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

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good and wise man against all the miseries that can befall him in this world if he knoweth and is assuredly perswaded that there is a resting place prepared for him not therein to be depriued of all sense of good and euill as they imagine who seeke for rest in death without all hope of another life but a place of happines for them that with a good heart and Will haue giuen themselues to vertue and holinesse which is appointed by God who is aliust almightie and algood For what rest can that thing find which is not at all So that if man bee no more after the death of the bodie then death cannot bring him any rest at all And therefore wee may say of this rest that as God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing according to the testimonie of Iesus Christ so rest is not for them that are not but for them that are For rest presupposeth a beeing because the thing it selfe must needes be as well as the rest that belongeth to it otherwise neither of them both should haue any being Thus then we may iudge after so many reasons taken from nature and hauing had so many testimonies as haue hitherto beene alleged from the authoritie and sayings of men on which side the truth is most certaine whether with them who haue all good and wise men on their side or with the other who haue none but foolish and wicked men Wee haue then in this matter which now wee follow the iudgement authoritie and sentence of all the greatest and most excellent men in the world with the greatest and chiefest part of all mankinde Vnto whose testimony we may further adde religion iustice holines and all vertues which are so grounded and laide vpon the immortalitie of mans soule that if this foundation bee taken from them they are altogether ouerthrowen For albeit they haue their chiefest foundation in God neuerthelesse he hath so ordained and ordered them that they cannot take place if there be no immortalitie of soules and that for the reasons alreadie declared It followeth then well that trueth is on their side For trueth will rather stande for them then for vices villanies and notorious wickednesse vnto which the mortality of the soule is more agreeable then the immortalitie And if all the Philosophers were not able to attaine to the knowledge of the soules nature nor define the immortalitie thereof wee ought not to bee greatly abashed if such as were most ignorant vile and abiect of them as they are called by some of the best of the Ancients abused themselues so grossely and spake so vnreuerently seeing many of the greater sort and of good account fell so shamefully and shewed themselues to be woorser then beastes in some things whereof a man may iudge by the outwarde senses For haue there not some beene founde who albeeit they sawe the snowe white yet they durst maintaine that it was blacke and that pepper was white and although they felt the fire hote and burning yet affirmed that it was colde But for this time let vs leaue the opinions of Philosophers and speake somewhat of them who although they doe not beleeue the immortalitie of soules nor yet all that is spoken of GOD or of religion say notwithstanding that it is good for the life of man that men shoulde bee of that opinion without which humane societie could not be kept inuiolable neither would men do any thing as they ought if they were not as it were with a bridle kept backe by this feare that there is another life after this and that there are gods to take vengeance of such as haue done euill And therefore they say that feare ws the first that made gods Heereof they conclude that religion is nothing but onely in opinion yea that it is nothing else but superstition which proceedeth from this foolish opinion But seeing this errour serueth for the benefit of mans life it is good say they to vpholde it and to confirme men therein And they that vse this speech are none of them that are taken to bee fooles and ignoraunt persons but of the greater and skilfuller sort of people yea of the wisest men of the worlde according to the iudgement of men For when wee speake of good men and such as are wise wee must iudge of them according to the matter which wee handle and according to the iudgement of God in his worde Therefore if according to this reason wee iudge of these men of whome wee nowe speake they shall be found to be the grosest and most blockish beasts that the earth beareth For all science wisedome and greatnes separated from vertue are not the things themselues indeed but brutishnesse rather and vile basenesse And if we iudge otherwise what is all the knowledge wisedome greatnesse that is in all men in respect of that which is in one Deuil onely For what want the deuils from being Angels like to those blessed Angels that continue still in their obedience vnto God If there be any question made for greatnesse of spirite they are all spirite If for such wisedome and knowledge as the cunning and wise men of this worlde haue of whome haue worldly wise men learned their skill but of them in comparison of whom they are but young schollers If the question bee for greatnesse what King or Prince in the worlde is so great as they For who is called the prince of this worlde by Iesus Christ the God of this worlde by Saint Paul principalities powers worldly gouernours and the princes of the darknesse of this worlde Are not the deuils so called who rule and gouerne the great ones of the whole worlde that are great indeede according to men but not according God What then doe they want of beeing celestiall Angels but vertue and goodnesse But because these men of whome wee speake nowe beleeue not that there are Angels or diuels wee will beate them with other arguments For of these men also there bee some that say wee must hue as the most doe but followe the opinion of the fewest Nowe then when they woulde haue men to bee perswaded to vertue and to doe their duetie by lying and errour namely by intertayning in them an opinion of religion and of a second life although there bee no such thing is not this a very proper meanes to call all trueth into question and to trample all vertue vnder foote For if any propounde the immortalitie of soules vnto men not as if it were a true matter but as a fayned and false thing which yet they would haue them beleeue as true to the ende that through the feare of Gods iudgement they might bee kept backe from euill and lead vnto goodnesse euerie one may guesse easily howe men will dispence with themselues when they once knowe that whatsoeuer is spoken and propounded vnto them is but as a scarre-crowe to make them afraide as wee vse to
that his 〈◊〉 ●●●cheth ouer all that the soule of man is immortall and that after this l●se there is a place of happinesse for the good and of torments for the wicked is as I may terme it a supernaturall error or rather cleun● againsst 〈◊〉 religion nature and all The trueth whereof appeareth both by the common consent of all nations who haue generally approo●ed those points as inuiolable principles and maximes in nature and also by the iudgement of the sounder sort of Phylosophers and Lawmakers amongst the Heath●● who knowing that all mens consciences did naturally acknowledge not onely a being of a diuine power but a subiection also thereunto pret●nded that their lawes and superstitions came from some one or other of their supposed gods goddesses as Minos King of the Cretensians made the people beleeue that he had receyued his lawes of Iupiter Lycurgus the D●●●demonian lawmaker of Apollos oracle Numa Pompilius a Roman● king of Aegeria the Nimph and so the rest of others And in tru●th they that deny the diuine essence what do they but deny themselues and the being of all things in the world besides For as Aratus the heathen Poet 〈…〉 is also confirmed vnto vs by the Apostle Paul In God we liue 〈…〉 haue our being so that without him it is impossible wee should haue any being one moment of an houre And it is strange to consider 〈◊〉 these reaonable beastes for men I dare not call them standing so 〈◊〉 vpon reason and sense as they would seeme to do cannot in reason 〈◊〉 that this great variety exquisite order which they behold and see in nature natural things must of necessity haue some superiour cause from which they receiued both their first beeing and their conti●●al 〈◊〉 in the same When they looke vpon any excellent picture they presently iudge as the truth is that it was wrought by some cunning painter and euery 〈◊〉 building leadeth all men to the consideration of some exquisite master builder that framed it And shall not the view of the worlde and the knowledge of so many admirable things therein as are subiect to all our senses constra●●●●s to acknowledge a superiour cause and creator of them all Doeth any shippe sayle his right course without a Pilot or is there any Citie well gouerned without a Magistrate And shall any surmize that the celestiall lights could obserue their right motions without the direction of him that made them or that the terrestriall globe of the earth coulde 〈◊〉 so well ordered by the course of nature were it not that all things are 〈◊〉 by him that 〈◊〉 them all But such is the blockishnesse of these 〈…〉 that they will beleeue nothing but that which they may see with their eyes and 〈◊〉 knowledge of by the light of their bodies As though if their eyes were plucked out of their heads there could be no sunne in the 〈…〉 nor light in the worlde because themselues were in darkenesse and coulde see nothing How many things are there in nature which 〈…〉 and yet no man maketh any question of their being no not they 〈◊〉 who notwithstanding deny that there is any diuine nature any 〈◊〉 soule Angell or spirite because they are not visible and sub●ect to ●ight Can any of them see the winde looke vpon the voice of a man beholde the sweete harmony of musicke Nay can they take a viewe of the heartes in their bodies or of the braines in their heades Are they therefore without heart and brainelesse Surely it seemeth they are cleane voyde of brayne ●it and common sense that nayle all their beliefe so fast to the sight of their b●dily eyes And yet were it so that they would not most wilfully 〈…〉 the euidence of their owne hearts they should there behold with the eyes of their mind as it were in a christall glasse that which may bee knowen of God Nay the holy Ghost proceedeth further and telleth vs that euen our bodily eyes may and doe after a sort looke vpon the eternall powe● and Godhead which are seene by the creation of the worlde being viewed in the workes thereof And because it may so fall out by the 〈◊〉 iudgement of God that these beetle-eyed Atheists may aswell be depriued of their bodily eyes as they want the sight of their mindes the creator and Lorde of the whole worlde hath set such markes of his diety in his workes that such as haue onely the direction of nature may euen with their eyes closed vp touch and handle him if they will but grope after him in whom we all liue mooue and haue our being What should I presse them with the certayne testimony of their owne hearts and consciences which will they will they drawe them to a fearefull acknowledgement of the mighty power of God whensoeuer eyther by his terrible voyce of thunder he shaketh their heartes or by some irrecouerable disease as a messenger of death hee 〈◊〉 them to appeare before his tribunall seate and throne of iusti● But there needeth no other proofe to co●●nce them then the wordes of their owne mouthes For doe not their horrible oathes whereby they blasph●● the Maiesty of God and asmuch as lyeth in them teare him in pieces ●e a●e ●●●nesse against themselues that the Lorde whom they despite in that 〈…〉 hath a being howsoeuer otherwise they deny the same And if no reason will sinke into their braines yet mee thinks the waight of Gods iudgement which haue from time to time seased extraordinarily vpon these Atheists that haue sprung vp in the world should cause them more seriously to consider of their miserable estate It is reported of Protagoras who was one of the first of that stamp that being banished from Athens and his Books publikely burnt he was drowned in the sea as he sailed into Sicilia Diagoras was violently slaine by certain men whom the Athenians had hired with mony for that purpose Epicurus also who placed his felicitie in corporall pleasures died miserably in a vessell of hot water after that he hadbin foureteene daies together extremely tormented with the stone in the bladder Lucianus surnamed by his owne countrimen the Blasphemer as he behaued himselfe most currishly in barking both against the gods of the Heathen and against Christ Iesus the Sauiour of the worlde so his ende was thereafter by being torne in peeces and deuoured of dogges Plinie the elder denying the immortalitie of the soule of man and placing Nature a creature in the steade of God the Creatour whilest he was ouer-curious in searching out the cause of the burning of Aetna was choaked with the smoke that issued from it A iust punishment for him to ende his life by smoke who esteemed his soule to be no better then a little vapour Cassius being a professed Scholler of Epicurus Brutus most brutishly railing vpon the prouidence of God because his enterprises against Caesar succeeded not to his
soules in what sence not only the Poets and heathen Philosophers but also Saint Paul haue sayd that men were the generation and linage of God of their error that say that soules are of the very substance of God of the transmigration of soules according to the opinion of the same Philosophers Chap. 84. 509 The chiefe causes as learned men thinke 〈…〉 Pythagoras and 〈…〉 transmigration of soules and transformation of bodies the ancient opinion of the Iewes touching the same thing Chap. 85. 515 Of the Pythagoreans of these dayes amongst the Christians and of their foolish opinions of the opinions of many Doctors and and Diuines touching the creation and ordinary generation of mens soules of the moderation that ought to be kept in that matter of the cause of the filthinesse and corruption of mans soule Chap. 86. 5●● Of those powers and properties which the soule of man hath common with the soule of beast●● of those powers and vertues which are proper and peculiar to it selfe according to the Philosophers of the difference and agreement that is betweene humane philosophie and christian doctrine touching th●se things Chap. 87. 5●6 How men can haue no certaine resolution of the immortality of the soule but by the word of God of the peruersnesse of Epicures and Atheistes in this 〈◊〉 of the chiefe causes that hinder 〈◊〉 from beleeuing the immortality of the soule and of their blockishnesse and euill iudgement therein how wee must seeke for the image of God after which man was created in his soule Chap. 88. The twelfth dayes worke 5●● OF those who desire the returne of soules departed to testifie their immortality what witnes hath binne sent vs of God out of another world to resolue vs therin Chap. 89. 53● Of naturall reasons whereby the immortality of soules may be prooued against Epicures and Atheists and first of the argument taken from the faculty of knowledge which the soule hath and from that knowledge of eternity which 〈…〉 howe it appeareth that it is not begotten of this corruptible nature because it ascendeth vp vnto God and how by a speciall benefite of God it is dayly created and not by the vertue of nature Chap. 90. 541 Of the argument for the immortality of the soule that may bee taken from that natural desire therof of perpetuitie which is in it of another argument to the same purpose of the desire which men haue to continue their name and memory for euer an argument to the same end taken from the apprehension and terrour which men may haue both of the death of the body and also of the soule and spirite Chap. 91. 546 Of the agreement that may be taken from the delights and pleasures of the soule to prooue the immortality therof an argument to the same ende taken from the insatiable desires pleasures of men euen from such as are most carnall of the testimony which they may find euen in their vices to prooue the immortality of their soule Chap. 92. 551 Of the testimony that men haue of the immortall nature of the soule in their very body by the composition and frame thereof of that which is in the motion and rest of their soule how the creation of the whole world shoulde be vaine and how there should be no prouidence of God no religion no diuine iustice if the soule were mortall of the multitude and qualities of the witnesses that stand for the immortality thereof Chap. 93. 556 Of another argument for the immortality of the soule taken from that naturall desire which men haue of knowlege of Aristotles opinion touching the nature and immortality of the soule of other reasons of Philosophers to proue that the spirite cannot be a corruptible and mortall nature and how iust men should be more miserable and shoulde haue more occasion to feare and to eschew death then the vniust and wicked if the soule were mortall Chap. 94. 563 Of that prayse and reward which wisdome and vertue may receiue of man in this worlde how miserable it is ●f there bee no better prepared for them elsewhere how death would bee more grieuous and lamentable to the best learned and wisest men then to the ignorant and foolish if the soule were mortall how the best most certaine iudgement of men is for the immortality of the soule of them who not beleeuing the same say that it is good for men to bee in such an error Chap. 95. 569 Of those internall testimonies which all men cary within themselues to conuince them that doubt of the immortality of the soule and of the iudgement to come which shall be in eternall happinesse for the good and perpetuall torment for the euill howe the very heathen acknowledged asmuch by reasons taken from the testimonies of nature Chap. 96. The thirteenth dayes worke 575 OF the testimonies which euery one may take from his conscience of that feare vnto which all men are naturally subiect to prooue the immortality of the soule a iudgement of God vpon the iust and vniust how that which the Atheistes say that feare causeth gods amongest men serueth to ouerthrow their damnable opinion Chap. 97. 581 Whether Epicures and Atheists bee reasonable beasts yea or no and what reasons they bring to ouerthrow the immortality of the soule of the false opinion of Pliny touching the same and of his friuolous and brutish reasons to this purpose of the brutish conclusion vnbeseeming the whole race of mankind which hee maketh of this matter and of the iudgement of God vpon him Chap. 98. 588 Of them who say that wee cannot know by the light of nature but that the soule is mortall of them that alledge a place of Salomon against the immortality of the soule howe wee ought to consider of the iudgementes of God vpon Epicures and Atheistes how the absurdities which follow their doctrine declare plainly the grossenesse of it of the force of those argumentes that were produced before for the immortality of the soule Chap. 99. 594 Of the image of God in the soule of man and of the image of the worlde in mans body of the coniunction that is betweene God the Angels and men of the sundry degrees of Good that are therein of those lessons and instructions which wee ought to receiue from the wonderfull composition aud coniunction of the soule and body Chap. 100. FINIS THE FORESPEACH OF THE INTERSPEAKERS IN this Academy wherein is handled the cause of their future discourses touching the naturall historie of Man The names of the discoursers ASER which signifieth Felicitie AMANA Trueth ARAM Excellency ACHITOB Brother of goodnesse ASER My companions I greatly bewayle the misery of our age wherein so many Epicures and Atheists liue as are dayly discouered amongst vs in all estates and callings True it is that the disagreement in matters of religion amongst them that beare the name of Christians is very great and causeth much trouble in the Church neuerthelesse I doubt not but that
the soule attained to the vnderstanding of the diuine essence Aristotle also taking the same way in his 8. booke of naturall Philosophy sheweth that he knew God vnder the name of the first moouer who was perpetual and vnmoueable But we may attaine to the knowledge of God of our selues a great deale better then al the Philosophers could who were ignorant of the true beginning and end of things if we be guided by the word which is the light of the trueth and whereof al the humane philosophy of the wisest that were is but a li●●e shadow Now then if vnder this heauenly guide wee feede our spirites with a doctrine that teacheth man to know himselfe well wee beginne at that science which of all other is most necessary profitable and pleasant I say necessary as that which guideth and leadeth vs as it were by the hand to find out God profitable because it bringeth a maruailous commoditie to this present life both in regarde of bodily health as also of ruling all our actions according to vertue and pleasant because a man may see therein as it were in a sacred temple all the images of the wonderfull workes of the world ACHITOB. I cannot but greatly commend those Philosophers that reprehended and condemned them who spent all their time only in the contemplation of heauen and earth and of the nature of other creatures and in the meane while descended not into themselues to know themselues and their nature but especially their soule For what will it profite a man to take so great paines as to measure the whole world and to compasse on euery side all the elementarie region to knowe the things that are contained in them and their nature and yet in the meane time hee can not measure or knowe himselfe being but alittle handfull of earth For although the knowledge of the rest of the creatures that are in this great visible worlde will greatly helpe to leade him to the knowledge of God the Creatour neuertheless● he shall neuer be able to know him well if withall he know not himselfe Yea these two knowledges are so ioyned togither that it is very hard matter to seuer them For as a man can not know himselfe if he know not God so he cannot know God wel if in like sort he know not himselfe So that I take this for most certain that neither Astronomy Geometry Geography or Cosmography nor any other Mathematical science is so necessary for man as that whereby he may learne to know himselfe wel to measure himselfe wel by the measure of his owne nature that he may thereby know how to contayne himselfe within the limits thereof As for Mathematicians natural Philosophers Phisicions who bestow their trauaile in the knowledge of nature and natural things and in the meane time forget God and themselues whereas they ought to learne both the one and the other by that knowledge that God hath giuen them of his works I say they are not worthy to be taken for naturall Philosophers Phisicions or Mathematicians but rather for blockheaded beasts In my opinion they behaue themselues as if a man should be alwayes occupied in looking vpon his house and handling of his mooueables and houshold stuffe and in the meane time did not put them to those principall and speciall vses for which they ought to serue but were altogether forget full of himselfe of his wife and of his children Moreouer concerning Phisicions if their care to know their own soule with the nature and parts therof be not more to minister that food and phisicke which is necessary for it to liue wel and happily and that for euer then to know the nature of mens bodies that they may cure others it may worthly be said vnto them Phisicion heale thy selfe For if he be worthily derided that taketh in hand the cure of other men and cannot heale himselfe or at the least hath no care to doe it surely that man is well worthy to be had in greater derision that is more carefull not only of his owne but also of other mens bodies then he is of his owne soule whereby he differeth from brute beasts and is made partaker of an immortall nature Wherefore it is very requisite that all students in naturall philosophy should profit so well in the study thereof as to be able to turne it into true naturall diuinity whereby they may learne to know God their creator in that nature which he hath created to this end to make himselfe seene and knowen therein to all men We haue therefore good cause my companions to bestow al possible paines trauaile that we may proceede on in so necessary profitable a knowledge Wherfore we must lay before our eyes two bookes which God hath giuen vnto vs to instruct vs by and to lead vs to the knowledge of himselfe namely the booke of nature and the booke of his word which we must ioyne both together as also that doctrine which is set forth vnto vs in them concerning the knowledge of our selues especially of the soule which is the true man For the first booke would stand vs in small stead without the second as we see it dayly by experience yea euery one of vs hath trial thereof in himselfe Therefore God of his great mercy hath added the second booke vnto the first to supply the want that is in our nature through sinne For if man had not sinned this booke of nature would haue sufficed to haue kept him alwayes in the knowledge contemplation and obedience of God his creator For then he should himselfe haue caried the booke whole and perfect imprinted in his heart and mind neyther should his soule haue needed any teacher to know to selfe but in it selfe it should haue cleerely beheld and contemplated it selfe so long as she preserued ●er first light and aboad in that harmony wherein God had created her But now that she is in the body as it were some excellent picture of Apelles fallen into a sinke of mire couered and compassed about with thicke mists and obscure darknesse it is very needfull that we should haue another new light brought vnto vs from heauen which is not naturall as the first but supernaturall For this cause God hath farther giuen vs this second booke of which I spake euen now by means wherof and by the vertue of his holy spirit hee communicateth vnto vs as much celestiall and heauenly light as is needfull for the knowledge of our selues and of his high Maiestie Being therefore guided by the spirit of God whereby our spirit doth see and contemplate let vs read in these two bookes diligently note in them the parts and powers force and vertue aswell of the body as of the soule of man especially the immortality thereof whereby we shall make the way easie for vs to walke and sport our minds hereafter in the large and goodly fields of the whole world by discoursing of
when he sayth According to our own image and likenesse which is the second thing we haue to note For by these wordes he plainely declareth that he mindeth to make a worke the like wherof was not before and to draw our an image more agreeable to his nature and more worthy his Maiesty then he had done before amongst all the works● of his hands For although he had already idomed and replenished the whole heauens 〈◊〉 goo●y lights yea al thee 〈◊〉 and residue of the world with all sorts of creatures yet there was not one creature vnder heauen which he had made capable of vnderstanding and reason to know and glorifie God the creator of the whole world And 〈◊〉 the Angels being 〈◊〉 spirits had this vnderstanding and knowledge yet he would haue man besides vpon earth for whose sake chiefly he had created the world to the end hee might know and glorifie him together with his Angels Therefore Moses addeth the third thing which we haue to consider in this deliberation of mans creation thereby the better to let vs know the excellency of this creature aboue the rest when hee declareth that God would create him that he might rule ouer the rest of the liuing creatures and ouer the whole earth as if man should be his Lieutenant and as it were a litle terrene god vnder the great soueraigne God that created him But some man may aske with whom God maketh this deliberation For he speaketh as though he would haue some helpers and companions in the making of this so excellent a work The Prophet Isaiah answereth to this saying Who was his counseller or who hath giuen to him first and he shal be recompensed For he had no other counsaile or helpe but of himselfe and of his heauenly and eternall wisedome as it is testified by Salomon Therefore we must not thinke that he had the Angels for counsellers and helpers either in the creation of man or of any other creature whatsoeuer as some haue presumed to imagine and to affirme For that were to derogate too much from the nature and maiestie of God and to take from him the title of Almightie which agreeth to him onely For the creature cannot be a creator And as there is but one onely God so there is but one creator of all things For the worke of the creation can agree to none but to God only But Moses by this maner of speaking in the plural number meant to giue out some obscure knowledge of the trinitie of persons that is in the vnitie of God and that vnion which they haue together in the worke of the creation which is common to the Father with the Sonne and the holy Ghost as are all the other workes of God For although there bee distinction of persons in one and the same diuine essence yet there is no diuision betweene them nor separation And as they are vnited together in one and the same essence so likewise are they in all their works For the Father doth nothing but by the Sonne that in the vertue of the holy spirite Therefore the Prophet addeth immediately God created the man in his image in the image of God created he him he created them male and female We see here that Moses doth not propound vnto vs three Gods or three creators but one onely And in that he doeth twice repeate this that God created man in his image it is to let vs vnderstand that this point ought to be well considered of and weighed as that wherein consisteth all the excellencie of man and the true difference that is betweene him and the other liuing creatures which are but brute beasts We shall know where we ought to seeke this image of God in man after we haue heard the rest of the historie of his creation For after that Moses hath briefly and summarily spoken as wee haue saide he taketh the same matter againe into his hand and intreateth thereof more specially He saith then That the Lo 〈◊〉 of the dust of the ground breathed in his face breath of life that the man was a liuing soule Wherby he sheweth euidētly that God did not create the body soule of mā both at one time as he had created the beasts but the body first then the soule which he ioined therwith not only to giue life vntoit as it is giuen to brute beasts by the soule which they haue but also to make it capable of vnderstāding as we shal vnderstand more at large hereafter For we speak not now by what means or at what time the soule is ioined with the body in the cōmon ordinary generation of men but only of the mean order which God obserued in the creatiō of the first mā according to the rehearsall which Moses maketh Now touching the matter wherof he made him because the chiefest most apparant was taken frō the earth it is said expresly that he was made therof that he should return thither as we see it true in the death of euery one But this is most certain granted of al the great philosophers yea euidēt to be seen that mans body is compounded of the 4. elements of all their qualities as also all the other bodies of creatures vnder heauen And because the greatest part which remaineth of that which wee see of man is of the earth therefore it is said that he returneth to earth although whatsoeuer is taken of the other elements in the compositiō of his body doth likewise turne againe into thē For the flesh of man agreeth aptly with the earth his vital spirits with the aire the fire his humors with the water The sence of seeing agreeth with the fire that of hearing with the aire that of tasting w e the element of water the sence of touching with the earth that of smeling with the aire and fire as we shall vnderstand more at large hereafter when we handle them Yea there is no piece so small in the whole frame of man wherein euery one of the elements doth not intemeddle his power qualities although one of thē doth alwaies command aboue the rest This is to be seen in the blood which is the first chiefest of those 4. humours in the body is properly of the nature of the aire For the muddy dregs which cōmonly thickē settle in the bottō of it are of the nature of the earth are called Melancholy the pure blood that swimmeth in the midst doth represent vnto vs the aire that humour that swimmeth in a rounde circle is watrie sleame and the skumme that appeareth aboue is the choler which is of the nature of the fire If we cōsider the ordinary generation of men the matter is humour naturall heate is as it were the master buylder drynesse hardneth the body and colde refreshings doe not onely moderate the heate that the moyst matter should not bee
by any newe and sodaine motion but by an immutable and eternall counsaile For no newe thing can befall him neither is there any thing in him that is mutable but according to the height and depth of his riches hee hath multiplied the children of men And let them thinke imagine and dispute what they list yet all things haue had their beginning according to the good prouidence of God which no man in the worlde can sufficiently comprehend O great mysterie that God hath alwayes beene and that it pleased him some time past to make man first who was neuer made before and yet not to change his purpose and will Thus you see howe wee must steppe by steppe ascend by the workes of God vnto himselfe as we haue alreadie touched in the beginning of our speech and as wee can doe it well ynough in mens workes For when I behold a worke it by and by putteth me in minde of the instruments wherewith it was made and the instruments of him that made them and of him that set them aworke Then the Workemaster putteth me in minde of him that made him such a one namely both of his master that taught him and also of his parents that begate him Thus climing vp still from one to one and from degree to degree I must needes in the ende conclude that there is one chiefe Workmaster of whom all others are descended by their order degree And there I must stay as in like maner proceeding from one essence to another I may come to the contemplation of that infinite and eternall essence which is the spring and first cause of euery nature namely vnto God who hath giuen to that matter whereof he made all things a forme meete and conuenient for that worke which he would make of it This is that which I thinke we ought to conceaue touching the creation of the matter of mans body Now before we consider the disposition therof I thinke we ought to intreate of the creation of woman who is one selfe same flesh differing onely in sexe and appointed of God to bee a necessarie helpe for the originall and preseruation of mankinde which I desire to heare you discourse of AMANA Of the creation of Woman Chap. 2. AMANA No maruaile if the eye of mans soule be often dimmed yea looseth all light in the diligent consideration of the wonderful workes of Gods prouidence For as the eye of the body although cleare of it selfe cannot behold colours figures other visible things except it bee illuminated with light from heauen or from some other lightsome body so albeit our vnderstanding of it owne nature be very cleare sighted as being a beame of the diuine brightnes yet by reason of the bond that conioyneth it to the body wherein it is ouerwhelmed with the darknes of the matter it can in no wise attain to the glittering conceptions of eternall wisedome vnlesse it alwaies haue God that great euerlasting Sunne and his heauenly light to illuminat it and to guide it to the faithful contemplation of the woorkes of his almighty hand This hath bin the cause why so many great wits discoursing philosophically of the originall and beginning of things and looking on euery side yea doubting and fearing many things which they found contrary to humane reason haue bin caried hither and thither with diuers opinions like to a vessel tossed in a deep sea but could neuer come neere to the knowledge of the trueth But if wee follow the bright starre of trueth fixed in the heauenly booke of life as wee haue learned therein the creation of man so we may as easily be instructed in the creation of the woman to the confusion of the wise men of the world and of all Epicures and Atheists The holy scriptures teach vs that after God had created man placed him in the garden of Eden to dresse it and keepe it had forbidden him to eate of the tree of the knowledge of good euil which was a signe tokē of the homage obedience and subiection he did owe to God his creator Lord and of that blessed life appointed for him as a recompence and crowne of this obedience It is not good then saide hee that man shoulde bee himselfe alone I will make him an helpe meete for him And to shew the better how this helpe was not onely meete but also necessary for man Moses saith that God had already brought all the beasts before Adam that he might name them according to their natures and kinds which hee perfourmed Whereby we may iudge what great knowledge of naturall things was in Adam before he sinned For otherwise hee could not haue giuen to all liuing creatures names agreeable to their nature and if hee had not named them as he should hee had brought in great confusion in nature Afterwarde Moses addeth that amongst all those liuing creatures hee found no helpe meete for Adam yea the Lorde had spoken of him before as if he had bene alone in the worlde For although all the beastes and all the residue of the creatures were giuen to man to assist him so that being in that estate of innocencie wherein hee was then hee might receiue all seruice and readie obedience from all the creatures neuerthelesse hee had not as yet any helpe of his kinde For hee coulde not haue that familiaritie and conuesation with the beastes nor receiue such helpe from them as hee coulde from creatures of his owne kinde Therefore when the Lorde saide that it was not good for man to be alone hee declared plainely that he did not create him to liue and solitary in the world but with companie and that his will was that there should be men vpon earth who should liue in societie and fellowship together Nowe seeing that man was created for this ende he coulde not liue in company with others of his kinde without generation and multiplication thereof which coulde not be except hee were ioyned to a wise seeing it pleased GOD to appoynt it so Wherefore as hee created the other liuing and sensible creatures of two sexes in one kinde namely some males and others females that they might increase and multiplie by generation so likewise dealt hee with mankinde But as hee tooke an other course in the creation of man then he did in that of beastes so also dealt he in the creation of the woman whome hee purposed to giue vnto man for a companion For hee created not man and woman both together but man first and then woman afterwarde as wee will declare by and by Nowe because there is no coniunction or communion in any humane societie wherein that holy bonde which ought to knitte all men together and ioyne them one to another is better declared then in that whereby man wife are conioyned and vnited as it were in one selfe same bodie and in one soule therefore it pleased God not without cause to beginne this holie
societie by that coniunction which is the bonde and foundation of all the rest and as it were the spring-head and fountayne of all mankinde Therefore it is written that GOD minding to create woman and to giue her to man for an helper caused an heauie sleepe to fall vpon Adam which name is as much to saye as Of earth and when hee slept hee tooke one of his ribbes and closed vp the flesh in steade thereof And the Lorde God made a woman of the ribbe which he had taken from man then the man said This nowe is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh she shall be called Mannes or Mannish because she was taken out of man First we see in this history that God woulde not that the male and female should haue two beginnings but onely one and that they should be as it were one stocke of mankinde to the end that the coniunction therof should be more straight firme and inuiolable For if it had beene otherwise the diuersitie of beginnings might haue giuen occasion either of conte●ning one another or of enuie dissention and brawlings Therefore God created in the person of Adam the fountaine of mankinde and after framed Euah which is as much to say as aliue or liuing to the ende wee might knowe that the woman was not created as a new creature of an other race or kinde but was onely a portion and part of the nature of man By this meanes Adam had in the woman as it were a glasse to beholde and contemplate himselfe as Euah also had the like in him and as yet to this day euery husband hath the like in his wife and euery wife in her husband For the woman was flesh of the flesh of man bloud of his bloud and bone of his bones euen as it were his owne body and a second-selfe Howe then can the husband despise and hate his wife and not hate himselfe For as Saint Paul witnesseth No man euer yet hated his owne flesh And what cause hath a woman to bee loath to bee obedient to her husband if shee consider that shee is taken out of him and that in setting her selfe against him shee striueth aginst her selfe and doeth her selfe great wrong and iniurie Therefore as the Lord hath declared what place hee woulde haue the husband and wife to keepe euery one in their degree by that order which hee hath obserued in creating the man first and then the woman so he hath done the like in that hee created the woman neyther of the mans head nor of his feete but of his ribbe Whereby as on the one side hee admonisheth the wife not to lift vp her selfe aboue her husband by taking authoritie ouer him and so making her selfe his head so on the other side hee admonisheth the husbande not to abuse his authoritie by putting his wife vnder his feete as if shee were a slaue but to account of her as of his sister and ●ompanion Wee are therefore to consider the great wisedome and prouidence of God in this creation of the woman But Atheists and other contemners of the worde of God besides that goodly ground and foundation of their impieti●● whereof wee heard before take farther occasion to deride this historie of the creation of woman because it is sayde that shee was builded of a ribbe which God tooke from Adam Truely the woorkes of God in the creation of things are not vsuall because they are the first but they which will not beleeue them may as well giue no credit neither to the myracles that haue beene in times past nor to those that are daily seene For they were not to be called by this name of miracles if they were wrought by an ordinarie course of nature They conclude then out of Moses speach either that Adam had then one rib more then he should haue had or else that he had one lesse then he should after the womans creation so that what side soeuer you take they will find a great absurdity They that seeke for occasions in this sort to scofte at the workes of God that study and take delight to cauill at them will alwayes finde absurdities enough in them according to their corrupt will and iudgement For they will daily coine as many as they list to hinder themselues from the knowledge of God and of his workes least they should be constrained by them to glorifie him But indeede what can they doe else but barke against God and his prouidence and laugh at al that is taught vs by the holy spirite concerning the creation of all thinges contained in the world seeing they are not capable of the knowledge and vnderstanding of heauenly mysteries But I demand of them what strange matter they finde in this if it were so that Adam was created with one rib more then men commonly haue which God prepared in his creation for the womans creations or otherwise if hee had one lesse after her creation which is more likely For it is saide expresly that God filled vp with flesh that place out of which hee tooke the ribbe whereof he framed Euah So that Adam lost nothing neither was he lesse perfect in respect of that For God did very well recompence it two wayes First bicause that which he put in steade thereof did serue Adams turne as well as if his rib had remained still Secondly it turned to his great good in that he had a whole woman for one of his ribbes yea such an helpe was giuen vnto him that shee was as it were another halfe of his body to make him a perfect man Besides al this we haue further to note the significations of those things which God meant to represent vnto vs and to teach vs by that manner of proceeding which hee obserued increating the woman of which I haue already spoken But we haue also to marke herein a notable prophecy of Iesus Christ and of his Church and a liuely image of her vnion coniunction and communication with him being her husband For as the rib was taken from the mans side whilest he was asleepe that the woman might bee made so in the death of Iesus Christ signified by this sleepe and whilest he hung vpon the crosse his side was pierced out of which issued blood and water which resemble the Sacraments that tend to the edification of the Church And as Euah was taken from Adam according to the flesh who was the first stocke of mankinde and then ioyned vnto him in marriage that of twaine they might be one in one flesh so the Church was taken from Iesus Christ according to the spirite who is the true stocke of mankind regenerated and reformed after the image of God that she might be one mystical body with Iesus Christ who was giuen vnto her by God for her husband and head For this cause we may say the same things of him and of his Church which we spake before of the authoritie and soueraignty
in the whole world And if we be not able to vnderstand or comprehend them doeth it followe therefore that he doeth them not yet there are many that conclude after that sort For they beleeue nothing but that which they are able to cōceiue know comprehend by their natural reason And so because they cānot know how the soule being of a spirituall nature is ioyned with the bodie which is cleane of another nature nor conceiue howe it is lodged and worketh therein therefore they must conclude that they haue no soule which worketh that in them that is there done For they see not neither can they shewe howe it worketh by those instruments which it hath in the bodie but onely so farre foorth as they behold the worke But we shall haue occasion elsewhere to handle this more at large For this time let vs goe forward with our speech of the powers and faculties of the soule considering first of the braine which is the principall instrument thereof and the seate of the internall senses already mentioned by vs of which wee are to be instructed particularly Of the Braine and of the nature thereof of the sundry kinds of knowledge that are in man of the similitude that is betweene the actions and woorkes of the naturall vertues of the soule and of the internall senses Chap. 23. ARAM. The woorkemanship which God hath wrought in the whole course of nature as well in the nature of the heauens as of the elements of liuing things of plants mettals and other creatures doth vndoubtedly containe in it great miracles and very excellent and euident testimonies which shewe plainely vnto vs that the nature of all things yea of the whole worlde commeth not by fortune and at aduenture but that they were created and ordeyned by a more excellent nature then any can be found in al the world But there is not a more expresse and clearer image of the diuine nature then in that part of man wherein are to be found those great and marueilous vertues and properties which are commonly called Animales as namely the thought vnderstanding and knowledge of numbers and of order reason iudgement memory with the discerning of honest things from those that are dishonest of good things from bad together with the election or reiection of them Therefore the contemplation of these vertues and powers is very necessary for vs that by the knowledge of them wee may dayly learne to knowe GOD the better by that resemblaunce and similitude of his wisedome which hee hath vouchsafed to transferre and to imprint in mans nature and that wee might bee induced thereby to glorifie him and that wee shoulde labour to the vttermost of our power to haue this image shine in vs more and more and daily to encrease in likenesse vnto the paterne from whence it is taken Nowe let vs followe that diuision which wee haue alreadie made of the sundry faculties vertues properties and offices which the soule hath in the bodie namely the Animall Vitall and Naturall and that diuision also which wee made of mans bodie vnto which many attribute three seuerall partes and call them bellies the first and highest of which they place in the head for the Animall faculties and vertues the second which is the middlemost belly in the breast and stomacke for the Vitall vertues and the last from the Midriffe to the share-bone for the Naturall faculties They vnderstande by the first the whole brayne which they diuide also into sundrie partes and call them likewise Bellies and little Bellies Wee haue alreadie hearde of the excellencie of the head of the place and situation thereof of the goodly outward members wherewith it is beautified of the bones whereof it is made and of the couering wherewith they are couered that the braine might haue his conuenient lodging and such a one as is requisite for the nature and office it hath that it might be wel fortified and defended on euery side to preserue and keepe it well against all outward inconueniences that might come vnto it and to the end also it might haue neere about it all those seruaunts and senses which it guideth and gouerneth and all those instruments which it standeth most in neede of both in regard of the workes it is charged with as also for the purging thereof Forasmuch then as it is lodged in the head we are to know that as the head hath a certaine agreement with the heauens and the eyes with the celestiall lightes as wee haue already touched so is it likewise with the braine For it is of a more heauenly nature and approcheth neerer to the spirituall and diuine nature then any other part of the whole body as that wherein a man may finde all those excellent vertues and Animall powers of which I made mention in the beginning of my speech and which are no actions or workes of a brutish nature Whereof also it followeth very wel that the Woorkemaster and authour thereof cannot bee of a brutish nature without vnderstanding and knowledge of order of things honest and dishonest and of good and bad Which teacheth vs moreouer that hee greatly esteemeth of the preseruation of nature and of humane societie detesteth whatsoeuer is contrary therevnto seeing hee hath imprinted in man such an image of his diuine nature as hee would not willingly haue defaced blotted out Wherfore although we cannot throughly know either the nature of the braine or the actions thereof or of the soule which it serueth yet that which may come to our knowledge will greatly helpe to confirme more more this testimony of God and of his prouidence which is already imprinted in our hearts by the light and law of nature Therfore it were very good and profitable for vs to consider diligently of that resemblance of God which euery one of vs beareth in a very small image that wee may giue him thankes and referre to their proper ende all those giftes and excellent partes which he hath placed in our nature Wee are to note then for the first poynt that as GOD manifesteth more excellently his diuine nature and the glorie of his maiestie in the heauens and in the highest partes of this great visible worlde then he doeth in other partes more base and terrestriall as we may easily knowe by the contemplation of them so dealeth hee with the head and brayne of man which is as it were the lodging of the internall senses already named which are farre more excellent and noble then the outward senses For if liuing creatures and chiefly man should onely and barely apprehend those things that are before them without any imagination thought or consideration of them thereby to know how to chuse or reiect them as they may be eyther profitable or hurtfull it would not be greatly profitable to haue them presented to the outward senses For this cause God hath ioyned vnto them another facultie and vertue which is much more
alwayes Therefore wee may well say of a woman if shee bee a Mother it is very like that she loueth her childe because it is naturall But wee cannot conclude certainely that it is alwayes so seeing wee often see the contrarie There are also oftentimes many signes which haue such apparant significations that they seeme to signifie things vnto vs certainely enough wherein neuerthelesse we are deceiued as it falleth out often in our suspicions opinions which are not grounded vpon certaine and firme arguments and most euident reasons Wherefore the knowledge that wee may haue of such thinges cannot properly be called science but onely coniecture opinion probabilitie or likelihood because there is great shew of trueth but yet not very certaine Nowe albeeit the nature of thinges bee mutable yet if they alwayes keepe one and the same tenour and constancie which continueth alike alwayes to it selfe a man may haue a certayne knowledge of them and that is called science example whereof wee haue in celestiall bodies and in naturall thinges which alwayes keepe one and the selfe same order and nature both in the elements and in liuing creatures in plantes also and such like things For as for the heauens although they bee mutable creatures yet they haue alwayes certayne courses and motions which followe their accustomed order without ceassing In like manner we see that all these thinges mentioned euen nowe are distinguished in their kindes and haue their naturall meanes whereby they are mainteyned and preserued For it is naturall in man to beget man and by this meanes mankinde is preserued The same may be saide of other liuing creatures of plantes also and of such other things which neuer faile in keeping their order We haue this light in vs by nature Wherfore when I see a childe or a man I may alwayes say certainly that no painter hath painted and fashioned him in that sort and that it is none of his worke but that he was begotten and bred of a man and a woman that were his parents For God doeth not nowe create men and women as he created Adam and Eue in the beginning and as wee shewed in our first discourse but by the common order which he established at that time and in regard of which he instituted the holy estate of Mariage as we will intreate hereafter But if the question be concerning immutable perpetuall and supernaturall things we haue neede of another light that is greater and more agreeable to their nature which is giuen to men by diuine inspiration This light or knowledge is called Sapience or Wisedome For this cause Saint Paul writing to the Ephesians saith I cease not to giue thankes for you making mention of you in my prayers that the God of our Lorde Iesus Christ the father of glory might giue vnto you the spirite of wisedome and reuelation through the knowledge of him that the eyes of your vnderstanding may bee lightened that yee may know what the hope is of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance is in the Saintes Wee see here how the Apostle ioyneth together wisedome reuelation and illumination of the vnderstanding the authour of which hee maketh the spirite of God by whose reuelation and lightning we obtain true wisdome of which the wisedome of the world is not capable And therefore afterward he calleth this wisedome the knowledge that passeth all knowledge For although by our naturall light wee haue some obscure knowledge of God as we haue already touched it yet it cannot so farre lighten vs nor cause vs to ascend so high except God giue vs this also of which I spake euen now Therefore howe great soeuer the naturall light be which we haue yet if we follow it any thing farre we are presently cōpassed with darknes which proceedeth not of the things we are to know but from our owne mindes which being pressed with the heauy burden of our body are hindred and made more slowe or els it is because our minds are troubled as if some cloud troubled the sight of our eyes So that the more light is in our mind the greater knowledge we haue there and the lesse doubting If there be no light at all or so litle that it be no better then none at al then ignorance spreadeth it selfe as it were darknes in an obscure and troubled night insomuch that there is neyther science nor opinion nor likelihood nor doubting Heere of it is that we commonly say ignorant persons cast no perils Thus then as euery one hath more light in the minde hee beholdeth obscure things more clearely because his vnderstanding is better eyther by the benefite of nature or by study and exercise or by a speciall gift of God Others see nothing at all or very litle no not into those thinges that are very cleare manifest so that they are like to men compassed couered with darknes at Midday This befalleth thē either through the ignorance that is in their vnderstanding or by reason of their blockish slouthfulnes that neglecteth exercise or by the iust iudgement of God who because of their sinnes hath blinded their minds giuing thē ouer to Satan to blind them who vseth to shut vp the eyes of worldly carnal and vnfaithful men whom he hath in his power So that if there be any errour in the mindes of men if they approoue and follow after lying in stead of trueth and euill in place of goodnesse this commeth not from the naturall or supernaturall light that God hath giuen them nor of the knowledge they haue thereby how great or small soeuer it be but of the darknesse that is mingled amiddest this light which sinne hath made more dark and wholly ouerwhelmed and the Deuill dayly increaseth to the vttermost of his power because hee woulde gladly haue all light in vs as well naturall as supernaturall cleane extinguished and put out For as brightnesse breedeth not clouds and obscurity so science and knowledge doeth not bring forth ignoraunce and errour For contraries are not made one of another Wherefore that commeth to passe in the lightning of our vnderstandings which wee see to happen in the change of light in regarde of our eyes For according to that which is put betwixt so doeth the qualitie and vertue of the light chaunge in respect of our sight If it be a verie thicke bodie which the light cannot pearce through then is it wholly taken from vs and as it is more or lesse thicke or thinne and transparent so doe our eyes receiue more or lesse light In like manner the lightening of our vnderstanding is wonderfull variable because of the great diuersitie of thinges that are set before it in this life to hinder it sundrie wayes in some more in some lesse according to those obiectes that are offered to euerie one or as men procure to themselues From hence it is that there are so many diuers opinions
and turned mee to cruddes like cheese he addeth presently Thou hast clothed mee with skinne and flesh and ioyned mee together with bones and sinewes This is that couering whereof the Psalmist spake which was giuen him of God in his mothers wombe after her conception Whereupon wee haue to note that these holy men speaking in this manner teach vs sufficiently what is the chiefe part of man which they accompt to be the true man For they declare vnto vs euidently that the soule which dwelleth in the body is truely man and that the body in comparison thereof is but his couering and the lodging wherein hee dwelleth Therefore the Heathens themselues compared mans soule to one placed in a garrison in which hee is to abide vntill hee be called from thence by the Prince and Captaine that placed him therein meaning thereby to teach vs that wee must abide in this life and discharge our duetie therein so long as it shall please God who hath brought vs into it to haue vs to continue therein Truely if wee consider well of those maruailous woorkes which GOD effecteth daily in the Generation of men wee may well say that it is a great miracle of God in Nature and ought to be diligently considered of as Dauid testifieth that hee did so in his owne person Therefore he saieth Thou holdest mee straight behinde and before and layest thine hand vpon me shewing throughout the whole psalme that there is nothing in man so hidden and couered which is not discouered before GOD and which hee knoweth not and searcheth not vnto the bottome to the ende that men deceiue not themselues through their hipocrisie thinking to hide themselues before him For this cause hee sayeth in the beginning that he is so knowen to GOD on all sides both within and without that there is not so much as one motion in him nor one thought or affection which is not wholly manifested vnto him And to prooue and confirme his saying hee taketh his argument from the creation of man giuing vs to vnderstand thereby that forasmuch as GOD is his Creatour and Maker it can not bee but that he shoulde throughly know his worke Whereby wee haue a certaine testimonie of that which wee spake in our former discourse of the creation of all those men that are dailie created by Generation according to the order of Nature appointed by GOD. For the Prophet doeth no lesse acknowledge that GOD hath made him then Adam the first man did So that looke what the Prophet speaketh of his owne person it is also to bee vnderstoode of euerie one both in regarde of his creation as also of that knowledge which GOD hath of all things in man be they neuer so hidde and couered Afterward hee addeth that this knowledge is too woonderfull for him and so high that hee cannot attaine vnto it Nowe wee may iudge well both of the composition of mans body and also of the nature of the soule by those discourses which wee haue already made And if wee did consider but of the body by it selfe yet had wee iust cause to say as much as Dauid sayeth heere What then might be spoken if wee ioyned the soule with the body and considered onely of that which might generally be knowen by such meanes as are already set downe For by that which we doe knowe wee shall iudge well enough howe farre this knowledge exceedeth our capacitie and what remaineth yet behinde which we cannot comprehend Forasmuch then as the Prophet woondereth so much at this great and high skill whereof God giueth vs so excellent testimonie in the creation and generation of men wee ought not to thinke it superfluous and vnprofitable but well beseeming a Christian man to enquire after that which God would haue vs know and which we may know and to consider well of his woorkes wherein he manifesteth his prouidence and wisedome especially in man who is as wee haue heard the chiefest of all his workes amongst the visible creatures and as it were an other worlde created within this Nowe as Dauid from the creation of man inferreth the knowledge which God hath of him so Iob in the same place that I alleadged euen now concludeth that forasmuch as God is the Creator and Artificer that made man he delighteth not in destroying his woorke Thy hands saieth hee haue made mee and fashioned me wholly round about and wilt thou destroy mee Which is as much as if he had saide is it possible that I who am the woorke of thy hands shoulde be brought to nothing by thee For besides that this were against nature the Scripture testifieth vnto vs in many places that he is not onely a preseruer of that which he hath made but also that hee leaueth not his woorkes vnperfect and that hee is so farre from defacing them that contrariwise it is his manner to leade them to perfection Whereby wee ought to learne that the onely consideration of the worke of our creation ought greatly to solace comfort and confirme vs in all afflictions and aduersities how rigorous soeuer the hand of God should be vpon vs. For first we ought to be throughly resolued of this that no affliction can come vnto vs but by his good will and from his hand whatsoeuer the means and instruments are of which hee maketh his roddes and scourges and by which he striketh and beateth vs. Nowe then seeing the hand that toucheth vs is the same that hath made and fashioned vs wee knowe well that he setteth not himselfe against a strange woorke vnknowen vnto him but against his owne wherewith he is very wel acquainted Whereupon we may certainly conclude that it proceedeth not of crueltie and furie that he striketh vs nor yet without good cause as hee that is neither cruell nor furious nor voyde of reason So that it followeth necessarily eyther that we haue giuen him great occasion or that it is very requisite for vs. But howsoeuer it be he euer knoweth well howe to turne all the afflictions of his children to his glorie and to their great honour and profite as we haue many notable examples hereof in all the seruaunts of God and namely in those two personages Dauid and Iob of whome wee haue spoken in this our discourse Which we continuing so farre forth as it respecteth the work of mans generation are to consider more narrowely of the admirable secrete of nature therein so much as daily experience and diligent searche hath learned men to knowe Tell vs then ARAM of the fashion of a childe in the wombe Of the fashion of a childe in the wombe and how the members are framed one after another in the mothers bellie of the time and dayes within which a childe is perfectly fashioned ARAM. I cannot marueile enough at the pride and presumption of many who thinke themselues to bee such great Philosophers and so skilfull in the knowledge of natural things that they perswade themselues
iustice that men vse against malefactors be grounded Shall there be more iustice in men who are altogether iniustice themselues then in God who is the fountaine of all iustice yea iustice it selfe All this must be so or else we must confesse that all these things testifie vnto vs that God hath care ouer vs and that there is an other place and time of rewarding euery man according to his workes then in this worlde and heere in this life For this cause Saint Peter calleth the day of the last iudgement in which all shall appeare before God the time of the restauration of all things foretolde of God by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the worlde beganne For considering that al things are so confused and troubled in the worlde that it seemeth there is no difference betwixt the blessings and curses of God pronounced in his lawe and that all things are turned topsie turuy by the malice of men the Lord hath ordained a place and time in which hee will put an end to this disorder and wil restore al things to their right estate and good order Now if the Lord hath appointed that euery one shal be rewarded at that time and place it followeth that then and there also wee must search for the end for which man was created and that his soule shall liue there And if the soule then liueth and in that place it followeth well also that there is the end of it For we take the ende for that which is the last and most perfect in euery thing So that if the question be of the authoritie of men and multitude of witnesses for the confirmation of that which hath beene hitherto saide of the immortalitie of the soules of men wee shall haue for this purpose all those who from the beginning of the worlde amongest all people and nations haue beleeued and thought that there is a God that there is a Diuine nature and prouidence and consequently any religion yea euen those barbarous and sauage nations which were found out of late dayes in those new Ilands commonly called the new found world And if the qualitie of the witnesses is to be considered we shall still haue almost all on our side For if wee looke vnto the most barbarous and strangest nations that are the testimonie of nature which all of them carry in their hearts compelleth them to range themselues on this side And if we come to others that haue bin more ciuil better instructed we shall haue a greater aduantage Or if the question be of the greatest and of such as by the consent and testimonie of all were accompted and were indeede best learned and most vertuous we shal not only finde them to haue beene on our side but also that they haue condemned as ignorant men and vnworthy to liue them that haue beene of a contrary opinion betwixt which men and the other there is great difference For those among the Philosophers that denied the immortalitie of the soule were such as did abolish also all diuine nature and prouidence and all religion and such as placed the soueraigne good of men in pleasure which kinde of men were alwayes woorthily taken to be the vilest and most abiect and as it were the skumme and dregges of the professours of Philosophie For to the ende wee may the better vnderstand this by mine aduise we will consider of the best arguments that are alleadged by Philosophers to prooue the immortalitie of soules that they who will not credite the testimony of the holy Scriptures may feele themselues vrged in their conscience with the sayings of Ethnickes and heathen men who shall rise vp in iudgement against them to aggrauate their condemnation Now it belongeth to thee AMANA to followe this matter Of an other argument for the immortalitie of the soule taken from that naturall desire which men haue of knowledge of Aristoteles opinion touching the nature and immortalitie of the soule of other reasons of Philosophers to prooue that the spirite can not be of a corruptible and mortall nature and how iust men should be more miserable and should haue more occasion to feare and to eschew death then the vniust and wicked if the soule were mortall Chap. 94. AMANA There is in all men a naturall desire of knowledge and wisedome yea a man may perceiue that most barbarous men desire naturally to knowe vnto what Art soeuer they apply their spirite iudging the same to be commendable honest as contrariwise they accompt it vnbeseeming a man and dishonest to be ignorant to erre and to be deceiued From this desire the wisest and most famous among the Philosophers tooke a very good argument to prooue the immortalitie of the soule For seeing this desire is naturall and that in this worlde all the knowledge and wisedome that men can haue is very small and as it were nothing in respect of that which they want they conclude necessarily that there must needes be some other place and time then in this life wherein that which is heere begunne but slenderly is to be accomplished and made perfect The reason from whence they deriue their argument is that common saying that God and Nature the minister of God doe nothing without cause Wherefore seeing this desire of knowledge and wisedome is naturall in man it can not be in vaine neither is it giuen vnto him but that it should attaine to some end and perfection For to what purpose serued the corporal eies of liuing creatures and for what cause should they be giuen them if they could neuer see or were to liue alwaies in darknes So likewise why should the eies of the soule mind be giuen to men thereby to behold celestiall and diuine things which cannot be seene with bodily eies if they could neuer view them but in such darknes as they do heere behold them To what end also should man be naturally pricked forward with a desire to know the truth and to haue skill if he could neuer soundly enioy his desire but should remaine always in ignorance for the greatest part of those things which he desireth to know which are of so great waight that whatsoeuer he is able to vnderstand and know in this world is nothing or very little in regarde of that which yet remaineth behinde for him to knowe For not to speake of those things in which all humane philosophie must acknowledge her ignorance let vs come to that vnderstanding which wee may haue by the holie Scriptures reuealed vnto vs of God For although the knowledge wee haue by them surpasseth without al comparison all humane philosophie and science yet Saint Paul compareth it to a knowledge that is very obscure to a light that is seene through thicke and darke cloudes and to an image represented vnto vs in a glasse in comparison of that most high and perfect knowledge and vnderstanding which is reserued for vs in another life and whereof
we haue here but a very little taste and weake beginning Therefore if wee could neuer goe further would it not be a vaine and ridiculous thing if God had giuen this desire onely to men and neuer woulde vouchsafe to let them haue the effect of it And if it were so that God had not ordained an other time and place for the finishing of that which is heere beginne in this life it seemeth that the complaint made by some of the greatest Philosophers against Nature shoulde not be without some ground of reason For what iust cause is there that hee shoulde giue a longer life to some beasts then to men seeing it skilleth not whether beastes liue long or no because long life cannot make them more learned or more wise then they are at their birth But it is otherwise in man For seeing that knowledge and wisedome are his greatest Good whereby hee approcheth neerer to the nature of God and of which all his other good things chiefely depend it seemeth to stand with reason that God should haue giuen a longer life to men then to beasts that so they might the better attaine to so great a Good so necessarie for them in regarde of which especially they are preferred before beasts and differ from them For wee see by experience that wee must die so soone almost as wee beginne to taste of Sciences and to waxe wise But we haue no cause to make this complaint against the wisedome prudence and goodnesse of God who hath granted vs life long enough wherein we may learne heere as much as wee neede if wee coulde vse it well both to passe away this life and also to attaine to the other in which wee shall abound in knowledge and wisedome and be fully satisfied therewithall And although God had giuen vs a life twice as long in this world as that wee nowe enioy so that we might liue as long as the ancient Patriarkes whose yeeres were so many especially before the flood as Moses testifieth yet all that which wee coulde possibly learne during the time of so long life woulde bee very little in comparison of the knowledge reserued for vs in that Eternitie For the eies of our spirite and minde are not able to endure so great brightnesse of heauenly knowledge and wisedome whilest it is heere shut vp and as it were imprisoned in this body of sinne and in a manner wholly ouerwhelmed with darkenesse but it fareth with the spirite in this respect as it doeth with the Owle in regarde of his eies and of the light of the sunne Therefore euery one hath better cause to assure himselfe that God hath appointed an other time and place for the full accomplishment of this desire of knowledge and wisedome that is so firmely engrauen in the nature of men then to accuse God as if he offered them iniurie to depriue them thereof by the shortenesse of their life Now let vs come to other particular reasons of Philosophers concerning this matter wee haue in handling Although Aristotele so famous amongest them be very obscure and wauering where hee handleth the same so that it is a very hard matter to vnderstand what was his opinion and resolution therein neuerthelesse hee dares not plainely say that the spirit of man is of a bodily nature and corruptible matter or that it is mortall as the body is But in one place hee saieth that if the Spirite be able to vnderstand without the fantasie it may bee separated from it but if it cannot vnderstand without it then it cannot be separated Which is all one as if hee saide that if the spirite could vnderstand without the senses and the vnderstanding and reason without fantasie and imagination then a man might certainely conclude that there is a difference in nature and substaunce betweene these things and that there may a separation bee made so that the destruction of the one doeth not bring with it a corruption of the other Wherefore none may conclude the mortalitie of the spirite that is capable of reason and vnderstanding by the mortalitie either of the externall or internall senses But Aristotele leaueth it doubtfull in this place whether this separation may bee made yea or no and whether a man may conclude thereupon that the spirite is of an other nature and substaunce then the senses are and so consequently immortall But it followeth not that if the soule being in the body vnderstandeth things bodily that is to say by the bodily instruments that are outward and then by the conueiance of the internall senses therefore it can vnderstand nothing but that which they declare and bring vnto it For after the internal senses haue gathered together the images and similitudes of those externall things that are offered vnto them and so retaineth them fast being secluded and separated from all matter the vnderstanding is to receiue from thence the first and simple knowledge of things So that as the qualities of externall things are the matter subiect of the internall senses so their images conceiued by the internall senses and purged from all bodily matter are the matter subiect of the vnderstanding and spirit And the spirite labouring about them draweth out certaine motions and knoweth many things from them which can not mooue the senses and which the senses can not know And yet the spirite is first mooued by these images as the senses are by externall things But wee must declare these things somewhat more familiarly We vnderstand already howe corporall things are the subiect and obiects of the corporall senses and that the bodily senses receiue and know them corporally euen such as they are presented vnto them euery one according to his nature and office But they cannot receiue or perceiue any more then that which is laied open vnto them and manifesteth it selfe outwardly Nowe after the outward senses haue thus receiued them and their matter couered with their qualities the internall senses to which the externall are seruiceable conceiue the images without the matters and qualities of those things whereof they are images For the eye cannot see either the sunne or the light of it nor yet any other creature discouered by the light except it bee present before it But the Fantasie and imagination receiue and conceiue the images of things euen in darkenesse although the things of which they are images appearant to the eyes nor yet are perceiued at that present by any corporall sense We see then already how these images are separated from the matter of which they are images and how the internall senses behold them without their matter bodies as the external senses look vpon them being ioined with their bodies Then hauing receiued them thus purged from their corporall matter the spirite receiueth them yet more pure and goeth further in the knowledge and vnderstanding of them then all the senses doe comprehending other things of which the senses can haue no knowledge or
oftentimes cruell death What comfort can such a bodie haue if hee thinke that there is no other rewarde after this life nor anie better estate for him then for the most wicked and abhominable person in the worlde And although none of all this shoulde euer happen to good men yet what contentation coulde they finde in all the rewardes which they shoulde receiue in this worlde for recompence of their vertue It is an easie matter to iudge by this that the memorie of the name and prayse of well-doing doeth not alwayes take effect neither is it alwayes due to them that haue it but oftentimes verie vniustly giuen But from thee ARAM wee shall receiue more full instruction touching this matter Of that praise and reward which wisedome and vertue may receiue of men in this world how miserable it is if there be no better prepared for them els-where how death would be more grieuous and lamentable to the best learned and wisest men then to the ignorant and foolish if the soule were mortall how the best and most certaine iudgement of men is for the immortalitie of the soule of them who not beleeuing the same say that it is good for men to be in such an errour Chap. 95. ARAM. If the Philosophers might draw many arguments of great waight from the natural desires of men to proue the immortality of soules this which we haue now to propound of the purpose reward which euery one naturally desireth is of great consideration touching this matter For it is very certain that the best most iust among mē albeit they could auoide all hurt from wicked men wherewith commonly they are rewarded from procuring their good yet they should not enioy any true and sound contentation in any of these rewardes which they might haue in this world as a recompence of their vertue But rather whilest they were expecting and hoping for them they should be euer in doubt and feare of missing them by reason of the inconstancie of men and of the vncertaintie of all humane things So that nature might well seeme to haue giuen vnto them this desire of praise and of reward if they should neuer enioy their desire els-where but in this present life Whereof wee may easily iudge by the reasons that are to be set downe For the first the memory of a mans name and the praise for wel doing doth not alwaies come to passe neither doth it fal out aright in regard of all but is for the most part very vniust For how often is glorie and honour attributed to vices yea to very execrable crimes and to the wicked whereas it ought to be giuen to vertue and to good men And if these haue sometime any commendation yet it is very sparing But it falleth out much woorse when vertue receiueth blame in stead of praise And when something is giuen to them vnto whom it appertaineth it cannot be stretched out farre by reason of the diuersity and contrarietie of natures of minds and of opinions of the manners of men and of people and nations For howe often commeth it to passe that some condemne and blame that which others approoue and prayse Yea manie times one and the same man will contradict himselfe through the inconstancie of his iudgement nowe dispraysing that which before hee had praysed and contrariwise On the other side albeit fame and commendation should be neuer so great yet it could not bee of any long continuance considering that time consumeth and bringeth an ende to all that is vnder the heauens Moreouer we see what great alterations are daily wrought by time and although praise were perpetuall among the liuing yet what could it profite the dead or what feeling can they haue of that more then of blame and infamie For the praise which good kings and Princes haue purchased by their vertues and the memorie they haue left behinde them among men can profit them no more in regard of the world then the memorie of that infamie and dispraise which tyrants haue left behind them can doe them any hurt For how wel or ill soeuer men speake and thinke one of another the dead haue no sense at all thereof Yea it is likely that they care not greatly for it and that they rest neuer the lesse at their ease for all that Therefore wee may well conclude that notwithstanding all the praise and reward which wisedome and vertue can receiue from men in this world yet they are still very miserable if there be no better prouided for them else where And if wise and vertuous men hope for another rewarde they must needes beleeue a second life in which they shall bee recompensed for their good and iust works But further when a learned and wise man hath by his spirite discoursed and gone through the heauens the planets and starres beasts men and through all nature yea hath reached to the Angels and euen to God himselfe the Creator and king of the whole worlde and hath passed through all histories both new old and hath gotten the knowledge of all things contained in them that haue come to passe in the world I pray you let vs consider what hee can be tolde of that wil be more grieuous more bitter and feareful vnto him then of death and what consolation can he receiue when hee shall vnderstand that his soule which hath seene and beheld so great riches so many goodly and excellent things and which hath beene as it were the storehouse and treasurie of them shall be wholly extinguished in the middest of such a goodly pleasaunt and wonderfull scaffold and theatre that is so excellently adorned with all kinde of beautie so that it shall neuer be againe at any time or in any place nor shal haue any more sense and feeling then the soule of a beast hath What is he who after such a consideration of death should not haue great cause to feare it in so great misery as may befall him in this life Doe we thinke that these men among the Heathen who haue heeretofore slain themselues to eschew the hands of their enemies and that shame and infamie which they feared to receiue among men and who haue accounted it an acte of great vertue and constancie to kill themselues in that maner for the auoyding of shame would haue done that which they did if they had not thought that there had beene another life besides this At leastwise Cato Vticensis for his part part testifieth this vnto vs who the same night in which hee had purposed to kill himselfe which he did because he would not fal into the hands and subiection of Iulius Caesar against whom he had taken Armes in that ciuil warre caused those Dialogues of Plato to bee read vnto him in which hee mainteineth and confirmeth the immortalitie of the soule according to the doctrine of his master Socrates We may then iudge by the contrarie what consolation it is to a
who euer returned from thence to assure vs of that which euery one may haue experience of in his death and whether they perceiued themselues to bee altogether like to beastes after the same For they can haue no more certaine testimonie of this by their senses then they haue of the other point Also I woulde gladly aske of him howe hee founde himselfe when hee was choked neere to the mountaine Vesuuius with smoake and with the smell of brimstone issuing out of the same and what consolation he found in death which hee sayeth is the greatest good of Nature Whereby hee shewed howe smally hee had profited in the knowledge of God the Creatour of Nature by the contemplation of his workes therein No maruaile then if knowing him no better hee called her step-mother and cruell mother seeing that according to his Philosophie the greatest good which shee bringeth to men is death and seeing shee neuer doeth them a better turne then when he bringeth them backe againe to that estate in which they were before they were conceiued or borne into the world According to which conclusion a man may wel approue of that desperate sentence of theirs who affirmed resolutely that it were good for men either neuer to be borne or to die presently after their birth So that the first and cheefest benefite of nature shoulde be neuer to bee borne and the second to be borne before the time or to be as soone dead as borne Moreouer it should follow by Plinies Philosophie that nature had made men with such a condition that they can not but be miserable if they liue after this life and if death doe not wholy destroy them and if they be not resolutely perswaded of this to haue no hope at all of another life For that which he sayeth importeth as much Is not this then a goodly resolution and conclusion of so great a searcher of nature whereof he hath written the historie With what eies did hee looke vpon all that which hee might haue scene Howe much differed they from the eyes of beastes and what profite reaped hee by that knowledge which hee had more then they In trueth wee haue in this man a wonderfull example of Gods iudgement vpon the learned and wise men of the worlde who so vilely abuse that reason knowledge and vnderstanding which GOD hath giuen them And forasmuch as this dogge was permitted to vomite out such horrible blasphemies both against God and against Nature and yet receiued no punishment for the same from man therefore GOD himselfe tooke vengeance of him by smoke whereby hee was choaked to death For seeing he esteemed the soule to be no better then a little winde or breath he deserued well to loose the same in the middest of smoake and brimstone But we haue spoken enough of him Nowe you may ARAM tell vs some more lies rather then reasons wherewith Atheists fortifie themselues against the trueth of this matter we haue in hand and howe wee ought to consider of the iudgements of God vpon them Of them who say that we can not knowe by the light of nature but that the soule is mortall of them that alleadge a place of Salomon against the immortalitie of the soule how we ought to consider of the iudgements of God vpon Epicures and Atheists howe the absurdities which followe their doctrine declare plainely the grosenesse of it of the force of those arguments that were produced before for the immortalitie of the soule Chap. 99. ARAM. It is a great matter when men iudge of things not according to reason but according to their affections because then their eares are closed vp against all reasons as wee haue the example of the Iewes who were the enemies of Iesus Christ For after they had once resolued not to acknowledge him neither to receiue him for the true Annointed of the Lorde but to reiect and condemne him with all his doctrine and workes no reason was euer sufficient to remoue them from this their purpose But to confirme them in their obstinacie there needed no great arguments no not in shew as it appeareth in that difficultie of theirs to beleeue his resurrection For neither all these witnesses of which they had so great a number nor all their doctrine nor all their holinesse nor all their signes and miracles were of any force with them in regarde of that testimonie which the theeuish and murdering souldiers corrupted with money gaue them to the contrary and that by a lowd lie which ouerthrew it selfe Therefore we may easily iudge what the minde of man is when it is corrupted and peruerted and when men suffer themselues to be carried away with their euill and froward affections so that God doeth euen blindfold and forsake them We see many such examples in this matter which we now hādle touching the immortalitie of the soule For on the contrary side what are the strongest reasons which these doggish Epicures Atheists enemies to God to mankind and to all nature against whom we now dispute can alleadge for themselues What would they do if they had as much against vs as we haue against them How would they lift vp themselues against those that maintaine the contrary and tread them vnder their feete We heard in the former speech the strongest arguments vpon which their error leaneth wherby we may know what a badde foundation it hath Others there are who say that in the light of faith the soule is immortall but in the light of nature it is mortal so that whilest they would seeme Philosophers they shew themselues to be ignorant and grosse beasts For there is but one only truth both of nature and of faith trueth neuer being double but alwayes one Therefore if the soule be immortall in the light of faith it can not be mortall in the light of nature but onely in the darkenesse thereof For wee see howe this small remnant of naturall light that yet remaineth in the corrupt nature of men sendeth them with one common and publike consent to this trueth of the immortalitie of mens soules so that none besides those in whome it is as it were vtterly put out and whome God hath by his iudgement wholly reiected and cast into a reprobate sense but acknowledge the same Howe then would this light of nature shewe it selfe if it had still continued in integritie Therefore I demaund of these men what it is which they call naturall light and whether it be not the reason of man and if it be that reason whereby men differ from beastes I aske againe of them whether any thing that may be knowen by arguments and reasons although they were all gathered together and examined narrowly hath greater and more euident light of reason then this hath Neuerthelesse I agree with them heerein that the light of faith maketh vs a great deale more certaine of all this matter then any reason that can be alleadged because that is the light
fallen into such execrable beastlinesse and such horrible blasphemies as in a manner to say that God or Nature had brought men into the worlde onely to make them more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures so that they can finde no better happinesse and felicitie for themselues then during their life to become like to beastes or plants or some other insensible creatures or else after their death to bee brought to nothing as they were before their conception and birth Is it possible for a man to thinke of a straunger thing more against GOD more vnwoorthie mankinde or more iniurious to all nature For the Atheists themselues that reiect God doe yet confesse if they be Philosophers that nature doeth nothing without cause or if they confesse it not they haue testimonies enow in nature to conuince them of it And yet if their doctrine were true God and Nature haue done woorse in the creation and production of men then to doe some thing without cause For this were a cause most vnwoorthie of God and of Nature to create and bring foorth men into the worde onely for this cause and to this ende that they shoulde bee more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures and to make mankinde onelie to beholde in him the perfection of all miserie and vnhappinesse as though God and Nature tooke pleasure in beholding such cruell pastime as is the viewe of mans miseries in such a cursed estate Wherefore seeing all the doctrine and Philosophie of these dogges bringeth with it so many so strange so beastlike and so horrible absurdities euen once to thinke of them being so vnbeseeming God all mankinde and whole nature and so contrary to al the testimonies which the whole world affordeth vnto vs in the behalfe of Gods eternal prouidence ouer al his creatures I thinke there is no body except hee be as brutish as the Authours and Teachers of such kinde of Philosophie and doctrine but hee can easily iudge that it is altogether impossible to bee true or to haue any foundation ground in reason seeing it confoundeth and ouerthroweth al reason al nature Which causeth me to be so much the more abashed that there are men found euen among Christians yea a great number who rather followe the false opinion of these masties and giue greater credite to these sottish and vain arguments which they propound both against God and all diuinitie and against all nature and trueth then to the true sentence of so many vertuous learned holy men as haue bin in the world from the beginning and to the common and publike testimony of all mankind and of al people and nations But if God hath not spared the very heathen who so shamefully abused that knowledge which he gaue them of his works in nature and of the testimonies of his diuine nature prouidence manifested vnto them therein but punished them with such a horrible iudgement as to deliuer them vp into are probate sense into a woorse estate then is that of brute beasts we are not to maruell if he deale so and more hardly at this day with them that deserue a great deale more then they did because he hath manifested him self more cleerly without all comparison to these men if they would see and know him yea we ought to thinke it more strange if he dealt otherwise For the moe means he affordeth vnto men to know him the greater iudgement they deserue when they abuse the same and labour to blind themselues by their own ingratitude peruerse malice As for vs we cannot God be thāked doubt in any sort of the immortalitie of the soule seeing wee see on our side the aduantage euery way in defence therof namely multitude authoritie nature reason and which is most of all the testimonie of God who alone is sufficient I doubt not but that some to whome God hath giuen more knowledge and greater graces then to vs are able to alleage other arguments and reasons for the confirmation of this matter which we haue omitted For truth is not vnprouided but hath great abundance of all sorts But wee haue alleaged the chiefest taken out of the writings of learned men that haue written best of this matter especially of them that in our time haue written most Christianly And although there are other reasons then those which wee haue set downe yet I thinke there are enow in our discourses to stoppe the mouthes of all Epicures and Atheists at leastwise to conuince them if we cannot confound them For what can they alleage against them that is of any great shew or strength It may easily bee iudged by their best arguments discoursed vpon by vs. What will they haue more Do they expect or desire of vs that we should point with the finger at soules when they depart out of bodies that dye Then they shoulde bee no soules and inuisible spirits but bodies that may be seene And yet vnles they may behold them comming forth as they do smoke from the fire they will not beleeue that they depart at all from the bodies or that they haue any beeing at all Surely I think that these men who would so faine haue soules to bee mortall and to bee extinguished by death with their bodies would not beleeue that they were departed and that they once liued their bodies being dead no not although they had seen them come foorth visibly but woulde perswade themselues that they were some illusions and that their eyes had some mist before them so strong is a lying perswasion in a man when he wil iudge of a thing not according to reason but according to his affection Now seeing we are come to the end of our purpose namely to lay before our eies as it were a naturall history of man by the consideration of the matter of his body of the diuersitie of that matter and of the forme that God hath giuen it together with the profite and vse both of the one and the other and also by a description of the partes powers vertues and faculties of his soule therby to be instructed at large in the nature and immortality thereof by causing the soule to behold her selfe in the glasse of her marueilous actions and all to this ende that wee should know our selues as it becommeth vs there remaineth nothing now but that wee shoulde draw out a generall instruction from these aduertisements and lessons which God giueth vs in the admirable composition of our nature to the end that hereafter we should become more fitte for the contemplation of this diuinitie by the consideration of the wonderfull works thereof in the heauens and in the earth of which we desire if God giue vs grace hereafter to discourse Therfore doe thou ACHITOB put an ende to the cause of our present assembly meeting by some goodly discourse vpon all these matters of which we haue intreated Of the image of God in the soule
it might make the sensuall and earthly part as it were celestiall and diuine by drawing it with it selfe if it woulde obey reason rather then the affections of the flesh and if it would looke more towardes heauen then towardes the earth as men commonly vse to doe For as they are in the middest betweene Angels and beastes if they woulde looke more towardes heauen from whence their soules haue their Originall then towardes the earth out of which their bodies are taken they should become celestial and diuine like to the Angels and finally like to God who hath created them after his owne image But if insteede of beholding the heauens vnto which their faces are lifted they looke downe to the earth as brute beasts doe hauing more care of that then of heauen they shall become altogether earthie and brutish like beastes Therefore it standeth euery one in hand to bethinke himselfe seriously which way he aymeth whither he desireth to come and whom he had rather resemble either the angels or beasts Let vs then consider wel of our nature and of that order which God setteth downe therein and follow the same and beware that we doe not peruert it Let vs learne to acknowledge the image of God in vs and to beholde his great wisedome therein as it were in a little world First let vs know by our soule which is a spirituall and no corporall nature that God is a spirite and of a spirituall nature which is not shut vp and inclosed in any place For neither our spirite hath any abiding in a place as if it were inclosed and shut vp therein notwithstanding that it remayneth in a place as it were in regarde of that coniunction which it hath with the bodie Neuerthelesse it is not so inclosed therein but that it is able not onli● to raunge through heauen and earth and throughout this whole visible worlde but euen higher and farther so that the whole world is not of sufficient bignesse to containe the same or to content and satisfie it but that it will goe beyond it What then shall wee thinke of GOD who hath created it And howe forgetfull shall man bee of himselfe if whereas the whole worlde is not great enough for his spirite hee content himselfe with a little angle of the earth and doe after a sort burie himselfe therein Likewise let vs knowe and beleeue that God is inuisible seeing our soule is so and cannot bee seen with bodily eyes For it is not painted with any colour neither hath it any corporal figure whereby it may be seene and knowen which is doen onely by the acts and deedes of it Let vs not seeke then to knowe the essence and nature of God by the eyes but onelie by the spirite For hee cannot bee seene by them but onelie by the eyes of faith neither can hee bee founde or conceiued by corporall senses Againe wee ought not onely to consider but euen to woonder howe hee hath ioyned our soule with the bodie and distributed the vertue thereof into all the partes and members of the same and howe hee doeth so excellently knitte together and conioyne so manie members so distant one from another euen from the one ende vnto the other all which receiue life and vertue from the soule according to their nature and office and are all gouerned by one and the same spirite Let vs consider then howe hee woulde haue that part of the soule which is partaker of reason to haue the principalitie and dominion ouer the part in which he hath placed the affections to the ende that the chiefest should commaund and the other obey as himselfe hath the Lordshippe and soueraigntie ouer all his creatures as they that must obey him Let vs not then suffer the spirite to bee brought into bondage by the perturbations of the affections neither let vs suffer them to bee so lifted vp against reason as to bee able to turne the vertue of the soule against it In like manner let vs remember how God worketh in our mindes in such sort as that the knowledge of those things which wee knowe first is not abolished by the vnderstanding of other things we learne after but they are all kept together very surely in the chiefe part of the soule and that in good order by meanes of the memorie without confusion one with another euen as if they were written and engrauen in a table or in a piller of brasse Wherefore we should be very vngratefull and brutish if any thing in the world cause vs to forget God and if we haue not his benefites towards vs in perpetual remembrance FINIS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prou. 6. 6. 1. Cor. 12. Iob 33. 3. Psalme 12. 2. Prouer. 15. 28. and 16. 23. Gen. 1. 1 26. Psal 139. 13. Iob 10. 10 11. Rom. 1. 20. Psalm 139. 14. Isay 44. 2. Hebr. 11. 6. Act. 17. Rom. 1. 19. Psal 20. Act. 17. 27. Protagoras Diagoras Epicurus Lucianus Plinie Sen. Cassius Brutus Lucretius Pope Iohn 13. Pope Leo. 10. Frances Rabelais Iodellus A citizen of Angiers Isaiah 11. 9. 54. 13. Ier. 31. 34. Psal. 119. 71. Psal. 16. 1. Act. 19. 19 20. Matth. 15. 14. iohn 9. 39. Esay 29. 14. 2. tim 3. 13. 2. thes 2. 10 11 12. Rom. 1. 18 19. c. Matth. 24. Acts 2. 37. Psal. 19. 1. What we learne by the view of the world Psal. 8. 1. 4 5 6. Psal. 32. 9. Isai. 1. 3. Euery creature hath his proper motion and disposition The difference betweene the naturall and supernaturall desire of man to good 1. Cor. 2. 14. Isay 64. 4. Psal 16. 11. How we may see God How Plato came to the knowledge of God The knowledge of God and of our selues ioyned together Two books that reach vs to know God The necessitie of the word The name of God Exod. 3. 14. Steps to ascend vp by to the knowledge of God Gen. 1. 26. Three things to be considered in the creation of man Isa. 40. 13 14. rom 11. 34. Prou. 8. 22. c. The trinitie of persons in the vnitie of the godhead Gen. 1. 27. Gen. 〈◊〉 7. Gen. 3. 19. Mans body compounded of the 4. elements Of what element e●ery sence holdeth most The first matter the mother of all things An argument of all Atheists against mans creation Aristotles errour was that the worlde had no beg●nning Nature commeth of the Latine word Nascor which signifieth to be borne How we must ascend vp to the knowledge of God by his creatures Gen. 2. 15 18. What great knowledge of naturall things was in Adam Man was created for societie The creation of woman and vse thereof In Hebrew Ish signifieth man and Ishah woman Ephes 5. 29. How Atheists scofle at the womans creation Genes 2. 21. Of the mvsterie of Christ and his Church in the creation of the woman Ephes. 5. 30. The opinion of naturall Philosophers touching the nature of women Genes 1. 27. 1. Cor. 11.
a lamp and mans body The causes of chirst and hunger Of physicke and the causes therof Instructions from the sense of taste The equality of heate and moysture preserueth life Of the inequality that is in the nature of the body A testimonie of the great prouidence of God What meate is fittest for infants From whence commeth the different substance of our members Men haue more varietie of drinks then beasts We must eate neither too much not too litle The chiefe end of foode Iohn 1. Vnthankful men are like to hogs Luke 12. 48. 1. Tim. 4. 4. Food must be receiued with thanke● giuing Some more like to madde dogges then men What beautie is and wherein it consisteth The nose is very seruiceable to the braine Why the sense of smelling is placed so neere to that of tasting Of the agreemēt of these two senses How men abuse these senses Iohn 12. 3. How the spirites are res●est●ed with sweete odours Of the diuers vses of the nose Of the matter of the nose How the nose is in steade of a spowt to the braine Of the nosethrils and of their parting asunder Of the spungie or siue-bone Of the muscles of the nosethrils and of the sinews of smelling Notable instructions for the soule Psal 16. 11. Of the vse of the externall senses Of the fupersluities that proceede out of the body Of the passages meete to purge the body by Of the pores in the skinne Of the spowts of the braine and head The face compared to a Limbeck Good instructions for all men The profite of care-waxe The diuersitie of faces is wonderfull The great variety of noses Varietie of countenance in one man The description of an angry visage Of an arrogant countenance Pride is seated vpon the eie lids Matth. 23 12. Luke 14. 11. The seate of shame Esay 48. 4. Ezech. 3. 8. Of the true Physiognomy Iob 10. 12. Genes 2. 7. Three sortes of faculties in man Of the animal power Of the sensitiue Of the motiue How we come to the knowledge of the soule The knowledge of the soule how necessary and excellent it is The knowledge of our selues very necessary The diuision of creatures Of creatures without life The celestiall bodies are immutable Of creatures hauing life Of the vegetatiue life Of the sensitiue Of the cogitatiue Of the reasonable soule The soule of man differeth from that of beasts in vnderstanding and immortality The soule is the proper inhabitant of mans body Two natures in man Two sorts of spirites The description of Angels Mens soules haue alwaies life in the. Matth. 10. 28. Luke 12. 4 5. The soule compared to a cunning workman To a musicion To an inhabitant The soule is the workeman the body the toole A glasse to see God in The world is not the body of God How the soule in the body resembleth God in the world The absurd collection of Atheists Of the Animall vertues Three bellies attributed to mans body Of the braine of the image of God therein The braine most resembleth the heauens Three kindes of knowledge Of the first kinde of knowledge common to all liuing creatures Of the second kind of knowledge Of the third kind of knowledge Of the naturall vertue and of the kindes thereof Of the Animal vertues and powers in the internal senses Of Imagination Of Memorie Of Fantasie and Common sense Of Reason and Iudgement The nature of the reasonable part in the soule is hard to be knowne Of the litle Bellies of the braine Of D●●a mater or the hard mother Of the skull Three vses of the hard Mother Eccles. 12. 6. Of Iia mater or the godly mother Of the braine and office thereof The diuision of the braine Of the presse and Vault in the head Of the Like worme and of his office Of the passage whereby the superfluities of the brain are voyded None can here attaine to a perfect knowledge of the essentiall power of the soule The mind cannot perfectly know it selfe God cannot deceiue nor be deceiued The testimony of the scriptures most firme Rom. 2. 15. Of the seate of voluntary sense and motion Of the Common sense and of his office Of Imagination and of Fantasie Dan. 2. 28 29. The giddinesse of Fantasie Fantasie is dangerous It is very subiect to the motions of good or ill spirites How sorcerers are deluded by the Diuell The deuill counterfaiteth the workes of God Of the force of imagination The strong fancie of women with childe Imagination preuaileth much in beasts Good counsaile for euery one Psal 119. 37. Beasts search only after corporall things belonging to this life Of the seate of reason and of his office Reason is the iudge of Fansie Of Memorie and of his office Dan. 2. Of the seate of memorie Causes of good and bad memories Of the agreement betweene all the senses The memorie is a spirituall eye Of the effects of Reason Of vnderstanding and contemplation A double discourse of Reason in man Memory compared to a picture What remembrance is The minde compared to the keeper of Rolles A good admonition to humble vs. Diuers kindes of madde folkes The imagination troubled Reason troubled The memory lost Dan. 4. How a man may ●●dge of the ●eats of the senses Of such as are possessed with Deuilles The power of euill spirites Matth. 26. 4● and 6. 13. Iob 7. 15. 1. Sam. 16. 14 15. 314. Good instructions for all men Psal 148. 8. Of contemplation and action The senses of ●●●serue for the good of his soule Contention betwixt the spirite and fantasie What is meant by the reasonable soule Proofe that the soule of beasts is mortall but of men immortal What is in plants aboue stones and in beasts aboue plants in men aboue beasts The end of m●n● being Only God knoweth the soule perfectly What actions men doe which beasts cannot How beasts discourse Ezech. 37. 1. Act. 10. 3 10 11. 2. cor 12. 2 3. Of the Vnderstāding and of Will The memory cōpared to the rolles of Chancerie What degrees are betweene Iudgement and Will What knowledge we may haue of variable things In what things coniecture taketh place Of what things science or knowledge may be had In what things wisedome taketh place Ephes 1. 16 17 18. The author of wisedome Ephe. 3. 19. Much darknesse mingled with our natural light The cause of the diuersity of knowledge and of ignorance in men 2. Cor. 4. 4. Causes of the variety of mens opinions The manners of men follow the disposition of their bodies Two kindes of discourses Of the end of al discourses A comparison The seueral powers of the soule Of the office of Iudgement A sound iudgement is an excellent gift of God Two kindes of consents Agreement betwixt Beleefe and Science What Opinion is What doubting is Of saith in diuine things Of the light of faith Of the senses of faith Ephes 4. 30. 2. cor 1. 22. Ephes 2. Hebr. 11. The conclusions of faith are most true