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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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5. It notes the eternall decree of God separating some men to holinesse and glory for the praise of his rich grace Ephes. 1. 4. 11. Election is the decree of Gods good pleasure according to Counsell whereby he hath from eternity chosen and determined with himselfe to call some men to faith in Christ to justifie adopt sanctifie and endue them with eternall life for the praise of incomprehensible grace and rich mercy Or it is an action of God ordaining some men out of his meere good will and pleasure to eternall life which is to be had by faith in Christ for the manifestation of his grace and mercy 1. The Generall nature of it it is an action of Gods ordaining 2. The impulsive Cause of his meere good will Ephes. 1. 6. Rom. 9. 16. 18. There can be no other reason given when men have wearied themselves out in disputes but onely Gods will Even so Father because it pleaseth thee Matth. 11. God will have mercy on whom hee will have mercy Gods meere free-will makes us differ in naturalls thou art a man and not a Toad how much rather must it make us differ in supernaturalls To flie to a scientia media or a congrua motio divina or to the preparation and use of Free-will is to wander and to say any thing in man makes a difference 3. The object of Election whether man absolutely considered or respectiuely as good by Creation miserable by sinne Some make homo condendus man to be made the object of Election some man made but not fallen some man made and fallen But these opinions may be reconciled for those who hold homo Condendus or massa pura to be the object doe extend Election further than the latter doe even to comprehend in it a decree to make man and to permit him to fall but as for that actuall Election and Separation Calvin and Beza hold it to be from the corrupted Masse of which opinion these reasons may be given 1. We are chosen that we might be holy and unblameable this supposeth that we were considered in Election as finners Ezek. 16. 6. 9. 1. Rom. 2. 9. Election is of God that sheweth mercy and wee are called vessells of mercy mercy presupposeth misery 2. We are elected in Christ as our head and he is a Mediatour and Saviour which presupposeth sinne he came to save sinners Matth. 20. 16. the meanes of salvation are given to few few are holy the effect of Election Matthew 7. 13. 3. Man simply considered is the object of Predestination in respect of the preordination of the end but man corrupted if we respect the ordination of the meanes which tend to that end or man absolutely in respect of the supreame or last end or in respect of this or that subordinate end 4. The end of Election is two-fold 1. neare and immediate eternall life 2. farther off and ultimate the glory of his name Ephes. 1. 3 4 5 6. 5. The meanes to bring about these ends Christs merits apprehended by faith Consider also the adjuncts of this Decree the eternity immutability and certainty of it There is a certaine and determinate number of the Elect which cannot be diminished or augmented Christ prayed to his Father that the Faith of his Elect might not faile Joh. 17. 16. 20. It is impossible they should be deceived Mat. 24. 24. The Papists thinke that the certaintie of immutable election begetts in a man a certaine carnall securitie and prophannesse but Peter thinks farre otherwise 2 Pet. 1. 10. God was not moved by any thing outwardly to choose us to eternall life but it was onely the meere will of God Some of the Papists say God did choose man to eternall life upon the foresight of his good workes and his perseverance in them 2. The Lutherans say for faith foreseene not because of any dignity in faith but for Christ apprehended by it Object If God should not predestinate for some thing in us he is an accepter of persons for all were alike Judas was no more opposite then Peter why then should one bee elected and not another Sol. 1. This makes the Doctrine of Election such a depth that God loveth Jacob and hateth Esau in the Angels some are elected and some fallen 2. To accept of persons is then when we preferre one before another and ought not to doe so now that God chooseth some it is of his meere grace for all deserve eternall damnation Arguments against the Papists and Lutherans That which is the effect and fruit of election that cannot be a cause or condition for then a thing should be a cause to it selfe but these are effects Ephes. 1. 4. It should be according to them he hath chosen us because we were foreseene holy Acts 13. 48. A man is not ordained to eternall life because he beleeveth but he beleeveth because he is ordained to eternall life Secondly then we should choose God and not he us contrary to that John 15. 19. Thirdly Infants are elected who cannot beleeve or doe good workes Fourthly if man were the cause of his owne election he had cause to glorie in himselfe election should not be of grace All the Sons of Adam without exception are not elected for election supposeth a rejection He that chooseth some refuseth others See Esay 41. 9. John 13. 8. Whom God electeth he doth also glorifie Rom. 8. 30. but all are not glorified 2 Thes. 1. 10. 2. 13. 2. Saving faith is a true effect of Gods election peculiar to the elect common to all the elect which live to be of age and discretion but many are destitute of faith for ever therefore they must needs be out of Gods election 3. The Scripture saith expresly that few were chosen Matth. 20. 16. Few saved Luke 13. 23. The elect considered apart by themselves are a numberlesse number and exceeding many in comparison of the wicked they are but few even a handfull Matth. 7. 13. 14. 22. 14. Luke 12. 32. Though some of the places of Scripture may be expounded of the small number of Beleevers in the dayes of our Saviour yet some are more generally spoken shewing plainly that only few do find the way to life At this day if the world were divided into thirty parts 19. of them doe live in Infidelity without the knowledge of the true God The Mahometans possesse other sixe parts of the world Amongst them which professe Christ scarce one part of those five remaining do embrace the true religion And many more do professe with the mouth then do with the heart beleeve unto salvation The Arminians say there is an election axiomaticall not personall they acknowledge that there is a choise of this or that particular meanes to bring men to salvation God say they hath revealed but two wayes to bring men to life either by obedience to the Law or by faith
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
when he was pressed by Bishop Ridly and others to tolerate his Sister Masse in her owne Chapell he would not though importuned yeeld thereto saying He should dishonour God in it but being much pressed by them he burst into teares and they thence concluded that he had more divinity in his little finger then they in all their bodies O that you would study to premote Gods glory and be zealous for his truth since you have had such experience of his mercy and likewise could not but perceive the evill of those dangerous errours which were too much indulged by some of those whom you have cast out I shall now speake of the threefold Subject I handle in my Booke 1. The Scripture 2. God 3. The Workes of God It is reported of Charles the Great that he set his Crown on the Bible and Luther was so zealous to have the Scriptures read that he professed if he thought the reading of his Bookes would hinder the reading of the Scripture he would burne them all before he dyed Alphonsus King of Spaine and Naples read the Bible with Lira's glosse foureteen times over The Emperour Theodosius the second wrote the New Testament out with his owne hand many speake much of new light but the Prophet Esay saith To the Law and to the Testimony if they speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Take heed of too much of that new light which the world is now gazing upon so much new light is breaking forth that the old zeale is almost extinct by it saith a Minister of New England The Familists say they are above Ordinances when the body hath no need of nourishment then and not afore will the soule have no need of Ordinances we about Westminster have beene better instructed out of the 20. of Exodus 24. Some talke of Revelations and the Testimony of the Spirit But now the Scripture is compleated I must not expect any immediate Testimony of the Spirit Luther saith if any Spirit should come and speak any thing to him that he brought not Scripture for he would spit in his face The Scripture is the best Cynosure to follow it was Davids Counseller it is a perfect rule of a Perfect Reformation Secondly all Christian States and Persons should labour for an experimentall practicall knowledge of God and Christ Phil. 3. 8. 10. the vision of God in Heaven shall make us perfectly Happye Quid Deus sit ipse tantum novit what God is God himselfe doth onely perfectly know But he hath revealed himselfe to us in his word and workes That place in 34 of Exodus 6. 7. verses is as full a description of Gods Attributes as any in all the Scripture The Lord the Lord God mercifull and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodnes truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression sin that will by no meanes clear the guilty visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the children and upon the childrens Children unto the third and fourth generation If God were more known he would be more loved honou●ed feared trusted The Heathens extolled the knowledge of a mans self but Christians must chiefely study to know God This is a Noble Subject for a Christian Parliament and a Christian Kingdome to exercise themselves in O that you would all labour to know Gods excellencies and to propagate the knowledge of him to the many darke Corners of the Land Thirdly the workes of God are to be diligently observed by a Christian State One observes that there is a five fold Declaration of the workes of God An Arthnieticall Declaration Psal. 40. 5. Secondly a Logicall Declaration of the workes of God when we shew the severall kinds of them as the workes of Creation the worke of Redemption the worke of Providence and distribute those into workes of mercy or works of Justice Thirdly an Historicall Declaration when we declare the persons acting the places the times the Counsels the mannaging of the severall actions the events and successes Fourthly a Rhetoricall Declaration Fifthly a Declaration purely Theologicall or a practicall Declaration of the works of God We should be lifted up by Gods manifold works to the Consideration of his unlimited greatnesse that is the first cause and author of them all we can turne our eyes no way but exceeding great multitudes of works wrought by God doe offer themselves to our view If we looke upward downeward on the right hand on the left into our selves and other things our minds shall be encountred with diversity of rare Workes of Almighty God These workes are all made with much wisdome Psal. 136. 5. and the serious considering of Gods workes is a great part of the sanctifying of his name Never had any Parliament more reason to magnifie Gods goodnesse for his singular mercies Oh that as many of your deliverances were got with supplication so they might be worne with thankefulnesse and as you have been a Parliament of many Prayers so may you be a Parliament of many prayses which is the earnest desire of Your Honours Devoted Servant EDW. LEIGH To the Christian Reader REader The number of bookes is without number the Presses are daily oppressed with them Yet though the world abound with unprofitable may pernicious Pamphlets there are many excellent subjects which are either not handled or not sufficiently There is a great variety in mens fancies as well as in their faces and bookes the fruit of mens brains are as various as men themselves Some books are to be tasted onely some chewed and some swallowed That saying of Stanchar the Hereticke doth exceedingly please the Papists Plus apud se valere unum Lombardum quam centum Lutheros ducentos Melancthones trecentos Bullingeros quadringentos Martyres quingentos Calvinos That one Lumbard was more esteemed by him then 100 Luthers 200 Melancthons 300 Bullingers 400 Martyrs 500 Calvins Focanus contrarily saith thus of the Schoolmen that one Austin among the Ancients and one Calvin in his Institutions of Christian Religion among the moderne Divines will afford thee more solid Divinity then all the School-Doctors of the Popish Church with all their vaine disputations jejune distinctions quodlibeticall questions and foolish speculations with which saith he Thomas Scotus Lombard Bonaventure Molina Vasquez Suarez à Soto Bellarmine and other Doctors of the Romane Church are full even ad nauseam But the Bible is indeed the Booke of Bookes it signifieth in the Greeke Tongue A Booke in generall and was sometimes taken so largely yet by an Antinomasie or excellency it is now taken for the Booke of the Holy Scripture and is all one with Gods Booke We told you before how much the Papists magnified Peter Lumbard the father of the Schoolmen calling him the Master of the sentences and preferring him before hundreds of ours The next Schoolman after him Alexander
be made by some thing which was capable of being from Eternity What is Eternall is of it selfe what is of it selfe is God the world is not God because the parts of it are corruptible therefore it is not eternall and what is Finite in quantity cannot be infinite in continuance It could not be made by any creature in it for the part cannot possibly make the whole because it is of farre lesse vertue then the whole and because it hath its being in and of the whole wherefore it must needs be made by some thing better then it selfe which is no part of it selfe and that is no other then God so the making of the world proves a God What Created the world is and is better then the world and before the world and above all creatures in the world God Created the world When we see the glorious frame of Heaven and earth the excellency magnitude and multitude of naturall things the beautifull order and harmony so great variety we cannot but conclude that there is a God who made and ordereth all these things 2. The Preservation and continuance of the world in that Order which we see maketh it manifest that there is a God which preserveth and ordereth it For either it must be preserved ruled and ordered by it selfe or by some more excellent thing then it selfe not by it selfe for what could not make it selfe cannot of it selfe keepe and uphold it selfe seeing no lesse power is required to its continuation then to its constitution for it could not continue if each of the parts did not so worke as to helpe and uphold the other in some respect or other Now these severall parts could not so worke for one Common end if they were not guided thereto by some common and understanding guide which were acquainted with and had power over each of them therefore it hath one ruler and upholder That which is effected by the constant orderly and subordinate working of innumerable particulars for one common end whereof no one of them hath any knowledge or acquaintance must needs be wrought by some common Ruler and Governour which knowes the motion and working of each and rules all and each to that end in their severall motions What upholds the world is but God upholds the world therefore he is 1. This is Aquinas his reason naturall bodies which want knowledge worke for a certaine end because they frequently worke after the same manner therefore there must be a minde understanding and governing all things and directing them to that speciall and chiefe end The whole world doth aptly conspire together for the attaining of one end the good and benefit of man All creatures incline to their proper operations the stone downe-ward the fire upward the seasons of the yeare constantly follow each other 2. Particular the framing and maintaining of each creature in the world the Heavens and Man especially these two were most artificially made as the Scripture shewes The Psalmist cals the heavens the worke of Gods Fingers Psal. 8. 4. because they were made with greatest ease and with exquisite Art Heb. 11. 10. whose builder 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Artifex is God speaking of the Heavens Psal. 139. 14 I am fearefully and wonderfully made 15. v. curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the Earth The Hebrew word is very Emphaticall it signifieth Embroydered or wrought with a needle that is cunningly wrought with Nerves Veines Arteries Galen upon the contemplation of the admirable workmanship in the body of man breaketh out into an Hymne in the praise of him that made him 1. The Creation of the Heavens proves that there is a God The largenesse roundnesse purenesse solidnesse the continuall and constant motion of the heavens doth excellently declare the glory of God The very name of Astronomy whose object is the motion of the heavenly Orbes and Stars in exact signification importeth that the Starres observe a Law in their motion which Law is given unto them onely by God himselfe who is their true Law-giver Suidas affirmeth that even Abraham himselfe was first occasioned to seek after God by considering the motion of the Stars for he being by nation a Chaldean who as Aristotle observeth are naturally given to that kinde of contemplation and observing in their motion a wonderfull order and variety and yet no lesse a constancie he presently collected that these strange revolutions were directed and guided by some God 2 The Creation of man proves this truth that there is a God 1. A man may reason from his owne framing in the wombe and preserving in the world Man is framed in the wombe by some most noble wise and excellent workman The Parents frame him not there for they know nothing of his framing neither when nor how he was so formed therefore some more excellent thing then a man did frame him there and doth daily and hourely frame other men and that is a wise worker which is a like wise and potent in all places of the world at all times seeing there is something more excellent then man which hath set downe this Order for producing of men and so a God 2. The Nobility and Excellency of the soule sheweth plainely that it is of Divine Originall it being Spirituall and Incorporeall could not but proceed from that which is Incorporeall The effect cannot be toto genere better then the cause Divers workes are done by man arts invented Zach. 12. 1. 3. The being and preservation of each particular man Each particular man in the world may reason from his owne being thus either there must be an infinite number of men or else there must be a first man which was the beginning of all men but an infinite number of particular men is not possible seeing there can be no infinite number at all for every number begins with an unity and is capable of being made greater by the addition of an unity therefore there cannot be an infinite number of particular men Therefore we must come to some first man and that first man could not make himselfe nor be made by any inferiour thing to it selfe therefore it must be made by some thing more excellent then it selfe viz. One infinite thing from which all particulars had their Originall 4. God is manifested in the consciences of men as was touched before 1. By the Ministery of the word by which he powerfully worketh on their consciences 2. By the inward Checks of conscience after finne committed 1. In the godly 1 Sam. 24. 5. and 2. Sam. 24. 10. 2. In the wicked Matth. 27. 3. 4. 5. 2. Civill States and Kingdomes consist and the Governed by a few Magistrates and Rulers There are innumerable more men that wish and desire the overthrow and ruine of the State then that would live under Government and be subject to Order This effect must have some cause either the wisedome and goodnesse of the governed or of the Governours or
both visible and invisible CHAP. VI. GOd is exceeding Great 1 Kings 8. 42. 2. Sam. 7. 22. Psal. 95. 3. and 96. 4. and 99. 2. 3. and 145. 3. Tit. 2. 13. God is Great and greatly to be praised and who is so Great as our God He is Great 1. In his nature and essence 2. In his workes 3 In his authority His name is Great Jer. 10. 6. 11. Josh. 7. 9. his power is great Psal. 147. 5. His Acts are great Psal 111. 1. his judgements are great Exodus 7. 4. He is great in counsell Jer. 32. 19. and mighty workes Deut. 32. 4. There is a double Greatnesse 1. Of quantity or bulk and that is an attribute of a body by which it hath very large bodily dimensions as a mountain is a great substance the Sun a great body and this cannot be found in God who is not a body but an Immateriall essence 2. Of Perfection worth and vertue and that is abundance of all excellencies and largenesse of whatsoever makes to perfection of being and this is in God He is so perfect every way that he stands in need of nothing God is absolutely and simply Perfect because he hath all things which are to be desired for the chiefest felicity He is pefect 1. In the highest degree of perfection simply without any respect or comparison secondly he is perfect in all kindes 1. John 1. 5. John saith he is light in which there is no darknesse that is Perfect and Pure without the least mixture of the contrary the Authour and cause of all perfections in all the creatures they are all in him but more perfectly and in a perfecter manner God is most absolutely Perfect Job 22. 2. Psal. 16. 2. Matth. 5. 48. The words in Scripture attributed to God which signifie this are 1. Schaddai which is as much as one sufficient to help himselfe or one that gives nourishment to all other things and therefore Gen. 17. 1. when God was to make a Covenant with Abraham to leave all earthly things and so trust in him onely he brings this argument that he was such a sufficient God 2. Gomer The verbe is used five times in the Psalmes as much as Perfect from the effect because God doth continually preserve to the end 3. Tom. Job 37. 16. It signifieth both Simple and Perfect 4. Calil à Col. omnis that in which all good things are God is perfect 1. Essentially he is Perfect in and by himselfe containing in him all perfections eminently Matth. 5 48. He hath all needfull to a Deity 2. Nothing is wanting to him he hath no need of any other thing out of himselfe Job 22. 2. 3. Psal. 16. 2. 3. Originally he is the cause of all perfection what hast thou which thou hast not received Jam. 1. 17. 4. Operatively all his workes are Perfect Deut. 32. 4. A thing is Perfect 1. Negativè which wanteth nothing which is due by nature to its integrity 2. Privativè which wanteth no perfection and so God onely is Perfect 2. God is Great in his workes Deut. 4. 36. Gods Perfection stands in an Infinitenesse of goodnesse Matth. 19. 17. wisedome Rom. 11. 33. power Gen. 17. 1. perfect wisedome goodnesse righteousnesse moderation holinesse truth and whatsoever may possibly be required to grace and commend an action that is found in the whole course and frame of Gods actions the worke of Creation is a perfect worke he made all things in unsearchable wisedome no man could have found any want of any thing in the world which might be reasonably desired no man could have found there any evill thing worthy to be complained of The worke of Providence is perfect all things are carryed in perfection of wisedome justice and goodnesse So is the work of Redemption likewise Perfect The perfectest measure of justice wisdome truth power that can be conceived of doth shew it selfe forth in that work Reason Such as the work-man is such must the work be a perfect Artists workmanship will resemble himselfe The perfection of God is his incomprehensible fulnesse of all excellenci●s He is absolutely and simply perfect Ob. Why doth God use the help of others Sol. Not out of need as the Artificer his Instruments so that he cannot work with them but out of choyce and liberty to honour them the more Hence sometimes he will use no meanes at all sometimes contrary meanes to shew that they help not and that we should not rely upon them Ob. Why is there sinne in the world seeing God needs not any glory that comes to him by Christ and by his m●rcy in pardoning of sinne why doth he suffer it Sol. Because sinne is not so great an evill as Christ is a good and therefore God would not have suffered sinne if he could not have raised up to himself matter of honour God makes an antidote of this poyson Ob. How comes it to passe that God makes one thing better then he did at first as in the creation all things had not their perfection at first Sol. Those things were perfect ex parte operantis he intended not they should have any farther perfection at that time the essence of nothing can be made better then it is because it consists in indivisibili God makes not out graces perfect in us because he aymes at another end Gods Perfection hath all imperfections removed from it 2 Tim. 2. 13. Titus 1. 2. Jam. 1. 3. There be 6 imperfections found in every creature 1. Contingency 2. Dependance 3. Limitation 4. Composition 5. Alteration 6. Multiplication Now God is free from all these He is 1. a necessary essence 2. Independent 3. Unlimited 4. Simple 5. Unchangeable 6. Wholly one Three of these viz. Gods Simplicity unlimitednesse in respect of time and place and unchangeablenesse I have handled already I shall speak of the other three when I have dispatched this attribute of Gods Greatnesse or Perfection 3. God is Great in his Authority I have shewed already that he is Great in his nature and essence and also in his workes now his Greatnesse in Authority is to be considered He is a Great King he hath Soveraign absolute and unlimited Authority over all things they being all subject and subordinate to him for at his will they were and are created This is signified by the Title of the most High so frequently given him in Scripture He is the High and lofty one Isay 57. 15. 1. In respect of place and dwelling he is in heaven Eccles. 5. 2. above the clouds 2. In respect of essence he is High indeed unexpressibly high the high God Gen. 14. 22. the Lord most High Psal. 7. 17. 3. In respect of Attributes he hath more wisedome power justice mercy then all creatures 4. In respect of State and dominion he is exalted in Authority power jurisdiction he is above all as Commander of all God hath
what is to come He doth not onely know what things naturally shall be but likewise what is possible By his Prophets he hath often foretold future things 4. He is privy to all our actions Psal. 119. 168. Job 34. 21. 22. 2. knowes our words 2 King 6. 12. Psal. 139. 4. Matth. 12. 36. 3. He knowes our thoughts Prov. 15. 11. Job 42. 2. 4. 1 Sam. 16. 7. Psal. 94. 11. God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sees and knowes the heart Gen. 6. 5. Psal. 90. 8. and Rom. 8. 27 Apoc. 2. 23. He made the heart and will judge men for their thoughts he gives lawes to the heart saying thou shalt not Covet thy neighbours house else God were not infinite in knowledge if he knew not the heart Our understanding differs from Gods many wayes 1. We have our knowledge from others from him he his from himselfe He understands by himselfe without any help man needs many helpers his sences fancie and intellgible species 2. In extent we know but some things he all generall and particular 3. Our knowledge is simply finite but Gods infinite 4. We understand things by species or Images abstracted from them he by his essence 5. We understand things successively one after another with paines of discourse proceeding from an unknown thing to a known or from a lesse known to a more known but God knows all things together and by one most simple immutable and eternall act of understanding 6. He knows himself and all other things perfectly all things past present and to come open secret certain contingent that which shall be which shall be never be we cannot shew the causes nor properties of an Herbe and understand onely those things which are or at least have been and we know doubtingly There is in God say the Schoolmen scientia visionis a knowledge of all future things 2. Simplicis intelligentiae a most perfect knowledge of all and the severall things which may be done 1. This is a terrour to the wicked who is Ignorant of God 2. Thess. 1 8. The Study of the knowledge of God and our Lord Jesus Christ is the highest noblest the most soule perfecting and exalting knowledge that can be all other knowledge without this will nothing advantage us 2. It is necessary for us to be ruled by him who is so full of knowledge and to beleeve all which he saith by way of relating promising threatning 3. This may comfort Gods people my witnesse is in heaven said Job if they know not how to expresse themselves in Prayer God knows their groanes To Gods understanding are referred his Wisedome or Prudence and Prescience The wisdome or Prudence and counsell of God by which God rightly perceives the best reason of all things which are do●e Hence it is that all things are joyned and knit together in a most perfect harmony and beautifull order so that they well agree both amongst themselves and with God God is wisdom it selfe Prov. 8. His wisdome is 1. Infinite Psal. 136. 5. and unsearchable Job 11. 7. 2. Essentiall to himselfe He is the onely wise God Rom. 16. 27. 1 Tim. 1. 17. 3. He is perfectly originally unchangeably wise Isay 40. 13. 4. The fountain of all wisdom was there such wisdome in Adam to give names to things according to their natures and in Salomon to discourse of all things and is there not much more in God Wisdome is an ability to fit all things to their ends He that worketh for a worthy and good end and fitteth every thing unto it worketh wisely God doth 4 Actions to all his ●reatures as Creatures viz. 1. He made them 2. Sustaineth them 3. Actuateth them 4. Guideth and disposeth them all wisely aiming at a noble end viz. his own glory content and satisfaction He hath set also to each of them speciall ends to which they serve in nature and that end is the mutuall preservation one of another and common beautifying of the whole workemanship in subordination to that high end of his glory and so he hath fitted each thing for that particular end he made it and all for the universall end to which he intended all The Sunne was made to distinguish day and night and the severall seasons it is most fit for that end it is most fit for the end in its quantity quality motion and all that pertain to it God made Grasse for the food of Beasts it is fit for that end so in the rest Wisdome hath two principall acts fore-sight and fore-cast by which a man can beforehand see what will be after to make his use of it 2. disposing and ordering things by taking the fittest meanes and opportunities to attain his own good and right ends This vertue is Infinitely in God for he doth fore-see all thiings eternally and in time disposeth of them most fitly by the fittest meanes and opportunities for the best that can be to his own glory which is the highest end that he can and should ayme at for to that which is the best of all things must all things else be referred therefore God is the onely wise God Gods knowledge differs from his wisdome in our apprehension thus His knowledge is conceived as the meer apprehension of every object but his wisdome is conceived as that whereby he doth order and dispose all things His knowledge is conceived as an act his wisdome as an habit or inward principle not that it is so but onely we apprehend it in this manner Gods wisdom is seene in these particulars 1. In making of this great world 1 Cor. 1. 21. all things therein are disposed in the best order place time by the wisest Architect How doth David in the Psalmes admire the wonderfull power and wisdome of God in making of the world Psal. 136. 5. and 104. per totum Much wisdome and art is seene in the Sunne Starrs creeping things Salomon in all his glory was not comparable to one of the lilies for that is native and imbred his adventitious 2. In particular in making of man the little world David is much affected with this Psal. 139. 14. 15. 3. In the order which is in these things God hath made every thing beautifull in his season saith Salomon He is called the God of order Psal. 19. The heavens are said to have a line which is likewise called their voyce because God by this exact order and art which he shewed in making of them doth plainly declare to all the world his glory and power 4. In that nothing is defective or superfluous 5. In contrivi●g things by contrary meanes He brings about contrary ends by contrary meanes by death he brought life to beleevers by Ignominy and shame the greatest glory By terrours for sinne he brings the greatest comfort and leads men by hell to heaven 6. By catching those which are wise in their own craftinesse Psal. 59. Job 9. 4. 7. In finding out a way to save man by
Christ Ephes 3. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wisdome in many curious passages 1 Pet. 1. 12. the very Angels desire to prie into this mystery and indeed here was so much wisdome that if the understanding of all men and Angels had been put together they could not have devised a possible way for mans salvation 8. In the Church in the Oracles of Scripture exceeding all sharpnesse of humane wit in the originall progresse change and migration of the Church and other mysteries of the Gospell the profound and immense wisdom of Gods councels shines 9. In the particular passages of his Providence to his Children about their outward condition in taking David from the sheep-fold to be a King but how much misery did he undergoe before he was setled So to Jacob Abraham and Paul in doing them good by their sinnes making them wary 10. In Heaven in which the Councels acts decrees and promises of God all obscurity being removed shall be most clearly unfolded Dost thou want wisdome go to this fountain Jam. 1. 5. Psal. 94. 10. all the wisdome of men and Angels comes from him The godly have a most wise teacher Job 36. 22. 2. Take heed of trusting in thy own crafty wisdome 1 Cor 3. 18. 3. Gods wisdom cals for our feare the people feared Salomon for his wisdom and praise Rom. 16. 27. 4. The order and variety of things ariseth not from nature but the Divine working 5. We should be content with the portion which God gives us that weather which he sends those troubles he brings on us since he is wisest and knowes best what is fittest for us and when is the best time to help us 6. Admire that in the works of God which we understand not Gods wisdome is unsearchable and his Counsell like unto the great depth 7. Be constant and diligent in reading and pondering upon the Scriptures they will make you wise to Salvation to which adde Prayer and Practise Gods Prescience or fore-knowledge is that whereby God fore-knew all future things necessarily certainly immutably and from everlasting Neither fore-knowledge nor remembrance are properly in God all things both past and to come being present before him Although Gods prescience bring not a nec●ssity upon events yet it is necessary for all things to happen so as God hath foretold because God so fore-knows as he hath decreed and wil'd it shall be but his decree gives existence So much for Gods understanding his will follows by which God freely immutably and efficaciously wils and approves of Good and that onely both the chiefest and first viz. himself and his own glory as the end and also the Secondary inferiour and subordinate good viz. that of the creature asfarre as it hath an Image of that chiefest good and tends as a meane to that ultimate end God wills 1. Most freely for as liberty is essentiall to every will so it is chiefely proper to the Divine because it is a will especially yet God wils good necessarily with a necessity of Immutability but not with a necessity of coaction for he is necessarily and naturally Good and that which he once willed he always wils immutably and yet freely 2. God wils efficaciously for no man resisteth nor can resist his will Dan. 4. 32. Rom. 9. 19. voluntas Dcisemper impletur aut de nobis aut à Deo in nobis Augustine Will is taken 1. For a faculty or power of the soule whereby we will so we say there are these faculties in the soule the understanding and the will 2. For the act of willing called volitio 3 The object or thing willed so John 6. this is the will of my Father that is that which he willeth and hath decreed So we say it is the Princes will that is that which the Prince will●th But Gods will is his essence whereby he freely willeth good and nilleth evill or it is a faculty whereby God chooseth all and onely good and refuseth all and onely evill The will of God is 1. Most holy Rom. 12. 2. Psal. 119. 137. the rule of justice Lam. 3. 37. Ephes. 1. 11. Deut. 29. 29. Isay 8. 20. 2. Eternall Rom. 9. 11. 3. Unchangeable Mal. 3. 6. Rom. 11. 1. The will of God is one and the same but it is distinguished 1. In respect of the object into voluntatem bene plac● ti placiti God wils good things and good effects with the will of his good pleasure approving them first of all and by h●mselfe he intends their end and meanes Ephes. 1. 5. but evill and evill effects as they are evill he nils disapproves and dislikes Yet he voluntarily permits evill and as there is a good end of it he wils it with the will of his pleasure for it is good that there should be evill Psal. 81. 12. Act. 14. 16. 1 Cor. 10. 5. 2. In respect of application to the creature into 1. Absolute when God willeth and concludeth any thing concerning us withont any condition in us 2. Conditionall when he wils some condition being put in us so God would have all men saved on this condition if they can beleeve The first of these is by another name called voluntas beneplaciti the last voluntas signi Gods will is 1. Secret that whereby he hath absolutely and freely determined with himself what he will doe permit or hinder 2. Revealed that whereby God hath manifested what he would have beleeved done or left undone by his reasonable creatures Marke 3. 35. 1 Thess. 4. 3. That distinction of Gods will into beneplaciti signi differs little from this Signi is the same with revealed beneplacitum is the decree properly so called which may be either hidden or manifest It serves first to comfort us in adversities God is a most free agent therefore he is not bound to second causes so as he cannot help without them Psal. 115. 3. 2. To exhort us to sobriety in our judgement of Gods works He is a most free agent therefore we should not rashly exact of him a reason of his deeds 2. We should labour first to know Gods will so did Eli. 1 Sam. 3. 17. 2. Our wils should be pliable to the will of God we should be carefull 1. To doe his will cheerfully speedily sincerely constantly a Christian makes God in Christ his portion that is his faith and the word of God his rule that is his obedience 3. Be patient under the hand of God in all afflictions for nothing can befall us but that which is the good pleasure of our heavenly Father 3. We should not depart from the word of God but make that the warrant of all our actions for there is nothing sinne but what God forbiddeth and nothing acceptable but what he commandeth A man may with a good will will that which God nils as if a good Sonne desire his Fathers life whom God would have dye one
needfull for it Mercy in God is not any passion or quality as it is in men but it is the very divine essence it selfe and therefore perpetuall and in●inite such as no tongue can expresse Mercy in God and in us differ 1. It is in him essentially in us as a quality 2. In him primarily in us secondarily Gods mercy is the cause of all mercy it is without motive or worth in us naturall free Rom. 9. 18. boundlesse extends to a mans soule body this life the next to a man and his posterity Exod. 34 6 7. it is above all his workes Psal. 145. 9. it is beyond his promise and our expectation Reasons 1. Whatsoever good and commendable thing is to be found in the creature that must needs be found eminently and excellently in the Creator from whom it is derived to the creature and who could not derive it t● the creature if he had it not more perfectly in himselfe Now mercy is to be found in all good men and it is a lovely and commendable thing in them such as begets good will and liking towards them therefore it is much more fully in God 2. He hath great mercy in him if God be mercifull at all he must needs be mercifull in great measure yea above all measure beyond all degrees in all perfection for the essence of God is infinite and his wisdome power and mercy are inf●nite There is a mercy of God which extends to all his creatures Psal. 145. 9. Luke 6. 35. God is mercifull unto all men but especially to some men whom he hath chosen unto himselfe The speciall mercy of God is offered unto all within the Church Ezech. 16. 6. Acts 13. 40. but is bestowed onely upon some viz. such as receive Christ John 1. 11 12. This life is the time of mercy wherein we obtaine pardon for sinne after this life there is no remission or place for repentance All blessings Spiritual and Corporeall are the effects of Gods mercy Common blessings of his generall mercy speciall blessings of his speciall mercy The effects of Gods speciall mercy are 1. The giving of Christ for us 2. His Word 3. Justification 4. Sanctification 5. giving his Spirit for a comforter in our griefes and afflictions I●hn 14. 16. 6. The Sacraments Mercy must accord with wisdome justice and truth therefore those that stoope to justice by acknowledging their offence and worthinesse to be punisht for it and are sorry they have so offended and ●esolve to offend so no more and earnestly also implore Gods mercy shall partake of it The Lord is plenteous in mercy to all which call upon him and the Lords delight is in them which feare him and hope in his mercy Judge your selves and you shall not be judged humble your selves under the hand of God and he will exalt you On these termes he will shew mercy universally to all which submit to him thus and seeke to him for mercy without any exception of person fault time Quest. Whether mercy and justice be equall in God and how can he be most just and most mercifull Answ. Mercy and Justice may be considered ad intra as they are essentiall properties in God and so he is equally just as well as mercifull 2. Ad extra as he puts himselfe forth into the outward exercise of mercy and punishment In this latter sence we must distinguish between this present time where mercy triumphs against judgement Jam. 2. 13. and the day of judgement that is a time of justice and retribution to the wicked and so David speaking of this present time saith All thy waies are mercy and truth Psalm 25. and that of the Schooles is true remunerat ultra condignum punit infra Gods justice and mercy are both infinite and equall in him onely in regard of man there is an inequality For God may be said to be more mercifull unto them that are saved then just to them that are damned for the just cause of damnation is in man but of salvation is wholy from God In himselfe and originally they are both equall and so are all his attributes but in respect of the exercise and expression upon his creatures and abroad in the world there is some difference Mr Bolton on Prov. 18. 14. 1. We should believe this point labour to be fully perswaded in our hearts that Gods mercies are great and many he hath preventing mercies how many sinnes hath he preserved thee from 2. sparing mercies Lam. 3. 22. behold Gods severity towards others and mercy toward thee 3. renewing mercies 4. pardoning mercies He is willing and ready to helpe us out of misery Therefore we should praise him for this attribute how excellent and desirable a thing is mercy therefore give him the glory of his mercy 2. It is full of comfort to a child of God he need not be dismayed with any thing not his imperfections since the divell himselfe cannot hurt him for God is more mercifull to help him then the divell can be malicious to hurt him 3. We should be encouraged to seeke to him for mercy seeing there is so great store of it in him There is an infinitnesse of mercy in God so that what ever my sinnes have been if now I will turne he will accept me if I strive to turne he will enable me Therefore I will now runne to him for mercy I will fall down before the Throne of justice and confesse I have deserved wrath and nothing but wrath but will cry to him for mercy 4. Those that have and doe seeke should give him the glory of his mercy and take comfort themselves in the confident hope of finding mercy Praise him for his mercy to others and he will give thee some comfortable hope of finding it thy selfe 5. We should be mercifull like God to our selves and brethren their soules and bodies imitate his mercy be you mercifull to the afflicted and distressed shew mercy freely and constantly and then we shall obtaine mercy Matth. 5. 7. 6. We should labour to be qualified for mercy 1. Confesse our sinnes and forsake them Prov. 28. 13. 2. Feare God his mercy is on them that feare him Luke 1. 50. Psal. 103. 11 17 18. 3. Love God He shewes mercy to them that love him Exod. 20. 6. 4. Trust in God then mercy shall compasse us Psal. 32. 10. 5. Thinke on good things then we shall have mercy Prov. 14. 22. 6. Keepe close to the rule of Gods Word Gal. 6 16. CHAP. XII AThird vertue in God is Justice by which God in all things wils that which is just or it is the Attribute whereby God is just in and of himselfe and exerciseth justice toward all creatures and giveth every one his due Esay 45. 21. Psal. 11. 7. Gen. 18. 25. Zeph. 3. 5. Rom. 2. 6 7. 1 Pet. 1. 17. 2 Thess. 1. 6 7. 2 Tim. 4. 8. 1 John
or uttered which hath revealed the councels of God to men especially the elect that we may know the Father by the Sonne as it were by an Image John 1. 18. so also he is the externall wisdome instructing us us concerning the will and wisdome of the Father to salvation 1 Cor. 1. 21. and v. 30. 3 The Property of the Sonne in respect of the Holy Ghost is to send him out I●hn 15 26. Hence arose the Schisme between the Westerne and the Easterne Churches they affirming the procession from the Father and the Sonne these from the Father alone To deny the procession of the holy Ghost from the Sonne is a grievous errour in Divinity and would have grated the foundation if the Greeke Church had so denied the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Sonne as that they they had made an inequality between the Persons But since their forme of speech is that the Holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father by the Sonne and is the Spirit of the Sonne without making any difference in the consubstantiality of the Persons it is a true though an erroneous Church in this particular divers learned men thinke that à Filio per Filium in the sense of the Greeke Church was but a question in modo loquendi in manner of speech and not fundamentall 3 The personall propriety of the holy Ghost is called procession or emanation John 15. 26. neither hath the word defined nor the Church known a formall difference between this procession and generation The third internall difference among the Persons is in the number for they are three subsisting truly distinctly and per se distinguished by their relations and properties for they are internall workes and different and incommunicably proper to every person There follows an externall distinction in respect of effects and operations which the persons exercise about externall objects namely the creatures for though the outward works are undivided in respect of the Essence yet in respect of the manner and determination all the persons in their manner and order concur to such workes As the manner is of existing so of working in the persons The Father is the originall and principle of action works from himselfe by the Sonne as by his Image and wisdome and by the holy Ghost But he is said to worke by his Sonne not as an instrumentall but as a principall cause distinguished in a certaine manner from himselfe as the Artificer workes by an Image of his worke framed in his mind which Image or Idea is not in the instrumentall cause of the worke but his hand To the Sonne is given the dispensation and administration of the action from the Father by the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 8. 6. John 1. 3. 5. 19. To the holy Ghost is given the consummation of the action which he effects from the Father and the Sonne Job 26. 13. 1 Cor. 12. 11. The effects or workes which are distinctly given to the Persons are Creation ascribed to the Father Redemption to the Sonne Sanctification to the holy Ghost all which things are done by the Persons equally and inseparably in respect of the effect it selfe but distinctly in respect of the manner of working The equality of the Persons may be proved 1. by the worke of Creation joyntly Psalm 33. 6. severally for the Father those places prove it 1 Cor. 8. 6. Heb. 1. 2. the Sonne John 1. 3 10. Col. 1. 16. the holy Ghost Job 33. 4. 2 By the worke of Redemption the Father sends and gives the Son the Son is sent and given by him the holy Ghost perfects the worke of conception and incarnation Luke 1. 35. 3 By the worke of Sanctification the Father sanctifieth John 17. 17. Jude v. 1. the Son Ephes. 5. 26. the holy Ghost 2 Thess. 2. 13. 1 Pet. 1. 2. 4 By the worship of religious adoration The Father is religiously adored often in the Scripture Ephes. 1. 17. the Sonne Acts 7. 59. Heb. 1. 6. the holy Ghost Acts 28. 25 26. Rom. 9. 1. This is a wonderfull mystery rather to be adored and admired then inquired into yet every one is bound to know it with an apprehensive knowledge though not with a comprehensive No man can be saved without the knowledge of the Father he hath not the Father who denieth the Sonne and he receives not the Holy Ghost who knowes him not John 14. 17. 2 We must worship the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity as it is in Athanasius Creed We must worship God as one in substance and three in Persons as if Thomas John and Matthew had one singular soule and body common to them all and entirely possessed of every one we were baptized in the Name of Father Sonne and Holy Ghost 3 We should praise God for revealing this mystery to us in his word and be assured that what he promiseth or threatens shall be accomplished being confirmed by three witnesses The end of the Second Booke A Treatise of Divinitie The third Booke CHAP. I. Of Gods Workes HAving spoken of the Scripture and God the Workes of God in the next place are to bee handled which some make two the Decree and the Execution of the Decree others three Decree Creation Providence The Works of God whereby he moves himselfe to his Creatures are three Decree Creation Providence not three individually for so they are innumerable but in the species and kindes of things The Workes of God are 1. Before time or eternall his Decree 2. In time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Gubernation and Suste●tation Government and Preservation Or thus Gods Workes are 1. Internall which are in the very will of God from eternity and they are called the Decrees of God by which God determined from eternitie what he would doe in time We follow the received Phrase of Divines when we call the Decrees the works of God and speake of God after our capacity Therefore we call Decrees of God his Works because the Decrees of man are Works or Actions from man and really distinct from his understanding and will by which we conceive the Decrees of God or rather God decreeing 2. Externall Creation and Providence 1. Of Gods Decree Decree is a speech taken from the affaires of men especially Princes in the determination of causes between parties at variance whose sentence is called a Decree or secondly it is a resolution of things consulted of either negatively or affirmatively according to the latter use of the Phrase it is applyed to God Esay 46. 10. Decretum in the Latine is indifferent to signifie either in the Abstract Gods Decree or in the Concrete a thing decreed Gods Absolute Decree is that whereby the Lord according to the Counsell of his owne Will hath determined with himselfe what he will doe command or forbid permit or hinder together with the circumstances of the same Acts 2. 23. and 4. 28. Luke 22. 22. John 7. 30. Or
Gods Decree is an eternall and infinite act of the Divine Essence by which he doth determine to doe or not to doe whatsoever is or shall be done from the beginning to all eternity that good is and to permit or suffer whatsoever evill is done or shall be Gods Decree is called Counsell because it is done most wisely all things being so ordered as is most agreeable to t●●est reason as if things had been long debated or consulted of before though the Divine Nature be free from all need of cousulting and it is called the Counsell of his Will because his Will doth determine all things agreeably to that Counsell It is an eternall determining of all things which have been are or shall be so as himselfe saw fittest to have them upon best reasons knowne to him though not to us The Decree of God extends to all things good and bad and the rule of it his owne wisedome and good pleasure guided by his wisedome the end is for his glory that is the manifestation of his excellencies His mercy moved him to decree his wisedome orders the Decree his power perfects it and brings it to passe The Properties of Gods Decree 1. It is compleat that is it comprehends the determination of everie thing whatsoever the Creature it selfe workes or God concerning it that was decreed from eternity so to be Matth. 10. 29. it reacheth to greater matters the Incarnation and comming of Christ Psalme 40. 6 7 8. Compared with Heb. 10. 5 6 7. the Kindome of Christ Psal. 2. 2. to lesse matters in things which befall the Church as the ordering of things in Egypt when the Israelites were in Captivity Nothing comes to passe but what God hath decreed shall come to passe and nothing com●s to passe otherwise then as hee hath decreed it shall come to passe we doe not onely subject res ipsas but modos rerum to the Will and Decree of God Neither hath God decreed onely good things but even justly the evill workes of evill men for evill in respect of Gods ordering it habet rationem boni viz. that by it the glory of God may be revealed in his Justice and Mercy He doth order determine and direct the sinfull actions of men but not effect them 2. It is most wise Ephes. 1. 11. 1 Tim. 17. Rom. 11. 33. 3. Just. 4. Free Rom. 9. 18. Nothing moved the Decree of God without or beyond himselfe ●v●nso O Father saith Christ because it pleaseth thee 5. Certaine firme 2 Tim. 2. 19. infallible unchangeable Matth. 18. 14. 6. Eternall Acts 15. 18. It was one of Vorstius prodigious Doctrines to maintaine that Gods Decrees are not eternall then he would be changeable 7. Absolute not so as to exclude meanes but Causes Merits and Conditions The Decree is two-fold 1. Common and Generall which concernes all Creatures the Decree of Creation and Government or Providence 2. Speciall which belongs to reasonable Creatures Angels and men it is called the Decree of Predestination and it consists of two parts viz. of a Decree of Election about saving and of Reprobation about damning some Angels and Men. The Execution likewise of the Decree is two-fold 1. Common the execution of the Decree of Creation which is Creation and of Government called Providence 2. Speciall 1. the execution of the Decree of Election in good Angels their confirmation in that state and in elect men Redemption and Restauration and all the gracious workes of God 2. the execution of the Decree of Reprobation partly in evill Angels casting them out from their state and condition and their punishments in Hell partly in men viz. their rejection obduration and all effects of divine anger upon them But I shall handle the speciall Decree first called Predestination and speake briefely concerning the two parts of it Election and Reprobation and then proceed to treat likewise of Creation and Providence Of Predestination To Predestinate is to Decree the attaining of some end by such like meanes as counsell shall prompt us with It differs from Election Election is in the Will Predestination in the understanding Acts 4. 28. Election is onely of the end this is of the meanes also By Divines Predestination is used to signifie the Decree of God concerning the eternall and Supernaturall estate of Angels and men or of men elect and reprobate although predestination concerne Angels and men alike yet the Scripture especially inculcates to us men the Predestination of men Predestination in Scripture say some is all one with Election almost every where as Rom. 8. 30. But with the ancient Latines Destinare is used of punishment as well as reward and ancient Devines make a Predestination to punishment as well as to glory Predestination is the Sentence or Decree of God according to Counsell determining with himselfe from all eternity to create and governe man-kinde for his speciall Glory viz. the praise of his glorious Mercy or excellent Justice Or thus Predestination is the secret and immutable purpose of God whereby he hath decreed from all eternitie to call those whom he hath loved in his Sonne Christ and through faith and good workes to make them vessells of eternall glory Or thus Predestination is the infallible purpose of God whereby he hath made choise of some and rejected others according to the pleasure of his owne will The Lord hath not onely decreed in generall that hee will save some which believe and condemne those which continue in infidelity but he hath determined whom and how many he will bring to holinesse and life eternall for the praise of his Grace and how many he will leave to themselves and punish for sinne for the praise of his Justice The ancient Fathers call that Verse Rom. 8. 30. The golden chaine of our salvation The parts of Predestination are two Election and Reprobation This Doctrine of Election is profitable to be taught in the Church of God for it sets forth the profound depth of the Lords love the glory and riches of his grace and mercy ascribing the whole praise of our Vocation Justification Adoptition and Glorification to the Mercy of God it holds forth the wonderfull Wisedome of God Romans 11. 33. It sets out his Power and Soveraignty Romans 9. 20. The word Election signifieth 1. The chusing or taking of one into some office 1 Sam. 10. 24. Luke 6. 13. and 17. 12. either in the Common-weale Psalme 78. 70. or Church John 6. 70. 2. The making choise of a Nation to bee Gods peculiar people upon whom passing by others hee will bestow his Lawes Ordinances and singular pledges of his love Deut. 4. 37. and 7. 7. and 10. 15. and 32. 8. Rom. 11. 5. 25. 3. It is put for the Elect themselves as Rom. 11. 7. 4. It is taken for the execution of Gods eternall Decree or the separation of certaine men in time by effectuall vocation Luke 18. 7. Col. 3. 12. Apoc. 17. 14.
our election sure by our calling Rom. 8. 29 30. and our effectuall calling by two things 1. by a new light 2. a new life 2 Cor. 4. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 9. John 12. 36. Ephes. 5. 8. We have a new knowledge wrought in us of our selves we see our miserie by sin and our inability to help our selves Rom. 2. 23. 2 of God God in Jesus Christ is discovered to us 2 Pet. 1. 3. We see our need of Christ and know him to be a mediatour who must reconcile God and us 2. a new life is wrought in us Ephes. 2. 1. We now die to sin and live to God 1. By faith Rev. 17. 14. These three are put together faithfull chosen and called 2. By new obedience CHAP. II. 2. The Execution of Gods Decree GOD executes his Decree by Actions Creation and Providence Gods workes are in time 1. Past Creation of all things 2. Present Governement and preservation Creation is taken 1. Strictly when God makes any Creature of nothing meerly of nothing not as if nothing were the matter but the terme so the souls of men and Angels are created of nothing 2. Largely when of some prejasent matter but very unfit and indisposed a creature is made as Adam of the earth Creation is the action of God whereby out of nothing he brought forth nature it selfe and all things in nature both substances and accidents in and with the substances and finished them in the space of sixe dayes both to his owne glory and the salvation of the Elect. Or it is an action whereby God the Father by his word and holy Spirit made all things exceeding good for the glory of his name Or thus Creation is a transient or externall action of God whereby in the beginning He made the world by a meere command out of his owne free will in sixe dayes space to the glory of his name 1. An action not a motion or change motion argueth some succession but in the things created the fieri factum esse is all one nor is it a change because that supposeth some alteration in the Agent 2. Transient it passeth from the Agent to the thing created whereas in immanent actions as Gods will decrees and personall actions they abide in himselfe 3. Of God The efficient cause of Creation is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost Creation is the proper worke of God alone so that He is God which created the world and he created the world who is God Jer. 10. 11. It is without controversie that the worke of creation agrees to God the Father the same is expressely given to the Sonne John 1 3. Col. 1. 16. and to the Holy Ghost also Psal. 33. 6. 4. In the beginning By the Scripture it is a matter of faith to hold that the world was not from all eternity in the beginning that notes not that there was time first and then God created the world for time is a creature and concreated but it denotes orde that is at first 5. The world that is the Heaven and Earth and all things contained in them Acts 4. 4. and 17. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that well ordered decent beautifull and comely frame of heaven and earth 6. By his meere command as appeares Gen. 1. Let there be light let there be heavens w●ich argues his omnipotencie 7. Out of his owne free will for God did not need the world and therefore he created it no sooner 8. The finall cause to the glorie of his name Rom. 2. 20. Three Attrbiutes especially manifest themselves in this work of Creation Gods power wisedome goodnesse his power in that he made all thing● by a word and of nothing his wisedome is seene in the order and exceeding wonderfull and particular uses all creatures have his goodnesse in that he would communicate being to the creatures He needed not the world but was happie enough in himselfe without men or Angels The worke of Creation say some set out generally in a generall proposition In the beginning God created the Heavens and the Earth Which proposition He after explains by its parts That the world was not from eternity but was made by God these arguments may perswade First and principally Faith Heb. 11. 3. which is grounded upon divers places of Scripture as the first and second chapters of Genesis 38 and 39 chapters of Job and some Psalmes almost whole as 104. and 136. this also is the first Article of our Creede that the world was created in time by God The Apostle Paul Acts 14. 15. and 17. 24. doth point out God to the Heathen by this worke above others Secondly and probably the light of nature shining in these reasons 1. The originall of Nations laid downe by Moses Gen. 10. and else where which could not be fained by him since some memorie of them was then extant among many which yet in progresse of time was extinguished 2. The beginning of Arts the first inventers whereof are known and in what time they flourished for it is not probable that so many ages before mankind lived without arts and that in these last times they were all both invented perfected 3. The newnesse of all Heathenish histories the ancientest of which tell of nothing before Noah's flood or the beginning of the Assyrian Empire under Ninus The holy history it selfe is only of 4000. yeares or thereabout which neverthelesse i● the greatest monument of antiquity Now it would be a most unworthy reproach and contumelie cast upon all those men who had lived so many infinite ages agoe to say that they were so ignorant that they could not or so sloathfull that they would not deliver in writing what was done in their times 4. The decay of mans bodie and age which from a great strength quantity bignesse and time of life is now come down to a narrow scantling which if had decreased so alwais in infinite ages it would by this time have been brought almost to nothing The certaine series and order of causes and impossibility of their proceeding in infinitum for it must needs be that there should be one first which is the universall cause but first it is not unlesse it be one nor one except it be God 6. As a thing is so it workes but God doth not depend upon another in his being therefore neither in working doth he require a pre-existent matter 7. Art presupposeth nature and nature matter but God in working is a more excellent cause then art or nature therefore presupposeth nothing in working 8. The first cause viz. God is infinite therefore he can do whatsoever implyeth not a contradiction but the Creation of things in time implyeth it not 9. Whatsoever perisheth hath a beginning the world doth perish because all its parts decay and are subject to corruption therefore the whole The Angels and soules of men are changeable by nature as appears by the
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
made and adorned so it is probable that the Angels were made together in a great multitude After the Heavens their habitation was finished Chemnit in loc commun Gen. 2. 1. The Heavens and all the host of them It is plain from Job 38. 7. that they were made before the Earth When God laid the foundations of the earth and laid the Corner-stone thereof then the Sons of God that is the Angels Job 1. 7. Snouted for joy An Element is that whereof any thing is compounded and it selfe uncompoun●ed Each element is superiour to other not more in place then dignitie The dry land is called earth which is a firme cold dry Element round and heavie hanging unmoveably in the midst of the world fit for habitation The Psalmist describes the creation of the earth Psal. 104. vers 5 Who hath laid the foundation of the earth or founded the earth upon his Basis that it should not be removed for ever The earth is the heaviest and lowest element It is so made that it doth stand firme in its place so that neither the whole earth is moved out of its place nor yet the great parts of it This is an exceeding wonderfull worke of God to settle the earth so upon certaine foundations that it is not shaken out of its place Take a little piece of earth not bigger then ones fist nay then ones eye or the apple of it hold it up in the aire let it fall it will never cease moving till come to lye upon some solid bodie that it may hold it up stay the motiō of it Now how is it that this whole lump of earth the whole body I say of the earth hangeth fast in the wide and open aire and doth not sway and move now hither and now thither what is it that holdeth it up so stedfast in the very midst of the aire It is Gods worke who hath founded it on his Basis that it cannot be moved This worke is often mentioned in the Scripture Joh 26. 7. There is nothing which might hold it up yet behold it hangeth still and quiet as if it had some pillar or base upon which to rest it selfe The Lord doth in larger words commend it to the consideration of Job when himselfe comes to speake with him Job 38. 4. 6. God there compareth himselfe to a builder that layes the foundation and then sets up the building by line and measure and convinceth Job of his weaknes that knoweth not how this earth should be set up or founded whereas the Lord himself effected this building long before Job was David telleth of it Psal. 24. 2. as a ground of Gods right unto it and to all things that are in it for saith he He hath founded it upon the seas and established it upon the flouds And Solomon mentions it Prov. 8. 29. and 30. 4. Eccl. 1. 4. This is a great work because it is both necessary and unsearcheable It is necessary for it is the cause of the order of things in all the world and of their not being jumbled and confounded together If the lowest part of any building be not firme all that is built upon it will totter and tumble and come downe quickly so if the earth this lowest part of the world should shake or reele and be apt to move hither and thither the things that be upon it by nature or that are built upon it by the workmanship of man could not possibly subsist or endure Rivers and Channels would be daily altered dry ground would ever and anon become Sea and Sea dry ground trees would often totter and fall or else be changed from place to place building and houses would still bee falling and tumbling down off the earth did it not keepe its own room nay heaven earth would come together utter confusion would overturne the face of the earth and men beasts and all things below would come to nothing So needfull it was for this great Architect to set the Corner-stone of the earth fast firm and immoveable But the cause of it is unsearcheable who can find out to the full the reason of this so necessary a work Every heavy thing we see must have something to keepe it up something on which to rest it selfe that it may goe no further but abide where it is but what doth this earth rest on How is it held so even in the very midst and sweyed neither one way nor another who can tell me a full just satisfactory reason in nature We must not thinke that God doth hold it up by an immediate violent supernaturall or miraculous working but in a naturall way by ordering the principles of nature so that they shall necessarily concurre to effect this setlednesse Philosophers give this reason of it they say the simple bodies were made some of a light subtill thin and spirituall nature and their propertie is to ascend to goe upward still so as the light still flies higher and some of a more grosse thicke and heavie nature and the property of these is to move downward and still the heavier to make it selfe a way through the lighter and to presse toward the Center that is the middle point of the whole round of the world for it must bee confessed that the world is round Wherefore seeing every part and portion of the earth presseth toward the very middle point of all it cannot be but that all must stand fast in the midst seeing each part thronging the other and leaning upon the other toward the very middle all will bee quiet if the parts be even poised But now how heavie things should be made so to move toward the Center and how each part should so evenly move and a number of other questions more let them answer that are able especially seeing the earth doth not carry in it selfe to sense a perfect even and smooth roundnesse it is hard then to answer to the question which God propounded to Job upon what bee the sockets of it fastned It is a worke of God exceeding our capacitie and must therefore quicken and call up our admiration We should blame our selves for so seldom putting our selves in mind of this great work to stir up our selves to magnifie the Author of it and make it an argument of our blessing his name for which David speaketh of it Psal. 104. or of humbling our selves before him in acknowledgment of his power and wisdome and of our weaknesse and follie to which end it is mentioned in other places or indeed to any good purpose of informing our selves the better either of his nature or our dutie Oh how brutish and blockish are we So strange so mightie a worke is done and continued in our sight here it was done before I was here and here it will remaine and bee continually done after I am gone hence I enjoy the benefit of it as well as any other and with all others and yet
when did I take it into consideration When did I once offer it to the serious meditation of my minde When did I say to my selfe how doth this great ball of earth remaine unmoveable in the midst of this wide and spacious Heaven Why doth it not reele or totter toward the North or South the East or West or now upward now downward What hand doth hold it up and that so stedfastly that for thousands of yeares it hath not moved surely some potent and intelligent workman hath in such a wonderfull manner reared up and founded this building That is he whom we call God why do I not fasten in my selfe a more sure and firme notion of his being and a more lively firme and effectuall acknowledgement of his excellencie We are worthy of great blame that have scarce ever directed our minds to the contemplation and fruitfull meditation of this great act of God among the rest for any good spirituall and holy intent Schollers sometimes in their Philosophicall studies stumble upon these questions and set their witts on worke to find out the natural reason of them but alas in how unsanctified a manner so as not at all to inforce the thing upon their soules for making of them more thankfull and obedient But for the plaine man that is no Scholler though he have wit enough for all things else yet hee hath no wit to enter upon these cogitations and when he findeth the matter so farre above his reach yet to tell himselfe that this is one of Gods workes and so to call on himselfe to feare know and obey him this this is that we must every man lament in himselfe as a just and due cause why the Scripture should ascribe brutishnesse unto us and we unto our selves and why wee should present our selves before the divine Majesty with bashfull and lowly confessions of our wrong done to God in robbing him of the honour due unto him for his workes which our selves have the fruit of Secondly to our selves in depriving our selves of the best and most excellent fruit of them which is to be led by them above themselves unto him This may exhort every one of us to take this work of God from David and to make it as it were our theame or the object of our meditations Whosoever applyeth himselfe to raise up such thoughts shall finde a great unaptnesse in himselfe and a kinde of wearinesse to them with a vehement inclination to entertaine other fancies and the Devill will take occasion hence to disswade him from doing the duty at all as if it were as good omit it as performe it so weakly it is a false tale which Satan tells for God hath promised acceptance to the weakest endeavours in calling himselfe a Father but to accept of the non-performance he hath never promised for even a Father cannot do that Lastly we must learn to seeke unto God and trust in him for spirituall stability of grace in our soules and must thus importune him Lord when there was never an earth thou mad'st one and didst lay the foundation of it so sure that no force nor skill can move it O thou canst also create a frame of holinesse in my heart and soule and so stablish settle and confirm it that it shall never be moved I beseech thee and trust that thou wilt do this as thou hast done the former One prime use to which we must improve these naturall benefits is to quicken our prayers and confirme our faith in begging and expecting such as are spirituall When God will confirme the faith of his people and winne them to call upon him for good things he puts them in minde of these wonders in nature they must make use of them therefore for this purpose ●The second Element is water so necessary a creature as nothing can be more dangerously or uncomfortably wanting to the life of man It is an Element moyst in some degree and cold in the highest therefore it cooles the body and tempers the heate that it grow not excessive It hath manifold uses constantly 1. We and our Cattel drinke of it and neither can continue without water or something made of it our bread must be kneaded with it and our meate boyled with it 2. It serves to wash our bodies and the apparell wee weare if our hands and feete were never washt what an evill smell should we carrie about 3. It makes the earth fruitfull The Husband-man looseth his labour if after sowing there come no raine it is 1. Of large and common use no Countrey can want it neither rich nor poore man nor beast 2. Of constant use we must have it daily or something made of it and our beasts also 3. Very profitable we drinke it and wash with it and our meate is prepared by it and beasts drinke it It reprehends us that so ungratefully enjoy and devoure this benefit without lifting our hearts up to God and praising him for it A secret Atheisme prevailes in our hearts which is the cause of this great blockishnesse and ingratitude and corrupts all things to us and forfeits them provokes Gods justice against us Say Lord thou mightst justly choak me for the time to come for want of water that have not been particularly thankfull to thee for this mercie Wee should bring in the parcels of Gods goodnesse for bread water fire when thou washest thy hands let thy heart be lifted up to God that made the Element Say O that I could praise love and obey him that hath done this for me The usefulnesse abundance and easinesse to come by doth highly commend this benefit and the giver of it shewing water to be very good and our selves much beholding to him that giveth it Aunciently in those warmer Countreys especially water was the usuall drinke of men therefore in the description of the cost of famillies in house-keeping when we read of so many Oxen and Sheep slaine and so much meale and fine flower we reade not of any wine which would have been mentioned if it had been usually drunke 3. The Aire or all the void place betweene the clouds and the earth giving breath of life to all things that breath this is the third Element light and subtill moving upward not downeward because it hath no heavinesse in it It is divided into three regions or stages The highest is said to be exceeding hot and also dry because it is neare the fiery Element and starres by the force of whose beames it receiveth the heate which also is much encreased by following the motions of the Heavens The lowest region is they say hot and moist hot by the reflection of the Sun-beames meeting with the earth and moyst from its own proper nature and by reason of the vapours exhaled out of the earth and water or rather it is variable now bot now cold sometime temperate differing according to times and seasons of the yeare and places also or severall climates The middle
must needs be at least 160. times 60. miles every houre that is almost 16000. miles every houre that is 166. miles every minute The celerity of this motion b is incredible it goes beyond the thoughts of a man to conceive distinctly of the passage through every place if a man should divide the circumference of the circle of the Sunne into certaine parts he could not so soone have thought of them as the Sun runs through them God doth this great work it is thought to be caused by the turning round of the highest Sphere or the Firmament which pulling along with it selfe the inferiour Orbes makes them to move according to its course but who can give a reaso● why that Spheare it selfe should goe so swiftly even much more swiftly then the Sun because it is far higher then the Sun as much as that is higher then the earth but the immediate power of God who doth move all in moving this one But that God should make the Sun fulfill such a daily race to make day and night it highly commends the work Againe the usefulnesse of it is great for if it should be in any place alwayes night what could they doe how should they live How would any thing grow seeing the nights are cold light and heate being companions and cold and darknesse being companions If no light had beene in the world the world would not have beene a place fit for living things But if one halfe only of the world should have had light with it alwayes it would have caused excessive heate and so would have burnt up and consumed all things beene no lesse harmfull then the defect of heat but now the succession of one of these to the other viz. light and heate to darknesse and cold doth so temper them by a kind of mixture that it is in such proportion in every place as is necessary to bring forth all sorts of living things especially the fruites of the earth So God hath assigned such a way and race to the Sunne which by his presence makes day and by his absence night as was fit only fit for the quickning enlivening and comfort of every kind of living creature so that upon this course the wel-being yea the very being almost of all things doth depend Wee should lament and bewaile our exceeding great blindnesse that live day after day and night after night and yet busie not our selves about this worke not see God in it though it be so constant as it was never stopped but twice since the beginning of the Creation viz. in Hezekiah's time by going backe of the Sunne and in Joshuah's time by stopping of the Sun for a certaine time by the immediate power of God We have the profit of the day and of the night but neither in one nor other do we mark the wisedome goodnesse and power of God In the night men rest and refresh their bodies with sleepe wilde beasts then wake and hunt for their prey In the day men and tame creatures make and dispatch their businesse and eate and drinke and wilde beasts then rest in their dens God is still working for us our thoughts are still idle towards him this is a proofe of our Atheisme and estrangement from him this is the blindenesse of our mindes a not being able to discern of things by discourse of reason the power of understanding for the conceiving of which just and plain reasons are offered unto us There is a natural blindnesse of the eye when it is unable to discerne things by the light of the Sun this is felt and complained of but spirituall blindnesse of mind is when it is unable to discerne supernaturall truths which concerne the soule and another and better life by the use of reason and helpe of those principles which are as light unto it this is not felt nor lamented but it is therefore not felt because it is so naturall to us and because we brought it into the world The beginning of the cure of spirituall blindnesse is to see it let us see it therefore and be troubled at it why do not I see Gods great worke in making night and day to succeed each other Let us looke up to God in this worke and meditate on it at fit times in the morning so soone as we are awake and begin to see the darknesse vanquished and the light conquering and that the Sun is raised above our Horizon and is come to visite our parts againe it were a fruitfull thing to think thus How great a journey hath the Sunne gone in this little time wherein I have been asleep and could observe nothing and now returned againe as it were to call me up say Lord thou hast made night I have the benefit of it and now light visits me Oh that I could honour thee and magnifie thy power and the greatnesse of thy hand and use the light of the day to do the services that are required at my hand in my place Againe in the evening a little before we sleepe we should think of the great work of making day for these many houres the Sun hath beene within our sight and shewed its beames and light unto us and hath run a long race for our good bringing with it lightsome cheerfulnesse the companion of the day Now it is gone to the other part of the world to visite them that God might shew his goodnesse to one place as well as to another Where a multitude of things concur to one effect with which none of them in particular is acquainted there we cannot but know that one common wisedome ruleth them all and so it is in the working of the Sun Moone and Stars to make the Seasons of the day and night and of Summer and Winter therefore some common wisedome must over-rule all of them There is a spirituall light in our Horizon whereas Judaisme and Turcisme is darknesse and Popery a glimering light We should pray to God to give us spirituall light and be thankfull for it He makes day and night also in respect of prosperity and adversity weeping may continue for a night this vici●litude keepes the soule in growth in good temper as the other is profitable for the body pray to God to send Christ to them which sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death and vouchsafe to make it day with them as well as with us Hee hath said in his word that hee will discover the glory of his Sonne and all the earth shall see it together CHAP. IIII. BY the name of Clouds and Waters above the Firmament Gen. 1. We may understand all meteores both watery and fiery which were then created in their causes and so by clouds and windes Psal. 104. 3. must be understood all the meteors the great works of God by which he sheweth himselfe worketh in this lower Heaven They are called Meteors because they are most of them generated
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
evill hee should practically feele what he had lost and what evill he had plunged himselfe into Some have thought that those words Gen. 3. 24. should not be understood Historically but allegorically that is that God gave him noe hopes of coming into this place againe but the text contradicts that some have understood by Cherubims some species and images of terrible creatures as wee call Scarecrowes but that is simple to thinke that Adam was so childish to be afraid of those others interpret it of the fire of Purgatory The more probable Interpretation is that by Cherubims are meant Angels who did after a visible manner shake up and downe this fiery sword Moses doth therfore call them Cherubims because the Jewes knew what he meant having such formes over the Arke Therefore it is taken for Angels not simply but as they appeared in some shape It is a curiositie to enquire how long they staid there although it is certaine they ceased when Paradise was destroyed which was by the floud Therefore this serves 1. For information to instruct us 1. That everyman and woman hath a soule there is a bodie and a spirit which enlivens acts the bodie for all performances of the Compositum we must glorifie God in both 1. Cor. 6. 20. 2. It is immortall by Gods appointing but in it selfe endable because it hath a begining that it may be capable of everlasting weale or woe 3. It is soe immortall that it admits of no cessation or intermission the Anabaptists say it is asleep when it parts frō the bodie as soone as it leaves the bodie it goes either to Abrahams bosome or a place of torment 4. At the last day it shall be united with the bodie and the bodie raised up for it and both be happie or miserable for ever 2. Be thankfull to God that hath given us our soules and redeemed them by the bloud of his Son propter hanc Deus facit mundum propter hanc filius Dei venit in mundum Chrysost. blesse him especially for sovle-mercies Ephes. 1. 3. 3. John 2 4. and let the soule praise him Psal. 103. and 104. first and last Wee should love our selves Psal. 22. 26. David calleth his soule his darling it is the immediate worke of God CHAP. IX Of Gods Providence TWo things are to be discussed abovt it 1. That there is a Providence wh●reby the world is governed 2. What it is 1. That there is a Providence which governeth the world and that nothing is done in the world without the certaine and determinate counsell of God is thus proved 1. Faith which leanes and rests on testimonies of holy writ Psal. 14. 2. and 33. 13. the 104. Psal. wholly and 91. Psal. 8 9 10 11. Act. 17. 25. 28. Ephes. 1. 11. At the feast of Tabernacles the Jewes were wont to reade the Booke of Ecclesiastes principally because it speakes so much of the workes of Gods providence 2. Certaine demostrative reasons taken 1. From the causes viz. the Attributes and nature of God 1. There is a God therefore providence because he is a most powerfull and wise King 2. The omnipotent will of God whereby all things are done without which nothing can come to passe 3. His infinite wisedome whereby he can be present with all things which are done in his kingdome 4. His justice in distributing rewards and punishments and goodnesse whereby he communicateth himselfe to the creatures 5. His foreknowledge of all things ● unchangeably depending on the counsell and decree of God 6. He regards the ends of things therefore also the meanes to those ends 7. Hee is the first cause therefore on him depend the second causes 2. From tbe effects the works of God 1. The most wise order of things both naturall and politicke which could not be setled much lesse preserved by blind nature chance or fortune 2. Naturall notions or the law of nature in the difference of honest and dishonest things 3. Peace or torment of conscience from keeping or violating the Law 4. Punishments rewards agreeable to mens deeds which prove there is some Judge of the world and revenger of sins whose severity we cannot shun 5. Heroicke motions vertues and singular gifts given by God to Princes Magistrates Inventers of Arts Artificers others for the common benefit of mankind Lastly by the same reasons it is proved that there is both a God and Providence 2. what providence is It is an externall and temporall action of God whereby he preserveth governeth and disposeth all and singular things which are and are done both the creatures and the faculties and actions of the creatures and directeth them both to the mediate ends and to the last end of all after a set determinate manner according to the most free Decree Counsell of his owne will that himselfe in all things may bee glorified 1. The matter or object of Gods providence is the whole world and whatsoever is b in it for God cares for and governs all things Substances Accidents things great and little necessary and contingent good and evill Hebr. 1. 3. Nehem. 9. 6. The care of God for the bruite beasts living creatures all Meteors is described Psal. 135. Job 37. 2. and ch 38. Matth. 6. 26. Also concerning voluntary things and actions of men good and bad as Prov. 26. 1. 9. Jer. 10. 23. Psalm 139. 1. Psalm 33. 13. 15. concerning things that are contingent Exod. 21. 13. Prov. 16. 33. Matth. 10. 29 30. The least and smallest things are by the God of heaven ordered disposed of according to his owne pleasure and wisdome for very good purpose not so much as a sparrow falls to the ground without Gods providence he saith the hairs of our head are all numbred therefore Cicero was out when he said Dij magna cu●ant parva negligunt and the Poet Non vacat exiquis rebus adesse Iovi The reasons of this are these 1. God is infinite in all excellencies infinite in wisedome there may as much wisdome be seen in little as in great things all things in the world yea even all things which might have beene as well as those that have fallen out are subject to his wisedome and power nothing so small but it is a fit subject of knowing and ordering 2. There is a necessary connexion and mutuall dependance betweene great and small things the one supporting upholding the other so that it is not possible to conceive how any thing should be ordered by God if all things were not the little things being like the pins of a house which hold the building together or the hinges of a great gate upon which the whole is moved Object These things are so small as it is an abasement to the Divine Majesty to intermeddle with them Sol. It is his highest commendation to be infinite so that nothing can bee hid from his knowledge the Lords manner of working in
they are divided ibid. Authenticall what it is l. 1 p. 91 Which are the Authenticall editions of Scripture l. 1 p. 92 100 101 102 Neither the Translation of the Seventy nor the vulgar Latine are Authenticall l. 1 p. 119 120 121 122 Authority of Scripture is Divine l. 1. p. 8 to 24. 130 131 B BEasts their usefulnesse l. 3 p. 81 to 85 Bees for what they are notable l. 3. p. 80 Bible why so called l. 1. p. 8. m. Who first distinguished the Bible into Chapters and Verses l. 1. p. 46 Blessed God is most Blessed l 2 p. 119 to 126 What Blessednesse is l. 2 p. 120 121 Blindnesse naturall and Spirituall l. 3. p. 42 43 Body taken three waies l. 2. p. 25 God is not a Body l. 2. p. 24 25 Bounty in God what it is l. 2 p. 83 84 85 86 C CAnon why the Scripture is called a Canone or Canonicall l. 1. p. 42 43 The condition of a Canon l. 1. p. 43 There is a threefold Canon in the Church l. 1. p. 43 44 83 84 Some abolish some adde to others diminish the Canone ibid. Which are the Canonicall Bookes of the old Testament l. 1. p. 48 to 60 Which of the New l. 1 65 66 67 Seven Epistles are called Canonicall and why l. 1 p. 77 78 Canticles why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 56 Catholique why seven Epistles are so called l. 1. p. 77 78 Chaldee why some part of the old Testament was written in Chaldee l. 1. p. 93 94 The Chaldee Paraphrast l. 1 p. 94 95 96 Christ is God l. 2. p. 131 132 133 Chronicles why so called and who best expounds them l. 1 p. 51 52 Christall what it is l. 3. p. 53 Church it hath a fourfold office in respect of the Scripture l. 1 p. 29 The true Church hath given testimony to the Scripture in all ages l. 1. p. 20 21 We believe not the Scripture chiefly for the Churches testimony l. 1 p. 26 27 28 29 30 Clemency in God what it is l. 2 p. 77 Cloudes what they are a great worke of God l. 3. p. 47 48 49 Colosse the chiefe City of Phrygia l. 1. p. 74 Who best expound the Colossians ibid. Conclusion whether that of the Lords prayer be true Scripture l. 1. p. 115 Conscience what it is the testimony of it is strong to prove that there is a God l. 2. p. 6 Corinth famous for divers things l. 1. p. 73 Who best interpret ●oth the Corinthians ibid. Councell the Florentine and Trent Councels not lawfull Councels l. 1. p. 89 90 Creation what it is l. 3. p. 13 14 Taken strictly and largely ib. The efficient cause matter form and end of it l. 3. p. 14 17 19 20 Consectaries from it l. 3. p. 20 21 22 The workes of each day l. 3 p. 23 24 25 26 D DAniel why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 58 59 Day what it is and the benefit of it l. 3. p. 40 41 42 Decree what the word signifieth and how it is defined l. 3 p. 2 How far it extends and the properties of it l. 3. p. 3 4 The kinds of it and the execution of it l. 3. p. 4 Devils their names and nature l. 3. p. 105 106 What the sinne of the Devils was l. 3. p. 106 107 Why they fell irrecoverably l. 3 p. 107 108 They are malicious subtill powerfull l. 3. p. 108 109 110 Some questions about the Devils l. 3. p. 110 111 112 113 114 Deuteronomy why so called and who best expounds it l. 1 p. 49 Dew what it is l. 3. p. 52 Divine why John so called l. 1 p. 69 Divinity that it is l. 1. p. 1 2 What it is l. 1. p. 3 4 The severall kinds of it l. 1 p. 2 4 How it is to be taught l. 1 p. 4 5 How to be learnt l. 1. p. 5 The excellency of it l. 1. p. 6 7 The opposites of it l. 1. p. 6 Dominion what it is Gods Dominion l. 2. p. 52 53 E EArth the Creation of it is a great worke l. 3. p. 31 32 It is firme and stable l. 3. p. 32 to 36 Earthquake l. 3. p. 33. m. Ecclesiastes why so called and who best expound it l. 1. p. 55 56 Election the severall acceptions of the word and how it is defined l. 3. p. 6 The object and end of it l. 3 p. 7 8 All are not elected l. 3. p. 9 Consectaries from Gods Election l. 3. p. 11 12 Element what it is and the number of the Elements l. 3 p. 31 32 Elephant whence derived his excellency l. 3. p. 82 83 End the Ends of the Scripture l. 1. p. 128 129 Ephesus a famous City l. 1 p. 73 Who best expounds the Ephesians l. 1. p. 73 74 Epistles why so called l. 1. p. 67 How they are divided and who best expounds them l. 1 p. 70 71 72 In what order they were written l. 1. p. 70 VVhich Epistles were doubted of for a time l. 1. p. 65 Esay an Evangelicall Prophet l. 1. p. 57 How often quoted in the new Testament and who have best expounded it l. 1. p. 57 Esther why so called and who hath best expounded it l. 1 p. 52 53 Eternall God is Eternall l. 2 p. 40 41 42 43 The world was not Eternall l. 3. p. 15 16 17 Evangelists who l. 1. p. 68 How they agree and differ l. 1 p. 64 65 VVho best expound them l. 1 p. 67 Exodus why so called and who are the best Expositors on it l. 1. p. 48 Expositors on Scripture who are the best among the Jewes Fathers Papists Protestants l. 1. p. 183 to 189 Ezekiel why so called and who hath best interpreted it l. 1 p. 58 Ezra why so called and who hath best expounded it l. 1. p. 52 F FAithfull God is faithfull l. 2. p. 97 98 99 Fire the qualities of that Element l. 3 p. 38 Fishes their nature and use l. 3 p. 75 76 77 80 81 Fowles their nature and use l. 3 p. 78 79 80 Frost what it is l. 3. p. 52 G GAlatians the subject of that Epistle and who best expounds it l. 1. p. 73 Ghost the Holy Ghost is God l. 2. p. 135 136 Glorious God is glorious l. 2 110 to 120 God how he is called in severall languages l. 2. p. 1. m. The knowledge of God is necessary profitable and difficult l. 2. p. 1 2 VVe know God three waies and there is a threefold knowledge of him l. 2 p. 2 VVhat the Heathens knew of God l. 2. p. 3 That there is a God l. 2. p. 3 to 16 VVhat God is l. 2. p. 18 19 How the word God is taken in Scripture l. 2. p. 19 The Names of God l. 2. p. 19 20 His Attributes what they be l. 2. p. 20 How they differ from Properties and what rules are to be observed in attributing them to God l. 2. p.
Greenhill on third of Ezek. v. 14. p. 316. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Analysis 1. Grammatica quae proprias 2. Rhetorica quae tropicas dictiones excutit 3. Logica quae scopum q●ae antecedentium consequentium seriem pr●bationumque vim indicat Altingius * Illum Graeci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocant Latini post eos abijs Deum dix●re Galli I●ali Hispani mut●●to à Latini● nomine Dieu Dio Dios appellant Germani Angli Belgae Go●t vel God●um ●um nuncupant a Act. 17. 27. Rom. 1. 20. 21. * Ephes. 4. 18. There is no equall proportion between the facultie and the object Deum dignè aestimamus dum inaessimabilem dicimus Cyprian De Deo etiam dicere vera periculosum est Ruffin in exposit Symb. Things that excell in Scripture phrase usually are said to be things of God Psal. 36. 6. and 80. 10. John 3 3. * Some u●g● this what Moses was to the Jewes Christ in the new Testament that was Philosophie to the Heathens enough to save them Erasmus had much adoe to forbeare saying Sancte Socrates ora pro nobis But omnis doctrina Philosophorum ●ine Capite quia Deum ignorabant Lactantius extra ecclesiam nulla salus See Matth. 4. 16. 2 Cor. 4. 3. and Doctor Prideaux in his eighth L●●ure de Salute Ethnicorum To beleeve there is a God is the foundation of all Religion Caput est primum Divine legis ipsum Deum n●sse Loctamius It is a question whether ●man by the light of nature may know that there is a God Though this be denied by the Socinians yet those Scriptures Rom. 1. 19. and Psal. 19. heg seeme to prove it There are two kinds of Demonstrations or proofes 1. A demonstrating of the effects by their causes which is a proof ● priori Principles cannot be demonstrated à causa and ● priori because they have no superiour cause A demonstrating of causes by their effects which is a proofe drawne à posteriori So principles may be demonstrated All principles being Prima and Notissima of themselves are thereby made indemonstrable Quad sit D●us * The weightiest Testimony that can be brought to prove there is a God is to produce the Testimony of God speaking in his own word None other in the world can have equall authority John 8. 13. 14. Yet this Testimony is not allowed by the Atheists For as they deny that there is a God so they deny likewise that the Scripture is his word Atheomastix l. 1. c. 2. Nulla gens tam effera ac barbara qvae non cognoscat esse Deum Cicero de natura Deorum Epicurum ipsum quem nihil pudendum pudet tamen Deum negare pudet Mornaeus * Inveniuntur qui si●e rege sine lege vivunt qui sub diò degunt qui nudi serarum instar sylvas oberrant avia querunt obvia depascuntur Qui religion●● specie qui sacris qui numinis sensu planè carerent nulli inventi sunt nulli et●amnum inveniuntur Morneus de veritate Christianae relig C. 1. A Iove principium musae * The most pregnant and undeniable p●oofe of the God-head with the Heathen was the voyce of conscience The Scripture sheweth that the wicked were much terrified in their consciences after the committing of hainous sinnes R●m 2. 15. Is●y 57. 20. 21. Marke 6. 14. 16. So doth common experie●ce teach in Murtherers Theeves and the like Marke 9. 44. Act. 16. 25. Act. 12. 6. Psal. 3. 6. and 46. 1. 2. Si fractus illabatur orbis impavidum ferient ruinae Horat. Every effect hath its cause whatsoever is wrought or done is wrought or done by some thing which hath ability and fitnesse to produce such an effect seeing nothing can doe nothing and what hath not sufficiency to produce such and such effects cannot produce them Of whom there be workes and effects he is of God there be workes and effects therefore there is a God As God is to be felt sensibly in every mans conscience so is he to be seene visibly in the Creation of the world and of all things therein contained Man the best of the creatures here below was not able to raise up such a Roofe as the Heavens nor such a floore as the earth D●cter Preston Job 12. 9. Serviunt omnia omnibus uni omnia Mundi Creatio est Dei Scriptura cuius ●ria sunt f●lia Caelum terra mare The preserving and ordering of the world and humane societies in it the planting and defending of the Church A number of wheeles in a Clocke doe worke together to strike at set times not any one of them knowing the intention of the other therefore they are ordered and kept in order by the care of some wise person which knowes the distance and frame of each and of the whole An Army of men could not meet together at one time and in one place to fight for or against one City if the wisdome of one Generall did not Command over all A number of Letters cannot all fall orderly together to make perfect sence without some Composer Protogenes by the smallnesse of a line drawn in a Table knew Apelles the chiefest Artificer He that sees but the shape and ●ffigies of a man presently thinkes of a Painter * Hic compono canticum in Creatoris nostri laudem Si Humani corporla admirabilem constructionem intus extraque conspicimus ut omnia ibi etiam minima suos usus habeant nullo studio nulla industria parentum arte vero tanta ut philosophorum ac medicorum praestantissimi nunquam eam satis possint admirari Grotius The Sunne is moved by another by whom he is tyed unto such a str●ct and unalterable motion that Astronomers can surely tell unto the very minute all the Ecclipses that shall ever fall out so long as the world it selfe shall last Psal. 148. 6. * The Heathens called the Soule of man divinae particulam aurae a parcell of the Divine essence but that speech must be taken ●um grano satis Civill Eff●cts Politiae Leges probant mentemesse divinam intelligentem illas hominibus tum m●nstratem tum conervantem ne Diaboli impiorumodio machinationibus dissolutae corruant Deus enim est Deus ordinis Miraculous Effects Exodus 15. 11. 72. Psal. 18. and 136. 4. Isay 41. 23. A Miracle is a worke of infinite strength or omnipotency surpassing the whole power of created nature as to turne water into wine to multiplie seven loaves to the feeding and satisfying of 4000 men to give the use of sight to one borne blind to arise up a man indeed dead to cure a leprosie with the word The Brideling of wicked Spirits and men The Atheists third objection that Religion is but an humane invention Gen. 4. 3. 4. Gen. 3. 3. Matth. 15. 13. 2 Chron. 7. 5. * He sp●nds his whole second Booke about this reason The Greekes insinuate that all Arts come from God in