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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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judge any that is by his owne proper act of judgement but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne that he may have a hand in all judgements together with himselfe and Iohn 16. 13 14. speaking of that speciall illumination of mens hearts and inward teaching which seemes most proper to the Spirit he saith it is not of himselfe alone but it is what he hath heard and received from the Father and the Sonne And therefore the second Branch is manifest that the doer of the outward workes of God is Jehovah our God and all the three Persons in God The third Branch comprehends in it the outward moving cause of all these outward workes namely Gods owne will and pleasure for he is said to do them according to his eternall purpose and after the counsell of his owne will This is expressed in the description and in the words of the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whatsoever the Lord pleased that is whatsoever is according to the Lords will and pleasure that he hath done and this is testified in other Scriptures as Psal. 115. 3. where it is said that the Lord doth whatsoever pleaseth him and Isa. 46. 10. where the Lo 〈…〉 saith I will do all my pleasure and Ionah 1. 14. All which places shew that first the Lord hath a mind and pleasure to doe such things and therupon he doth them Also Ephes. 1. 11. It is said he doth worke all things after the counsell of his will And Acts 2. 23. 4. 28. the worke of our Redemption by Christ and all that he did and suffered is said to be done by the determinate counsell of God Therfore this Branch is manifest namely That Gods will and pleasure is the only inward mooving cause of all his outward works and that they are nothing but the execution of his eternall will and decree The fourth Branch by which these outward works are specially distinguished from his inward operation comprehends in it the subject wherein these workes do subsist and the circumstance of time and place wherein they are done For these workes are not done within God himselfe neither doe they subsist in his Essence as his inward operations do but they are Extra Dei essentiam without Gods essence they are done in all the world and upon the creatures some in Heaven and some in Earth others in the Sea and all deepe places as my Text saith and they have their circumstances of time and place as God hath appointed from all eternity The Creation was in the first beginning of time in the first six dayes of the world Gen. 1. The Redemption wrought by Christ in the midst of yeares betweene the Law and the Gospell Hab. 3. 2. and upon the mountaine where Hierusalem stood Isa. 25. 6 7. The great execution shall be at the end of the world in the last day of Judgement and the works of Gods governement and actuall providence as they are divers so they are done at divers times and in divers places of the world as experience teacheth on the very day which the Lord appointed did the flood come upon the old world Gen. 7. 11. In the same day which God had fore-told was Israel delivered out of Aegypt Exod. 21. 41. And howsoever the words of the Apostle Act. 17. 18. intimate that in God and not without him We live moove and have our being yet we are not thus to understand that these things are and that we subsist in Gods Essence and that we are so in God as his inward operations and eternall decrees are But that we all are compassed about with Gods presence and essentiall power which are every where and by him as by the chiefe efficient cause and authour of life motion and being are sustained and upheld in life being and motion continually For to be in God that is to subsist in his essence doth necessarily imply coeternity and consubstantiality with God Quicquid est in Deo Deus est nothing can be within his Essence but it must be coeternall with God and of the same Substance with him Hee who denies this must needes deny God to be immutable and most simple free from all composition Therfore this Branch also is most manifest and doth containe in it nothing but solid Truth The fifth Branch containes in it the manner of Gods outward works to wit that in respect of God himselfe they are done with such power as cannot be resisted and in respect of the event they are certaine infallible and cannot faile This is truely collected from the Text For it is said that all Whatsoever the Lord pleaseth hee doth or hath done which shewes that not one jot of his will and pleasure failes but comes to passe If his will or pleasure could be resisted or any thing prevented which he willeth to worke surely the Divell who is so cunning watchfull and malitious would in some things have defeated God or this either by himselfe or some of his instruments But this Text affirmes the contrary that whatsoever the Lord pleased he hath done in all the world Therfore in respect of God they are all unresistable and in respect of the event infallible And this David testifieth Psal. 115. 3. saying The Lord doth whatsoever pleaseth him And Isa. 46. 10. my counsell shall stand and I will performe all my pleasure yea because these are voluntary workes of God and are willed and decreed in his secret counsell from all eternity as I have noted before therefore they must needs be unresistable for Who can resist his will Rom. 9. 19. The sixth Branch containes the principall use and effects of Gods outward workes namely the making of himselfe knowne in his nature and essentiall attributes and so communicating himselfe to his elect That Gods externall workes doe all serve for this use and doe worke this effect we may gather from the dependance and inference of this Text. For the Psalmist having professed that he knows the Lord to be great and that he is the onely true God above all gods that is who hath all the essentiall properties of the true God he proves it by and from his workes and sheweth that by meanes of them he knoweth it And other Scriptures and experience confirme the same Psal. 19. 1. It is said that the heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy worke day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledge and Rom. 1. 20. The visible things of God are seene from the creation of the world clearly being understood by the things which were made Even his divine Power and God-head So the works of Gods actual providence in governing and upholding the world and in mooving the Heavens and the starres in order doe shew his infinite wisdome and supercelestia'l glory Psal. 8. 1. His overthrowing of his enemies and the persecutors of his Church as in the stood of Noah and in the drowning of Pharaoh and his host do shew his power His
to the manifestation of his glory and the eternall salvation of his elect in Christ. The glory of God is two wayes made manifest by his actuall providence First in a more generall way by a more generall providence Secondly by a more speciall way which is called his speciall providence First by the generall th● whole World is ruled by an universall motion and all things in the World every one according to the proper nature and naturall disposition and inclination of it For as the Apostle saith Hee giveth to all life and breath and all things and in him wee all live move and have our being Act. 17. 25 28. Hee by his mighty word sustaineth all things Hebr. 1. 3. His name is excellent in all the World in which he sheweth his glory Psalme 8. 1. The Heavens declare his glory and the firmament sheweth his handy-worke day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledge and that by the Suns going round about the World and discovering by his light all things from one end of Heaven and Earth to another Psalme 19. 1 2. This generall providence appeares First by his consecration of things Secondly by his destruction of so many as hee in his just will and judgement thinks fit Thirdly by his governing of all things according to his eternall counsell and just will First hee doth universally conserve and uphold all things in the World by the light motion and influence which hee hath given to the heavens in the creation which are continually turned about by his counsels that they may doe whatsoever hee commandeth them upon the face of the World in the Earth Iob 37. 12. Hee maketh his Sun to shine on the evill and on the good and sendeth raine on the iust and uniust Matth. 5. 45. Hee giveth food to all flesh Psalme 136. 27. H●● giveth meat to the beasts and feedeth the young ravens which crie Psalme 147. 9. He provideth for the fowles of the aire their food though they neither sow nor reape and cloatheth the grasse of the field Matth. 6. 26 30. This conservation is first by succession For when any creatures passe away hee maketh others of their race and kind to succeed by a continuall generation and propagation as it were by a continued creation The forming and fashioning of men in the wombe is ascribed to him Iob 10. 8. 9 10. and 31. 15. and Psalme 139. 13. So that as men and other living creatures dye their off spring and progeny succeed in their place and by this meanes he doth renue the face of the Earth Psalme 104. 30. and not onely one generation of living creatures passeth away and another commeth in the place so that the earth is alwayes replenished but day and night succeed continually by the going and returning of the Sun and the winde whorleth about continually going and returning according to his circuits The waters doe all run into the Sea and yet the Rivers are supplied by springs which come from the Sea by secret passages under the Earth as the wise-Man sheweth Eccles. 1. 4 5 6 7. Secondly hee preserveth all things universally by changing mutable things from an evill to a good and from a lesse good to a better condition Hee girdeth the weake with strength Job 12. 18. 1 Sam 2. 4. Hee maketh the barren wombe fruitfull Psalme 113. 9. Hee turneth the wildernesse into standing pooles of water and dry ground into water springs and maketh the barren desert a fruitfull field Psalme 107. 35. Isa. 41. 18. and 51. 3. Hee raiseth the needy out of the dust and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill 1 Sam. 2. 8. and Psalme 113. 7. And because the universality of creatures cannot bee preserved without Gods carefull keeping and preserving every particular therefore God hath an eye to every singular thing and his provident hand is reached forth to every one of them in so much that our haires are numbred and not one small sparrow can fall on the ground without him Matth. 10. 29 30. Hee cloathed the grasse of the field even every Lillie Matth. 6. 30. Hee reckons up our teares Psalme 56. 9. and is with every one in his going out and comming in in his downe sitting and uprising Psalme 139. 1. 2. Isa. 27. 28. Secondly his generall providence appeareth and is exercised in the destruction which hee himselfe according to his just will bringeth upon the whole Earth or upon whole Nations and Cities or upon some notable persons The destruction of the whole World in the dayes of Noah came by his hand and providence for hee said Behold I will bring a flood of waters and will destroy all flesh Gen. 6. 13. and hee foretold his purpose so to doe an hundred yeares before And the destruction of Sodome and Gomorrha was by fire which hee rained upon them Gen. 19. Hee smotte Egypt with plagues and destroyed the first borne and also Pharaoh and his host Exod. 12. and 14. Psalme 135. 10. And the Cana●nites by Joshua and Israel Josh. 10. and 11. and Senacheribs host 2 King 19. And the murmuring Israelites together with Corah Dathan and Abiram Num. 16. Vzzah 2. Sam. 6. 6. Herod Act. 12. and many others By this destroying and abolishing of men and other creatures and by his consuming and wasting of them by smitting the earth with barrennesse and sending pestilence and warre hee makes men know that hee is Jehovah the righteous Iudge and the Nations to see and feele that they are but mortall men as the Psalmist testifieth Psalme 9 21. and 46. 11. Thirdly this generall providence is seene in his government of all things according to his owne just will and good pleasure Hee doth after a generall manner rule inferiour things by the light and influence of the Heavens and of the Sun Moone and Starres By the Sun hee rules the day and by the Moone and Starres hee governes the night Psalme 136. 8. 9. And as his eyes are upon all things and upon all the wayes and workes of men so hee fashioneth their hearts Psalme 33. 15. Hee keepeth the waters of the Sea within their bounds beyond which they doe not passe Psalme 104. 9. Hee hath a set time and season for every thing and for every purpose under Heaven Eccles. 3. 1. And this government hee exerciseth by motion and direction of motions and by cohibition First by motion for hee moveth all things not onely the mindes wils of men by turning their hearts at his pleasure Ier. 12. 24. Act. 17. 28. Psalme 105. 25. and Prov. 21. 1. but also things without life by a naturall inclination which hee giveth to every thing in his kind as the Psalmist sheweth in the Sun Moone and Starres the windes and the waters Psalme 104. 19. 25. And as hee moveth every creature so hee directeth all their motions as appeares Psalme 37. 23. Prov. 20. 24. Ier. 10. 23. In so much that what men
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. Batchelour of Divinity and Pastour of St. Iohn Evangelist LONDON Printed for John Bartlet at the signe of the gilt Cup neare St. Austins-gate in Pauls Church-yard 1641. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE AND NOBLE Lords FRANCIS Earle of BEDFORD Robert Earle of Warwick William Viscount Say and Seale Edward Viscount Mandevilc Robert Lord Brooke John Lord Roberts and the rest of the Honourable Lords Committees in the upper nou●e of the high Court of Parliament Grace and Peace with multiplicity of all Blessings temporall and eternall Most Noble LORDS THat which the learned Doctours of the Jews doe say of their Masorah to wit That it is an hedge or defence to the Law We Christians may more truly say of our weekly Sabbath the Lords day that it is the hedge of defence to true Christian Religion For as their Masorah which was their Annotations upon all the Scriptures of the old Testament shewing the genuine reading and signification of every word in the Hebrew text with what pricks vowels and accents it ought to be and was anciently written and read by Moses and the Prophets and by tradition from Ezra and other succeeding Fathers in all ages delivered over unto them did serve as an hedge and fence to keep the Scriptures of the old Testament pure from all corruption and alteration so that if any Scribe did in writing any copy of them omit or adde one word or letter or alter and change any vowell point or accent his errour might easily by the notes and rules of their Masorah be discerned and amended So the Lords holy weekly Sabbath being rightly observed according to the Law of God and the first institution and sanctification of it that is First by cessation and rest from all worldly cares and all secular affairs in respect wherof it is called in Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sabbath that is rest and cessation Secondly by devoting it only to the worship and service of God and by sanctifying it with preaching reading and hearing of the word prayer meditation and other works of piety and exercises of true Religion in which respect it is called the Lords day that is the day of the Lord Christ consecrated to his honor and to the service and wor●hip of God in his name It is most certainly as we find by experience a strong hedge and fence to true Christian Religion by which true piety and the true knowledge and worship of God and true Faith in Christ are upheld maintained increased and continued among all Christian nations from generation to generation Without observation of this weekly Sabbath and keeping this day of the Lord Christ holy by holy assemblies the publik and private worship of God the knowledge of Christ the memory of our Redemption by him and of his finishing and perfecting that great work and resting from it in his resurrection the publike preaching reading and hearing of the word and all other exercises of Christian religion which are the most effectuall ordinary meanes of grace and furtherances to eternall life and blessednesse would undoubtedly grow out of use and at length utterly decay and vanish This consideration did move me to insist more largely upon this subject and to make many Sermons upon that Text Gen. 2. 2 3. which briefly relates the first institution of the Sabbath on the seventh day in the first weeke of the world and Gods blessing and sanctifying of every seventh day in every week to be an holy Sabbath to his people Out of which Sermons first publikly preached to mine owne peculiar flocke I did afterwards compose this Treatise at the importunity of some of my best affected hearers and imparted severall written copies of it unto divers of them having at that time no hope to get it licensed for the Presse For by Gods speciall providence I having handled the doctrine of the Creation out of the 1. Chap. of Genesis was by my order of preaching and expounding of that Scripture led along and brought to this Text concerning Gods sanctifying of the seventh day at that very time when a book of liberty for sports on the Lords day was by the Bishops in every Diocesse sent to every Parish Church and commanded to be publickly read by every Minister in time of divine Service in the audience of all the people And because I proceeded to handle this subject as the order of my text did lead me and durst not balk that part of Gods word I was three severall times convented before my Ordinary and admonished under paine of suspension to proceed no further in this doctrine not for any errour which could be objected against any part or passage in it but only because the times would not beare it And because I did not hold it fit nor safe for me to obey man rather then God by concealing from my flock any part of Gods truth and shunning to declare unto them the whole counsell of God I have undergone the high displeasure of that Primate to whose jurisdiction my Church doth belong who upon divers false informations of catchers which have bin imployed to entrap me in my words that they might have something wherof to accuse me hath caused me to be convented before the Kings Majesty and the Lords of his Honourable Privy Counsell and hath charged and accused me to be a Preacher of factious and seditious Doctrine and for many years the great troubler of the City of London Wherupon I was committed close prisoner for two and twenty weeks and through close custody was by sicknesse brought neare unto death and could not obtain so much liberty as to be confined to the limits of my brothers house for the safety of my life upon bayle of a 1000 pound given untill by the testimony of fifty five Neighbour Ministers of best report in and about the City I was declared to be innocent and free from all the crimes of which I was accused Now blessed be God for your happy Assembly in this most hopefull Parliament by which I have been eased of my strait bonds and the times are so changed that this Treatise and divers others of my labours are licensed to passe by the Presse into the publik view of the world I should not have dared to commend it to the sight and grave Judgement of your Honours If your godly Zeale for the sanctifying of the Lords day and for the honouring of the name of the Sabbath which appeared most evidently to us all who of late were present at the time when that scandalous libell intituled Sunday no Sabbath was most accurately and judiciously sifted and examined by your Honours and justly censured and condemned to the fire had
this put us in mind to be humble here and to rest in hope that the eternity and the eternall joyes of heaven are such as neither eye hath seen nor eare heard nor mans heart conceived And let us labour to walke by faith and not by sight as the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 5. 7. So much for the Doctrines There be also two questions which here offer themselves to be discussed The first is What time of the yeare the world was created and which day moneth were the first of the world without the knowledge of this we cannot exactly tell how long it is since the world was created The second is How long it is since that first beginning wherein God created the heavens and the earth For Moses doth carefully set them downe untill his time and so also doe the succeeding Prophets which sheweth that this knowledge is not to be neglected For the first question Some hold that the world was created in September in the time of the Autumnall equinoctiall Others that it was created in the Spring time and in March when the day and night are equall and of one length in all the world Both these opinions are maintained by reasons and arguments produced out of Gods Word but the reasons which are brought to prove the latter opinion I conceive to be more strong and solide and therefore I doe incline to beleeve that the world was created in the Spring time and not in Autumne and that others may be better confirmed in this truth I will propound the reasons on both sides and will answer the one and confirme the other The maine Arguments which tend to prove that the world was created in September are foure especially The first because September was from the beginning observed and accounted for the first moneth of the yeare both by the Israelites and Forefathers and also by the Egyptians and other Nations For Exod. 12. 2. it appeares that March for a speciall reason was made the first moneth to the Israelites because in that moneth they came out of Egypt And that till then both they and the Egyptians accounted September the first moneth I answer that the Egyptians did erroneously begin their yeare in Autumne and the Israelites living with them did for civill respects follow their account And therefore when they were to depart out of Egypt God did both reach and command them the right observation in Abib or March Exod. 12. 2. and called them to the true ancient and originall forme of beginning the yeare in the Vernall equinoctiall which is in Abib that is March Yea the Caldeans and Persians who were of better credit then the Egyptians did alwaies from the beginning account March the first moneth of the yeare therefore this Argument is of no force Secondly they argue that September was the moneth wherein the yeare of Rest and the yeare of Jubile did begin by Gods appointment as appeares Levit. 25. 9. for on the tenth day of that moneth God commanded the Israelites to sound the Trumpet of Jubile in all the land and so to begin their yeare of Jubile and Release Therefore that is the true beginning from the creation I answer to this two waies First that as the yeare of Rest was not the first but the seventh and the last of the seven and the yeare of Jubile was the next year after seven Sabbaths of years So the Lord did still follow the number of seven and would have it begin in September because it was the seventh moneth and not the first by the order of creation Secondly the moneth of September when all the fruit is taken from the ground and men begin to sow and plant for the next yeare is the fittest time for to begin the yeare of Rest and of Jubile wherein every man was to re-enter into his land which he had sold as appeares Vers. 10 11. and this was the cause of beginning in September not because it was the first moneth of the world and of the yeare reckoned from the creation but because it was the fittest for men to give up the land empty to the owners when they had gathered in the corne and fruit and cleared the ground and so this Argument is of no force Thirdly they argue That the time wherein all things naturally come to prefection is most likely to be the time wherein God created the world and all things therein perfect in their kind and that is Autumne and September as experience teacheth Therefore it is most likely to be the first moneth from the creation This Argument is divers waies defective First the state of the world in the creation was far different from that state of things which now is ever since mans fall and corruption Then all times were both Spring and Harvest and trees did both blossome and beare perfect fruit at all times of the yeare Therefore no certaine Argument can arise from this ground Secondly if any time be more perfect then another and retaine perfection from the creation it is most likely to be the Spring time for in the Spring all things begin to revive and shoot forth of the earth as they did in the creation then are the fields most fresh and green and full of beautifull flowers as in the state of innocency And as for Summer and Harvest they doe but ripen things which the Spring hath quickened and nourished and hasten them to corruption and not to perfection causing them to die and wither Yea verily if the earth had not been cursed for mans sin it would now bring forth in the Spring not onely flowers and blossomes and Spring fruits but also all other kinds of fruit Therefore this is a weak Argument As for their fourth Argument which is Cabalisticall drawne from the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth in September agreeing with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth in the beginning in the same letters I have answered it before and shewed that they differ in one letter to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore it is but a fallacie But now for the beginning of the yeare naturally in the moneth of March which is called by the Hebrewes Abib and Nisan as being the moneth in which the world was created and that the world was created in the Vernall equinoctiall when day and night were equall in all the world divers of the Ancients affirme and hold as Athanasius Ambrose Theodoret Cyril Damascene Beda and others and with them many judicious and learned Divines of later times doe concurre as Junius Polanus and others Their reasons are very strong forcible and convincing which cannot be gain-said First they prove it out of the Scriptures Gen. 8. 13. where that moneth is called the first of the yeare by account from the creation wherein the waters were dried up from the earth and it began to bring forth fruit for Noah and the