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A54603 Volatiles from the history of Adam and Eve containing many unquestioned truths and allowable notions of several natures / by Sir John Pettus ... Pettus, John, Sir, 1613-1690. 1674 (1674) Wing P1912; ESTC R7891 75,829 198

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Exorbitancies which grew up with the exuberancy of the world Besides we see even in our times to what great Ages Men and Women have arived even to two and three hundred years though Climes constitutions vitiations by food and other inordinacies do distemper that harmony of nature by which our forefathers did subsist Now nine hundred and thirty years want but seventy of a thousand and a thousand are but as a span the span is but what it can grasp and why should we labour to grasp that which whether we hold or not is equal at present but disadvantagious not only in the riddance of Anxieties but also procrastinating those happy Expectations which even Common Reason guides us to believe For though there is no mention made in our Translations how Adam was disposed of after he died yet the Targum of Jerusalem says Mortuus est collectus fuit e medio Mundi And it is sufficient he was taken out of the midst of the troubles and anxieties of the world And there can be no doubt but that he who was imprisoned here nine hundred and thirty years for his offence and had worn the badges of mortality in the skins of dead Beasts for his cloathing and digg'd his grave so oft in cultivating the Earth as a reward for his frugality and industry after his death enjoyed such quiet felicities as I hope will be given to all such as shall live and die here in a clear submission to our Creators Will. And he died § 55. We read of three sorts of death the Violent which befel Abel the Natural Adam and the Transmutative Enoch yet these distinctions relate only to the manner for death is the same to all and as the Poet saith there are a thousand ways to it If it be forced 't is still a death or transmuted which is a kind of insensible force it is still a death or according to the extent of Nature when she or the soul being weary of the confusions of this life retires and hides it self from performing any further offices to the body it is still a death And though Adam is said to live nine hundred and thirty years which is three hundred thirty nine thousand six hundred thirty six days in which I compute the Bissextile days and if those days be accounted by hours and those hours by minutes yet it may truly be said that so many minutes as he lived so many minutes he died for the Casualities which occasion death are as many as those which attend our lives and therefore he which lives longer than another passeth by only so many more Casualties his life is not the longer though prolonged because death hath still an Interest in every prolongation and is so clearly concerned that 't is not to be judged who is living or who dying At our Birth we break the Prisons of Death and lie at the mercy of Midwives or other Keepers for our Evasions in our Infancy Nurses and Tutors in our Youth our Extravagancies in our riper years our discretion and indiscretion madness and sobriety are equal attendants in Age diseases and infirmities are ready to usher us to the Grave a more severe Prison and yet with little difference for the grave of the womb gives life to us and the other by our death gives life to multitudes of vermine they by Corruption enrich the Earth the Earth by that fertility affords us food that food supports life And so there is a Circulation of Generation and Corruption and those possibilities being in either 't is hard to judge which is living which dying And it is not only thus in Terrestrials but even in Celestials The day dies the night produceth another that dies again And so in those glorious Creatures in the heavens there is also a visible Rotation of living and dying and our life and death is but as night and day And it seems an incivility towards God or rather an affront to his disposure to desire a long life as if we would afford no room to our successors or permit God to be seen by any but our selves in his unexpreffible variations And therefore the most consonant way to our Immortality is to live in a continued mortification For so we shall live by dying and die by living Of Life Death Resurrection and Immortality As also of the Chemistry of Nature operating in our souls and bodies by which they are forced to rejoyn 1 Cor. 15.22 FOr as in Adam all die so in Christ the second Adam all shall be made alive or have resurrection from the dead The joynt operation of mans soul and body is called Life the Cessations of those joynt motions Death The operations and constant exchanges which Nature admits of are perplexities for nothing in life is pleasure but the enjoyment of an equal and contented mind knowing our selves totally or in our particles to be every minute hurled about with the vicissitude of Constitutions the Cessation or at least our want of knowledg what is done in the grave seeming to be our quiet But how far or how long it continues 't is hard to judge seeing our corrupted parts are hourly traversing into various Productions of which we consist and into which we return again But by reason of this Cessation or seeming separation not only of soul and body but of the parts of the body into millions of forms we to support our belief in the union of our parts seek after the progresses and inclinations of other Creatures to theirs notwithstanding their several Contingent obstructions and therefore I think fit to set down several observables And in the first place that Experiment of reviving a Plant out of its ashes is a noble piece of Chemistry Dr. Browns Religio Medici and serves well to this purpose And though such a revived Plant may want some of its Accidents yet the very revivification of it if it gains not a full satisfaction to Immortality yet it affords us a fair testimony of the possibilty of our Resurrection for then all the Accidental defects of nature shall be volatile but the virtues and perfections of nature fixed Indeed if we could find out by art a revivification of Vegetables in all their accidents we should make Immortality too common it is enough if a man can make any experimental inducement to his faith and give an imitation to future perfection The whole Art of Chemistry what is it as I conceive but to dissolve the nature of a Creature and to recollect it again if not into its superfluous accidents yet into a noble Evidence of its virtues And this is done not so much by the force of Arts as by the secret instinct and greediness of its own disposition to unite its scattered nature And that which is worthy of obfervation for our use in this Art is Let the gross body of any Creature be dissolved or dissected into many parts that remaining part which is visible to us after its dissolution