes one way must needs by little and little returne againe to cover the earth If this be the cause as is probable it is wonderfull that God should set such an inclination into all parts of the world that they will suffer any crossing of their own particular natures rather then not maintain the generall course of nature in the close joyning together of things for if they might bee sundred one from another at length the whole must needs be quite out of frame and a generall confusion would follow We must even chide and reprove our selves for our extream stupidity that are so little if ever a whit affected with this worke so great in it selfe and so behoofefull for our very life and being How are we daily and hourly preserved from the swelling waves how comes it that in all this length of time the Sea hath not broken in upon us and overtopped the earth We doe not tell our selves of our debt to God for commanding the waves not to be so bold as to drowne us It may exhort us to feare him that hath appointed the Sands for a bound of the Sea and will not let the waves prevaile over us for all their tossing and tumbling He is of great power and can over-rule so furious an Element and feare not though the waters roare and though the mountains were cast into the midst of the Sea This commends unto us Gods greatnesse who doth so infinitely surpasse the Seas greatnesse and who hath made so much water for it and it a place for so much water Let us thinke of it in particular and dwell a little upon it that we may also know our nothingnesse What a great thing is the Sea in it selfe considerd What is this Island in comparison of the Sea and yet we call it Great Brittaine It must needs bee greater then the earth for the waters did round about involve and
foure Evangelists the Popes authority as Papists say being above the authority of the Councels it followeth that his authority is greater then the Evangelists then which what can be more blasphemously spoken We say the true interpretation of Scripture is not to be sought from generall Councels 1. Because even universall Councels have erred the Chalcedonian Councell one of the 4 so much magnified by Pope Gregory in rashly preferring the Constantinopolitane Church before that of Alexandria and Antioch Those that condemned Christ were then the universall visible Church Matth 26. 65. John 11. 47. See Act. 4. 18. 2. Generall councels have beene opposite one to another that of Constance to the other of Basill whereof one setteth downe that Councels could erre and so also the Pope and that a Councell was above the Pope the other affirmeth the quite contrary 3. There were no Generall Councels after the Apostles for 300 yeares till the first Councell of Nice when yet the Church had the true sence of the Scriptures 4. The generall Councels interpreted Scripture by Scripture as Athanasius and Ambrose teach concerning the first Councell of Nice 5. Because they cannot be so easily celebrated to declare any doubtfull sense of Scripture They have expounded but few places of Scripture neither is it likely the Pope will assemble them to expound the rest The Papists say that the Scripture ought to be expounded by the rule of faith and therefore not by Scripture onely But the rule of faith and Scripture is all one As the Scriptures are not of man but of the Spirit so their interpretation is not by man but of the Spirit likewise Let Councels Fathers Churches give their sense of the Scripture it 's private if it be not the sense and interpretation of the Spirit Let a private man give the true sense of the Scripture it 's not private because it 's Divine the sense of the Holy Ghost and private in 2 Pet. 1. 20. is not opposed to publike but to Divine and the words are to be read no Scripture is of a mans own interpretation that is private contrary to Divine The word is interpreted aright by declaring 1. The order 2. The summne or scope 3. The sense of the words which is done by framing a Rhetoricall and Logicall Analysis of the Text. In giving the sense three Rules are of principall use and necessity to be observed 1. The literall and largest sense of any words in Scripture must not be imbraced farther when our cleaving thereunto would breed some dis-agreement and contrariety between the present Scripture and some other Text or place else shall we change the Scripture into a Nose of wax 2. In case of such appearing dis-agreement the Holy Ghost leads us by the hand to seek out some distinction restriction limitation or figure for the reconcilement thereof and one of these will always fit the purpose for Gods word must alwayes bring perfect truth it cannot fight against it selfe 3. Such figurative sense limitation restriction or distinction must be sought out as the word of God affordeth either in the present place or some other and chiefely those that seeme to differ with the present Text being duly compared together The end of the first Booke THE SECOND BOOKE CHAPTER 1. OF GOD. HAving handled the Scripture which is principium Cognoscendi in Divinity I now proceed to Treate of God who is principium essendi or thus the Scripture is the rule of Divinity God and his workes are the matter or parts of Divinity This Doctrine is 1. Necessary 1. Because man was made for that end that he might rightly acknowledge and worship God love and honour him 2. It is the end of all divine Revelation John 5. 39. 3. To be Ignorant of God is a great misery being alienated from the life of God through the Ignorance that is in them 2. Profitable Our welfare and happinesse consists in the knowledge of God Jer. 9. 23. John 17. 3. the knowledge of God in the life to come is called the Beatificall vision 3. Difficult God being infinite and our understanding finite betwixt which two there is no proportion who knowes the things of God save the spirit of God A created understanding can no more comprehend God then a Viall-glasse can containe the waters of the Sea His wisdome is unsearchable Rom. 11. Job 11. 7. and 26. 13. Euclide answered very fitly to one asking many things concerning the Gods Coetera quidem nescio illud scio quod odêre curiosos Simonides being injoyned by Hiero to tell him what was God required a dayes time to be given him before he answered and at the end of that two when they were expired foure still doubling his time for inquiry till at the last being by Hiero asked a reason of his delayes he told him plainely that by how much the more he thought of God by so much the more he apprehended the impossibility of declaring what he was We know God per viam eminentiae negationis causationis 1. All perfections which we apprehend must be ascribed unto God and that after a more excellent manner then can be apprehended as that he is in himselfe by himselfe and of himselfe that he is one true good and holy 2. We must remove from him all imperfections whatsoever he is Simple Eternall Infinite Unchangeable 3. He is the Supream cause of all There is a threefold knowledge of God 1. An implanted knowledge which is in every mans conscience a naturall ingraffed principle about God O anima naturaliter Christiana said Tertullian 2. An acquired knowledge by the Creatures Psal. 19. 1. That is the great Booke in evey page whereof we may behold the Diety Praesentemque refert quaelibet herba Deum 3. Revealed knowledge of faith spoken of Heb. 11. 6. and this is onely sufficient to Salvation The Heathens had the knowledge of God in a confused manner Rom. 1. 19. 21. and 2. 14. a practicall knowledge 15. v. which shew the worke of the Law written in their hearts not the gracious writing promised in the Covenant the light of nature is not sufficient to bring man to Salvation onely in Judah is God known 76. Psal. 1. 2. and 147. 19. See I●hn 14. 6. and 11. 27. Ephes. 2. 11. 12. The Heathen might know Gods nature and attributes that he was the Creator of the world that by his providence he did preserve and rule all things but they could not by the most industrious use of all natures helpes attaine unto any the least knowledge of God as he is mans Redeemer in Christ they knew not the truth as it is Jesus Ephes. 4. 21. In God we will consider 1. His Nature 2. His workes In his nature two things are considerable 1. That he is 2. What he is That God is is the most manifest cleare evident ungainsayable truth in the world It is the first verity
the waters in a garment Prov. 30. 4. that is makes the Clouds How as it were by an even poysing of one part with the other God makes these Clouds to hover a great while over the earth before they bee dissolved is a thing worthy admiration and greatly surpasseth our knowledge Job 38. 34. Psal. 14. 78. and Prov. 8. 28. Psal. 104. 3. The cloud is water rarified drawn upward till it come to a cold place and then it is thicke and drops downe They are but nine miles say some from the earth but they are of unequall height and are lower in Winter then in Summer when the Sun hath the greater force then they ascend higher and in his smaller force they hang the lower Let us consider the causes of these clouds and the uses of them The efficient causes are thought to be the heate influence of the Sun and the Stars which doth rarifie the water draw thence the matter of the clouds as you shall perceive if you hold a wet cloath before the fire that a thicke steame will come out of it because the fire makes thin the thickness of the water and turns it into a kind of moist vapour and the earth hath some heate mixed with it through a certain quantity of fire that is dispersed in the bowels of it which causeth such like steames to ascend out of it and the coldnsse of the middle region doth condensate and thicken these steames or breaths and turne them againe into water at length and at last to thicke clouds 2. The matter is the steams that the waters and earth doe yeeld forth by this heate The uses of it are to make rain and snow snow is nothing but rain condensated whi●ened by the excessive cold in the winter time as it is in descending for the watering of the earth and making it fruitfull or else for the excessive moistning of the earth to hinder the fruitfulnesse of it if God see fit to punish The earth without moysture cannot bring forth the fruit● that it should and some parts of the earth have so little water neare them below that they could not else be sufficiently moystened to the making of them fruitfull God hath therefore commanded the Sunne among other offices to make the vapours ascend from the Sea and Earth that he may powre it down again upon the forsaken wildernesse or other places whether for punishment or otherwise Ob. How can it be conceived that the clouds above being heavy with water should not fall to the Earth seeing every heavy thing naturally descendeth and tendeth down-ward Sol. No man by wit or reason can resolve this doubt but only from the word of God which teacheth that it is by vertue of Gods Commandement given in the Creation that the Cloudes fall not Gen. 1. 6. Let the Firmament separate the waters from the waters by force of which commanding word the water hangeth in the clouds and the clouds in the aire and need no other supporters Job 26. 7 8. setting out the Majestie and greatnesse of God in his workes here beginneth that He hangeth the Earth upon nothing be bindeth the waters in the Clouds and the Cloud is not rent under them Philosophie is too defective to yeeld the true reason of this great work of God which commonly attributeth too much to natura naturata nature and too little to natura naturans the God of nature Now we must here also blame our own carelesnesse and folly which forbeare to consider of this worke that hangs over our heads The clouds are carried from place to place in our sight and cover the Sun from us They hinder the over-vehement heate of the Sunne from scorching the earth and yet wee never thinke what strange things they be and what a mercifull Creator is he that prepared them Not seeing God in the workes of nature shewes great stupidity and should make us lament Let us endeavour to revive the thoughts of God in our mindes by his workes When wee see the clouds carried up and downe as wee doe sometimes one way sometimes another swiftly then let us set our heart a worke to thinke there goes Gods Coach as it were here he rides above our heads to marke our way and to reward or punish our good or bad courses with seasonable raine for our comfort or excessive showers for our terrour O seeke to him and labour to please him that hee may not finde matter of anger provocation against us When the Clouds either favour or chastise us let us take notice of Gods hand in these either comfortable or discomfortable effects and not impute it all to the course of nature By meanes of the Clouds God waters the earth yea the drye wildernesse without moysture there can be no fruitfulnesse without Clouds no raine without that no corne or grasse and so no man or beast Raine is as it were the melting of a Cloude turned into water Psal. 104. 13. It is a great work of God to make raine and cause it fitly and seasonably to descend upon the earth It is a work often named in Scripture Deut 11. 14. and 28. 12. Levit. 26. 4. Jer. 5. 24. It is noted in Job divers times 36. 27. He maketh small the drops of water God propounds this worke to Job as a demonstration of his greatnesse Job 38. 25. 34. See Jer 30. 13. Psalm 137. 8. Now this work is the more to be observed in these respects 1. The necessity of it in regard of the good it bringeth if it be seasonable and moderate and the evill which followes the want excesse or untimelinesse of it 2. In regard of mans utter inability to procure or hinder it as in the dayes of Noah all the world could not hinder it and in the dayes of Ahab none could procure it 3. In regard of the greatnesse of the worke in the course of nature for the effecting of which so many wonders concurre First without this drinke afforded to the fields we should soone finde the world pined and sterved and man and beast consumed out of it for want of foode to eate It is the cause of fruitfulnesse and the want of it causeth barrennesse and so destruction of all living creatures that are maintained by the encrease of the earth As mischievous and terrible a thing as a famine is so good and beneficiall a thing is raine which keepeth off famine Secondly It procureth plenty of all necessaries when the Heavens give their drops in fit time and measure the earth also sends forth her off-spring in great store and fit season so both men and beasts enjoy all things according to their naturall desire this so comfortable a thing as plenty is so worthy a work of God is the effect of raine I meane raine in due season and proportion Lastly The greatnesse of the workes which must meet together for making and distributing of
raine doth magnifie the worke The Sunne by his heate drawes up moist steams breath from the earth and water these ascending to the middle region of the aire which is some-what colder then the lower are again thickned and turne into water and so drop downe by their owne heavinesse by drops not altogether as it were by cowles full partly from the height of place from which they fall which causeth the water to disperse it selfe into drops and partly because it is by little and little not all at once thickned and turned into water so descends by little portions as it is thickned So the Sunne and other starres the earth the water windes and all the frame of nature are put to great toile and paines as it were to make ready these Clouds for from the end● of the earth are the waters drawn which make our showers God is the first efficient cause of raine Gen. 2. 5. It is said there God had not caused it to raine Job 5. 10. Jer. 14. 22. Zach. 10. 1. The materiall cause of it is a vapour ascending out of the earth 3. the formall by the force of the cold the vapours are condensed into Clouds in the middle region of the aire 4. The end of raine to water the earth Genes 2. 6. which generation and use of raine David hath elegantly explained Psal. 147. 8. The cause of the Raine-bow is the light or beames of the Sun in a hollow and dewie cloud of a different proportion right opposite to the Sun beames by the reflection of which beames and the divers mixture of the light and the shade there is expressed as it were in a glasse the admirable Raine-bow We should be humbled for our unthankfulness and want of making due use of this mercie the want of it would make us mutter yet we praise not God nor serve him the better when we have it Jer. 14. 22. intimating without Gods omnipotencie working in and by them they cannot doe it If God actuate not the course of nature nothing is done by it let us have therefore our hearts and eyes fixed on him when wee behold raine sometime it mizleth gently descending sometimes falls with greater drops sometime with violence this ariseth from the greater or lesse quantity of the vapour and more or less heate or cold of the aire that thickneth or melteth or from the greater or smaller distance of the cloud from the earth or from the greater purity or grossenesse of the aire by reason of other concurring accidents either we feele the benefit or the want of raine likely once every moneth· Let not a thing so admirable passe by us without heeding to bee made better by it Want of moisture from above must produce praying confessing turning 1 Kings 8. 35. 36. The colours that appear in the Rainbow are principally 3. 1. The Cerulean or watery colour which notes the destroying of the world by water 2. The grassie or greene colour which shewes that God doth preserve the world for the present 3. The yellow or fiery colour shewing the world shal be destroyed with fire Dew consists of a cold moist vapour which the Sun draweth into the aire from whence when it is somewhat thickned through cold of the night and also of the place whether the Sun exhaled it it falleth down in very small and indiscernable drops to the great refreshment of the earth It falleth only morning aud evening Hath the raine a Father or who hath begotten the drops of dew Out of whose wombe came the raine and the hoary frost of heaven who hath gendred it saith God to Job Ch. 38. 28 29. A frost is dew congealed by overmuch cold It differs from the dew because the frost is made in a cold time and place the dew in a temperate time both of them are made when the weather is calme and not windy and generated in the lowest region of the aire Haile and ice is the same thing viz. water bound with cold they differ onely in figure viz. that the hailestones are or bicular begotten of the little drops of raine falling but ice is made of water continued whether it be congealed in rivers or sea or fountaines or pooles or any vessels whatsoever and retaines the figure of the water congealed Though ice be not Chrystall yet some say Chrystall is from ice when ice is hardened into the nature of a stone it becomes Chrystall more degrees of coldnesse hardnesse and clearenesse give ice the denomination of Chrystall and the name Chrystall imports so much that is water by cold contracted into ice Plinie in his naturall Historie saith the birth of it is from ice vehemently frozen But Doctor Browne in his enquiries into vulgar errours doubts of it The windes are also a great worke of God he made and he ruleth the winds They come not by chance but by a particular power of God causing them to be and to be thus hee brings them out of his treasures He caused the winds to serve him in Egypt to bring Froggs and after Locusts and then to remove the Locusts againe He caused the winds to divide the red Sea that Israell might passe Hee made the winds to bring quailes and the winds are said to have wings for their swiftnesse the nature of them is very abstruse The efficient causes of them are the Sunne and starres by their heate drawing up the thinnest and dryest fumes or exhalations which by the cold of the middle region being beaten back againe doe slide obliquely with great violence through the ayre this way or that way The effects of it are wonderfull they sometimes carrie raine hither and thither they make frost and they thaw they are sometimes exceeding violent and a man that sees their working can hardly satisfie himselfe in that which Philosophers speakes about their causes the wind bloweth where it listeth wee heare its sound but know not whence it commeth nor whether it goeth It is a thing which farre surpasseth our understanding to conceive fully the causes of it They blow most ordinarily at the Spring and fall for there is not so much wind in winter because the earth is bound with cold and so the vapour the matter of the wind cannot ascend nor in summer because vapours are then raised up by the Sun and it consumes them with his great heate These Winds alter the weather some of them bringing raine some drinesse some frost and snow which are all necessary there is also an universall commodity which riseth by the onely moving of the ayre which ayre if not continually stirred would soone putrifie and infect all that breath upon the earth It serves to condemne our owne blindnesse that cannot see God in this great worke the wind commeth downe unto us it is neere us we feele the blasts of it and yet we feele not the power and greatnesse of God in it When
encompasse the earth what then is the whole globe of Earth and water and yet that whole globe is a thing of nothing in comparison of heaven and yet all that is nothing in comparison of God O how great is hee and how much to be admired Great not in quantity and extension of dimensions but in perfection of Essence How great is hee that is beyond Earth Sea and world and all more then these are beyond Nothing And let us a little compare our selves with this great and wide Sea The Sea is but part of this Globe yet hath in it water enough to drowne all the men that are in the world if either it were suffered to overflow as once at Noah's flood or else they were cast into it so that all men are but a small trifling thing in comparison of this Sea and then what am I must every one say to himselfe and what compared to God the maker of the wide Sea and this wide world Oh how nothing is man am I my selfe among other men and why am not I humble before God why do I not cast downe and abase my selfe in his presence and carry my selfe to him as becommeth so poore meane and small a creature to so Infinite and great a Creator Let us morally use the things wee see else the naturall knowledge will doe us no good at all We may see in the Sea a map of the misery of mans life it ebbeth and floweth seldome is quiet but after a little calm a tempest ariseth sodainly So must I looke for stormes upon the sea of so troublesome a world For the great worke of Navigation and so of transportation of things by Sea and for the fitnesse of the Sea to that use wee must praise God every man hath the benefit of it By vertue of it wee have Pepper Cloves and Mace Figs and Raisms Sacke and Wines of all sorts Silkes and Velvets and all the commodities of other Kingdomes distant a thousand of miles from us and by this they have from us such commodities as our Land affords above theirs There is no art which helps more to inrich a Nation and to furnish it with things for State pompe and delight And yet how is it abused by Marriners who behold Gods wonders in the Deepe being the worst of men and never good but in astorme and when that is gone as bad or worse then ever The materialls of a ship are wonderfull First it is made of the strongest and durablest wood the Oake and Cedar Now it is a strange worke of God to make such a great tree out of the earth 2. The nailes in it are made of iron that the pieces may be closely compacted 3. Tarre and pitch to stop every crevise that no water or ayre might enter this they learned of God himselfe who bid Noah to plaister the Arke within and without with pitch 4. Cords made of flaxe a multitude of strange things concur to this worke What pitty is it that Souldiers Marriners as was said who are sosubject to dangers have such frequent experience of Gods goodnesse and mercy to them in their preservation should generally be so prophane and forgetfull of God For the Souldier it is an olde saying Nulla fides pietasque viris qui castra sequuntur And for the Marriuer nautarum vota is grown into a proverb In the third dayes worke were likewise created grass herbs plants and trees The first is grasse or greene herbe which is that which of it selfe springs up without setting or sowing 2. Herbe bearing seed that is all herbs which are set or sowne and encrease by mans industry The third trees and plants which are of a woody substance which beare fruit and have their feede which turnes to fruit in themselves God by his powerfull word without any help of mans tillage raine or Sun did make them immediately out of the earth and every one perfect in their kinde grasse and herbs with flowers and seedes and trees with large bodies branches leaves and fruites growing up suddenly as it were in a moment by Gods word and power The great power of God appeares in this Hee is able to worke above nature without meanes the fruitfulnesse of the earth stands not in the labour of the Husband-man but in the blessing of God He also caused the earth to yeeld nourishment for such divers herbs and plants yea herbs of contrary qualitie will grow and thrive close one by another when those which are of a nearer nature will not do so The herbe was given at first for mans use as well as beasts Gen. 1. 9. Psalm 104. 14. Herbs are one wonderfull worke of God The greatnesse of the worke appeare●h in these particulars 1. The variety of the kinds of herbs 2. The variety of their uses of their shapes and colours and manner of production and of their working growth Some come forth without seede some have seede some grow in one place some in another some are for foode some for medicine and some for both That out of the earth by the heate of one Sunne with the moysture of one and the same water there should proceede such infinite variety of things so differing one from another is a wonder some are hot in operation some cold some in one degree some in another some will draw some heal some are sweete some sowre some bitter some of middle tasts In the bowells of the earth the Lord created gold silver precious stones and the face of the earth above was beautified with grasse herbs and trees differing in nature qualities and operations Plants grow till they dye whence they are called vegetables At the first herbs were the ordinary meate of men Gen. 1. 20. and they have continued ever since of necessary use both for meat to maintain life and for medicines to recover health Solomons wisedome and knowledge was such that hee was able to set out the nature of all plants from the highest Cedar to the lowest Mosse 1 Kings 4. 33. We must here condemne our stupidity and blindnesse of minde that are not provoked many times by this particular to magnifie the name of God When a man hath occaslon to travell through a Close or ground how great store of herbs seeth hee whose nature yea names he is ignorant of yet admireth not God in them nor confesseth his power and goodnesse Secondly we are to lament the fruite of our sin which hath made us blinde there is nothing hurtfull to mans bodie but some herb or other rightly applyed would cure it It is a great and worthy worke of God to make grasse on the earth Psal. 104. 14 15. and 147. 8. He maketh grasse to grow upon the mountaines The omnipotent power of God was exercised to make this creature else it could not have beene and at his appointment it came forth This is one of the benefits which God promiseth to his people upon their
obedience Deut. 11. 5. Zach. 10. 16. There are many things considerable in this work of making grasse 1. The plenty store and commonnesse of it It groweth every where and in abundance covering the face of the earth and hiding the dry and naked face thereof 2. The colour of it It is of a greene and some-what of a durke greene colour which is neither over-light nor over-darke but of an indifferent and middle nature and so most fit to content and delight the eye refresh preserve the sight 3. The usefulnesse of this creature for the Cattell it is a soft covering to make the lodging of the poore beasts more easeful for them even as it were a mattresse for them to lie upon It hath a sweet iuyce and verdure in it by which it is pleasant to the tasts of the beasts as any dainty meate can be to us and is fit to nourish them to be turned to bloud and flesh so to make them fat and well liking 4. The wayes meanes and manner for bringing it forth for this use the whole course of the Heauens Sun Moone and Starres which runne a large race daily with great swiftnesse and the great workes done in the aire for producing divers Meteors do tend in great part for the bringiug forth of this grasse The grasse it selfe hath a life and vigour in the roote of it by which it drawes from the earth that moisture which is agreeable to it and disperseth it likewise 1. Wee are dull and blinde and behold not God in this great worke when wee goe into the fields and can scarce tread beside it We do not consider Gods greatnesse and goodnesse in making so beneficiall a thing so common Wee let this worke of God perish in respect of any spirituall use wee make of it to make our soules the better 2. Let us stirre up our selves to observe Gods hand in this worke with others and confesse our debt to him that gives us Commons and Pasture for all our Cattell Trees are certaine plants springing from a roote with a single Trunke or Stemme for the most part shooting up in height and delineated with lims sprigs or branches Leaves are ornamenta arboris munimentà fructus they serve to grace the tree make it pleasant to behold and defend the fruit from the injury of the weather The Philosopher saith homo est arbor inversa a man is a tree turned upside downe for a tree hath his roote in the ground his branches spread above groūd but a mans root is in his head therein is the fountain of sense and motion and there doth hee take in nou-rishment but the arms and legs are branches of this tree they spread downe-ward The Psalmist compares a good man to a tree Psal. 1. 3. The Palme-tree growes in Egypt all along the shores of the red Sea It is said to yeeld whatsoever is necessary to the life of man The pith of it is an excellent sallet better then an Artichoake which in tast it much resembleth Of the branches they make Bedsteds and Lattices of the leaves Baskets Matts Fannes of the outward halfe of the Codde cordage of the inward brushes It is the nature of this tree though never so huge or ponderous a weight be put upon it never to yeeld to the burden but still to resist the heavinesse thereof to endeavour to lift raise it selfe the more upward for which cause it was given to Conquerours in token of Victory Hence figuratively it is used for the victory it selfe plurimarum palmarum homo and for the signe of it Palmaque nobilis Terrarum dominos evehit ad Deos. Rev. 7. 9. With white robes in token of their innocencie palmes in their hands in token of their victory It is reported that the Armes of the Duke of Rhoan in France which are lozenges are to bee seene in the wood or stones throughout all his Countrey so that break a stone in the middle or lop a bough of a tree and one shall behold the graine thereof by some secret cause in nature diamonded or streaked in the fashion of a lozenge Fullers prophane State l. 5. c. 6. It was a great worke of God in making all sorts of trees to proceed out of the earth Psal. 104. 16 17. The nature of the trees is wonderful in these respects principally First the way and manner of their growing and being An Oake comes from an acorne an Apple-tree from a kernell What a kinde of power and vertue is that which God hath put into a kernell being so small a thing that it should pull to it selfe by an unknown vvay the juice of the earth and should send some of it down-ward into little small strings as it were to fasten it selfe in the earth and send some upward to spread it selfe above the ground and yet it should distribute the moysture so fitly as to grow in due proportion within the earth and without that it should frame to it selfe a bodie and divers branches in such fashion that it should b●d and put forth leaves that it should cause a fruite to grow upon it or seede and that in great numbers every one of which is able to make another tree and that tree to yeeld as much more 2. The great variety of kinds of trees we in our Countrey have divers Oakes Elmes Ashes Beech-trees Chesnut-trees Sally Willow Maple Syccamore besides Apple and Peare-trees of divers kindes Cherry-trees Hazell Walnut-trees Some trees are of huge growth as Oakes Cedars Elmes some low as the Thorn the nut Some of one fashion colour making and manner of growth some of another this sheweth an exceeding great measure of wisedome in him that made them all The use of trees in the next place is manifold 1. They serve for fruit what great variety of fruit do they yeeld what pleasant and wholsome fruit what store and plenty of fruit Some Summer fruit that will be gone quickly some Winter fruit that will last most part of the year and some all the yeare 2. For building both by Land and Sea to make us houses both strong and stately warme dry and coole under which we may rest our selves in Summer free from scorching heate in Winter and stormie times free from pinching cold the injury of the weather With wood also wee make floating and fleeting houses with which wee may dwell upon the face of the waters and passe through the deep Sea as upon dry ground 3. It yeeldeth fuell too by which wee doe both prepare our food and keepe our selves warme in the winter and in the time of weaknesse and sicknesse Had wee not something to burn we could neither bake our bread nor brew our beer nor seeth our meate nor rost it nor at all make use of flesh to eate it as now we doe 4. For delight How comfortable a shade doth a spreading Ash or Oake yeild in the hot Summer how refreshing is it to man and beast How
Good and Omniscient as hee wherefore they must bee made by some Maker because they cannot bee Eternall and if made then either by themselves or some other thing besides themselves not by themselves because that implies and absolute contradiction if by some other thing then by a better or worse thing not by a more meane for the lesse perfect cannot give being to a more perfect thing for then it should communicate more to the effect then it hath in it selfe any way which is impossible that any efficient cause should doe not by any better thing then themselves for excepting the Divine Majestie which is the first and best there is no better thing then the Angels save the humanity of our Lord Jesus Christ which could not bee the Maker of them because they were created some thousands of yeares before the humanity was formed in the Virgins womb or united to the second person in Trinity Wee are not able to conceive of their Essence they are simple incorporeall Spirituall substances therefore incorruptible An Angell is a Spirituall Created compleat substance indued with an understanding and will and excellent power of working An Angel is a substance 1. Spirituall that is void of all corporeall and sensible matter whence in Scripture Angels are called Spirits Psal. 104. 4. Heb. 1. 14. Therefore the bodies in which either good or evill Angels appeared were not naturall to them but only assumed for a time and laid by when they pleased as a man doth his garments not substentiall but aeriall bodies they were not Essentially or personally but only locally united to them so that the body was moved but not quickned by them 2. Created by which name hee is distinguished from the Creator 3. Compleate by which an Angel is distinguished from the reasonable soule of man which also is a spirituall substance but incompleate because it is the essentiall part of man 4. Indued with 1. an understanding by which an Angel knoweth God and his works 2. a will by which he desires or refuseth the things understood 3. An excellent power of working by which hee effects what the will commands this is great in them Psalm 103. 20. See 2 Kings 19. 35. The Angels are most excellent creatures when the highest praise is given of any thing it is taken from the excellencie of Angels Psal. 78. 25. 1 Cor. 13. 1. They are called holy Angels Luke 9. 26. Marke 8. 36. therefore they are cloathed with linnen Dan. 11. 4. to signifie their purity and are called Angels of light 2 Cor. 12. 14. to note the purity wherein they were created All the Individuall Angels were made at once and as God made Adam perfect at the first so they were made of a perfect constitution They have all our faculties save such as be badges of our weakenesse they have no body therefore not the faculties of generation nut●ition augmentation They have reason conscience will can understand as much as we doe and better too they have a will whereby they can refuse evill and chuse good a conscience reasonable affections though not such as depend upon the bodie They are endowed with excellent abilities know more of God themselves us and other things then we doe love God themselves and men are obedient to God The good Angels obey God 1. Universally in all things Psalme 103. 20. 2. Freely and readily make hast to doe what hee would have done therefore they are said to have Harps Revel 15. 2. as a signe of their chearfull mind 3. With all their might they serve God with diligence sedulity therefore they are said to have wings to flie 4. Constantly Rev. 7. 15. and 14. 4. They have incredible strength and therefore by an excellencie they are called strong in strength Psal. 103. 20. Angels of the power of the Lord Jesus 2 Thess. 1. 7. Powers Rom. 1. 38. One Angel is able to destroy all the men beasts birds and fishes and all the creatures in the world and to overturne the whole course of nature if God should permit it to drowne the earth againe and make the waters overflow it to pull the Sunne Moone and Starres out of their places and make all a Chaos therefore we reade of wonderfull things done by them they stopt the mouths of Lions that they could not touch Daniel they quencht the violence of the fire that it could not touch so much as a haire of the three Childrens heads nor a threed of their garments they made Peters chaines in an instant fall from his hands and feet they can move and stir the earth say the Schoolemen as appears Matth. 28. 2. The Angels shooke the foundation of the Prison where Paul and Silas lay and caused the doores to flie open and every mans bands to fal from him They destroyed the first borne of Aegypt Sodome and Gomorrah One Angel slew in one night in the host of Senacherib and hundred fourscore and 5000. men Reas. Their nature in respect of bodily things is wholy active not passive they are of a spirituall nature what great things can a whirl-wind or flash of lightning doe They are swift and of great agility they have no bodies therefore fill not up any place neither is there any resistance to them they move with a most quick motion they can be where they will they move like the winde irresistibly aud easily without molestation and in an unperceivable time they move more swiftly then the Sun can dispatch that space in as few minuts which the Sun doth in 24. hours They have admirable wisedome 1 Sam. 18. 14. and 14. 20. the knowledge of the good Angels is increased since their Creation for besides their natural knowledg they know many things by revelation Dan. 9. 22 23. Matth. 1. 20. Luke 1. 30. either immediately from God or from his Word Ephes. 3. 9 10. 1 Pet. 1. 12. Luke 15. 18. by experience and conjecture How an Angel doth understand is much disputed their understanding is not infinite they know not all things Mar. 13. of that day the Angells know not againe they cannot know future contingent things any farther then God reveales these things to them neither can they know the secrets of mans heart 1 Kings 8. 39. Psal. 7. 10. for that is proper to the Lord alone They are said indeed to rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner but that is no further then their inward conversion puts it selfe forth into outward actions They do not know the number of the Elect nor the nature of spirituall desertions the manner of mortifying sin unlesse by the Church and Ministry of the word So againe for the manner of their knowledge that of the Schooles about their morning and evening knowledge is vaine but it is plain they know discursivè as well as intuitivè though some say they are creaturae intelligentes but not ratiocinantes There are three degrees of their knowledg say the Schoolmen
argument of doing good to us His name is the more magnified by how much we are more vile We should ascribe unto his Name all the mercies we enjoy giving all the praise from our selves wholy to him God for his Names sake hath made and redeemed us * Hereby we may judge which is the true Religion what Doctrine is sound pure and of God and what corrupt and from men That Doctrine which setteth forth the praise of God commeth from Heaven but that which is from men advanceth the power pride and merit of man John 7. 18. Ephes. 1. 6. 2. 4. Rom. 3. 21. * Duobus modis refer●i aliquid ad Dei gloriam dicitur Primum formaliter explicitè quando aliquis cogitat cum animo hoc sibi agendum esse quia nomini divino sit glori●sum Deinde virtualiter implicitè cum quis divinae studens gloriae eoque nihil facere decernens nisi quod legi congruat ad hoc gratiam Dei quotidie exposcens boni quippiam facit de universali fine actu non cogitans sed solùm particularis finis bonum intendens Voss●us in Thesibus Though we can not actually intend Gods glory alwaies in every thing yet we should virtually To glorifie is to manifest ones excellency as appeares John 17. 4. compared with verse 6. See of glorifying God Church his miscelanies p. 11. to 18. * 1 Cor. 15. 42 43. There is say the Schooles beatitudo objectiva so whatever is the chiefest good of the soule is the soules blessednesse 2 Formalis when the soule and its beatifying object are united as the fruition of God The soule is here united to God remorely and imperfectly there immediately and perfectly 2 Sam 22. 47. 1 Kings 1. 48. Paul intitleth him God blessed for ever the onely blessed Potentate Vide Amesium Psalm 1. 1. * Beatitudo status est omnium bonorum aggregatione perfectus Boetius de consol Phil. 1 Tim. 6. 15. * He that is the cause of all welfare to other things and makes them in their severall kinds happy he must needs be therefore most happie himselfe God is the au●●our of all blessednesse Psalm 132. 1 2. Aristotle Happinesse is taken two waies 1 Octjectively for the object wherein one is happy as Gods infinite essence is the object both of Gods Angels and mens happinesse 2 Formally for those acts whereby we possesse that object God is happy formally because he knoweth loveth and enjoyeth himselfe therefore it is said our goodnesse extendeth not to him so Angels and men are formally happy when they know and enjoy God We should praise God 1. Intensivè Psalm 36. 10. 103. 1. 3. Extensive with all praise Psalm 9. 14. and for all mercies Psalm 71. 7 8. Dicique beatus a●te obitum nemo supremaque funera possit Consectaries from Gods Blessednesse The happinesse of man consists in the enjoying of God All other things are no otherwise means of happinesse or helpes to it then as we see and taste God in them We must account our selves happy in this thing wholy and onely in that God is ours Happinesse is the enjoyment of good commens●●ate to our desires * Bish. Lake a Man in the state of blessednesse can not see God absolutely as he is in himselfe for that which is Infinite can not be comprehended of that which is limited Visio beatifica est cognitio non comprehensiva sed quidditativa But God doth manifest himselfe so farre forth as a creatu●e is able to know him As a vessell may be filled with the water of the Sea but it can not containe all the water in the Sea The Apostle saith we shall know God even as he also is knowne But as is not a note of equality but of likenesse As God knoweth me after a manner agreeable to his infinite excellency so shall I know God according to my capacity * The Word ●ssence or Trinity are not found in Scripture but Essence is duely derived thence for seeing God saith that he is Essence is fitly ascribed to him Trinity hath a sufficient ground there are three that beare witnesse in Heaven 1 John 5. 7. The word person is extant Heb. 1. 3. therefore these words are rightly used in the Church Ephes. 1. 17 18. Par on Rom. 11. 23. Exod. 33. 20. 1 Cor. 13. 9. * Si rectè dicuntur tres Elohim etiam rectè dici possit tres Dii nam Elohim Latinè sonat Dii vel Deu● Drusius de quaefi●●s per Epistolam Epist. 6● Sic concidit gravis querela expostulatio viri D●cti adversus libri cujusdam titulu De tribus Elohim Non n. voluit author libri illius voce Elohim propriè significare Personas ac proinde tot esse Elohim quot fides Christiana agnoscit esse personas in Divinis cum Scriptura aperiè contra flet que ●estatur Deum nostrum esse Deum unum Non ●ic erravit aut cecutiit doctus ille Theologus ut diceret doceres Tres esse prop●ie loquendo Elohim Sed quoniam vocis illius terminatione plurali Scriptura innuere voluit S. S. Trinitatis mysterium ipse huc resciciem eò vol●s in libri quem de S. S. Trinitate scribebat titul● alludere catach●esi non infrequenti sed ●●ainaria Capel Davidis Lyra. * Matth. 28. 19. John 5. 26 27. The Father is the fountaine and originall of all the Deity and the cause of the Sonne which the very wo●d Father signifieth therefore he is said to be unbegotten and hence the name God is often pecul●arly and by an excellency given to the Father in Scripture Psalm 2. 17. proves that the Father begets and the Sonne is begotten of the Father Galat. 4. 6. See John 15. 26. 14. 26. Haec est differentia inter essentiam divinam personam divinam Essentia divina est communu pluribus divinitatis personis Persona autem una alteri non est communicabilis Vnde Pater non est Filius nec Filius Pater 2 Essentia divina est una Personae plures Wendelinus * Persona est individuum subsistens vivum intelligens in communicabile non sustentatum ab alio nec pars alterius Persona igitur non est ●ssentia quae pluribus est communicabilis Personae vox non hic sig●sicat ossicium aut rel●tionem ut persona principis vel vultum visibilem speciem gestum vel formam alterius representamem ut Personae in drammate sed modum quo essentia divina subsistit Quinescis Tri●●tem ito ad Jordanem See John 15. 26. The Hereticks that are Antitrinitarians See John 8. 58. Psalm 2. 12. Paulus Samosetanus more fitly Semisathanas held Christ was but a meere man Matth. 6. 6. See Acts 4 24. 25 26 27. John 8. 54. God purchased his Church with his blood Acts 20. 28. John 1. 1 2. 1 Cor. 8. 6. By the Apostle Christ is expresly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Divine
in sublimi regione pendent Brierwood There are 3. sorts of Meteors one of fire and hot the other of aire or water and cold the other mingled Hee sendeth snow like wool * Vapor est calidus humidus oriturque ex aere et aqua exhalatio calida et sicca oriturque ex igne terra Zab. a Like chesnuts or egges breaking in the fire b Cum exhalatio Calida sicca in nubibus ocurrit humidae frigidae illam violenta eruptione perrumpit atque ex hac collisi●ne fragor oritur qui tonitrudicitur atque accensio inflammatio exhalationis quae fulgur nominatur Arist. l. 2. Meteor c. 2. 8. Job 37. 4. 1 Sam. 7. 10. 29. Psal. per tot 18. 1● A winters thunder is a summers wonder In Autumne or Spring are oftner meteor seen then in the summer and winter except in such places where the Summer Winter are of the temper of Spring Autumne Job 37. 1 to 6. Plutarch in the life of Flaminius reporteth that there was such a noyse made by the Grecians after their liberty was restored that the birds of the aire that flew over them were seen to fal down by reason that the aire divided by their cry was made so thinue that there was no strength in it to bear them up therefore the thunder must needs rarifie make thin the aire If it bee a great cloud it is called nubes it but a little one it is called nubecula Ab obnubendo operiendo coelum The clouds are called the bottles of heaven Job 38. 37. The windowes and flood-gates of heaven Gen 7. 11. Mal. 3. 10. the fountaines of the deep Prov. 8. 28. the watery roofe of Gods chambers Psal. 104. 3. The pavilion chariot and treasure of the Lord Psal. 18. 11. 2. Sam. 22. 12. swadling bands for the Sea Job 38. 9. The cloud is a thicke moist vapour drawne up from the earth by the heat of the Sun to the middle region of the aire and by the coldnesse there further thickened so that it hangeth untill ether the weight or some resolution cause it to fall downe Mr. Perkins on Jude 12. Consectaries Job 37. 11. to 17. Job 36. 32. Psalme 91. 1. Psalme 104. 3. a Great raine is called nimbus small raine imber Amos 4. 8. b Though all men should unite all their wits purses hands together to make or to hinder one showr of raine they are unable Rich men great wise men have not these waters at command the lesse a creature can do to effect it the more doth the greatness of God shine forth in it In Egypt there is seldom rain it is made fruitf●l by the inundation of Ni●us In India raine is not so frequēt as with us Jerome saith hee never saw rain there in the months of June July hence raine in harvest was there unusuall Pro. 26. 1. 1 Sam. 12. 16. * as they do in the Ind●● Verbum Dei comparatur pluviae Deutr. 32. 2. Ideoque Hebraei uno verbo jorah doctrinam pluviam efferunt Mollerus Thaumantis filiam dixere Iridem Poetae Colores ejus tam exacti ut vix artificis possit exprimere manus Consectaries from the raine Raine bow Job 5. 8 9 10. James 5. 17 18. See Gen. 9. 13. Hosea 14. 5. Valessus de sa●ra philosophia a lib. 37. ch 2 * lib. 2. chap. 1. b Psal. 104. 24 and 135. 7. It is a dry and hot fume ascending upward beaten backe againe by the coldne●se of the middle region some comes downeward againe sideling with more or lesse violence as the sume is larger or subtiler and the cold more or lesse Ventus à violentia vehementia nomen habet quod veniat abundè magna vi irruat in unum aliquem locum mag Ph. Some think the Angells cause the windes to blew Revel 7. 1. but that is but a conceire Prov. 30. 4. Amos 4. 13. c The profit of the wind Dr. Fulke of meteors It made Adam tremble when God came in the winde 1 Cor. 12. 11. Matth. 8. 26. Jer. 18. 17. * Metalla i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is which is ingendred or bred about or with some other thing as gold about silver and silv●r abo●● brass Plinis l. 33. chap. 6. Third dayes worke Psal. 104. 89. * It is called mare either frō the Latine Amarum or the Chaldee marath signifying also bitter because the Sea-water is bitter and salt For the use of man and all other living creatures God made a separation of the earth and water causing the water to sinke down into huge hollow channells prepared to receive it that so the dry land might appeare above it We must consider the earth and waters 1. absolutely as they are Elements and solid bodies so the water hath the higher place being lighter 2. In respect of the superficies of either so the superficie of the earth is higher Carp Geog. If wee compare the Coasts and the neerest Sea then the land is higher then the Sea but if wee compare the land and the maine Sea then the Sea is higher then the Land and therefore the Sea is called Altum where ships flye faster to the shore then from it * Carpenter in his 2d book of Geographie c. 10. saith the perpendicular height of the highest mountaines seldome exceeds ●en fur longs See Sir Walter Raleighs Historie of the world l. 1. c 7 Sect. 11. * Insulae portiones terrae sunt oceano cinctae ortus varia habent principia Emersere quaedam ex mari a continenti av●lsae quaedam aggesta nonnullis ortum dedit materia Johnstoni Thaumato graphia naturalis Duo maxima quae mari tribuuntur mira salsedo reciprocatio Johnstoni Thaumat● graphia naturalis De Origine Fontium c. 8. 9. See Plinies booke of natural history from ch 97. to 100. * It is called reciprocatio aestus maris because it is caused by a hot exhalation boiling in the Sea or because the Sea suffers as if it boyled again with heate Brierwood de meteoris * l. 7. ch 13. a See Doctor Jorden of Bathes ch 3. Rivers are said to be ingendred in the hollow concavities of the earth and derive both their birth and continuall sustenance from the aire which penetrati●g the open chinks of the earth being congealed by the extream cold of that element dissolves into water as the aire in winter nights is melted in a pearly dew sticking on our glass windows Doctor Halls Contemplation It must be large to containe so many creatures Amos 5. 8. and 9. 6. Psal. 104. 25. 107. 23 24 25 26 27 28. Dr. Halls Contemplat Psalm 104. 1 Kings 19. 26 10. 22. Consectaries rom the Sea See the history of Canutus in Cambden The safety of this Kingdo●e consists much in its wooden walls The ●s. Navv exceedes all others in the world in beauty strength safety *
See Plinies natural history l. 16. c. 40. He that carries his life in his hand must cary grace in his heart Doctor Sibbs in his Epistle to Sir Ho ratio Vere prefixed before his Bruised reede Qui nescit ●rare discat navigare Latini distribuunt plantas in tr●agenera herbam fruticem arborem Hebraei aliter in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mercerus in rimum caput Genes 5. 11. Voluit Deus per primam germinationem terrae non modo pastui animaniium sed●etium immortalitati specie● consultum Pareus Job 28. 1. 2. Ezek. 6. 16 17. Joel 3. 5. Hag. 2. 8. Genes 1. 11 12. Vide Mercerum in primū caput Gen. v. 29. Before the flood both herbs fruits of trees were so wholsome and good as that man needed no other foode after it the earth was so corrupted by the inūdation thereof and mans body became so weakned that hee stood in neede of more solid and nourishing meate * Gen. 1. 11 13. It is a Carpet upon the earth to adorne and beautifie it See rare things of a tree called Coco in Doctor Primrose on the Sac. p. 30. Rem miradam Arist. in 8● problematum Plutar. in 8● Symposiacorum dicit Si supra palmae inquit arboris lignum magna pondera imponas ac tam graviter urgeas ut magnitudo oneris sustineri non queat non deorsum palma cedit nec infra flectitur sed adversus pondus resurgit sursum nititur recurvaturquè Aul. Gell. Noct. Att. l. 3. cap. 6. Corallaries * Serunt arbores quae prosint alteri saeculo Cicero Gen. 1. 14. 15 2 Chron. 33. 3. Jer. 44. 17. Deut. 4. 19. * Sol usitatissimè Hebraeis dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Schèmech à ministrando quod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Schimmesch quia dei Ministerin natura clarissimus aliter à calore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chammah Graecis ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. splandore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Latinis Sol vel quia solus ex omnibus sideribus est tantus vel quia quum est exortus obscuratis aliis sol●s appareat Martinius * 〈…〉 ad corporum quam splendoris eorum respexit Moses ad popularem captum aspectum qui haec judicat esse maxima sydera in coelo juxta sensum Mercer See Doctor Hackewells Apology of Gods providence page 74. 76. 77. Dominatur corporibus humidis as over women the brain shel-fish From the new Moone to the full all humours doe encrease and from the full to the new Moone decrease againe Only God can number the Stars Psal. 147 4. It is impossible for man to number them which God intimates to Abraham Gen. 15. 5. Corollaries Gen. 1. 20. 21 22. * The Fishes were appointed to encrease and multiply and to fill the waters the fowles were appointed to increase and multiply and fly in the aire Plinies Naturall history l. 32. ch 11. Plinies Naturall hist. l. 32. ch 1. Id. ibid. Johnstoni Tbaumato graphia * Plinie Ibid. Four Actes long in the Indian Sea Idem l. 9. c. 3. Amama Antibarb Bibl. l. 3. Chamierus t●m 2 do l. 9. ch 11. Plin. Ibid. c. 2. b li. 9. chap 8. * Pisces Deus noluit sibi offferri tum quod extra aquam non vivant nihil autem mortuum ex animalibus offerri sibi Deus velit tum etiam quod ex Serpentum genere ce●sentur Pisces-Serpentum vero genus universum damnatum est à Deo propterèa quod per serpentem deceptus fuerit homo fuitque serpeus organon Diaboli Gen 3. 〈◊〉 Isag. Christ. l. 2. c. 23 Job 12. 7. One cannot say of the Phoenix being only one in the world increase and multiply there were two of all creatures in the Arke therfore there is no Phoenix Aldrovandus and Plinie c Job 39. 13 14 15 16. Lam. 4. 3. Jer. 8. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 She is somwhat like a Hern having a long necke and feete a Doctor Twist against Doctor Jackeson Petronius Arbiter Solinus cal the Stork pietatis cultricem They count it there a happy Omen for the Storke to build in their houses Job 39. 27 28 29. See of the Nightingales singing Plinies 10. l. of naturall history c. 29. and Famianus Stradas Prolusions Bees are principall among In●ects When bees are most angry in swarming cast but a little dust upon them and they are presently quiet leave their hūming * See Plinies natural history l. 11. c. 17. Corollaries There are divers kindes of bruite beasts differing in nature qualities figure colour quantity voice * Vtrum ea vox Elephas ab Eleph bos an verò potius ab Alaph quod Syris Ebraeis discere est derivata sit meritò dubites Adeo verisimilis utraque sententia est Nam quod primam attinet in confesso est apud Graecos Latinos nobilitatam semper fuisse bovis praecaeteris terrestribus animātibus magnitudinem Ita credibile est Ebraeos Syros Phoenices cum hoc animal mole figuratione corporis ad bovem quàm proxime accedens primò vidissent bovis nomine appelasse Quod ad alteram attinet quis ignorat ea quae de hujus belluae docilitate narrat Plinius l. 80. c. 1. 3. 7. Cicero Epist. Famil 1. 7. plena manu Lipsius Centuria prima Epist. 5● Amama Antibarb Bibl. l. 3. Plinies natural history lib. 8. ch 40. Id. ib. Vide adagium canis de Nil● Plinies natural history l. 8. c. 50. A memorable story of the punishment of buggery * Topsell de quadrupedibus * Bucephalus siguifieth an oxe head Plinies natural hist. l. 8. c. 42. lib. 6. cap. 20. Aul. Gell. Noct. Att. l. 5. c. 2. This horse is also celebrated by Plutarch and Quintus Curtius a Sir Walter Raleigh b Hic est leo hospes hominis hic est homo medicus leonis See Doctor Willet of the Camel on the 11. of Levit. quest 14. Angelorum nomen Graecum est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Enimest nuncius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nunciare Graecum nomen Angeli Europaeae gentes fèrè retinent nisi quód id inflectant ad terminationem uam Galli id 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicunt ange Germani a in e mutato engel Martinius de Creatione That there are Angels Esse Angelos vel hinc liquet quòd sint in rerum natura quae dam quae nullis possint adscribi causis Physicis unde necesse est Spiritusesse unde illa profisciscantur Tum etiam videtur ipse ordo universi id requirere ut sint Angeli nempe certum est naturā esse corpoream certum item est mediam esse naturam quae nempe partim corporea partim incorpore sit consequens igitur est ut sit natura quemadmodum mere corporea sic etiam merè in corporea Scriptura 〈◊〉 non probat esse Angelos quemadmodum neque probat animam esse immortalem sed hoc sumit Cameron tomo 2 do Paelect