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

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his pleasure whensoever he will And hereby to be stirred up and encouraged to rejoyce mo 〈…〉 aboundantly in the Lord our Creatour to rest more confidently on him when we have committed our selves to his protection and he hath received us under the shadow of his wings and to hope for all blessings which he hath promised and for the performance of all his promises in due time and season without hinderance or resistance of any power As all created things were made for some end and whatsoever is not fit to serve for some speciall end is a meer vanity so the knowledge of things without the knowledge of the end and use of them is a vaine notion swimming in the braine and therefore the maine thing which we ought to drive at in seeking the profitable knowledge of things is to know and understand the speciall use of them Now Gods creating of the highest heavens and the host of them in glorious perfection by himselfe alone in the first act of creation in the beginning doth serve most properly naturally and necessarily to shew the infinite wisdome and omnipotencie of God the Creatour as is before proved that we seeing therein these divine attributes of God as in a glasse may rejoyce in him and rest securely on his promises knowing that he will performe and fulfill his word and none can resist him Wherefore let us study to make this right use that our knowledge may be sound and saving and may bring us on to salvation Secondly this may justly smite our hearts and make us ashamed of our owne dulnesse and negligence in this point in that we all or the most part of us have so often read heard remembred and understood in reading and hearing the Word of God this great worke of creating the heavens and heavenly host and have beleeved it and spoken of it and so have passed it over without seeing beholding and considering in it the wisdome power and glory of God Alas there be few amongst us who have taken care to look so farre into the end and use of these things of God and that is the cause that science abounds without conscience and much knowledge goeth alone without any sound or sincere practise O let us be throughly ashamed of our negligence in the times past which is too much indeed and let us labour to redeem the time hereafter by double diligence studying to see Gods glory in those great workes and seeing to admire his wisdome and to adore his heavenly Majesty Thirdly Gods truth in this doctrine beleeved and embraced is a strong Antidote against all Atheisticall thoughts which possesse the hearts of divers dull and carnall people who cannot conceive thoroughly nor fully beleeve but often doubt of Gods omnipotencie and ability to create in a moment out of meere nothing most perfect and glorious creatures such as are Angels and blessed spirits and the heaven of heavens Such doubts are the cause that they cannot beleeve in God rest on his power and be confident in him in cases of extremity when the whole world seems to be against them and all outward helps faile If they did but discerne the power of God by the first simple act of creation they might know and beleeve that hee out of nothing can raise more help then they can desire or stand in need of in their greatest extremities Secondly in that here in the first act of creation performed in the first beginning of all things and in the first moment of time God the Creatour is described by the name Elohim which signifies a plurality of persons in the unity of essence as I have before proved and this act is ascribed to all the three persons equally in one and the same word Hence we may gather a necessary doctrine concerning the consubstantiality equality and eternity of all the three persons in the sacred Trinity to wit That the three persons the Father the Son and the holy Ghost are all co-eternall and without beginning all equall among themselves and consubstantiall of the same undivided nature and substance three persons distinct in one infinite eternall Jehovah For plaine reason tells us that whatsoever had no being given to it in or after the first beginning of creatures but was and had a being already in the first beginning and before any thing was made yea was the authour and maker of the first worke of all that must needs be of absolute eternity every way eternall without any beginning or end at all Now such are all the three persons in the blessed Trinity they all by this word Elohim are shewed to be equall in the first act of creation and so to be before the first beginning of all things as the authour and cause before the worke and effect they all are declared to be one and the same singular God and undivided essence and therefore this Doctrine doth hence truly arise I need not here againe stand upon further proofe of it for that I have done aboundantly already in expounding the Doctrine of the Trinity Onely the consideration of this truth may serve first to convince all Heretickes of horrible errour and blasphemy who deny either the Creatour of the world to be the true God or the Son and the Spirit to be equall co-eternall and of the same substance with the Father as the Arians and others did Behold here the blasphemous fictions of these men cut off before they shoot forth and rooted up before they were sowne by this first act of creation as it is here described by the Spirit of God and therefore let us hate and abhorre all such dreames and fictions as most monstrous and unnaturall damned in Gods booke from the first words of the history of the first creation Secondly let us even from this furthest ground fetch the all-sufficiencie of our Mediatour and Redeemer Christ and the efficacie and perfection of his full satisfaction that we may rest on him confidently without scruple feare or doubting As also the infinite power of the Spirit that we may rest in his strength for perseverance If the Son Christ or the Spirit were inferiour Gods and of an inferiour nature not infinite nor co-eternall with the Father men might have some colour of diffidence and some cause to doubt of sufficient satisfaction redemption and stedfast perseverance But here we see the contrary that the Son if the Word by whom all things were made and the Son and Spirit one the same God and Creatour with the Father and the Spirit as he is in the regenerate is greater every way then he that is in the world 1 John 4. therefore let us comfort our selves in the all-sufficiencie of Christ for full redemption and of the Spirit for sanctification and perseverance Thirdly in that here the first act of creation even the creation of the highest heavens with the host of them and of the common matter of the visible world out of
man lost by sin even heavenly glory and immortality yet all this profits nothing without the work of the Spirit Christ with all his sufferings and obedience unto death and all his righteousnesse and fullfilling of the law are as a Fountaine sealed up and treasures hid and locked up in darknesse so that none can partake of him or them for redemption and salvation without communion of the holy Ghost which God in our regeneration doth shed on us aboundantly through Christ. This Spirit dwelling in Christ and the faithfull makes them one mysticall body with Christ sons and heires of God makes his satisfaction their ransome for actuall redemption and reconciliation and his righteousnes their righteousnes for justification This Spirit also doth renue them after the image of God and transformes them into the image of Christ in all holinesse that they may bee fit to see and enjoy God and thus hee brings them to the fruition of perfect blessednesse and to the inheritance incorruptible and undefiled which never fadeth And Gods blessings are through Christs mediation poured out upon all creatures for their sakes And hereupon it is that all gifts and graces which tend to make men perfect and unchangably blessed are ascribed to the Spirit as wisedome knowledge faith hope love meekenesse patience courage strength prayer and in a word all holinesse and perfection and whensoever God is said to give any of these gifts to men in an effectuall and saving manner and measure hee is said to give them the Spirit of grace wisedome zeale and supplication as appeares Isa. 11. 2. Zach. 12. 10. Yea common illumination and all extraordinary supernaturall gifts which are given to unregenerate reprobates for the revealing of Christ as the gift of prophecie to Balaam and Saul and the change of heart in Saul from cowardly pusillanimity to fortitude and magnanimity the gift of miracles to Iudas also illumination tast of the heavenly gift joy in the holy Word of God given to backsliders Heb. 6. are the worke of the holy Ghost assisting them and inspiring them from without for the Churches good not inwardly dwelling and working in them for their owne salvation Wherefore let us count it no reproach that wee have no hope of being in an happy and blessed estate no assurance that wee are in the way to perfection till wee feele the Spirit of God dwelling and working in us moving our hearts and conforming us to the image of Christ and that wee rejoyce in this and this is our glorying that wee are not carnall but spirituall They who think it enough for the obtaining of perfection and salvation to know beleeve and professe that in Christ there is as sufficient matter of satisfaction for the redeeming of all mankind as there was in the rude masse without forme matter enough for the whole visible World and all creatures therein doe much deceive themselves for many who know and beleeve all this doe perish and none are saved or perfected by Christ but onely they who are by the Spirit dwelling in them united to Christ and regenerated and renued after his image This Spirit is the earnest of our inheritance and witnesseth to us our adoption hee makes us new creatures and a free willing people hee sanctifieth us to bee an holy Temple for himselfe to dwell in purgeth out sinfull corruption mortifieth the deeds of the flesh so that sin cannot reigne in our mortall bodies There is one thing more which I may not passe over here in silence to wit that this text doth prove plainely that the Spirit of God the third person in the Trinity is one and the same God with the Father and the Son of the same uncreated nature and substance the almighty Creatour and Preserver of all things in heaven and in earth visible and invisible To sustaine a rude matter without forme and void and to make it subsist is a worke of power farre above the power of any thing created and to compasse and comprehend the whole matter and masse of the visible World and to assist and cherish by present vertue every part thereof at once is a strong argument and plaine proofe of divine and infinite power and omnipotency proper to Iehovah the one onely true God and all this is here testified of the Spirit of God in these words and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters that is as the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Merachepheth and here used in the originall signifieth did sit upon and cherish that mightie masse as an Hen doth sit upon and cherish her egges that they may bee formed into chickens Therefore the Spirit of God is here proved to bee one and the same God with the Father and the Son and the almighty Creatour former and preserver of the whole World and all things therein To which purpose the Scriptures also speake fully in other places where the heavens and the host of them are said to bee made by the Word and Spirit of God as Psalme 33. 6. and that when God sends out his Spirit things are created as Psalme 104. 30. and that God by his Spirit garnished the heavens Iob 26. 13. and that hee is present by his preserving and sustaining power in all places Psalme 139. 7. which places prove the Spirit of God to bee Iehovah the Creatour and Former of all things and the true God in whom wee all live move and have our being This point which I have proved and confirmed by many other strong arguments already in my discourse of the Trinitie as it discovers the desperate malice impudency and Atheisme of the Remonstrants the Disciples of Socinus and Arminius who call into question the Deitie of the holy Ghost and his unitie with the Father and the Son and his right to bee prayed unto and worshipped with Divine worship so it is of singular comfort to the faithfull whose bodies are Temples of the holy Ghost in that it assures them that God is their portion and dwells in them and they are begotten of his seed in regeneration and are partakers of the Divine nature and heaven is their inheritance CHAP. VI. Of the first dayes worke What the light was What it is God said Let there be light How be called the light day and the darkenesse night Of a day naturall and civill That the night was before the day How a day was before the Sunne was Prerogatives of the first day VErs 3 4 5. And God said Let there be light and there was light And God saw the light that it was good And God divided the light from the darknesse And God called the light day and the darknesse hee called night and the evening and the morning were the first day After that darknesse had continued upon the face of the deep and the whole matter of this inferiour World had remained full of darknesse for the space of one night God by his powerfull Word created Light the first
the handling of this point if I should rehearse the severall opinions of the ancients how they make a difference betweene the image likenesse of God how some make the image of God to be onely in the soule some in the whole man some holdthe reasonable soule as it is endowed with understanding will and memory to be the image and holinesse and righteousnesse to be the likenesse of God others hold that Gods image consists in mans Dominion Lordship over the creatures others that Gods image consists in mans immortality others in this that man is a spirituall substance in respect of his soule others that the image of God after which God formed man is God the Son as hee is the image and character of the Fathers Person and the similitude is the holy Ghost others that the image of God is the humane nature which the Son was ordained to assume and did in fulnesse of time take upon him If I should rehearse all these and lay them open and confute so much in them as in unsound I should spend time and weary my selfe to small purpose Likewise it would take up exercises of many houres if I should rehearse the divers opinions questions and disputations of the Schoolemen all which would trouble mens braines and leave them in a maze or labyrinth uncertaine what to hold or beleeve as also the many disputations absurdities and contradictions of the Iesuits by which they contradict one another and some of them themselves in many things which they teach and affirme concerning the image of God As for the grosse opinions of old Hereticks as of the Manichaans who utterly denyed the image of God in man and of the Audians and Anthropomorphites who held that the outward forme and shape of mans body was Gods imagc and of the Pelagians who held that the image of God in which man was created was no other but that in which every man is now borne they are not worthy to bee named it were losse of time to confute them and to discover the absurdities of them The maine ground which I will wholly build upon shall bee the word of God written in the sacred Scriptures and what I find in the Fathers and best moderne Writers agreeable to the Scriptures that I will commend unto you and where I find them differing from Gods word I will be bold to professe open dissert and shew my dislike that none may bee mislead by them or by any who build upon humane authority But that wee may understand this point plainely and fully I will first of all sift the words of the text and shew what is the image and likenesse of God and how we are to understand the phrase of making man in his owne image and after his likenesse And secondly I will shew the particulars wherein man was made like unto God and what is that image in which hee was made First the image of a person or thing is that which though it differs in nature and substance yet is formed by that person and according to that thing and in all things made like unto that whereof it is the image in so much that hee who knoweth the person or thing it selfe when hee seeth the image can discerne that it is the image of such a thing or person and that it is very like him and by seeing the true image hee knowes and discernes what a one the person or thing is whereofit is the image this is the first the most proper sense of the word image and thus it is used where statues of gold silver wood stone or other metall made in the shape of a man to represent him or in some other shape to represent a feined God are called images as Num. 33. 52. where God commands the Israelites to destroy the Idols of the Canaanites and cals them molten images and a King 11. 19. the Idols or statues made to represent Baal the God of the Zidonians are called the images of Baal And man being made a fit creature to represent God and to shew his glory is in this sense called the image and glory of God 1 Cor. 11. 7. Secondly the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zelem image is used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is abusively to signifie a vaine shadow or bare forme and shape of a thing without a substance such as is the shadow of a man or other creature or a shape formed in the fansie having no being but in mans imagination as Psalme 39. 6. where every man is said to walke in a vaine shadow the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zelem image and Psalme 37. 20. the vaine fansie and dreame of the wicked that is the vaine felicity which they frame to themselves is called by the same name Zelem image Here in this text the word is used in the first sense for such a thing or such a creature as differing in nature and substance from God yet in that nature and substance is so like unto God and doth shew forth the glory wisedome power and other attributes of God that they may bee seene and represented in some good measure in the things and by the things which are proper to that creature And an image according to this sense hath in it two things to bee considered to wit the matter and the forme The matter is the nature and substance of the creature differing from the substance of the thing whereof that creature is the image and yet a very fit subject to receive such a forme and such qualities as may make it very like the thing whereof it is the image as for example gold silver wood and stone differ in nature and substance from man and yet they are fit to receive the whole outward shape of a mans body and to bee like unto it in all parts If things bee both of one kind and nature though the similitude bee never so great yet the one is not called the image of the other except it bee made by and according to it as for example One egge is not the image of another nor one apple nut or figge anothers image nor water nor wine of the same kind in severall cups though they bee very like because they are both of one nature and of the same kinde and one is not made and formed by another Secondly the forme of the image is the likenesse and similitude which is in all the parts properties of a thing by meanes whereof it resembles that whereof it is the image is like unto it so becomes the image of it as for example the forme shape resemblance which is in the image of gold silver or stone by which it resembleth and expresseth all parts of a mans body and the colour of it by which it resembles a mans haire face hands and cloathes that is the likenesse by which it becomes the image of a man even of this or that particular man and
second Adam Christ in which hee was formed by the holy Ghost and into which all the elect are changed and renued when they are regenerate and made new creatures in him may serve for excellent use as I shall shew when I have described the image of God wherein our first Parents were created and have laid downe by way of Doctrine the particulars wherein it doth consist But before I can distinctly describe the Image of which my text here speakes I must yet a little more distinctly shew the severall sorts of images which are images of God and of other things There are images which are essentiall and perfect to wit every person begotten by another of his owne nature and images which are accidentall and imperfect An essentiall image is either absolute and most perfect or lesse perfect The essentiall image which is most perfect and absolute is one person begotten by another of the same undivided substance and being in all essentiall properties equall and alike distinct onely by personall properties and subsistence Thus the eternall Son of God is the image of the Father of whom he is begotten from all eternity of the same nature and individuall substance For the second person the Son considered according to his divinity simply as God before his assuming of our fraile nature is said to bee in the forme of God that is his person is of the same essence glory and majesty with the Father and hee thought it no robbery to bee equall with God that is to have all essentiall properties of God equall which the Father as the Apostle testifieth Philip. 2. 6. and in this respect hee is called the image of the invisible God Coloss. 1. 15. and the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse image of his person Hebr. 1. 3. which words though they have respect to Christ as hee is the Word made flesh and God incarnate revealing God in his goodnesse wisedome justice mercy power and the like yet they must not bee limited to his incarnation but are extended to his deity as hee is the eternall Word the Son the second Person by whom the Father created all things and who with the Father doth uphold and sustaine all things as the words immediatly following doe shew For indeed the eternall Word the Son is in the forme of God one and the same God of the same substance glory and majesty with the Father and onely distinguished in personall properties relatiom and subsistence And therefore hee alone can truely bee called the image of God in this sense which is most perfect and absolute The essentiall or substantiall image which is lesse perfect then the other is either naturall or supernaturall A naturall essentiall image is one person begotten by another of the same nature and kind of substance and equall and alike in the same kind of naturall properties but not of the same singular substance and individuall properties thus every Son of man is the image of the Father which begets him for though hee hath a severall soule and body and severall properties which are of the same kind but not the same singular with those of his Father yet because his body and soule and all the faculties of it are of the same kind and in the outward forme resembles his Father and his Father may bee seene as it were in him therefore hee is his Fathers image and made in his likenesse A supernaturall essentiall image is a nature or person who is so begotten of God by the holy Ghost given to bee and abide in him as the immortall seed of God that hee is made partaker of the divine nature that is hath not onely supernaturall and spirituall gifts wrought in him by which hee is made fit to see and enjoy God but also is united to God and God becomes his portion for ever This image is either primary or secondary The primary image of this kind is onely Christ as hee is man or the humane nature of Christ which God formed and made in the womb of the virgin so pure and holy by the holy Ghost from the first conception in which the holy Ghost came upon her and the power of the Almighty over-shadowed her Luk. 1. that it was not onely most pure and holy and full of the holy Ghost from the first being of it but also was personally assumed and united to the eternall Son of God the second Person in the blessed Trinity and so became the first borne of every creature Coloss. 1. 15. and the first fruits which doe sanctifie the whole masse of the elect 1 Cor. 15. 23. and hee head from whom the Spirit is derived unto all the elect Ephes. 4. 15 so that they become a kind of first fruits of Gods creatures Iam. 1. 18. The secondary supernaturall image is every elect regenerate child of God begotten and borne of his Spirit shed on them through Christ Tit. 3. 6. and so created a new man after God in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth and made partakers of the divine nature one with God in Christ and by Christ Ioh. 17. 23. I call this a secondary image because the elect become this image not immediatly but after a secondary manner by deriving the Spirit from Christ and by union with God in him I call it a supernaturall image because it is above mans nature and belongs not to him in the creation nor consists in any naturall properties or resemblance And I call it an essentiall image because every regenerate man hath in him the holy Ghost dwelling as the soule of his soule quickning the whole man which Spirit is of the same essence with the Father and the Son And in respect of this Spirit and his gifts dwelling in his tabernacles their bodies and furnishing them throughout they are truely called and are indeed a new image of God and new creatures All these sorts of images are to bee excluded out of this text for our first parents are not here said to bee created after God essentially or supernaturally but onely in the accidentall and naturall image of God as I have in part shewed before and shall also hereafter more fully shew in all the particulars The accidentall or imperfect image of a thing or of a person is a thing or person so framed and made by another as by a paterne and after the likenesse of that paterne that it doth very much resemble it in likenesse and similitude but yet is not every way equall nor in all things fully alike nor of the same nature and substance with it In an image of this kind there are required two things necessarily First that the thing which is the image bee very like that whereof it is the image yea so like that it must resemble and represent either the nature and essentiall forme of it or the outward forme and figure or some speciall properties and proper qualities of it or all these together and yet in
giving of Christ his Son for a Redeemer aboundantly testifieth his infinite goodnesse and bounty his punishing our sins in Christ to the full shews his infinite Justice and his pardoning of beleevers by Christs satisfaction freely given and communicated to them shewes his infinite mercy and free grace as the Scriptures often testifie and our own consciences within us do witnesse and our daily sense and experience do proove And in our Redemption and application of it we see discovered the Trinity of Persons in one God And while wee in these things as in a glasse behold the glory of God with open face the vaile of ignorance being remooved we are changed into the same Image from glory to glory and so come to have communion with God and the fruition of him 2 Cor. 3. 18. The seventh and last Branch sets before us the utmost end of all Gods outward works to wit the eternall blessednesse of the elect by the communion vision and fruition of God in all his glorious attributes as wisedome power goodnesse mercy justice and the rest The Text it selfe intimates this Truth to us saying that all these workes of God proceed from his good will and pleasure For the good pleasure and will of God consists chiefly and principally in willing that his elect shall be brought to perfect communion of himselfe and of his glory for their eternall happinesse And what God willeth according to his owne good pleasure and doth because he is pleased so to do it must needs aime at the blessednesse of his elect by the sight and fruition of him and his glory Now therfore all Gods outward workes proceeding fiem Gods pleasure must needs tend to this end and this is confirmed Rom. 8. 28. 1 Cor. 3. 21 22 23. where we read that all things worke together for good to them that love God and are the called according to his purpose and that all things are the elects the world life and death things present and things to come and they are Christs and Christ is Gods also Col. 1. 16. all things visible and invisible were created as by Christ so for him that they might serve him for the salvation of his elect and for this end and purpose Angells principalities and powers are said to be made subject to Christ 1 Pet. 3. 22. And their office and ministery and the great wonders which God doth by them are said to be for them who shall be heires of salvation Heb. 1. 14. To these testimonies many reasons might be added I will onely call to mind that which I have else where abundantly declared and prooved to wit that for this end the world is upheld by Christ and for his sake and through his mediation ever since mans fall and for this end the wicked live even the barbarous and savage nations either that they may serve for some use to Gods people or for the elects sake whom God will raise up out of them or that God may shew his justice and power on them being sitted for destruction to the greater glory of his elect even the judgements of God on the wicked and their damnation serve for this end to increase the blessednesse of the Saints The doctrine of this description serves for to stirre us up in imitation of God our Creator not to content our selves with saying purposing and promising or with making a shew of doing good workes but to be reall true constant and faithfull in performance of them I or so doth God whatsoever he promiseth or purposeth or is pleased to doc that he doth in Heaven and Earth Sluggards who delight in idlenesse doing nothing and Hypocrites who say and promise and make great shew of doing but are barren of the fruites of good workes as they are most unlike to God and contrary to him so they are hatefull and abhominable in the sight of God and they onely are accepted of God who are active Christians alwayes doing good and abounding in the worke of the Lord their labour shall not be in vaine but every one shall receive reward according to his workes which are evidences of his communion with Christ and of his faith justification and sanctification wherefore seeing God is alwayes reaching forth his mighty hand to worke in Heaven in Earth in the Sea and all deep places for our profit let us be alwayes doing and studying to do good for his glory Secondly it serves to move and direct us in and through the outward workes of God to see and behold the infinite eternall and omnipotent God and his divine power and Godhead and in the unity of Gods essence the sacred Trinity of persons because all the persons have a hand in every worke and that one God who is three persons is the author and worker of every divine outward worke as this doctrine teacheth It is a common custome among men when they see and behold the handy worke of any person to remember the person to bee put in minde of him by the worke especially if he have knowne the person before and beare the love and affection to him of a friend and a beloved one So let it be with us so often as we see and behold the visible outward workes of God let us in them behold the face of God and remember his glorious attributes Let us in the great workes of Creation behold the wisedome and power of God the Creator in the worke of Redemption the mercy bounty and love of God in our Sanctification the love and the holinesse of God and in them all let us behold the three glorious Persons in that one God who worketh all things after the counsell of his owne will The Father by his eternall Word and Spirit creating all things The Sonne sent forth by the Father in our nature and sanctified by the Spirit redeeming us and paying our ransome The Holy Ghost shed on us by God the Father through the Sonne Christ in our regeneration And all three conspiring together to purge sanctifie and justifie us and to make us eternally blessed in our communion with them and in our fruition of God in grace and glory And let us take heed and beware of idle and vaine speculation of Gods great workes which shew his glory and proclaime his glorious Attributes Wisdome Power and Goodnesse lest by such idle negligence wee become guilty of taking the name of the Lord our God in vaine Thirdly from this description we may easily gather and conclude that sinnefull actions as they are evill and sinnefull are not Gods workes for God is pleased with those things which he doth and his workes are according to his pleasure but God is not pleased with sinnefull actions and evill workes he hath no pleasure in iniquity Psal. 5. 4. If any aske How then can it be done if he will not and be not pleased I answer That in them there is to be considered 1. A naturall motion or action proceeding from some created power
Scripture the Angels may here be understood Thirdly what is here meant by the heavens Moses himselfe sheweth Chapt. 2. 1. namely the heavens and the host of them that is the Angels for they are the host of the highest heaven and so are called Luke 2. 13. Therefore undoubtedly the Angels are included in the word Heavens So then the creation of the Angels coming now the next in order to be handled I will seeke no further for a Text though there be some more plain and expresse but will ground all my Doctrines concerning the creation and nature of Angels on this word taken in that sense which I have here proved which offers to our consideration five maine and principall points of instruction unto which all other Doctrines may be reduced which concerne their nature and creation and may be as branches comprehended under them First we here learne that Angels had a beginning and were not from all eternity Secondly that God created them and that they were made by that one God and three persons here called Elohim Thirdly that they were created in the beginning as the word Bereshith taken in the most strict sense signifieth the first moment of time Fourthly that they were created by the first simple act of absolute creation that is they were made out of nothing most perfect and glorious creatures in an instant Fifthly that they were made in and with the highest heavens and by the law of creation made to inhabit them as the proper place of their naturall habitation These are the maine and principall points of Doctrine which immediately flow from the words And these especially the last of them doth offer to our consideration divers other particular questions and points of instruction to be handled As first seeing they were created in and with the highest heavens to be the proper inhabitants of them therefore they are of an heavenly nature even pure excellent and glorious spirits such as the nature of the place requires to be suteable inhabitants And here an occasion is offered to seeke out a true description of Angels and to enquire after their wisdome power and such like properties wherein they excell and are like unto God the Creatour bearing his image Secondly hereby are offered to us these points to be handled and these questions to be discussed viz. That the Angels are of a finite nature limitted to their places Also whether they are circumscribed and measured by the place in which they are or rather definitively in it And whether and how they move from place to place and such like Thirdly the most high and large heavens compassing about the whole visible world in and with which they were created to be the host of them doe import that the Angels were created many in number according to the largenesse of the place and that they are innumerable more then mans fraile reason can comprehend Fourthly the highest heaven being their naturall place in which they were created Hence a question ariseth concerning a being in other places How they come to be out of heaven their naturall place and some of them quite banished out of heaven for ever And here their mutability and fall comes to be handled and the distinction of them into good and evill Angels Thus we see in briefe into what a broad field this short Text doth lead us and what large scope it gives us to speake of the Angelicall nature and the heavenly spirits the first and chiefest of the creatures of God That we may better understand these Doctrines I will first consider the name of Angels what it signifies and how we are to take it in this place The name Angell comes of the Greek name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a messenger sent forth from some superiour person or state to deliver a message and to declare the mind of him or them that sent him The Hebrew name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the name of an Angell in the Old Testament signifies also a messenger but yet in a more full and large sense For it signifies such a messenger as doth not only deliver and declare a message by word of mouth but also doth act and execute indeed the will of him that sent him and doth performe his worke injoyned as a faithfull minister and servant And hence it is that the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is derived of it and is used for the office and worke of an Angell signifies in generall any thing which serves for the use and ministery of man And as the signification according to the Etymology is generall and large so the word is used in the Scriptures to signifie any messenger or minister sent forth upon a message or some employment either from God or men Jacobs messengers which he sent unto Esau Genes 32. 3. to worke his peace are called by the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angels And Num. 20. 14. the messengers which Moses sent from Kadesh unto the King of Edom are so called and in Greeke translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But when Gods messengers are thereby signified it hath the name Jehovah or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 most commonly added to it As for the first signification we let it passe as a stranger in this place where we are to discourse of heavenly Angels and doe take it in the second signification for the Angels of the Lord. And being so taken it is still doubtfull till it be more particularly distinguished For in this sense it signifies three sorts of Angels as the learned have well observed First of all it signifies that chiefe and principall messenger and ambassadour of God his Son Jesus Christ who was sent forth as God in the forme and shape of an Angell and Messenger to the fathers before his incarnation And as man in ●u●nesse of time by incarnation and assuming of mans nature into his person For Gen. 48. 16. by the Angell which delivered Jacob and which he prayeth may blesse the sons of Joseph is meant the Lord Christ. And in all places where the Angell which appeared is called Jehovah or was worshipped God the Son is meant as Exod. 3. and Zach. 3. there by the Angell Christ is meant appearing either like an Angell or in the shape of a man to fore-shew his incarnation So likewise where we reade of the Angell of Gods presence or face as Isa. 63. 9. Or of the Angell of the Covenant as Malac. 3. 1. Or of the Archangell as 1 Thes. 4. 16. Jud. 9. Christ is meant Secondly this word is used to signifie men by divine inspiration called and sent from God upon some speciall message especially the message of salvation as Job 33. 23. Judg. 2. 1. Malac. 2. 1. and 3. 1. and Revel 2. 3. Thirdly this word is most frequently and commonly used to signifie the heavenly spirits created by God to stand about his Throne in heaven to behold his face continually because they are as
by nature fit so by office ready to be sent on his message and to doe his will as Gen. 19. 1. Psal. 103. 20. Matth. 18. 10. In this sense we are to take the word in this discourse of the creation of Angels For though Christ be the Angell of God and the great messenger of salvation and Gods ministers as they are Gods embassadours sent by him are Angels of the Lord yet they are not Angelicall spirits created in the first beginning they are onely Angels by office and calling not by nature in the creation Onely the heavenly spirits whom God hath made at the first fit to minister and hath since in Christ appointed to be ministring spirits for the good of them who are chosen to be heires of salvation in Christ they are Angels both by nature and office And they are the proper subject of our present discourse I proceed to the Doctrines which I will prosecute in order as they arise out of this Text. First seeing the Angels are included in this word the heaven hence we may learne that as the heavens so the Angels the host of heaven had their beginning with the highest heaven and were not in being from all eternity which point is farther confirmed by all such Scriptures as attribute a beginning to all things and tell us that they are and subsist not of themselves but from God as Rom. 11. 36. where the Apostle saith that of God and through him and to him are all things and 1 Cor. 8. 6. But to us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we for him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things And Revel 4. 11. and 10. 6. thou Lord hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created And that God who liveth for ever created heaven and the things that therein are And that in this universality of things created the Angels are comprehended the Apostle sheweth most plainly Colos. 1. 16. where hee affirmes that all kinds of things visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers all were created by him and for him But if any shall cavill and say that though they are of God and he is the cause and creatour of them yet it doth not necessarily follow that they were created in the beginning with the heavens but from eternity and as co-eternall effects have their being from God The next words which follow will cut off this objection which affirme that Christ is before all things and by him all things consist Verse 17. and therefore they had a beginning after Christ and were not co-eternall with him Reason also confirmes this drawne from the fall of a great multitude of the Angels For things eternall which were and had their being from eternity without beginning and before all times they cannot fall in time nor be changed but abide the same for ever But a great multitude of the Angels did fall And the Divell was once one of the most glorious among them and he with many others who left their habitation are reserved in chaines to the last judgement 2 Pet. 2. 4. and Jud. 6. Therefore they are but creatures made in the beginning Secondly though Angels are not circumscribed and measured by a bodily space or dimension yet they are definitively in place and where there is no place there can be no Angell as I shall shew hereafter Now before the creation of the heavens there was no place at all wherein Angels might be abide and subsist Therefore before the heavens they were not but were created with them But Angels are called Jehovah as that Angell which spake to Agar and promised to multiply her seed Genes 16. 13. and the Angell which appeared to Moses in the bush Exod. 3. 4. and the Angell which rebuked Satan Zach. 3. 1. And Jehovah is without beginning The Angell mentioned in those places was Christ the Sonne of God the Angell of the Covenant and so was Jehovah indeed the creatour of Angels the words of the severall Texts shew so much For that Angell saith I will multiply thy seed and I am the God of Abraham Therefore this Objection is of no force Angels are called the sons of God Job 1. 6. and 38. 7. Therefore they are of Gods nature and substance begotten from all eternity not created with the heavens Every son of God is not a naturall son begotten from all eternity for men are also called sons of God by creation regeneration and adoption and yet are not naturall and co-eternall sons of God And so Angels are sons First by creation in respect of the speciall image of God in which they were made and to which they are conformable Also the good Angels are sons by adoption unto God in Christ their head But none of them all is the Son of God by nature as the Apostle testifieth Heb. 1. 4 5. that is proper to Christ alone he onely is the brightnesse of his Fathers glory and the expresse image of his person and he onely is called the first-borne and the onely begotten Son of God John 1. 14 18. Therefore this Objection is of as little force as the other This point serves to shew that absolute eternity without beginning is the proper attribute of God and to communicate it to any other by holding that any other besides the one onely true God is eternall is no lesse then a sacrilegious robbery and taking from God the honour due to him For seeing Angels are all created in the beginning when the heavens were made and are not from all eternity much lesse may eternity be attributed to any other besides the true God Secondly here we see the grosse errour of Papists who worship Angels and pray unto them As also their foule mistaking and wresting of some Scriptures some examples of the Patriarchs as Abraham Jacob and Moses who did worship the Angels which appeared to them and spake unto them For these were not divers Angels but the great Angell of the Covenant Christ the Son of God appearing in the forme of an Angell who as he is Jehovah the true God so he is called by them who prayed to him and is worthy to be worshipped and prayed to but not any of the Angels which are but creatures and not Jehovah can be worthy of this honour which God requires as proper to himselfe The second Doctrine hence flowing is That all the Angels were created by that one God and three persons here called Elohim and that the Son together with the Father and the Spirit is the Lord the Creatour of them which truth is confirmed also by divers Scriptures as John 1. 3. where by the Word the eternall Son all things are said to be made and nothing without him And Colos. 1. 16. all things in heaven and in earth whether they be thrones or dominions principalities or powers all are said
this shewes the infinite power and omnipotency of God that he can make the most excellent immortall and glorious creatures greatest in power and strength meerly out of nothing by his owne hand immediately The wisest and most able and skilfull Artificers and Master-workmen in all the world and among all the sons of men doe stand in need of divers helps and instruments for the effecting and perfecting of any good worke and without them he can doe little or nothing He must have servants and inferiour workmen under him he must have good tooles and instruments fitted for his hand and he must have also good materials to worke upon for he can frame and make no good worke out of course stuffe and base metalls But lo here an admirable Artificer and Work-master before whom all the art and skill of all creatures is as vanity and nothing The Lord God the Creatour and Former of all things he alone hath made all the world and he hath not onely made his owne materials out of which he framed this great fabrick of the visible world and all this without any instruments or working-tooles but also hee hath made in a moment in the first beginning together with the glorious highest heavens the Palace and Throne of his glorious and infinite Majesty the most glorious and excellent of all his creatures the Angels and that out of nothing which are great in power wonderfull in strength and admirable in swiftnesse immortall spirits able to destroy a whole army of men in a night and to overturne kingdomes and cities in one day at whose sight and presence valiant Gideon a mighty man of warre and the great Captaine of Israel was so affraid and astonished that he cried Aha Lord God I shall die Zachary an holy Priest was stricken dumbe for a time And the hardy Roman souldiers which watched Christs sepulchre were astonished and became as dead men Who therefore can sufficiently admire this mighty Creatour What heart is able to conceive or tongue to expresse his wisdome power and omnipotency Let us in silence adore him and tremble and feare before him not with servile and slavish horrour but with holy feare and reverence Let us flee to him for all help succour and strength in all distresses for supply of all our wants for guidance and direction in all our waies If we be assured of his favour and that he is with us and on our side and that we stand for his cause let us not care who be against us nor feare what men and Divels can doe unto us If we want meanes and instruments let vs not be dismayed for he can worke without them If we want necessary matter he can make it or worke without it and bring things most excellent out of nothing For this very end the Lord hath shewed himselfe and his divine power in the creation and by the creatures that we might know and acknowledge love and honour serve and worship him and upon all occasions give him the glory due to his name and tell the people what great and wonderfull things he hath done and how by his owne arme and power he hath brought great and strange things to passe Secondly this Doctrine serves to discover the errour and falshood of divers opinions published and maintained by men of learning As first that of Origen Basil and other Greek fathers who dreamed that the Angels were created many ages before the corporeall and visible world 2. And that held by some others That they were created after the creation of Adam 3. That the creation of Angels is not mentioned by Moses in the history of the creation but the time thereof is altogether concealed which is the opinion of Pererius and of some Fathers and Schoolmen 4. That opinion of some Ancients who held That God by the ministery of Angels created this visible world This Doctrine proves them all to be vaine dreames and fictions in that it shewes plainly by plaine testimonies and solid arguments out of Gods holy Word that the Angels were created in and with the highest heavens neither before nor after them and are the inhabitants and host of those heavens mentioned Gen. 2. 1. and that expresly by Moses 5. Also for that opinion of the Popish Schoolmen and of their Master Aristotle who hold that Angels move the spheres of the visible heavens and guide the severall motions of the Sun Moon and Starres it is in no case to be allowed For as the Scriptures doe expresly ascribe the creation of all things to God alone and to his eternall Word and Spirit and never mention Angels as creators working with God in the creation but as creatures first made in and with the highest heavens and rejoycing at Gods founding of the earth So they affirme that in God all things move and have their being and he gives the law and rule of motion to the Sun Moon and Starres guides them by his hand causeth them to rise and set and brings forth all their host by number Isa. 40. 26. and 45. 12. And this Doctrine which teacheth us that the Angels were made to dwell in the highest heavens and there they have their residence not in the spheres of the visible heavens it overthrowes all such conceipts makes them vanish like smoak and drives them away like chaffe before the wind Wherefore let us all acknowledge that as God created Angels of nothing by himselfe alone and did give motion to the heavens so without help of Angels he doth continue the same motion and did create all other inferiour things Let us take heed that we give not Gods glory to any other but let us confesse that all thankes for all blessings are due to him in him things live move and have their being and he turneth about the spheres of heaven by his counsels that they may doe whatsoever he commandeth them upon the face of the world in the earth Job 37. 12. From the use of this Doctrine I proceed to the Conclusions which necessarily flow from it 1. Corollary or Conclusion The first is That Angels by creation and in their nature and substance are the first and chiefest of all Gods creatures far more excellent then man in his best naturall being in the state of innocency this Doctrine floweth necessarily from the former For first God in wisdome hath made all things the best and chiefest of creatures for the best places and inferiour creatures for inferiour p●aces as we see by experience in all things visible And therefore undoubtedly the Angels which were created to be the naturall inhabitants of the highest and best place must needs be the chiefest creatures and the most excellent in nature and substance Secondly those creatures which God framed in the creation to dwell nearest to his glorious presence even with his heavenly Majesty and to stand before his Throne in the heaven of heavens must needs be in their nature and substance most excellent and farre
above man in innocency whose best dwelling was but an earthly Paradise or Garden furnished with fruits which might be eaten up and consumed and such were the Angels as the former Doctrine hath plainly proved Therefore this conclusion necessarily flowes from that Doctrine and is proved and confirmed by it But we have for further confirmation both plaine testimonies and arguments in the holy Scriptures The royall Prophet David being ravished with the contemplation of the supercelestiall glory appearing in the secondary beames thereof which shine in the visible heavens and in the Sun Moon and Starres cries out in admiration and wonders that God dwelling in such admirable glory and having such excellent and glorious company and attendants about him should vouchsafe to look upon man or have any regard of him What is man saith he that thou art mindfull of him or the sonne of man that thou visitest him Psal. 8. 4. But in the next words he goeth further and speaks fully to the point and shewes that Christ himselfe according to his humanity though conceived and borne most pure and holy was made lower then the Angels thou hast made him saith he a little or for a little while lower then the Angels that is Christ in the nature of man which he took upon him for so the Apostle expounds these words of David Hebr. 2. 6. And Psal. 103. 20. Yee Angels saith he which excell in power Our Saviour also in the Gospel sheweth plainly that the Angels in heaven are so excellent in nature and substance as the elect Saints glorified shall be after the last resurrection and their most glorious and blessed condition which farre excels Adam in innocency shall be like unto the Ange's Matth. 22. 30. Saint Peter in plaine words saith that Angels are farre greater then men in power and might 2 Pet. 2. 11. Saint Paul calls them Angels of light 2 Corinth 11. 14 and the Angels of Gods power 2 Thes. 1. 7. he numbers them with principalities and powers which farre excell the nature of man Rom. 8. 38. Whensoever he sets forth the greatest excellency of things created greater then in men he doth instance in Angels as 1 Cor. 13. 1. though I speak with tongues of men and Angels And Galat. 1. 8. If I or an Angell from heaven and 4. 14. Ye received me as an Angell of God yea as Christ Jesus In a word whereas man is an earthly creature framed out of dust in respect of his visible part his body Angels are pure heavenly spirituall substances framed immediately out of nothing by the simple and absolute act of creation And whereas mans better part the soule though it be a spirit yet was not created a perfect compleat creature but made to subsist in the body and cannot be in full perfection without it Angels are spirits complete and perfect in themselves without subsistence in any other creature as shall appeare hereafter And therefore Angels are by creation and in nature and substance farre above man in his best naturall estate even in the state of innocency First this shewes most clearly that all the love and favour which God extends to man in Christ and in giving Christ to be mans Saviour and Redeemer by taking mans nature upon him and making full satisfaction therein to justice for him and in saving man from hell and damnation and exalting him to heavenly glory is on Gods part most free and voluntary arising meerly and wholly from the good pleasure of his owne will and not from any merit worth and excellency which he at first created or since found in mans nature If the naturall excellency of any creature could procure Gods speciall favour or deserve his bountie or move him to shew mercy to any creature which hath sinned and by sin is fallen into misery surely the Angelicall nature should have been more respected of God then the nature of man and Angels being fallen should more easily have found mercy at his hand For as this Doctrine hath proved Angels are by creation and in nature and substance the chiefest and most excellent of all Gods creatures far excelling man in power might purity and being And yet when Angels and man were both fallen and found guilty charged with folly and involved in misery God passed by the Angels and shewed no mercy to them neither gave his Son to take upon him the nature of Angels and to be their Saviour and Redeemer but so many of them as sinned and kept not their first estate but left their habitation he hath reserved in everlasting chaines of darknesse unto the judgement of the great day 2 Pet. 2. Jud. 6. But for man who is of lesse worth and farre inferiour by nature he hath given his Sonne to take mans nature upon him to be incarnate and made flesh and hath sent him forth in the forme of fraile and sinfull flesh made of a woman and made under the Law and hath delivered him up to a cursed death and to hellish agonies pangs and sorrowes that he might redeem this fraile worme of the earth miserable and sinfull man from hell and damnation unto which the Angels which sinned are reserved under darknesse and to exalt him far above the state of innocency in which he was created and his best naturall estate in Paradise unto the high estate of heavenly glory with the elect holy and blessed Angels which is farre above that mutable state of glory in which the Angels were first created and from which so many of them did fali Wherefore let us admire this free grace of God and stand amazed at his wonderfull and supertranscendent bounty to mankind And whatsoever mercy we receive from him in our deliverance from any evill or whatsoever blessing and benefit of bounty and goodnesse in advancing us to this state of grace or glory let us wholly ascribe it to the good pleasure of his owne free will and not to any merit in our selves or any excellency created in our nature And let no man glory in his naturall wit or wisdome and knowledge gotten by learning and study nor boast in his owne strength but as it is written Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord and triumph in this that he knoweth Gods free grace and aboundant mercy in Jesus Christ and hath the sweet taste and experience of it in his owne soule Secondly this serves to magnifie in our eyes both the large measure of Gods bounty to his elect in Christ and also the infinite power and excellency of Christ his mediation and the dignity and worth of his person in which hee hath so dignified our fraile nature by assuming it upon himselfe and uniting it personally to his Godhead that hee hath exalted it farre above the most glorious and excellent state of the Angels in heaven That Angels are the best and chiefest of all Gods creatures by creation and in nature and substance farre more excellent then man in his best naturall estate of
innocency I have proved in this Doctrine And yet Christ taking upon him our nature which was far inferiour to the Angels and uniting it personally to himselfe as he is the eternall Sonne of God hath dignified and exalted and crowned it with glory and excellency farre above all Angels Principalities Thrones and Dominions Hebr. 2. 7. so that the holy elect and blessed Angels exalted above their best naturall estate to the immutable estate of supernaturall life immortality and glory doe adore and worship him as David fore-told Psal. 97. 7. and the Apostle affirmes Heb. 1. 6. He is the head of all and they all are made subject to him 1 Pet. 3. 22. And so wonderfull is Gods bounty to man in Christ and so powerfull and excellent is Christs mediation for the elect of mankind that by Christs mediation concurring and working together with Gods bounty according to wisdome and for the satisfaction of Gods justice a ready way is made for them into the Holy of holies the Heaven of heavens and they are not onely exalted and elevated farre above their best naturall being unto the blessed state of the glorious Angels but also the holy Angels with whom they shine in heavenly glory hereafter in the life to come are made of God ministring spirits whom Christ hath procured to minister for their good here in this world in the state of grace so that upon him as upon the Ladder in Jacobs dreame the Angels of God descend from heaven to earth and ascend from earth to heaven and doe encamp round about them to save and deliver them as David saith Psal. 34. 7. Yea and when the evill Angels shall be judged at the last day they shall through Gods infinite bounty and for the merit and worthinesse of Christ be advanced to sit upon Thrones with him and to judge and give sentence against the Divell and all his Angels as wee reade 1 Corinth 6. 3. And therefore if wee had the tongues of men and Angels we are never able to utter or expresse the infinite excellency worth and dignity of the person and mediation of Christ nor sufficiently to extoll laud and magnifie the bounty of God to poore mankind in Christ. And here we see that truly verified which the Prophet fore-told Isa. 64. 4. And the Apostle proclaimed 1 Cor. 2. 9. that since the beginning of the world the eye of man hath not seen nor his eare heard neither hath it ever entered into the heart of man what good things God hath prepared for them that love him Thirdly this Doctrine serves to worke in us a true love and reverent respect of the Angels of God as being the chiefest of Gods creatures and by nature more excellent then man in his best naturall estate and great in power able to help us more then all other creatures when God offers occasion and opportunity and gives them charge over us Every man is bound to thinke better and more reverently of other men who are in any gifts more excellent then himselfe though they be all of one nature and kind and of the same flesh and bloud And God hath put upon the beasts of the field by nature a feare and respect of man because he is a more excellent creature Now the Angels are by nature and creation more excellent then man in his best naturall estate and man in the supernaturall estate of glory shall be but equall to the elect and holy Angels And therefore as we must ever labour to decline that servile superstition and base will-worship of Angels which is condemned Colos. 2. 18. and must beware of giving divine and religious worship to them which they themselves reject and refuse being our fellow-servants and have utterly detested and forbidden when it hath been offered as appeares Revel 19. 10. and 21. 9. so we must take heed that we doe not thinke meanly of them as if they were but our servants because they minister for our good For in guarding us and encamping about us and in ministring for us they are not our servants which owe us service neither have we power to command them nor ability to requite them for the least service but they are the servants of God and of our Lord Christ and fellow-servants with all Kings Prophets and Holy men of God and as Gods Embassadors and Princely Courtiers Ministers we ought to esteem and respect them with all love and hearty affection And as in all places where there are Embassadors and noble Princes and Courtiers of great Emperours and Monarchs men will have a care to beare themselves orderly and to doe all things decently and will be affraid and ashamed to commit any absurdity or beare themselves immodestly So let us in the publick assemblies of the Saints and in holy congregations of Gods-Church where Angels are supposed sometimes to guard us and to over-look us as the words of the Preacher seem to import Eccles. 5. 6. and of the Apostle also 1 Cor. 10. 11. beare our selves reverently and beware of all vaine words filthy behaviour and beastly drowzinesse and sleepinesse as if we came to the Church like uncleane dogges for company only or to lye snorting and sleeping which is the evill custome and practice of many carnall people Fourthly this Doctrine is matter of comfort to Gods poore despised servants in that it doth assure them that the Angels which love them and as friends rejoyce in their conversion and as guardians protect and watch over them are great excellent and glorious above all earthly men And therefore though the great men of the world scorne and despise them and among such they can find no favour help or defence yet let them comfort themselves and rejoyce in this that he who is higher then the highest hath a guard to whose care and charge he hath committed them and that not of mighty men in whom there is no help but of Angels which in power strength and glory far exceed the most excellent among the sons of men 2. Corollary Secondly in that Angels were created in and with the highest heaven to be the naturall inhabitants sutable to the place hence we may gather a definition of Angels to wit that Angels are heavenly Spirits or pure and entire spirituall substances created in the beginning by God after his owne image every one of which is distinct from another by a speciall existence or proper particular being of his owne which God hath given to have in himselfe for ever First in that Angels were not made and created out of the rude masse without forme and void which is called earth and the deep nor of any other matter before made by God but in the first beginning of all things were created perfect creatures in and with the highest heavens the lively and proper inhabitants of them Hence it necessarily followes that they are pure heavenly spirits and intire spirituall substances not parts of any body or person not compounded of any
matter first made and of a forme thereto added afterwards and therefore have a proper existence and being every one in himselfe which cannot be dissolved but in respect of second causes remaines immortall so that this definition and every branch thereof flowes from the former Doctrine as a naturall Corollary or necessary Conclusion And it doth excellently set forth the nature and naturall being and properties of Angels by which they are distinguished from all other things First in that they are called spirits or pure spirituall substances this shewes their nature and being wherein they resemble God and beare his image who is the one onely true Jehovah who hath his essence and being in and of himselfe and gives essence and being to all things and by whom all things subsist as that name Jehovah signifies which he assumes as proper to himselfe Exod. 3. 14 15. and Isa. 42. 8. and who is a spirit as our Saviour restifieth John 4. 24. And by this name spirits they are distinguished from all bodily creatures Secondly in that they are called pure intire spirituall substances and perfect creatures which have every one a proper existence and particular being hereby they are distinguished from the spirits that is the soules of men which are not intire complete and perfect creatures of themselves by creation but are made to be and to subsist in an humane body and together with the body to make up a perfect man Hereby also they are distinguished from the breath of life and the vitall and animall spirits which are in living bodies of men and other living creatures for they are not pure perfect intire creatures which subsist by themselves but fraile vanishing parts of creatures which continually increase and decrease fade and perish Thirdly in that they are called heavenly spirits hereby they are distinguished not onely from the spirits created here below on earth in this inferiour world even soules of men and all bodily spirits but also from God who is a spirit but not contained in any place no not in the Heaven of heavens but is essentially present in all places as well in earth as in heaven as the Scriptures testifie 1 Kin. 8. 27. and Psal. 139. 8. Fourthly in that they are said to be created in the beginning by God hereby they are distinguished from the absolute essence of God and from every one of the three persons in one God for they are not created but are absolutely eternall without beginning of being Fifthly in that they are said to be created in the image and similitude of God this shewes the excellent naturall properties of Angels that they are living spirituall and immortall creatures indued with knowledge wisdome understanding liberty of will power strength and activity to doe and performe great things wisely justly and freely and so to resemble God in his glorious attributes and workes Sixthly in that they are said to be distinguished one from another by a proper and particular subsistence and being which every one hath by himselfe this shewes that Angels are not one common spirit breathed into the highest heavens and every one a part of that one spirit but they are every one a whole substance or person by himselfe as Augustine saith Enchirid. 18. Lastly in that every one is said to have a proper existence and particular being which God hath given him to have in himselfe by which he differs from the rest this necessarily implies that Angels are finite and limited both in their substance and number and are mutable not infinite and unchangeable as God is This is the definition which in the severall parts and branches thereof doth fully set forth the nature and naturall properties of Angels I proceed to the confirmation of the severall parts in order First that Angels are spirits or spirituall substances the holy Scriptures affirme most clearly Psal. 104. 4. and Heb. 1. 7. where it is said that he maketh his Angels spirits And Hebr. 1. 14. where they are called ministring spirits And lest any should thinke or imagine that Angels are not spirits by nature and creation but by grace and communion of the Holy Ghost which is given to the elect Angels in and by Christ and by which they become holy and are settled in the immutable state of eternall blessednesse we have most cleare testimonies in those Scriptures which call not onely the good and elect Angels spirits as Act. 23. 9. and the places before cited but also the evill Angels of Satan even the Divell himselfe and his Angels which in respect of their substance which they still retaine though they have lost their goodnesse and uprightnesse are still called spirits as Levit. 20. 27. 1 Sam. 16. 1 Kin. 22. Matth. 8. 16. Act. 5. 16. Ephes. 2. 2. where the Divell speaking in false Prophets and his spirit of fury in Saul and of lying in Ahabs Prophets and his evill Angels possessing divers persons and cast out by Christ and his Apostles are called evill and unclean spirits Secondly that Angels are entire and complete spirituall substances and perfect creatures which have every one a proper existence and being in himselfe the holy Scriptures prove most clearly by divers reasons First by naming some of them by proper and distinct names as the Angell which was sent to Daniel Dan. 8. 16. and to salute the Virgin Mary Luke 1. is called Gabriel Secondly by giving them such titles and ascribing and assigning to them such offices as belong to none but complete substances and persons which have a proper and personall existence as for example they are called the sons of God Job 1. 6. and 38. 7. They are called Gods messengers and ministers as appeares by their Hebrew and Greek names and by Scriptures Matth. 4. 11. and Heb. 1. 14. They have the office of watchers and guardians which have charge given over the elect and encamp about the righteous to guard and defend them and observe and behold the face of God ready to be at his beck for the defence of his little ones as appeares Num. 22. 22. Psal. 34. 7. and 91. 10. Dan. 4. 13. and Matth. 18. 20. Thirdly the Scriptures doe plainly shew that Angels doe willingly and readily and by themselves performe perfect and complete actions and workes which none can doe but perfect creatures which have a proper subsistence by themselves as for example that in the first creation as soon as they were created they did sing together and lift up their voice Job 38. 7. that they praise God hearken to the voice of his word and keep his commandements Psal. 103. 20. and 149. 2. that they have appeared and spoken to men as to Gideon Judg. 6. to the father of Sampson Judg. 12. and to Eliah 1 Kin. 19. that they have comforted Christ in his agony Luke 22. rolled the stone from his sepulchre Matth. 28. opened the prison doores and set the Apostles at liberty Act. 5. and 12. and
have smitten and destroyed thousands of men in a night as 2 Kin. 19. and rejoyce over sinners which repent Fourthly the Scriptures reckon up Angels not among those inspirations motions or affections which proceed from Gods Spirit or any other person or substance but among perfect creatures and spirituall substances which live and move and subsist by themselves and not in another substance and so the Spirit of God speakes of them Psal. 149. 5. and in all the places where they are said to come from heaven to earth and to be sent from God unto men The third point in the definition is That Angels are heavenly spirits that is neither made of any bodily substance nor compounded of any elements or creatures of the visible world but of a pure and heavenly nature made to dwell in the highest heaven as in their proper and naturall place of habitation and there have their continuall residence This is manifestly proved by the former Doctrine and also by those Scriptures which testifie that they alwaies and continually in heaven behold the face of God as Matth. 18. 10. and that they are the heavenly host Luke 2. 13. and Spirits of heaven Zach. 6. 5. And there they encamping are in a moment as ready to defend the righteous and to guard the Church militant on earth and avenge all wrongs done to Gods little ones as if they were here present on earth for in the twinckling of an eye they can descend from heaven to earth and deliver the godly and stay the hand of their enemies and smite them with death as we see by the army of Angels coming from heaven and guarding Elisha so soon as he called upon God 2 Kin. 6. and by the Angell of God which at the praier of Hezekiah destroyed all the army of the Assyrians in one night and at our Saviours praier in his agony appearing presently from heaven and comforting him In a word our Saviour affirmes that spirits have not flesh and bones Luke 24. 39. They cannot be seen with bodily eies nor felt by bodily hands as corporall things may be Therefore Angels being spirits are not corporall nor compounded of bodily elements but are pure and invisible as the Apostle cals them Colos. 1. 16. The fourth point to wit That Angels were created by God in the beginning and God hath given to them their being is aboundantly proved in divers Doctrines before I need not say any more of it The fifth point is That Angels were created in the image of God and doe in many respects resemble God more then any other creatures First in their very substance and naturall being for as God is a spirit so they are spirits yea pure spirits and in that respect resemble God more then any other creatures Secondly as God is absolutely pure and simple so they are more pure and simple then any other creatures and have no corporall or visible substance in them Thirdly as God is the living God and even life it selfe and as he is infinite in wisdome knowledge goodnesse and power and doth all things freely of himselfe according to the good pleasure of his owne will also is in and of himselfe most glorious and blessed for ever and with him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning so Angels are most quick active and lively spirits the most excellent of all Gods creatures in wisdome knowledge and liberty of will and in all goodnesse and good will towards men they are also great in power and excell in strength Psal. 103. 20. and are called the blessed and glorious Angels of light heaven the place of blisse is their habitation And as they are incorporeall spirits which cannot be dissolved and die as men doe when their soules are separated from their bodies and the whole person is dissolved so and in that respect they are immortall do more resemble God who only hath immortality then any other creatures doe by nature All these things to wit the lively strength activity knowledge wisdome free-will glory power and blessed estate of Angels wherein they were created the Scriptures doe most clearly testifie and declare where they affirme that the Angels doe see Gods face who is all in all and that they look into all the mysteries know the manifold wisdome of God concerning the salvation of the Church 1 Pet. 1. 12. and Ephes. 3. 10. and have great joy in heaven over sinners which repent and doe relate great and mighty workes done by Angels most readily and speedily without delay The sixth point is That Angels are distinct and different among themselves and one from another by a proper and particular existence and being this I have fully proved in the second branch The last is That Angels are finite in their nature and number and have their bounds and limits and also are by nature mutable such as might fall from the first estate wherein they were created That Angels are in nature finite and cannot be in divers places or in all places at once is most plaine both by this that they are said to be Gods heavenly host and Angels in heaven that is who are confined to heaven for the proper place of their dwelling and when they are here on earth are said to be descended from heaven Matth. 28. 2. and to be here and not there That though they are many and more then man can number and in that respect are called innumerable yet that their number is limited and that God knowes the number of them cals them by their names and brings them out by number the Prophet testifieth Isa. 40. 26. That Angels are mutable by nature subject to fall from the state wherein they were created the Scriptures doe testifie where they make this Gods property that hee onely changeth not Malach. 3. 6. And with him is no variablenesse Iam. 1. 17. And where it is testified that God hath charged the Angels with folly Iob 4 18. And many of the Angels did not keep their first estate but left their habitation and by sinning did fall from Heaven and are cast downe to Hell and delivered into chaines of darknesse 2 Pet. 2. 4. and Iude 6. And that onely the elect Angels are made holy and immutably blessed by the light which God hath added to them Iob 4. 18. Thus much for the definition of Angels 3. Corollary The third Corollary is That the bodily shapes of men and other creatures in which Angels have appeared were no parts of their nature and substance neither were essentially united unto them but were onely assumed for the present time and occasion that thereby they might make fraile men see more evidently and acknowledge their presence and their actions For the heaven of heavens is not the place of grosse earthly bodies and therefore Angels being naturall inhabitants of heaven have no such bodies personally united they onely did for a time assume the bodies in which they appeared and performed some
use for comfort and confidence to all the elect and faithfull people of God in the midst of all troubles which befall them in this life and when dangers and worldly enemies beset them round about also for confirmation and strengthening of them against all the assaults and temptations of the Divell For if the glorious Angels which are ministering spirits for their good which also love them rejoyce at their conversion watch for their safety and are their fellow servants under one Lord Christ be such heavenly powerfull and active spirits even by creation so excellent in strength so lively quick and ready at hand to help in a moment when God gives the watch-word what need we feare or faint so long as wee cleave to God and sticke to his truth Hee is a tender and loving father and Christ our high Priest hath a feeling of our infirmities and doth pity us he will be ready to help and he hath mighty instruments and ministers even thousands and ten thousand thousands ready to save and deliver us from all enemies as he did Daniel from the Lyons and his three fellowes from the fiery furnace Or if hee doth not send them to deliver us out of the troubles of this life yet hee will at our death send his Angels to carry our soules with triumph to heaven as Eliah was carried up in a fiery Chariot and the soule of Lazarus is said to bee carried up by them into Abrahams bosome Wherefore let us not feare either multitude malice or might of enemies but carefully serve God and confidently rest on the Lord Christ our Redeemer and Saviour Secondly These Doctrines serve to discover divers errours concerning the nature and substance of Angels as that grosse opinion of Peter Lombard who held that the Angels are corporeall substances because the Divell and evill Angels shall suffer the torment and feele the paines of hell fire which hath no power but over bodily creatures Also that opinion of the Gentiles and Cardanus who held that the Angels were mortall and corruptible creatures both these are here discovered to be erroneous For the first is builded on a grosse conceipt that the fire of hell is elementall and corporcall fire which as it burneth and consumeth bodily substances over which it hath power so it in time wasteth it selfe and goeth out but indeed the fire of Hell is the fire of Gods wrath which burneth and tormenteth worse then elementarie fire but consumeth not neither shall ever be quenched as our Saviour testifieth The second opinion is also confuted by these doctrines which have proved Angels to be spirits or spirituall substances which though they may bee stained with sin yet they cannot bee dissolved as men are in death by the separation of soule and body not corrupted as mens bodies are in the grave but the evill Angells shall live in eternall torment and their substance shall never be corrupted and consumed and the holy and blessed Angels are immortall and shall live in glory for ever and there shall be no end of their blessednesse CHAP. V. Of the Creation of the Earth The names whereby it is called Properties of it All creatures have being of God with Vses The World is all mutable and appointed so to be Vses The creation and redemption of the World wherein they resemble one another Vses The holy Ghost is of one and the same nature with the Father and the Sonne THe Second thing created next after the highest heaven with the inhabitants thereof the Angels is the Earth as my text here faith in these wordes and the Earth But wee must not here understand by Earth this earth or drie land upon which men and beasts doe live and move and have their being and which is beautified and adorned with trees plants greene herbes and flowers and replenished with stones and metals of all sorts For that was created together with the waters of the Sea and brought into forme and replenished in the third day as appeares in the 9. 10. 11. verses of this Chapter But here by Earth wee are to understand a certaine rude matter and masse without forme and void out of which God made all the inferiour visible World and all things therein contained so the wordes following in the second verse plainely shew The earth was without forme and void and darknesse was upon the face of the deep Now that wee may know what creature this Earth was wee are to consider these 3 things First the severall names by which it is called Secondly the properties by which it is described Thirdly the meanes by which it was upheld in being and disposed to bee the common matter of all othervisible things created afterwards First the names by which it is called are three 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the earth 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deep 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters First it is called the earth because of the grossenesse unmoveablenesse and impurity of it For the earth is of all elements most grosse heavy impure and confused not fit to move out of the place wherein it is most untractable and not ready to apply it selfe to any other thing and hard to bee turned into the forme of other things without labour and working of it This first rude and informed masse which God created out of nothing is here declared by this name Earth to have beene like the earth very impure and confused dull and unfit for motion resembling at the first the earth rather then any purer element Secondly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deep here also in the text which word signifies a great deep or devouring gulfe as it were of troubled waters also troubled and confounded with mixture of mud and myre which though in respect of the troubled mixture and confusion it hath a resemblance of earth yet it is bottomlesse there is no solidity in it no ground or stay to bee found at all Thus much the Hebrew word signifies according to the notation and common use of it Thirdly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters also in this text because of the waterish fluxibility which was in it by meanes of which it was unstable and unsettled and also because it was an huge deep like the great waters of the Sea Now it may seeme strange that this one and the same rude masse should bee like earth and like a bottomlesse depth of myre or quick-sand and like waters all at once which are things different and unlike one to another especially the thinne flowing element of water and the grosse dull unmoveable earth And therefore the learned Expositors labour thus to qualifie the meaning of the words they say it was a confused masse even the matter of all the elements mingled together and because the earth and water are the most grosse and impure and did most of all appeare in it therefore it is called earth and water and the deep which is a
mixture of both But in viewing reviewing and sifting the words thoroughly I have observed something over above that which by reading I could observe in others to wit that this rude masse was not suffered to lye idle one moment from the first creation and bringing of it into being out of nothing but being a meere unformed masse or Chaos it had at the first a resemblance of earth because the grosse matter of the earth was so mingled and confounded in it that it chiefely appeared in the upper face of it and so it seemed grosse and earthy and is first called Earth Secondly by the operation of the spirit of God cherishing and moving it the grosse thicke matter settling downward toward the center it became immediatly in the upper face of it like a deep mire or quick-sand which more inclines to water then earth and hath no ground stay or bottome in it and therefore in the second place it is called the deep Thirdly God making the earthy matter to sinke and settle downward still more and more all the upper face of it became more thinne and fluid like unto impure water and thereupon in the third place it is called the waters though indeed there was neither perfect water nor earth but a confused matter without forme and void out of which all visible things were formed Thus much the names shew unto us concerning this masse which I propounded as the first thing The second thing is the consideration of the Properties by which it is described for it is said to be Tohu and Bohu and that darknesse was upon the upper face of it First it is said to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tohu that is without forme even a thing imperfect which had neither the nature nor substance nor naturall shape or property of any perfect creature Secondly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bohu void it had in it no formed creature of any kinde to fill and replenish it for this word is used to signifie the emptinesse and utter desolation of a land wholly depopulated laid waste and of a Citie brought to ruine having nothing left but heap●s of ruined Walls Isa. 34. 11. and Ier. 4. 23. Thirdly it is said to bee all darknesse in the upper face of it darknesse was upon the face of the deep By darknesse we are not here to understand any darke body as aire or thick clouds of darknesse compassing it round and over-spreading of it as the dark aire and thick mist did the land of Egypt when God plagued it with darknesse but this is the meaning that in this rude matter there was no light neither did any appeare in the out-side or upper face of it Now these properties by which it is described do comprehend in them that which in naturall philosophy is called privation is held to be a principle or beginning of natural things For unto the making generating of any bodily creature or natural body there are three things required as first principles 1. A matter capable of some forme that is expressed in the names of earth deep and waters 2. Privation which is an absence or want of the forme which ought to be or might bee in that matter for to give it that naturall being of which it is capable and unto which it is inclined This privation of forme and this emptinesse of all naturall powers and properties which are required in creatures and this darkenesse which is the privation of light they are the second principle The third is the naturall and substantiall forme which is that which distinguisheth one creature from another and gives being to every creature that is makes it to bee that which it is in the kind of it This forme God by his word gave to the severall parts of this matter when hee said Let it be it was so But when a matter rude undigested and unformed is inclining to some forme and wants it there must be a disposing of the matter to receive the forme which it ought to have to make it a perfect creature in his kind and which it yet wants and requires and that working preparing and disposing of the matter that it may bee fit to receive the forme which must perfect it And this disposing of the common and rude matter of all the visible World is here expressed in these words of the text And the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters Some doe here by the spirit of God understand some Angelicall spirit which God used and imployed to fit and prepare this matter to his hand thus Cajetan a Romish Cardinall and Schooleman held Tertullian lib. 3. contra Hermog saith that this spirit of God was a winde by which God prepared and disposed it Theoderet saith it was the aire which moved on the upper part of it Quaest. 8. in Genes But I conceive all these to bee unsound opinions First they are confuted by the very words of the text and by all other Scriptures which ascribe the whole worke of the creation and the making of the World and all things therein wholly and onely to God the Father the Word and the Spirit three Persons in one undivided essence Secondly it is against all reason to thinke that God who created the chiefest and most excellent of all his workes the highest heavens and the Angels the heavenly spirits immediately of nothing in a moment and also the common matter of all the visible World in an instant would use or did imploy any creature to dispose the matter and to fit it to his hand Wherefore tho best exposition of these words is that which is held generally by the best learned to wit that this Spirit of God here mentioned is the eternall Spirit one and the same God with the Father and the Son by whom all things were made and Hee is said here to move upon the face of the waters The Hebrew word here used doth properly signifie the Eagles gentle fluttering with her wings over her young ones thereby to cherish them as appeares Deut. 32. 11. And here it signifies the worke of Gods Spirit extending his power upon this rude confused unformed and empty masse and gently shaking it and causing the grosser parts to settle downewards and the more subtle parts to gather into the upper place and so to prepare and dispose every part for the substantiall forme which God at length gave unto it Thus you have the text opened From whence we learne First That man and all other creatures which live and move and have any being in the whole visible World howsoever they are engendered and propagated one by another yet they have their whole substance and being from God and he is the sole creatour and maker of them That he made the first common matter out of which they were framed the text here sheweth plainely Also that the spirit of God did prepare and dispose that whole
perfect creature and element of the visible World and commanded it to shine out of darknesse and this was the morning of the first day In the words wee may observe these foure things First the creation of light in the 3. vers Secondly Gods approbation of it in these words God saw the light that it was good Thirdly Gods separation of it from the darknesse vers 4. Fourthly Gods nomination or naming of the light day and the darknesse night and so compounding these two light and darknesse into the first whole day of the World vers 5. In the first thing which is the creation of light the first of all perfect creatures in this visible World two things come to bee sifted and examined for our right understanding thereof First the thing created Light what is thereby here meant Secondly the manner of creating it God said Let light bee and it was so Concerning the first I find divers and severall opinions of the learned Saint Augustine lib. 1. in Genes ad literam cap. 3. and Rupertus lib. 1. de Trinit cap. 10. doe by this light understand the highest heavens and the Angels which are not a corporeall but a spirituall light but this cannot bee the truth for this light is said to bee that which is called the day and is opposed to the darknesse of the night here in this mutable and visible World the shining whereof doth distinguish day from the night which cannot bee said of the Angels and the highest heavens which were not made out of darknesse nor out of the rude unformed masse as this light was which God commanded to shine out of darknesse as the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 4. 6. Secondly others as Beda Lyra and Lombard doe by this light understand a bright cloud carried about and making a difference of day and night Nazianzene and Theadoret doe think that it was the same light which now is in the Sun Moone and Starres subsisting at the first in one bodie and afterwards divided into severall parts when God made the Sun Moone and Starres out of it Basil thought that it was light without a subject Aquinas that it was the light of the Sun made imperfect at the first and of this opinion is Pererius also Catharinus held that it was the Sun it selfe made first of all which is directly contrary to the expresse words of the 16. vers which affirme that the Sun was made the fourth day Iunius by light here understands the element of fire In this variety of opinions I hold it the best and surest way of finding out the truth to seeke it out of the word used in the originall text The Hebrewword 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or which is here translated Light besides the tropicall and spirituall senses in which it is used in those Scriptures which call God the light in whom is no darknesse and the light and salvation of his people and doe call Gods regenerate people light in the Lord doth more properly signifie two things First that naturall bodie or substance which among all the parts and creatures of the visible World is most bright and shining in it selfe and gives light to others as for example the Sun Moone and Starres are called Lights Psalme 136. 7. and the element of fire is called by this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Light Ezech. 5. 2. Secondly it signifies and that most frequently in the Scripture the light that is the shining brightnesse of the heavens and of the Sun Moone and Starres and of the element of fire burning in a lamp or torch or other combustible matter Here I doe not take the word in this latter sense onely for a shining brightnesse for then God had created an accident or quality without a subject which is a thing against nature of things created for common reason and experience shew that never did any qualitie subsist of it selfe without a substance by course of nature no light can be but in some created body as in the heavens fire or aire But hereby light wee are to understand of necessity some notable part of this great frame of the visible World which God first framed out of the rude masse which was without forme and void before mentioned yea that part which is most bright shining and resplendent and doth by light and brightnesse which is naturall in it shine forth and enlighten other things Now that cannot bee any of these lower elements the water and the earth for they have no such light in them and besides it is manifest that they were formed out of the grossest and most dark part of the common masse on the third day vers 9. Neither can it bee the spacious region of the aire which is extended and spread abroad farre and wide over all the round globe of the earth and the waters and reacheth up to the etheriall region of the visible heavens even to the sphaere of the Moone and is called the lowest heaven or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the broad expansion or firmament in the midst of the waters For that was formed the second day as appeares in 6. 7. 8. vers It must needs therefore bee the firmament of the visible heavens which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The large and farre stretched firmament of the midle heaven even the fiery or etheriall region wherein God on the fourth day formed and set the great lights of the Sun Moone and Starres vers 14. 16. For first those heavens were framed and made of the most pure and refined part of the masse which is the common matter of the visible World and are most bright and shining full of light and brightnesse and undoubtedly as in place and order they are the next to the highest heavens so they were created next after them in the first day and are here called by the name of Light because all the light of this visible World is in them and from them shineth into the aire and giveth light upon the earth Secondly there is no particular mention made by Moses in this Chapter of the framing of these heavens among all the works of the six dayes except it bee in this word Light and it is most incredible that hee would omit the creation of them which are the most excellent and glorious part of the visible frame of the World especially seeing hee doth exactly and particularly name and relate the creation of all other parts and the day wherein they were created I am not ignorant that Aristotle and the most learned naturall Philosophers of his sect did hold that the visible heavens are eternall and unchangable and of a matter and substance different from the foure elements fire aire water and earth and were not made of the same common matter Also divers learned Christians and Schoolemen doe thinke that these heavens were created together with the highest heavens immediatly of nothing in the beginning when time first began to bee and are mentioned in the
and after their likenesse to bee Lord over all other creatures the fishes of the Sea the fowles of the aire and all living things on earth In the creation of all other things God said onely Let them bee and so they were made but in the creation of mankind hee calls a councell as being now about a greater worke and saith Let us make Man which is a speciall point not lightly to bee passed over without due consideration First hee who thus enters into consultation is said to bee Elohim that is God the Creatour who is more persons then one or two even three Persons in one essence as the Hebrew word being plurall doth imply And hee who here saith Let us make man and in the next verse is said to create man in his owne image hee is the same God which created the heavens and the earth Verse 1. and the light and the firmament and all other things mentioned before in this Chapter They with whom hee conferres are not the Angels as some have vainely imagined nor the foure elements which God here calls together that hee may frame Mans body of them being compounded and tempered together as others have dreamed For the text shewes plainely divers strong reasons to the contrary First it is said that God created man not by the ministery of Angels or the elements but by his owne selfe as it followes in the next Verse and Chap. 2. 7. Secondly God created man in his owne image not in the image of Angels or elements and therefore it is most ridiculous to imagine that God spake to them or of making man in their image Thirdly it is shewed that man was made to rule over the earth and the fowles of the aire and the fishes of the Sea and therefore it is absurd to thinkethat the earth or any elements were fellow-makers of man together with God And lastly it is both foolish and impious to thinke that God who made heaven earth the heavenly host the Angels of nothing should call upon others to helpe him and to share with him in the honour of mans creation seeing hee doth so often in Scripture challenge this honour of creating all things to himselfe and professeth that hee will not give this glory to another Here therefore God the Creatour is brought in by Moses as it were consulting within himselfe even the eternall Father with the eternall Word the Son who is called the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse image of his Person by whom hee made the World of which man is a part Hebr. 1. 2. and with the eternall Spirit And here hee brings in God consulting about mans creation to bee Lord over other creatures for 3. speciall reasons and to teach us three things which are reasons of consultations among men when they are about a worke The first is to shew not that God needed any advice or helpe but that the worke which hee was about was a speciall worke even the making of man the chiefest of all visible creatures one that should bee Lord over all the rest being made in Gods owne image indued with reason understanding wisedome and liberty of will The second to shew that man was to bee made a creature in whom God should have occasion given to shew himselfe a mighty and wise Creatour and Governour a just Iudge and revenger of wickednesse and sin which doe provoke him to wrath and revenge a mercifull Redeemer and Saviour of sinners seduced and an holy sanctifier of them by his Spirit If wee consider man as a creature which might fall and have Gods image defaced in him and by his many provoking sins might give God cause to repent that hee had made him as is said Gen. 6. then there appeares some reason why God should as it were consult whether hee should make him or no. Also if wee consider that man being fallen and brought under the bondage and slavery of death and the Divell and under eternall condemnation could not possibly bee redeemed but by the Son of God undertaking to become man and to suffer and satisfie in mans nature and that man cannot bee made partaker of Christs benefits for redemption without the holy Ghost the eternall spirit of God infused into man and descending to dwell in man as in an earthly tabernacle There will appeare to us great cause of consultation that God the Father should consult with the Son and the Spirit and this consulting about mans creation doth intimate all these things But in that this consultation is with a resolution all things considered to make man with a joynt consent this shewes that God foresaw how mans fall and corruption and all the evils which by it were to come into the World howsoever to our understanding and in our reason they may seeme just impediments to hinder God from creating mankind yet might by his wisedome bee turned to the greater advancement of his glory and might give him occasion to shew all his goodnesse wisedome power perfect purity and holinesse in hating sin his infinite justice in the destruction and damnation of wicked reprobates and in exacting a full satisfaction for the sins of them that are saved his infinite mercy love and free grace in giving his Son to redeeme and save his elect from sin death and hell and his unspeakeable bounty in giving his Spirit to sanctifie them to unite them to Christ and to conforme them to his image and so to bring them to the full fruition of himselfe in glory God in consulting within himselfe and thereupon resolving to create mankind and saying Let us make man and then immediatly creating him as the text sheweth did in the creation of man shew before-hand that in mankind hee would manifest and make knowne all his goodnesse more then in all other creatures The third reason of Gods consultation is to manifest more plainely in mans creation then in any other creature the mystery of the blessed Trinity that in the one infinite eternall God the Creatour there are more even three Persons of one and the same undivided nature and substance For such consultations and resolutions as are expressed in this forme of words Let us make man in our image and after our likenesse doe necessarily imply that there are more Persons then one consenting and concurring in the worke And that these three Persons are all but one and the same God it is●manifest by the words following which speake of these Persons as of one God for it is said that God created man in his owne image and not they created man in their image Thus much for the intent and meaning of the Spirit of God in these words Let us make man in our image and after our liknesse From which words thus expounded wee learne First that the creation of mankind was a speciall worke of God and that man is by nature the chiefest and most excellent of all creatures which God made in all the
in things which they command contrary to Gods commandements Yea they must remember that they are Gods creatures and handi-worke and ought to employ all their power and authority to the honour of God If otherwise they abuse the talents which God hath lent them let them know that God will one day call them to a reckoning and give them the reward of evill unfaithfull and unprofitable servants even eternall destruction and torment in Hell where shall be howling and wayling and gnashing of teeth Secondly this serves to shew that whosoever offers wrong and injury to any of mankind by cutting mangling or any way defacing their 〈…〉 age and deforming their bodies by afflicting or some way corrupting their soules or by taking away their lives and naturall being without speciall warrant and cōmmandement from God they are notoriously injurious to God himselfe they scorne despise mis-use and deface Gods Workmanship they provoke God to wrath and jealousie and hee surely will bee avenged on such doings And here wee have matter as of dread and terrour to all cruell Tyrants and unmercifull men so of hope and comfort to all who suffer injury and wrong at their hands As the first sort have just cause to feare and tremble so often as they thinke on God the avenger of such wrong so the other have cause to hope that God will not wholy forsake them being the worke of his owne hands nor leave them to the will and lust of the wicked his enemies but will in his good time save them and send them deliverance Thirdly this discovers the abomination and filthinesse of all Idolaters who being the workmanship of God the Lord and wise creator of all things doe most basely bow downe to images and altars and debase themselves to worship humane inventions and the worke of mens hands which are dumbe Idols of wood and stone and lying vanities It is just with God to cast out and expose all such people to ignominy shame and confusion in this world and in the world to come into that place of darknesse where the Divell and all such as forsake God and rebell against the light which from the creation shines to them shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the face and presence of God and from the glory of his power Secondly in that God is here said to forme man of the dust of the ground not of clay well tempered and wrought but of dust which of it selfe is most unfit to be compacted and made into a stedfast shape and which is counted so base and so light that every blast of wind drives it away and in Scripture the basest things are resembled to it Hence wee may learne two things First that God in the creation even of mans body shewed his infinite power and wisedome in bringing dust of the earth which is the basest thing of all into the forme and shape of mans body which is the most excellent of all visible bodies and a fit house and temple not onely of a reasonable living soule but also of Gods holy spirit as other Scriptures plainly affirme This point appeares so plainly in the Text that I need not spend time in further confirmation of it the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 formed here first used implies an excellent forme and the upright face of man Here therefore I will adde for illustration sake the words of David which are very pertinent to this purpose Psal. 139. 14 15 16. where speaking of Gods forming and fashioning him in the wombe of the living substance even the seed blood and flesh of his parents saith he I will prayse thee for I am fearefully and wonderfully made Marvelous are thy workes and that my soule knoweth right well My substance was not hid from thee when I was made in secret and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy booke were all my members written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them Here we see with what feare admiration and astonishment David considers mans frame and the curious workmanship of his body when God forms it in the mothers womb by lively instruments and of a lively matter and substance How much more may we conclude that Gods creating of Adams body which was the most curious naturall body that ever was made is most admirable and deserves more reverence feare and astonishment at our hands being made without instruments out of the basest matter and substance even dust of the earth Surely in this God shewed wisedome and power beyond all admiration The Vse of this doctrine is to stirre us up so often as we thinke of our creation in Adam to laud and praise Gods wisedome and power to feare and reverence God and to admire his curious workmanship And although the matter of which God framed mans body was the basest of all even dust of the ground yet let us not thinke ever a whit more meanly of our creation but so much more admire Gods workmanship in our bodies For to make a curious worke in gold silver or of some beautifull precious and plyable mettall is not rare nor so excellent but to frame of the basest matter the dust of the ground the chiefest worke and even the Master-piece of all works in the visible world that is the body of Adam in the state of innocency this is worthy of all admiration and is a just motive and provocation to stirre us up to praise and to extoll with admiration the wisedome and power of God especially if wee consider the most excellent forme of mans body and upright stature together with the head comely face hands and other members every way fitted and composed to bee instruments of a reasonable soule and to rule and keepe in order and subjection all living creatures Secondly in that the dust of the ground the basest part of the earth is the matter out of which mans body the beautifull Palace and Temple of his Soul was formed in the excellent state of innocency Hence wee learne that man is by nature and in his best naturall being given to him in the creation but a dusty earthy substance in respect of his body and in respect of his Soul an inhabitant of an house of clay the foundation whereof is in the dust But some perhaps will object against the collection of this Doctrine from the base and fraile matter of which mans body was formed and will thus argue That the state and condition of creatures is not to bee esteemed by the matter of which they were made but by the forme and being which God gave to them as for example the Angels together with the highest heaven were created immediatly of nothing as well as the rude unformed masse which is called earth and yet they are most glorious spirits and the rude masse is not to bee compared to them Yea man was created
an helpe meet for him The words seeme to sound as if God had brought the creatures before Adam to see if either he himselfe or Adam could find one among them all fit to bee a consort for Adam and a meet help But the purpose and intent of God was to imploy Adams wit and to take an experiment of it as is before noted And as for God hee knew well enough what was to bee found among all the creatures hee needed not either to seeke for Adam or to set Adam to seeke a meet helpe among them Yea hee had said before I will make an helpe meet for him The meaning is that when Adam had viewed and named all kinds of earthly creatures hee found them all so farre inferiour to himselfe and so unlike in nature that they could not all yeeld him an help meet for him The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated meet for him some would have it to signifie against him which is most absurd For the Woman was not made a perverse creature to thwart Man then shee had beene a Crosse and an Hell not an help Tostatus would have this word to signifie contrary to him because the Woman in her naturall members or parts is contrary to Man which is also absurd Neither doth this word signifie as one before him that is as Kimchi expounds it as one to stand before him and to attend him as a servant for then God would not have made her of his owne substance but of a meaner and inferiour matter But the word signifies as one which is his second selfe made in the same forme like him as a picture is drawne in a table set just before a mans face and over against him that it may in all parts answer to his shape and feature Such an help Adam could not finde among all earthly creatures but such a one God purposed and resolved to make for him even one who should be his second selfe made of his owne substance and in the same image of God and consisting of a living reasonable Soule as hee did and of a body in all parts and members and in forme and shape fully like to his body onely the difference of sex excepted This common sense and experience doth shew and teach and therefore this is the true sense and meaning of this phrase I will make an help meet for him And hence wee learne That man created in the image of God doth so farre in nature former and substance excell all living creatures birds beasts and living things on earth that none of them all is a meet consort or companion for him to converse with Some delight hee may take in ruling over them and in their service and obedience but no true or solid content in their society and conversation As Adam found this in the state of innocency and in his pure uncorrupt nature so all Adams sons of the best temper ever abhorred to bee excluded from humane society and to converse with birds and beasts David counted it worse then death to live among wild beasts in the desarts and complained bitterly of it Psalme 42. and could not bee satisfied till hee had drawne to him all discontented persons and them who durst not shew their heads for debt 1 Sam. 22. 2. So did austere Eliah when Iezabel made him flee for his life into the wildernesse 1 King 19. And never any of Gods Saints delighted to live in the wildernesse onely among beasts and birds without humane society except in times of cruell persecution as appeares Hebr. 11. or for some speciall triall and temptation as our Saviour Mark 1. 13. and his forerunner Iohn the Baptist Luk. 1. last verse to harden him and make him austere and a second Eliah This admonisheth us to esteeme the society of men as a great blessing of God and not to set our delight on dogs horses hawkes and hounds more then in the company of men as many doe which is an argument that they are degenerate from the nature of men Secondly this discovers the beastly dotage of many Romish Saints and of the Monkes and Anachorites of the Church of Rome who count it an high point of perfection to live in caves and dennes and cottages in the wildernesse remote from all humane society and to converse onely whith beasts yea and to preach unto them as their Saint Francis is by them recorded to have done and have called ravenous Wolves his bretheren God made man a sociable creature to delight in humane society and hath given him a mouth and tongue to speake his minde to others who can with reason hear and understand him Hee who will follow Christ must not looke on his owne things but on the things of others and must impart all his holy meditations to as many as hee can if hee hath any in him Otherwise hee hides his talent and covers his candle under a bushell which favours of Satanicall envy hath no relish of Christian kindnesse and charity I might here observe the conformity of Woman in her nature and frame unto man and the sweet harmony and concord which by the law of nature and creation ought to betweene Man and Woman but I have in part touched it before and shall have more occasion hereafter I proceed to the creation it selfe laid downe in the 21. and 22. Verses wherein I observe First the matter of which the Woman was made to wit a Rib of the Man Verse 21. Secondly the manner Verse 22 In the matter First it is shewed that God caused a deep sleepe to fall upon Adam such as makes a man senselesse of any thing which is done to him so the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies This sleepe was not naturall but an extraordinarie sleepe which God made to fall on him a sleepe which came not from any violence done to nature but by the powerfull hand of God making man to sleepe quietly so that hee did not feele what God did to him Secondly it is said that in this deep sleepe God did take one of Adams Ribs and closed up the flesh in stead of it Here divers questions are moved by divers interpreters 1. Whether it was one Rib or a paire of ribs 2. Whether it was one of Adams necessary Ribs one of the twelve which every man hath naturally in his side or whether an extraordinary Rib made in Adam for the purpose 3. Whether Adam was cast into stupidity to take away paine and feare or whether for some other cause Some thinke that if it was a Rib created in Adam above the ordinary number then Adam was made a monster Others say that if it was an ordinary Rib then Adam was afterwards a maymed man and wanted a necessary naturall part But I conceive this to bee the truth First that it was but one Rib or at least one paire of Ribs so the text affirmes Secondly it was not one of Adams necessary Ribs required
to make him a perfect man but a Rib above the ordinary number which God created in Adam of purpose and yet Adam was no monster neither was it a superfluous part for as Adam was created the common stock and root of all mankind so it was requisite that hee should have one Rib extraordinary created in him above other Men whereof the Woman was to bee made and he neverthelesse remaine perfect and complete as any other man afterwards Thirdly Adams deep sleepe was not to take away sense of paine but a mystery of building the Church out of Christs death under which hee slept to the third day And it is said that God closed up the flesh in stead thereof or in the place thereof not that God left a scarre or hollow place or that God created flesh to fill up the place of the Rib but onely closed up the flesh in the place where hee tooke out the Rib so that no scar or print did there appeare but man appeared most perfect and without mayme or signe of any wound In the second place for the manner of the Womans creation it is said that God made this Rib a Woman or builded it up to bee a Woman as the words run in the Hebrew which word implies that as children are derived of their parents to build up their familie so the Woman was derived from Adam to build up his great family mankind of his owne nature and substance and that his posterity might spring wholly from him both in respect of himselfe and of his wife their common Mother which was taken out of him I omit needlesse questions and ridiculous collections which some have here made as that the Woman being made of a bone is hard hearted and such like The profitable points which I observe from hence are these following First wee are here taught by mans falling into a deep sleepe senselesse like death that the Woman might bee taken and formed out of him That God in the creation foreshewed that the spouse of the second Adam Christ even the true Church should be purchased by the death of Christ and the blood drawne out of his side and Christ by his sleepe in death should make way to raise and build up his Church That the first Adam and his Wife in her creation were the types and figures of Christ and his spouse the Church I need not stand to prove the Apostle hath done it sufficiently Ephes. 5. 25 26 32. This serves for much heavenly instruction as first to put us in minde of the unity which is betweene Christ and his Church and to make us as wee desire to bee a true and chaste spouse of Christ also to labour to be spiritually united to him never rest till wee feele and perceive that wee are borne of Gods immortall seed even of his Spirit Secondly to make us ascribe our being wholly to Christ as wee are the true holy and regenerate Church and people of God and of the heavenly family Thirdly to make us love Christ and to meditate on his death with all holy reverence and tender affection as the thing by which wee are purchased yea to make us ready to conforme our selves to Christ in his death by suffering for the good of his Church Fourthly to make us see that the creation was as it were a shadow of Gods restauration of the World by Christ and that the restauration is the substance by which the creation is perfected Secondly God made the Woman of a Rib which was a part of the mans body which teacheth us that Woman must by the course of nature yeeld to man the preheminence as being made out of him this the Apostle also teacheth 1 Cor. 11. 7 8. And this admonisheth Women to give due respect to their husbands as is meet in the Lord and not to usurpe rule and authority over men Thirdly God made Woman of Mans substance which teacheth that Woman is neare and ought to bee deare to Man as a part of himselfe which the Apostle confirmes Ephes. 5. And here all harsh and tyrannicall husbands are justly noted and their doings reproved Fourthly the making of the Woman of a bone a solid part teacheth us that shee is made to bee a solid helpe and stay to man and ought so to be in his family And hereby husbands are directed to esteeme their wives as the stay of their family And wives to strive to bee helps Fifthly in that God made the Woman not out of mans head nor feet but out of his side hereby hee hath taught us that women must not bee too high and proud as the head nor too low vassals as the feet but consorts and companions of their husbands in the whole course of their life partakers of the same grace and of the same honours and dignities yoke-fellowes in the same labours and cares in this World and coheires of the same glory in the World to come The wise-Man confirmes this fully by the description of a vertuous Woman which is reformed after the true image in which shee was created Prov. 31. For hee describes her to bee one who consorts with her husband in labour and provident care and drawes equally with him in the same yoke and partakes of the same honour and respect both in publike and private The holy Prophets also and Apostles shew that the Woman is made to bee Mans inseparable companion Mal. 2. 14. even the desire of his eye and the joy of his glory on whom especially hee sets his mind Ezech. 24 16. and that mans delight must bee to have her continually at his side and her delight must bee to present her selfe to his eyes as a looking-glasse in which hee may behold his owne glory even the image of God in which hee was formed first and shee after him 1 Cor. 7. 10 11. where the Apostle forbids the Wife to depart from her Husband and the Husband to put away his Wife and their defrauding one another of mutuall comfort by separating and living apart For as man is the image and glory of God so the Woman is the glory of the Man 1 Cor. 11. 7. in whom man may behold as in a glasse the image of God in which hee was created And therefore the holy Apostles who were married as Peter and the bretheren of the Lord in their travelling to preach the Gospell did lead about their wives as Saint Paul testifieth 1 Cor. 9. 5. Also Saint Peter speakes plainely to this purpose 1 Pet. 3. 7. where hee injoynes husbands to dwell with their Wives according to knowledge giving honour to the Wife as to the weaker vessell and as being coheires of the grace of life that is as a man is indued with more knowledge so it is his duty to dwell and converse with his Wife wisely as a man of knowledge and as wee tender those necessary vessells which are usefull for us and the more weake
a vertuous Woman Ruth 3. 11. As this Doctrine serves for direction and exhortation to men and women to ground their conjugall affections aright upon knowledge experience and good information which is a course most commendable and agreeing to Gods ordinance So also for reproofe and conviction of Anabaptists Enthusiasts and Antinomians such as Iohn of Leiden and they of his sect the Anabaptists of the family of love who challenged women to bee their wives upon pretence of inspiration and divine revelation and when they had satisfied their lust on them and were ●●●aged with lust of others did upon the same pretence either murder or cast them off and take others Gods wrath for this horrible sin and disorder pursuing them and giving them up to monstrous and unnaturall lusts and at length to miserable destruction There are some who too much resemble these miscreants and hereby also are reproved I mean them who like lustfull Shechem upon the first sight are set on fire of lust and are so strongly carried by it with violence that they must have one another or else they will dye or bee distracted Such matches and marriages for the most part prove unhappy and uncomfortable if any doe not it is a great mercy of God and a favour which ought to bee acknowledged with all thankfulnesse The third thing here to bee noted is the manifest sense of Adams words which is that the Woman was not onely bone of his bones but also flesh of his flesh that is shee had both of his flesh and of his bones in her concurring to her substance Whence wee may probably gather That the Rib of which the Woman was made was not one bone that is an halfe Rib taken out of one side but bones that is a paire of Ribs or whole Rib taken out of both sides The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is my bones intimates so much and that this Rib was not a bare naked bone but had some flesh cleaving to it because hee cals her flesh of his flesh as being made of his flesh as well as of his bones This is a matter of no great moment but being a truth necessarily implied in the words of the text it may serve for speciall use First to put us in minde that Adam the first man was the common stock and root of all mankind and not onely all Adams posterity were wholly contained in Adam alone but also the first woman the Mother of us all had her first vitall life in Adam and was a part of his living flesh and bones And as in the first Adam all mankind had their naturall being so in Christ all the elect and faithfull have their spirituall being and whole life and even the Church Christs spouse the Mother of all true beleevers hath her being wholly from Christ and therefore to Christ wee must ascribe our whole spirituall being and new birth The Father by his Spirit shed on us through Christ begets us to himselfe of his immortall seed his Spirit to the lively hope to the inheritance incorruptible and undefiled that fadeth not away reserved for us in heaven Secondly it serves to worke constant love betweene man and his wife and to stirre up man to love his wife as his owne flesh and every woman to love her husband as every part of the body loves the body whereof it is a part and also to provoke men to love one another as being a most naturall affection of one member to another in the same body As for them who are envious and men-haters and cruell persecuters they are here discovered to bee children of the great man-murtherer the Divell and with him they shall have their portion Secondly in that Adam gives this as a reason of his free accepting of his wife because shee is of the same nature and substance bone of his bones and fit to bee named 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Woman or as one would say a she-man Hence wee learne that the best ground of marriage and band of love is similitude of natures and dispositions and unity of heart and spirit by which they are both alike affected This is that which the Apostle teacheth were hee saith Bee not unequally yoked for what concord can there bee betweene light and darknesse righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse that is contrary natures and dispositions 2 Cor. 6. 14. This rule Abrahams faithfull servant followed in chusing a wife for Isaae as hee knew Isaac to bee charitable and kind to strangers and given to hospitality so hee made his prayer to God to direct him to find a wife for him of the same disposition and when hee found Rebecca to bee such a one by the entertainment which shee gave to him being a stranger hee would not rest till hee had gotten the consent of her and her parents and friends Gen. 24. The neglect of this rule God forbids in his law and threatens with a curse Deut. 7. 3. It was that which made wise Solomon prove a doating foole in his old age because wives of a contrary religion turned away his heart and made him build high places for Idols 1 Kings 11. Ahabs matching with Iezabel an Idolatrous worshipper of Baal made him an Idolater and a slave who sold himselfe to all wickednesse when his wife Iezabel stirred him up 1 King 21. 25. And Iehoram the Son of Iehosaphat King of Iudah by taking to wife the daughter of Ahab of a contrary religion brought miserable destruction upon himselfe and his whole family 2 Cron. 21. 6. This Doctrine serves for admonition to all Men to bee wary and circumspect in the choice of their wives and if they bee vertuously and piously affected and have a desire to live in the feare of God and to build up a godly family to have a speciall eye and respect of true religion as well as of a good naturall disposition and good education and behaviour A godly Man must seeke a godly Wife a kind and liberall Man a free hearted Wife and a courageous Man a Woman of courage that they may both draw one way It is true that sometimes in case of notable infirmities bearing sway in Men Women of contrary disposition may bee usefull and fit Wives to correct amend or moderate their corruptions a Woman of a meeke and patient disposition may asswage the heat of her Husband being hasty and cholericke and so bee an helpe meet for him A wise Abigail may prove a necessary helpful wife to a foolish Nabal and by her wisedome may overcome his folly and by her liberall hand may make amends and prevent the mischiefe of his churlishnesse But it is no wisedome either in Man or Woman to runne such a desperate hazzard in confidence of their owne wisedome vertue or abilities For wee find by experience and it is a thing commonly seene that Men and Women by reason of humane frailty and naturall corruption which remaine in the best are
is knowne and discerned to bee his image and in it his shape is plainely seene Both these are here to bee understood in this word image and Gods image containes in it both the similitude or resemblance by which man is said to bee like unto God in all his naturall properties gifts and endowments and also his nature and substance which though it differs from Gods nature and substance Yet is a fit subject of such properties gifts and endowments which resemble Gods attributes and properties Secondly the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demuth which is here translated likenesse is used in a twofold sense First it signifies the similitude and likenesse by which one thing resembles another in all the speciall properties of it thus it is used Psalme 58. 4. where the poison rancour and malice of the wicked is said to have the likenesse of the poison of aspes and Ezech. 1. 10. the likenesse of the faces of the foure living creatures in Ezechiels vision is said to bee like the face of a man and of a Lyon and of an Oxe and of an Eagle and Dan. 10. 16. one is said to touch Daniel who had the likenesse of the Sons of men Secondly it signifieth the same that the word image doth that is a thing which is made like to another and is the very patterne which resembleth it in all parts and properties as 2 King 16. 10. where the patterne of the Altar of Damascus which Ahaz sent to Vriah the Priest is called the image of it And 2 Chron. 4. 3. the images of Oxen which Solomon made under the brasen Sea are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demuth the likenesse of Oxen and Isa. 40. 18. an image made to represent God according to that conceipt of him which men frame in their mindes is thus called Here in this text the word is used in the latter sense and signifies the same that the word image doth in effect but in a diver and manner For the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Image signifies first a creature and then the likenesse by which that creature so resembles God the Creatour in all the speciall properties of it that it becomes his image And the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 likenesse signifies first the similitude and then the creature that is such a similitude and resemblance of God stamped upon the nature and being of a creature as makes it the very image of God and so these two words Zelem Image and Demuth Likenesse are as the best learned and most judicious expositors of this text doe affirme the one the exposition of the other The word Image sheweth that the creature barely considered is not Gods image but by the naturall properties and gifts by which it resembles God And the word likenesse sheweth that the similitude alone is not the image but as it subsists in a fit subject and flowes from the nature and properties which God gave it in the creation Vpon these grounds wee may easily understand that the phrase of creating man in Gods owne image and likenesse signifies Gods creating man of such a nature and endowed with such naturall properties gifts and endowments that hee doth in them all resemble himselfe and is his lively image very like to him shewing forth his divine properties and attributes of goodnesse wisedome power knowledge and in all things conformable to his just will Thus much for the opening of the words The next thing to bee considered is the Image it selfe and the speciall things wherein it doth consist And here I hold it necessary first to distinguish the image of God and his likenesse into two kinds The first is naturall formed in the creation The second is supernaturall and spirituall formed in man by the holy Ghost dwelling in him This distinction though divers people lead by custome and humane authority more then the word of God doe reject as a meere device of mine owne yet I finde it plainely laid downe in the word of God For the holy Apostle Saint Paul 1 Cor. 15. 49. doth in expresse words affirme that as there is both a first Adam made of the Earth earthy who by Gods breathing into him the breath of life became a living soule in the first creation and also a second Adam made a quickening Spirit even the Lord Christ from Heaven heavenly So there is a twofold image of God in man the first The image of the earthy Adam in which hee was created which though hee forfeited and lost by the law of justice yet by Gods common and generall indulgence in Christ hee did so farre retaine and communicate it though grievously mangled defaced that we are said to have borne it who are Adams naturall progenie and were created upright in his loynes The other is the image of the heavenly Adam the Lord Christ who being in the forme of God equall with God did humble himselfe to descend from Heaven by taking our nature upon him and framing to himselfe out of the seed of the woman by the operation of the holy Ghost a most pure and holy manhood which did beare over and above the image of the first Adam deformed with many frailties and all our infirmities sin onely excepted Rom. 8. 3. Philip. 2. 7. an holy and heavenly image created and framed in his humane nature by the working of the holy Ghost which is given to him not by measure Ioh. 3. 34. even from his first conception Luk. 1. 35. And this image as the elect regenerate and faithfull doe beare in part in the state of grace while they are by the inward worke of the Spirit conformed to the image of Christ Rom. 8. 29. and Christ is formed in them Gal. 4. 19. So they shall fully and perfectly beare it in heaven after the last resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 49. And as the holy Apostle doth distinguish these two images and doth oppose the one to the other making the one the image of the first Adam who was of the Earth earthy the other proper to Christ the second Adam who is the Lord from Heaven heavenly so hee doth shew divers differences betweene them in his divine Epistles which are confirmed also by other Scriptures First the image of God in the first Adam was naturall it was that which was given him in the creation so my text here saith God created man in his owne image But the image of God in the second Adam was supernaturall and spirituall for hee was conceived and formed in the wombe by the holy Ghost Luk. 1. 35. and his image is communicated to men and they are changed into it by the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 3. 18. Secondly the image of God in the first Adam was mutable and Adam did forfeit it together with his life and naturall being by his sin and disobedience And although God out of his common favour and indulgence in Christ doth still continue it in some degree to Adams posterity yet
a different substance Secondly that it bee formed and made by that whereof it is the image and according to the paterne of it Where any of these two is wanting there can bee no image at all as for example One egge is like another in nature substance and all naturall properties yet that egge is not the image of the other because the one is not made by the other as the paterne of it so wee may say of an apple or a figge and of many other things but the forme of an egge or apple made in chalke or paste or wax is the image of an egge or apple though not so like it as another egge or apple and farre different in nature and substance because it is formed by it as by a paterne And againe though an egge bee formed in the body and of the naturall substance of a bird and sometimes wormes are bred in the bodies of men and beasts and the egge resembles the bird in whitenesse or in variety of other colours and the wormes seeme like mans flesh in whom they are bred both in colour and substance and in life sense and motion yet they cannot bee called images because they are not like in shape nor outward forme nor in any property but onely in some qualities and small resemblance But the picture or statue made after a man and in many things like him though more like another man then him yet it is his image and not the image and picture of another so the figure of a man appearing in a glasse when hee stands before it though it differs in nature and substance and is but a vanishing shadow yet because in outward shape forme and colour it is very like and is expressed in the glasse by him looking in it therefore is his image And the impression of a stamp or seale made in wax or well tempered clay is the image of that stampe or seale though it bee not perfectly like by reason of some small defects in the wax clay or stamping and the impression of another seale engraven with the same figure or letters may bee in all points more like and yet not the image of it because it was not made after it but by another seale engraven with the same figure Now then that wee may plainely see that man was created and how hee was created in the image of God and made after his likenesse and that hee is a true accidentall image of God his Creatour Wee are to observe and take notice of these two things First that God did frame mans nature even his whole soule and body after himselfe with intent that both his substance and naturall properties and endowments might take their patterne from him his Creatour that is in a word God himselfe was the originall and chiefe patterne by which alone man was made and formed Secondly that though divers other creatures had in divers things more resemblance of God then man had as the heavens in large comprehension of the visible World the Sun in glorious brightnesse beauty and Majesty the highest heaven in glory and immutability And all creatures as they have essence and being and were made good and perfect in their kind have some more some fewer impressions and resemblance of God in his essence and attributes yet none can bee called the image of God among all visible creatures but onely man because though God formed all things after his owne will wisedome and goodnesse yet hee made no visible creature living or without life so farre resembling himselfe in his nature and essentiall properties that it might justly or with good reason bee called his image but onely man As man alone of all creatures under heaven was made in the image of God so man alone doth so plainely resemble God is so stamped with the impression of Gods properties and in his whole nature and frame is made so fit a subject for God to dwell in and to bee conformed to God and wherein God may shew his wisedome power goodnesse liberty of will justice mercy and other attributes that hee onely of all visible creatures can truely bee called the image of God Let us now therefore in the next place come to the things wherein this image of God did consist and in respect of which things man is said to bee created in the image of God and to bee the image of God his creatour First it is a most certaine truth that the image of God in which man was created is nothing else but the conformity of man unto God and man is truly called the image of God in respect of all those things wherein hee doth more then any other visible creatures resemble God in his divine essence and properties Now this conformity of man unto God is twofold primary or secondary Primarie conformity is seated in the Soule of man or in man according to his soule the chiefe part of his substance Secondary conformitie is that which is in man according to his bodie and consists in the body and in things which belong to his body Conformitie of Man to God in his Soule is either in the Nature of substance of his Soule or in the naturall Faculties Properties and Endowments of it First conformity to God in the Substance of his Soule is the similitude which mans Soule hath unto the nature and substance of God in that mans Soule is not a Corporeall substance as all visible Creatures are nor a Materiall body created of any former matter but it is a pure Spirit even a spirituall incorporeall invisible and living substance and so it is called 1 Cor. 2 11. Heb. 12. 23. and both here in my text and 1 Cor 15. 45. a Living Soule which lives and gives life to the body and in these things it is like unto God who in his nature and being is a Spirit or a spirituall substance as our Saviour affirmes Joh. 4. 24. is called the Invisible God Coloss. 1. 15. Tim. 1. 17. and the Living God Psal. 42. 2. Ier. 10. 10. Ioh. 6. 96. and his Eternall power and Godhead are called Invisible things Rom 1. 20. yea as God saith of himselfe Isa 40. 18. So wee may truely say of mans Soule that it cannot truely be likened to any visible thing neither can any bodily substance resemble it Conformity to God in the naturall faculties properties and indowments of his Soule is the likenesse and similitude which man in respect of his reason understanding liberty of will desires and affections all upright and perfect had unto Gods wisedome knowledge goodnesse libertie justice mercy and the like First man in his perfect understanding naturall light wisedome and knowledge did resemble Gods wisedome and knowledge of all things For man in his creation and naturall integritie did rightly know God and himselfe and did perfectly understand all the workes and the nature of all the creatures of God and what was good both