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A67073 The history of the creation as it is written by Moses in the first and second chapters of Genesis : plainly opened and expounded in severall sermons preached in London : whereunto is added a short treatise of Gods actuall Providence in ruling, ordering, and governing the world and all things therein / by G.W. Walker, George, 1581?-1651. 1641 (1641) Wing W359; ESTC R23584 255,374 304

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innocency I have proved in this Doctrine And yet Christ taking upon him our nature which was far inferiour to the Angels and uniting it personally to himselfe as he is the eternall Sonne of God hath dignified and exalted and crowned it with glory and excellency farre above all Angels Principalities Thrones and Dominions Hebr. 2. 7. so that the holy elect and blessed Angels exalted above their best naturall estate to the immutable estate of supernaturall life immortality and glory doe adore and worship him as David fore-told Psal. 97. 7. and the Apostle affirmes Heb. 1. 6. He is the head of all and they all are made subject to him 1 Pet. 3. 22. And so wonderfull is Gods bounty to man in Christ and so powerfull and excellent is Christs mediation for the elect of mankind that by Christs mediation concurring and working together with Gods bounty according to wisdome and for the satisfaction of Gods justice a ready way is made for them into the Holy of holies the Heaven of heavens and they are not onely exalted and elevated farre above their best naturall being unto the blessed state of the glorious Angels but also the holy Angels with whom they shine in heavenly glory hereafter in the life to come are made of God ministring spirits whom Christ hath procured to minister for their good here in this world in the state of grace so that upon him as upon the Ladder in Jacobs dreame the Angels of God descend from heaven to earth and ascend from earth to heaven and doe encamp round about them to save and deliver them as David saith Psal. 34. 7. Yea and when the evill Angels shall be judged at the last day they shall through Gods infinite bounty and for the merit and worthinesse of Christ be advanced to sit upon Thrones with him and to judge and give sentence against the Divell and all his Angels as wee reade 1 Corinth 6. 3. And therefore if wee had the tongues of men and Angels we are never able to utter or expresse the infinite excellency worth and dignity of the person and mediation of Christ nor sufficiently to extoll laud and magnifie the bounty of God to poore mankind in Christ. And here we see that truly verified which the Prophet fore-told Isa. 64. 4. And the Apostle proclaimed 1 Cor. 2. 9. that since the beginning of the world the eye of man hath not seen nor his eare heard neither hath it ever entered into the heart of man what good things God hath prepared for them that love him Thirdly this Doctrine serves to worke in us a true love and reverent respect of the Angels of God as being the chiefest of Gods creatures and by nature more excellent then man in his best naturall estate and great in power able to help us more then all other creatures when God offers occasion and opportunity and gives them charge over us Every man is bound to thinke better and more reverently of other men who are in any gifts more excellent then himselfe though they be all of one nature and kind and of the same flesh and bloud And God hath put upon the beasts of the field by nature a feare and respect of man because he is a more excellent creature Now the Angels are by nature and creation more excellent then man in his best naturall estate and man in the supernaturall estate of glory shall be but equall to the elect and holy Angels And therefore as we must ever labour to decline that servile superstition and base will-worship of Angels which is condemned Colos. 2. 18. and must beware of giving divine and religious worship to them which they themselves reject and refuse being our fellow-servants and have utterly detested and forbidden when it hath been offered as appeares Revel 19. 10. and 21. 9. so we must take heed that we doe not thinke meanly of them as if they were but our servants because they minister for our good For in guarding us and encamping about us and in ministring for us they are not our servants which owe us service neither have we power to command them nor ability to requite them for the least service but they are the servants of God and of our Lord Christ and fellow-servants with all Kings Prophets and Holy men of God and as Gods Embassadors and Princely Courtiers Ministers we ought to esteem and respect them with all love and hearty affection And as in all places where there are Embassadors and noble Princes and Courtiers of great Emperours and Monarchs men will have a care to beare themselves orderly and to doe all things decently and will be affraid and ashamed to commit any absurdity or beare themselves immodestly So let us in the publick assemblies of the Saints and in holy congregations of Gods-Church where Angels are supposed sometimes to guard us and to over-look us as the words of the Preacher seem to import Eccles. 5. 6. and of the Apostle also 1 Cor. 10. 11. beare our selves reverently and beware of all vaine words filthy behaviour and beastly drowzinesse and sleepinesse as if we came to the Church like uncleane dogges for company only or to lye snorting and sleeping which is the evill custome and practice of many carnall people Fourthly this Doctrine is matter of comfort to Gods poore despised servants in that it doth assure them that the Angels which love them and as friends rejoyce in their conversion and as guardians protect and watch over them are great excellent and glorious above all earthly men And therefore though the great men of the world scorne and despise them and among such they can find no favour help or defence yet let them comfort themselves and rejoyce in this that he who is higher then the highest hath a guard to whose care and charge he hath committed them and that not of mighty men in whom there is no help but of Angels which in power strength and glory far exceed the most excellent among the sons of men 2. Corollary Secondly in that Angels were created in and with the highest heaven to be the naturall inhabitants sutable to the place hence we may gather a definition of Angels to wit that Angels are heavenly Spirits or pure and entire spirituall substances created in the beginning by God after his owne image every one of which is distinct from another by a speciall existence or proper particular being of his owne which God hath given to have in himselfe for ever First in that Angels were not made and created out of the rude masse without forme and void which is called earth and the deep nor of any other matter before made by God but in the first beginning of all things were created perfect creatures in and with the highest heavens the lively and proper inhabitants of them Hence it necessarily followes that they are pure heavenly spirits and intire spirituall substances not parts of any body or person not compounded of any
have smitten and destroyed thousands of men in a night as 2 Kin. 19. and rejoyce over sinners which repent Fourthly the Scriptures reckon up Angels not among those inspirations motions or affections which proceed from Gods Spirit or any other person or substance but among perfect creatures and spirituall substances which live and move and subsist by themselves and not in another substance and so the Spirit of God speakes of them Psal. 149. 5. and in all the places where they are said to come from heaven to earth and to be sent from God unto men The third point in the definition is That Angels are heavenly spirits that is neither made of any bodily substance nor compounded of any elements or creatures of the visible world but of a pure and heavenly nature made to dwell in the highest heaven as in their proper and naturall place of habitation and there have their continuall residence This is manifestly proved by the former Doctrine and also by those Scriptures which testifie that they alwaies and continually in heaven behold the face of God as Matth. 18. 10. and that they are the heavenly host Luke 2. 13. and Spirits of heaven Zach. 6. 5. And there they encamping are in a moment as ready to defend the righteous and to guard the Church militant on earth and avenge all wrongs done to Gods little ones as if they were here present on earth for in the twinckling of an eye they can descend from heaven to earth and deliver the godly and stay the hand of their enemies and smite them with death as we see by the army of Angels coming from heaven and guarding Elisha so soon as he called upon God 2 Kin. 6. and by the Angell of God which at the praier of Hezekiah destroyed all the army of the Assyrians in one night and at our Saviours praier in his agony appearing presently from heaven and comforting him In a word our Saviour affirmes that spirits have not flesh and bones Luke 24. 39. They cannot be seen with bodily eies nor felt by bodily hands as corporall things may be Therefore Angels being spirits are not corporall nor compounded of bodily elements but are pure and invisible as the Apostle cals them Colos. 1. 16. The fourth point to wit That Angels were created by God in the beginning and God hath given to them their being is aboundantly proved in divers Doctrines before I need not say any more of it The fifth point is That Angels were created in the image of God and doe in many respects resemble God more then any other creatures First in their very substance and naturall being for as God is a spirit so they are spirits yea pure spirits and in that respect resemble God more then any other creatures Secondly as God is absolutely pure and simple so they are more pure and simple then any other creatures and have no corporall or visible substance in them Thirdly as God is the living God and even life it selfe and as he is infinite in wisdome knowledge goodnesse and power and doth all things freely of himselfe according to the good pleasure of his owne will also is in and of himselfe most glorious and blessed for ever and with him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning so Angels are most quick active and lively spirits the most excellent of all Gods creatures in wisdome knowledge and liberty of will and in all goodnesse and good will towards men they are also great in power and excell in strength Psal. 103. 20. and are called the blessed and glorious Angels of light heaven the place of blisse is their habitation And as they are incorporeall spirits which cannot be dissolved and die as men doe when their soules are separated from their bodies and the whole person is dissolved so and in that respect they are immortall do more resemble God who only hath immortality then any other creatures doe by nature All these things to wit the lively strength activity knowledge wisdome free-will glory power and blessed estate of Angels wherein they were created the Scriptures doe most clearly testifie and declare where they affirme that the Angels doe see Gods face who is all in all and that they look into all the mysteries know the manifold wisdome of God concerning the salvation of the Church 1 Pet. 1. 12. and Ephes. 3. 10. and have great joy in heaven over sinners which repent and doe relate great and mighty workes done by Angels most readily and speedily without delay The sixth point is That Angels are distinct and different among themselves and one from another by a proper and particular existence and being this I have fully proved in the second branch The last is That Angels are finite in their nature and number and have their bounds and limits and also are by nature mutable such as might fall from the first estate wherein they were created That Angels are in nature finite and cannot be in divers places or in all places at once is most plaine both by this that they are said to be Gods heavenly host and Angels in heaven that is who are confined to heaven for the proper place of their dwelling and when they are here on earth are said to be descended from heaven Matth. 28. 2. and to be here and not there That though they are many and more then man can number and in that respect are called innumerable yet that their number is limited and that God knowes the number of them cals them by their names and brings them out by number the Prophet testifieth Isa. 40. 26. That Angels are mutable by nature subject to fall from the state wherein they were created the Scriptures doe testifie where they make this Gods property that hee onely changeth not Malach. 3. 6. And with him is no variablenesse Iam. 1. 17. And where it is testified that God hath charged the Angels with folly Iob 4 18. And many of the Angels did not keep their first estate but left their habitation and by sinning did fall from Heaven and are cast downe to Hell and delivered into chaines of darknesse 2 Pet. 2. 4. and Iude 6. And that onely the elect Angels are made holy and immutably blessed by the light which God hath added to them Iob 4. 18. Thus much for the definition of Angels 3. Corollary The third Corollary is That the bodily shapes of men and other creatures in which Angels have appeared were no parts of their nature and substance neither were essentially united unto them but were onely assumed for the present time and occasion that thereby they might make fraile men see more evidently and acknowledge their presence and their actions For the heaven of heavens is not the place of grosse earthly bodies and therefore Angels being naturall inhabitants of heaven have no such bodies personally united they onely did for a time assume the bodies in which they appeared and performed some
commandement bringing all things to passe out of meere nothing or that which was as nothing made of nothing without any instruments toile labour alteration or delay for the revelation of himselfe and for the communion of his goodnesse and glory This description truely gathered from this text and this historie is in whole and in every part confirmed by other testimonies of Gods holy infallible Word First creation is an outward act or work because it is not within God himselfe but his making of things and giving to them a being different from his own essence Secondly it is Gods first outward act because it was the giving of the first being to all kindes of creatures in which and upon which hee exerciseth all other outward works these two points are manifest and need no further proofe But as for the third point the Author or first cause God the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost wee have manifest proofe of it in Scripture able to satisfie any reasonable mind First that the Lord Jehovah the only true God not Angels is alone the Creatour of all things Holy Job testifieth saying that hee alone spreadeth out the heavens and treadeth upon the waves of the Sea Job 9. 8. And Isa. 44. 24. I saith Jehovah am the Lord that maketh all things that stretcheth forth the heavens alone that spreadeth abroad the earth by my selfe Secondly that all the three Persons are equall in this worke and as they all are one God so are one Creatour of all things it is manifest Job 35. 10. Where the Creatour of all things is called in the plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my makers that is more Persons than one even three Persons in one God and Psal. 149. 2. Let Israel rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them that made him and Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creators 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Isa. 54. 5. The Lord thy makers is thine husbands the Lord of hostes is his name For the Father in particular there is no doubt all confesse him to be the Creatour and so the Scriptures testifie Prov. 8. 22 23. and Heb. 1. 2 3. For the Son also we have plaine texts that by him all things were made and nothing without him John 13. 10. and Joh. 5. 17 19. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Col. 1. 16. Heb. 1. 10. And as the Spirit is one God with the Father and the Sonne so his hand wrought with them in the Creation as appeares Gen. 1. 2. Where it is said the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters that is cherished the rude masse as the Hen doth her egges by sitting on them and so gave forming vertue to them so the Hebrew word signifieth and Job 26. 13. God is said by his spirit to have garnished the heavens and Job 33. 4. The spirit of God hath made me saith Elihu and Psal. 33. 6. By the Word of the Lord that is the Sonne were the heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth that is his spirit Fourthly for the time of the Creation we need not stand much upon proofe of it This Text sheweth that it began in the beginning or first moment of time And in six dayes it was perfected and fully finished as the rest of the Chapter sheweth It was of old that God founded the earth and made the heavens as the Psalmist testifieth Psal. 102. 25. that is in the first beginning of times And reason tells us that time being a circumstance and inseparable companion of creatures visible must of necessity begin together with their being Yet one thing is worthy to be noted in the time namely That whereas God was able in the first moment to create all things as he did the highest heavens and the rude masse which is called the earth in my Text and which was the common matter of all the visible world yet he did distribute and divide the creation into divers acts which are distinguished one from another by the effects that is the creatures made and by the severall times and dayes also wherein they were performed Which point wee will insist upon as it well deserves when we come to the several acts performed particularly in severall dayes of the Creation The fifth point in the description is the generall object and effect of creation to wit all things and the first being of them For here the object and effect concurre and are altogether the same The world and all things therein and the first matter of which they were made as they are the onely things about which the act of creation is exercised so they are the object of creation And as they are things made by the creation so they are effects of it Now this generall object and effect as it is truly gathered from the enumeration of all the kindes of things created which are numbred in this Chapter and the next and is plainely expressed in the description so it is abundantly testified in all the Scriptures as Isa. 44. 24. and Coloss. 1. 16. and Exod. 20. 11. where all things in heaven and earth visible and invisible are said to bee made created and formed by God Yea the first rude matter it selfe out of which the inferior world was made is here in my Text said to be created by God And this is confirmed by reason drawn from the nature of God and his Name Jehovah For God as this Name signifieth is an absolute essence of himselfe and the first being of all and the Author of all being Therefore every thing which is or hath being must needs be of him and be his creature The sixth point in the description is the matter out of which God created all things under which we comprehend two things First the matter improperly so called or Terminum à quo from whence God brought the first being of all things immediately And that was either negative even nothing or their not being at all or positive their being in Gods eternall purpose onely This was the first matter which God had to worke upon in the first immediate act of creation Secondly the matter properly so called that is either the rude masse made of nothing which was without forme and void or the foure Elements which had in them no forme or being of the things created and so were as nothing in respect of that being which God gave to every particular thing which he made of them For proofe of this we have a plain testimonie Heb. 11. 3. where the Apostle saith By faith we underst and that the worlds were framed by the word of God So that the things which are seen were not made of things which doe appeare Here it is plaine that hee speakes 1. Of creation in generall in that hee saith The worlds were framed 2. In that he denies the visible world to be made of any naturall things which doe appeare to any sense hereby hee shewes that their first matter was made of
Evangelist useth them doe signifie eternity but in that he saith The Word was that is had already a being with God in the beginning when hee began to give being to all other things this proves by necessary consequence that the Word was eternall and therefore the common exposition stands sure that here the word Bereshith signifies the beginning or first part of time The second word of this Text that is Bara created signifies the giving of first being to all things either simply out of nothing or out of matter undisposed for the forme introduced as I have noted before And by a Metaphor it signifies great and mighty workes which resemble the creation but here it signifies absolute creation or giving the first being to the highest heavens and to the rude masse or matter of the visible world out of meere nothing for they were created of no matter before existing as all doe hold and of their creation onely this Verse speakes That the third word Elohim being of the plurall number signifies three persons in one God the Creatour and that the creation was the worke of all the three persons in the Trinity I have before shewed Here let mee adde further a Cabalisticall proofe gathered from the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the act of creation and consists of three Hebrew letters which are the first letters of the three Hebrew words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifie the Father the Son and the Spirit And therefore if the Caballisticall art be of any credit this act of creating is the work of all the three persons the Father the Son and the holy Spirit one and the same God The two last words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heaven and the earth do here signifie as I have noted before the highest heaven and the earth which was without forme and void that is the rude masse and common matter of the visible world Some learned men do by heaven and earth understand the whole world in the same sense as the words are Chapt. 2. 1. By heaven they conceive the highest heaven the visible starry heaven and the whole firmament of the aire to be meant by earth the lowest globe of the earth which hath the sea intermingled with it and by creating they understand the whole worke of creation in generall and not that first speciall act by which God made the highest heavens and the rude masse and matter of the visible world onely The main reason which they have to prove this is drawn from the Hebrew Articles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is joyned with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is prefixed before the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 earth The first of which Articles consists of the first and last letter of the Hebrew Alphabet and so implies an universall comprehension of all things which were created both the first and the last The other to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is of plaine demonstration and sheweth that this heaven and earth as they now stand are said to be created here in these words But this exposition is plainly overthrown by the Text it selfe and the reason answered without any difficulty First the act of creation spoken of and intended in this Verse is that which was performed in the beginning that is in the first moment of time so the Text affirmes but the whole world and all creatures in heaven and earth were not made in the first moment of time nor in the first day but in sixe daies therefore the whole world is not meant in these words nor all creatures in heaven and earth Secondly if the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be of generall comprehension then each of these words should signifie the whole world for it is added to each of them and so the other word should be superfluous in this place Thirdly we may safely grant that these words are of generall comprehension and yet we need not expound them of any other heaven then the highest heaven nor of any other earth then the first rude masse out of which the whole visible world was made which was without forme and void as it is testified in the next words Verse 2. For this heaven did comprehend in it the highest heaven and all the host and inhabitants of it the Angels actually And this earth or rude masse did potentially comprehend in it the whole visible world which afterwards in the sixe daies was actually formed out of it and therefore I take this to be the best exposition to understand by the heaven the highest heaven onely where the Angels and blessed Saints have their dwelling together with the host thereof And by the earth to understand as the next Verse sheweth the rude masse out of which God after formed the whole visible and mutable world consisting of the starry heavens and of the aire water and earth with all things in them As for them who here by heaven and earth understand the whole world actually formed and made and them who understand the common seed and rude matter of the heavens both highest and invisible and also the visible heavens and the inferiour world they exclude out of this history of the creation the distinct and speciall narration of the creation of the highest heavens and of the glorious host thereof the Angels and super-celestiall Spirits contrary to that which Moses himselfe plainly teacheth Chapt. 2. 1. where repeating summarily the whole creation in generall which he had before distinctly related and in all the parts thereof described in the first Chapter he saith Thus were the heavens and the earth finished and all the host of them that is the Angels among the rest for they are called the heavenly host Luke 2. 13. From the words thus expounded we may gather an excellent description of the first speciall act of creation which is called simple and absolute creation and of the two particular branches thereof to wit That it is that act of creation whereby God in the first beginning did create and give the first being out of nothing to the highest heavens and to the earth that is the first rude masse and matter of the visible world The parts of this act are two The first is that act of simple creation by which God created out of nothing and gave a most perfect glorious being to the highest heaven and to all things therein contained The second is that act of simple creation by which God gave the first imperfect being to that rude earth the masse which was the common matter out of which hee formed the whole inferiour visible and mutable world In this description of the first act of simple creation and of each branch thereof wee may observe foure things The first is the matter both generall and speciall laid downe in the word Bara created Secondly the author of it God the Father Sonne and
his pleasure whensoever he will And hereby to be stirred up and encouraged to rejoyce mo 〈…〉 aboundantly in the Lord our Creatour to rest more confidently on him when we have committed our selves to his protection and he hath received us under the shadow of his wings and to hope for all blessings which he hath promised and for the performance of all his promises in due time and season without hinderance or resistance of any power As all created things were made for some end and whatsoever is not fit to serve for some speciall end is a meer vanity so the knowledge of things without the knowledge of the end and use of them is a vaine notion swimming in the braine and therefore the maine thing which we ought to drive at in seeking the profitable knowledge of things is to know and understand the speciall use of them Now Gods creating of the highest heavens and the host of them in glorious perfection by himselfe alone in the first act of creation in the beginning doth serve most properly naturally and necessarily to shew the infinite wisdome and omnipotencie of God the Creatour as is before proved that we seeing therein these divine attributes of God as in a glasse may rejoyce in him and rest securely on his promises knowing that he will performe and fulfill his word and none can resist him Wherefore let us study to make this right use that our knowledge may be sound and saving and may bring us on to salvation Secondly this may justly smite our hearts and make us ashamed of our owne dulnesse and negligence in this point in that we all or the most part of us have so often read heard remembred and understood in reading and hearing the Word of God this great worke of creating the heavens and heavenly host and have beleeved it and spoken of it and so have passed it over without seeing beholding and considering in it the wisdome power and glory of God Alas there be few amongst us who have taken care to look so farre into the end and use of these things of God and that is the cause that science abounds without conscience and much knowledge goeth alone without any sound or sincere practise O let us be throughly ashamed of our negligence in the times past which is too much indeed and let us labour to redeem the time hereafter by double diligence studying to see Gods glory in those great workes and seeing to admire his wisdome and to adore his heavenly Majesty Thirdly Gods truth in this doctrine beleeved and embraced is a strong Antidote against all Atheisticall thoughts which possesse the hearts of divers dull and carnall people who cannot conceive thoroughly nor fully beleeve but often doubt of Gods omnipotencie and ability to create in a moment out of meere nothing most perfect and glorious creatures such as are Angels and blessed spirits and the heaven of heavens Such doubts are the cause that they cannot beleeve in God rest on his power and be confident in him in cases of extremity when the whole world seems to be against them and all outward helps faile If they did but discerne the power of God by the first simple act of creation they might know and beleeve that hee out of nothing can raise more help then they can desire or stand in need of in their greatest extremities Secondly in that here in the first act of creation performed in the first beginning of all things and in the first moment of time God the Creatour is described by the name Elohim which signifies a plurality of persons in the unity of essence as I have before proved and this act is ascribed to all the three persons equally in one and the same word Hence we may gather a necessary doctrine concerning the consubstantiality equality and eternity of all the three persons in the sacred Trinity to wit That the three persons the Father the Son and the holy Ghost are all co-eternall and without beginning all equall among themselves and consubstantiall of the same undivided nature and substance three persons distinct in one infinite eternall Jehovah For plaine reason tells us that whatsoever had no being given to it in or after the first beginning of creatures but was and had a being already in the first beginning and before any thing was made yea was the authour and maker of the first worke of all that must needs be of absolute eternity every way eternall without any beginning or end at all Now such are all the three persons in the blessed Trinity they all by this word Elohim are shewed to be equall in the first act of creation and so to be before the first beginning of all things as the authour and cause before the worke and effect they all are declared to be one and the same singular God and undivided essence and therefore this Doctrine doth hence truly arise I need not here againe stand upon further proofe of it for that I have done aboundantly already in expounding the Doctrine of the Trinity Onely the consideration of this truth may serve first to convince all Heretickes of horrible errour and blasphemy who deny either the Creatour of the world to be the true God or the Son and the Spirit to be equall co-eternall and of the same substance with the Father as the Arians and others did Behold here the blasphemous fictions of these men cut off before they shoot forth and rooted up before they were sowne by this first act of creation as it is here described by the Spirit of God and therefore let us hate and abhorre all such dreames and fictions as most monstrous and unnaturall damned in Gods booke from the first words of the history of the first creation Secondly let us even from this furthest ground fetch the all-sufficiencie of our Mediatour and Redeemer Christ and the efficacie and perfection of his full satisfaction that we may rest on him confidently without scruple feare or doubting As also the infinite power of the Spirit that we may rest in his strength for perseverance If the Son Christ or the Spirit were inferiour Gods and of an inferiour nature not infinite nor co-eternall with the Father men might have some colour of diffidence and some cause to doubt of sufficient satisfaction redemption and stedfast perseverance But here we see the contrary that the Son if the Word by whom all things were made and the Son and Spirit one the same God and Creatour with the Father and the Spirit as he is in the regenerate is greater every way then he that is in the world 1 John 4. therefore let us comfort our selves in the all-sufficiencie of Christ for full redemption and of the Spirit for sanctification and perseverance Thirdly in that here the first act of creation even the creation of the highest heavens with the host of them and of the common matter of the visible world out of
nothing is said to be performed in the beginning that is in the first part or moment of time Hence some profitable Doctrines arise and here some questions offer themselves to be discussed First we here are taught That the whole world and all things therein even the highest and most durable heavens and the first matter of the visible world had a beginning and were not from all eternity as some Heathen Philosophers imagined This Doctrine as it is plainly affirmed in this Text which alone is proofe sufficient so other Scriptures doe aboundantly prove and confirme it John 17. 24. our Saviour saith that God the Father loved him before the foundation of the world Ephes. 1. 4. the Apostle saith that God hath chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world And 1 Pet. 1. 20. it is said that Christ was ordained before the foundation of the world And Prov. 8. 23. the Wisdome of God saith I was set up from everlasting before the earth was or ever the heavens were prepared These and such other Scriptures which mention things before the first beginning and foundation of the world doe most evidently shew that neither the world nor any part thereof was from eternity but with time and in time began And if this be not sufficient to satisfie Atheists who refuse to beleeve God or his Word naturall reason it selfe is able to prove it against them by their owne Principles which they grant First they acknowledge that whatsoever is corruptible or mutable by nature must needs have a beginning and cannot be eternall Now it is manifest that the whole world and all things therein are by nature corruptible and changeable and whatsoever therein is constant unchangeable and incorruptible it is so not by any naturall power in it selfe but of the free grace of God in Christ. The Angels the most glorious creatures and the spirits and soules of men which are created of nothing they are changeable by nature as appeares by the fall of the Divell and mans fall and corruption and therefore it is said that hee charged his Angels with folly to wit them that did fall and to the rest which stand he added light even supernaturall light of his sanctifying Spirit Job 5. And although the wisest of the Heathen Philosophers did gather from the constant course of the visible heavens and the starres that the heavens were incorruptible and unchangeable yet experience hath taught the contrary and it is found by long observation of Astronomers that there are many fixed starres and strange comets or blazing starres generated in the heavens farre above the Moon which appeare for a time and after doe vanish away as the late blazing starre in Anno 1618. was found to be by certaine demonstration But for the inferiour Elements under heaven and the creatures therein every eye sees them to be in daily change and alteration and to have no constancie in them Therefore the world is not from all eternity Secondly that which is eternall hath no cause subsisting before it nor any superiour to over-rule order and dispose it but is absolute of it selfe And that which hath such a preceding and superiour cause authour and disposer must needs have and receive a beginning from another Now such is the world and all things therein the world and the whole course of it is over-ruled and disposed by God as every eye may see For whereas it is the nature of Summer to be hot when the Sunne which is the fountain and cause of light and heat is most present with us God at his pleasure for the sins of men doth turne our Summers heats into cold Winter stormes and doth drown our Harvests with immoderate raine in the midst of the dry scorching dog-daies as we have found of late yeares So hee makes fruitfull lands barren when they are best tilled and the barren wildernesse hee turnes into a fruitfull field and the desart into springs of water Also daily experience doth teach us that things which naturally serve for health are sometimes turned to poyson that which enricheth one doth impoverish another and that which hurteth one doth help another All which shew that God over-rules the world and that all things are under his hand and he is the supreme cause and disposer of all Yea if we observe all parts of the world we shall see that the earth and the sea are ruled much by the heavens and the heavens are moved by some superiour power Therefore the world is not eternall without cause or beginning These and such arguments and experiments convinced the Heathen Philosophers and Poets and forced them to confesse that the world was not eternall but made in the beginning of time as appeares in Hermes Trismegistos Pythagoras Plato Orpheus Sophocles Homer and others And even Aristotle himselfe though he affirmed stiffely the worlds eternity and did oppose the fictions of Plato and others concerning the making of the world of a matter which was before existing and without beginning yet at length he was forced to confesse and doth in divers of his bookes that God is the authour and preserver of the whole universall world as appeares lib. de mundo lib. 2. de gener corr This admonisheth us not to set our hearts on the world nor content our soules with such things as are therein but to looke up higher to a better portion if we desire full satisfaction and true contentment and felicity indeed He that builds on a foundation which of it selfe may faile and needs a supporter it selfe he can never dwell safely and securely but in continuall feare that his house will fall on his head neither can he sleep in peace till he hath laid a deeper and surer foundation under that Now here we see the world is a moveable foundation it was not from eternity but had a beginning and the being of it hangs on an higher cause even God And therefore let us not set our hearts on the world nor make it our portion but looke up to God and set our affections on him and seeke to him to be our portion for he onely can fill our soules and he is and hath been and shall be for ever the same and in him is no variablenesse nor shadow of turning Secondly this truth serves to arme us against all temptations of Sathan and all cunning sophistications of Atheists which tend to shake our faith in this point of the worlds beginning and to make us thinke that the world hath been from all eternity we have here a sure foundation from Gods infallible Word and strong reasons also to confirme our hearts in this doctrine and therefore let no cavills of opposers trouble our hearts Yea that we may more cleerly see and more firmly beleeve this truth without doubting I will briefly shew the weaknesse of the best arguments which are brought to the contrary and so will remove those clouds and mists out of the way
the highest heavens which is invisible and the visible or lower heaven which also consists of two parts the starry and the airie heavens And all these are divided into two equall parts to all men living on earth The one is that which wee see in our Hemisphere and within our Horizon from East to West and from North to South above the earth The other halfe is that which is hid from us by the earth and is seen by the Antipodes that is them who dwell on the other side of the earth directly opposite to us and both these parts of the heavens are equally remote and distant from the earth Moreover the heavens doe move about two Poles the North and South Pole and therefore in many respects the name of the heavens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is most fitly derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brought into the forme of the duall number Fourthly this derivation of the name and the signification of it doth fitly agree to all things which are called by the name Heaven and is verified in them all even the highest heaven the starry heaven and the superiour regions of the aire for they are all remote and distant from the earth and are divided every one into two equall Hemispheres equally distant from the earth But in the highest heaven there is neither fire nor water nor any mutable Element and therefore the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cannot agree to it at all And as for the superiour regions of the aire they are not so glorious nor so high as to astonish us and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cannot agree to them wherefore the last is the best derivation The next thing after the derivation of the word is the diversitie of significations which we are to note in the next place and withall to shew in what sense it is here used in the Text. First this word is used in a large sense for that whole space from the upper face of the earth and the sea to the utmost height of the highest heavens which comprehends in it the highest the starry and the airie heavens thus the word Heaven is to be understood Gen. 2. 1. and in all other places where the Spirit of God comprehends the whole world under these two words The heavens and the earth Secondly it is used to signifie more specially either the highest heaven as Deut. 26. 15. Looke downe from heaven the habitation of thy holinesse which Saint Paul calls the third heaven 2 Corin. 12. 2. Or the starry heaven as Gen. 22. I will multiply thy seed as the starres of heaven and Psal. 19. 6. Or the airie regions wherein birds flie as Gen. 1. 26. where mention is made of the foules of heaven Thirdly the word Heavens by a Metonymie of the cause for the effect and of the subject is used in Scripture to signifie foure things First God the possessour of the heavens whose glorious Majestie doth dwell in the highest heaven as Dan. 4. 26. where the heavens are said to reigne that is the God of heaven And Luk. 15. 18. I have sinned against heaven and Matth. 21. 25. Was the baptisme of John from heaven or of men Secondly the Angels and blessed Spirits which dwell in the highest heaven as Job 15. 15. The heavens are not cleane in his sight and Psal. 89. 6. and 69. 35. where the heavens are said to praise God that is the Angels and Saints Thirdly the Church militant which is a congregation of people written in heaven begotten from above of heavenly seed and whose hope reward and triumph is in heaven as Dan. 8. 10. the armies of the faithfull are called the host of heaven And so in the Prophets and the Revelation Heaven signifies the true holy Church and the Earth signifies earthly men of the world Fourthly the clouds in the aire and in the face of heaven as Levit. 26. 19. I will make your heaven as iron that is the clouds insomuch that they shall yeeld no raine Now here in this Text is meant as I have before touched the highest heaven as it is distinct from the rude masse without forme which is here called Earth which was the common matter of the starry and airie heavens and of all the visible world as appeares in the next Verses And under this name here the Angels who were the host and inhabitants of the highest heavens are comprehended For as the word Jerusalem is often used in the Prophets to signifie the people and inhabitants together with the citie and place so here the word Heaven signifies not the bare place and body of the highest heaven but the place with all the host and inhabitants of it the Angels As for the visible starry heavens which are the light of the inferiour world and the airie heaven called the firmament they can in no case be here understood for they were made out of the rude masse without forme called Earth and opposed to heaven in my Text. From the word thus expounded I come to the instructions For whereas some doubt whether there be any heaven besides the visible starry heaven where those heavens are and whether they were created this Text doth cleare the doubt and sheweth that there is an heaven which farre exceeds the heavens which are seen in all glory and excellency For here Moses speakes of an heaven created in the beginning with or before the common masse out of which the Sunne Moone and Starres and all the vis●ble heavens and world were made Yea in that this heaven was created out of nothing and had not a being given it out of the rude masse without forme out of which God made all the visible world as the Text here saith this doth imply that they have a more excellent being of another kind farre better then all that is seen and above and without the compasse of the visible heavens so that hence these Doctrines arise 1. That there are such heavens 2. That this heaven is not God but a place created by God 3. That it is above the visible heavens 4. That it is most large and ample and yet not infinite nor every where as God is 5. That it is a place most excellent and glorious free from corruption excelling and exceeding the naturall knowledge reach and apprehension of men First we here learne That besides the visible starry heavens which were made out of the first rude deformed earth there are heavens created out of nothing in the first beginning of the creation And this is confirmed by those Scriptures which speak expresly of the Heaven of heavens that is an heaven besides these visible heavens as Deut. 10. 14. 1 Kings 8. 27. Psal. 68. 33. and 115. 16. Also by those Scriptures which mention an heaven in which Gods glorious Majesty is said to dwell and the holy Angels which cannot be
of Gods holinesse and glory and even eternity which shall never decay Secondly God hath appointed this place to be the habitation of his holy Angels which kept their standing in which he will have them to dwell and to behold his glorious face continually as our Saviour saith Matth. 18. 10. and so much is intimated Luke 2. 13. where Angels are called the heavenly host The third sort of inhabitants to whom God hath allotted these heavens is the glorified company of his Saints with Christ their head in whom they are chosen and brought to salvation Though Adam was made after Gods image yet by creation and in the state of naturall uprightnesse he was not capable nor worthy of heavenly glory that is the proper purchase of Christ for his elect and it is the gift of God in Jesus Christ which he gives only to them who are made in Christ the first fruits of his creatures sons and heires of God Our Saviour testifies so much Joh. 14. 3. where he saith that he prepares a place for his faithfull in that house of God And the holy Apostle Heb. 9. where he saith that Christ onely opened the way into this Holy of holies and that none can enter thereinto but by him the way and the doore And Ephes. 1. 3. he saith that God blesseth us with all spirituall blessings in heavenly places in Christ. And 1 Pet. 1. 3 4. we are said to be begotten to a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to the inheritance incorruptable and undesiled that never fadeth reserved in heaven for us wherefore it is manifest by the excellency of the inhabitants being none but God himselfe and the elect Angels and Saints which are most neare and deare to God that this Heaven is a place most glorious and excellent A third Argument may be drawne from the situation of it For the highest place is ever the best by the law and course of nature as our senses doe teach and we see manifestly in all knowne parts of the world and by faith we ought to beleeve that it is so in places beyond our sight especially because the Spirit of God in the Scriptures extolls the highest places Psal. 113. 5. and Isaiah 57. 15. Now the highest of all places is the third heaven in situation For Christ ascending up thither there to remaine and to make intercession for us Act. 3. 21. and Heb. 9. 24. is said to ascend farre above all other heavens and those heavens are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the high places Psal. 148. 1. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the highest places Ephes. 4. 8. and Heb. 1. 3. Therefore they are the most excellent and glorious places The fourth reason is drawne from the excellent things which are there laid up in store for the Saints For the wisdome of God requires that he should store up the best treasures and things in the best place and undoubtedly that place is the best where God layes up in store such treasures Now in the highest heaven are the best treasures which neither rust nor moth can corrupt nor theeves touch with unjust hands Matth. 6. 20. there is the inheritance of the Saints in light Colos. 1. 12. and the incorruptible and undefiled 1 Pet. 13. There God hath prepared for them that love him such things as neither eye hath seen nor eare heard nor mans heart conceived 1 Corin. 2. That is the place of Gods right hand and of his presence where is fulnesse of joy and pleasures for evermore Psal. 6. Therefore it is the best place of all Fifthly that place from whence every supernaturall good and perfect gift doth come must necessarily bee the most excellent and such a place is the highest heaven Christ the second Adam the fountaine of all blessings is said to be from heaven heavenly 1 Corinth 15. and to be the bread of life which came downe from heaven to give life to the world John 5. The calling of men to the participation of all excellent graces is called the heavenly calling Hebr. 3. 1. The gift of supernaturall grace is called the heavenly gift Heb. 6. 4. The substantiall things shadowed out under legall types are called heavenly things Heb. 8. 5. and the new Jerusalem the most glorious Church is called the heavenly Jerusalem Hebr. 12. 22. and is said to come downe from heaven Revel 21. In a word every good and perfect gift is said to come downe from above from the father of lights that is from heaven Jam. 1. 17. Therefore this heaven must needs be a most excellent place Sixthly the Spirit of God in the Scriptures doth describe and set forth this Heaven by all the things which are or have been most excellent in this world and doth make th●m but types and shadowes of it as first by the earthly Paradise in which God put Adam in the state of innocency which was the sweetest and most excellent place that ever was knowne in the world 2 Cor. 12. 4. by the hill of Zion which was most beautiful for situation and the joy of the whole earth Heb. 12. 22. By Jerusalem the most glorious citie of all the world the place which God chose to put his Name there Gal. 4. 26. and by the Temple of Jerusalem the most glorious Sanctuary of God and the Holy of holies Psal. 11. 4. and 18. 7. Habak 2. 20. Heb. 9. 12. and 10. 9. Therefore this Heaven is most excellent Lastly that this Heaven is a place of wonderfull light and glory and a worke of God which shall never be changed or perish but stand and endure for ever it appeares by the light which hath shined from thence and by the eternity of the things which God hath annexed to it The light which shined from thence on Saint Paul at mid-day did surpasse the brightnesse of the Sun Act. 26. 13. And the house which the faithfull have there prepared for them is said to be eternall in the heavens 2 Corin. 5. 1. And the inheritance there reserved is said to be immortall 1 Pet. 1. 3. and the life which the elect shall live there is called life eternall Therefore it is a most blessed place Now though some Scriptures seem to speak to the contrary that the heavens shall perish as Psal. 102. 26. and that heaven as well as earth shall passe away Matth. 24. 35. and the heavens shall passe away with a noise 2 Pet. 3. 10. and be burnt with fire Yet the truth is they speak not of the highest heaven which was with the Angels created immediately out of nothing but of the visible fiery and starry heavens which were created out of the same rude masse the common matter of the aire water and earth They may be burnt and set on fire and passe away but the highest heaven being not of the same common matter no fire can take hold of it Now these instructions concerning this first worke of God
the highest heavens serve for excellent use First to discover the madnesse and folly of all them who either deny the creation of these heavens as Cajetan Augustinus Steuchus and other great Popish Writers have done or doe hold this heaven to be nothing else but God or his glorious Majesty and light shining forth to his creatures These Doctrines prove the contrary and declare all such profane conceits to be doting dreames ever to be abhorred Secondly they shew the admirable free bounty and love of God towards his elect and his eternall fatherly providence in that he hath not onely provided such an excellent habitation for them wherein they may live most happy and blessed for ever but also made it the first of all his creatures and workes If the Lord had first made us and tryed our obedience how we would serve him before he had made and furnished the highest heaven the house of glory men might have imagined that by their own doings they had procured it But lo God hath cut off all such vaine conceits in that he made this first and by so doing sheweth that it is his love and free bounty not our merit it was his providence not our purchase or care for our selves Let us therefore give him the glory and praise of a God wonderfull in goodnesse free grace and providence even from the first foundation of the world creating a place of rest and glory for us Thirdly in that the highest heaven is here discovered to be so high excellent a place so full of glory and light and the proper country of the Saints chosen in Christ this ought as to reprove us make us ashamed of our immoderate love affection to worldly things and of our groveling on the ground like brute beasts and cleaving to the earth like moles and earth-wormes and of our negligence in inquiring after heaven and meditating on this heavenly country so also to stirre us up to the contrary and to direct us how to prepare our selves for it by looking and minding high things and casting off all earthly clogges and workes of darknesse and all uncleannesse and filthinesse and by putting on all holinesse and the armour of light If we were to goe into another country there to spend all our daies we would be carefull to enquire after and learne the nature qualities fashions and language of the country And so let us doe concerning our heavenly country and city which is above Let us enquire after heavenly things fashion our selves to it and because there is our inheritance and our treasures let there our hearts be also Fourthly seeing heaven is so high and so excellent and glorious a place and habitation that man in innocency was neither capable nor worthy of it this serves to magnifie in our eyes the infinite goodnesse and admirable bounty of God who hath given Christ to purchase for us being corrupted and become sinners by Adams fall a more excellent place state and condition then did belong to us in our best naturall being in the state of pure nature This also magnifies the vertue and power of the grace of Christ which hath lifted us up from the valley of darknesse and of the shadow of death and hath advanced us to be heires of a better inheritance then the earthly Paradise even to live and reigne with God in his heavenly Kingdome Fifthly here is matter of singular comfort and of patience and hope in all the afflictions which can befall us here on earth in this vale of misery when men labour and strive and fight for an earthly crowne and in hope of a glorious victory and triumph no danger of death doth daunt or dismay them no pain and griefe of wounds doth discourage them but the crowne of glory which we wrestle for it is incorruptible and never fadeth and the Kingdome for which we suffer is an heavenly Kingdome and an inheritance reserved in the highest heavens which is a place more glorious and excellent then any tongue can expresse or heart of man conceive And therefore let us be stedfast and unmoveable never daunted with any danger nor dismayed with any feare but comfort our selves and possesse our soules in patience knowing and counting that all the sufferings of this life are not worthy of the glory which shall be revealed and our momentany passions shall bring a farre more exceeding and eternall weight of glory in heaven where a durable substance is stored up for us Let us hence learne to loath and hate also that erroneous opinion which some hold to wit that the highest heaven is not ordained to be the habitation of the Saints after the last judgment but that Christ shall reigne with them here on earth in his bodily presence a fond conceit contrary to the expresse Word of God utterly razed by the former Doctrine CHAP. IV. Of the creation of Angels Their names They had a beginning Reasons and Uses They were all created by the one true God with Uses They were made in the beginning of the world They are Gods first and best creatures with the Use. They were made in heaven and to inhabit heaven Reasons and Uses Seven Corollaries or Conclusions concerning the Angels I Proceed in the next place to the inhabitants or host of the highest heavens the Angels which were by the same Word of God in the beginning created together with them as appeares Chapt. 2. 1. And howbeit they are not here expresly named by Moses yet they are necessarily included in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heavens as may easily be proved and made manifest by three reasons First the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is demonstrative and shewes that there is an Emphasis in this word and the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consisting of the first and last letter of the Alphabet is of generall comprehension and shewes that by these speciall and most glorious heavens he means all whatsoever was created with them and whatsoever was in the creation contained in them even all the glorious Angels Secondly it is a common and usuall thing in the Scriptures for the Spirit of God to signifie by the name of the place both the place and the inhabitants as for example Psal. 147. 12. and Jerem. 4. 14. O Jerusalem wash thine heart And Matth. 23. 37. Jerusalem Jerusalem that killest the Prophets In these places by Jerusalem is meant not the city only but also the inhabitants And so the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heavens is used to signifie the Angels which were the created inhabitants of heaven Job 15. 15. where it is said The heavens are not pure in his sight that is the Angels because many of them rebelled and lost their habitation and were stained with sinne And Psal. 89. 6. And the heavens shall declare thy wonders O Lord that is the heavenly host Therefore by analogy of
Scripture the Angels may here be understood Thirdly what is here meant by the heavens Moses himselfe sheweth Chapt. 2. 1. namely the heavens and the host of them that is the Angels for they are the host of the highest heaven and so are called Luke 2. 13. Therefore undoubtedly the Angels are included in the word Heavens So then the creation of the Angels coming now the next in order to be handled I will seeke no further for a Text though there be some more plain and expresse but will ground all my Doctrines concerning the creation and nature of Angels on this word taken in that sense which I have here proved which offers to our consideration five maine and principall points of instruction unto which all other Doctrines may be reduced which concerne their nature and creation and may be as branches comprehended under them First we here learne that Angels had a beginning and were not from all eternity Secondly that God created them and that they were made by that one God and three persons here called Elohim Thirdly that they were created in the beginning as the word Bereshith taken in the most strict sense signifieth the first moment of time Fourthly that they were created by the first simple act of absolute creation that is they were made out of nothing most perfect and glorious creatures in an instant Fifthly that they were made in and with the highest heavens and by the law of creation made to inhabit them as the proper place of their naturall habitation These are the maine and principall points of Doctrine which immediately flow from the words And these especially the last of them doth offer to our consideration divers other particular questions and points of instruction to be handled As first seeing they were created in and with the highest heavens to be the proper inhabitants of them therefore they are of an heavenly nature even pure excellent and glorious spirits such as the nature of the place requires to be suteable inhabitants And here an occasion is offered to seeke out a true description of Angels and to enquire after their wisdome power and such like properties wherein they excell and are like unto God the Creatour bearing his image Secondly hereby are offered to us these points to be handled and these questions to be discussed viz. That the Angels are of a finite nature limitted to their places Also whether they are circumscribed and measured by the place in which they are or rather definitively in it And whether and how they move from place to place and such like Thirdly the most high and large heavens compassing about the whole visible world in and with which they were created to be the host of them doe import that the Angels were created many in number according to the largenesse of the place and that they are innumerable more then mans fraile reason can comprehend Fourthly the highest heaven being their naturall place in which they were created Hence a question ariseth concerning a being in other places How they come to be out of heaven their naturall place and some of them quite banished out of heaven for ever And here their mutability and fall comes to be handled and the distinction of them into good and evill Angels Thus we see in briefe into what a broad field this short Text doth lead us and what large scope it gives us to speake of the Angelicall nature and the heavenly spirits the first and chiefest of the creatures of God That we may better understand these Doctrines I will first consider the name of Angels what it signifies and how we are to take it in this place The name Angell comes of the Greek name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a messenger sent forth from some superiour person or state to deliver a message and to declare the mind of him or them that sent him The Hebrew name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the name of an Angell in the Old Testament signifies also a messenger but yet in a more full and large sense For it signifies such a messenger as doth not only deliver and declare a message by word of mouth but also doth act and execute indeed the will of him that sent him and doth performe his worke injoyned as a faithfull minister and servant And hence it is that the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is derived of it and is used for the office and worke of an Angell signifies in generall any thing which serves for the use and ministery of man And as the signification according to the Etymology is generall and large so the word is used in the Scriptures to signifie any messenger or minister sent forth upon a message or some employment either from God or men Jacobs messengers which he sent unto Esau Genes 32. 3. to worke his peace are called by the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angels And Num. 20. 14. the messengers which Moses sent from Kadesh unto the King of Edom are so called and in Greeke translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But when Gods messengers are thereby signified it hath the name Jehovah or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 most commonly added to it As for the first signification we let it passe as a stranger in this place where we are to discourse of heavenly Angels and doe take it in the second signification for the Angels of the Lord. And being so taken it is still doubtfull till it be more particularly distinguished For in this sense it signifies three sorts of Angels as the learned have well observed First of all it signifies that chiefe and principall messenger and ambassadour of God his Son Jesus Christ who was sent forth as God in the forme and shape of an Angell and Messenger to the fathers before his incarnation And as man in ●u●nesse of time by incarnation and assuming of mans nature into his person For Gen. 48. 16. by the Angell which delivered Jacob and which he prayeth may blesse the sons of Joseph is meant the Lord Christ. And in all places where the Angell which appeared is called Jehovah or was worshipped God the Son is meant as Exod. 3. and Zach. 3. there by the Angell Christ is meant appearing either like an Angell or in the shape of a man to fore-shew his incarnation So likewise where we reade of the Angell of Gods presence or face as Isa. 63. 9. Or of the Angell of the Covenant as Malac. 3. 1. Or of the Archangell as 1 Thes. 4. 16. Jud. 9. Christ is meant Secondly this word is used to signifie men by divine inspiration called and sent from God upon some speciall message especially the message of salvation as Job 33. 23. Judg. 2. 1. Malac. 2. 1. and 3. 1. and Revel 2. 3. Thirdly this word is most frequently and commonly used to signifie the heavenly spirits created by God to stand about his Throne in heaven to behold his face continually because they are as
by nature fit so by office ready to be sent on his message and to doe his will as Gen. 19. 1. Psal. 103. 20. Matth. 18. 10. In this sense we are to take the word in this discourse of the creation of Angels For though Christ be the Angell of God and the great messenger of salvation and Gods ministers as they are Gods embassadours sent by him are Angels of the Lord yet they are not Angelicall spirits created in the first beginning they are onely Angels by office and calling not by nature in the creation Onely the heavenly spirits whom God hath made at the first fit to minister and hath since in Christ appointed to be ministring spirits for the good of them who are chosen to be heires of salvation in Christ they are Angels both by nature and office And they are the proper subject of our present discourse I proceed to the Doctrines which I will prosecute in order as they arise out of this Text. First seeing the Angels are included in this word the heaven hence we may learne that as the heavens so the Angels the host of heaven had their beginning with the highest heaven and were not in being from all eternity which point is farther confirmed by all such Scriptures as attribute a beginning to all things and tell us that they are and subsist not of themselves but from God as Rom. 11. 36. where the Apostle saith that of God and through him and to him are all things and 1 Cor. 8. 6. But to us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we for him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things And Revel 4. 11. and 10. 6. thou Lord hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created And that God who liveth for ever created heaven and the things that therein are And that in this universality of things created the Angels are comprehended the Apostle sheweth most plainly Colos. 1. 16. where hee affirmes that all kinds of things visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers all were created by him and for him But if any shall cavill and say that though they are of God and he is the cause and creatour of them yet it doth not necessarily follow that they were created in the beginning with the heavens but from eternity and as co-eternall effects have their being from God The next words which follow will cut off this objection which affirme that Christ is before all things and by him all things consist Verse 17. and therefore they had a beginning after Christ and were not co-eternall with him Reason also confirmes this drawne from the fall of a great multitude of the Angels For things eternall which were and had their being from eternity without beginning and before all times they cannot fall in time nor be changed but abide the same for ever But a great multitude of the Angels did fall And the Divell was once one of the most glorious among them and he with many others who left their habitation are reserved in chaines to the last judgement 2 Pet. 2. 4. and Jud. 6. Therefore they are but creatures made in the beginning Secondly though Angels are not circumscribed and measured by a bodily space or dimension yet they are definitively in place and where there is no place there can be no Angell as I shall shew hereafter Now before the creation of the heavens there was no place at all wherein Angels might be abide and subsist Therefore before the heavens they were not but were created with them But Angels are called Jehovah as that Angell which spake to Agar and promised to multiply her seed Genes 16. 13. and the Angell which appeared to Moses in the bush Exod. 3. 4. and the Angell which rebuked Satan Zach. 3. 1. And Jehovah is without beginning The Angell mentioned in those places was Christ the Sonne of God the Angell of the Covenant and so was Jehovah indeed the creatour of Angels the words of the severall Texts shew so much For that Angell saith I will multiply thy seed and I am the God of Abraham Therefore this Objection is of no force Angels are called the sons of God Job 1. 6. and 38. 7. Therefore they are of Gods nature and substance begotten from all eternity not created with the heavens Every son of God is not a naturall son begotten from all eternity for men are also called sons of God by creation regeneration and adoption and yet are not naturall and co-eternall sons of God And so Angels are sons First by creation in respect of the speciall image of God in which they were made and to which they are conformable Also the good Angels are sons by adoption unto God in Christ their head But none of them all is the Son of God by nature as the Apostle testifieth Heb. 1. 4 5. that is proper to Christ alone he onely is the brightnesse of his Fathers glory and the expresse image of his person and he onely is called the first-borne and the onely begotten Son of God John 1. 14 18. Therefore this Objection is of as little force as the other This point serves to shew that absolute eternity without beginning is the proper attribute of God and to communicate it to any other by holding that any other besides the one onely true God is eternall is no lesse then a sacrilegious robbery and taking from God the honour due to him For seeing Angels are all created in the beginning when the heavens were made and are not from all eternity much lesse may eternity be attributed to any other besides the true God Secondly here we see the grosse errour of Papists who worship Angels and pray unto them As also their foule mistaking and wresting of some Scriptures some examples of the Patriarchs as Abraham Jacob and Moses who did worship the Angels which appeared to them and spake unto them For these were not divers Angels but the great Angell of the Covenant Christ the Son of God appearing in the forme of an Angell who as he is Jehovah the true God so he is called by them who prayed to him and is worthy to be worshipped and prayed to but not any of the Angels which are but creatures and not Jehovah can be worthy of this honour which God requires as proper to himselfe The second Doctrine hence flowing is That all the Angels were created by that one God and three persons here called Elohim and that the Son together with the Father and the Spirit is the Lord the Creatour of them which truth is confirmed also by divers Scriptures as John 1. 3. where by the Word the eternall Son all things are said to be made and nothing without him And Colos. 1. 16. all things in heaven and in earth whether they be thrones or dominions principalities or powers all are said
to be created by him To which we may adde those places Psal. 104. 4. Revelat. 4. 11. and 10. 6. where all things in heaven and earth and by name the Angels are said to be made by God Which point may comfort us with assurance that Christ is absolute Lord of the Angels and as he hath a love to us and a will to help and assist us so he hath the Angels which excell in strength at his command alwaies ready prest to doe his will and to execute his word for our good The best ground of Lordship and Dominion which any can have over any things is the creating and making of them For it is good reason that none should have more power over a thing then he who made and formed it by his owne hand and skill and gave the whole being to it And this the Scriptures shew where they attribute great power and lordship to the potter over the clay which he formeth and the vessell which he makes of it Isa. 45. 9. Jerem 18. 6. Rom. 9. Now this the Lord Christ our Saviour hath over the Angels as he is their Creatour in an high measure for he made them out of nothing by his owne power And therefore just it is that all Angels Principalities Powers should ever be subject to him and that they should not only worship him Heb. 1. 6. but also should be his ministring spirits sent forth to minister for the good of them who are heires of salvation in Christ. In this assurance let us solace our selves and be of comfort knowing that the Angels in heaven are ministers for us when we are Christs little ones and they behold the face of our heavenly Father And let us in this hope harden our faces and stand with courage before all wicked violent enemies and persecutours And as we are here assured that the Angels being created by the Lord Christ and having him for their head adding light and holinesse unto them must needs love us as fellow-creatures and members under the same head and be ready and willing to help us when God sends them so we are here admonished to love them as our fellow-servants under one the same Lord and as creatures made in the same image but more excellent and by one and the same hand rejoycing in heaven at our conversion and turning unto God by repentance Here also we are admonished that we are not to dream or imagine that Christ tooke the nature of Angels on him though he be called the Angell of the Covenant and of Gods presence and the Archangell that is the Prince of Angels for an Angell he is called in respect of his office but by nature he is no Angell but as different from Angels as the Creatour and Lord differs from the creature who is by him created of nothing and the servant ministring to him The third point of instruction is That the Angels were created in the beginning of the world in the first moment of time by Gods first act of creation This is confirmed Job 38. 7. where Angels are called the sons of God to shew that he is their father by creation and also the starres of the morning to shew that they were created in the first moment or morning of the creation with the first light the highest heavens and are said to sing together and to lift up their voice when God laid the first corner-stone and foundation of the earth which necessarily implies that then they were already made and had a being given before even with the heavens Also Psal. 104. 4. where God is first said to make his Angels spirits and his ministers a flaming fire and then to lay the foundations of the earth that is of the inferiour visible world This serves to shew that Angels and their actions are not so properly measured by time as the actions of men and other inferiour creatures but as they were created in the first beginning with the first moment of time so they can remove their presence into places far distant in a moment without time and doe things quickly in an instant and are swift messengers Fourthly in that the Angels are here included in the word Heavens and are said to be created with them in the beginning Hence we may learne That the Angels are Gods first creatures made perfect out of nothing by the first act of simple and absolute creation For proofe of this we need no further argument but those Scriptures which affirme that God made his Angels Spirits that is spirituall substances which are the most perfect of creatures and come nearest in nature to God who is a spirit as Psal. 104. 4. and Hebr. 1. 7. If they had been created out of any matter made before then they must have been made out of the rude masse without forme called earth For all things which were created not by absolute and simple creation but out of some thing made before were created out of the rude masse the earth but Angels were not made out of it for it is the common matter of the visible and inferiour world but Angels are invisible and were created to bee inhabitants of the highest invisible heavens therefore they must needs be the first of Gods creatures made perfect as the invisible heavens were of nothing by the first act of simple and absolute creation This discovers to us the excellency of the Angelicall nature that the Angels are Gods master-piece his first and most perfect worke in all the creation The rude masse without forme called earth was made out of nothing imperfect void and full of darknesse and was no perfect creature but the matter of the visible inferiour mutable world and all the creatures therein The highest heavens were also made perfect out of nothing to be the place of the Angels the heavenly Spirits but yet the Angels must be more excellent then they by nature because they were made to serve for the use of Angels even to be the place of their habitation And yet the Angels those excellent and chiefest of all creatures are in Christ become our brethren and fellow-servants yea they are after a sort made our servants and ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be heires of salvation Wherefore as we are by this doctrine stirred up to contemplate with admiration upon the excellency of the Angelicall nature and to wonder at Gods bounty to us fraile men inferiour earthly creatures in honouring us so farre as give his glorious Angels to minister for us So also we are provoked to magnifie and extoll the infinite excellency of the merits and mediation of the Lord Christ our Redeemer and Saviour who procured and purchased this honour and dignity for us that the blessed Angels should minister for our good who of our selves and by our sinnes deserved to be slaves of the Divell and evill Angels Wherefore as Angels grudge not to minister for us so
let not us grudge but rejoyce to minister for the poorest of the Saints and the little ones of Christs flocke our brethren The fifth point of Doctrine is That the Angels were created in and with the highest heavens and by creation were made to inhabit those heavens as the naturall and proper place of their being and habitation This Doctrine is confirmed first by the expresse words of Moses himselfe in the first words of the next Chapter viz. Gen. 2. 1. Thus the heavens and the earth were finished and all the host of them In which words he plainly affirmes That not onely the heavens and the earth but also all the host of them were thus created and perfectly finished that is in that order and maner as he hath before related in my Text the rest of this first Chapter Now in this Chapter we have not one word which can be understood of the creation of the host of the highest heaven that is the Angels but onely these words of my Text which affirme that in the beginning that is in the first moment when God began to give being to his first creatures he created the heavens that is the highest heavens distinct from the earth which was the common matter of all the visible world and with those heavens the host of them that is the Angels which are the host and inhabitants of them For it is an usuall thing in the Scriptures to signifie by the name of a place the proper inhabitants of the place together with the place it selfe as I have before shewed by divers examples Yea the word heavens is used to signifie the Angels as I have shewed from Job 15. 15. Therfore it is a thing most clear manifest that the Angels were created together with the highest heavens as the host naturall inhabitants of them and those heavens by the law of creation are the naturall and proper place of their being and habitation Secondly the Scriptures fully prove this point which call the Angels the Angels of heaven as Matthew 24. 36. and Galat. 1. 8. and the heavenly host as Luke 2. 13. and name the Angels among the hosts of the Lord which from the heavens and in the heights sing Halleluiah and praise to him as Psal. 148. 1 2. Thirdly this doctrine is confirmed by divers reasons grounded on the Word of God The first is builded upon the Doctrines before proved by plaine testimonies of holy Scripture to wit that the Angels were not from all eternity but were created by Elohim that is the true God who is one God and three persons as is plainly restified Psal. 104. 4. and 148. 5. and Colos. 1. 16. upon this infallible ground I thus argue That Angels being creatures created and made by God must of necessity be created either before the heavens or in and with the highest heavens or else together with the Elements and the creatures of the inferiour visible world which were all made out of that rude masse called earth which was without forme and void But they were not made before the heavens For the heavens were made in the beginning that is in the first moment when God began first to make and to give being to creatures before which beginning there could be no creation of Angels or any other things Neither indeed was there any place wherein Angels could subsist before the heavens were made Certainly no finite creature can subsist in it selfe without a place in meer nothing it is proper to God onely to subsist in and of himselfe Neither were they created together with the earth and other elements and creatures of the visible world For it is plainly testified Job 38. 7. that when God laid the foundations of the earth and stretched the lines upon it and laid the corner-stone thereof then the sons of God shouted for joy that is the Angels for they are called the sons of God Job 1. 7. and there were no other living creatures then made Therefore the Angels were undoubtedly created before the earth or else they could not have shouted and sung together when the earth was made David also testifieth that the Angels were made spirits first Psal. 104. 4. and after them God laid the foundation of the earth Verse 5. Therefore it followeth necessarily that the Angels were created in and with the highest heaven and are the host and proper inhabitants thereof Secondly that place from which the evill Angels were cast downe and did fall when they sinned and left their first estate and habitation is their naturall proper place in which God created them and they by creation are the proper inhabitants thereof Now that is the highest heaven for when some of the Angels to wit proud Lucifer the Divell and his Angels sinned and left their habitation as Saint Jude speakes Jude 6. then they were cast downe to hell 2 Pet. 2. 4. even from heaven as the Prophet Isaiah testifieth Isa. 14. 12. saying How art thou fallen from heaven O Lucifer Therefore undoubtedly the Angels in their creation were made in and with the highest heavens and had them given for their proper and naturall habitation The third reason is drawne from the order which God observed in the creation For as soone as God had fitted any part or place of the world for the creatures which were to dwell and to have their being in it he made those creatures and replenished the place with them So soon as the airie heavens were made and the waters separated from the earth and place made for the Sun Moone and Starres and for their beames to be stretched out from heaven to earth then the host of the visible heavens the Sunne Moon and Starres were created and placed in them And so soon as the sea was fitted for living and moving creatures God created them out of it and so likewise when the earth was made to stand out of the waters and furnished with herbs plants and trees for the use of living creatures God created birds and beasts and when it was furnished with all creatures fit for mans use then he created man and the woman also an help meet for him Therefore undoubtedly so soon as he created the highest heavens the proper and naturall place of the Angels then and together with those heavens he did create the Angels which are the heavenly host and suffered them not to remaine one houre empty without their furniture and inhabitants This Doctrine thus laid downe and proved besides some speciall use which we may make of it for affection and practice is a ground and foundation of many other Doctrines concerning Angels which flow as Conclusions and Corollaries from it and an occasion of questions to be discussed First let me make some briefe application of it and then proceed to the Doctrines and Questions First in that Angels were created in and with the highest heaven by Gods powerfull Word and by his simple and absolute act of creation
this shewes the infinite power and omnipotency of God that he can make the most excellent immortall and glorious creatures greatest in power and strength meerly out of nothing by his owne hand immediately The wisest and most able and skilfull Artificers and Master-workmen in all the world and among all the sons of men doe stand in need of divers helps and instruments for the effecting and perfecting of any good worke and without them he can doe little or nothing He must have servants and inferiour workmen under him he must have good tooles and instruments fitted for his hand and he must have also good materials to worke upon for he can frame and make no good worke out of course stuffe and base metalls But lo here an admirable Artificer and Work-master before whom all the art and skill of all creatures is as vanity and nothing The Lord God the Creatour and Former of all things he alone hath made all the world and he hath not onely made his owne materials out of which he framed this great fabrick of the visible world and all this without any instruments or working-tooles but also hee hath made in a moment in the first beginning together with the glorious highest heavens the Palace and Throne of his glorious and infinite Majesty the most glorious and excellent of all his creatures the Angels and that out of nothing which are great in power wonderfull in strength and admirable in swiftnesse immortall spirits able to destroy a whole army of men in a night and to overturne kingdomes and cities in one day at whose sight and presence valiant Gideon a mighty man of warre and the great Captaine of Israel was so affraid and astonished that he cried Aha Lord God I shall die Zachary an holy Priest was stricken dumbe for a time And the hardy Roman souldiers which watched Christs sepulchre were astonished and became as dead men Who therefore can sufficiently admire this mighty Creatour What heart is able to conceive or tongue to expresse his wisdome power and omnipotency Let us in silence adore him and tremble and feare before him not with servile and slavish horrour but with holy feare and reverence Let us flee to him for all help succour and strength in all distresses for supply of all our wants for guidance and direction in all our waies If we be assured of his favour and that he is with us and on our side and that we stand for his cause let us not care who be against us nor feare what men and Divels can doe unto us If we want meanes and instruments let vs not be dismayed for he can worke without them If we want necessary matter he can make it or worke without it and bring things most excellent out of nothing For this very end the Lord hath shewed himselfe and his divine power in the creation and by the creatures that we might know and acknowledge love and honour serve and worship him and upon all occasions give him the glory due to his name and tell the people what great and wonderfull things he hath done and how by his owne arme and power he hath brought great and strange things to passe Secondly this Doctrine serves to discover the errour and falshood of divers opinions published and maintained by men of learning As first that of Origen Basil and other Greek fathers who dreamed that the Angels were created many ages before the corporeall and visible world 2. And that held by some others That they were created after the creation of Adam 3. That the creation of Angels is not mentioned by Moses in the history of the creation but the time thereof is altogether concealed which is the opinion of Pererius and of some Fathers and Schoolmen 4. That opinion of some Ancients who held That God by the ministery of Angels created this visible world This Doctrine proves them all to be vaine dreames and fictions in that it shewes plainly by plaine testimonies and solid arguments out of Gods holy Word that the Angels were created in and with the highest heavens neither before nor after them and are the inhabitants and host of those heavens mentioned Gen. 2. 1. and that expresly by Moses 5. Also for that opinion of the Popish Schoolmen and of their Master Aristotle who hold that Angels move the spheres of the visible heavens and guide the severall motions of the Sun Moon and Starres it is in no case to be allowed For as the Scriptures doe expresly ascribe the creation of all things to God alone and to his eternall Word and Spirit and never mention Angels as creators working with God in the creation but as creatures first made in and with the highest heavens and rejoycing at Gods founding of the earth So they affirme that in God all things move and have their being and he gives the law and rule of motion to the Sun Moon and Starres guides them by his hand causeth them to rise and set and brings forth all their host by number Isa. 40. 26. and 45. 12. And this Doctrine which teacheth us that the Angels were made to dwell in the highest heavens and there they have their residence not in the spheres of the visible heavens it overthrowes all such conceipts makes them vanish like smoak and drives them away like chaffe before the wind Wherefore let us all acknowledge that as God created Angels of nothing by himselfe alone and did give motion to the heavens so without help of Angels he doth continue the same motion and did create all other inferiour things Let us take heed that we give not Gods glory to any other but let us confesse that all thankes for all blessings are due to him in him things live move and have their being and he turneth about the spheres of heaven by his counsels that they may doe whatsoever he commandeth them upon the face of the world in the earth Job 37. 12. From the use of this Doctrine I proceed to the Conclusions which necessarily flow from it 1. Corollary or Conclusion The first is That Angels by creation and in their nature and substance are the first and chiefest of all Gods creatures far more excellent then man in his best naturall being in the state of innocency this Doctrine floweth necessarily from the former For first God in wisdome hath made all things the best and chiefest of creatures for the best places and inferiour creatures for inferiour p●aces as we see by experience in all things visible And therefore undoubtedly the Angels which were created to be the naturall inhabitants of the highest and best place must needs be the chiefest creatures and the most excellent in nature and substance Secondly those creatures which God framed in the creation to dwell nearest to his glorious presence even with his heavenly Majesty and to stand before his Throne in the heaven of heavens must needs be in their nature and substance most excellent and farre
above man in innocency whose best dwelling was but an earthly Paradise or Garden furnished with fruits which might be eaten up and consumed and such were the Angels as the former Doctrine hath plainly proved Therefore this conclusion necessarily flowes from that Doctrine and is proved and confirmed by it But we have for further confirmation both plaine testimonies and arguments in the holy Scriptures The royall Prophet David being ravished with the contemplation of the supercelestiall glory appearing in the secondary beames thereof which shine in the visible heavens and in the Sun Moon and Starres cries out in admiration and wonders that God dwelling in such admirable glory and having such excellent and glorious company and attendants about him should vouchsafe to look upon man or have any regard of him What is man saith he that thou art mindfull of him or the sonne of man that thou visitest him Psal. 8. 4. But in the next words he goeth further and speaks fully to the point and shewes that Christ himselfe according to his humanity though conceived and borne most pure and holy was made lower then the Angels thou hast made him saith he a little or for a little while lower then the Angels that is Christ in the nature of man which he took upon him for so the Apostle expounds these words of David Hebr. 2. 6. And Psal. 103. 20. Yee Angels saith he which excell in power Our Saviour also in the Gospel sheweth plainly that the Angels in heaven are so excellent in nature and substance as the elect Saints glorified shall be after the last resurrection and their most glorious and blessed condition which farre excels Adam in innocency shall be like unto the Ange's Matth. 22. 30. Saint Peter in plaine words saith that Angels are farre greater then men in power and might 2 Pet. 2. 11. Saint Paul calls them Angels of light 2 Corinth 11. 14 and the Angels of Gods power 2 Thes. 1. 7. he numbers them with principalities and powers which farre excell the nature of man Rom. 8. 38. Whensoever he sets forth the greatest excellency of things created greater then in men he doth instance in Angels as 1 Cor. 13. 1. though I speak with tongues of men and Angels And Galat. 1. 8. If I or an Angell from heaven and 4. 14. Ye received me as an Angell of God yea as Christ Jesus In a word whereas man is an earthly creature framed out of dust in respect of his visible part his body Angels are pure heavenly spirituall substances framed immediately out of nothing by the simple and absolute act of creation And whereas mans better part the soule though it be a spirit yet was not created a perfect compleat creature but made to subsist in the body and cannot be in full perfection without it Angels are spirits complete and perfect in themselves without subsistence in any other creature as shall appeare hereafter And therefore Angels are by creation and in nature and substance farre above man in his best naturall estate even in the state of innocency First this shewes most clearly that all the love and favour which God extends to man in Christ and in giving Christ to be mans Saviour and Redeemer by taking mans nature upon him and making full satisfaction therein to justice for him and in saving man from hell and damnation and exalting him to heavenly glory is on Gods part most free and voluntary arising meerly and wholly from the good pleasure of his owne will and not from any merit worth and excellency which he at first created or since found in mans nature If the naturall excellency of any creature could procure Gods speciall favour or deserve his bountie or move him to shew mercy to any creature which hath sinned and by sin is fallen into misery surely the Angelicall nature should have been more respected of God then the nature of man and Angels being fallen should more easily have found mercy at his hand For as this Doctrine hath proved Angels are by creation and in nature and substance the chiefest and most excellent of all Gods creatures far excelling man in power might purity and being And yet when Angels and man were both fallen and found guilty charged with folly and involved in misery God passed by the Angels and shewed no mercy to them neither gave his Son to take upon him the nature of Angels and to be their Saviour and Redeemer but so many of them as sinned and kept not their first estate but left their habitation he hath reserved in everlasting chaines of darknesse unto the judgement of the great day 2 Pet. 2. Jud. 6. But for man who is of lesse worth and farre inferiour by nature he hath given his Sonne to take mans nature upon him to be incarnate and made flesh and hath sent him forth in the forme of fraile and sinfull flesh made of a woman and made under the Law and hath delivered him up to a cursed death and to hellish agonies pangs and sorrowes that he might redeem this fraile worme of the earth miserable and sinfull man from hell and damnation unto which the Angels which sinned are reserved under darknesse and to exalt him far above the state of innocency in which he was created and his best naturall estate in Paradise unto the high estate of heavenly glory with the elect holy and blessed Angels which is farre above that mutable state of glory in which the Angels were first created and from which so many of them did fali Wherefore let us admire this free grace of God and stand amazed at his wonderfull and supertranscendent bounty to mankind And whatsoever mercy we receive from him in our deliverance from any evill or whatsoever blessing and benefit of bounty and goodnesse in advancing us to this state of grace or glory let us wholly ascribe it to the good pleasure of his owne free will and not to any merit in our selves or any excellency created in our nature And let no man glory in his naturall wit or wisdome and knowledge gotten by learning and study nor boast in his owne strength but as it is written Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord and triumph in this that he knoweth Gods free grace and aboundant mercy in Jesus Christ and hath the sweet taste and experience of it in his owne soule Secondly this serves to magnifie in our eyes both the large measure of Gods bounty to his elect in Christ and also the infinite power and excellency of Christ his mediation and the dignity and worth of his person in which hee hath so dignified our fraile nature by assuming it upon himselfe and uniting it personally to his Godhead that hee hath exalted it farre above the most glorious and excellent state of the Angels in heaven That Angels are the best and chiefest of all Gods creatures by creation and in nature and substance farre more excellent then man in his best naturall estate of
matter first made and of a forme thereto added afterwards and therefore have a proper existence and being every one in himselfe which cannot be dissolved but in respect of second causes remaines immortall so that this definition and every branch thereof flowes from the former Doctrine as a naturall Corollary or necessary Conclusion And it doth excellently set forth the nature and naturall being and properties of Angels by which they are distinguished from all other things First in that they are called spirits or pure spirituall substances this shewes their nature and being wherein they resemble God and beare his image who is the one onely true Jehovah who hath his essence and being in and of himselfe and gives essence and being to all things and by whom all things subsist as that name Jehovah signifies which he assumes as proper to himselfe Exod. 3. 14 15. and Isa. 42. 8. and who is a spirit as our Saviour restifieth John 4. 24. And by this name spirits they are distinguished from all bodily creatures Secondly in that they are called pure intire spirituall substances and perfect creatures which have every one a proper existence and particular being hereby they are distinguished from the spirits that is the soules of men which are not intire complete and perfect creatures of themselves by creation but are made to be and to subsist in an humane body and together with the body to make up a perfect man Hereby also they are distinguished from the breath of life and the vitall and animall spirits which are in living bodies of men and other living creatures for they are not pure perfect intire creatures which subsist by themselves but fraile vanishing parts of creatures which continually increase and decrease fade and perish Thirdly in that they are called heavenly spirits hereby they are distinguished not onely from the spirits created here below on earth in this inferiour world even soules of men and all bodily spirits but also from God who is a spirit but not contained in any place no not in the Heaven of heavens but is essentially present in all places as well in earth as in heaven as the Scriptures testifie 1 Kin. 8. 27. and Psal. 139. 8. Fourthly in that they are said to be created in the beginning by God hereby they are distinguished from the absolute essence of God and from every one of the three persons in one God for they are not created but are absolutely eternall without beginning of being Fifthly in that they are said to be created in the image and similitude of God this shewes the excellent naturall properties of Angels that they are living spirituall and immortall creatures indued with knowledge wisdome understanding liberty of will power strength and activity to doe and performe great things wisely justly and freely and so to resemble God in his glorious attributes and workes Sixthly in that they are said to be distinguished one from another by a proper and particular subsistence and being which every one hath by himselfe this shewes that Angels are not one common spirit breathed into the highest heavens and every one a part of that one spirit but they are every one a whole substance or person by himselfe as Augustine saith Enchirid. 18. Lastly in that every one is said to have a proper existence and particular being which God hath given him to have in himselfe by which he differs from the rest this necessarily implies that Angels are finite and limited both in their substance and number and are mutable not infinite and unchangeable as God is This is the definition which in the severall parts and branches thereof doth fully set forth the nature and naturall properties of Angels I proceed to the confirmation of the severall parts in order First that Angels are spirits or spirituall substances the holy Scriptures affirme most clearly Psal. 104. 4. and Heb. 1. 7. where it is said that he maketh his Angels spirits And Hebr. 1. 14. where they are called ministring spirits And lest any should thinke or imagine that Angels are not spirits by nature and creation but by grace and communion of the Holy Ghost which is given to the elect Angels in and by Christ and by which they become holy and are settled in the immutable state of eternall blessednesse we have most cleare testimonies in those Scriptures which call not onely the good and elect Angels spirits as Act. 23. 9. and the places before cited but also the evill Angels of Satan even the Divell himselfe and his Angels which in respect of their substance which they still retaine though they have lost their goodnesse and uprightnesse are still called spirits as Levit. 20. 27. 1 Sam. 16. 1 Kin. 22. Matth. 8. 16. Act. 5. 16. Ephes. 2. 2. where the Divell speaking in false Prophets and his spirit of fury in Saul and of lying in Ahabs Prophets and his evill Angels possessing divers persons and cast out by Christ and his Apostles are called evill and unclean spirits Secondly that Angels are entire and complete spirituall substances and perfect creatures which have every one a proper existence and being in himselfe the holy Scriptures prove most clearly by divers reasons First by naming some of them by proper and distinct names as the Angell which was sent to Daniel Dan. 8. 16. and to salute the Virgin Mary Luke 1. is called Gabriel Secondly by giving them such titles and ascribing and assigning to them such offices as belong to none but complete substances and persons which have a proper and personall existence as for example they are called the sons of God Job 1. 6. and 38. 7. They are called Gods messengers and ministers as appeares by their Hebrew and Greek names and by Scriptures Matth. 4. 11. and Heb. 1. 14. They have the office of watchers and guardians which have charge given over the elect and encamp about the righteous to guard and defend them and observe and behold the face of God ready to be at his beck for the defence of his little ones as appeares Num. 22. 22. Psal. 34. 7. and 91. 10. Dan. 4. 13. and Matth. 18. 20. Thirdly the Scriptures doe plainly shew that Angels doe willingly and readily and by themselves performe perfect and complete actions and workes which none can doe but perfect creatures which have a proper subsistence by themselves as for example that in the first creation as soon as they were created they did sing together and lift up their voice Job 38. 7. that they praise God hearken to the voice of his word and keep his commandements Psal. 103. 20. and 149. 2. that they have appeared and spoken to men as to Gideon Judg. 6. to the father of Sampson Judg. 12. and to Eliah 1 Kin. 19. that they have comforted Christ in his agony Luke 22. rolled the stone from his sepulchre Matth. 28. opened the prison doores and set the Apostles at liberty Act. 5. and 12. and
actions on earth The wordes of our Saviour Luk. 24. 39. shew that Spirits have not flesh and bones Therefore Angels being spirits have no such bodies united to them as those wherein they appeared 4. Corollary That Angels are confined to the places in which they are and are in places definitively though not circumscribed and measured by them as bodily things are Angels being pure spirits doe not consist of parts as bodily things doe neither have they any bodily quantity or dimension as length breadth height and thicknesse and so they cannot bee compassed about nor measured nor limited by any bodily space but yet they are definitively in their places that is there and no where else and their substance together with bodily substances may be in the same place as the whole soule of man is in the whole body and is wholly in every part of it and no where else so it is with Angels 5. Corollary Seeing Angels are by creation the proper and naturall inhabitants of the highest heavens which is a most spacious place compassing about the whole visible World and more large and capacious then all other places as Solomon doth intimate 1 Kin. 8. 27. Hence it followeth that the Angels are many in number more then can be numbred by man and so in respect of man innumerable For we must not thinke that God who in the creation replenished the Sea with fishes the aire with birds and the visible heavens with innumerable starres and the earth with beasts and creeping things and commanded man to multiply and replenish the earth wouldleave the bestand most glorious place of all not fully replenished with inhabitants glorious Angels who were created at the first in their full number undoubtedly therefore there must be many farre more then man can number And this the Prophet Daniel saw in a vision and testified Dan. 7. 10. where hee saith that a thousand thousand ministred to the Lord Christ and ten thousand thousand stood before him Also in the Gospell wee read that there was a Legion that is six thousand divels in one man Mark 5. 9. And if there be so many divels that is evill Angels in one man then surely the whole company or multitude of those evill Angels must be many And the whole company of Angels in the first creation of which some onely did fall and become Divels must needs much more bee innumerable And if that conjecture and opinion of learned men be true to wit that the Angels which sinned and were cast downe from heaven are as many in number as all the elect of mankind which have beene are or shal be to the end of the World and that they shall fill up the glorious mansions and supply the roomes and places of the lost Angels then surely the multitude of all the Angels which God created must needs bee great and innumerable farre exceeding our capacity 6. Corollary Sixthly the highest heavens being the place of rest and not of motion which is proper to visible and corporeall things and being the place where God hath appointed that the eternall rest or Sabbath shal be kept Therefore the Angels which were created to bee the naturall inhabitants of those glorious heavens were not made to move with bodily motion as bodily creatures doe their coming from heaven to earth is not a passage through the whole space between heaven and earth which would require a long time but as it is with the mindes and thoughts of men they are now here exercised about things present and in a moment of time in the twinckling of an eye they are in the remotest parts of the World or in the highest heavens and yet passe not through the space betweene so it may well be and we may with good reason conceive that the Angels which are of a purer and more heavenly substance then our soules and more nimble and active then the mindes or thoughts of men are by nature can in a moment bee present here on earth and in the next moment bee againe in heaven But howsoever or by what way soever they descend and ascend it is most certaine that they are the swiftest of all things created and so much the Scriptures shew clearly in many places where they describe Angels with wings and call them Cherubins and Seraphins yea some one of them with many wings which are instruments of flying and of swiftest motion as Gen. 3. 24. Ezech. 10. 1. 19. and 11. 22. and Isa. 6. 2. Also we read that on a suddaine even in an instant a whole multitude of the heavenly host have descended from heaven and beene present on earth Luk. 2. 13. And the Angell of the Lord is said to encampe with an heavenly host round about them that feare God Psalm 34. 7. not by being here resident and abiding on earth out of their proper place of abode but by standing before God in heaven and beholding his face that they may bee ready in a moment when hee gives the watch word to present themselves on earth there to deliver his elect and to destroy their enemies as our Saviour doth intimate Matth. 18. 20. 7. Corollary Seventhly seeing the highest heaven is the proper place of Angels and this is the order which God did set in the creation that all creatures should keep their station and not leave their dwelling Hence it followes that it is against nature and contrary to the order of creation that many Angels are excluded and shut out of heaven even all the evill Angels And it is a thing above nature even the supernaturall grace and gift of God and a thing purchased and procured by the infinite power excellency and dignity of Christs merit and mediation that the elect and holy Angels should bee made ministering spirits and sent forth to minister for them who shall be heires of salvation as the Apostle saith Hebr. 1. 14. And here now occasion is offered to discourse about the sin and fall of the Divell and evill Angels how contrary it was to the law of nature that they should forsake their station sin against God and not stand in the truth and to the order which God set in the creation that they should leave their dwelling and exclude themselves out of heaven and be cast downe into Hell Also here is occasion given to shew that the elect Angels come to minister for the elect through the supernaturall power and efficacy of Christs mediation that Christ by supernaturall grace and benefits given to the heavenly Angels hath obliged and bound them to himselfe to obey him as their head and to minister for the good of his little ones But these things come more fittly to bee handled after the creation when wee come to discourse of the confusion of the World by the Divels Apostasie and mans fall and of the restoring of mankind and the renuing and perfecting of the World by Christ. Now these Doctrines thus opened and proved are of great
use for comfort and confidence to all the elect and faithfull people of God in the midst of all troubles which befall them in this life and when dangers and worldly enemies beset them round about also for confirmation and strengthening of them against all the assaults and temptations of the Divell For if the glorious Angels which are ministering spirits for their good which also love them rejoyce at their conversion watch for their safety and are their fellow servants under one Lord Christ be such heavenly powerfull and active spirits even by creation so excellent in strength so lively quick and ready at hand to help in a moment when God gives the watch-word what need we feare or faint so long as wee cleave to God and sticke to his truth Hee is a tender and loving father and Christ our high Priest hath a feeling of our infirmities and doth pity us he will be ready to help and he hath mighty instruments and ministers even thousands and ten thousand thousands ready to save and deliver us from all enemies as he did Daniel from the Lyons and his three fellowes from the fiery furnace Or if hee doth not send them to deliver us out of the troubles of this life yet hee will at our death send his Angels to carry our soules with triumph to heaven as Eliah was carried up in a fiery Chariot and the soule of Lazarus is said to bee carried up by them into Abrahams bosome Wherefore let us not feare either multitude malice or might of enemies but carefully serve God and confidently rest on the Lord Christ our Redeemer and Saviour Secondly These Doctrines serve to discover divers errours concerning the nature and substance of Angels as that grosse opinion of Peter Lombard who held that the Angels are corporeall substances because the Divell and evill Angels shall suffer the torment and feele the paines of hell fire which hath no power but over bodily creatures Also that opinion of the Gentiles and Cardanus who held that the Angels were mortall and corruptible creatures both these are here discovered to be erroneous For the first is builded on a grosse conceipt that the fire of hell is elementall and corporcall fire which as it burneth and consumeth bodily substances over which it hath power so it in time wasteth it selfe and goeth out but indeed the fire of Hell is the fire of Gods wrath which burneth and tormenteth worse then elementarie fire but consumeth not neither shall ever be quenched as our Saviour testifieth The second opinion is also confuted by these doctrines which have proved Angels to be spirits or spirituall substances which though they may bee stained with sin yet they cannot bee dissolved as men are in death by the separation of soule and body not corrupted as mens bodies are in the grave but the evill Angells shall live in eternall torment and their substance shall never be corrupted and consumed and the holy and blessed Angels are immortall and shall live in glory for ever and there shall be no end of their blessednesse CHAP. V. Of the Creation of the Earth The names whereby it is called Properties of it All creatures have being of God with Vses The World is all mutable and appointed so to be Vses The creation and redemption of the World wherein they resemble one another Vses The holy Ghost is of one and the same nature with the Father and the Sonne THe Second thing created next after the highest heaven with the inhabitants thereof the Angels is the Earth as my text here faith in these wordes and the Earth But wee must not here understand by Earth this earth or drie land upon which men and beasts doe live and move and have their being and which is beautified and adorned with trees plants greene herbes and flowers and replenished with stones and metals of all sorts For that was created together with the waters of the Sea and brought into forme and replenished in the third day as appeares in the 9. 10. 11. verses of this Chapter But here by Earth wee are to understand a certaine rude matter and masse without forme and void out of which God made all the inferiour visible World and all things therein contained so the wordes following in the second verse plainely shew The earth was without forme and void and darknesse was upon the face of the deep Now that wee may know what creature this Earth was wee are to consider these 3 things First the severall names by which it is called Secondly the properties by which it is described Thirdly the meanes by which it was upheld in being and disposed to bee the common matter of all othervisible things created afterwards First the names by which it is called are three 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the earth 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deep 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters First it is called the earth because of the grossenesse unmoveablenesse and impurity of it For the earth is of all elements most grosse heavy impure and confused not fit to move out of the place wherein it is most untractable and not ready to apply it selfe to any other thing and hard to bee turned into the forme of other things without labour and working of it This first rude and informed masse which God created out of nothing is here declared by this name Earth to have beene like the earth very impure and confused dull and unfit for motion resembling at the first the earth rather then any purer element Secondly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deep here also in the text which word signifies a great deep or devouring gulfe as it were of troubled waters also troubled and confounded with mixture of mud and myre which though in respect of the troubled mixture and confusion it hath a resemblance of earth yet it is bottomlesse there is no solidity in it no ground or stay to bee found at all Thus much the Hebrew word signifies according to the notation and common use of it Thirdly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters also in this text because of the waterish fluxibility which was in it by meanes of which it was unstable and unsettled and also because it was an huge deep like the great waters of the Sea Now it may seeme strange that this one and the same rude masse should bee like earth and like a bottomlesse depth of myre or quick-sand and like waters all at once which are things different and unlike one to another especially the thinne flowing element of water and the grosse dull unmoveable earth And therefore the learned Expositors labour thus to qualifie the meaning of the words they say it was a confused masse even the matter of all the elements mingled together and because the earth and water are the most grosse and impure and did most of all appeare in it therefore it is called earth and water and the deep which is a
perfect creature and element of the visible World and commanded it to shine out of darknesse and this was the morning of the first day In the words wee may observe these foure things First the creation of light in the 3. vers Secondly Gods approbation of it in these words God saw the light that it was good Thirdly Gods separation of it from the darknesse vers 4. Fourthly Gods nomination or naming of the light day and the darknesse night and so compounding these two light and darknesse into the first whole day of the World vers 5. In the first thing which is the creation of light the first of all perfect creatures in this visible World two things come to bee sifted and examined for our right understanding thereof First the thing created Light what is thereby here meant Secondly the manner of creating it God said Let light bee and it was so Concerning the first I find divers and severall opinions of the learned Saint Augustine lib. 1. in Genes ad literam cap. 3. and Rupertus lib. 1. de Trinit cap. 10. doe by this light understand the highest heavens and the Angels which are not a corporeall but a spirituall light but this cannot bee the truth for this light is said to bee that which is called the day and is opposed to the darknesse of the night here in this mutable and visible World the shining whereof doth distinguish day from the night which cannot bee said of the Angels and the highest heavens which were not made out of darknesse nor out of the rude unformed masse as this light was which God commanded to shine out of darknesse as the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 4. 6. Secondly others as Beda Lyra and Lombard doe by this light understand a bright cloud carried about and making a difference of day and night Nazianzene and Theadoret doe think that it was the same light which now is in the Sun Moone and Starres subsisting at the first in one bodie and afterwards divided into severall parts when God made the Sun Moone and Starres out of it Basil thought that it was light without a subject Aquinas that it was the light of the Sun made imperfect at the first and of this opinion is Pererius also Catharinus held that it was the Sun it selfe made first of all which is directly contrary to the expresse words of the 16. vers which affirme that the Sun was made the fourth day Iunius by light here understands the element of fire In this variety of opinions I hold it the best and surest way of finding out the truth to seeke it out of the word used in the originall text The Hebrewword 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or which is here translated Light besides the tropicall and spirituall senses in which it is used in those Scriptures which call God the light in whom is no darknesse and the light and salvation of his people and doe call Gods regenerate people light in the Lord doth more properly signifie two things First that naturall bodie or substance which among all the parts and creatures of the visible World is most bright and shining in it selfe and gives light to others as for example the Sun Moone and Starres are called Lights Psalme 136. 7. and the element of fire is called by this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Light Ezech. 5. 2. Secondly it signifies and that most frequently in the Scripture the light that is the shining brightnesse of the heavens and of the Sun Moone and Starres and of the element of fire burning in a lamp or torch or other combustible matter Here I doe not take the word in this latter sense onely for a shining brightnesse for then God had created an accident or quality without a subject which is a thing against nature of things created for common reason and experience shew that never did any qualitie subsist of it selfe without a substance by course of nature no light can be but in some created body as in the heavens fire or aire But hereby light wee are to understand of necessity some notable part of this great frame of the visible World which God first framed out of the rude masse which was without forme and void before mentioned yea that part which is most bright shining and resplendent and doth by light and brightnesse which is naturall in it shine forth and enlighten other things Now that cannot bee any of these lower elements the water and the earth for they have no such light in them and besides it is manifest that they were formed out of the grossest and most dark part of the common masse on the third day vers 9. Neither can it bee the spacious region of the aire which is extended and spread abroad farre and wide over all the round globe of the earth and the waters and reacheth up to the etheriall region of the visible heavens even to the sphaere of the Moone and is called the lowest heaven or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the broad expansion or firmament in the midst of the waters For that was formed the second day as appeares in 6. 7. 8. vers It must needs therefore bee the firmament of the visible heavens which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The large and farre stretched firmament of the midle heaven even the fiery or etheriall region wherein God on the fourth day formed and set the great lights of the Sun Moone and Starres vers 14. 16. For first those heavens were framed and made of the most pure and refined part of the masse which is the common matter of the visible World and are most bright and shining full of light and brightnesse and undoubtedly as in place and order they are the next to the highest heavens so they were created next after them in the first day and are here called by the name of Light because all the light of this visible World is in them and from them shineth into the aire and giveth light upon the earth Secondly there is no particular mention made by Moses in this Chapter of the framing of these heavens among all the works of the six dayes except it bee in this word Light and it is most incredible that hee would omit the creation of them which are the most excellent and glorious part of the visible frame of the World especially seeing hee doth exactly and particularly name and relate the creation of all other parts and the day wherein they were created I am not ignorant that Aristotle and the most learned naturall Philosophers of his sect did hold that the visible heavens are eternall and unchangable and of a matter and substance different from the foure elements fire aire water and earth and were not made of the same common matter Also divers learned Christians and Schoolemen doe thinke that these heavens were created together with the highest heavens immediatly of nothing in the beginning when time first began to bee and are mentioned in the
the airy or lowest heaven is thus called Verse 20. and 26. where it is said Let the fowles flie in the open firmament of heaven and Psalme 79. 2. and Hos. 2. 18. and many other places where wee read of the fowles of heaven But the best learned of later times have for the most part held that by the firmament is here meant that vast and spacious element and region of the aire which is extended and stretched out not onely round about all the Earth and the Sea but also reacheth from this globe of the Earth and the Sea to the starry heavens even to the spheare of the Moone and this is without doubt the true sense and meaning of the word in this place as appears by divers reasons First the Hebrew name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which God called this firmament or large region being compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies there or in that place and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies waters notes out unto us that this firmament is the place where waters are engendered in the clouds and which from thence descend and water the earth and that is the fluid and waterish element the aire Secondly there is no other firmament besides the aire stretched out between the waters of the Sea which are below and the undermost and the waters above in the clouds heaven-ward and from thence distill and water the earth and did descend in great aboundance and drowned the old World when God dissolved the clouds so opened the floud-gates and windowes of heaven The aire is the onely element which divides between these two waters of the clouds above and of the Sea and Rivers below Thirdly the airy region is that in which the Sun Moone and Starres doe shine and give Light to the Earth and in which their beames and light appeare to us on earth The light of the starry heavens and of the Sun which alwayes shines in them even at midnight as well as at noone day is not seene of us as it is in the heavens but as it is in the aire for by multiplying their beames in the aire the Sun Moone and Starres are seen of us and give light upon the earth And therefore it is not said that God made the Sun Moone and Starres in the firmament or set them to have their place and being in it but gave them to bee lights in it that is set them above to shine through it and by multiplying their beames in this firmament the aire to give light to the earth Verse 15. Fourthly the fowles which flie in the open face of the aire are said to flie in the firmament which God called heaven Verse 20. Fifthly the highest heaven was created in the beginning in the first moment of time together with the Angels And the starry heaven is the light created in the first day therefore this heaven here called firmament is the airie region or lowest heaven Sixthly in all places of Scripture wherein wee finde this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated firmament wee may very well and with good reason understand by firmament the large extended region of the aire and it cannot be proved by any one place that the word signifies any other then the airie heaven enlightned with the beames of the Sun and the starry heavens Seventhly they who here by firmament do understand the starry heavens are forced by the words of the text which say that the firmament is in the midst of the waters and divides the waters above from the waters below to imagine that there are waters above the starry heavens there placed to mitigate the heat of the Sun and the Starres and that these waters drowned the old World which is a ridiculous conceipt grounded on palpable mistaking of divers Scriptures and contrary to all reason For the places of Scripture which speake of waters above the heavens intend no other waters but such as are in the clouds in the middle region of the aire and above the lowest region of the firmament or airy heaven First the Hebrew phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is above the firmament or above the heavens signifies no more but waters that are above heavenward Secondly the Scriptures doe plainely expound this phrase and in many places shew that by waters above the heavens they doe not meane either the multitude of heavenly Angels as Origen dreamed or any Crystall orbe or naturall waters above the starry heavens as Basil Ambrose Beda and others imagined or the matter of spirituall and supercelestiall substances different from the matter of earthly creatures as Austen thought but that these waters above are the waters in the clouds above in the middle region of the aire even raine and haile and snow and such waters as flow from thence in great aboundance when it pleaseth God to open the bottles windowes fountaines and floodgates of heaven that is the clouds for the clouds are called the bottles of heaven Iob 38. 37. and the fountaines of the deep Prov. 8. 28. and the watery roofe of Gods chambers Psalme 104. 3. and God is said to bind up his waters in the thick clouds and the cloud is not rent under them Iob 26. 8. and when God openeth the clouds and sends downe raine to water the earth to give to it the blessing of fruitfulnesse hee is said to open the windowes and flood-gates of heaven Gen. 7. 11. and Mal. 3. 10. And the lowest region of the aire in which the dew is engendered of vapours and mists dissolved into small drops is called heaven and the dew from thence distilling is called the Dew of heaven Gen. 27. 28. Psalme 133. 3. and Zach. 12. 8. So then wee see that the firmament here called heaven is the wide and broad spread aire reaching from earth to the starry heaven and compassing the globe of Sea and land round about and by the waters above the firmament the waters in the clouds are meant which are above the lowest region of the airy heaven or firmament And thus much for the opening of the first thing in my text to wit the thing created The second thing is the creation of this firmament and the manner of it It is said God made the firmament that is framed it as hee had done the light the starry heavens out of the rude matter before named which was without forme and void Verse 2. and this hee did by the same power and after the same manner as he did the light saying Let there be a Firmament that is by his eternall Word the Son by whom he doth exercise all his power and performe all his works according to his eternall Counsell and by whom hee sheweth outwardly his eternall purpose and will as a man by his word doth openly professe and declare his mind and purpose And thus wee see the Son● still worketh with the Father and
in things which they command contrary to Gods commandements Yea they must remember that they are Gods creatures and handi-worke and ought to employ all their power and authority to the honour of God If otherwise they abuse the talents which God hath lent them let them know that God will one day call them to a reckoning and give them the reward of evill unfaithfull and unprofitable servants even eternall destruction and torment in Hell where shall be howling and wayling and gnashing of teeth Secondly this serves to shew that whosoever offers wrong and injury to any of mankind by cutting mangling or any way defacing their 〈…〉 age and deforming their bodies by afflicting or some way corrupting their soules or by taking away their lives and naturall being without speciall warrant and cōmmandement from God they are notoriously injurious to God himselfe they scorne despise mis-use and deface Gods Workmanship they provoke God to wrath and jealousie and hee surely will bee avenged on such doings And here wee have matter as of dread and terrour to all cruell Tyrants and unmercifull men so of hope and comfort to all who suffer injury and wrong at their hands As the first sort have just cause to feare and tremble so often as they thinke on God the avenger of such wrong so the other have cause to hope that God will not wholy forsake them being the worke of his owne hands nor leave them to the will and lust of the wicked his enemies but will in his good time save them and send them deliverance Thirdly this discovers the abomination and filthinesse of all Idolaters who being the workmanship of God the Lord and wise creator of all things doe most basely bow downe to images and altars and debase themselves to worship humane inventions and the worke of mens hands which are dumbe Idols of wood and stone and lying vanities It is just with God to cast out and expose all such people to ignominy shame and confusion in this world and in the world to come into that place of darknesse where the Divell and all such as forsake God and rebell against the light which from the creation shines to them shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the face and presence of God and from the glory of his power Secondly in that God is here said to forme man of the dust of the ground not of clay well tempered and wrought but of dust which of it selfe is most unfit to be compacted and made into a stedfast shape and which is counted so base and so light that every blast of wind drives it away and in Scripture the basest things are resembled to it Hence wee may learne two things First that God in the creation even of mans body shewed his infinite power and wisedome in bringing dust of the earth which is the basest thing of all into the forme and shape of mans body which is the most excellent of all visible bodies and a fit house and temple not onely of a reasonable living soule but also of Gods holy spirit as other Scriptures plainly affirme This point appeares so plainly in the Text that I need not spend time in further confirmation of it the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 formed here first used implies an excellent forme and the upright face of man Here therefore I will adde for illustration sake the words of David which are very pertinent to this purpose Psal. 139. 14 15 16. where speaking of Gods forming and fashioning him in the wombe of the living substance even the seed blood and flesh of his parents saith he I will prayse thee for I am fearefully and wonderfully made Marvelous are thy workes and that my soule knoweth right well My substance was not hid from thee when I was made in secret and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy booke were all my members written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them Here we see with what feare admiration and astonishment David considers mans frame and the curious workmanship of his body when God forms it in the mothers womb by lively instruments and of a lively matter and substance How much more may we conclude that Gods creating of Adams body which was the most curious naturall body that ever was made is most admirable and deserves more reverence feare and astonishment at our hands being made without instruments out of the basest matter and substance even dust of the earth Surely in this God shewed wisedome and power beyond all admiration The Vse of this doctrine is to stirre us up so often as we thinke of our creation in Adam to laud and praise Gods wisedome and power to feare and reverence God and to admire his curious workmanship And although the matter of which God framed mans body was the basest of all even dust of the ground yet let us not thinke ever a whit more meanly of our creation but so much more admire Gods workmanship in our bodies For to make a curious worke in gold silver or of some beautifull precious and plyable mettall is not rare nor so excellent but to frame of the basest matter the dust of the ground the chiefest worke and even the Master-piece of all works in the visible world that is the body of Adam in the state of innocency this is worthy of all admiration and is a just motive and provocation to stirre us up to praise and to extoll with admiration the wisedome and power of God especially if wee consider the most excellent forme of mans body and upright stature together with the head comely face hands and other members every way fitted and composed to bee instruments of a reasonable soule and to rule and keepe in order and subjection all living creatures Secondly in that the dust of the ground the basest part of the earth is the matter out of which mans body the beautifull Palace and Temple of his Soul was formed in the excellent state of innocency Hence wee learne that man is by nature and in his best naturall being given to him in the creation but a dusty earthy substance in respect of his body and in respect of his Soul an inhabitant of an house of clay the foundation whereof is in the dust But some perhaps will object against the collection of this Doctrine from the base and fraile matter of which mans body was formed and will thus argue That the state and condition of creatures is not to bee esteemed by the matter of which they were made but by the forme and being which God gave to them as for example the Angels together with the highest heaven were created immediatly of nothing as well as the rude unformed masse which is called earth and yet they are most glorious spirits and the rude masse is not to bee compared to them Yea man was created
according to his inferiour part the body of dust which is a created substance better then nothing of which the Angels were made and yet the Angels in nature far excell man Therefore mans creation of dust doth not prove him to bee so fraile a creature seeing God gave him such an excellent forme To this I answer that to bee created immediatly of nothing is in it selfe a more excellent worke and shewes greater power then to bee made of a meane inferiour matter For when things are said to bee created of nothing the meaning is not that they are made of nothing as of a matter but that they are made of no matter at all but have their whole being from God and his infinite power and so may bee if God will most excellent But when man is said to be formed of dust the meaning is that dust is a part of his substance even the matter of which hee consists and that his body according to the matter is a dusty earthy substance and his Soul though a spirituall substance created of nothing yet dwelling in that body is an inhabitant of an earthly Tabernacle and house of clay founded in the dust Secondly though the frame of mans body is in it selfe most excellent and surpasseth all bodily formes and his Soul is a spirituall substance endowed with reason yet all these were of mutable excellency in the best naturall estate of innocency and could not continue in that excellency but by dependance upon God and cleaving fast to him and by his hand and power sustaining them continually which by promise hee was not bound to doe in that estate And therefore wee may truly gather from the matter of which God formed mans body that hee was in his best naturall being in respect of his body but a dusty substance such as might returne to dust by falling off from God by sin and disobedience yea undoubtedly as God in framing man his chiefest visible creature of dust intended to shew his wisedome and power and to glorifie his goodnesse so also hee teacheth man thereby his owne naturall frailty and mutability how unable hee is of himselfe to abide in honour and excellency And this hee shewes most plainely Gen. 3. 19. where hee saith to man alluding to his creation Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt returne Wee have also an excellent argument to this purpose Iob 14. 18 19. and 15. 15. where the Lord is said to charge his Angels with folly and to lay no trust in his servants and the heavens are not cleare in his sight how much lesse can hee find steadfastnesse in men who dwell in houses of clay which have their foundation in the dust that is seeing the heavenly spirits are not immutably pure in Gods sight but some of the Angels hath God charged with folly to wit such as did fall and to the rest hee hath added supernaturall light of his Spirit and so hath made them Saints immutably holy much lesse is man immutably pure and steadfast by nature whose better part the Soul is by creation made to dwell in an house of clay a body made of dust To this purpose serve those Scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles which compare man in his first creation to clay in the hand of the potter Ier. 18. 9. Rom. 9. 21 which affirme that the first Adam was of the Earth earthy 1 Cor. 15 47. that is in his first creation hee was of an earthy and dusty substance First this serves by discovering unto man his frailty and mutability in his best naturall being to humble every man in his owne eyes and to make him lowly and to withdraw his heart from pride and all high conceipts of any worth in himselfe and to teach us all to ascribe all the unchangable purity which wee finde in ourselves and all our steadfastnesse to the free grace of God in Christ and not to any power of our owne free will or to the excellency of our naturall frame and being If man in his first creation and best naturall being was but of earth and dust an earthy and dusty creature and before that death entered into the World while hee had yet power of free will to obey God and to depend on him was mutable and might fall into sin and disobedience and by sin might bring and did bring death upon himselfe and all his posterity how much more now in the state of nature corrupted is every Son of man a very masse of corruption and frailty yea vanity and abominable filthinesse who drinketh iniquity like water as it is written Iob 15. 16. Wherefore Let no man glory in any naturall power or prerogative nor hope to stand by his owne strength much lesse to merit or purchase by any works of nature or power of free will the least grace supernaturall which tends to bring him to heavenly happinesse and glory unchangeable For man as hee is flesh and blood that is an earthly creature cannot possibly come to inherite the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 15. 50. Secondly this discovers the madnesse and desperate blindnesse of Pelagians and Papists who teach that a man by the right use of his naturall power and free-will may procure spirituall grace from God and even the Spirit of regeneration and faith working by love by which hee may merit and purchase to himselfe eternall life and heavenly glory and felicity as a just and condigne reward of his works If Angels cannot bee made steadfast and trusty without supernaturall light added to them much lesse can earthy man who by sin is become filthy and abominable worke out his owne salvation by meriting and purchasing the heavenly reward Oh let us all hate and abhorre all such conceipts which wholly tend to the frustrating and evacuating of Christs merits and satisfaction and to make them seeme vaine and needlesse Be not deceived God is not mocked they who sow such tares and feed like swine on the huskes of their owne works and on things which nature teacheth they are enemies to the grace of God which is given onely in Iesus Christ and together with him by communion of his Spirit After the creation of mans Body of dust immediatly followes the creation of his Soule which is to bee understood in these words And breathed into his nosthrils the breath of life and man was a living Soule For no sooner was mans body brought into frame but God breathed into him the breath of life that is caused him to breathe with the breath of life even those vitall spirits which are the band of union by which the Soule is united to the body and in the first instant wherein he created the vitall spirits he also created the spiritual substance of his Soule in his body immediatly of nothing by his omnipotent hand Some are opinion that mans Soule was first created a Spirit subsisting by it selfe before his body was formed and when the body was formed a
aire and the beasts of the Earth c. For our full understanding whereof wee are to inquire and search out First what things are necessarily required in perfect Dominion and Lordship over the creatures Secondly the divers degrees of it Thirdly in what degree Dominion over the creatures was given to man Concerning the first There are foure things required to perfect Dominion and Lordship over the creatures two in the Lord and Ruler and two in the creature ruled and made subject In the Lord and Ruler there is required First Power and ability to order rule and dispose according to his owne minde will and pleasure in all things the creatures ruled by him Secondly a true right to use and dispose them according to his owne will and pleasure In the creature there is also required First a disposition fitnesse and inclination to serve his Lord and Ruler and to yeeld to him in all things whatsoever hee shall thinke fit Secondly a bond of duty by which hee is bound to obey his Lord and serve for his use and necessarily to yeeld to him in all things All these things are necessarily required in perfect Lordship and Dominion And wheresoever all these are found to concurre in the highest degree there is most perfect Dominion and where they are in a lesser degree there is a lesser an inferiour Dominion and where any of these faileth or is wanting there the Lordship and Dominion faileth and is imperfect As for example The Lord God as hee is almighty and omnipotent so hee hath absolute power in and of himselfe and all ability to order and dispose and rule every creature as hee himselfe will And as he is Iehovah the author of all being who hath his being and is that which hee is absolutely of himselfe without beginning and doth create and give being to all other things so hee hath absolute right to use and dispose all creatures according to his owne mind and will and in these respects hee is absolutely called the Lord and is absolute Lord even in this confusion of the World and all things therein as over all other creatures so over the rebellious Divell and all his wicked instruments and hath absolute power to destroy them or to make of them even contrary to their disposition what use he will And because in the creation God made all things good and perfect in their kind and nature according to his owne will and wisedome and every creature as it was good in the nature and kind of it so was it most fit inclinable to serve for the use unto which the Lord appointed it in the creation and as it was the worke of the Lords owne hand by him brought into being out of nothing so there was a bond of duty laid upon it to obey the Lords word and to yeeld to his will without any resistance or reluctation And in these respects Gods Dominion and Lordship was not onely most absolute over all creatures but also most sweet and lovely unto them even a most loving and fatherly rule of God over them and a most free and voluntary subjection and obedience of them to him and to his will in all things But now ever since the fall and rebellion of the Divell against the light and the fall and corruption of man and the confusion which thereby came into the World Though Gods power and right stand most absolute and unchangeable like himselfe and hee both can and doth most justly over-rule the Divell and all creatures which are most corrupt and malicious and makes even their enmity serve for his glory and for the communion of his goodnesse more fully to his elect yet this power and right he exerciseth not in that loving and fatherly manner over the rebellious and disobedient creatures but by just violence and coaction by necessity and strong hand forcing and compelling them to doe and worke and to suffer and yeeld unto and serve for that use which they would not and from which they are most averse And because no other Lords have any such power or right over any creature but all their power and right is given them by God and is but an image and shadow of his right and power therefore their Dominion is not absolute and most perfect but secondary and inferiour depending upon Gods will power and pleasure These things proposed as grounds and foundations wee may from them easily observe divers degrees of Lordship and Dominion The first and highest Lordship and Dominion which is most absolute over all creatures is that of God which in respect of Gods power and right cannot bee increased or diminished at all For as hee hath right to doe with all creatures what hee will because they are his owne and hee gives them all their being so he hath power as he is omnipotent either to incline or to inforce them to doe his pleasure and to serve for what use hee will The Angels in heaven and Saints glorified and made perfect and all creatures in the state of innocency as in duty they are bound to serve and obey God so they have in them a fitnesse and inclination to serve and obey his will in all things to the vtmost of their power and therefore this Dominion over them is lovely and amiable and is paternum imperium a fatherly rulo and Dominion over them But the Divels and wicked men and all creatures corrupted are froward and rebellious and his rule and Dominion over them is in respect of them violent and compulsive and as a King he forceth them to doe what hee will and compels them to serve for what use hee will and justice requires it should bee so The second Degree of Dominion is when a Lord hath both power and right to rule over creatures and they have an inclination and fitnesse to serve and obey but all these are from a superiour Lord giving this power and right to the one to rule and disposing and binding the other to serve and obey This delegated Lordship and Dominion is either unlimited or limited Vnlimited is that which is not confined to some creatures but is extended over all things in heaven and in earth and it is a power and right to make them all serve and obey him in all things whatsoever hee will This unlimited Dominion is given onely to Christ as Mediatour who as hee is man personally united to God and in his humane nature hath perfectly fulfilled the will of God overcome all powers of darknesse satisfied Gods justice and redeemed the World is exalted to Gods right hand as David foretold Psalme 110. 1. and hath all power in Heaven and in Earth given unto him Matth. 28. 18. and hath a name given him above all names even the name and title of the Lord Christ so that in and at his name all knees must bow both of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth
age of the World which God doth not over-rule and order by his providence For as hee is infinite in wisedome and power able to decree and ordaine from all eternity all things most wisely and to create and bring to passe all things according to the counsell of his will by a mighty hand of power which cannot bee resisted So also hee is wonderfull in goodnesse and bounty to provide most carefully all things needfull in aboundance for the being and welbeing of his creatures and to order governe and dispose all things good and evill most wisely to the good of his elect the iust punishment and destruction of the wicked and to his owne glory Wherefore that wee may better understand this point and proceed profitably in the handling of it We are first to consider the signification of the name and the true sense of the word And after to insist upon the thing it selfe and to define and describe this actuall providence of God The word providence is sometimes taken in a large sense and signifies Gods care and respect of all creatures both in decreeing and ordaining their being and all things which befall them and in executing his eternall decree according to the counsell of his owne will for in all these things God did shew a provident care and respect Sometimes the word is used more strictly and that three wayes First for the provident care and respect of God in decreeing things for the best that they should so come to passe as they have done or shall doe at any time hereafter of this providence the Apostle speakes Hebr. 11. 40. where hee saith God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not bee made perfect this may bee called Gods providence in willing and decreeing Secondly it signifies Gods provident care which hee shewed in the creation of the World and all things therein For hee first created things above which could subsist and bee perfect by themselves without the inferiour elements and the creatures in them as the highest heavens and their inhabitants the Angels then hee created the visible heavens which might bee ready by their light to bee of use for other th●ngs below in such measure as was needfull then hee created the spacious regions of the aire through which that light might shine to other elements and all creatures which hee was about to create in them and before hee created any living creatures which could not well subsist nor move themselves without greater light then that of the naked heavens hee created the Sun Moone and Starres which might both give light sufficient to those creatures and also might cherish and comfort them and all other things which were made to serve for their use And before hee created mankind male and female in his owne image fit to rule under him in the inferiour World hee prepared and made ready for them all creatures which they might rule over all kinds of delicate food in great variety and aboundance and a Lordly palace and place of pleasure wherein to dwell in which he put them so soone as they were created As God in all this shewed his provident care for man and all creatures to make them every one perfect in their kind with naturall perfection in the creation so I have noted this his actuall providence in the severall passages of the creation and have unfolded it so farre as for the present was necessary Thirdly this word is frequently used to signifie Gods provident care in ordering and governing the whole created World and preserving all creatures therein and in disposing every thing which doth befall them and come to passe in the World to some good end according to the counsell of his owne will This is the actuall providence which now comes to bee distinctly handled and unfolded in the next place after the creation But before I come to describe this providence of God and to lay open the nature object severall parts and kinds of it I hold it necessary to prove clearly out of the holy Scriptures that there is in God such a providence and provident care which hee doth shew and exercise in the ruling and governing of the whole World and ordering and disposing all things to their severall ends And that God is not a carelesse sleepie and slumbering one who doth neglect and not see regard and care for any things here below as some blind fooles desperate Atheists and wicked Men have imagined and spoken as the Psalmist sheweth Psalme 10. 11. 13. and 94. 7. who say that the Lord doth not see God hath forgotten ●ee hideth his face hee will never see nor regard nor require what is done among men in the World For the manifest proofe of Gods providence I will first rehearse some notable testimonies even plaine texts of holy Scripture which being laid together may minister to us sufficient matter and occasion to describe and set forth the actuall providence of God and all things wherein it doth consist and which thereto belong Psalme 14. 2. The Lord looketh downe from heaven upon the Children of men to see if there bee any that doe understand and seeke after God Psalme 33. 13 14 15. The Lord loooketh from heaven hee beholdeth all the Sons of men from the place of his habitation hee looketh upon all the inhabitants of the Earth Hee fashioneth all their hearts alike hee considereth all their works Psalme 34. 15 16. The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and his eares are open unto their cry The face of the Lord is against them that doe evill to cut off the remembrance of them from the Earth Psalme 36. 6. Thy iudgments O Lord are a great deepe thou preservest man and beasts Psalme 104. 27 28 29 30. All living things wait upon the Lord that hee may give them their meat in due season Hee giveth to them and they gather it hee openeth his hand and they are filled with good when he hideth his face they are troubled when hee taketh away their breath they dye and returne to their dust when hee sendeth forth his Spirit they are created and hee renueth the face of the Earth Psalme 113. 5. Who is like unto the Lord our God who dwelleth on high 6. Who humbleth himselfe to behold the things that are in Heaven and in Earth 7. He raiseth the poore out of the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill that he may set him with Princes Psalme 138. 6. Though the Lord b● high yet he hath respect to the lowly Job 13. 7. But aske now the beasts and they shall teach and the fowles of the Aire and they shall tell thee 8. Or speake to the Earth and it shall teach thee and the fishes of the Sea shall declare unto thee 9. Who knoweth not in all these that the hand of the Lord hath wrought this 10 In whose hand is the soule of every living thing and the breath of
had a beginning Reas. 1. Reas. 2. Psal. 107. Use 1. Love not the world being so movable Use 2. Arme against Atheisme As in some Objections answered Object 1. Answ. Object 2. Answ. Doctr. 2. T 〈…〉 had 〈◊〉 b●ginning Use 1. Use 2. See thy own wea●nesse 1 Cor. 2. 9. Quest. 1. The world began in the Spring Argum. 1. Answ. Argum. 2. Answ. Argum. 3. Answ. Argum. 4. Answ. Argum. 1. Argum. 2. Argum. 3. Argum. 4. Argum. 5. August in serm de natal Dom. Quest. 2. Use 1. Gods providence to be noted and admired Use 2. Truth of creation and redemption hereby demonstrated Use 3. All made for us and to be used for God Use 4. Note and admire Gods eternity Psal. 102. 25 26. 4. Derivation of the word signifying Heavens 1. 2. 3. 4. Diversity of its significations 1 2. 3. Foure things signified by Heavens 1 2 3. 4. Doctr. 1. Doctr. 2. Doctr. 3. Doctr. 4. Doctr. 5. Excellencie of heaven Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Reason 4. Reason 5. Reason 6. Object Answ. Use 1. To confute the otherwise minded Use 2. Admire the bounty of God to his chosen Use 3. Be ashamed of thy earthly mindednesse And prepare for heaven Use 4. Be thankfull for this good provision Use 5. Comfort in all afflictions Rom. 8. 18. 2 Cor. 4 17. Use 6. Against the Chiliasts Angels comprehended in the name Heavens 1. 2. 3. Points concerning them Of their names Doctr. 1. Angels had a beginning Reason 1. Reason 2. Obj●ct 1. Ansir Object 2. Answ. Use 1. Use 2. Angels not to be worshipped Doctr. 2. Angels all created by God Use 1. Christ is Lord of the Angels Mat. 18. Use 2. Mal. 3. 1. Doctr. 3. Angels made in the beginning of the creation Use. Doctr. 4. Angels are first and best creatures Use. Excellencie of the Angels Doctr. 5. Angels made in heaven to inhabit heaven Reason 1. Reason 1. Reason 3. Use 1. Gods infinite power hereby demonstrated Use 2. Confutation of contrary errours Job 9. 7. 37. 12. Angels the chiefest of the creatures 1. 2. Use 1. The love of God to man hereby commended Use 2. And the love of Christ not taking the nature of Angels but mans Use 3. Love and reverence the Angels Use 4. Comfort hereby to the godly Angels are heavenly spirits 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Enchirid. ad Laur. cap. 18. 7. 1. They are spirits 2. Entire complete spirits 3. Heavenly spirits 4. 5. They are like to God 1. 2. 3. 6. 7. They are finite in nature Heb. 12. Of the assumed bodies of Angels How Angels are in a place The number of them very great Their motion wondrous quick Of the fal● and standing of Angels Vse 1. Comfort by the ministery of Angels Vse 2. Confutation of contrary errors Gen. 1. 2. What the earth here is The names of it 1. 2. 3. Properties of it 1. 2. 3. What the Spirit moving is 〈◊〉 1 Ioh. 5. 7. 2. 1. Doctr. all creatures have being of God Vse 1. He is the● Lord of all Vse 2. All our right is from God 2. Doctr. The World is all mutable and appointed so to be Vse 1. Trust not in any earthly thing Vse 2. Thinke not changes in the World to come by chance Similitude of the Creation and Redemp tion Vse 1. Vse 2. All whom Christ saves renewed by the Spirit 4. Doctr. Vse Gen. 1. 2 Cor. 4. 6. What the Light was Of Gods saying lee light be 〈◊〉 3. 4. 1. Quest. Ans. 2. Quest. Ans. 3. Quest. Ans. 4. Quest. Ans. 1. Doctr. Three Persons in the Godhead Vse 2. Doctr. All things possible to God Vse 3. Doctr. God wonderfull in wisedome and providence Vse 4. Doctr. Prerogatives of the first day 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Verse 6 7 8. Of the things now created The skie meant by the firmament Reas. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. How a day without the Sun Doctr. 1. All created wisely orderly Vse Doctr. 2. Vse Verse 9. Of Water and Earth distinct elements 1. 2. Of the name of the Earth And of the Sea 1. 2. Of herbes plants and trees Doctr. 1. All earthly things nothing to God Vse Doctr. 2. Wee strangers here in a pilgrimage Vse 1. Vse 2. Doctr. 3. God ruleth the most tumultuous creatures 1. 2. Vse Verse 14. Of these lights that they are substantial bodies Quest. The place of them Answ. 1. Arsw. 2. The use of them 2. 2. 3. Of the Sun Of the Moone Doctr. 〈◊〉 No instruments used in the creation Vse Doctr. 2. Great wisedome of God in the Creation Vse Doctr. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 4. Vse Jon. 4. Verse 20. God do 〈…〉 all on good advice Doctr. Vse 1. Bee followers of God as deare children Vse 〈◊〉 How to view the crea● 〈◊〉 Rom 〈◊〉 12. Of fishes Their two notable properties 1. 2. Creation of mankind male female 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Of the consultation in making man Who consults With whom It was for 3. reasons 1. 2. 3. Doctr. 1. Man the chiefest of creatures Doctr. 2. Doctr. 3. Of the name Adam used two wayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctr. Woman as capable of grace and glory 〈◊〉 man Object Answ. Vse 1. Vse 2. Doctor Man was made by God alone Vse 1. Vse 2. Danger of them that wrong man Vse 3. The sin of idolaters Doctr. 1. Mans body being of dust was wondrously made Vse 1. Doctr. 2. Man at best a dusty substance Object Answ. 1. 2. Vse 〈◊〉 For humility and thankfulnesse Vse 2. Against Pelagians and Papists The creation of mans soule Opinions 1. 2. 3. 4. Doctrine No supernaturall gifts in the soule of Adam Reason Vse 1. Our estate better by regeneration then by creation Vse 2. No Apostasie of Saints All good and Adam good yet not to bee alone how Doctr. 1 In Christ a better thing intended then the creation Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Doctr. 2. Vse More gained in Christ then lost in Adam Doctrine Woman not made to bee a servant Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Of giving names to the creatures Doctrine Adam perfect in natural knowledge Vse The best naturall knowledge cannot uphold Doctr. None but Woman a meet companion for Man Vse 1. Vse 2. Of the rib where of Woman was made Of Adams deep sleep Doctr. 1. Out of Christ dying the Church is raised Vse 1. Vse 2. 3. 4. Doctr. 2. Vse Doctr. 3. Doctr. 4. Doctr. 5. Wives are continuall companions of our lives Vse 1. Gal. 6. 16. Vse 2. 3. Consequents 1. 2. 3. 1. Of Gods bringing Eve to Adam Doctr. 1. Marriage the ordinance of God Reas. 1. Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Doctr. 2. Marriage is of one Man with one Woman Mal. 2. 15. Vse 2. 〈◊〉 Doctrine Marriage must bee free and voluntary Reas. Vse A reproofe to many 2. Doctrine What guides must lead to marriage Vse 3. Doctr. 1. Vse 1. Vse 2. Doctr. 2. Similitude of manners the best ground of love Vse 1. A rule for ●husing Vse 2. 3. Consequent
the starry visible heavens as Deut. 26. 15. 1 Kings 8. 30. and Mat. 18. 10. Yea the ho●y Apostle puts all out of doubt 2 Cor. 12. 2. where he calls this the third heaven That this highest heaven is not God but a place created by God for here it is said that God created this heaven Some thought that there was no place above the Spheres of heaven but that there God is all in all and that there all things are in God and subsist in him Their ground is that speech of the Apostle 1 Corinth 15. that God shall be all in all But that shewes the contrarie that God is in all not that all things are or shal be and subsist in God as in a place Againe this shewes not the place but the state of the blessed that they shall immediately injoy God without a Mediatour Now that the highest heaven is not God divers reasons shew First it is Gods throne Isa. 66. 1 Deut. 26. 15. therefore not God himselfe Secondly it cannot containe God but he is infinite and farre without the compasse of it 1 Kings 8. 27. Thi●dly God is every where but this heaven is not so it is onely above not in the visible world Fourthly it is such a bodily substance as can containe glorified bodies as the body of Christ Enoch and Eliah It comprehends the visible heavens within the compasse of it But God is a spirit That it is not God but his creature and his workmanship and that he hath the disposing of it as his creature appeares Gen. 2. 1. Heb. 11. 10. Psal. 115. 16. That this heaven is above the visible heavens divers Scriptures testifie For it is called Heaven above where Jehovah is Deut. 4. 39. Jos. 2. 11. that is above all the visible world Into this heaven our Saviour is said to be taken up on high when he ascended Luke 24. 51. Yea he is said to ascend up farre above all the visible heavens Ephes. 4. 10. Fourthly that this heaven is a most ample and large place may easily be gathered and proved from this That it was made distinct from the earth which was the matter of the whole visible world and doth subsist above and without the compasse both of the masse and of all things which were made of it and so comprehends them within the large compasse of it And our Saviour intimates so much where he affirmes that in it are many mansions John 14. 2 3. Also the Psalmist Psal. 68. 5. where hee calls this heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies faire and large spacious plaines And yet it is not infinite nor every where for God fills it and the earth also and it is not able to containe him 1 Kings 8. 27. The fifth instruction is That the highest heaven is a place most glorious and excellent free from all corruption and full of glorious light farre surpassing our fraile imagination and the reach of mans naturall understanding The very signification of the name shewes that it is farre remote from our sight conceipt and apprehension And that rule in Philosophy proves that it is free from alteration and corruption to wit That those things onely are changeable and may be corrupted and turned into their first matter which are made of a common matter capable of divers formes But things which have no part of any such matter in them are incorruptible and unchangeable free from alterations incident to inferiour things Now such are these heavens discovered to be in my Text For they were made absolutely of nothing with or before the first common matter of the visible world Yea in the next words the Spirit of God doth distinguish the rude masse from these heavens by this that it was full of darknesse and without forme and void which implies that these heavens were farre different that is full of beauty forme and light And other Scriptures fully confirme this First by the names by which this heaven is called and by the excellent things which are spoken of it for it is called the Heaven of heavens that is the heaven farre above all heavens in glory and excellency Deut. 10. 14. and 1 Kings 8. 27. and Psal. 68. 34. The Heaven of heavens everlasting so much the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth intimate And Saint Paul who was rapt up into this heaven was so astonished with the glory of it that he knew not whether he was in the body or out of the body there he heard words which it was not lawfull to utter and the sight thereof was such a cause of glorying that he was afterwards in danger thereby to be too much exalted and had need to be buffetted by the Angell of Sathan for his humiliation to keep him from excessive boasting 2 Cor. 12. And the same Apostle calls the inheritance therein reserved for the elect the inheritance of the Saints in light Colos. 1. 12. and he saith of God who dwels there by his glory that he dwels in light which none can approach unto 1 Tim. 6. 16. which testimonies with many other which might be cited fully prove the glory and excellency of this heaven Besides we have many Arguments to this purpose The first is drawne from the proper efficient cause of this heaven For it is most certaine that the place and city which hath God only for the builder maker of it in the building whereof God hath shewed such admirable divine wisdome that it more specially is called his worke and building must needs be most excellent and glorious Now such is the highest heaven it is called the citie whose builder and maker is God Heb. 11. 10. that is the city which God builded alone as his master-piece for his owne purpose to shew therein his glorious wisdome and art as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there used doth signifie Yea it is said to have foundations that is to be so firmly built that it can never faile but stand stedfast for ever world without end Therefore it is a most glorious place A second Argument is drawne from the proper inhabitants of these heavens For in all reason and by the course of nature that is the best place which falls to the share and is allotted to the best inhabitants by the will and appointment of him who is the wisest of all and doth order all things in wisdome and equity Now the highest heavens are allotted by God to the best inhabitants First he hath chosen them to be his owne habitation wherein he delighteth to dwell not onely by his essentiall presence and power as he is in all other places but also by his visible glory holinesse and unspeakable majesty So the Scriptures testifie Deut. 26. 15. where these heavens are called the habitation of his holinesse And Psal. 113. 5. the high dwelling in which God is so high above all And Isa. 57. 15. and 63. 15. the high and holy place the habitation