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A05099 The second part of the French academie VVherein, as it were by a naturall historie of the bodie and soule of man, the creation, matter, composition, forme, nature, profite and vse of all the partes of the frame of man are handled, with the naturall causes of all affections, vertues and vices, and chiefly the nature, powers, workes and immortalitie of the soule. By Peter de la Primaudaye Esquier, Lord of the same place and of Barre. And translated out of the second edition, which was reuiewed and augmented by the author.; Academie françoise. Part 2. English La Primaudaye, Pierre de, b. ca. 1545.; Bowes, Thomas, fl. 1586. 1594 (1594) STC 15238; ESTC S108297 614,127 592

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the graue hee sheweth after very euidently what he vnderstandeth by his soule when he saieth Thou hast reuiued me from them that goe downe into the pit Hee taketh this worde Soule in the same sense when he saieth that God deliuered his soule from death and from the midst of lions and when he prayeth him to deliuer his soule from the sword his desolate soule from the power of the dogge For it is easie to iudge by these wordes that he taketh not the soule in these places for the essence of the soule and proper substance thereof because the soule can not be smitten with the sword nor deuoured of lions nor carried away by dogges Therefore seeing the soule is so often put in the Scripture for corporall life which endeth with the body and which the soule giueth vnto it by meanes of those instruments which it hath in the body the name of Spirite is many times vsed therein to signifie more specially this essence and spirituall substance which wee call the soule and which may be separated both from the body and blood as that which liueth after the death of the body Therefore Dauid did so vse the word Spirite when he recommended his soule to God by the same wordes which Iesus Christ vsed vpon the crosse Afterward Saint Steuen tooke it in the same sense when he saide Lorde Iesus receiue my spirite For this is that spirite of which Salomon saieth that it returneth to God that gaue it after that the body is returned to the earth and to dust of which it consisteth And yet this difference is not alwayes obserued in the Scriptures For as wee haue already heard both the heart and soule and spirite are oftentimes generally and indifferently put for all the partes and powers of the soule and not onely for those of men but also of beastes as when the Wise man attributeth spirit vnto them hauing regard to this corporall life For when Salomon speaketh so it is in consideration of this life that consisteth in breath which is also called Spirit in the holy Scriptures which vse one the same word to signifie both wind and breathing and whatsoeuer we call spirit taking it both for the soule of man for the Angelicall natures and for the Diuine nature Therefore Iob speaking of this present life sayth So long as my breath is in me and the spirit of God in my nosethrilles my lippes surely shall speake no wickednesse and my tongue shall vtter no deceit But when Saint Paul saieth The same spirite beareth witnesse with our spirite that wee are the children of God hee taketh the worde Spirite in an other sence then Iob did in the place nowe alleadged For in the first place hee taketh the name of Spirite for the Spirite of GOD and in the second place for the Spirite of man which signifieth the humane soule It is true that in this place hee taketh it for the soule and for the spirit such as it is in regenerate men but when hee saieth elsewhere that the spirite of man knoweth the things of man hee taketh the spirite simply for a humane Spirite and for the vnderstanding part thereof Likewise the name of soule is put not onely for this naturall life and for the will and affections but also for the selfe same thing that is comprehended by this worde Spirite when one woulde signifie thereby the greatest excellencie of the soule As when Dauid sayeth Our soule waiteth for the Lord for hee is our helpe and our shield Surely our heart shall reioyce in him because wee trusted in his holie name And againe My soule reioyceth in the Lorde and is glad in his saluation And when Saint Peter sayeth Abstaine from fleshly lustes which fight against the soule and haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles hee taketh the name of Soule for the spirituall man who hath his minde and all his affections well ruled according to the will of GOD. As then wee haue heard in what sort the soule may die in regarde of this corporall life according to the phrase of the Scriptures and of the Hebrewes so by this which Saint Peter saieth that fleshly lustes fight against the soule wee may learne after what manner the soule may be said to die and to be slaine For nothing can bring death vnto it but sinne Wherefore it is not said without good reason in the Booke of Wisedome that the mouth that telleth lies slayeth the soule Albeit then the soule is immortall in that it can neuer be without life no more then the Angelles who are spirites like to it neuerthelesse it is after a sort mortall so farre forth as being farre off separated from God through sinne it liueth no more that blessed life wherewith it shoulde liue if it were vnited and ioyned vnto him by true faith and sincere obedience For it shoulde enioy the selfe same life which the heauenly Angelles with the soules and spirites of the blessed doe enioy As contrariwise the soules of the wicked liue with the same life that the Diuelles doe which is called dead because it is a more accursed life then death it selfe and therefore called the second and eternall death Nowe wee may thinke our selues sufficiently taught touching the diuerse significations in which the name of Soule is taken It seemeth to mee that wee haue spoken enough of the Anatomy of the bodie and soule of which the most of our discourses hitherto were made which may suffice for the contentation of euery one that will keepe himselfe within the bounds and limits set downe vnto vs by the wisedome of GOD in his word But to finish this whole matter concerning the soule which we haue chiefly considered in her parts powers and effects we are further yet to be instructed in the creation generation nature and immortalitie thereof And because they are marueilous difficult matters and such as are not without great contrarieties of opinions euen amongest the learned I am of opinion that these things are to be discoursed of according to that manner of teaching of the ancient Academickes which wee followed in our first meeting namely vpon the theame propounded vnto vs to ballance the arguments on the one part with the reasons of the other side that so we may diligently search out the trueth Notwithstanding it shal be lawfull for vs to deliuer our opinion so long as wee ground it vpon the infallible testimonie of the worde of God leauing to euery one his libertie to iudge which is best and to embrace and follow the same For our entrance therefore into so goodly a matter thou shalt beginne ASER to morrowe to declare vnto vs what thou shalt thinke good concerning this proposition namely whether the soule is begotten with the body and of the seede thereof or whether it be created apart and of another substance and what is requisit for vs to know therein The end of the
may more easily take holde then in another that is more contrarie to it It is otherwise with flegmatike or melancholike men according as the humours which rule in them dispose and incline them more to be caried with one affection rather then with another Therefore wee see that they which are of a cholericke complexion as they are of a more hote and dry nature so their affections are more sodain burning and violent like to fire Flegmatike and melancholy persons as they are colder so they are not so easily mooued but are more slowe and heauy and haue also other inclinations and other affections And as they that are cōmonly said to be sanguine are of the best temperature so their affections are for the most part more cheerful more temperate And as there are diuers mixtions of bodily qualities so there are sundry sorts of temperatures and complexions of the body and consequently of soules in regard of their saculties and affections Therfore also there is great agreement betweene corporall and spirituall Physicke For this cause the Physicions both of the bodies and soules of men are to follow almost one the same methode and obserue a like order in their arte practise euery one according to the subiects propounded vnto them insomuch that looke what the one doeth vnto the body the other is to deale so with the soule such things being applied as best agree with their seuerall natures Wherein they may further eche others worke greatly obseruing that ende at which both of them aime which to the one is the health of the body and to the other the cure of the soule considering that the one may helpe the other as hath bin already touched For if the body be not temperant hardly wil the soule be if the soule be intemperate the body desireth not to be temperant Therefore also we see that not only Physicions for the body appoint men diets both for the preseruation of their bodily health and also for the recouery restoring thereof again but also spiritual Physicions doe the like in regard of the soules health so farre foorth as bodily sobriety wil serue greatly to that purpose For this cause not only ordinary sobriety moderation which ought to be kept throughout the whole life of man is so greatly recommended vnto vs in the holy scriptures but fasts also which being more strict abstinēces are very profitable yea necessary oftentimes according to times places and persons For they serue to tame and humble the flesh that it may be the better kept in lesse hinder the spirit which thereby is the better inabled to attend to euery good worke to the contemplation of diuine celestial things Therfore the people of God holy men fasted oftē wherof wee haue many testimonies in the scriptures And as it is necessary that bodily Physicions should know wel the tēperatures complexions of mens bodies and their natures their health and diseases also with their conuenient and apt remedies so is it needfull that spirituall Physicions shoulde knowe the nature of soules of their faculties powers affections the natures of vertues which are their health and of vices which are their diseases together with those medicines remedies that are necessarie for the preseruation increase of vertues and for the diminution abolishing of vices For without this knowledge neither of them can be good Physicions but it may bee feared least they make the diseases worse or in steed of curing the sick persons kill them outright But we must yet draw more instruction out of this matter here offered vnto vs. For whatsoeuer hath beene hitherto spoken concerning the agreement between the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule or concerning the health diseases of them both or the knowledge that is requisit in Physicions to follow a good method in their art practise for the healing of their patiēts I say the vnderstāding of al these things is not only necessary for the Physiciōs both of soules bodies but euen for euery one of vs particularly For if we were all skilfull in the art of corporall Phisicke I meane not such skil as is needful for them that make publike profession thereof to all but onely so much as is necessary for the preseruation of our owne health I doubt not but we might easily auoyde many infirmities and diseases whereinto we fall daily for want of good diet good gouernment and the vse of those meanes which might either retaine vs in health or restore it quickly vnto vs when it is somewhat altered or impeached Moreouer we should haue this aduantage besides if we fell into any disease that we should know the better howe to keepe and gouerne our selues more moderately and wisely and obey the Physicions counsell the better because we should haue greater knowledge of that which we ought to doe of the danger whereinto we might fall or which we might easily auoyde Wee may say as much of the soules phisicke the knowledge whereof is a great deale more necessary for vs not onely because the soule is more noble and precious then the body but also because it is a harder matter to knowe the nature and diseases of the soule then of the bodie And if wee prooue so happie as to be able to comprehend any thing wee shall know daily better and better what things are in vs of God and what is his order as also what there is of Satans and what is that disorder and confusion which by meanes of sinne he hath brought into all things For as sinne is cause of that excesse which is in the qualities of which our bodies are made and consequently of the diseases that proceed from thence which afterward bring death to the bodie so is it in respect of the soule and of the excesse that is in the affections thereof and in all the other partes of it contrary to that nature in which God created the same And as sinne is the cause of the disorder and confusion that is in both of them so it is the cause that one helpeth to spoile another whereas there should be a pleasant harmonie and concord not onely of the bodily qualities among themselues and so likewise of the qualities of the soule among themselues but also of the qualities both of soule and bodie one with another For God hath put nor onely into our soules but into our bodies also the seedes of all the vertues and the pricks and meanes to incite and to leade vs vnto them in such manner and forme as shal be declared hereafter Although wee may learne somewhat by that which we haue heard alreadie of the conueniencie that is betweene the body and the soule betweene the temperature of the one and the affections of the other For if the one bee answerable and correspondent to the other no doubt but God so disposeth of
holes vnable to hold in and keepe anie secret matter they are fierce in assailing but inconstant in sustaining the assault in some sort resembling the nature of dogges which barke and bite if they can and afterward flie away And if there bee excesse of the melancholike humour the natures of such are sadde still hard to please suspicious conceited obstinate some more and some lesse And if the cholericke and melancholike humours be corrupt and mingled together their natures become monstrous prowd full of enuy fraud subtilties venemous and poisonfull hatefull and diabolicall And when the malignant spirits know mens natures thus disposed no doubt but they take occasion thereby to intermingle themselues if God permit them and purpose to vse them for the punishing of men I say they will ioyne themselues vnto them and make them their instruments as God on the other side vseth those natures that are most moderate and best tempered making them instruments of his glorie Now we may call to mind what we learned before almost to the same ende touching the meanes whereby euill spirites might trouble the imagination fantasie and mindes of men We may say as much of the humours of the body whose motions and nature they knowe very well Whereby they can so much the more easily abuse them in their damnable worke and will as wee may iudge by the example of him that was possessed and lunatike of whom the Euangelists make mention and whome they call by those two names And by that which they wrote of him it seemeth that he was subiect to the falling sickenesse that returneth oftentimes according to the course of the moone which naturally hath great affinitie with the humors and great power ouer them And therefore it is very likely that the euill spirit which tormented this poore lunatike watched the occasions of his disease to afflict him the more and to cause him to fall either in the fire or in the water as he did indeede thereby to worke his death if he had could Which example sheweth vnto vs what is the malice of the deuil what pleasure hee taketh in hurting of men what meanes and what occasions he seeketh for and maketh choice of and what accesse vnto vs we may offer him through our corrupt nature through our vices and sinnes and through our inclinations and manners that are naturally euill and peruerse if God letteth him loose the bridle by his iust iudgement seeing he spareth not the little children as it appeareth in that which is written of him of whom we spake euen now For this cause we ought to take good heede that we giue not our common enemie those occasions that he seeketh to haue from vs to the ende that hee abuse vs not nor any thing that is ours and which God hath bestowed vpon vs. This is the reason why the consideration of our temperature complexion and naturall inclination is very necessary for vs because the knowledge hereof affoordeth vnto vs many good instructions that may stand vs in great steade throughout our whole life as well for the preseruation of the health of our bodies as for the rule and gouernement of our affections and manners as also in regarde of the familiaritie and acquaintance which wee haue one with an other For through the contemplation hereof wee may knowe not onely the causes of health and sickenesse of the life and death of the body but also of that of the soule For as the good humours corrupt in our bodies according as wee haue heard and breede in them sundry diseases which finally leade them vnto death euen so by means of sinne all those good and naturall affections which ought to bee the seedes of vertues in vs are corrupted and turne into vices that are the diseases of the soule and bring vnto it the second and eternall death as contrariwise vertues are the health and life thereof But as GOD hath prouided corporall medicines for the bodie so hee hath prepared spirituall Physicke for the soule against all the diseases thereof Therefore when wee consider with our selues vnto what vices wee are inclined by nature wee must labour to correct and bridle them and to quench such inclinations as much as wee can through sobrietie vigilancie and continuall practise to the contrary least wee nourish and encrease them when as wee ought to diminish and wholy to abolish them For the common prouerbe is not without reason that Education passeth Nature or that it is another nature Wee see by experience what Education and Instruction are able to doe both to goodnesse and vice according as they are either good or euill For as there is no nature so good which can not bee corrupted and peruerted through euill education and teaching so there is none so vicious and euill which can not at the least in some measure through the helpe and grace of GOD bee corrected and amended by good education instruction and discipline And because conuersation and familiaritie are of great efficacie in this point wee are diligently to consider with what persons and natures wee acquaint our selues and bee carefull to eschew such natures as are vicious prowd fierce enuious hatefull malicious suspicious disloyall and traiterous as well in regarde of the corruption of manners wherewith wee may bee infected by them as also in respect of other harmes that may befall vs by reason they are vnsociable natures or at the least very difficult to conuerse withall being indeede such as towardes whome no man can beare any true loue or firme friendship But when wee haue vsed all the diligence wee can possible about these things the chiefest point wherein the whole consisteth is this that wee haue recourse to Iesus Christ the eternall sonne of GOD to the end that by his holy Spirit hee woulde correct represse and quench in vs all the vicious affections and disordered motions that wee haue contrary to his holy will according to that promise which is made vnto vs wherein it is saide that if fathers knowe howe to giue good gifts to their children and such things as are necessarie for them much more will our heauenly Father giue his holie Spirite to them that aske it of him And this is the true meanes wee ought to keepe for the correcting of these vices and defectes that are in our naturall inclinations Now wee haue spoken sufficiently of those things which concerne the naturall powers of the soule in respect of the nourishment and growth of the body and of those instruments which it hath in the same for the performaunce of her actions It remaineth nowe that wee consider what effectes it hath in Generation First then ASER thou shalt handle the restauration and reparation of all natures by that vertue and power of Generation that is in them and namely in man to the end wee may after proceede with those other points that concerne this matter Of the restauration and reparation of all
enioy whatsoeuer GOD hath prepared for it euen that which is most agreeable and proper to the nature thereof Wherefore wee may say that the death of man is a separation or a departure of the soule from the body wherein GOD propoundeth vnto vs a perfect image of our separation and departure from him which commeth by the meanes of sinne For wee see what becommeth of the body when the soule is gone from it and what it is during the time that it is ioyned therewith The difference is very great Let vs then propound our soule as if it were in the place of the bodie and imagine that God were insteade of the soule in it as wee fee the soule is in the body Then let vs consider what might be the estate of the soule both when it is ioyned with GOD and when it is separated from him For there is greater difference betweene the soule separated from GOD then betweene a body separated from his soule Forasmuch as there is no bodie so stincking nor so infected when it is separated from the soule as the soule is when it is separated from GOD if wee will compare spirituall things with corporall things And contrariwise wee may iudge of the estate thereof when it is ioyned with God by the estate of a body ioyned with his soule and by that difference which is betweene a dead body and a quicke Nowe if wee woulde well consider these things and compare the corporall death of the bodie with the spirituall death of the soule wee woulde abhorre sinne in greater measure then wee doe and bee more afraid of it then of anie thing that may come vnto vs. For there is nothing either in heauen or earth that can hurt vs but sinne as in deede nothing can bring dammage to vs but that which can hurt the soule But it is sinne onely that is able to hurt the soule because by it those meanes are taken away from the soule whereby GOD bestoweth spirituall life vpon it Therefore wee ought not to thinke that bodily death can anie way hurt the soule vnlesse it be in regarde of the euill life past It is true that seeing GOD hath created man to bee of such a nature as to be compounded of a bodie and of a soule and that his true and perfect estate consisteth heerein that they shoulde liue vnited and ioyned together it is very like that there is some euil in the seuering of thē asunder especially if any of them corrupt and perish and the euill may seeme to be doubled if both of them should corrupt perish as many epicures and atheists would haue it For if it be euill to haue but halfe a beeing the euill and imperfection is much more not to be at all seeing there is nothing more goodly or more excellent then to haue a beeing And if it be an excellent thing to bee then to bee well is a farre more goodly and excellent thing For therein consisteth the perfection and absolute felicitie of man Nowe there is no sound or perfect estate of anie man but onely that in which and for which GOD created him And although man bee fallen from that estate yet it hath pleased GOD not onely to restore him againe thereunto by his Sonne Iesus Christ but also to make it vnto him more entire and more perfect yea much more sure and stedfast then it was in the beginning For this cause if besides the benefite of creation wee consider also that of regeneration and of the restauration and repairing of man wee shall finde therein ample matter of true and sound consolation against death For wee knowe that this tabernacle of our body which is infirme faulty corruptible fraile and tending to putrifaction shall bee destroyed and as it were pulled downe to the ende that afterwardes it may bee restored vnto a perfect firme incorruptible and celestiall glorie Wee see that by death wee are called backe againe from a miserable exile to the ende that wee may dwell in our countrie euen in our heauenly countrie In a worde wee are assured by death to enioy such a blessed and permanent estate as the like whereof appeareth no where vpon the earth And if the brute beastes euen the insensible creatures as Saint Paul teacheth vs as wood and stone hauing some sence of their vanitie and corruption doe waite for the day of iudgement that they may bee deliuered from the same shall not wee bee very miserable hauing both some light of nature and also boasting that wee are inspired with the spirite of GOD if wee doe not lift vp our eyes aboue this earthly corruption when the question is concerning our beeing Shall wee not contemne and disdaine the vanitie of the worlde to aspire after the good beeing of the immortalitie to come Let vs knowe then that wee can not finde any true and sound consolation without this consideration and hope which is most assured to them that beleeue in Christ Iesus Therefore they that went not beyond the boundes of naturall Philosophie coulde neuer enioy anie true consolation either against the miseries of mans life or against corporall death And although they beleeued that together with the body whatsoeuer is in man was extinguished or otherwise that after the death of the body the soule remained immortall yet notwithstanding some haue done nothing else but mourne and complaine in this life insomuch as they haue laid violent handes as it were vpon Nature reuiling her and calling her the stepmother rather then the mother of mankind others haue doubted of their future estate and condition not being able to learne and knowe whether their soules should liue either in ioy and rest or els in paine torment but only by opinion Of which if we would discourse at large and consider particularly of their reasons we should be confirmed more and more in that true consolation that ought to bee in the heart of euery Christian against the honour of death Therefore I greatly desire ACHITOB to heare thee discoursing vpon this matter Of the chiefe consolations which the wisest amongst the Pagans and Infidels coulde drawe from their humane reason and naturall Philosophie against death of the blasphemies vsed by Atheists and Epicures against God and Nature what Nature is and who they bee that attribute vnto it that which they ought to attribute vnto God Chap. 76. ACHITOB. Trees haue their seasons in which they beginne to budde and afterwards do blossome which blossome in conuenient time taketh the forme and fashion of the fruite and after that it continueth growing vntill it becommeth ripe and beeing come to the greatest maturitie and ripenesse that it can haue it falleth down of it selfe and still consumeth more and more The same may bee saide of leaues But this happeneth not to all nor yet altogether after the self same maner to all those vnto whō it doth happen For some fruits perish euen in the very bud or els
in the floure and some after they are come to the fashion of fruit And of these latter sort some fade away sooner some later according to their sundry accidents For some are eaten by wormes other by noisome flies and some through diuers kinds of creeping things which bred in the fruite it selfe Againe some are shaken downe violently either through great mighty showres huge stormes blustering windes or els by haile and tempest beeing plucked forcibly from the trees before they can come to any ripenesse By all which things God propoundeth vnto vs a goodly picture and representation of the whole course of mans life yea of all estates and conditions of men in the worlde both generally and particularly For although in our former speech wee hearde what order nature vsually followeth in naturall thinges and namely in that which respecteth the estate of Empires and Monarchies yet if wee looke well into it wee shall there finde also this very difference which we haue obserued to bee betwixt naturall death and that which wee call violent death For as amongest men all come not to the vttermost of olde age but manie are stayed by the way so is it with estates Wee see some men ascende vp through all degrees euen vntill they attaine to the highest and then by the same degrees descend againe vntil they come to the ende and period of all But we see others that are staied in ascending or if they come to the highest degree are sodainely throwne downe Moreouer among those fruites which attaine to maturitie and ripenes all haue not one and the selfe same time of rypening but euery one hath his proper season and those that are most forward and soonest rype are of shortest continuance and quickly gone This selfe same thing also we see to be obserued in the life of men and in the course of this world Wherefore if we had no hope of another life besides this our estate would be more miserable not onely then the estate of beastes but also then that of trees For as trees decay yeerely in regard of their flowers fruites and leaues so they are yeerely renewed whereas many men perish after that manner that being once dead they shall neuer be raised vp and renewed againe to glory For although they haue some opinion of another life yet if by the certaintie of faith they doe not apprehende the fruition of eternall happinesse which is prepared for the blessed through the grace of Christ Iesus they can neither liue nor die without some doubt of that which they desire most to be perswaded of When the greatest and most skilfull Philosophers the wisest and most vertuous personages that haue byn amongst the Heathen went about to comfort either themselues or their friends in their great afflictions and chiefly in death this was thought to be one of their strongest reasons that the lawes of nature are vnauoydable and that it must be so For they had no hope of the resurrection of their bodies as indeed it is a doctrine that humane Philosophy doth not vnderstand And as for the immortalitie of the soule albeit the best Philosophers and most learned men amongst them were of that opinion which also was for the most part generally receiued of the people yet they were neuer so assured thereof but that still there remained some doubt in them because they had no certaine knowledge of it but onely so much as they could get by their naturall light and humane Philosophie Therefore when such as excelled others amongst them laboured to comfort and strengthen men against the feare of death and would perswade them that there was no euill in it they vsed for their principal reason this disiunctiue speech saying Either man is wholly extinguished by death or els some part of him remaineth afterwards If he perish altogether so that nothing of him continueth still then he feeleth no ill and so death hurteth him not but deliuereth him from all those euils whereunto he is necessarily subiect in this life But if some part of him abideth still so that he die not altogether then is death no death vnto him or at leastwise it is not euill vnto him seeing his principall part which is his soule and in regard of which he is man liueth and abideth whole and sound Nowe these are very leane and slender consolations For seeing GOD hath created man of that nature that hee is compounded of body and soule no doubt but his true and perfect estate consisteth heerein that these two natures be vnited and lincked together as in deede they shoulde haue done had it not bene for the sinne of our first parents who thereby brought vpon man both bodily and spirituall death And it is against reason to thinke that a separation of these two natures so well knit together coulde bee made and that one of them shoulde corrupt and perish and all this without griefe Nowe if they perish both together the euill that followeth thereupon is the greater For nothing can bee imagined to bee more goodly and excellent then to haue a beeing Nowe can any body call that thing excellent which ceaseth to bee or which hauing a beeing fadeth incontinently But what a horrour is it to a man onely to thinke of death And howe much more will his horrour bee encreased when he shall thinke that hee must so vanish away by death that no part of him afterward shall haue any more beeing then if hee had neuer beene at all And what profite ariseth to him that was neuer borne more then to the brute beast But yet the estate of this man is more miserable For to what ende shoulde the reasonable soule serue which God hath giuen him as also the vnderstanding reason and all the other vertues wherewith God hath endued it aboue the soule of beastes but to make him more miserable and wretched then if hee had beene created a beast For seeing beastes haue no minde vnderstanding or reason to conceiue and knowe what a benefite and gift of GOD it is to haue a beeing and to liue they haue no such vehement apprehension either of death as men haue or of the losse of any good thing which they are in danger to loose And by this reason it followeth that the more blockish and brutish men are the lesse miserable they shoulde bee as contrariwise the greater spirites they haue and the more they acknowledge the excellencie of mans nature and those gifts wherewith God hath endued it so much the more miserable and wretched shoulde they be instead of receiuing greater ioy and consolation Whereupon it commeth to passe that they are more ready to despite and blaspheme God then to praise and glorifie him for those graces and benefits wherewith hee hath adourned mankinde We see howe Epicures and Atheists and all they that consider in man this present life onely and goe no further drawe neere to this point of which wee speake Therefore some
deny nothing of all this but they say onely that God did then establish this order nowe spoken of which hee daily continueth in the generation of man I omit heere many other opinions touching this matter which come not so neere vnto the trueth namely a great controuersie betweene the Doctors in Diuinitie and in Physicke touching the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule and the time when the burthen beginneth to bee nourished and to haue sence thereby considering that it is a great deale better to inquire of these things to sobrietie and to leaue the resolution to GOD who knoweth that which is hidde from vs then by vaine questions and curious disputations to thinke to determine of the matter according to trueth and to the contentation of euery one For as we haue before touched we can knowe nothing either of the generation or original or of the substance and nature of our soule or of the immortalitie thereof but onely by those testimonies which by the effects it aftoordeth vnto vs and which God setteth downe in his word Wherefore according to that which hath beene already handled wee must distinguish those things vnto which our mindes may in some sort reach and of which wee may haue some knowledge from them that are so hidden from vs that wee can not knowe or iudge of any thing but like blinde men by groping and gessing This is a matter then of which wee must speake very soberly and with great reuerence of God contenting our selues with that which it pleaseth him to make knowne vnto vs by the meanes aforesaid and goe no further by desiring to knowe that which wee can not conceiue or comprehend vntill such time as God himselfe shall giue vs more ample and cleere knowledge thereof And I suppose wee shall not erre if wee say the like touching the question propounded by vs in the beginning of our speech about this matter namely of the meanes by which the reasonable soule shoulde bee infected with originall sinne seeing it is not engendered of that corrupt seede of which the bodie is bredde Let it then suffice vs to knowe that albeit the soule can not be defiled with sinne as it is created of God yet as God created all mankinde in Adam so when he fell all the rest of the worlde fell with him and in him was bereaued both of originall iustice and of other gifts which he lost by his fall So that albeit mens soules are created and produced of God pure and entire yet they keepe not that puritie stil neither can they be the soules of men and ioyned vnto their bodies and so become members of mankinde in them with any other condition then with that into which the first Father brought all his children by his sinne as we haue before touched Wherefore we must not search for the cause of that original sinne wherewith they are infected either in their creation because they are created by God of a diuine and immortall essence or in the generation of the body and in that seede of which it is engendred as if the soule took her originall infection together with the body frō the seede Moreouer we must not as the Pythagoreans do search for the corruption of soules in their entrance and coniunction with their bodies as if they receiued it from them but we must seeke it in that blot of sinne vnto which the whole race of mākind was made subiect through the fall corruption of the first stocke and in that decree of God whereby hee hath condemned all mankinde by his iust iudgement without any further enquirie after the meanes and manner how it came to passe For this cause Saint Paul doth bring vs backe to this consideration when in propounding vnto vs the first stock of mankind he saith that by one man sinne entred into the world and by sinne death And then hee propounded vnto vs this stocke of sinne so on the contrary side he propoudeth to vs the stock of iustice and righteousnesse namely Christ Iesus the new man who is an other stocke of mankinde regenerated renewed and reformed after the image of GOD. Therefore hee saieth that as by the disobedience of one man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one many are made righteous Now as humane Philosopie knoweth not either the corruption of all mankinde such as it is or the fountaine thereof so it is ignorant of the meanes whereby it must bee restored neither knoweth it that the wound is so great and mortall as that it cannot be cured but onely by the hand of God For which cause hee was to giue vs his owne sonne to be the Surgion and Physicion The ignorance heereof is the cause why humane Philosophie so greatly magnifieth the nobilitie and excellencie of the soule as it is well worthy being considered in the first nature in which it was created But the sequele of this matter wee will heare of thee ARAM. Of those powers and properties which the soule of man hath common with the soule of beastes of those powers and vertues which are proper and peculiar to it selfe according to the Philosophers of the difference and agreement that is betweene humane philosophie and Christian doctrine touching these things Chap. 87. ARAM Amongst the heathen they that were most ancient and neerest to the true Church of God and conuersed most with his seruants had greater knowledge and better vnderstanding of the nature of God of Angelles and of mens soules and of other matters belonging to true religion then they that were farthest off and succeeded latest after the other For the farther off that the doctrine of heauenly things was drawne from the fountaine of it the more hath it beene altered and corrupted both by ignorance ouerwhelming it and by false vnderstanding of it as also because euery one hath added to and taken away what seemed him best and that either to boast themselues that they may seeme some body or to couer their thefts that none might knowe from whence that thing was first taken and borrowed that so they might bee thought to bee the first members thereof or lastly to please and satisfie the curiositie and vanitie of the minde of man No maruell therefore if there were heathen Philosophers among the ancients who beleeued and taught many things agreeable to the worde of God and if there be now some amongst vs who boast of their study in philosophie and yet haue no part of that first innocencie and puritie but haue their mindes filled with strange opinions contrary to all reason and trueth We see wel enough by experience what impietie raigneth in this our age For there are an infinite number to be founde of whose religion no man can iudge except it be heerein that they thinke there is none at all and therefore mocke at all religion what shewe soeuer they make to the contrary But I knowe not why they shoulde not blush for shame when they
amongst vs of those foolishmen of whom Dauid speaketh Who say in their hearts that there is no God In the forefront of which companie the students of Machiauels principles and practicers of his precepts may worthily be raunged This bad fellowe whose works are no lesse accounted of among his followers then were Apollos Oracles among the Heathen nay then the sacred Scriptures are among sound Christians blusheth not to belch out these horrible blasphemies against pure religion and so against God the Author thereof namely That the religiō of the heathen made them stoute courageous whereas Christian religion maketh the professors thereof base-minded timerous fitte to become a pray to euery one that since men fell from the religion of the Heathen they became so corrupt that they would beleeue neither God nor the Deuill that Moses so possessed the land of Iudaea as the Gothes did by strong hand vsurpe part of the Romane Empire These and such like positions are spued out by this hel-hound sometime against true religion otherwhiles against the religion and Church of Rome sometimes also taxing the religion of the heathen of falsehoode and coosinage so that in trueth hee woulde haue all religion to be of like accompt with his disciples except it be so farre foorth as the pretence and shewe of religion may serue to set forward and effect their wicked pollicies And for this cause hee setteth downe this rule for euery Prince and Magistrate to frame his religion by namely that he should pretend to be very religious and deuout although it be but in hypocrisie And to this hee addeth a second precept no lesse impious that a Prince should with tooth and naile maintaine false myracles and vntrueths in religion so long as his people may thereby be kept in greater obedience Nowe what fruits wee are to expect from the students of this profession let all men iudge that haue any sparkes of pure religion glowing in their hearts Vnto these may bee added such as treade in the steppes of Lamech who derided the iudgement of God vpon Caine such as walke in the wayes of Ismael who mocked Isaac in regarde of the promise and such as those irreligious persons were of whome Peter speaketh who in iesting-wise asked what was become of the promise of Christ his comming to iudgement That there are such amongest vs euen in these times wherein we liue let the testimonie which one of that crew gaue lately of himselfe when the heauy hand of God by sickenesse sommoned him to giue an accompt of his dissolute life He being one day admonished of his friendes to leaue his badde course of life which otherwise woulde bring him to vtter destruction scoffingly returned them this answere Tush quoth hee what is hee better that dieth in his bedde then hee that endeth his life at Tiburne And beeing further vrged to doubt the losse of his soule in Hell fire for euer although hee feared not death in this worlde hee replied Hell What talke you of Hell to mee I knowe if I once come there I shall haue the company of better then my selfe I shall also meete with some knaues in that place and so long as I shall not sit there alone my care is the lesse But you are madde folkes quoth hee for if I feared the Iudges of the Bench no more then I dread the iudgements of God I woulde before I slept diue into one karles bagges or other and make merrie with the shelles I found in them so long as they would last The voyce of a meere Atheist and so afterwardes hee pronounced of himselfe when hee was checked in conscience by the mightie hand of GOD. And yet this fellowe in his life time and in the middest of his greatest ruffe had the Presse at commaundement to publish his lasciuous Pamphlets whereby hee infected the hearts of many yoong Gentlemen and others with his poysonfull platforms of loue and diuellish discourses of fancies fittes so that their mindes were no lesse possessed with the toyes of his irreligious braine then their chambers and studies were pestered with his lewde and want on bookes And if the rest of his crew may be permitted so easily as hee did without controlment to instill their venimous inuentions into the minds of our English youth by meanes of printing what other thing can wee looke for but that the whole land should speedily be ouerflowen with the deadly waters of all impieties when as the flood-gates of Atheism are thus set wide open Are they not already growen to this boldnes that they dare to gird at the greatest personages of all estates and callings vnder the fables of sauage beasts not sparing the very dead that lie in their graues that the holy Apostles the blessed virgin Mary the glorious kingdome of heauen it selfe must be brought in as it were vpon astage to play their seuerall parts according as the humor of euery irreligious head shal dispose of them And wheras godly learned men and some that haue spoken of their owne experience haue in their bookes that are allowed by authority termed Stage-playes and Theaters The schoole of abuse the schoole of bawdery the nest of the deuil sinke of all sinne the chaire of pestilence the pompe of the deuil the soueraigne place of Satan yet this commendation of them hath lately passed the Presse that they are rare exercise of vertue It were too long to set downe the Catalogue of those lewde and lasciuious bookes which haue mustered thēselues of late yeeres in Pauls Churchyard as chosen souldiers ready to fight vnder the deuils banner of which it may be truely said that they preuaile no lesse if not more to the vpholding of Atheisme in this light of the Gospel then the Legend of lies Huon of Burdeaux King Arthur with the rest of that rabble were of force to mainteine Popery in the dayes of ignorance Wherefore my humble sute is to all such as may by vertue of their authoritie stay the violent course of Atheisme dayly spredde abroade by these pernicious Pamphlets that they woulde lay to their helping hand for the speedy redresse thereof And as for those that reape the gayne of iniquitie by the sale of such infectious stuffe oh what a sweete smelling sacrifice should they offer vnto the Lord if they would gather all such hurtfull Books together and cause them to passe through the fire in the midst of that yeard where now they are so commonly sold Hereby it would come to passe that the land being purged of so great contagion as droppeth out of the pennes of such godlesse braines the Lord would withdrawe his heauy hand which now many wayes presseth vs sore the preaching of the Gospel woulde preuaile mightilie as it did in Ephesus after the like sacrifice and yoong Gentlemen and others woulde employ good houres vpon better studies which the Lord grant for his mercies sake AMEN THE SPECIALL AND principall matters handled in this second tome of the
the hippe-bones in them that bring foorth children Others saye that there is no opening but onely that it stretcheth foorth and inlargeth it selfe There are some also that thinke it is so called because it is so necessarie vnto life that after it is once hurt death followeth After this bone the rest that followe are lesse and lesse vntill you come to the highest insomuch that the lowest are biggest and the highest least to the ende that as they are the foundation one of another so they might bee able to beare that charge which they are to sustayne and bee the lesse burdened And as for the coniunction and vniting of them together it is so well contriued that it hath so much strength as is necessarie for it and is neyther too soft nor too harde too drie nor too wette and slipperie but that which is meete for their motions This order of bones and turning ioynts thus raunged is properly called the Backebone or Chine and in Latine Spina dorsi because of the sharpe endes or poyntes which eche of them hath oneuerie side for his defence as it were thornes This whole chine hath a marow proceeding from the hinder part of the braine and reaching downe to the nether ende of the backebone which beeyng rounde in shape is as a riuer whose spring is in the brayne from whence it proceedeth as the great Arterie doeth out of the heart and the hollow veyne out of the liuer as wee haue alreadie declared and may intreate thereof more at large in speaking of the inner partes of the bodie Therefore as the great arterie is as it were the stocke of all the rest being planted in the heart from whence it springeth and the hollowe veyne whose fountaine is in the liuer is as it were the stocke of the other veines so the marrowe of the chine is as it were the stocke and spring from whence all the sinewes issue which afterward like to litle riuers impart their sence and motion And because the fountaine of this riuer is in the braine therfore also the originall of sinewes is attributed thereunto notwithstanding that all those sinewes which giue motion and sence to the partes that are vnder the head except it be to the intrals and guttes proceede from the marrowe of the chine Hereby we may note once againe that that place alleadged by mee out of Salomon where hee calleth the backbone a siluer chaine agreeeth also very fitly with that which is here spoken For seeing the sinewes distribute sence and motion to all the members of the body as it hath bene already told vs and haue their beginning from the braine and marrow of the chine we may well say that it is a chaine and coa●d of a great length which extendeth it selfe very farre by reason of other chaines and strings proceeding from it For as the backbone may be resembled to a chaine so the marrowe within it is like to a coarde whereof all the sinewes which are as it were the little strings of all the members of the body haue their beginning and increase And therfore some in stead of a siluer chaine translate a coard or threede of siluer as wee reade in the common Latine translation but the sence is all one And that which Salomon addeth after of the golden ewer which is broken in olde-age with the exposition of the best learned giuen thereof agreeth also very well to this effect For by this golden Ewer they vnderstand the skinne that couereth the braine which is of a yellowish colour resembling the colour of golde It is very fitly called a Ewer because it is a vessell contianing the matter and nourishment of the sinewes and as it were the fountaine of all the motions and sences of the body it is as it were the lodging of all the animall partes and the originall of all the sences both internall and externall Wherefore the matter of the braine contayned within it is of a more celestiall nature then any other part of the bodie and commeth neerest to the spiritual and diuine natures So that this vessell is not without good and iust cause called by Salomon the Ewer of gold For there is in it a fountaine out of which man receiueth great treasures Nowe because the sinewes arteries and veynes were to haue their passage and issue from their fountaine without let or hinderaunce it was requisite that the backebone should haue such holes as it hath and that the bones therof should be of that fashion they are to the ende that neyther themselues nor the marrow within might be easily broken and that the next partes and members might not be hurt For it is very dangerous to haue any rupture or hurt in the chine aswell by reason of the marrow as of the sinewes And because it pleased God to lodge there those internall members of the bodie that are most necessarie for life and for the preseruation thereof he fastened the ribbes to both sides of the backebone namely twelue on euery side and hath left a sufficient space betwixt them that the place might bee able to receiue those members for whose cause they were so built disposed So that there are before and behinde especially about the noblest members very long and large bones to defend them on al sides as it were good harnesse and strong bulwarkes but chiefly behind because the armes and handes cannot so well defend them as they may the other before Therefore God hath better armed them with bones making those of the shoulders so large behind as they are and knitting them also vnto the backebone by their bande but yet so that they touch it not Likewise they are fastened to the highest bone in the brest which reacheth vp to the throate aboue the first ribbe by two litle bones which passe ouer the ribbes that are betwixt them For this cause these bones are called the keyes of the throate For they close and shutte vp these partes as it were keyes so that without them shoulder blades would fall backeward beeing no more able to keepe close together then the poldron of an harnesse not beeing fastened to the gorget The armes likewise are fastened to the shoulders as also the thighes and legges to the hippes then the handes are ioyned to the armes with their ioyntes and bandes as hath beene touched before Now we are to note further according to that I spake euen nowe that the backebone is in a mans body as the keele in a ship so that as the rest of the matter and forme of the shippe must bee well proportioned and framed according to the keele so is it in the composition of mans body and in that correspondencie which all the members ought to haue with the ridgebone of which they all depende otherwise there would be no good agreement but great deformitie And as for the ribbes and brest bones they haue such workemanship as is requisite for the members contained within the
a lampe to moysten the meate to the end that this fire should not consume it so quickly And because it must alwayes be kept burning otherwise the light thereof which is the life will die together with it it must haue new matter continually ministred vnto it as it were to a fire that cannot alwayes continue kindled in the chimney and not goe out if it be not preserued by wood or coale or in a candle or lampe if it haue not alwayes cotton or weeke and oyle or some other tallowy and moyst matter Therefore wee see that when either of them beginneth to fayle another is put in to supplie the place of it And thus as fire and the light thereof are mainteined in a lampe or candle by meanes of that nourishment they haue both in the weeke and in the tallow thereof so life and that naturall fire which giueth life to the bodie are mainteyned by that food which they receiue ordinarily in eating and drinking The meate then in mans bodie is to nourish and preserue the naturall heate thereof as the weeke is in a candle or lampe and the moysture which it receiueth by drinke is vnto it as the ●oyle and tallowe For this cause if heate bee stronger in a man he shall feele thirst which is an appetite and desire of that which is moyst and colde that is of such qualities as are contrary to the fire which is hote and dry For the moysture must be confirmed strengthened to moderate the burning heate as it is when oyle is powred into a lampe And if both heate and moysture consuming eche other beginne to waxe faint and to fayle they must both bee holpen that they may gather more strength as when we put not onely oyle but weeke also into a lampe And this is the cause of hunger which is a desire of that which is hote and moyst But there is difference betweene the humiditie required in hunger and that which is required in thirst because the moysture desired in thirst is more thinne and lesse earthie then that which is required in hunger And if the moisture be increased ouer much so that the heate decreaseth and languisheth and consequently the appetite to meate and drinke and to receiue nourishment decayeth it must be restored againe by physicke For although all nourishment be as it were physick to the body neuerthelesse there is this difference in that foode repaireth the whole person and all the body whereas physicke repaireth onely the instruments of the body which are to serue for nourishment For this cause food is alwayes necessary for all at all times and in all places but besides that all stande not in neede of physicke they that want it vse it but at certaine times as necessitie requireth For if those members that serue to nourish the body be well disposed and discharge their office so well that all the partes of the bodie receiue due nourishment and the whole body bee healthie and sound there needeth nothing but ordinary foode to preserue the body and to keepe it in good health But if any member be weakened and doeth not his duetie well especially any of those that ought to serue to nourish the whole bodie it must be restored again to strength by the meanes of physicke Now albeit the sense of taste whereof we haue presently discoursed be not so apt to teach especially the knowledge of spirituall and diuine things as the senses of sceing and hearing of which we haue spoken heretofore yet we may receiue much good doctrine thereby For as the body cannot liue except it haue such corporall foode as agreeth to the nature thereof so the soule cannot liue if it haue not that knowledge which God hath appointed for it And as life is kept in the body by heate which is the chiefe instrument thereof to the life of our soules consisteth and is preserued and increased by heate namely by the loue charity of God without which it cannot liue that life that is agreeable to it owne nature For the soule that is separated from the loue of God is dead in respect of the true and blessed life seeing God liueth not in it nor it in God For this cause this loue must be alwayes nourished and mainteyned therein by the celestiall and diuine moysture agreeable to the nature thereof Wherefore as it is of a heauenly and celestiall nature so the foode thereof must be answerable thereunto This foode therfore cannot be had but of God who is the life of the soule as the soule is the life of the body and the meanes which he hath appointed to minister this food vnto it is his heauenly eternall word and those spirituall graces which he communicateth vnto vs thereby But let vs follow our matter subiect of corporall senses And seeing we haue intreated of the meanes wherby the body is nourished we ought to consider more particularly of those things that are meet and conuenient to mainteine and preserue the body of man and see how God prepareth them to this end in which thou shalt instruct vs AMANA Of helpes and creatures meete for the preseruation and nourishment of the bodie how God prepareth them to serue for that purpose of their vse Chap. 18. AMANA God being carefull ouer the welfare of his creatures that haue life hath put in them a desire to preserue themselues to the ende they shoulde followe after such things as are profitable for their health and shunne that which is hurtfull and contrarie vnto it Nowe this preseruation consisteth eyther in the equalitie of heate and moisture nourishers of life or els in an inequalitie that may easily be reduced and brought to an equalitie by that which we eate and drinke For if there bee so great excesse of heate or moysture that the one consumeth the other death followeth necessarily if there be no excesse of either but a good equalitie the body is very well affected But it is very hard to finde a bodie so tempered And although such a one might be found yet it could not long continue in that estate but that it would quickly change as we may iudge by that which we haue learned in the former discourse But when this change doeth not bring with it so great excesse and inequalitie but that it may be kept vpright by nourishment the body is neuerthelesse well disposed vntiil such time as the excesse is greater then can bee repaired by foode For then if foode will not serue the turne wee must haue recourse to physicke and if the inequalitie be so great that by the helpe of physicke no remedie can be found there is no other naturall ayde to be had Nowe this inequalitie that approcheth so neere to equalitie is very pleasaunt as that which is the pricke and procurer of naturall pleasures necessarie for the life of man to incite him to desire them and as it were the sawse to make them toothsome For if
compounded and so consequently according to the temperancie or intemperancie that is in vs the affections of the soule also will be more moderate or immoderate and the perturbations which they shall bring with them will be greater or lesse and more easie or vneasie to be prouoked or appeased Whereby wee might knowe what great agreement God hath made betweene the body and the soule For not withstanding their natures differ much one from an other yet seein they must be linked together it is necessary they shoulde haue some agreement betweene them to the end they may be conioyned and vnited in one It is true that by the reasons of humane Philosophie we know well howe the coniunction of corporall things and of their qualities what contrarietie soeuer it is betweene them may be effected and wrought But as wee cannot see or knowe our soule or any spirituall nature as wee knowe our bodies and bodily natures so can wee not iudg so easily of the meanes whereby the body agreeth with the soule and corporall natures with spirituall but onely as experience and the effectes giue vs some sight thereof For wee see by experience from whence the good or ill disposition of the body and health and sickenesse proceede namely from the good or ill temperature of the qualities thereof Wee see also that according to the nourishment which the body taketh that sobrietie or gluttoni● it vseth in eating and drinking and according to the abstinence or the effectes it bringeth foorth in all things it is either better or worse affected and disposed We see likewise the changes and alterations that befall it according to the ages and exercises it hath Wherefore although we had nothing else to looke vnto but to maintaine and preserue our health yet ought we to desire to be sober moderate and very temperate in all things seeing moderation beareth so great sway in all the partes of mans life But it ought to be more pretious in our eies when wee see that the temperance or intemperance that may be in our bodies extendeth it selfe vnto the estate of our soule and that it can do much eyther in the helping and maintaining or in the hurting and troubling thereof For wee knowe already by experience that which is of a cholericke nature is more subiect to those diseases that are bredde of a cholericke humour then a flegmatike person that is of a contrary temperature and that a flegmatike bodie is most subiect to diseases proceeding of flegme The like may bee saide of all the other qualities and complexions If then euery one encline more to such diseases as may proceede from those naturall qualities which abound most in his body it is an easie matter to iudge what is like to fall vpon him if they exceede whereby they are encreased much more And if that humour which naturally exceedeth most in a man and of which his temperature and complexion hath his name cause him to incline most to those diseases that may be bred thereof a man may iudge into what disposition of body he may fall through excesse of other qualities which are more repugnant to his nature and complexion if there be no such counterpoize and equalitie that one contrary may serue as a remedy against another But hauing considered of these things we must goe forward and prosecute our speech of the affections of the soule which are as it were health and sicknes therein according as they shal be eyther well or ill moderated and see what conueniencie there is betweene corporall and spirituall phisicke Finish therefore this dayes woorke ACHITOB with some discourse vpon this poynt which may serue to instruct vs in the matter of the affections of the soule of which to morowe we are to intreate particularly and in order Of the Health and diseases of the soule of the agreement betweene corporall and spirituall Phisicke how necessary the knowledge of the nature of the body and of the soule is for eueryone Chap 40. ACHITOB. It is alwayes in his power who hath giuen vs beeing namely God the spring and fountaine of all essences to preserue and keepe vs therein and to take it also from vs when it pleaseth him But forasmuch as he delighteth not in destroying the woorkes which himselfe hath wrought hee hath giuen vnto his creatures certaine meanes to preserue themselues in that nature wherin he created them And that they might haue those meanes neere at hand he hath placed them euen in their owne nature For they haue by nature an inclination that moueth and vrgeth them to keepe and defend themselues asmuch as they can possible from euery thing that may corrupt their nature that is contrary vnto it or that wil bring to an end that beeing which they haue receiued of God But that which herein is most to be lamented in man is his ouer great care and curiositie in searching out remedies meete for the maintenance and preseruation of his bodie the least griefe and ill disposition whereof seemeth vnto him to be very burthensome but as for thinking eyther vpon those means wherby God hath appoynted him to attaine to an eternall and blessed life or vpon the diseases of the soule which in steed of life will bring death vnto it and are farre more dangerous stubberne and vneasie to be cured then those of the body he dreameth litle thereof his care is very small he esteemes them not great and therefore is very slouthfull in seeking remedie for them We are to know then that the affections of the soule are as it were health and sicknesse therein according as they are either temperate or intemperate For as there is no euill disposition or sicknesse in the bodie but contrariwise good health if there bee not some excesse in the qualities of which it is compounded which may destroy that equalitie that is requisite for the keeping of it sounde so is it with the faculties powers qualities and affections of the soule which according to her nature hath her health and her diseases Wherefore when the harmonie conueniencie and temperature of her powers and affections is such as her nature requireth then is shee well disposed and in health as contrariwise thee is ill affected and diseased when in place of temperance and mediocritie there is intemperance and excesse Nowe according to that which wee hearde in the former speech of the conueniencie betweene the temperature and complexion of the bodie and the affections of the soule wee see that a man of a cholericke nature is a great deale more easily stirred vp to anger then an other that is of a flegmatike or melancholy nature For seeing the cholericke humour is by nature hote and burning like to fire that man in whome this humour raigneth is sooner inflamed with anger and wrath then an other that is of a contrary nature For fire will more speedily kindle in a matter that commeth neerer to it owne nature and of which it
iudgementes of God whereby he punisheth men neuertheles these water-floods which we alwaies carie about vs ought to admonish and induce vs to feare him to call vpon him by prayer and day and night yea hourely to recommend our life vnto him seeing he can take it from vs by stopping our breath yea by a very small matter or at least depriue vs of all motion and sense as though our bodies had neither soule nor life in them but were like to poore dead carkases For the doing hereof hee needeth not to thunder or lighten from heauen against vs but onely to cause a small showre of water to powre downe from our head which is the highest the goodliest and most noble part of all the bodie and as it were the heauen of the litle world or if it please him to cause a fewe droppes onely to distill downe vpon the sinewes and ioyntes it will torment men more grieuously then if they were in some continuall torture as the daily songs of such gowtie persons doe testifie who are impatient and voyde of the feare of God Now besides this profitable aduertisement which euery one may take by that which hath bin here vttered wee ought on the other side to consider the prouidence and goodnesse of God towardes men in that as he holdeth vp in the aire and cloudes the water that hangeth ouer vs not suffering them to breake downe vpon vs all at once to ouerwhelme all the earth by them with all the beastes and other creatures conteined in it but distributeth them by good and iust measure so dealeth he with the humours that ascend vp continually and are kept in our braine where they haue their vessels to retaine them in as it were in sponges which yeeld foorth water according as they are either loosened or restrayned and closed together And as for that which is said of the testimony which we haue of the frailtie of our life appearing in the principal and most noble part of our bodie as the like was shewed vs before in that instruction which we learned by the office that God assigned to our lungs and to the passages allotted by him for the taking in end letting out of the aire so wee haue a very notable lesson in the consideration of the liuer and of the blood of which that is the forge and fountaine and of the distribution thereof into all the partes and members of the bodie by meanes of the veynes as wee hearde yesterday For as a man may iudge by outward appearance that the life of man consisteth in his breath and that he giueth vp both soule and life when hee dyeth as it were in giuing vp the last gaspe so it seemeth also that it is placed in the blood as that which goeth as it were with the blood so that when the blood is drawen out of a mans bodie the life also may seeme to bee drawne out therewithall Herevpon as the soule is oftentimes in holy Scripture put for the life because it giueth life to the bodie so it is also put for the blood and the blood likewise called soule because it is the instrument and meanes whereby the soule giueth life and when the Lorde forbiddeth his people to case the flesh with his soule that is the blood thereof Whereby his meaning is to teach men to abhorre the effusion of mans blood and therefore hee sayeth further I will require your blood euen the blood of your soules Wherefore hee that sheadeth blood doeth as much as if hee drewe the soule out of the bodie Nowe forasmuch as the blood is so necessarie vnto life wee are likewise to vnderstande that as it is either pure and sounde or vnpure and corrupted so is it disposed either to health or sicknesse and to life or death For as the naturall life of man consisteth especially in heate and moysture so a man may easily iudge that as euery thing is bred by meanes of them chiefely liuing and sensible creatures so nothing can bee preserued in this bodily life without these two qualities that are proper to the ayre and to blood as wee haue alreadie hearde But these qualities must bee so tempered that there bee no excesse on either side And for this cause GOD woulde haue all the humours to bee mingled together with the blood that so it might bee tempered as is requisite for the life of man For if it bee too hote and drie or too moyst and colde it cannot doe that office for the performance whereof it is ordayned but in steede of bringing health and life it will breede diseases and in the ende cause death For naturall death commeth onely of diseases amongest which olde age is to bee reckoned which is an incurable sicknesse that lasteth vntill death Neither doe diseases proceede but onely of the distemperature that is in mens bodies and in the humours of which they are compounded For as long as they are in a good moderate and proportionable temper and are distributed to all the partes of the bodie according as neede requireth so that none of them exceedeth then is there an equalitie in all the bodie which doeth not onely preserue it in life but in health and good disposition For there is the like concorde and harmonie betweene these humours that is betweene the partes of a good consort of musicke agreeing well together or of an instrument of musicke well tuned from which you shall heare nothing but pleasaunt melodie Whereas if all the partes thereof agree not well together there will bee no musicall harmonie but onely a very vnpleasant discorde The like may bee saide of all the concordes and discordes that may fall out in the humours of our bodies And therefore GOD had so tempered them in the first creation of man as was requisite so that hee woulde haue preserued him in a perpetuall life if by true obedience hee had alwayes beene knit and vnited vnto God his Creatour But since man fell at variance with God through sinne all this goodly concorde which God had placed not onely in mans bodie but also betweene the rest of his creatures hath been troubled and turned into discord by meanes of sinne So that all this goodly temperature and harmonie of the humours in which mans bodie was created was dissolued and broken asunder and that in such sort that it was neuer since sounde and perfect in any man of howe good constitution soeuer hee hath beene For euen in the best complexions there is alwayes some defect or excesse in some of the humours so that if there were no other cause yet no body coulde naturally bee immortall For alwayes in the ende the excesse or defect that is in it woulde cause it to decay and finally bring it to corruption But besides this there are so many other wantes and superfluities throughout the whole life of man whereby this euill alreadie become naturall is so much augmented that there die moe without
comparison of ordinarie diseases and of violent death then of olde age and naturall death and all this by meanes of sinne Therefore we may well conclude that health is the effect and fruite of peace and concord betweene all the partes and humors of mans bodie and so consequently is life as contrariwise sicknesse death proceed of discord dissention and warre betweene them For as concord bringeth peace and peace all good things with it so contrariwise discord breedeth warre and warre a heaped measure of all miseries and euils Wherefore a sounde body of a good constitution is like the bodie of a whole people and societie that hath the members agreeing well together so that euery one keepeth his ranke not hurting one another But a sicke and diseased body is like to the body of a mutinous and seditious people that breaketh the order it ought to keepe and goeth beyond the appoynted bounds Therefore we haue a goodly image of peace and of that peaceable life whereunto men are created and borne in the disposition and temperature of the humors and members of our bodie whereby wee ought to learne what great account we are to make of peace amitie and concord and howe we ought to hate and abhorre all warre discord and dissention seeing the one is as it were health and life and the other as diseases and death Now let vs see the vse and profite the particular and speciall properties of the humors ioyned with the blood and what vessels are assigned vnto them together with their nature and offices It belongeth to thee AMANA to handle this matter Of the vses and commodities of the humors ioyned with the blood and what vessels are assigned vnto them in the bodie and of their nature and offices and first of the cholericke humour of the gall and vessell thereof next of the melancholike humour and of the spleene then of the flegmatike humour and of the kidneyes and other vessels which it hath to purge by Chap. 66. AMANA As we ought to labour to cut off all discord and to nourish all concord that wee may enioy peace and those benefites that proceede thereof so wee must be very carefull to preserue all the partes of our bodie in such a temperature as may keepe them in a harmonie and concord that we may liue in health For this cause as God hath tempered all the humors one with another so he hath assigned to euery one his proper place seate both to withdraw it self therin and to performe the office enioyned vnto it and also to purge and clense it selfe and to discharge the body of superfluities and corruptions that otherwise might hurt it Nowe we haue alreadie heard how he hath assigned the liuer to be the seat of the blood because he hath appointed the blood to water all the body and to giue life and nourishment vnto it out of which also the vital spirits arise as smal mild windes proceed out of riuers and fountaines As for the cholericke humour it is ioyned with the blood for the concoction of humors that abound and to awake and stirre vp the bodie least it become heauie sleepie and dull as also to penetrate and open the passages when it goeth with the blood and therewithall to nourish those members that agree with the nature of it as the lungs with whose nourishment cholericke blood doeth better agree then any other Whereby it appeareth euidently that this humour holdeth of the nature of fire which giueth vnto it this quicknesse and vertue And because it is hote and drye it serueth also to temper the moysture of the blood and to meete with all colde that might come vnto it and helpeth to preserue it in his naturall heate Nowe forasmuch as it is not all caried and distributed with the blood but the greatest part of it remaineth for other vses God hath assigned a vessell vnto it into which it retireth and is contained therein so farre foorth as is requisite The ende hereof is that the blood should not bee infected with too much choler mingled therewith as also that it might descend into the guttes by those passages that are giuen vnto it to that purpose to be voyded by them and to prouoke them to discharge those excrements which they receiue and so to purge the whole body For this cause there is a bladder in fashion like to a long peare placed vnder the middest of the liuer about the hollowe part of the right side of it within which it is halfe hidden This bladder is the vessell into which that yellowe humour withdraweth it selfe and is conteined therein which wee call Gall. And as this bladder hath his filaments and threedes both to draw vnto it and to reteine as also to expell forth so it hath two branches comming out of the necke of it the one vpwarde to draw away the cholericke humour in the purifying of the blood the other downeward towardes the guttes to carie this humour vnto them both for the thrusting forwarde of nourishment and for the casting foorth of the excrements For it was necessary that the great abundance of this humour should retire into some place in the purging of the blood and therfore it was as requisite that it shoulde haue a fitte vessell to retire into wherein it was not to remaine vnprofitable For besides the vses alreadie spoken of it serueth not onely to cleanse all the guttes of ordure but also to heate the liuer and to hinder the putrefaction of the blood Besides experience sufficiently sheweth how needefull it is that the blood should haue such a vessell wherewith to purge it selfe For when the passages thereof are stopped great diseases followe thereupon as inflammation of the liuer and the dropsie but especially the yellowe iaundies For when this humour is not duely separated from the blood so that it is not purged thereof as nature requireth then doeth it beginne to corrupt whereupon it cannot send such foode to the members as is necessarie for them but that which is corrupted by this gall whereby they are driuen out of their naturall disposition And this wee may see chiefely in the yellowe iaundies by reason of this yellowe and bitter humour that maketh the bodie yellowe into which it is dispersed by meanes of the veynes in steede of beeing nourished with good blood The like may bee saide of the melancholicke humour which is as it were the lees of the blood For if the blood bee corrupted and infected great inconueniences ensue thereof vnto the whole bodie through which this humour is dispersed after the same manner that the cholerick humour is insomuch as it becommeth blacke thereby as the cholericke humour maketh it yellowe and for the like cause breeding the like disease the difference of humours onely excepted Nowe because we haue not in our vsuall speech a speciall name to declare this difference this disease is commonly called the blacke iaundies Therefore God hath
assigned the spleene for a seate to this blacke humour which beeing placed on the left side conteineth this humour in it hauing proper pipes and passages both to drawe from the liuer this dregges of the blood and also to communicate the same vnto the stomacke thereby to prouoke appetite as likewise to purge it selfe by diuers meanes The chiefe vse of it is to receaue the grosse and muddie blood and to that ende there is a great veine which beeing the pipe of this blood goeth from the Port-veine to the spleene which is nourished with the best of it and concocteth the aboundance of this humour Therefore God hath created it with such a flesh as is meete and apt for that office and further hath holpen it with certaine arteries whereby it is heated and made warme And when it hath taken so much of this grosse blood to nourish it selfe withall as is requisite the rest is partly reteyned still and partly thrust out and sent to the bottome of the stomacke by a veyne seruing for the same purpose to the ende that from thence this humour may bee voyded out of the bodie Now when these veines are stopt daungerous diseases follow thereupon chiefely when this happeneth to the first veine whereof I spake euen nowe For when the liuer is not purged his whole office is hindered and it selfe decayeth by little and little by retayning still the excrementes thereof from whence the vapours ascending vp to the brayne trouble it very much and cause it to fall into very strange and foolish conceiptes And when the body is burdened with this humour it causeth that man to bee very melancholicke and sadde and many times bringeth that yrkesomnesse vpon him that he desireth nothing but death It was very requisite therefore that God shoulde giue both a vessell and passages to this humour which is not without his great commodities if it bee tempered and distributed as it ought to bee For it serueth to stay and to retaine the floting spirites which arise out of the blood least if they shoulde bee made more pure and subtill then is expedient for the bodie they vanish and passe away altogether It is profitable also to thicken the blood and to helpe to restraine and keepe it from running ouer hastily besides it nourisheth therewithall the melancholicke members which holde most of the nature of that humour as namely the bones and the spleene Likewise the drinesse both of this and of the cholericke humour standeth the blood in some steade and the coldnesse thereof serueth to coole and moderate the heate of the blood and of the cholericke humour As for the flegmaticke humour which is also called Pituita it is not without his commodities For first it is the matter whereof the blood is made when it is by little and little concocted better it mitigateth the heate of the blood and is vnto it in place of nourishment and in steade of a bridle to restraine the burning and deuouring heate thereof from present consuming of all Besides it keepeth the blood from beeing too thicke and drie and beeing caried with the blood it nourisheth the flegmatike and colde members such as the braine is And as the other humours ioyned with the blood haue their superfluities and vessels to keepe them in and to purge them so is it with this For this humour is not onely caried with the blood to keepe it from ouermuch thicknesse that it may the better passe through the veynes but there proceedeth also from the whole masse of blood an excrement like to very thinne water which by reason of the thinnesse of it can no way bee profitable to the bodie For it is a water that differeth as much from blood and from the flegmatike humour ioyned with it as whay doeth from milke when the butter and cheese with all the substaunce that can bee had from it is drawen out of it For it is like to sweate with which it hath some resemblaunce Therefore it hath his proper place assigned vnto it in the kidneyes which drawe to themselues the watrish matter from the blood thereby purging it from water that woulde corrupt it and fill the veynes in steade of good blood as wee see it in the dropsie which bloweth vp the bodie that is stuffed with water in steade of good nourishment which by the veynes it shoulde drawe from the blood if the liuer were well affected and if all the other partes that ought to helpe it did well performe their dueties And to the ende that the kidneys may the better do their dutie God hath not only created two but hath so placed them by his prouidence that the right kidney is higher then the left so that they doe their dueties one after another For if they wrought both together if they were both in one place if both drewe vnto themselues with equall force in steede of mutuall helpe they woulde greatly hinder eche other which inconuenience the prouidence of God doeth very well meete with And as all the inwarde partes of which wee haue hitherto spoken haue their pipes both to drawe from the liuer that humour that is meete for them and to sende it where neede requireth and also for to purge themselues euen so the kidneyes haue their passages apt and meete for the performance of all these things For first they haue Emulgent veines so called because they drawe this waterish superfluitie as a child sucketh milke out of the breast and hauing receiued this water separated from the blood they sende it vnto the kidneyes It is true that a little blood passeth together with it to nourish the kidneyes withall with which there is some yellowe choller mingled that serueth afterwarde to helpe expulsion and the water beeing coloured therewith is made yellowe and brackish and then it is rightly called Vrine Nowe after the kidneyes haue drawen from the liuer this water whereby the blood is purged and themselues also in part nourished with some little of the blood and that by meanes of the veines and passages giuen vnto them for that purpose they haue two other passages called Vreteres or Vrine pipes whereby they purge and discharge themselues of that water that is called Vrine after the blood is wholly separated from it This done these pipes sende the water vnto the bladder which is a vessell meete for the receipt thereof and which doeth as it were distill the same by litle and litle through these pipes that enter into the bladder both on the right side and on the left Moreouer the bladder hath a necke and passage neere to the two vrine pipes whereby it dischargeth it selfe of this humour after it hath kept the same awhile voyding it forth of the body as a superfluous excrement For if this were not so after the body were full of this water ouerflowing in it not onely many partes and members woulde bee broken but men also shoulde bee stifled by reason of
the compression and contraction of the Midriffe I speake not heere of the stone which wee carie in our kidneyes or of that which oftentimes breedeth both in the kidnes and in the bladder I meane of such stones as bake there as it were in a Tile-kill or potters fornace I omitte also the passions of the kidneyes and the extreame paines proceeding from thence which are further instructions vnto vs of our infirmities and miseries and of the frailetie of mans life but the handling of these things properly belongeth to the Physicions I will onely adde to that which I haue spoken of the necke of the bladder where the Vrinary pipes ende that the hole thereof is full of wreathings and turnings to the ende it may the better holde and keepe in the water And for this cause also it hath a muskle as well as the fundament to open and to shut and to yeelde and retaine the vrine according to natures will euen as it is with the other excrementes that are purged by the bowels Wee propounde these things as it were a generall Anatomie of the bodie because if I should lay them open at large and by peece-meale eche member hath in it sufficient whereof to make a great booke For as I haue alreadie declared the artificiall woorkemanship of mans bodie is incredible and incomprehensible if a man consider all the partes of it For there is nothing bee it neuer so small but the woorke of it is very marueilous the vse great and so fitted to the purpose as cannot possibly be better But wee neede not discourse more particularly of the composition and nature of mans body and of the partes of it seeing our intent is not to become Physicions but in some sort naturall Diuines by learning to knowe the prouidence of God in his woorkes especially in our creation composition nourishment and preseruation that wee may glorifie him in them as becommeth vs. Nowe in all that wee haue hitherto propounded of the foure naturall humours of the bodie wee haue spoken of them according as naturally they are and ought to bee without corruption and such as are necessary for the life of man But forasmuch as they are of great vertue and power in regarde of the affections and manners of men whether they abide in their right nature or whether they be corrupted wee must speake somewhat of their corruption and of the hurt that commeth thereby not onely to the health and life of the bodie but also to that of the soule considering withall what are the sundry naturall temperaments of men Marke therefore ARAM what you haue to say vnto vs concerning this matter Of the names wherby the humors of the bodie are commonly called with the causes wherefore of the comparison betweene the corruption and temperature of the humors of the body and betweene the manners and affections of the Soule of the meanes whereby the humours corrupt and of the Feuers and diseases engendred thereby of the sundry natural temperatures in euery one Chap. 67. ARAM. The nourishment of mans body hath many degrees and passeth through many pipes and vessels before it bee perfect and conuerted by true generation into the proper substaunce of euery member whither it is caried as wee may iudge by that which wee haue alreadie hearde to this purpose But there is such an accorde betweene all the members of the bodie whereby euery one executeth his office and such a communion of all their powers that eche member keepeth his ranke and order neyther doeth any one retayne and keepe to it selfe more nourishment then is requisite but sendeth as much as is needefull vnto the rest euen vnto the nayles and haires and vttermost excrements Nowe if through some defect or corruption falling out in their nature any of them breake the order of this equall distribution a common detriment seazeth vpon the whole bodie and vpon all the members generally so that those partes also taste of the hurte that offered wrong vnto the residue For they cannot liue alone nor without helpe from others The like is seene in the Common-wealth and in the members thereof For what is the cause that some are readie to burst for farnesse and multitude of meates whereas others are emptie and die of hunger that some haue so much wealth that they are greately troubled therewith and others are so poore Nay what is the cause of all the confusion in the worlde but that euerie one raketh to himselfe and no such equalitie and communion is obserued as becommeth the estate of euerie one Wherefore as sundrie diseases are bredde in mans bodie whereby in the ende it is vtterly ouerthrowen when there is no such communion betweene the members thereof nor any such distribution of the nourishment as there ought to bee so is it with the bodie of the Common-wealth when some oppresse others and when euerie one hath not that that belongeth vnto him For first there followeth great confusion and of confusion subuersion as diseases followe faultes committed by the members and after diseases death it selfe Nowe the infinite number of infirmities and ordinarie diseases whereby moe violent deathes are procured then naturall by reason of the defectes and excesses brought in by sinne into the whole life of man causeth men to speake diuersely of the foure humours of the bodie necessarie for the preseruation and nourishment thereof For they are more often taken for the vices and excesses whereby they are corrupted then for the true naturall humours which are the chiefe instruments of the soule whereby it giueth life and nourishment to the bodie The cause whereof as I thinke is because men doe sooner and more easily perceiue and marke what is euill and hurtfull vnto them then that which breedeth their good and profite And indeede it falleth out commonly that they knowe not the good thinges they haue vntill they haue lost them or else are become hurtfull vnto them No marueile then if they knowe not from whence these good things come or of whome they haue receiued them and so become ingratefull towardes GOD. Wherefore let vs not woonder when God withdraweth them from vs or suffereth them to corrupt and to bee spoyled that they might hurt vs in steede of helping vs to the ende that by this meanes wee might learne to acknowledge that good which before wee knewe not and not to despise it when wee haue it I meane that wee shoulde learne this by the euill that succeedeth after wee haue lost the good For wee are such scholers as cannot otherwise imprint in our mindes those good thinges which God bestoweth vpon vs but by beeing depriued of them and by our owne hurt Heereof it is that wee alwayes learne to our owne cost as wee say because wee cannot conceiue so well as wee ought to doe of the free goodnesse of God Nay it were well if all coulde learne aright by their owne harmes For there are but fewe that profite
woman is of short continuance and full of trouble He shooteth forth as a flowre and is cut downe he vanisheth also as a shadow and continueth not Nowe it is certaine that if we looke to the causes of the life death of men layd downe by vs we shal thinke that all this is done naturally that there is a certaine order of nature vnto which we must all be subiect and a naturall necessitie which none can eschew But wee see that Moses mounteth aloft and searcheth higher for the cause for hee seekth it in God and in his determination yea in his wrath conceiued against our sinnes Therefore the children and seruants of God that haue bene instructed in his worde doe not onely consider of that in death which prophane men beholde there but they mount vp euen to this highest cause and behold there the wrath of God against sinne against all mankinde for the same So that wee may knowe by that whith hath bene sayd what difference there is betweene humane and naturall Philosophie and that which is diuine and supernaturall and wherein they deceiue themselues that stay altogether in naturall Philosphie And hereby also wee may learne the cause why so many become Atheists and Epicures thereby whereas it should serue them in place of steps and degrees to cause them to ascend vp to that Philosophie that is supernaturall and heauenly For their noses are altogether poring in this base kitchin of which we haue intreated in our former discourses as though God had not created men for another life and end then hee hath done beasts Whereupon we may imagine what true ioye and consolation they can haue I say not only in death but also throughout their whole life seeing their life wil they nill they must passe through so many dangers and miseries For whether they will or no they must be subiect to this sentence passed from God against all mankinde in the person of our first parents when hee sayd to Adam Cursed is the earth for thy sake in sorow shalt thou eate of it all the daies of thy life Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee and thou shalt eate the herbe of the fielde In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate bread till thou returne to the earth for out of it wast thou taken because thou art dust to dust shalt thou returne Therefore Eliphaz sayth in the booke of Iob that miserie proceedeth not out of the dust that affliction buddeth not out of the earth Which is asmuch to say as that the cause of barrennes of ground proceedeth not from the earth but from the sinne of man Wherefore men cannot lay the blame vpon any other beside themselues as being the cause of all the euils which they suffer because they beare the matter of them in themselues Now if any thinke that this sentence pronounced by God against all mankinde is not so much executed vpon the wicked that are without God as vpon others because wee see commonly that they are richest liue in greatest ease in pleasures in delightes we must know that they are not therefore exempted from those miseries whereunto the life of man is subiect and which are all comprehended vnder this sweate of the face mentioned in the holy Scriptures For there is not one of them to be found that can so saue himselfe but that he hath alwayes his part portion in these things And if we could consider wel the whole course of their life who seeme to be the happiest amongst them and had the patience to waite vntill the end of their race we should still finde by experience the trueth of that we speake of But let vs goe on with our speeches touching the causes of the length and shortnes of this bodily life and of naturall death as also of that which is violent whereof wee haue not yet spoken Also let vs consider of the things that are chiefly required for the vpholding of this bodily life and without which it could not consist This then shall be the matter subiect of which thou ARAM shalt take vpon thee to discourse Of the causes generally of the length and shortnes of bodily life of naturall and of violent death in what manner the life of man consisteth in his breath of the principall things required to life and without which it cannot be of the difference betwixt the life of men the life of beasts of the image of the spirituall death in the corporall of the true comfort which we ought to haue therein Chap. 75. ARAM. This lawe was layde vpon nature by GOD the Creator thereof that the things which it should bring forth in this inferiour world should haue small beginnings at the first and after growe by litle and litle when they were come to their full greatnes should stand a while at a stay and then fall by litle and litle and returne to their originall and first beginning as we see a patterne hereof and an example twise a day in the Ocean sea For after it is mounted vp to the highest and hath spread it selfe in length and breadth as much as it may it returneth againe vnto the fountaine and wombe from whence it came and there closeth vp it selfe For God hath compassed it with certaine bounds beyond which it cannot passe So likewise euery thing hath his course and set time of continuance neither doe we see any thing vnder the Moone either of the workes of God or of the inuentions of men which keepeth not this course And so is it with the body which being created by litle and litle decayeth after the same maner as it were by the same degrees by which it mounted vpward And that which we see in euery particular body the same we perceiue to be in the whole frame and course of the world in all the estates thereof For the world hath had his infancie next his youth then his mans estate and now he is in his olde-age For we see howe all things decline dayly and continually waxe worse and worse as it were approching to their end In like maner if we would consider the course and estate of all Common-wealths Principalities Kingdomes and Empires and of all the greatest and chiefest Monarchies that euer were from the creation of the world we should finde that all of them were very small and weake in their beginnings and that afterwards they increased and mounted vp vntill they came to their highest degrees and after they had attained thither they descended fell by litle and litle continually vntill in the ende they were wholy ruinated Nowe the first causes of all these things proceeding from God and from his eternall counsell we know that the second causes are in the nature of euery thing that hath beginning and must end and chiefly in the nature of mens bodies By our formmer speech wee haue learned already howe
appeare vnto vs and contrariwise the more pure and thinne it is the brighter and more shining it will shew it selfe vnto vs. Nowe for this matter wee must call to minde what wee heard concerning the generation of spirites both Vitall and Animall in those discourses of the nature and office of the heart And as they are thinne vapours engendered of blood concocted and sette on fire through the vertue of the heart that they might bee as it were little flames hauing diuers actions in diuers members so according to the puritie and impuritie of the blood in the composition of the bodie wee are to iudge of the spirites that proceede from them And albeeit they haue all one and the same fountaine namely the heart in which they are bredde neuerthelesse they change according to those places and members wherein they woorke and being so changed they haue diuers and seuerall actions Wee vnderstand then by the Vitall spirite a little flame bredde and borne in the heart of the purest blood whose office is to carie naturall heate to the other members and to giue them vertue and strength to put in practise those actions and offices which they exercise by the same heat It hath beene tolde vs also before that the arteries serue to carie this vitall spirite to all the members But wee are farther to learne that when the vitall spirites bredde in the heart are in part transported to the braine others are engendered of them which are called Animall spirites in that sence in which wee called those Animall faculties and powers from whence the Soule deriueth her vessels and instrumentes in the brayne For after the spirites sent by the heart are come thither they are made more cleane and bright through the vertue of the braine and agreeable to the temperament thereof and then beeing infused into the brayne by meanes of the sinewes they are insteade of a light whereby the actions of the sences are incited and stirred vp as also those motions which are from place to place And as wee haue hearde that a good temperature of the blood and of other humours doeth much helpe forwarde and profite the manners and conditions of men the same may bee saide of the heart and of the spirites proceeding from the same For when the heart is in good temper so that it is not troubled either with anger or sadnesse or any other euill affection it is manifest that the spirites are a great deale the better in the braine Nowe let vs consider the woonderfull woorke of God wrought in man by meanes of the Vitall and Animall spirites For what are the chiefe actions effected in him Are they not the preseruation of life nourishment and generation and then sense and motion with cogitation and the affections of the heart And what were all these thinges without spirites Hence it commeth that in the holy Scriptures the heart is taken for the fountaine not onely of life but also of all the actions of men as it hath beene alreadie declared vnto vs. And for this cause also some haue sayde that these spirites and little Vitall and Animall flames were the soule it selfe or the immediate instrument thereof that is to say the verie next whereby it woorketh immediately so that there is none betwixt them twayne But the latter is more certaine and more agreeable to trueth then the former For if the soule were nothing else but the Vitall and Animall spirites it shoulde fayle and perish with them as the bodily life doeth and so it shoulde not bee immortall But seeing they are but the instruments thereof as the humours of the bodie are and namely the blood from which they proceede the soule can well bee without them albeeit they cannot bee without it and although it cannot without them perfourme the woorkes it doeth with and by them And forasmuch as God hath giuen them to bee as it were a light it is certaine that the light of these surmounteth the light of the Sunne Moone or starres and that all these lights haue great agreement one with another But it is yet a farre more woonderfull woorke of GOD when not onelie the soule vseth these instrumentes for the life of man but also when the celestiall spirite ioyneth it selfe vnto them vsing them in the elect and making them more cleere by his heauenly light that the knowledge of God might bee more euident that their assuraunce and trust in him might bee more firme and that all the motions of his children might bee kindeled the more towardes him So likewise the euill spirite knoweth well howe to take occasion by the badde temperature of the humors to abuse men as wee haue alreadie declared thereby to set forwarde their ruine when hee possesseth the heart troubleth and poysoneth the spirites in that and in the brayne Whereupon hee attempteth to hinder reason and iudgement to bring men to furie and madnesse and to thrust forwarde their heart and their other members to committe foule and execrable factes Whereof wee haue examples in the furie of Saul and in his death in the death of Achitophel of Iudas and of manie others whome hee hath brought to slaye themselues as likewise in manie other horrible factes dayly committed by men Therefore it is very requisite that wee shoulde diligently consider our nature and bee carefull to gouerne and guide it well Wee are to knowe that our spirites are the habitations of the holy spirite and therefore wee are to pray to God through his sonne Christ Iesus to repell and keepe backe euill spirites farre from vs and to inspire his diuine and celestiall spirite into our spirites heartes and mindes that it may guide and gouerne them And this agreeth verie fitly with that prayer which wee hearde alreadie vttered by Saint Paul touching the entire sanctification of the whole man whome hee diuided into spirite soule and bodie So that if wee haue throughly tasted of the former discourses as well concerning the nature of the bodie as of the soule wee may perceiue wherefore the Apostle hath thus diuided the whole man For first wee cannot doubt but that the soule beeing the principall Woorker is such a substaunce and nature as dwelleth in a bodie apt and meete to receiue life in I speake this purposely because all sortes of bodies are not capable of soule and life and they that are capable are not yet capable of euerie kinde of soule and life but onelie of such as are agreeable to their nature hauing those instrumentes in themselues which may bee vsed by them according to their nature Wherefore the soule of man must of necessitie haue another bodie with other instruments and of another nature then the soule of beastesmay haue and the soule of beastes another then the soule of plantes according as euerie one of them differeth from other both in nature and offices But of what nature soeuer eyther the soule or the bodie is the soule hath this
ought to depart and the place where they are to be receiued according to the estate of euery one euen vntill they returne into their bodies at the resurrection If they be soules of the reprobate they are deteined in Hel in eternall fire where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth if they be the soules of Gods elect they shine as the sunne in the kingdome of heauen in a life accompanied with perpetual ioy and happinesse But wee must vrge them better that require testimonie for the immortalitie of soules by their returne into this world or of some that haue come from another world For it is an easie matter for vs to bring them as credible witnesses as any can bee to tell them most certaine newes if they will beleeue them according as they deserue it And for the first haue wee not Iesus Christ who first came downe from heauen and became man to bring vs newes and to declare the same vnto vs in his owne person not onely before his death but also after his resurrection Besides how many other witnesses haue we that haue testified most certainly of the same who saw with their eyes and touched with their hands euen to the number of moe then fiue hundred according as Saint Paul testifieth Moreouer they that were raised as wel by him as by Elias and Elizeus and by the Apostles and disciples may they not serue vs also for good withnesse to assure vs not onely that soules are immortall but also that their bodies shall rise againe and that God is of sufficient vertue power to doe it as he hath promised I omit here the testimonie which the Angels haue giuen both of the resurrection and ascension of Iesus Christ besides that of the holy spirite which is the chiefest of all with signes and giftes wherewith he came accompanied and those woorkes and effectes that followed them Wherefore seeing wee haue for this point the worde of God that is most certaine cleere which teacheth vs what we ought to beleeue and hold let vs rest our selues in the testimonie thereof and not desire to make further inquiry For it is he that said to Moses I am the God of Abraham of Isaac and of Iacob Whereupon Iesus Christ concludeth that Abraham Isaac and Iacob doe liue yet after their death seeing God is the God of the liuing and not of the dead that is to say of them that are yet in being and not of them that are nothing at all For otherwise if all men should so perish by death that nothing of them should remaine in life at leastwise in regard of the soule then should he be the God of nothing And although it seemeth that Iesus Christ alleaged this place against the Sadduces not onely to proue against them by the doctrine of Moses the immortality of soules but also the resurrection of bodies we may well gather that if it be fitte to proue that bodies arise it is much more strong to assure vs of the immortality of soules For when the Lord spake these words Abraham Isaac and Iacob were not aliue in regarde of their bodies but onely of their soules And yet Iesus Christ alleaged it to confirme also therby the resurrection of the dead although at the first sight it may seem not to be very fit firm to proue that so much as the immortality of soules But if it be narrowly looked into his argumēt shal be found to be very well deduced grounded vpon inuincible reason For Iesus Christ had respect to the promise which God made to those holy Patriarkes of whom he spake which was not made only to their soule but to the whole man together compounded of body soule Wherfore al they to whō it was made to whom it appertaineth should not haue the whole effect of it nor the ful fruition of that which it cōtaineth if they were not whole inheriters therof both in body soule For if it were otherwise the promise should be accomplished but in one part of man not in the whole man Wherupon it followeth that seeing the promise is not of a tēporal benefit but of an eternal therefore the whole man that must enioy the same must of necessitie liue an euerlasting life beeing of the same nature that the benefit is of which he must inherit Wherefore seeing the course of mans life is brokē off by death in regard of the body the body must necessarily rise again to liue again with his soule in a better longer life to the end that the whole man may possesse that inheritance which is promised him of God or els the promise made by God to his seruants is altogether vain or the testimony which the holy scripture beareth is wholly false so also the scripture that propoundeth the same vnto vs. But none may once think either of these two last points without great horror of blasphemy contained in thē So that the first point concludeth very strongly according to that groūd which it hath most certaine in the word of God Whereunto may be added further that seeing the soule of man is created not to liue alwaies without a body as the Angels do nor yet to wander from body to body but to be knit and ioyned to that body which is assigned to it of God it must needs be that being part therof as of her lodging she should once againe returne thither Besides seeing the body hath serued the soule either in obeying God or in disobeying of his wil the nature of Gods iusticerequireth that it should be rewarded also with the soule according to the qualitie of those workes whereof it hath bin an instrument Therefore according to that which we haue discoursed of this matter the resurrection of the body doth so depend of th'immortality of soules that it foloweth necessarily vpō this so that if we haue assurance of the one we ought to haue it of the other seeing both of them are certainely grounded vpō the iustice of God which cānot be iust vnlesse he iudge men both in body soule according to his word according as euery one liueth But seeing the matter of th'immortality of soules that of the resurrection of bodies are sundry questions and that wee are to handle but one of them we must returne to our first point of the soule touching th'immortality thereof which is easily beleeued of al that approue of the doctrine of holy Scriptures that giue credit to the word of God For they are throughly resolued therof Yea we may know by the writings of al antiquity that the common opinion of all people nations of what religion soeuer they haue bin hath bin this that mens soules were immortal Wherfore in regard of this point we are to fight only against Epicures Atheists And because they wil not beleeue the word of God but deride it as tales made vpō pleasure I am of opinion that now we
apprehension And thus the Spirite beholdeth and vnderstandeth corporall things corporally that is by meanes of those instruments which it hath in the body and spirituall things it beholdeth spiritually without those instruments Whereupon it followeth that although it vseth the senses and such kinde of instruments neuerthelesse it is not so tied vnto them that it can not be separated or do nothing without them or not knowe and vnderstand that which they are not able to conceiue or know So that it is no hard matter to beleeue that the soule is of another nature and substance as a man may iudge also by this that it is the fountaine and beginning of motion begunne by it selfe and not by any other but as we haue already declared Likewise by this that it is capable of the knowledge of infinite things of which it retaineth the memorie and that it inquireth into secret things separated from all corporall matter which can not be perceiued by any sense and that it doeth so many and so great things without the helpe of any bodily nature Whereupon the Philosophers conclude that it is of a simple nature not compounded and so consequently that it is immortall For that nature which is adorned and decked with such vertues and with the facultie to vnderstand the like whereof is not in the body and which can vnderstand by it selfe without the vse of the body can not be compounded of an earthly and mortall nature nor haue any part thereof mingled with it selfe but it is stayed and sustained by it selfe it subsisteth of it selfe and is immortall Heereof also it followeth that if the soule of man be of such a nature then it cannot be rent in sunder or diuided or pulled into peeces or haue any thing in it that can be separated from it and so it must needes be that it can not die or perish And therefore the best and most excellent Philosophers holde that sentence as immooueable which Aristotle saieth in an other place namely that the spirite is a thing separate and distinct from the senses and from the body as an immortall thing from a mortall and that it commeth from without and else-where then from the body as we haue already touched it in another place Whereby to my thinking he hath declared very plainely that he did not take the soule of man to be mortal But yet it is somewhat hard to iudge what his opinion was because he doth not shew himselfe so openly as the matter requireth Yet whatsoeuer he thought or resolued with himselfe the soule shal not be therfore any whit the more mortall or immortall For the immortality therof depēdeth not vpon his opinion or of any other mans whatsoeuer Neuerthelesse seeing so subtill and sharpe a Philosopher durst not affirme that it was mortall euerie one of anie sound mind may wel iudge that hee knew there were too many arguments to the contrary and those so waightie that they deserued to bee diligently examined and were not so lightly to be reiected For hee was not so shamefast and modest but he durst boldly reiect and condemn the opinions and sentences of all others that were as wel in his time as before him how great and famous personages soeuer they were when he thought he could doe it with any shew of reason insomuch as hee spared not his master Plato Therefore albeit we had no other resolution from him touching this matter but this only that he was in doubt and durst affirme nothing on either side yet his authoritie ought to preuaile much with vs against them who depende onely of humane Philosophie and reason and are so easily induced to approue rather of the mortalitie then of the immortalitie of the soule For at leastwise they may imagine that so great a Philosopher who is in such woonderful estimation amongst all learned men did not iudge their reasons friuolous and vaine who mainteined the immortalitie of the soule as our Epicures and Atheists thinke because they are more blockish and foole-hardie And therefore they boldly condemne that which either they will not or cannot conceiue and comprehend not considering what a confusion of things their opinion worketh in all mankinde For besides that which wee haue spoken to this purpose alreadie if it were so that the soule were mortall the wickedest and most desperate men should haue that which they desire most and which is most expedient for them and that should befall the best and iustest men which they abhorre most and flee from as very hurtful for them contrary to that which Salomon saith in the Prouerbes That the wicked shall fall into the euill he feareth and that the desire of the iust shal be accomplished In regard whereof good men shoulde haue farre greater reason to feare death then the wicked to desire it For what good man is there of noble courage who will not greatly abhorre death when hee thinketh with himselfe that it consumeth and swalloweth vp the whole man as if he were buried in perpetuall darknesse What consolation will serue him and what comfort can a man offer him that will be able to surmount the feare and horrour of death but that he will expect and suffer it with great impatiencie and despaire when he shal be through necessitie brought vnto it As for that consolation which is taken from the necessitie of nature and from the common condition of all men it is very leane if there be no other We see by them who are so greatly tormented that they wish and aske after death as after a hauen wherein they may bee deliuered from that tempest and torment in which they are although the greefe which they suffer breede such vowes and desires in them yet if they haue but a smal respite they gather some consolation to themselues by some assurance that their griefe will in time cease or els that time and custome will make it lighter vnto them and will teach them to beare it patiently To be short life is acceptable and beloued of euery one that such as are most miserable and wretched cannot bee brought to leaue it but with great griefe no not those who destroy themselues with their owne handes Whereby wee may iudge howe much more bitter it is to them that haue not all these occasions to desire it For euery one may imagine what extreame griefe it woulde bee to a good man who for liuing honestly all his life time and for all the good which hee had euer thought spoken or done shoulde not onely receiue no honour nor recompence in this world but which is woorse as it commonly falleth out among men shoulde receiue nothing but euill for good And yet in the meane time hee shoulde see the woorst men that wholly giue ouer themselues to dishonour and despite God enioy the honours riches and pleasures of this worlde and contrariwise himselfe to haue nothing but dishonour shame confusion famine pouertie miserie sorowe torment and
who euer returned from thence to assure vs of that which euery one may haue experience of in his death and whether they perceiued themselues to bee altogether like to beastes after the same For they can haue no more certaine testimonie of this by their senses then they haue of the other point Also I woulde gladly aske of him howe hee founde himselfe when hee was choked neere to the mountaine Vesuuius with smoake and with the smell of brimstone issuing out of the same and what consolation he found in death which hee sayeth is the greatest good of Nature Whereby hee shewed howe smally hee had profited in the knowledge of God the Creatour of Nature by the contemplation of his workes therein No maruaile then if knowing him no better hee called her step-mother and cruell mother seeing that according to his Philosophie the greatest good which shee bringeth to men is death and seeing shee neuer doeth them a better turne then when he bringeth them backe againe to that estate in which they were before they were conceiued or borne into the world According to which conclusion a man may wel approue of that desperate sentence of theirs who affirmed resolutely that it were good for men either neuer to be borne or to die presently after their birth So that the first and cheefest benefite of nature shoulde be neuer to bee borne and the second to be borne before the time or to be as soone dead as borne Moreouer it should follow by Plinies Philosophie that nature had made men with such a condition that they can not but be miserable if they liue after this life and if death doe not wholy destroy them and if they be not resolutely perswaded of this to haue no hope at all of another life For that which he sayeth importeth as much Is not this then a goodly resolution and conclusion of so great a searcher of nature whereof he hath written the historie With what eies did hee looke vpon all that which hee might haue scene Howe much differed they from the eyes of beastes and what profite reaped hee by that knowledge which hee had more then they In trueth wee haue in this man a wonderfull example of Gods iudgement vpon the learned and wise men of the worlde who so vilely abuse that reason knowledge and vnderstanding which GOD hath giuen them And forasmuch as this dogge was permitted to vomite out such horrible blasphemies both against God and against Nature and yet receiued no punishment for the same from man therefore GOD himselfe tooke vengeance of him by smoke whereby hee was choaked to death For seeing he esteemed the soule to be no better then a little winde or breath he deserued well to loose the same in the middest of smoake and brimstone But we haue spoken enough of him Nowe you may ARAM tell vs some more lies rather then reasons wherewith Atheists fortifie themselues against the trueth of this matter we haue in hand and howe wee ought to consider of the iudgements of God vpon them Of them who say that we can not knowe by the light of nature but that the soule is mortall of them that alleadge a place of Salomon against the immortalitie of the soule how we ought to consider of the iudgements of God vpon Epicures and Atheists howe the absurdities which followe their doctrine declare plainely the grosenesse of it of the force of those arguments that were produced before for the immortalitie of the soule Chap. 99. ARAM. It is a great matter when men iudge of things not according to reason but according to their affections because then their eares are closed vp against all reasons as wee haue the example of the Iewes who were the enemies of Iesus Christ For after they had once resolued not to acknowledge him neither to receiue him for the true Annointed of the Lorde but to reiect and condemne him with all his doctrine and workes no reason was euer sufficient to remoue them from this their purpose But to confirme them in their obstinacie there needed no great arguments no not in shew as it appeareth in that difficultie of theirs to beleeue his resurrection For neither all these witnesses of which they had so great a number nor all their doctrine nor all their holinesse nor all their signes and miracles were of any force with them in regarde of that testimonie which the theeuish and murdering souldiers corrupted with money gaue them to the contrary and that by a lowd lie which ouerthrew it selfe Therefore we may easily iudge what the minde of man is when it is corrupted and peruerted and when men suffer themselues to be carried away with their euill and froward affections so that God doeth euen blindfold and forsake them We see many such examples in this matter which we now hādle touching the immortalitie of the soule For on the contrary side what are the strongest reasons which these doggish Epicures Atheists enemies to God to mankind and to all nature against whom we now dispute can alleadge for themselues What would they do if they had as much against vs as we haue against them How would they lift vp themselues against those that maintaine the contrary and tread them vnder their feete We heard in the former speech the strongest arguments vpon which their error leaneth wherby we may know what a badde foundation it hath Others there are who say that in the light of faith the soule is immortall but in the light of nature it is mortal so that whilest they would seeme Philosophers they shew themselues to be ignorant and grosse beasts For there is but one only truth both of nature and of faith trueth neuer being double but alwayes one Therefore if the soule be immortall in the light of faith it can not be mortall in the light of nature but onely in the darkenesse thereof For wee see howe this small remnant of naturall light that yet remaineth in the corrupt nature of men sendeth them with one common and publike consent to this trueth of the immortalitie of mens soules so that none besides those in whome it is as it were vtterly put out and whome God hath by his iudgement wholly reiected and cast into a reprobate sense but acknowledge the same Howe then would this light of nature shewe it selfe if it had still continued in integritie Therefore I demaund of these men what it is which they call naturall light and whether it be not the reason of man and if it be that reason whereby men differ from beastes I aske againe of them whether any thing that may be knowen by arguments and reasons although they were all gathered together and examined narrowly hath greater and more euident light of reason then this hath Neuerthelesse I agree with them heerein that the light of faith maketh vs a great deale more certaine of all this matter then any reason that can be alleadged because that is the light
fallen into such execrable beastlinesse and such horrible blasphemies as in a manner to say that God or Nature had brought men into the worlde onely to make them more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures so that they can finde no better happinesse and felicitie for themselues then during their life to become like to beastes or plants or some other insensible creatures or else after their death to bee brought to nothing as they were before their conception and birth Is it possible for a man to thinke of a straunger thing more against GOD more vnwoorthie mankinde or more iniurious to all nature For the Atheists themselues that reiect God doe yet confesse if they be Philosophers that nature doeth nothing without cause or if they confesse it not they haue testimonies enow in nature to conuince them of it And yet if their doctrine were true God and Nature haue done woorse in the creation and production of men then to doe some thing without cause For this were a cause most vnwoorthie of God and of Nature to create and bring foorth men into the worde onely for this cause and to this ende that they shoulde bee more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures and to make mankinde onelie to beholde in him the perfection of all miserie and vnhappinesse as though God and Nature tooke pleasure in beholding such cruell pastime as is the viewe of mans miseries in such a cursed estate Wherefore seeing all the doctrine and Philosophie of these dogges bringeth with it so many so strange so beastlike and so horrible absurdities euen once to thinke of them being so vnbeseeming God all mankinde and whole nature and so contrary to al the testimonies which the whole world affordeth vnto vs in the behalfe of Gods eternal prouidence ouer al his creatures I thinke there is no body except hee be as brutish as the Authours and Teachers of such kinde of Philosophie and doctrine but hee can easily iudge that it is altogether impossible to bee true or to haue any foundation ground in reason seeing it confoundeth and ouerthroweth al reason al nature Which causeth me to be so much the more abashed that there are men found euen among Christians yea a great number who rather followe the false opinion of these masties and giue greater credite to these sottish and vain arguments which they propound both against God and all diuinitie and against all nature and trueth then to the true sentence of so many vertuous learned holy men as haue bin in the world from the beginning and to the common and publike testimony of all mankind and of al people and nations But if God hath not spared the very heathen who so shamefully abused that knowledge which he gaue them of his works in nature and of the testimonies of his diuine nature prouidence manifested vnto them therein but punished them with such a horrible iudgement as to deliuer them vp into are probate sense into a woorse estate then is that of brute beasts we are not to maruell if he deale so and more hardly at this day with them that deserue a great deale more then they did because he hath manifested him self more cleerly without all comparison to these men if they would see and know him yea we ought to thinke it more strange if he dealt otherwise For the moe means he affordeth vnto men to know him the greater iudgement they deserue when they abuse the same and labour to blind themselues by their own ingratitude peruerse malice As for vs we cannot God be thāked doubt in any sort of the immortalitie of the soule seeing wee see on our side the aduantage euery way in defence therof namely multitude authoritie nature reason and which is most of all the testimonie of God who alone is sufficient I doubt not but that some to whome God hath giuen more knowledge and greater graces then to vs are able to alleage other arguments and reasons for the confirmation of this matter which we haue omitted For truth is not vnprouided but hath great abundance of all sorts But wee haue alleaged the chiefest taken out of the writings of learned men that haue written best of this matter especially of them that in our time haue written most Christianly And although there are other reasons then those which wee haue set downe yet I thinke there are enow in our discourses to stoppe the mouthes of all Epicures and Atheists at leastwise to conuince them if we cannot confound them For what can they alleage against them that is of any great shew or strength It may easily bee iudged by their best arguments discoursed vpon by vs. What will they haue more Do they expect or desire of vs that we should point with the finger at soules when they depart out of bodies that dye Then they shoulde bee no soules and inuisible spirits but bodies that may be seene And yet vnles they may behold them comming forth as they do smoke from the fire they will not beleeue that they depart at all from the bodies or that they haue any beeing at all Surely I think that these men who would so faine haue soules to bee mortall and to bee extinguished by death with their bodies would not beleeue that they were departed and that they once liued their bodies being dead no not although they had seen them come foorth visibly but woulde perswade themselues that they were some illusions and that their eyes had some mist before them so strong is a lying perswasion in a man when he wil iudge of a thing not according to reason but according to his affection Now seeing we are come to the end of our purpose namely to lay before our eies as it were a naturall history of man by the consideration of the matter of his body of the diuersitie of that matter and of the forme that God hath giuen it together with the profite and vse both of the one and the other and also by a description of the partes powers vertues and faculties of his soule therby to be instructed at large in the nature and immortality thereof by causing the soule to behold her selfe in the glasse of her marueilous actions and all to this ende that wee should know our selues as it becommeth vs there remaineth nothing now but that wee shoulde draw out a generall instruction from these aduertisements and lessons which God giueth vs in the admirable composition of our nature to the end that hereafter we should become more fitte for the contemplation of this diuinitie by the consideration of the wonderfull works thereof in the heauens and in the earth of which we desire if God giue vs grace hereafter to discourse Therfore doe thou ACHITOB put an ende to the cause of our present assembly meeting by some goodly discourse vpon all these matters of which we haue intreated Of the image of God in the soule
our birth What similitude there is betweene our spirituall and our natural birth Why we abhorre natural death The first point to be considered touching mans nakednes Gen. 3. 19. The second point Man by nature hath least defence for himselfe A commendation of the hand of man The third point A double vse to be made of our wants Wherin men excell all other liuing creatures The fourth point What we ought to learne by the proportion of our bodies What man is The excellent frame of mans body Who they be that know not themselues Ioh. 15. 1 2 3 4 The soule proceedeth not of the matter Nor of the qualities Nor of the harmonie Nor of the composition of the body The nature of a Hog And of an Elephant The soule of a beast differeth from the substance and nature of his body The facultie of sense commeth not from the body The cause of the life of the body The degrees of mans age Iob 14. 5. The cause of the length and shortnes of life What naturall death is Psal 90. 10. Psal 7. 8 9. Iob 14. 1 2. Of the true difference betweene naturall and diuine Philosophie The cause of so many Atheists Gen. 3. 17 18. Iob 5. 6. The cause of barrennes Nothing abideth still in the same state The cause of the length of life What death is Naturall death Violent death Of the windpipe From whence the cough commeth Esay 2. 22. The blood necessary for life The difference betweene the death of beasts and of man An image of our spirituall death in the bodily Only sinne hurteth the soule What it is to be well A comfort against death Rom. 8. 22. Naturall philosophie affoordeth no found comfort against afflictions or death A profitable contemplation in nature The miserable estate of Atheists that haue no hope of another life Philosophicall reasons against the feare of death Sinne the cause of death Atheists more miserable then beasts The common sayings of Atheists Naturall reason not sufficient to stay the conscience Two sorts of Atheists Why there must needes be a second life What Nature is Nature is a creature The error of Galen such like Atheists nowe adayes What we are to iudge of Nature 1. Thes 5. 23. Dan. 9. 24. Man diuided into three parts One soule in one bodie The soule like to a man that hath many offices Of the seate of the soule in the body The soule compared to an Husbandman The chiefe instruments of the soule Two kinds of vniting things together Of the vnion betweene the soule and the body How the soule is ioyned to the bodie Diuers degrees of nature in the soule Beasts haue some kinde of knowledge The originall of the powers of the Soule An admirable worke of God Why God hath ioyned the body to the soule The naturall knowledge of mans body very profitable Why the soule worketh with sundry instruments Of the Vital and Animal spirites and of their operations The effects of the Vital and Animal spirits in man The Vital Animal spirits are not the soule A wonderfull worke of God 1. Sam. 18. 10. 31. 4. 2. Sam. 17 23. Matth. 27. 5. 1. Thess 5. 23. A comparison of the soule and a workeman A similitude Against the transmigration of soules The aptest instrument for the soule The necessary vse of the humours The humors are in continuall motion What partes of the body come nerest to the soule 1. Cor. 6. 19. Of the entire sanctification of mans bodie The body liueth not to eate but eateth to liue 1. Thes 5. 23. The name of Soule taken diuersly Math. 10. 28. Gen. 6. 17. esai 40. 6. luc 3. 6. leuit 4. 2. ezech 18. 4. rom 13. 1. Gen. 14. 21. 46. 27. When a man is perfectly sanctified Esay 26. 8 9. Luk. 1. 46 47. The soule deuided into three partes Ephe 4. 17 18. Iohn 1. 9. and 8. 12. and 9. 5. and 12. 46. Why the naturall powers are not mentioned in these diuisions Genes 37. 21. Deut. 19. 21. Ierem. 11. 21. Matth. 2. 20. Esay 5. 14. Esay 29. 8. Ierem. 31. 25. Ezech. 7. 19. Deut. 24. 15. leuit 19. 13. Deute 24. 6. Matth. 16. 17. Iohn 1. 12 13. 1. Cor. 2. 11 12 What is meant by liuing soule Genes 1. 1. Cor. 15. 44. What is meant by a naturall and by a spirituall man Genes 2. 7. What is meant by an animal or naturall man The soule put so the affections Gen. 34. 3. Gen. 44. 30. 1. Sam. 18. 1. Deut. 6. 5. matth 10. 39. mar 8. 35. luke 9. 24. iohn 12. 25. How we are to vnderstand that the soule dieth Num. 23. 10. Gen. 22. 16. Ierem. 51. 14. Amos 6. 8. Leuit. 21. 1. The name of soule put for the dead body Iob 33. 18 22. Psalme 30. 3. Psalm 56. 13. and 22. 20. What is meant by Spirite in the Scriptures Psalme 31. 5. luke 23. 46. Actes 7. 59. Eccles. 12. 7. Iob 27. 3 4. Rom. 8. 16. 1. Cor. 2. 11. Psal 33. 20 21. 1. Pet. 2. 11 12. Wisd 1. How the soule is after a sort mortall The ancient Academicall kinde of teaching P●at●n Phad The word of God the true glasse for the minde Who know the soule best The soule is not bred of corporall seede Genes 1. Modestie requisite in searching the trueth How we become guiltie of original sinne What originall sinne is How wee must learne to know the soule When wee shall know our s●lues perfectly What the soule is Varietie of opinions touching the essence of the soule Iohn 3. 6. Why one soule is called vegetatiue another sensitiue the third reasonable Iohn 3. 12. Of the distinction of the soule from the powers there of The soule of the beast is of a corporal substance Gen. 9. 4. Leui. 17. 14. The Vitall spirite compared to the flame of a lampe It is engendred of the blood in the heart God the author of nature Sundry opinion of the reasonable soule The soule proceedeth not frō the elements Rom. 11. 33. Galens opinion of the soule Gal. d● pl●s Hip. Platoes opinion touching the soule Aristotles opinion of the soule Occams opinion of the soule Of the creation of soules according to the Platonists Lib 11. chap. 23. of the citie of God Origens opinion of soules The Platonists opinion of the soule confuted God is not the soule of the world Act. 17. 28. Arat. Phae. How men are the linage of God Platoes opinion of Daemones or celestial spirits Plato dwelt with the Egyptians Lactautius lib. 2. cap. 13. Ecclus. 24. 5. The Soule created of nothing Of the transmigration of soules The regeneration of the Pythagoreans A fond opinion of certaine Heretikes Against the transmigration of soules Why Plato inuented the transmigration of soules Mans nature compared to a Monster How mē become like to beasts The ignorant wrest the sence of good writers Math. 14. 2. marke 6. 14. Luke 9. 7 8. Mat. 16. 13 14. luke 9. 19. Of the Iewes opinion of the transmigration