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A44137 A discourse of the knowledge of God, and of our selves I. by the light of nature, II. by the sacred Scriptures / written by Sir Matthew Hale, Knight ... for his private meditation and exercise ; to which are added, A brief abstract of the Christian religion, and, Considerations seasonable at all times, for the cleansing of the heart and life, by the same author. Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676. 1688 (1688) Wing H240; ESTC R4988 321,717 542

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causes that have no natural connexion one with another When the Prophet that prophesied against Bethel returned back met the Lion and the Lion slew him here was a Voluntary Act in the Prophet viz. to go a Contingent Act in the meeting with the Lion a Natural Act in the Lion to kill him now because this death of the Prophet had no necessary connexion with all the causes that concurred to it neither had the journey of the Prophet any necessary connexion with the walk of the Lion that they must needs meet the death of the Prophet though it had a kind of natural connexion with the next cause that preceded it was in the estimation of Men Contingent yet in respect of that predetermination that was of all this business which was not therefore predetermined because spoken by the old Prophet who had only a revelation of That counsel the whole frame of this business was necessary yet note that this predetermination did not alter the nature of the intermediate causes the journey of the Prophet was nevertheless voluntary the meeting with the Lyon Contingent the death of the Prophet by the Lyon in effect necessary So the Divine Predetermination of Effects predetermines them in their several Causes and takes not away the truth of the denomination of Necessary Contingent and Voluntary it predetermines the being of each but the being of the first but to be necessarily because it predetermines it to depend upon a necessary cause as the Eclipse of the Sun it predetermines the being of the second but to be contingently because it predetermines it to be upon contingent and unconnexed causes it predetermines the third to be but to be voluntarily because it hath predetermined it to be upon a voluntary cause All things to him have the same necessity of being though distinguished in their manner of being which are represented to our understanding under the notions of Necessary Contingent and Voluntary 3. We have considered the influence of the First Cause upon the creature in actu primo which is giving it a being or creation and as to things Natural and Contingent in actu secundo which is Providence or Government Now concerning the relation that Man the only visible Intellectual and Voluntary being in the World hath We must premise to this consideration what hath been partly observed viz. 1. That the first disposal of every thing to its several End doth of right belong to the First Cause 2. That this End is twofold 1. In respect of the First Cause the mere fulfilling of his own Will 2. In respect of the Creatures 1. relatively one to another a Subordination of one thing to and for another as the more imperfect to the more perfect 2. absolutely the End that is planted in every thing is its own Preservation and Perfection 3. That as the implanted End of every thing is his own being and perfection so the being of things being different both in nature and degrees of Excellence so are their Perfections different the Perfection of Animate above the Inanimate the Perfection of the Sensitive above the Animate and of the Rational above the Sensitive 4. That as the several Creatures are moved to their several Preservations and Perfections as to their several Ends so they have suitable Inclinations Dispositions and Motions placed in them conducible to those Ends as the Motions of Bodies to their several stations the generation of Vegetables and their attraction of supplies of nourishment answerable to their tempers the fading of Sensitives and assimilation of the nourishment to their own nature supplying the decays thereof Natural Instincts of every species to avoid those things places and foods that are destructive providing for varieties of Seasons multiplication of their Species and infinite the like which is nothing else but that Rule Law or Means that the First Cause hath put in them for the attaining that End which he hath put in them viz. their Preservation and Perfection And this is the great Wisdom as I may call it of the Creature that it pursues that End by that Law which the First Cause hath given it Mankind hath some things in him common with other inferiour Beings and in respect thereof hath the same Natural End viz. the Preservation of his Subsistence by the same Law of Nature which he doth and may and ought to preserve as other Creatures do But if he have a higher degree of Being than other Creatures then consequently he hath these two things different from other Creatures 1. A higher End than other Creatures planted in him by the First Cause whereinto he is or should be carried 2. A higher and different Law given by the First Cause in order to that End which whiles he follows he is most wise because most conformable to the Will of his Maker and moves to a suitable End to himself by a suitable Means and which when he declines he is more bruitish than the Beast because he either moves to no End or by such a Rule by which it is impossible he should attain it The Conclusion then is That Man was by the First Cause made for an End answerable to his own Perfection by such a Rule or Law as was by the First Cause ordained to be conducible to this End That therefore all other Ends and Perfections that are below the uttermost hight and Perfection of Man may consist with this End for we are not to conceive so improvidently of the First Cause that he should put a thing in such a degree of being that the Ends and Rules incident to any consideration of him should be inconsistent with his Supream End all stood together but if by any casualty it should fall out that there were an inconsistency all the Subordinate Ends must give way to this Supream End That the pursuit of this great End whatsoever it is by this Rule is exactly conformable to the Will of the First Cause by this Man doth two works at once God's work and his own That this is the Great Business of Man the highest act of Wisdom deserves all his labour study and endeavour and all the rest of his Business in the World is either lost labour or worse if not subservient to this great End. We are therefore to enquire into these three things 1. Wherein consists the Eminence of the being of Man above other Creatures for without this we cannot know that Perfection which must be the object of his desire 2. What is this Perfection that is thus to be desired and attained 3. By what Means and how it is attainable CHAP. III. Of Man his Excellence above other Creatures THE Goodness of the Wise Creator was communicated to his Effects 1. in giving them a Being 2. in assigning to every thing a portion of Perfection in themselves answerable to the degree of their Being 3. a Motion or Desire to the attaining and conserving that Perfection and consequently of their Being which is the Vessel wherein that
his Glory by the death of Christ who was the Lamb slain from the foundation of the World Man is created in a glorious happy free Estate he hath a Covenant made with him which he may keep or break at his own liberty he is left in his own hands and not necessitated to break that Covenant which he but even now made with his Maker if he had done so the sending of Christ had been needless Man falls now is Christ promised Gen. 3.15 and after confined to the Line of Abraham Gen. 18.18 and after to the Line of David See what a World of Interventions of Accidents and Success interposed between the Promise and the Event the Birth of Christ any one whereof if it had miscarried had disappointed the whole Success When he was born what strange Events happen for the fulfilling of all the Prophecies concerning him So in the fulfilling of the Prophecy made to Abraham that after four hundred years bondage his Posterity should enjoy the Land of Canaan Gen. 15. ver 13 18. What a world of strange Interpositions were there conducing to the fulfilling of it between that and Exod. 12.40 and Joshua 18.1 The Births of Isaac Jacob and the Patriarchs the Dream of Joseph that caus'd envy against him and that very Envy conducing to the fulfilling of his Dream he is sold to the Ishmaelites by them to the Egyptians he is injured and imprisoned Pharaoh's Butler is imprisoned in the same Prison and then dreams this interpreted by Joseph the Butler delivered Pharaoh dreams Joseph is mentioned and interprets it is advanced furnisheth Egypt to be the Magazine of Africa the Famine pincheth Jacob's Family this lead his Sons to Egypt Joseph is discovered Jacob sent for he and his Family sixty six Persons go down into Egypt What a Circle is here of the Divine Counsel managing these seeming Casualties to fulfill that part of the Prophecy to Abraham That his Seed should be Strangers in a Land that was not theirs Well for their Deliverance from thence they must be oppressed that 's not enough the Males must be killed had not this been Moses had not been exposed Pharaoh's Daughter must come just to prevent his drowning and to give the opportunity of a learned Education this was the Instrument of their Deliverance The like we might pursue in the following Passages wherein we may see the Wise God by his Wise Counsel marshalling the Means fitting them most admirably with Circumstances and strange Conjunctures for the fulfilling of his purposed Ends. And herein is the Excellency of the Scripture that shews us a Hand ordering and disposing by a most Wise Counsel these seeming tumultuary and disorderly Passages in the World to most admirable and fixed Ends. This is the first thing wherein the Wisdom of this Counsel of God is seen in chaining all things one to another by the very same purpose whereby he determined the End. 2. That in the disposing of Means and Ends every thing notwithstanding moves according to that Law that he hath given to its particular Being We usually distinguish the actions or successes of things within our observation into three Ranks or Ranges viz. Necessary Voluntary Contingent 1. Necessary Effects are such as their Causes being admitted have a necessary conjunction therewith or consequence thereupon according to the usual course of Nature Such are the Consequences that rise upon the motions of the Heavens as the positions of the Planets the Consequents that arise upon the contiguity or conjunction of the Elements and divers such things that hold a constant course in Nature These although the great God may and sometimes doth interrupt by the extraordinary acts of his Power and to shew his Freedom yet most admirably he doth not hinder but useth them to the production of his own most sure Counsels And this evidenceth the Infinite Wisdom of the great God that hath so admirably framed his Works and his Counsels that while the former move uniformly according to that prescript Rule and Law which the God of Nature hath put into them yet the latter shall not be interrupted but effected by them though they know it not nor mean it not As when we see in a curious Watch the uniform motion of the Spring serving to produce several artificial motions as of the hour of the Day the day of the Month the age of the Moon and the like we commend the Wisdom of the Artist that hath so tempered the Spring that by one uniform motion it may be useful for all these and hath likewise so directed and managed this natural motion of the Spring to serve exactly those different intellectual motions and do conclude that the contrivance of this piece of Work was all at one time otherwise it were impossible that every part should hold that order So when we see the natural moti●ns of the Creatures conducing to the production of those rational Ends which God hath appointed we may justly admire the Wisdom of God that while he intends a Purpose above the conception or drift of a natural Agent he bringeth it about without the violation of the Rules or Laws which he hath appointed to be constant in Nature and may most justly conclude That the Law of Necessity in the natural Agents is but the Effect of that ●●ry Counsel that hath predetermined his own Purp●●●s by them and that they are all of a piece all laid at the same time And from thence grows the subservience of the natural Agent in the most rigid Law and Rule of his Operation unto the free Counsels of the great God that doth most sweetly and infallibly ●ffect the latter without the violation of that Rule which he hath given to the former And hence it is that those Effects which are produced naturally by natural Causes we do and may call Natural and Necessary and yet it excludes not the Counsel of the Divine Will in the production of it for it is the same Counsel that hath made this necessary connexion between the Cause and the Effect that did predetermine the Effect to be produced Here then is conspicuous the Wisdom of God that while his Creatures in whom he hath placed an uniform Course of Working fulfil his Will yet they keep their Law of Unformity and Necessity 2. Voluntary And this is admirable that whiles Voluntary Agents do most necessarily fulfil the Counsel of God yet they do it without the least diminution of their Freedom The Jews did most freely crucifie Christ yet it was by the predeterminate Counsel of God Pharaoh did most freely refuse to let Israel go yet Almighty God tells him for this purpose had he raised him up to shew his Power upon him Exod. 9.16 And from hence we may observe the reason why Almighty God in all times hath used rational ways for the reducing of Men to the Obedience of his Will not but that he could if he pleased force the Wills of all Mankind to what Dispositions or Actions
he pleased but that were to infringe that Law which he at first planted in Voluntary Agents Here is the Wisdom of the great God his Will shall be effected yet Man's Will not forced Psal 110. Thy People shall be willing in the day of thy Power So that the Conclusion is The Wills of Men are ruled by the Counsel of God for the producing of his Ends yet without violation of Man's Freedom This is done by a rational Means And the Courses that God's Counsel useth to work the Will of Men to his Purposes are most usually these 1. By propounding Rational Objects or Motives conducing to the winning the Will to act those things that are conducible to the Purpose of God. In that one Instance concerning the hardening of Pharaoh's Heart God had a Purpose to be honoured upon Pharaoh in the miraculous delivery of his People it is propounded to him to let the People go it was a rational occasion for him to deny it for then he should lose their Work which was beneficial to him Moses to confirm his Embassage casts down his Rod it becomes a Serpent the Magicians that were of a contrary Counsel to Moses did the like this Object hardens the Heart of Pharaoh The like we may say concerning Perswasions Afflictions and those other Dispensations of the Divine Will brought upon a Man in ictu opportuno 2. By giving and administring Extraordinary Aids and Inlightenings strengthening the Faculties of the Soul. 3. By withdrawing the ordinary Supplies and concurrence of God's Assistance We are to know that as the Being of all things is from God so the very natural supportation of all things in their several Powers and Activities is from him and if he withdraw his Concurrence and Assistance our Wills will move freely but to other objects or in another manner than they did when assisted by him Now these we must not imagine to be Expedients or Helps pro re nata as it happens among us that when a thing beyond our expectation is gone beyond our mastery then to devise some helps to reclaim it or allay it But the whole Plat-form of all and every Circumstance was laid and set by the Purpose of God before the being of any thing Man shall work freely yet I will draw out that Freedom of his into these and these actions by this and that rational means supply or subduction of my aid of his Will shall not elude or defeat my Counsel nor yet the fulfilling of that Counsel violate the Freedom of that Will which I purpose to allow him 3. Contingent Effects which are such as arise from the conjuncture of several Causes not subordinate one to the other and this casual conjuncture of Causes denominates the Event neither Voluntary nor Necessary although it perchance arise from Causes of both or either Nature but these having no natural conjunction or connexion one with the other the Event that ariseth upon this conjuncture is Casual or Contingent And this Consideration leads us to the third thing wherein the Wisdom of this Counsel is eminent viz. 4. In ordering marshalling and managing of several Causes of several Natures wholly independent and unsubordinate one to another to the fulfilling of his own Eternal Infallible Counsel And this consists in the drawing out of the several activities and causations of things at such a time and such a distance as may be subservient to the Effect wherein though the Causes apart perhaps move simply according to their Nature yet the meddling and mingling of them together is a clear Evidence of the Unity and Wisdom of that Counsel by which they are governed In that admirable Piece of the Execution of God's Counsel concerning Joseph this is ligible almost in every pas●●ge of it t●is the Purpose of God he shall be advanced for the preservation of his Father and Bret●●●n see but the last act of this Counsel preceding h● 〈…〉 He is ●●mmitted to Prison by the a● 〈…〉 the chief Butler by the Command of 〈…〉 and Phara●● were several Voluntary A●●nts yet these acts of theirs drawn out upon seve●●l grounds and independent one upon the other occ●●ion a me●ting between Joseph and the Butler in Prison and there they might have continued unacquainted till their deaths an Act of Divine Providence draws out an occasion for their Acquaintance the Butler is delivered and his Promise forgotten another occasion given by Phara●h's Dream this had not been useful for Joseph unless communicated by Phara●● to the chief Butler this Communication draws out another Act of his viz. the remembrance of Joseph● thus these several Voluntary Acts of Agents independent one upon another are drawn out to meet together in such a conjuncture of time as serves to produce that Event which if any one had failed could not have been effected The like is easily observable in all the great and predicted Changes in Commonwealths and Kingdoms how several Causes are without straining as it were interwoven and married together for the production of such a change And the like for the natural motions of the Elements in the constitution of mixt Bodies Though every Cause apart mov●● according to that Causality and course of Nature that is in him yet that Activity is drawn out in such a distance at such a time and with such Concurrences that makes appear at once the Efficacy and Wisdom of the Counsel of God that whiles every Cause moves according to his own Nature yet they are strangely mingled in the production of such an Effect that neither of them did foresee or intend but only the God that guided them 5. It is an Active and Irresistible Counsel This is evident by what hath been before observed viz. because it is the cause and measure of the being and power of every thing without it it is therefore impossible to be resisted because that strength that any thing hath it hath meerly by the efficacy of this Purpose of God. Although in the Divine Nature there is no difference in the Power or Act of his Understanding and Will yet for our Conceptions sake they are propounded under a different Notion his Purpose or Counsel is referred immediately to his Will and is not only a Foreknowledge of what shall be but hath an operative influence into the being and operations of all things His Prescience or Foreknowledge we conceive as an act of his Understanding by which he actually knows whatsoever shall be This Prescience is not an objective impression of the things themselves upon the Divine Understanding for that were to suppose a kind of Passibility which is incompetible to the Divine Perfection and supposeth a kind of Priority in Nature of the Object to the Power and a kind of dependance of the Act upon it But as all things have their Being by the Act of the Divine Will or Purpose so in that Purpose of his he sees the things purposed and it is impossible to sever the act of his Purpose from the act
likewise in Experience Take but the instance of one Creature Man It is plain that the World doth every day grow fuller and fuller that which is now almost a Nation we can with a little help derive into one Man five hundred years since so that it is not imaginable but that at length we must necessarily come to a First Man If so how had that Man his being It is true that there be some living creatures that we may trace their beginning to the corruption of some preexisting matter which by its own temper and the concurrence of other second causes may produce a living creature as Worms Mice c. But if there should be such a production of Man at first why is it not so at some time since viz. that a Man should be produced out of the ground by some concurrence of the disposition of the matter with second causes If it be said that that is now needless and Nature doth nothing in vain the answer is unsatisfactory For 1. where such productions are as of Mice c. it is as needless because they propagate their kind as well as Man. And 2. if Nature doth nothing in vain it is plain that whatever is so called Nature is in truth the first cause though miscalled Nature for not to do any thing in vain is an act of a Voluntary and Rational Agent a mere natural Agent cannot but work uniformly whether in vain or not in vain when the matter is uniformly disposed Therefore we must needs have recourse to a First Voluntary and Intellectual Agent that did at first make Man and by his free Power did advance the piece of red Earth above its own disposition and beyond the causality of second Causes to produce Man and that hath not since done the like but as to those other imperfect creatures hath planted in second Causes such a strength and causality as out of a prepared matter to produce other living creatures without any concurrence of his immediate or extraordinary Power 2. In every Successive Motion it is necessary to arrive to some beginning of it and it is impossible it should be eternal as in case of the motion of the Sun which is successive it cannot in reason be but there must be a time or instant wherein it either was not or did not move for otherwise the revolutions would be actually infinite in number and yet that infinite number of revolutions be still augmented by dayly new revolutions which would be in it self a contradiction that that which was before actually infinite should yet receive an increase as necessarily it must if the motion of the Sun had never a beginning Therefore of necessity it had a beginning If it had a beginning of its motion it could not have it from it self for why did it not then move sooner But of necessity it must have the beginning from another for though animate creatures move themselves yet they receive still the original cause of their motion from something without them as well as of their being Who or what was it that gave it that motion or principle of its motion And if any could assign any other than the First Cause which is not almost imaginable yet still my enquiry must rise higher what was that that gave being or causality to that cause So that in summ the motion of the Sun or Heavens cannot be Eternal because Successive It must have a Cause of its motion from without it self that Cause if the First Cause then a First Cause must be granted if not the First yet by the same reason that in all Successive motions we must admit a beginning we may conclude in all Successions of Causes there must be a beginning because the being and causation or motion of second causes is likewise Successive and therefore can be no more infinite than the successive motions of the same subject can be infinite It is impossible that any thing should be Eternal that is not Indivisible ut videbitur infra So that the Succession of Causes and Motion is that which doth necessarily inforce a first cause To these we may add those Considerations which arise from the Observation of the created World the subservience of one thing to the perservation of another the inclinations of Creatures without choice to means conducible to their preservation the ordering and fitting of things whereby confusion and uselesness of creatures is avoided all which do bespeak the admission of a Voluntary Intellectual Supreme and Universal Cause of all things Now a First Cause being admitted we are to consider what may rationally be deduced from thence concerning this First Cause And those are of two kinds First such as absolutely concern his own Being Secondly such as concern him in relation to those Effects which proceed from him For the former of these we say That a First Cause of all things being granted I. It necessarily follows that he hath no bounds of his existence or being The bounds of Existence are either in Duration or Extension the exclusion of the bounds of Existence in Duration is Eternity that in Extension is Immensity Now first for Eternity Whatsoever is Eternal must be without Beginning without Succession without End. 1. Without Beginning For if it be a First Cause it cannot have a Beginning for then he must have a Cause of his Being which would be a contradiction Neither could he have a beginning from himself for that were to suppose a pre-existence in himself to himself which were also repugnant 2. Without Succession There is nothing past nothing to come for all is one indivisible Succession and those notions of Time past present and to come are only the consequences of a Successive Motion for Time is nothing else but that conception whereby we measure successive motion were there no successive motion in the World it would be impossible that there should be any of those affections of Time and consequently Time is not any thing real but a relation to Motion Now before that the First Cause did set a continued motion in the World there could be no Succession but all was wrapped up in one permanent instant for the Being of the First Cause and his Motion what ever it was or is is indivisible as shall be shewn Then when he produced second Causes and consequently those moved in their several causalities and courses and consequently their motions beings and causalities being successive there was a prius and posterius and succession yet this did not alter the indivisible nature of that duration which that indivisible being had before and at and with that motion which he after produced The First Being hath a co-existence with the Successive Motions of the creatures but his duration is not measured by it or co-extended with it but is of the same indivisibility as if there had been no successive motion produced and consequently no successive time 3. Without End For first what should or can
of his Attributes by the same Essence he is and he is what he is they are divided notions in us but in him neither divided from his being nor one from another And hence it likewise follows that though the emanant Actions that flow from this First Cause are different and represented unto us under different Notions as this is an act of Power this of Goodness this of Knowledge or Wisdom and upon these we frame notions to our selves whereby we represent that from whence these acts move by several Names or Attributes of Mercy Power Wisdom yet these proceed not in truth from several Qualities in the First Cause but from one simple absolute unqualified Being V. From this consideration that he is the First Cause and Being it follows that he is Ens Perfectissimum For that is Perfect to which nothing is wanting Now it is impossible that any thing can be wanting to the First Cause for there can be nothing besides him but what proceeds from him and that which proceeds from him cannot possibly either add any further degree of Perfection to him or include that Perfection which was not in the First Cause most eminently The First Cause had a pre-existence to all things else nothing then could be wanting to his Perfection because there was nothing else but himself The production of the Second Causes could not possibly include any greater Perfection than what was derived to them It is true in the working of Second Causes there may be a production of an Effect that may be more perfect in its kind than the Cause that immediately produced it as the production of a Worm out of putrefaction a Plant out of the Earth c. but there the Effect is not purely due to the Second Cause but to the Original Operation of the First Cause that did put that activity in the Second Causes to produce such Effects for every Second Cause worketh and moveth in the virtue and efficacy of the First Cause and hath its causality from it as well as its being without which though it had its being it is impossible it should be operative This Perfection in the First Cause is in truth inconceptible because impossible for humane Understanding to receive it without Divine Revelation and much more impossible to comprehend it because Infinite Therefore to help our selves herein we do and that rationally attribute to the First Being that manner of Being that we find most Perfect Therefore from this Perfection it follows 1. That the First Cause is a most pure Act without any mixture of Passibility or Power for if there were any Power as it signifies a susceptibility of some further act or impression that were an Imperfection for whatsoever is susceptible of some further act as all Power is it is impossible it should be perfect And from hence follows his Omnipotence for all inability to do any thing proceeds from the want of activity in the agent to overcome that resistance that it finds in the thing to be done Now in the First Cause there wants no activity for it is a most pure Act and were it not a most pure and Infinite Act it were impossible it should be the First Cause because that supposeth a priority of being in the Cause to the Effect and consequently requires an Infinite Activity in the First Cause because it must produce that which before was not at all and the motion between being and simply not being is infinite and therefore requires an infinite activity 2. From the consideration of this Perfection it follows that this First Being is a Substantial Act not an act that flows from another thing or depends upon another thing for then he could not be Ens Primum nor yet Ens Perfectissimum but it is an Act subsisting by it self 3. From this consideration of this Perfection it follows that he is Ens Vivens Life adds a degree of Perfection to the substance in which it is and the more Perfect the Life is the more perfect the Being hence the Sensitive Life is perfecter than the Vegetative and the Rational Life than the Sensitive and the Life of a Spirit than the Life of a Body Now this First Cause being an Infinite and Pure Act he hath an infinite perfect Life 4. From hence it follows that he is an Intellectual Being and as all his Works bespeak him so so doth this consideration of his Perfection necessarily evidence it for otherwise he should not be Perfect because an Intellectual Being is a more Perfect Being than that which is not so And this Understanding of the First Cause is commensurate to his Essence viz. Infinite and Eternal whereby he perfectly seeth himself and all things else that are or can be in one Eternal Indivisible act And from hence riseth the Omniscience of the First Cause without which he could not be Perfect for if any thing that is or might be were hid from him then by the discovery of that to him he would receive a degree of Perfection that he had not before And this Knowledge hath a threefold Object 1. His own Essence which requires an Infinite Knowledge to comprehend it because an Infinite Essence 2. All things that are for his Knowledge being Infinite it must necessarily extend to all other things 3. All things that may be because otherwise upon a further act of his Power that should be a new extension of his Knowledge which stands not with his Perfection And all this with one Eternal Indivisible act not by Succession not by mediate representation Such Knowledge is too wonderful for me 5. From hence it follows that he is Ens Liberrimum though he be most necessarily what he is yet he is free first for that the Freedom in agency is a degree of Perfection above a necessary agent and therefore this Liberty must of necessity be attributed to the First Cause Again it is impossible but that the First Cause must be a Free Agent for whatsoever works necessarily hath that necessity put upon it by somewhat without it which is inconsistent with the First Cause for if any thing else did put that necessity of working in him then that which imposeth that necessity was the First Cause Again every Necessary Agent omnibus aequè dispositis works uniformly now nothing was as equally disposed to become something from Eternity as at the first production of any thing the motion from not being to a being being the adequate effect of the First Cause therefore if there were not a Freedom in the First Cause the first Effect had been as ancient as the First Being Therefore we must necessarily affirm concerning the First Being that he is Ens Liberrimum Voluntarium and that according to his Will he worketh 6. From hence it follows that he is Ens summè Bonum Concerning this Goodness of God we affirm 1. That it is an Essential Goodness and his Goodness is not any thing divided from his Essence for that is
work of Natural Reason working Opinion or at most knowledge differs as much as knowledge and Opinion Those things of God that are discoverable by natural Reason receive another kind of impression upon the Soul by the work of God as is evident by the Effects and Operations each have upon the Soul Rom. 1.21 When they knew God yet they glorified him not as God. 3. Of Love therefore so called because the Principal part of the Message that the Soul is acquainted with is a Message of Love and Goodness and so the Will inclined and ingaged to love that Goodness And this is the fruit of the work of God's Spirit 1. Mediately and naturally presupposing the former work of Illumination for some Objects are of so light a nature that when they are known all the work of the Soul is done so they are only known that they may be known But these objects of our Faith they do include a Goodness and Conveniency for the Soul and therefore being known they are desired so that in natural Consequence the Spirit of God if it demonstrates these Truths to the Soul it doth by consequence engage the Love of the Soul to them It is true that Education Instruction and Discipline may make us know these Truths speculatively and yet our Soul not affected with them but the Conviction which is wrought by the Power of God's Spirit is not so thin or jejune a union of these Truths to the understanding but deeper and more radicated and consequently doth more effectually work upon the Will and therefore it is the Logick of the Apostle 1 John 2.4 He that saith he knoweth God and keepeth not his Commandments is a liar and the truth is not in him 2 Pet. 1.9 He that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see The Argument is from the Negation of the necessary Effect or Consequent to the Negation of the Cause or Antecedent as if he should have said Wheresoever there is no true Obedience to the Will and Command of God there is certainly no Love of God. It is the conclusion of Truth and Reason Joh. 14.23 If a man love me he will keep my words And wheresoever there is a true knowledge of God there must of necessity be a true Love unto God because it doth represent God as the chiefest only and most suitable Good to the Soul. It is true that notional and speculative knowledge of God that is wrought by natural discourse cannot or at least seldom doth arrive to that full apprehension of the Goodness of God and consequently doth not raise up the Heart to that height of Love and Obedience for our Reason is weak and the disproportion between Him and our Understanding is infinite and therefore he hath chosen to reveal it unto us in his Word and Son and by his own Power working Knowledge in us And by this we see why the renovation and conversion unto God is sometimes expressed under the name of Knowledge John 17.3 This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God c. Colos 3.10 Having put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge 2 Cor. 4.6 For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ c. Sometimes under the name of Trusting and depending upon God Galat. 3.6 Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for Righteousness sometimes under the name of Love Jud. 21. Keep your selves in the Love of God 1 Tim. 1.14 with faith and love which is in Christ 2 Tim. 1.13 2 Thes 2.10 Receiving the Love of the Truth sometimes under the name of Obedience James 1.27 Pure religion and undefiled c. James 2. per tot 1 John 2.29 Every one that doth righteousness is born of him so sometimes under the name of Repentance Fear of God c. For all this is but one work of this Spirit of Grace and but the several Emanations of the same work of the Spirit of God upon the Soul diversified only in the faculties or objects the first act in Nature is Light and when it convinceth the heart of the sinfulness of sin that works Repentance when of the Promises of God that breeds Dependence and Confidence when of the Goodness and Love of God in Christ that breeds Love unto him Watchfulness over our selves Obedience to his Will when of the Majesty and Justice of God it breeds Fear and Reverence when of our own vileness it breeds Humility so that all these are but the bringing home and joyning of those Convictions wrought in our Understanding unto the Will and Affections and thereupon these Effects do as naturally follow upon this work of Illumination and Conviction wrought by the Spirit of God as the like Effects do arise upon natural convictions of Objects of inferiour kinds and goodness 2. But this is not all there is a work of strength and power upon the Will Phil. 2.13 It is God that worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure As the death and disability was in both Faculties so the Life is conveyed into both universally And this Power of God's Spirit is not only in the first acts of our Conversion to him but it goes along with us All those actions which are pleasing to God are wrought by the same Spirit of Christ by which they were at first animated It is a Spirit of Supplication in our Prayers Rom. 8.26 The Spirit maketh intercession c. A Spirit of Access for our Prayers Eph. 2.18 A Spirit of Assurance and Sonship Gal. 3.6 Eph. 1.16 A Spirit of Wisdom to direct us in our difficulties Ephes 1.17 A Spirit of Comfort and Joy in our Distresses Rom. 14.17 A Spirit of Fruitfulness in our Conversation Galat. 5.22 25. A Spirit of Perseverance 1 Pet. 1.5 Ye are preserved by the power of God through faith unto salvation CHAP. X. How our Vnion with Christ is wrought on Man's part viz. By Faith Hope and Love. HITHERTO we have seen the motion of the Love of God to his Creature by which it may appear the whole Business of Man's Salvation is the work of God and Man appears in a manner passive in all the parts of it In the sending Light into his Understanding he is passive In the enabling the Understanding to receive this Light he is still passive In the subduing the Will to the entertainment of it he is still passive Yet there is some kind of motion in us which though it be the Work of our Creator in the first giving of it and again● his Work in reviving quickening and enabling it yet he is pleased to require it from us and to expect it of us Mori movemus And that are principally these three Faith Hope and Love we find them oftentimes joyned together 1 Tim. 1.14 The Grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant with faith and love which is
436 1. Natural Page 436 437 2. The Word of God absolutely in it self Page 438 1. The Law 1. Moral Page 438 2. Ceremonial Page 441 3. Judicial ibid. 2. The Prophets Page 442 3. The Gospel which contains a most excellent Rule of Righteousness in 1. The Example of Christ Page 443 2. The Precepts and Counsels Page 444 Page 1. General 1. Love of our Neighbour Page 448 2. Doing as we would be done unto Page 456 2. Particular things Page 1. To be done Page 2. To be suffered 3. Parts 3. God. A Brief Abstract of the Christian Religion Page 461 Seasonable Considerations for the Cleansing of the Heart and Life Page 473 A DISCOURSE OF THE Knowledge of God and of our Selves PART I. By the Light of Nature CHAP. I. Of the Existence and Attributes of God. I. ALL things but the Soul it self are extrinsecal to the Soul and therefore of necessity the Knowledge of all other things is extrinsecal to the Soul for Knowledge is nothing else but the true impression and shape of the thing known in the Understanding or a conception conform to the thing conceived And although the Soul in its own nature be apta nata to receive such impressions and doth therefore naturally desire and affect it yet it is as impossible for the Soul to know till the Object be some way applied to it as for a Looking-glass to reflect without first uniting of a Species of some Body to it that may be reflected The Means whereby the Scibile or thing to be known is united to the Soul and consequently Knowledge is wrought is threefold viz. 1. Supernatural Thus Almighty God in the first Creation of Man did fasten certain Principles of Truth in Man by his immediate discovery especially the Knowledge of Himself and his Will which was properly the Image or Impression of God in his Understanding This was not essential to the Soul but a Habit or Quality which God put into his Understanding and therefore though his Knowledge decayed by his Fall yet his Soul continued the same 2. Artificial Thus Knowledge is derived from Man to Man by signs of those impressions of Truth c. that are wrought in his Understanding that communicates it Thus Knowledge is acquired by Writing Speech and other Signs that are agreed upon to communicate Intelligence from the understanding of one Man to the understanding of another though mediante sensu Thus the Reliques of the knowledge of God in Adam were derived to his Posterity though still it grew for the most part of Men weaker and corrupter 3. Natural And this may be divided into these three branches viz. 1. Simple Apprehension Thus when any object singly by the Ear or Eye or other Sense is let into the Phantasy and so shewn to the Understanding without either affirming or denying any thing concerning it 2. Complex Apprehensions whereby either duo scibilia are joyned together in an Affirmation or Negation and this is a Proposition which again is of two kinds viz. either that which is most universal and therefore the first proposition that is framed in the understanding viz. that it is or est or est ens For that notion doth necessarily and upon the first view of any object joyn it self with it in the understanding Other propositions are more complex or remote as that God is good c. For the first question in the Understanding is Whether it be to which that general proposition answers and in the next place What it is to which the second sort of complex notions answer Now of this second kind of complex notions there are two kinds viz. either such as without the help of any Discourse or Ratiocination present themselves from the object to the understanding as this The Man is red the Man and the red being both objects of Sense and meeting in the same subject or else such as either the thing affirmed or the thing whereof the affirmation is or both are things that do not immediately fall within our Senses as the Man is a substance or the Spirit is a substance These though originally derived from sense yet they are refined by the help of Discourse 3. Conclusions drawn either from these simple or complex apprehensions which flow into our understanding immediately by our Senses and this is Rational Discourse a Faculty or Power put into Man whereby he is beyond all other visible Creatures and whereby all his actions whether Civil or Religious are and ought to be guided This is that Power whereby we may improve even sensible Objects Apprehensions and Observations to attain more sublime and high discoveries and rise from Effects to their Causes till at last we attain to the First Cause of all things So we may conclude that the Knowledge of our Creator though it fall not within the reach of our Sense and so falls not immediately within the reach of our Understanding yet by the ascents and steps of Rational Discourse so much may be gathered as may leave an Atheist without excuse God having given to Man even in his lapsed condition besides other Providential helps a stock of Visibles and a Rational Faculty to improve that stock to some measure of the Knowledge of himself For the invisible things of him from the Creation of the World are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his Eternal Power and Godhead so that they are without excuse Rom 1.20 Therefore as on the one side we are to avoid curiosity in measuring the infinite Mysteries of Truth by our own finite Understandings so on the other side we must beware of Supineness and Neglect of imploying that treasure of God's Works and his Light or Reason in us to that end for which it was principally intrusted with us even the knowledge of our Creator yet still humbly concluding with Elihu Job 34.32 That which I see not teach thou me II. The first and most Magisterial Truth in the World upon which all other truths do depend is this That there is a First Being and Cause of all other Beings This is evident by clear Reason 1. Either we must admit a First Cause or else an actual infiniteness of Succession of Causes The latter is impossible in Nature because it is impossible there can be that which is infinite and yet successive for then it would follow That that which is actually infinite in number should be yet more infinite because there are new Successions on Causes and Causations Again it is impossible that there should be an eternal dependance of Causes one upon another without a First because then the whole Collection of those Causes taken all together must needs likewise be actually depending and if so then upon themselves and that is impossible for the immediate Cause of the Effect doth not depend upon its Effect but immediately upon its Cause Therefore this bundle of dependent causes must depend upon some one among them which is independent And impossible
determine his being in as much as all things else are his productions and cannot have any causality upon him Secondly End is inconsistent with Eternity for that is a permanent and fixed indivisible and takes in all past present and to come without any difference of notion The present subsistence of the First Cause was the same numerical instant that he had a thousand years since So that End as well as Succession is but of those things that are measured by time not of an indivisible being To suppose him to have an end were to suppose him not ever to have been because past and present and to come are all indivisibly conjoyned in his duration This indivisibility of duration is proper only to the First Cause for nothing else can upon any sound ground be said to be of indivisible duration though it may be of a perpetual Suppose we the Being of an Angel or the Soul though admitted to be Everlasting yet that is rather a multiplyed extension of duration than any indivisible duration for of the First Cause I may say truly the instant of the duration that is now and that was a thousand years since or a thousand years after is the same but I do not think the same may be affirmed of any other thing whatsoever 1. because their essence is not indivisible and simple as is that of the First Cause for it is evident they are perfectible compounded of Act and Power not pure Acts 2. because some things might be affirmed of them in a time past which cannot now be affirmed of them as the creation continuance in the Body separation re-union c. 3. their being is dependent II. From this admission of a First Cause doth necessarily follow Immensity which includes three things 1. Exemption from Circumscription or bounds of his being There is a twofold exemption from Circumscription 1. That which ariseth from the disproportion between the thing that should circumscribe and be circumscribed thus a Spirit of what kind soever is not circumscribed nor is in any determinate place for that is proper to a Body that hath extension of parts yet though we cannot say It is here yet we are sure we cannot say It is every where There is 2. another exemption from circumscription which ariseth from Infinitude that it exceeds all place and circumscription Now that it is thus with the First Cause is evident for if he had a Being before any thing else nothing then could bound his Being if it should then he could not be the First Cause there being something else that had limited him which had a pre-existence to his causation and it is impossible for any thing to have a limited or bounded Being unless it were so limited or bounded by something without it That which is without a cause of his being must needs be without bounds of his being Neither could those effects which he after produced straiten the extent as I may call it of his Being or shut him out from them From whence follows 2. His Omnipresence not only vertually and potentially but essentially in and with all things though the manner of it be incomprehensible because a consequence of his Infinitude This is Exemption from Exclusion for it is not possibly imaginable that the production of new Effects should exclude or straiten that indivisible extent which that being had before those Effects were produced 3. Exemption from Succession or Division of Parts for otherwise he could not be Immense for whatsoever hath Succession of Parts as his Parts are measurable so is the whole and therefore cannot be actually Infinite in Extension as I may call it And this doth consequently exempt him from Materiality Succession of Parts being an affection of a material substance and therefore it is an indivisible Immensity What is said of the Soul may explain it Tota in toto tota in qualibet parte III. Hence it follows that the First Cause is Indivisible and that in a double opposition 1. In Opposition to Divisibility which is partly touched before and though this be common to all things that are incorporeal for Divisibility is an effect of Quantity yet it is most eminently to be affirmed of the First Cause 2. In Opposition to Multiplicity and this is the Vnity of the First Cause viz. that there is but one First Cause of all things for if there were two or more First Causes either all must be infinite in Being and consequently in Operation and that is impossible viz. that there should be two Infinites because one must of necessity bound and limit the other both in Being and Power 2. or else both must be finite and then of necessity each must have a Cause of his Being for what is it that should prescribe the bounds to these Beings unless the Cause of their Beings if so they can neither be the First Cause or 3. one must needs be Infinite and the other Finite and Subordinate and then of necessity those Finite Beings cannot be the First Causes but meerly Second Causes depending upon that Infinite Being both in their Essence and Operation for nothing can have limits of his being but what hath causes of his being which should prescribe those limits IV. From hence likewise follows that the First Cause is Ens Simplicissimum and excludes all Composition of what kind soever either of Power and Act of Substance and Accident or Matter and Form for every mixture doth of necessity suppose some pre-existing Cause to joyn these together and indeed the very membra componentia have in nature a pre-existence to the being so compounded and so the admission of any kind of Composition is inconsistent with a First Cause And from hence it is evident that all things that are affirmed concerning this First Cause are but improper and serve only as notions to render him unto our Understandings 2. From hence it also follows that whatsoever is affirmed of the First Cause is the same with his Essence and one the same with another though they are conceived by us under different notions and conceptions as for instance we see an effect of the First Cause which in case of a Man we derive from that habit in Man which we call Mercy and another effect which in Man we would conclude to come from such a quality or habit which we know by the name of Justice hence we stile the First Cause Merciful and Just yet in truth neither of these are proper for they signifie Qualities neither if they were proper were they distinct for they are the same one with another and both the same with his Essence otherwise it is impossible he should be Simple for should his Being and Attributes be several he should be compounded of Substance and Accident or should the same thing which we call Justice be the same with his Essence and not the same with his Mercy he must needs consist of several beings divided one from another the like for all the rest
whereby we are bound and whereunto all Humane Justice is to be resolved both in point of Conformity as to its Pattern and Obligation as to its Law. But how these Laws were at first given to Man whether by a formal Command or whether by an immediate Impression in the understanding and will or whether by an implanted Propension or inclination in the will or partly by one partly by another it is not easy to determine Sed vide infra But what ever way it was it is impossible to have any notion or imagination of just or unjust among Men without resolving it in its original into the Rule or Law that was given to Men by the First Cause of our being 9. From the consideration of the First Cause and of the premisses it must needs follow that he is Immutable for Mutability is inconsistent 1. With his Perfection It is impossible that a Pure Act can have any Change for all Change doth necessarily infer Passibility and Receptibility of what it had not before and to suppose that were to conclude he were not Actus Simplicissimus Perfectissimus for all Receptibility imports Potentiam or Passibilitatem 2. It is inconsistent with his Eternity for all Changes too of necessity suppose a Succession of Duration in the thing changed it is not to every intent the same simply that it was before it had that change which doth of necessity import Succession which is inconsistent with Eternity for whatsoever is Eternal hath no Succession and consequently whatsoever is affirmed of it at one instant must necessarily be affirmed of it Eternally this cannot stand with any change for before that change that could not be affirmed of him which might be affirmed after if it should be admitted 3. It is inconsistent with his Simplicity Some things have accidental changes which yet in Essence continue the same as from ignorance to knowledge from one colour to another but such accidental changes cannot be in that which is Ens Simplicissimum because there can be nothing in him which is not his Essence 4. It is inconsistent with his Infinitude for to whatsoever any thing can be added that it had not before that cannot be Infinite because still capable of a farther accession And as this Immutability is affirmed of the First Cause in point of his Essence and Nature so in some respects it is concerning his Acts. These are of two kinds viz. the Immanent Acts such are the Acts of his understanding and Will and these are Immutable as well as his Essence for indeed they are but notionally divided from it In us our Will is one thing and our willing another but that is inconsistent with the Simplicity of the First Cause hence it is that as his Essence so his Will is immutable he wills nothing now but what he ever willed and understood from Eternity what he now knows for Eternity hath neither now nor then in it 2. The Emanant Acts those are nothing else but the Execution of that Immutable Will these are subject to mutation but without the least mutation either in the Essence or will of the First Cause 1. Not in his Essence It is true here is a new relation that was not before for when the First Being produced an Effect it is true the Relation of a Cause and an Effect is now produced which was not before and so when more Effects are produced the Relations are multiplied but Relations breed no Change at all in the subject concerning whom they are affirmed the being was the same before it put forth it self in a causation as it was before it doth of necessity import a change in the thing effected viz. a motion à non esse simpliciter or à non esse tale but not in the Cause which had an absolute being before though not actually as a Cause before 2. Not in his Will. It is true when any Effect is produced that was not before here is an execution of what was not before but the will of that to be then was from all Eternity Again when a being is either changed or annihilated that is not by a Change of the will in the First Cause but only in the term or execution of that Will for by the same indivisible and eternal act of his Will he willed this or that to be made and after to be annihilated in time the Change is in the terminus or execution of his Will not in the Will or the Immanent Act of it But how can we then conceive that there should be one Immutable Act of his Will when a thing is past How can he be said to will that which is already executed and past For which we must return to what hath been said viz. that past and to come are but the measure of Successive Motions and therefore though they are applicable to them yet they are not applicable to an Indivisible Being or Act the measures of successive motion do not fit Eternity which though it be a Duration that consists with the Successive Motion and Duration of the Creature yet it holds no proportion with it The Motion of the Heavens though 10000 times swifter than the motion of a Tortois have yet a proportion one to another because both successive and so Time measures both But the Duration of the First Cause is the Duration of an Indivisible Being and consequently holds not proportion with Succession And hence it is that it is but our gross conception that do imagine any part of Eternity past or any part to come or that Time doth divide the fore part of Eternity from the future part of Eternity It is an indivisible permanent Duration nothing past nothing future but the same fixed instant consequently the Act of the Divine will always one always present This Knowledge is too wonderful for me CHAP. II. Of the Works of God of Creation and Providence THUS far have we proceeded in those inquiries which rectified Reason suggests to us concerning the Nature of the First Cause Now we consider the Emanant Acts of his Will and Power upon things without him for from this consideration that he is the First Being it likewise follows that All things besides him must needs have their being and subsistence from him This falls into these two Conclusions 1. That all thing besides himself have their being from him 2. That all things are directed and governed unto their several Ends by him Touching the former viz. That all things besides him have their original being from him that is a necessary consequent of the admission of a First being for whatsoever is not first there was a time when it was not for otherwise it must be eternal the contrary whereof is before evidenced That then which once was not and now is and consequently had a beginning of its being could not have it from it self for nothing hath a power or activity of it self to produce any thing therefore that second being must needs
be produced by the First Being the consequences whereof are these 1. That all things except the First Cause had a beginning of their being and consequently there was no Eternal Matter out of which any thing was made 2. That all Beings had their first being from him that is the First Being This is evident by what goes before 3. That the first production of all things by the First Being is purely and solely by way of Efficiency and not by derivation of substance from himself for that is impossible his Essence is Immaterial and Indivisible 4. The manner of this Efficiency or his Causality is not any act distinct from himself but only the me●e act of his mere Will which is essentially the same with himself and with his Infinite Power And herein the first production of second Beings differs from that manner of causation which is ordinary in subsequent productions of things for the first production of beings was an infinite motion viz. from a simple not-being to a being and therefore was acted immediately by the Infinite Power and Will of the First Cause there being no instrument to be used or if it had been yet any instrument had been infinitely disproportionable to such a motion But in the subsequent production of most things the matter pre-existing and so the motion not being à non esse simpliciter the causation of the First Cause is by instruments and second Causes 5. That as the first production of all things was the immediate act of his will so the disposing of all things into that Order and frame wherein they now are was the immediate Act of his Will and Power and Wisdom This is evident upon a double ground viz. First because whatsoever had its being from another had its esse tale from him 2. It is not conceptible that if all the things in the World had been put together they being all irrational substances they should ever have marshalled themselves into that order they are in unless the First Being had so willed it And if it should be admitted that the Forms and Qualities of the several beings would naturally have inclined them to their several places and stations which though all things had been wrapt together would by degrees have severed and taken their places That as it is impossible to imagine would ever have been unless the substances themselves as well as their active qualities had been divided so if it were granted it were equally to be resolved into the Will of the first Being to put such Forms Qualities and Inclinations in things conducing to and effecting such an order as if that Order and Fabrick of things had been by the immediate call of every thing into its Order and Rank by the First Cause 6. That the production of Mankind especially was the immediate work of the First Being This is touched before 7. That all these Activities that are in Second Causes are put into them by the First Cause and they work in the virtue of the First Cause so that although the Effect be not the immediate production of the First Cause yet the Activity and Power that is put in the second Cause to work is originally due to the First Cause And hence it is that a more ignoble being doth produce sometimes a being of a higher nature than it self as the Earth produceth Vegetables Putrefaction Sensibles because the vigor and Activity that causeth it was at first put into the second causes by the First so that though they move uniformly omnibus rectè dispositis yet they act in virtute Primae Causae 8. Though Second Causes work naturally and uniformly for the most part where all things are equally disposed and this by the virtue of that Activity which by the will and Power of the First Cause was at first put in them yet this Activity is managed and ordered so that it neither breaks the Law of its causality or motion that was at first put into it nor yet disturbs or disorders the universal fabrick of Nature things being at first framed in that order that each should be a corrective to the other in case of exorbitancy de hoc infra 9. From hence it follows that the constant and uniform Course of Nature is not to be attributed to it self but only to the Will of the First Cause that wills it to continue in that frame though he hath ordained Means subservient to that end 10. From hence it follows that as all things in actu primo owe their being to the will of the First Cause constant and uniform Course of Nature is not to to be attributed to itself but only to the Will of the First Cause that wills it to continue in that frame though he hath ordained Means subservient to the will of the First Cause so in actu secundo viz. their continuance and subsistence is due only to that Will they were made because he willed it and they continue because he wills it And this as it is most true in respect of the whole frame of Nature which hath no adequate means of its subsistence but the Will of the First Cause so it is true likewise as in the beings so in the continued subsistence of Second Causes which though they are and are supported immediately by Second Causes Qualities and concurrences yet the Activity and Power that is in these Second Causes to produce or continue these Effects is due to the First Cause and continues in them by virtue of that Will that at first planted it in them 2. The Disposing of all things to their several Ends whether remote or near belongs to this First Cause Every Intellectual Agent works for some End or other the First Cause we have shewed to be an Intellectual Agent therefore what he works he works for some End answerable to the Work and Worker and it must of necessity be that he that is the First Cause or Efficient of all things must needs be the appointer of his own End in that Work. The End though it be last in execution is first in intention for it moves the Agent to the work or otherwise though he work not without an Event he doth it without an End. Now that which is first in Efficiency must needs be the first designer of his own End which is but the result of his Work A Second Cause though he may have an End in his Causation proportionable to the causality wherewith he is indued yet as his Efficiency is subordinate to and derived from the Efficiency of the First Cause so must his End be it may be an Ultimate End in respect of it it is but interlocutory or rather no End at all in respect of the First Cause but only a means conducing to the Execution of the End of the first Cause When a passionate Ambitious or Covetous Man drives mainly and wholly at the satisfaction of those lusts as his End and that End draws out his activity and strength to
compass them yet a wise Statesman according to the convenience or exigence of the Publick can manage and order this Ambition and the Satisfaction thereof unto a higher End which the other never so much as dream'd of As we therefore divide all Beings and Causes into First and Second so we distinguish all Ends into the Ends of the First Cause and of Second Causes Touching the End of the First Cause we say it is twofold 1. That which is the End in respect of himself This is nothing but the Satisfaction of his own Will. As we must resolve the being of all things into the Will of the First Cause in point of Efficiency so in this respect we must resolve all things into that same Will in point of Finality and this is the most adequate and Ultimate resolution of all things they are because he wills them to be For the First Cause being absolutely and infinitely Perfect and Good cannot originally be moved by any thing without him that would import a Passibility viz. to be moved and impulsed to any thing by any thing without him and an Imperfection which might be supplyed by the acquisition of that End for which he works both these are necessarily to be admitted in any case where any End extrinsecal to the Efficient it self is admitted for 1. the End hath an impulsion or action upon the efficient and 2. it necessarily supposes a vacuity or emptiness quoad hoc which shall be supplied with that End acquired be it an End of Supplement or Delight Neither of these are possibly to be admitted in the First who is an Infinite Good commensurate to the Infinite measure of his own Will. The Final Cause then of all things is He wills because He wills His Glory is a consequence of his Work in the Work not the ultimate End of his Work because nothing that he made can contribute ought to his Glory or Happiness 2. In respect of the thing produced the ordination of every particular thing to its particular End either in order to it self or to some thing else or both the Intermediate Ends of all things being different according to their several natures and the several dispensations of the Divine will. That this may be so is evident upon the consideration of that Infiniteness of Wisdom Power and Presence of the First Cause which before is considered and that it must be so is likewise evident upon the consideration before expressed viz. that the Will of the First Cause is the Cause of all beings and operations in the World Nothing can be unless he wills it to be and this will must needs be extended to every individual thing and motion in the World for as well as any might evade the determination of his will all things might There be three degrees of things Natural Contingent and Voluntary Now the Means of carrying things merely Natural to their several Ends ordinarily is that Rule and Order which he hath set in things Natural and those Propensions and Inclinations which are planted in things to the observance of that Law. Now this hath a threefold reference to the First Cause 1. Of Position or giving for it is not imaginable that this Rule was taken up by the things themselves the Law of Nature and the Frame order and Course of thing according to that Law doth most necessarily conclude a Lawgiver and although the motion of the Law or Rule of Nature is for the most part uniform yet it doth in no sort follow that therefore it moved not from a voluntary Agent But though it infinitely speaks his Wisdom that did so foresee and order all things that one uniform Law or Rule should serve without any alteration for a change of a Rule imports Imperfection in the Rule and a want of foresight in him that makes it of those emergencies that induce such an alteration Now in as much as nothing could be but it was first in the Will of the First Cause and consequently in his Knowledg all those Propensions Rules and Orders of Nature which he hath put into things are exactly subservient to those purposes and consequently to the effects produced by it 2. Of Concurrence with it all things depending upon the First Cause as well in the support as in the Original of its subsistence 3. Of Subordination to it Hence it is that extraordinarily the Ordinary Rule of Nature is intermitted for though the most exact uniform Rule unalterable in the least point may nevertheless proceed from a Free Agent because the uniformity of the Rule proceeds not from it self but because the First Cause wills it to be so and yet hath exactly fitted it to the bringing about his Ends yet because Mankind is apt to mistake sometimes there is an intermission or interruption of that Course of Nature this Subordination likewise appears by the Direction and forming of it to special purposes wherein whiles the Second Cause moves according to the Rule of Nature that is set in it yet by the Concatenation and Conjuncture of other things which happily moved naturally thither some strange effect is produced beyond the reach of that Natural Agent as when an Artificer by conjuncture of several things together makes use of the natural motion of the Lead poise to work a circular or other strange motion in a Clock or Engine Now the Law or Rule of Nature as in divers other particulars so in these it most evidently sheweth it self to be nothing else but the Course that the great Master of the World hath put in things 1. Those Propensions that are in things for their own Preservation and Protection Hence those motions of Inanimate things as it were to their several homes and stations appointed by the First Cause Multiplication of their kinds Specifical Inclinations incident to a whole kind 2. The Subserviency of one thing to the use and exigence of another wherein for the most part the more Imperfect is still subservient to the more Perfect and all to Man. 3. The Disposition of things in those places and ranks as may be most usefull and as may best prevent that disorder and confusion which contrary qualities would produce as appears in the Elements in hurtful creatures 4. The Subordination of the particular Inclinations and Dispositions of any particular to the prevention of that which is contrary to the Law of the universe 5. The admirable Concurrence of things indued with contrary qualities and destructive each to other in t●●●onstitution of mixt bodies shewing a hand that tempers and overrules them in their operations and causalities 2. Contingent Effects In reality there is nothing in the World Contingent because every thing that hath bin is or shall be is praedetermined by an Immutable Will of the First Being But we therefore call a thing Contingent because either we find no constant Rule or determination of the immediate cause to the production of the effect or an effect resulting out of the conjunction of
and rational deductions And from hence among mere natural Men the Contemplative is the most happy because he fits his Soul with Food in some measure answerable to it And according to the levity or weight vanity or reality of the Object this Enjoyment is diversified 2. Not Mortal or perishing As the want of a proportion between the Immaterial nature of the Soul and Material Objects renders them unpleasing and unsatisfactory to the Soul so if there were a suitableness between their Natures yet if there were a suitableness in their Duration it wants that which is necessarily required to Happiness or an End answerable to the Soul and that upon a double Reason 1. In the Fruition The very Enjoyment of a suitable Good which I am sure must leave me mi●gles fear and preapprehension of the loss of my present Enjoyment and consequently cannot possibly be Happiness And from hence likewise grows that Vexation which is dipt in the highest Enjoyments every Man in the very Enjoyments hath the present apprehension of an inevitable future loss of them especially in Death which doth take away that possibility of farther uniting of external Objects to Man. 2. In the Loss of it That cannot be a suitable End to an Immortal Being that must be severed from it The Conclusion therefore of this Consideration is that the Wise Maker of Man as he hath made him a living corporeal Creature did put into his hand such a Good as was common with other Creatures which he may justly enjoy so as he furnished him with an Immaterial Immortal Soul he did order that Soul to an End answerable to it self and above other Creatures viz. an Immaterial Immortal Good. And less than this cannot be an End answerable to the Wisdom of the Worker nor value of the Work. 2. Thus concerning the Nature of the Soul now concerning the Faculties whereby it is enabled to move to that End. And these have a threefold use 1. First they serve as fit Receptacles to entertain and be united unto that Good which is the proper End of the Soul and hold some proportion with that Object wherein the Happiness of the Soul consists 2. They serve as Receptacles to receive that Rule or Law which must conduce to that End and therefore they are likewise fitted for that 3. They serve as Helps and Instruments actively to move to that End. these three are seen likewise in inferiour Creatures 1. They have a Receptibility of that Good which is answerable to their Nature 2. A Receptibility of that Instinct which is their Law whereby they are directed to that Good 3. An Activity in them to carry them on to that Good according to that Rule or Propension The two great Affections that every Being is endued with is the Truth of its being and the Goodness of it answerable to those are the two great Faculties or Powers of the Soul the Understanding which is conversant about the former and the Will which is conversant about the latter Yet in the very same Faculties both these are conjoyned under their distinct Notions the Understanding taking into consideration the Truth of that which is propounded as Good and the Will being carried with a desire to the Knowledge of Truth as Good. Now concerning the Vnderstanding it hath a threefold Power 1. A Receptive or Passive Power whereby it takes in those Objects that are conveyed to it by an impression from without whether it be by the ordinary and natural way of the Sense or by a supernatural impression or by artificial means as Speech or Reading or other Signs And thus it receives not only simple Apprehensions but likewise Complex or Propositions Now without this receptive power it were impossible for any knowledge to be in the Soul because our Knowledge is not by Intuition as the Divine Knowledge is but by reception of the thing known into the Soul. And hence it is plain that all Knowledge is extrinsecal to the Soul for though it be apta nata to receive the species or object into it yet without such reception it cannot actually know it 2. A Retentive Power of the Object or Proposition received Without this it were impossible for the Discursive Power of the Understanding to hammer any thing out of it 3. An Active and Discursive Power whereby the Understanding is able to work upon those Objects thus received and retained and deduce Conclusions and Consequences from them So that though the foundation of this intellectual Motion be from those things that are impressed from without upon the Soul yet when they are once there this active and discursive part of the Understanding can draw millions of Conclusions create millions of Mixtures and entia rationis which present not themselves at first to the passive Understanding The Rule whereby this Active Power of the Understanding works is that we call Reason which is but a beam of the Divine Light a part of the Image of God in Man and of singular use in all his Actions if rightly used De hoc infra Now as all Receptive or Passive Powers are perfected by the receipt of the Object which may fill that vacuity which is in the Power and as all Powers are likewise perfected by Acts and Habits so are these Intellectual Powers they have their several Acts and Habits whereby they are perfected and moved 1. Knowledge and this I may call of two kinds 1. Passive Knowledge which answers to the Passive part of the Understanding Such is the Knowledge of Simple Apprehensions which come through the Senses and the Knowledge of Principles and these are of two kinds 1. Such as are per se nota and without any Argumentation are subscribed unto as many Principles in the Mathematicks 2. Such as are inscribed in the Heart of Man by the Maker of Man. Thus without all question at first God did indite his Law in the Heart of Man but this being not essential to the Soul though he retained his Intellectual Soul his Principles of this kind were obliterated and therefore it was the Mercy of God from time to time to inculcate them into Man's Posterity Sed de hoc infra 2. Active or Discursive Knowledge This bottoms it self upon those simple apprehensions that are in the Passive Understanding and upon those Principles that are in the Soul and by purifying things from their materiality abstracting rising from the Effect to the Cause and so downward by the aid of that Light and Rule of Reason which the God of Wisdom hath put into the Soul arrives to those Truths that lie in the Creature as Gold in the Stone beyond the reach of Sense to acquire Now in this respect the Understanding of Man is of vast and boundless Capacity and is capable to receive all the things in the World and nothing that is finite can satisfie it And hence it is that it moves from one thing to another to meet with somewhat that may satisfie the vast Comprehension of it It
Uncertainties in the midst of any external Trouble without a Refuge and so full of Despair As we cannot have Confidence to go to our offended God by our Prayers so it makes him withdraw and hide himself from them a continual disquietness and heaviness of Spirit mingles and winds it self into all our thoughts even in our pursuits of diversions from it the same aspect that is between God and us is between our own Conscience and us The Light of his Countenance is able to give Life and Comfort and Serenity to the Soul in the midst of all the Losses and Pains and Deaths in the World and the want of that Light makes the most happy external Condition to be dark and disconsolate And all this Good I lose by a transient unprofitable Sin a Sin that I might have avoided and therefore a Loss that I might have avoided a Loss that comes not to me by my necessity but by my foolish choice I will therefore sit down and mourn in secret for that Comfort and Light that I have thus foolishly sinned away and measure out my sorrows and tears proportionable in some degree to that Loss I have sustained The time was when it pleased the great God to let his Presence and the Light of his Countenance to shine into my Soul and when I could with Comfort and Confidence upon any occasion go to him and present my wants my desires my acknowledgements unto him and he that sits in Heaven was pleased to accept and entertain them at the hands of his Creature But now that Influence of his hath met with a filthy and backsliding Heart and is weary of it and hath withdrawn it self as justly it may and my Prayers are laden with my Guilt and cannot get up to him and he hides himself I have regarded Iniquity in my Heart and as he hath said so I find he will not hear my Prayers But though he will not hear my Prayers yet he will not neglect my Tears A broken and contrite heart O Lord thou wilt not despise O Lord though I have thus trifled away my Peace and my Comfort and have destroyed my self yet in thee is my help As I will not rest in my Sin so neither will I rest in my Grief but will never give my self nor thee rest till thou hast been pleased in the Blood of thy Son to wash away my Guilt and restore unto me thy Presence and Peace again And when I have recovered this Loss I will by the assistance of that good Spirit of thine learn by this my sin to revenge my self upon my sin to value the Mercy and Goodness of my Creator that hath yet once more intrusted into my hands the Life and Comfort which I had so lately lost to value the necessity as well as the Love of my Saviour that hath been pleased by a reapplication of his own Blood to wash me again after my late Relapse to value the kindness of the Pure and Blessed Spirit that though by my sin I made him weary and forsake that polluted chamber of my Heart yet is pleased to return and cleanse and take up again that Room from which I had so unworthily excluded him I will learn to prise that Peace and Comfort which once I had and valued not but lost it for an unprofitable perishing Sin I will strive to sence my Heart with renewed Covenants and Resolutions of more watchfulness over my self that I return not again to Folly I will sit down and bless the Mercy Goodness Patience Bounty of God that hath not left me in that Condition which I could neither endure nor remove and study to return a Heart and Life in some measure answerable to so great Love and Goodness And when I have done all O Lord Jesus let that Eternal Covenant between thee and the Father that thou shouldest give Eternal Life to as many as he hath given thee John 17.2 that Power and Promise of thine that none shall pluck me out of thy hands John 10.28 that Union with thee that thou art pleased to give to as many as believe on thee John 15.4 5. that Spirit of thine which by that Union with thee conveys Life and Influence to the smallest branch in thee preserve and support me in all my Purposes and Resolutions in all my Frailties and Temptations For without thee I can do nothing 2. In reference to outward Objects and occasions of Sorrow as loss of Friends Wealth Reputation Health Life it self have a guard upon this Passion 1. Look upon them as the Fruits and Effects of thy Sin and so let them carry thy Grief beyond the immediate object to the meritorious cause of them This is the sting of all Affliction the Plague in thy Heart is the Core and Fountain of the Plague of thy Externals And when thou hast humbled thy Soul before thy Creator and gotten the Blood of thy Saviour to wash thy Conscience thy Affliction shall be removed or thy Soul enabled with chearfulness and comfort to bear it 2. Labour to find out the Voice of the Rod the Mind of thy Creator for if thou diligently observe it there is not a dispensation of Divine Providence but it brings a message with it to thy Soul. Look into thy Heart it may be there is an accursed thing in the midst of thee Joshua 7.13 and this Affliction bids thee be up and removing it It may be thy Heart was leaning too much upon that very Blessing wherein thou findest thy Cross or Affliction which robbed thy Maker of some of the Love and Duty thou owest to him It may be thy Heart was grown dead and careless in thy applications to thy Creator secure and resting in thy temporal Enjoyment and he hath sent his Messenger to awake thee It may be thou hast had a dull and heavy Ear that would not listen or could not perceive God speaking once yea twice unto thee in a still voice Job 33.14 and now he hath sent an instruction with a louder voice It may be thou begannest too much to set up thy rest here to place thy Confidence in the things of this World to be overtaken with the delight in them to over●expect them and he hath sent a disappointment into thy Counsels a Worm into thy Gourd a Moth into thy Store a Canker into thy Bag a Distemper into thy Body to shew thee the vanity of thy Dependances to make thee let go thy hold of that which may fall upon and hurt thee but cannot secure thee to make the look upward to quicken thy Life of Faith by shaking thy Life of Sense It may be thou wert growing presumptuous in the Goodness of God Saucy in thy Carriage towards him insolent towards him opinionative of thy self And he hath sent this searching Medicine to fallow and purge these disorderly and dangerous Humours But g●ant that upon all thy search thou findest that for a long time thou hast kept a Watch over thy Heart that thou