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A32723 Several discourses upon the existence and attributes of God by that late eminent minister in Christ, Mr. Stephen Charnocke ...; Discourses upon the existence and attributes of God Charnock, Stephen, 1628-1680. 1682 (1682) Wing C3711; ESTC R15604 1,378,961 866

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31.3 the Egyptians are Flesh and not Spirit And our Saviour gives us the notion of a Spirit to be something above the nature of a Body Luke 24.39 not having flesh and bones extended parts loads of gross matter 'T is also taken for those things which are active and efficacious because activity is of the nature of a Spirit Caleb had another Spirit Num. 14.24 an active affection The vehement motions of sin are called Spirit Hos 4.12 the Spirit of Whoredoms in that sense that Pro. 29.11 a Fool utters all his mind all his Spirit he knows not how to restrain the vehement motions of his mind So that the notion of a Spirit is that it is a fine immaterial substance an active being that acts it self and other things A meer Body cannot act it self as the Body of Man cannot move without the Soul no more than a Ship can move it self without Wind and Waves So God is called a Spirit as being not a Body not having the greatness figure thickness or length of a Body wholly separate from any thing of flesh and matter We find a Principle within us nobler than that of our Bodies and therefore we conceive the Nature of God according to that which is more worthy in us and not according to that which is the vilest part of our Natures God is a most spiritual Spirit more spiritual than all Angels all Souls * Gerhard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As he exceeds all in the nature of Being so he exceeds all in the nature of Spirit He hath nothing gross heavy material in his Essence 2. When we say God is a Spirit 't is to be understood by way of Negation There are two ways of knowing or describing God By way of affirmation affirming that of him in a way of eminency which is excellent in the Creature as when we say God is wise good The other by way of negation when we remove from God in our conceptions what is tainted with imperfection in the Creature * Gamacheus Tom. 1. q. 3. Cap. 1. P. 42. The first ascribes to him whatsoever is excellent the other separates from him whatsoever is imperfect The first is like a Limning which adds one Colour to another to make a comely Picture the other is like a Carving which pares and cuts away whatsoever is superfluous to make a compleat Statue This way of negation is more easie we better understand what God is not than what he is and most of our knowledge of God is by this way As when we say God is infinite immense immutable they are negatives He hath no limits is confined to no place admits of no change * Coccei sum Theol. Cap. 8. When we remove from him what is inconsistent with his Being we do more strongly assert his Being and know more of him when we elevate him above all and above our own capacity And when we say God is a Spirit 't is a negation he is not a Body he consists not of various parts extended one without and beyond another He is not a Spirit so as our Souls are to be the form of any Body A Spirit not as Angels and Souls are but infinitely higher we call him so because in regard of our weakness we have not any other term of excellency to express or conceive of him by We transfer it to God in honour because Spirit is the highest excellency in our nature Yet we must apprehend God above any Spirit since his Nature is so great that he cannot be declared by human speech perceived by human sense or conceived by human understanding The second thing That God is a Spirit * Thes Sedan Part. 2. P. 1●●● Some among the Heathens imagined God to have a Body some thought him to have a Body of Air some a Heavenly Body some a human Body * Vossius Idolol lib. 2. cap. 1. Forbes Instrument l. 1. c. 36. And many of them ascribed bodies to their Gods but bodies without blood without corruption bodies made up of the finest and thinnest Atomes such bodies which if compared with ours were as no bodies The Saddures also who denied all Spirits and yet acknowledged a God must conclude him to be a Body and no Spirit Some among Christians have been of that opinion Tertullian is charged by some and excused by others And some Monks of Egypt were so fierce for this Error that they attempted to kill one Theophilus a Bishop for not being of that Judgment * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the wiser Heathens were of another mind and esteemed it an unholy thing to have such imaginations of God * Plutarch incorporalis ratio divinus spiritus Seneca And some Christians have thought God only to be free from any thing of body because he is omnipresent immutable he is only incorporeal and spiritual all things else even the Angels are clothed with bodies though of a neater matter and a more active frame than ours a pure spiritual Nature they allowed to no Being but God Scripture and Reason meet together to assert the spirituality of God Had God had the Lineaments of a Body the Gentiles had not fallen under that accusation of changing his Glory into that of a Corruptible Man * Rom. 1.23 This is signified by the name God gives himself Exod. 3.14 I am that I am a simple pure uncompounded Being without any created mixture as infinitely above the being of Creatures as above the conceptions of Creatures Job 37.23 Touching the Almighty we cannot find him out He is so much a Spirit that he is the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.9 The Almighty Father is not of a Nature inferior to his Children The Soul is a Spirit it could not else exert actions without the assistance of the body as the act of Understanding it self and its own nature the act of willing and willing things against the incitements and interest of the Body It could not else conceive of God Angels and immaterial substances It could not else be so active as with one glance to fetch a compass from Earth to Heaven and by a sudden motion to elevate the understanding from an earthly thought to the thinking of things as high as the highest Heavens If we have this opinion of our Souls which in the nobleness of their acts surmount the Body without which the Body is but a dull unactive piece of clay we must needs have a higher conception of God than to clogg him with any matter though of a finer temper than ours We must conceive of him by the perfections of our Souls without the vileness of our Bodies If God made Man according to his Image we must raise our thoughts of God according to the noblest part of that Image and imagine the Exemplar or Copy not to come short but to exceed the thing copyed by it God were not the most excellent substance if he were not a Spirit Spiritual substances are more excellent than bodily
cap. 1. § 4. Who can behold the Sun rising in the morning the Moon shining in the night increasing and decreasing in its due spaces the Stars in their regular motions night after night for all ages and yet deny a President over them And this motion of the Heavenly bodies being contrary to the nature of other Creatures who move in order to rest must be from some higher cause But those ever since the setling in their places have been perpetually rounding the world * Whether it be the Sun or the Earth that moves it is all one Whence have either of them this constant and uniform motion What nature but one powerful and intelligent could give that perpetual motion to the Sun which being bigger than the Earth a hundred sixty six times runs many thousand miles with a mighty swiftness in the space of an hour with an unwearied diligence performing its dayly task and as a strong man rejoycing to run its race for above five thousand years together without intermission but in the time of Joshuah * Josh 10.13 T is not natures Sun but Gods Sun which he makes to rise upon the just and unjust * Mat. 5.45 So a Plant receives its nourishment from the Earth sends forth its juyce to every branch forms a bud which spreads it into a blossom and flower the leaves of this drop off and leave a fruit of the same colour and tast every year which being ripened by the Sun leaves seeds behind it for the propagation of its like which contains in the nature of it the same kind of buds blossoms fruit which were before and being nourished in the Womb of the Earth and quickened by the power of the Sun discovers it self at length in all the progresses and motions which its predecessor did Thus in all ages in all places every year it performs the same task spinns out fruit of the same colour tast vertue to refresh the several Creatures for which they are provided This setled state of things comes from that God who laid the foundations of the Earth that it should not be removed for ever * Psal 104.5 and set ordinances for them to act by a stated law * Job 38.33 according to which they move as if they understood themselves to have made a Covenant with their Creator * Jer. 33.20 3. Add to this union of contrary qualities and the subserviency of one thing to another the admirable variety and diversity of things in the World What variety of Metals living Creatures Plants what variety and distinction in the shape of their leaves flowers smell resulting from them Who can number up the several sorts of Beasts on the Earth Birds in the Air Fish in the Sea How various are their motions Some Creep some Go some Fly some Swim And in all this variety each Creature hath Organs or members fitted for their peculiar motion If you consider the multitude of Stars which shine like Jewels in the Heavens their different magnitudes Or the variety of colours in the Flowers and Tapestry of the Earth you could no more conclude they made themselves or were made by chance than you can imagine a peice of Arras with a diversity of figures and colours either wove it self or were knit together by hazzard How delicious is the sap of the Vine when turned into Wine above that of a Crab Both have the same Womb of Earth to conceive them both agree in the nature of Wood and Twigs as Channels to convay it into fruit What is that which makes the one so sweet the other so sower or makes that sweet which was a few weeks before unpleasantly sharp Is it the Earth No They both have the same soil the Branches may touch each other the strings of their Roots may under ground entwine about one another Is it the Sun both have the same beams Why is not the tast and colour of the one as gratifying as the other Is it the root The tast of that is far different from that of the fruit it bears Why do they not when they have the same Soil the same Sun and stand near one another borrow something from one anothers natures No reason can be rendred but that there is a God of infinite Wisdom hath determin'd this variety and bound up the nature of each Creature within it self * Amirald de Trinitate pa. 21. Everything follows the Law of its Creation and it is worthy observation that the Creator of them hath not given that power to Animals which arise from different species to propagate the like to themselves As Mules that arise from different species No reason can be rendred of this but the fixt determination of the Creator that those species which were Created by him should not be lost in those mixtures which are contrary to the Law of the Creation This cannot possibly be ascribed to that which is commonly called nature but unto the God of nature who will not have his Creatures exceed their bounds or come short of them Now since among those varieties there are somethings better than other yet all are good in their kind and partake of Goodness * Gen. 1.31 there must be something better and more execellent than all those from whom they derive that goodness which inheres in their nature and is communicated by them to others And this excellent Being must inherit in an eminent way in his own nature the goodness of all those varieties since they made not themselves but were made by another All that goodness which is scattered in those varieties must be infinitely concentred in that nature which distributed those various perfections to them Psal 94.9 He that Planted the Ear shall not he hear he that formed the Eye shall not he see he that teacheth Man knowledge shall not he know The Creator is greater than the Creature and whatsoever is in his effects is but an Impression of some excellency in himself There is therefore some cheif fountain of goodness whence all those various goodnesses in the world do flow From all this it follows if there be an Order and Harmony there must be an Orderer one that made the Earth by his Power established the world by his Wisdom and stretched out the Heavens by his Discretion Jer. 10.12 Order being the effect cannot be the cause of it self Order is the disposition of things to an end and is not intelligent but implies an intelligent Orderer And therefore it is as certain that there is a God as it is certain there is order in the world Order is an effect of Reason and Counsel this reason and Counsel must have its residence in some being before this order was fixed The things ordered are always distinct from that Reason and Counsel whereby they are ordered and also after it as the effect is after the cause No Man begins a peice of work but he hath the Model of it in his own mind No Man
Power an Arm to destroy his Enemies and an Arm to relieve his People * Isa 51.9 All those are attributed to God to signifie divine actions which he doth without bodily organs as we do with them 3. Consider also that only those members which are the instruments of the noblest actions and under that consideration are used by him to represent a notion of him to our minds Whatsoever is perfect and excellent is ascribed to him but nothing that savours of imperfection * Episcop institu l. 4. § 3. c. 3 The heart is ascribed to him it being the principle of vital actions to signifie the Life that he hath in himself Watchful and discerning eys not sleepy and lazy ones A mouth to reveal his Will not to take in food To eat and sleep are never ascribed to him nor those parts that belong to the preparing or transmitting nourishment to the several parts of the body as stomach liver reins nor bowels under that consideration but as they are significant of compassion but only those parts are ascribed to him whereby we acquire knowledge as eyes and ears the Organs of learning and wisdom Or to Communicate it to others as the mouth lips tongue as they are the Instrmments of speaking not of tasting Or those parts which signifie strength and power or whereby we perform the actions of Charity for the relief of others Tast and touch senses that extend no further than to Corporeal things and are the grossest of all the senses are never ascribed to him * T is Zanchie● observation Tom. 2. de natura Dei lib. 1. cap. 4. Thes 9. It were worth consideration whither this describing God by the Members of an human body were so much figuratively to be understood as with respect to the incarnation of our Saviour who was to assume the human nature and all the Members of a human body Asaph speaking in the person of God Psal 78.1 I will open my mouth in Parables In regard of God it is to be understood figuratively but in regard of Christ literally to whom it is applied Matt. 13.34.35 And that Apparition Isa 6. which was the appearance of Jehovah is applied to Christ John 12.40.41 * Amiraut Meral T●m 1. pa. 293. 294. After the report of the Creation and the forming of man we read of Gods speaking to him but not of Gods appearing to him in any visible shape A voice might be formed in the air to give man notice of his duty some way of info●●a●i●n he must have what positive Laws he was to observe besides that Law w●●ch w●●●●graven in his nature which we call the Law of nature And without a voice the knowledge of the Divine Will could not be so conveniently communicated to man Tho God was heard in a voice he was not seen in a shape But after the fall we several times read of his appearing in such a form Tho we read of his speaking before mans committing of sin yet not of his walking which is more Corporeal till afterwards * Gen. 3.8 Tho God would not have man believe him to be Corporeal yet he judged it expedient to give some prenotices of that Divine incarnation which he had promised * Amirald 5. Therefore we must not conceive of the visible Deity according to the letter of such expressions but the true intent of them Tho the Scripture speaks of his eyes and arm yet it denies them to be arms of flesh * Job 10.4 2 Chron. 32.8 We must not conceive of God according to the Letter but the design of the Metaphor When we hear things described by Metaphorical expressions for the clearing them up to our fancy we conceive not of them under that garb but remove the vail by an act of our reason When Christ is called a Sun a Vine Bread is any so stupid as as to conceive him to be a Vine with material branches and Clusters or be of the same nature with a Loaf But the things designed by such Metaphors are obvious to the conception of a mean understanding If we would conceive God to have a body like a man because he describes himself so we may conceit him to be like a Bird because he is mentioned with wings * Psal 36.7 or like a Lyon or Leopard because he likens himself to them in the Acts of his strength and fury * Hos 13.7.8 He is called a rock a horn fire to note his strength and wrath If any be so stupid as to think God to be really such they would make him not only a man but worse than a Monster * Maimon More Nevoc par 1. cap. 27. Onkelos the Chalde Paraphrast upon parts of the Scripture was so tender of expressing the Notion of any Corporeity in God that when he meets with any expressions of that nature he translates them according to the true intent of them as when God is said to descend Gen. 11.5 which implies a local motion a motion from one place to another he translates it and God revealed himself We should conceive of God according to the design of the expressions When we read of his eyes we should conceive his Omniscience of his hand his power of his sitting his immutability of his Throne his Majesty and conceive of him as surmounting not only the grossness of bodies but the Spiritual excellency of the most dignified Creatures something so perfect great spiritual as nothing can be conceived higher and purer * Mores conjectura cabalistica pa. 122. Christ saith one is truly Deus figuratus and for his sake was it more easily permitted to the Jews to think of God in the shape of a man Use If God be a pure Spiritual being then 1. Man is not the image of God according to his external bodily form and figure The image of God in man consisted not in what is seen but in what is not seen not in the conformation of the members but rather in the Spiritual faculties of the Soul or most of all in the holy endowments of those faculties Eph. 4.24 That ye put on the new man which after God is Created in righteousness and true holiness * Col. 3 1● The image which is restored by redeeming grace was the image of God by Original nature The image of God cannot be in that part which is common to us with beasts but rather in that wherein we excell all living Creatures in reason understanding and an immortal Spirit God expresly saith that none saw a similitude of him Deut. 4.15 16. which had not been true if man in regard of his body had been the image and similitude of God for then a figure of God had been seen every day as often as we saw a man or beheld our selves Nor would the Apostles argument stand good Acts 17.29 That the Godhead is not like to stone graven by art if we were not the off-spring of God and bore the stamp of
inferior nature of nothing As bodily things are more imperfect than spiritual so their Creation may be supposed easier than that of spiritual There was as little need of any matter to be wrought to his hands to contrive into this visible Fabrick as there was to erect such an excellent Order as the glorious Cherubims 2. This Creation of things from nothing speaks an infinite power The distance between Nothing and Being hath been alway counted so great that nothing but an infinite Power can make such distances meet together either for Nothing to pass into Being or Being to return to nothing To have a thing arise from nothing was so difficult a Text to those that were ignorant of the Scripture that they knew not how to fathom it and therefore laid it down as a certain Rule That of nothing nothing is made which is true of a created Power but not of an uncreated and Almighty Power A greater distance cannot be imagin'd then that which is between Nothing and Something that which hath no being and that which hath And a greater Power cannot be imagin'd then that which brings Something out of Nothing * Amyral Morale tom 1. p. 252. We know not how to conceive a Nothing and afterwards a Being from that Nothing but we must remain swallowed up in admiration of the Cause that gives it being and acknowledge it to be without any bounds and measures of Greatness and Power The further any thing is from being the more immense must that Power be which brings it into being 'T is not conceivable that the power of all the Angels in one can give being to the smallest spire of Grass To imagine therefore so small a thing as a Bee a Fly a grain of Corn or an Atome of Dust to be made of nothing would stupifie any Creature in the consideration of it Much more to behold the Heavens with all the Troop of Stars the Earth with all its embroidery and the Sea with all her Inhabitants of Fish and Man the noblest Creature of all to arise out of the Womb of meer Emptiness Indeed God had not acted as an Almighty Creator if he had stood in need of any Materials but of his own framing It had been as much as his Deity was worth if he had not had all within the compass of his own Power that was necessary to Operation if he must have been beholden to something without himself and above himself for matter to work upon Had there been such a necessity we could not have imagin'd him to be Omnipotent and consequently not God 3. In this the power of God exceeds the power of all natural and rational Agents Nature or the Order of second Causes hath a vast Power The Sun generates Flies and other Insects but of some Matter the Slime of the Earth or a Dunghill The Sun and the Earth bring forth Harvests of Corn but from Seed first sown in the Earth Fruits are brought forth but from the Sap of the Plant. Were there no Seed or Plants in the Earth the power of the Earth would be idle and the influence of the Sun insignificant whatsoever strength either of them had in their Nature must be useless without matter to work upon All the united strength of Nature cannot produce the least thing out of nothing It may multiply and increase things by the powerful blessing God gave it at the first erecting of the World but it cannot create The Word which signifies Creation used in Gen. 1.1 is not ascrib'd to any second Cause but only to God a word in that sense as incommunicable to any thing else as the action it signifies Rational Creatures can produce admirable Pieces of Art from small things yet still out of Matter created to their hands Excellent Garments may be woven but from the Entrails of a small Silkworm Delightful and Medicinal Spirits and Essences may be extracted by ingenious Chymists but out of the Bodies of Plants and Min●rals No Picture can be drawn without Colours no Statue engraven withou●●tone no Building erected without Timber Stones and other Materials Nor can any man raise a thought without some Matter framed to his hands or cast into him Matter is by Nature formed to the hands of all Artificers they bestow a new Figure upon it by the help of Instruments and the product of their own Wit and Skill but they create not the least particle of Matter when they want it they must be supplyed or else stand still as well as Nature for none of them or all together can make the least Mite or Atom And when they have wrought all that they can they will not want some to find a flaw and defect in their work God as a Creator hath the only Prerogative to draw what he pleases from nothing without any defect without any imperfection He can raise what Matter he please enoble it with what form he pleases Of nothing nothing can be made by any created Agent But the Omnipotent Architect of the World is not under the same necessity nor is limited to the same Rule and tied by so short a Tedder as created Nature or an ingenious yet feeble Artificer 2. It appears In raising such variety of Creatures from this barren Womb of Nothing or from the Matter which he first commanded to appear out of Nothing Had there been any preexistent Matter yet the bringing forth such varieties and diversities of excellent Creatures some with life some with sense and others with reason superadded to the rest and those out of indisposed and undigested Matter would argue an infinite Power resident in the first Author of this variegated Fabrick From this Matter he formed that glorious Sun which every day displays its Glory scatters its Beams clears the Air ripens our Fruits and maintains the propagation of Creatures in the World From this Matter he lighted those Torches which he set in the Heaven to qualifie the darkness of the Night From this he compacted those Bodies of Light which though they seem to us as little sparks as if they were the Glow-worms of Heaven yet some of them exceed in greatness this Globe of the Earth on which we live And the highest of them hath so quick a motion that some tell us they run in the space of every hour 42 millions of Leagues From the same matter he drew the Earth on which we walk from thence he extracted the Flowers to adorn it the Hills to secure the Valleys and the Rocks to fortifie it against the Inundations of the Sea And on this dull and sluggish Element he bestowed so great a fruitfulness to maintain feed and multiply so many Seeds of different kinds and conferred upon those little Bodies of Seeds a power to multiply their kinds in conjunction with the fruitfulness of the Earth to many thousands From this rude Matter the Slime or Dust of the Earth he kneaded the Body of Man and wrought so curious a Fabrick fit to
he needed not have sought without himself for his own preservation and comfort What depends upon another is not of it self and what depends upon things inferiour to it self is less of it self Since nothing can subsist of it self since we see those things upon which Man depends for his nourishment and subsistence growing and decaying starting into the world and retiring from it as well as man himself some preserving cause must be concluded upon which all depends 5. If the first Man did produce himself why did he not produce himself before It hath been already proved that he had a beginning and could not be from Eternity Why then did he not make himself before Not because he would not For having no being he could have no will he could neither be willing nor not willing If he could not then how could he afterwards if it were in his own power he could have done it he would have done it if it were not in his own power then it was in the power of some other cause and that is God How came he by that power to produce himself If the power of producing himself were communicated by another then Man could not be the cause of himself That is the cause of it which communicated that power to it But if the power of being was in and from himself and in no other nor communicated to him man would always have been in act and always have Existed no hinderance can be conceived For that which had the power of being in it self was invincible by any thing that should stand in the way of its own being We may conclude from hence the excellency of the Scripture that it is a Word not to be refused credit It gives us the most rational account of things in the 1. and 2. of Genesis which nothing in the world else is able to do Thirdly III. Proposition no Creature could make the world No Creature can create another If it creates of nothing t is then Omnipotent and so not a Creature If it makes something of matter unfit for that which is produced out of it then the inquiry will be who was the cause of the matter and so we must arrive to some uncreated being the cause of all Whatsoever gives being to any other must be the highest being and must possess all the perfections of that which it gives being to what visible Creature is there which possesses the perfections of the whole world If therefore an invisible Creature made the world the same enquiries will return whence that Creature had its being for he could not make himself If any Creature did Create the World he must do it by the strength and vertue of another which first gave him being and this is God For whatsoever hath its Existence and vertue of acting from another is not God If it hath its vertue from another t is then a second cause and so supposeth a first cause It must have some cause of it self or be Eternally Existent If Eternally Existent t is not a second cause but God if not Eternally Existent we must come to somthing at length which was the cause of it or else be bewildred without being able to give an account of any thing We must come at last to an Infinite Eternal Independent Being that was the first cause of this Structure and Fabrick wherein we and all Creatures dwell The Scripture proclaims this aloud * Isa 45.6.7 Deut. 4.35 I am the Lord and there is none else I Form the light and I Create darkness Man the Noblest Creature cannot of himself make a man the chiefest part of the World If our Parents only without a Superior power made our Bodies or Souls they would know the frame of them as he that makes a Lock knows the Wards of it he that makes any curious peice of Arras knows how he setts the various colours together and how many threads went to each division in the Web he that makes a Watch having the Idea of the whole work in his mind knows the motions of it and the reason of those motions But both Parents and Children are equally ignorant of the nature of their Souls and Bodies and of the reason of their motions God only that had the Supream hand in forming us in whose Book all our members are written Psal 139.16 which in continuance were fashioned knows what we all are ignorant of If man hath in an ordinary course of generation his being chiefly from an higher cause than his Parents the World then certainly had its being from some infinitely wise intelligent Being which is God If it were as some fancy made by an Assembly of Atomes there must be some infinite intelligent cause that made them some cause that separated them some cause that mingled them together for the piling up so comely a structure as the world T is the most absurd thing to think they should meet togeither by hazard and rank themselves in that order we see without a higher and a wise agent So that no Creature could make the world For supposing any Creature was formed before this visible world and might have a hand in disposing things yet he must have a cause of himself and must act by the virtue and strength of another and this is God Fourthly IV. Proposition From hence it follows that there is a first cause of things which we call God There must be somthing supreme in the order of nature somthing which is greater than all which hath nothing beyond it or above it otherwise we must run in infinitum We see not a River but we conclude a Fountain a Watch but we conclude an Artificer As all number begins from unity so all the multitude of things in the world begins from some unity Oneness as the principle of it T is natural to arise from a view of those things to the conception of a nature more perfect than any As from heat mixed with cold and light mixed with darkness men conceive and arise in their understandings to an intense heat and a pure light And from a Corporeal or bodily substance joyned with an incorporeal as man is an earthly body and a Spiritual Soul we ascend to a conception of a substance purely incorporeal and Spiritual So from a multitude of things in the world Reason leads us to one choice being above all And since in all natures in the World we still find a superior nature the nature of one beast above the nature of another the nature of man above the nature of beasts and some invisible nature the worker of strange effects in the Air and Earth which cannot be ascribed to any visible cause we must suppose some nature above all those of unconceivable perfection * Coccei sum Theol. cap. 8. § 33. c. Every Sceptick one that doubts whither there be any thing real or no in the World that counts every thing an appearance must necessarily own a first cause They cannot
of its capacity The understanding can conceive the whole world and paint in it self the invisible Pictures of all things T is capable of apprehending and discoursing of things superior to its own nature * Culverwel T is suted to all objects as the Eye to all Colours or the Ear to all sounds How great is the Memory to retain such varieties such diversities The Will also can accomodate other things to it self It invents Arts for the use of Man prescribes rules for the Government of States ransacks the bowels of nature makes endless conclusions and steps in reasoning from one thing to another for the knowledge of Truth It can contemplate and form notions of things higher than the world 2. The quickness of its motion * Theodoret. Nothing is more quick in the whole course o● nature the Sun runs through the World in a day this can do it in a moment It can with one flight of fancy ascend to the battlements of Heaven The mists of the Air that hinder the sight of the Eye cannot hinder the flights of the Soul it can pass in a moment from one end of the World to the other and think of things a thousand miles distant It can think of some mean thing in the world and presently by one cast in the twinkling of an Eye mount up as high as Heaven As its desires are not bounded by sensual objects so neither are the motions of it restrained by them It will break forth with the greatest vigour and conceive things infinitely above it Though it be in the body it acts as if it were ashamed to be Cloystered in it This could not be the result of any material cause Whoever knew meer matter understand think will And what it hath not it cannot give That which is destitute of Reason and Will could never confer Reason and Will * Coccei sum The dog cap. 8. § 51.52 T is not the effect of the Body for the Body is fitted with members to be subject to it T is in part ruled by the activity of the Soul and in part by the Counsel of the Soul T is used by the Soul and knows not how it is used Nor could it be from the Parents since the Souls of the Children often transcend those of the Parents in vivacity acuteness and comprehensiveness One man is stupid and begets a Son with a capacious understanding one is debauched and beastly in morals and begets a Son who from his Infancy testifies some vertuous inclinations which sprout forth in delightful fruit with the ripeness of his age I do not dispute whether the Soul were generated or no Suppose the substance of it was generated by the Parents yet those more excellent qualities were not the result of them Whence should this difference arise a fool begat the wise man and a debauched the vertuous man The wisdom of the one could not descend from the foolish Soul of the other nor the vertues of the Son from the deformed and polluted Soul of the Parent it lies not in the Organs of the Body For if the folly of the Parent proceeded not from their Souls but the ill disposition of the Organs of their bodies how comes it to pass that the bodies of the Children are better Organiz'd beyond the goodness of their immediate cause We must recur to some invisible hand that makes the difference who bestows upon one at his pleasure richer qualities than upon another You can see nothing in the World endowed with some excellent quality but you must imagine some bountiful hand did inrich it with that dowry None can be so foolish as to think that a vessel ever inricht it self with that spritely Liquor wherewith it is filled or that any thing worse than the Soul should indow it with that knowledge and activity which sparkles in it Nature could not produce it That nature is intelligent or not if it be not then it produceth an effect more excellent than it self in as much as an understanding being surmounts a being that hath no understanding If the supream cause of the Soul be intelligent why do we not call it God as well as nature We must arise from hence to the notion of a God a Spiritual nature cannot proceed but from a Spirit higher than it self and of a transcendent perfection above it self If we beleive we have Souls and understand the state of our own faculties we must be assured that there was some invisible hand which bestowed those faculties and the riches of them upon us A man must be ignorant of himself before he can be ignorant of the Existence of God By considering the nature of our Souls we may as well be assured that there is a God as that there is a Sun by the shining of the beams in at our Windows And indeed the Soul is a Statue and representation of God as the Land-Skip of a Country or Map represents all the parts of it but in a far less proportion than the Country it self is The Soul fills the body and God the world the Soul sustains the body and God the World the Soul sees but is not seen God sees all things but is himself invisible How base are they then that prostitute their Souls an image of God to base things unexpressibly below their own nature 3. I might add the union of Soul and Body Man is a kind of compound of Angel and Beast of Soul and body if he were only a Soul he were a kind of Angel if only a body he were another kind of brute Now that a body as vile and dull as earth and a Soul that can mount up to Heaven and rove about the world with so quick a motion should be linkt in so strait an acquaintance that so noble a being as the Soul should be an inhabitant in such a Tabernacle of Clay must be owned to some infinite power that hath so chained it 3. Man witnesseth to a God in the operations and reflections of Conscience Rom. 2.15 Their thoughts are accusing or excusing An inward comfort attends good actions and an inward torment follows bad ones for there is in every mans Conscience fear of punishment and hope of reward There is therefore a sense of some superior Judge which hath the power both of rewarding and punishing If man were his supream rule what need he fear punishment since no man would inflict any evil or torment on himself nor can any man be said to reward himself for all rewards refer to another to whom the action is pleasing and is a conferring some good a man had not before If an action be done by a Subject or Servant with hopes of reward it can not be imagined that he expects a reward from himself but from the Prince or person whom he eyes in that action and for whose sake he doth it 1. There is a Law in the minds of men which is a rule of good and evil There is a Notion
dived into the depths of Nature have been more studious of the qualities of the Creatures than of the excellency of the nature or the discovery of the mind of God in them who regard only the rising and motions of the Star but follow not with the wise men its conduct to the King of the Jews How often do we see men filled with an eager thirst for all other kind of knowledge that cannot acquiesce in a twilight discovery but are inquisitive into the causes and reasons of effects yet are contented with a weak and languishing knowledge of God and his Law and are easily tired with the Proposals of them He now that nauseates the means whereby he may come to know and obey God has no intention to make the Law of God his Rule There is no man that intends seriously an end but he intends means in order to that end As when a man intends the preservation or recovery of his health he will intend means in order to those ends otherwise he cannot be said to intend his health So he that is not diligent in using means to know the mind of God has no sound intention to make the Will and Law of God his Rule Is not the inquiry after the Will of God made a work by the by and fain to lacquy after other concerns of an inferior nature if it hath any place at all in the Soul which is a despising the Being of God The Notion of the Soveraignty of God bears the same date with the Notion of his Godhead and by the same way that he reveals Himself he reveals his Authority over us whether it be by Creatures without or Conscience within All Authority over Rational Creatures consists in commanding and directing the duty of Rational Creatures in compliance with that Authority consists in obeying Where there is therefore a careless neglect of those means which convey the knowledge of Gods Will and our Duty there is an utter disowning of God as our Soveraign and our Rule 2. When any part of the Mind and Will of God breaks in upon Men they endeavour to shake it off As a Man would a Sergeant that comes to arrest him they like not to retain God in their Knowledge Rom. 1.28 A natural Man receives not the things of the Spirit of God that is into his Affection he pusheth them back as men do troublesome and importunate Beggers They have no kindness to bestow upon it They thrust with both shoulders against the Truth of God when it presseth in upon them and dash as much contempt upon it as the Pharisees did upon the Doctrine our Saviour directed against their Covetousness As men naturally delight to be without God in the world so they delight to be without any offspring of God in their thoughts Since the Spiritual Palate of Man is depraved Divine Truth is unsavoury and ungrateful to us till our taste and relish is restored by Grace Hence men damp and quench the motions of the Spirit to Obedience and Compliance with the Dictates of God strip them of their Life and Vigor and kill them in the Womb. How unable are our Memories to retain the substance of spiritual Truth but like Sand in a Glass put in at one part and runs out at the other Have not many a secret wish that the Scripture had never mentioned some truths or that they were blotted out of the Bible because they face their Consciences and discourage those boiling Lusts they would with eagerness and delight pursue Me thinks that interruption John gives our Saviour when he was upon the Reproof of their Pride looks little better * Mark 9.33.38 than a design to divert him from a discourse so much against the grain by telling him a story of their prohibiting one to cast out Devils because he followed not them How glad are men when they can raise a Battery against a Command of God and raise some smart Objection whereby they may shelter themselves from the strictness of it 3. When men cannot shake off the Notices of the Will and Mind of God they have no pleasure in the consideration of them Which could not possibly be if there were a real and fixed design to own the Mind and Law of God as our Rule Subjects or Servants that love to obey their Prince and Master will delight to read and execute their Orders The Devils understand the Law of God in their minds but they loath the impressions of it upon their Wills Those miserable Spirits are bound in Chains of Darkness evil Habits in their Wills that they have not a thought of obeying that Law they know It was an unclean Beast under the Law that did not chew the Cud 'T is a corrupt Heart that doth not chew Truth by Meditation A natural man is said not to know God or the things of God he may know them notionally but he knows them not affectionately A sensual Soul can have no delight in a spiritual Law To be sensual and not to have the Spirit are inseparable Jude 19. Natural Men may indeed meditate upon the Law and Truth of God but without delight in it if they take any pleasure in it 't is only as 't is knowledge not as it is a Rule for we delight in nothing that we desire but upon the same account that we desire it Natural Men desire to know God and some part of his Will and Law not out of a sense of their practical excellency but a natural thirst after knowledge and if they have a delight 't is in the act of knowing not in the Object known not in the Duties that stream from that Kowledge they design the furnishing their Understandings not the quickning their Affections like idle Boys that strike Fire not to warm themselves by the heat but sport themselves with the Sparks Whereas a gracious Soul accounts not only his Meditation or the Operations of his Soul about God and his Will to be sweet but he hath a joy in the object of that Meditation * Psal 104.34 Many have the knowledge of God who have no delight in Him or his Will Owls have Eyes to perceive that there is a Sun but by reason of the weakness of their sight have no pleasure to look upon a Beam of it So neither can a man by Nature love or delight in the Will of God because of his natural corruption That Law that riseth up in men for Conviction and Instruction they keep down under the power of Corruption making their Souls not the Sanctuary but Prison of Truth Rom. 1.18 They will keep it down in their hearts if they cannot keep it out of their heads and will not endeavour to know and taste the Spirit of it 4. There is farther a rising and swelling of the Heart against the Will of God 1. Internal Gods Law cast against a hard Heart is like a Ball thrown against a stone Wall by reason of the resistance rebounding the further
as well as Heathens who used the outward Ceremonies not as signs of better things but as if they did of themselves please God and render the worshippers accepted with him without any sutable frame of the inward man * Amirald in loc It is as if he had said now you must separate your selves from all carnal modes to which the service of God is now tyed and render a worship chiefly consisting in the affectionate motions of the heart and accommodated more exactly to the condition of the object who is a Spirit In Spirit and Truth * Amirald in loc The Evangelical Service now required has the advantage of the former that was a Shadow and Figure this the Body and Truth * Muscul Spirit say some is here opposed to the legal Ceremonies Truth to hypocritical services or * Chemnit rather truth is opposed to shadows and an opinion of worth in the outward action 't is principally opposed to external Rites because our Saviour saith v. 23. The hour comes and ●o● is c. Had it been opposed to Hypocrisy Christ had said no new thing For God always required Truth in the inward parts and all true Worshippers had served him with a sincere Conscience and single Heart The old Patriarks did worship God in Spirit and Truth as taken for sincerity Such a Worship was always and is perpetually due to God because he always was and eternally will be a Spirit * Mus●al And it is said the Father seeks such to worship him not shall seek He always sought it it always was performed to him by one or other in the world And the Prophets had always rebuked them for resting upon their outward Solemnities Isa 58.7 and Micah 6.8 But a Worship without legal Rites was proper to an Evangelical State and the times of the Gospel God having then exhibited Christ and brought into the world the substance of those shadows and the end of those institutions There was no more need to continue them when the true reason of them was ceased All Laws do naturally expire when the true reason upon which they were first framed is changed Or by Spirit may be meant such a Worship as is kindled in the heart by the breath of the holy Ghost Since we are dead in sin a spiritual light and flame in the heart sutable to the nature of the object of our worship cannot be raised in us without the operation of a supernatural Grace And though the Fathers could not worship God without the Spirit yet in the Gospel-times there being a fuller effusion of the Spirit the Evangelical State is called the administration of the Spirit and the newness of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 in opposition to the legal Oeconomy entitled the oldness of the Letter * Rom. 7.6 The Evangelical State is more suted to the Nature of God than any other Such a Worship God must have whereby he is acknowledged to be the true Sanctifier and Quickner of the Soul The nearer God doth approach to us and the more full his manifestations are the more spiritual is the Worship we return to God The Gospel pares off the rugged parts of the Law and Heaven shall remove what is material in the Gospel and change the Ordinances of Worship into that of a Spiritual Praise In the words there is 1. A Proposition God is a Spirit The Foundation of all Religion 2. An Inference they that worship him c. As God a Worship belongs to him as a Spirit a spiritual Worship is due to him in the inference we have 1. The manner of Worship in Spirit and Truth 2. The necessity of such a Worship must The Proposition declares the Nature of God the Inference the Duty of Man The Observations lie plain Ob. 1. God is a pure spiritual Being He is a Spirit 2. The Worship due from the Creature to God must be agreeable to the Nature of God and purely spiritual 3. The Evangelical State is suted to the Nature of God For the first D. God is a pure spiritual Being 'T is the Observation of one * Episcop insti tut l. 4. c. 3. that the plain assertion of Gods being a Spirit is found but once in the whole Bible and that is in this place which may well be wondred at because God is so often described with hands feet eyes and ears in the form and figure of a Man The spiritual Nature of God is deducible from many places but not any where as I remember asserted totidem verbis but in this Text Some alledge that place 2 Cor. 3.17 the Lord is that Spirit for the proof of it but that seems to have a different sense In the Text the Nature of God is described in that place the operations of God in the Gospel * Amyrald in loc 'T is not the Ministry of Moses or that old Covenant which communicates to you that Spirit it speaks of but it is the Lord Jesus and the Doctrin of the Gospel delivered by him whereby this Spirit and Liberty is dispensed to you He opposes here the Liberty of the Gospel to the Servitude of the Law 'T is from Christ that a Divine Vertue diffuseth it self by the Gospel 't is by him not by the Law that we partake of that Spirit * Suarez de Deo vol. 1. P. 9. Col. 2. The Spirituality of God is as evident as his Being If we grant that God is we must necessarily grant that he cannot be corporeal because a Body is of an imperfect Nature It will appear incredible to any that acknowledge God the first Being and Creator of all things that he should be a massy heavy Body and have Eyes and Ears Feet and hands as we have For the explication of it 1. Spirit is taken various ways in Scripture It signifies sometimes an aereal substance as Psal 11.6 A horrible Tempest Heb. A Spirit of Tempest Sometimes the breath which is a thin substance Gen. 6.17 All Flesh wherein is the breath of Life Heb. Spirit of Life A thin substance though it be material and corporeal is called Spirit And in the bodies of living Creatures that which is the principle of their actions is called Spirits the animal and vital Spirits And the finer parts extracted from Plants and Minerals we call Spirits Those volatile parts separated from that gross matter wherein they were immerst because they come nearest to the nature of an incorporeal substance And from this notion of the word 't is translated to signifie those substances that are purely immaterial as Angels and the Souls of Men. Angels are called Spirits Psal 104.4 who makes his Angels Spirits * Heb. 1.14 And not only good Angels are so called but evil Angels Mark 1.27 Souls of men are called Spirits Eccl. 12. And the Soul of Christ is called so John 19.30 whence God is called the God of the Spirits of all Flesh Numb 22.16 and Spirit is opposed to Flesh Isa
Essence as in his Veracity and Faithfulness They are perfections belonging to his Nature But if he were not a pure Spirit he could not be immutable by Nature 7. If God were not a pure Spirit He could not be omnipresent He is in Heaven above and the Earth below * Deut. 4.39 He fills Heaven and Earth * Jer. 23.24 The Divine Essence is at once in Heaven and Earth but it is impossible a Body can be in two places at one and the same time Since God is every where he must be spiritual Had he a Body he could not penetrate all things he would be circumscribed in place He could not be every where but in parts not in the whole one member in one place and another in another for to be confined to a particlar place is the property of a Body But since he is diffused through the whole World higher than Heaven deeper than Hell longer than the Earth broader than the Sea * Job 11.8 he hath not any corporeal matter If he had a Body wherewith to fill Heaven and Earth there could be no Body besides his own 'T is the Nature of Bodies to bound one another and hinder the extending of one another Two Bodies cannot be in the same place in the same point of Earth one excludes the other And it will follow hence that we are nothing no substances meer illusions there could be no place for any Body else * Gamacheus Theol. Tom. 1. Quos 3. C. 1. If his Body were as bigg as the World as it must be if with that he filled Heaven and Earth there would not be room for him to move a hand or a foot or extend a finger for there would be no place remaining for the motion 8. If God were not a Spirit he could not be the most perfect Being The more perfect any thing is in the rank of Creatures the more spiritual and simple it is as Gold is the more pure and perfect that hath least mixture of other Metals If God were not a Spirit there would be Creatures of a more excellent Nature than God as Angels and Souls which the Scripture calls Spirits in opposition to Bodies There is more of perfection in the first notion of a Spirit than in the notion of a Body God cannot be less perfect than his Creatures and contribute an excellency of being to them which he wants himself If Angels and Souls possess such an excellency and God want that excellency he would be less than his Creatures and the excellency of the Effect would exceed the excellency of the Cause But every Creature even the highest Creature is infinitely short of the perfection of God for whatsoever excellency they have is finite and limited 't is but a spark from the Sun a drop from the Ocean but God is unboundedly perfect in the highest manner without any limitation and therefore above Spirits Angels the highest Creatures that were made by him An infinite sublimity a pure act to which nothing can be added from which nothing can be taken In him there is light and no darkness * 1 John 1.5 spirituality without any matter perfection without any shadow or taint of imperfection Light pierceth into all things preserves its own purity and admits of no mixture of any thing else with it Question It may be said If God be a Spirit and it is impossible he can be otherwise than a Spirit how comes God so often to have such Members as we have in our Bodies ascribed to him not only a Soul but particular bodily parts as heart arms hands eyes ears face and back-parts And how is it that he is never called a Spirit in plain words but in this Text by our Saviour Answ 'T is true many parts of the Body and natural affections of the human nature are reported of God in Scripture Head * Dan. 7.9 Eyes and Eye-lids * Psal 11.4 Apple of the Eye Mouth c. our Affections also Grief Joy Anger c. But it is to be considered 1. That this is in condescension to our weakness God being desirous to make himself known to Man * Loquitur lex secund ling. filiorum hominum was the H. saying whom he created for his Glory humbles as it were his own Nature to such representations as may sute and assists the capacity of the Creature Since by the condition of our nature nothing erects a notion of it self in our understanding but as it is conducted in by our sence God hath served himself of those things which are most exposed to our sence most obvious to our understandings to give us some acquaintance with his own Nature and those things which otherwise we were not capable of having any notion of As our Souls are linkt with our Bodies so our knowledge is linkt with our sence that we can scarce imagin any thing at first but under a corporeal form and figure till we come by great attention to the Object to make by the help of reason a separation of the spiritual substance from the corporeal fancy and consider it in its own nature We are not able to conceive a Spirit without some kind of resemblance to something below it nor understand the actions of a Spirit without considering the operations of a human Body in its several Members As the Glories of another Life are signified to us by the pleasures of this so the Nature of God by a gracious condescension to our capacities is signified to us by a likeness to our own The more familiar the things are to us which God uses to this purpose the more proper they are to teach us what he intends by them Answ 2. All such representations are to signifie the acts of God as they hear some likeness to those which we perform by those members he ascribes to himself So that those members ascribed to him rather note his visible operations to us than his invisible Nature and signifie that God doth some works like to those which men do by the assistance of those Organs of their Bodies * Amyral de Trin. p. 218. 219. So the wisdom of God is called his Eye because he knows that with his mind which we see with our eyes The efficiency of God is called his Hand and Arm because as we act with our hands so doth God with his Power The divine Efficacies are signified By his eyes and ears we understand his Omniscience by his face the manifestation of his Favour by his mouth the revelation of his Will by his nostrils the acceptation of our Prayers by his bowels the tenderness of his Compassion by his heart the sincerity of his Affections by his hand the strength of his Power by his feet the ubiquity of his Presence And in this he intends instruction and comfort By his eyes he signifies his watchfulness over us By his ears his readiness to hear the crys of the oppressed * Psal 34.15 By his Arm his
his nature in our Spirits rather than our bodies * Petav. Theol. Dog Tom. 1. lib. 2. cap. 1. pa. 104. It was a fancy of Eugubinus that when God set upon the actual Creation of man he took a bodily form for an Exemplar of that which he would express in his work and therefore that the words of Moses * Gen. 1.26 are to be understood of the body of man because there was in Man such a shape which God had then assumed To let alone Gods forming himself a body for that work as a groundless fancy Man can in no wise be said to be the image of God in regard of the substance of his body but beasts may as well be said to be made in the Image of God whose bodies have the same Members as the body of Man for the most part and excell Men in the acuteness of the senses and swiftness of their motion agility of body greatness of strength and in some kind of ingenuities also wherein Man hath been a Scholar to the brutes and beholden to their skill The Soul comes nearest the nature of God as being a Spiritual substance yet considered singly in regard of its Spiritual substance cannot well be said to be the image of God A beast because of its Corporeity may as well be called the image of a Man for there is a greater similitude between man and a brute in the rank of bodies than there can be between God and the highest Angels in the rank of Spirits If it doth not consist in the substance of the Soul much less can it in any similitude of the body This Image consisted partly in the state of man as he had dominion over the Creatures partly in the nature of man as he was an intelligent being and thereby was capable of having a grant of that Dominion but principally in the conformity of the Soul with God in the frame of his Spirit and the holiness of his actions Not at all in the figure and form of his body Physically tho morally there might be as there was a rectitude in the body as an instrument to conform to the holy motions of the soul as the holiness of the soul sparkled in the actions and members of the body If man were like God because he hath a body whatsoever hath a body hath some resemblance to God and may be said to be in part his image But the truth is the essence of all Creatures cannot be an image of the immense essence of God 2. If God be a pure Spirit T is unreasonable to frame any Image or picture of God * Jamblyc protrept cap. 21. Symb. 24. Some Heathens have been wiser in this than some Christians Pythagoras forbad his Scholars to engrave any shape of him upon a Ring because he was not to be comprehended by sense but conceived only in our minds our hands are as unable to fashion him as our eyes to see him * Austin de Civitat Dei lib. 4. cap. 31. out of Varro The ancient Romans worshipped their Gods 170. years before any material representations of them * Tacitus and the Ancient Idolatrous Germans thought it a wicked thing to represent God in a human shape Yet some and those no Romanists labour to defend the making Images of God in the resemblance of man because he is so represented in Scripture he may be * Gerhard loc Comun vol. 4. Exegesis de naturâ Dei cap. 8. § 1. saith one conceived so in our minds and figured so to our sense If this were a good reason why may he not be pictured as a Lyon Horn Eagle Rock since he is under such Metaphors shadowed to us The same ground there is for the one as for the other What tho man be a nobler Creature God hath no more the body of a man than that of an Eagle and some perfections in other Creatures represent some excellencies in his nature and actions which cannot be figur'd by a human shape as strength by the Lyon swiftness and readiness by the wings of the Bird. But God hath absolutely prohibited the making any Image whatsoever of him and that with terrible threatnings Exod. 20.5 I the Lord am a jealous God visiting the iniquities of the Fathers upon their Children and Deut. 5.8 9. After God had given the Israelites the Commandment wherein he forbad them to have any other Gods before him he forbids all figuring of him by the hand of man * Amiraut Morale Christiene Tom. 1. p. 294. not only Images but any likness of him either by things in Heaven in the earth or in the water How often doth he discover his indignation by the Prophets against them that offer to mould him in a Creature form This law was not to serve a particular dispensation or to endure a particular time but it was a declaration of his Will invariable in all places and all times being founded upon the immutable nature of his being and therefore agreeable to the Law of nature otherwise not chargeable upon the Heathens And therefore when God had declared his nature and his works in a stately and Majestick eloquence he demands of them To whom they would liken him or what likeness they would compare unto him Isa 40.18 Where they could find any thing that would be a lively image and resemblance of his infinite excellency Founding it upon the infiniteness of his nature which necessarily implies the Spirituality of it God is infinitely above any Statue and those that think to draw God by a stroak of a pensil or form him by the engravings of Art are more stupid than the Statues themselves To shew the unreasonableness of it Consider 1. T is impossible to fashion any image of God If our more capacious Souls cannot grasp his nature our weaker sense cannot frame his image T is more possible of the two to comprehend him in our minds than to frame him in an image to our sense He inhabits inaccessible light As it is impossible for the eye of man to see him t is impossible for the art of man to paint him upon walls and carve him out of wood None knows him but himself none can describe him but himself * Cocceius sum Theol. cap. 9. pa. 47. § 35. Can we draw a figure of our own Souls and express that part of our selves wherein we are most like to God Can we extend this to any bodily figure and divide it into parts How can we deal so with the Original Copy whence the first draught of our Souls was taken and which is infinitely more Spiritual than Men or Angels No Corporeal thing can represent a Spiritual substance there is no proportion in nature between them God is a simple infinite immense eternal invisible incorruptible being A Statue is a compounded finite limited temporal visible and corruptible body God is a living Spirit but a Statue nor sees nor hears nor perceives any thing But suppose God
had a body t is impossible to mould an Image of it in the true glory of that body Can the Statue of an excellent Monarch represent the Majesty and air of his Countenance tho made by the skilfullest workman in the world If God had a body in some measure suted to his excellency were it possible for Man to make an exact Image of him who cannot picture the light heat motion magnitude and dazling property of the Sun The excellency of any Corporeal nature of the least Creature the temper instinct artifice are beyond the power of a Carving tool much more is God 2. To make any Corporeal representations of God is unworthy of God 'T is a disgrace to his nature Whosoever thinks a Carnal corruptible Image to be fit for a representation of God renders God no better than a Carnal and Corporeal being 'T is a kind of debasing an Angel who is a Spiritual nature to represent him in a bodily shape who is as far removed from any fleshliness as Heaven from Earth much more to degrade the glory of the Divine nature to the lineaments of a man The whole stock of Images is but a lie of God Jer. 10 8 14. A Doctrin of vanities and falsehood It represents him in a false garb to the world and sinks his glory into that of a corruptible Creature * Rom. 1.25 It impairs the reverence of God in the minds of men and by degrees may debase mens apprehensions of God * Rom. 1.22 and be a means to make them believe he is such a one as themselves and that not being free from the figure he is not also free from the imperfections of their bodies Corporeal Images of God were the fruits of base imaginations of him and as they sprung from them so they contribute to a greater corruption of the notions of the Divine nature The Heathens begun their first representations of him by the Image of a corruptible Man then of birds till they descended not only to four footed beasts but creeping things even Serpents as the Apostle seems to intimate in his enumeration Rom. 1.23 It had been more honourable to have continued in human representations of him than have sunk so low as beasts and Serpents the baser Images tho the first had been infinitely unworthy of him he being more above a man though the noblest Creature than Man is above a Worm a Toad or the most despicable creeping thing upon the Earth To think we can make an Image of God of a piece of Marble or an Ingot of Gold is a greater debasing of him than it would be of a great Prince if you should represent him in the statue of a Frog When the Israelites represented God by a Calf 't is said they sinned a great sin Exod. 32.31 And the sin of Jeroboam who intended only a representation of God by the Calves at Dan and Bethel is called more emphatically * Hosea 10.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wickedness of your wickedness the very skum and dreggs of wickedness As men debased God by this so God debased men for this he degraded the Israelites into Captivity under the worst of their Enemies and punished the Heathens with spiritual Judgments as uncleaness through the lusts of their own hearts Rom. 1.24 which is repeated again in other expressions v. 26 27. as a meet recompence for their disgracing the spiritual nature of God Had God been like to Man they had not offended in it But I mention this to shew a probable reason of those base lusts which are in the midst of us that have scarce been exceeded by any Nation viz. the unworthy and unspiritual conceits of God which are as much a debasing of him as material Images were when they were more rife in the world and may be as well the cause of those spiritual Judgments upon men as the worshipping molten and carved Images were the cause of the same upon the Heathen 3. Yet this is natural to Man Wherein we may see the contrariety of Man to God Though God be a Spirit yet there is nothing Man is more prone to than to represent him under a corporeal form The most famous Guides of the Heathen world have fashioned him not only according to the more honourable Images of men but beastialized him in the form of a Brute The Egyptians whose Country was the School of Learning to Greece were notoriously guilty of this brutishness in worshiping an Ox for an Image of their God and the Philistines their Dagon in a figure composed of the Image of a Woman and a Fish * Daille super Cor. 1.10 Ser. 3. Such representations were ancient in the Oriental parts The Gods of Laban that he accuseth Jacob of stealing from him are supposed to be little figures of men * Gen. 31.30.34 Such was the Israelites Golden-Calf their worship was not terminated on the Image but they worshipped the true God under that representation They could not be so brutish as to call a Calf their Deliverer and give so him great a Title these be thy Gods oh Israel which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt Exod. 32.4 or that which they knew belonged to the true God the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob. * Gen. 3.16 17. They knew the Calf to be formed of their Ear-rings but they had consecrated it to God as a representation of him Though they chose the form of the Egyptian Idol yet they knew that Apis Osiris and Isis the Gods the Egyptians adored in that figure had not wrought their Redemption from Bondage but would have used their force had they been possessed of any to have kept them under the Yoke rather than have freed them from it The Feast also which they celebrated before that Image is called by Aaron the Feast of the Lord Exod. 32.5 a Feast to Jehovah the incommunicable name of the Creator of the world 'T is therefore evident that both the Priest and the People pretended to serve the true God not any false Divinity of Egypt That God who had rescued them from Egypt with a mighty hand divided the Red-Sea before them destroyed their Enemies conducted them fed them by miracle spoken to them from Mount Sinai and amazed them by his Thundrings and Lightnings when he instructed them by his Law a God they could not so soon forget And with this representing God by that Image they are charged by the Psalmist Psal 106.19 20. they made a Calf in Horeb and changed their glory into the similitude of an Ox that eateth Grass They changed their glory that is God the glory of Israel so that they took this figure for the Image of the true God of Israel their own God not the God of any other Nation in the world Jeroboam intended no other by his Calves but Symbols of the presence of the true God instead of the Ark and the Propitiatory which remained among the Jews We see the inclination
and as a stone in things relating to the Donor of them as a man with his mind about him in the affairs of the world as a Beast without reason in his acts towards God If a man did not employ his reason in other things he would be an unprofitable Creature in the world If he do not employ his spiritual faculties in worship he denies them the proper end and use for which they were given him 't is a practical denial that God hath given him a Soul and that God hath any right to the exercise of it If there were no worship appointed by God in the world the natural inclination of man to some kind of Religion would be in vain and if our inward faculties were not employed in the duties of Religion they would be in vain The true end of God in the endowment of us with them would be defeated by us as much as lies in us if we did not serve him with that which we have from him solely at his own cost As no man can with reason conclude that the Rest commanded on the Sabbath and the Sanctification of it was only a rest of the body that had been performed by the Beasts as well as Men but some higher end was aimed at for the rational Creature So no man can think that the Command for worship terminated only in the presence of the Body that God should give the Command to Man as a reasonable Creature and expect no other service from him than that of a Brute God did not require a worship from man for any want he had or any essential honour that could accrue to him but that men might testifie their gratitude to him and dependance on him 'T is the most horrid ingratitude not to have lively and deep sentiments of gratitude after such obligations and not to make those due acknowledgments that are proper for a rational Creature Religion is the highest and choicest act of a reasonable Creature No Creature under Heaven is capable of it that wants reason As it is a violation of reason not to worship God so it is no less a violation of reason not to worship him with the Heart and Spirit It is a high dishonour to God and defeats him not only of the service due to him from Man but that which is due to him from all the Creatures Every Creature as it is an effect of Gods Power and Wisdom doth passively worship God that is it doth afford matter of adoration to man that hath reason to collect it and return it where it is due Without the exercise of the Soul we can no more hand it to God than without such an exercise we can gather it from the Creature So that by this neglect the Creatures are restrained from answering their chief end they cannot pay any service to God without man nor can man without the employment of his rational faculties render a homage to God any more than beasts can This engagement of our inward power stands firm and unviolable let the modes of worship be what they will or the changes of them by the Soveraign Authority of God never so frequent this could not expire or be changed as long as the nature of Man endured As Man had not been capable of a Command for Worship unless he had been endued with spiritual faculties so he is not active in a true practice of Worship unless they be imployed by him in it The constitution of Man makes this manner of worship perpetually obligatory and the oblation can never cease till man cease to be a Creature furnisht with such faculties In our worship therefore if we would act like rational Creatures we should extend all the powers of our Souls to the utmost pitch and essay to have apprehensions of God equal to the excellency of his Nature which though we may attempt we can never attain Reason 3. Without this engagement of our Spirits no act is an act of worship True worship being an acknowledgment of God and the perfections of his Nature results only from the Soul that being only capable of knowing God and those perfections which are the object and motive of worship The posture of the body is but to testifie the inward temper and affection of the mind If therefore it testifies what it is not 't is a lye and no worship The cringes a Beast may be taught to make to an Altar may as well be called Worship since a man thinks as little of that God he pretends to honour as the beast doth of the Altar to which he bowes Worship is a reverent remembrance of God and giving some honour to him with the intention of the Soul It cannot justly have the name of Worship that wants the essential part of it 'T is an ascribing to God the glory of his Nature an owning subjection and obedience to him as our soveraign Lord This is as impossible to be performed without the Spirit as that there can be life and motion in a body without a Soul 'T is a drawing neer to God not in regard of his essential presence so all things are neer to God but in an acknowledgement of his excellency which is an act of the Spirit without this the worst of men in a place of worship are as neer to God as the best The necessity of the conjunction of our Soul ariseth from the nature of worship which being the most serious thing we can be employed in the highest converse with the highest object requires the choicest temper of Spirit in the performance That cannot be an act of worship which is not an act of Piety and Vertue but there is no act of vertue done by the members of the Body without the concurrence of the Powers of the Soul We may as well call the presence of a dead Carcass in a place of worship an act of Religion as the presence of a living body without an intent Spirit The separation of the Soul from one is natural the other moral that renders the body lifeless but this renders the act loathsome to God As the being of the Soul gives life to the Body so the operation of the Soul gives life to the actions As he cannot be a man that wants the form of a man a rational Soul so that cannot be a worship that wants an essential part the act of the Spirit God will not vouchsafe any acts of man so noble a title without the requisite qualifications Hos 5.6 They shall go with their Flocks and their Herds to seek the Lord c. A multitude of Lambs and Bullocks for Sacrifice to appease Gods Anger God would not give it the title of worship though instituted by himself when it wanted the qualities of such a service The Spirit of Whoredom was in the midst of them v. 4. In the judgment of our Savior it is a vain worship when the Traditions of Men are taught for the Doctrins of God * Mat. 15.9 and no
up and the Devil stands ready to tempt us to self-confidence You know how it was with Paul * 2 Cor. 12. from v. 1. to v. 7. His buffetings were occasions to render him more spiritual than his raptures because more humble God suffers those wandrings starts and distractions to prevent our spiritual pride which is as a Worm at the root of spiritual worship and mind us of the dusty frame of our Spirits how easily they are blown away As he sends sickness to put us in mind of the shortness of our breath and the easiness to lose it God would make us ashamed of our selves in his presence that we may own that what is good in any duty is meerly from his Grace and Spirit and not from our selves That with Paul we may cry out by Grace we are what we are and by Grace we do what we do We may be hereby made sensible that God can alway find something in our exactest worship as a ground of denying us the successful fruit of it If we cannot stand upon our duties for Salvation what can we bottom upon in our selves If therefore they are occasions to make us out of love with any righteousness of our own to make us break our hearts for them because we cannot keep them out If we mourn for them as our sins and count them our great afflictions we have attained that brokeness which is a choice ingredient in a spiritual Sacrifice Though we have been disturbed by them yet we are not robbed of the success we may behold an answer of our worship in our humiliation in spite of all of them 2. For the baseness of our Nature These unsteady motions help us to discern that heap of vermin that breeds in our nature Would any man think he had such an averseness to his Creator and Benefactor such an unsutableness to him such an estrangedness from him were it not for his inspection into his distracted frames God suffers this to hang over us as a Rod of Correction to discover and fetch out the folly of our hearts Could we imagin our natures so highly contrary to that God who is so infinitely amiable so desirable an Object or that there should be so much folly and madness in the heart as to draw back from God in those services which God hath appointed as pipes through which to communicate his grace to convey himself his love and goodness to the Creature If therefore we have a deep sense of and strong reflections upon our base nature and bewail that mass of aversness which lies there and that fulness of irreverence towards the God of our mercies the Object of our worship 't is a blessed improvement of our wandrings and diversions Certainly if any Israelite had brought a lame and rotten Lamb to be sacrificed to God and afterward had bewailed it and laid open his heart to God in a sensible and humble confession of it That Repentance had been a better Sacrifice and more acceptable in the sight of God than if he had brought a sound and a living Offering 2. When they are occasions to make us prize duties of worship When we argue as rationally we may that they are of singular use since our corrupt hearts and a malicious Devil doth chiefly endeavour to hinder us from them And that we find we have not those gadding thoughts when we are upon worldly business or upon any sinful design which may dishonour God and wound our Souls This is a sign Sin and Satan dislike worship for he is too subtle a Spirit to oppose that which would further his Kingdom As it is an argument the Scripture is the Word of God because the wickedness of the world doth so much oppose it so it is a ground to believe the profitableness and excellency of worship because Satan and our own unruly hearts do so much interrupt us in it If therefore we make this use of our cross steps in worship to have a greater value for such duties more affections to them and desires to be frequent in them Our hearts are growing spiritual under the weights that would depress them to carnality 3. When we take a rise from hence to have heavenly admirations of the graciousness of God That he should pity and pardon so many slight addresses to him and give any gracious returns to us Though men have foolish rangings every day and in every duty yet free grace is so tender as not to punish them Gen. 8.21 And the Lord smelt a sweet savour and the Lord said in his heart I will not curse the Ground for mans sake for the imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth 'T is observable that this was just after a Sacrifice which Noah offered to God v. 20. But probably not without infirmities common to human nature which may be grounded upon the reason God gives that though he had destroyed the Earth before because of the evil of mans imaginations Gen. 6.5 He still found evil imaginations He doth not say in the heart of Cham or others of Noah's Family but in mans heart including Noah also who had both the Judgments of God upon the former world and the mercy of God in his own preservation before his eyes yet God sawevil imaginations rooted in the nature of Man and though it were so yet he would be merciful If therefore we can after finding our hearts so vagrant in worship have real frames of thankfulness that God hath spared us and be hightned in our admirations at Gods giving us any fruit of such a distracted worship we take advantage from them to be raised into an Evangelical frame which consists in the humble acknowledgments of the grace of God When David takes a review of those tumultuous passions which had rufled his mind and possessed him with unbelieving notions of God in the persons of his Prophets * Psal 116.11 how high doth his Soul mount in astonishment and thankfulness to God for his mercy * verse 12. Notwithstanding his distrust God did graciously perform his promise and answer his desire Then it is what shall I render to the Lord His heart was more affected for it because it had been so passionate in former distrusts 'T is indeed a ground of wondring at the patience of the Spirit of God that he should guide our hearts when they are so apt to start out as it is the patience of a Master to guide the hand of his Scholar while he mixes his writing with many blots 'T is not one or two infirmities the Spirit helps us in and helps over but many * Rom. 8.26 'T is a sign of a spiritual heart when he can take a rise to bless God for the renewing and blowing up his affections in the midst of so many incursions from Satan to the contrary and the readiness of the heart too much to comply with them 4. When we take occasion from thence to prize the mediation of Christ The
was so as that he never began Is to come so as that he never shall end By whom all things are what they are who hath both eternal knowledge to remember our service and eternal goodness to reward It. A DISCOURSE UPON THE IMMUTABILITY OF GOD. Psalm 102.26 27. They shall perish but thou shalt endure yea all of them shall wax old as a Garment as a Vesture shalt thou change them and they shall be changed But thou art the same and thy years shall have no end THIS Psalm contains a Complaint of a People pressed with a great Calamity some think of the Jewish Church in Babylon others think the Psalmist doth here personate Mankind lying under a state of corruption because he wishes for the coming of the Messiah to accomplish that Redemption promised by God and needed by them Indeed the title of the Psalm is a Prayer of the Afflicted when he is overwhelmed and pours out his complaint before the Lord Whether afflicted with the sense of corruption or with the sense of oppression And the Redemption by the Messiah which the ancient Church looked upon as the fountain of their Deliverance from a sinful or a servile Bondage is in this Psalm spoken of A set time appointed for the discovery of his mercy to Sion v. 13. An appearance in glory to build up Sion v. 16. The loosing of the Prisoner by Redemption and them that are appointed to Death v. 20. The calling of the Gentiles v. 22. And the latter part of the Psalm wherein are the verse I have read are applied to Christ Heb. 1. Whatsoever the design of the Psalm might be many things are intermingled that concern the Kingdom of the Messiah and Redemption by Christ Some make three parts of the Psalm 1. A Petition plainly delivered v. 1.2 Hear my Prayer oh Lord and let my cry come unto thee c. 2. The Petition strongly and argumentatively enforced and pleaded v. 3. from the misery of the Petitioner in himself and his reproach from his Enemies 3. An acting of Faith in the expectation of an Answer in the general Redemption promised v. 12 13. But thou oh Lord shalt endure for ever thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion The Heathen shall fear thy Name The first part is the Petition pleaded the second part is the Petition answered in an assurance that there should in time be a full deliverance * Pareus The design of the Pen-man is to confirm the Church in the truth of the Divine Promises that though the foundations of the World should be ript up and the Heavens clatter together and the whole Fabrick of them be unpinn'd and fall to pieces the firmest parts of it dissolved yet the Church should continue in its stability because it stands not upon the changeableness of Creatures but is built upon the immutable Rock of the truth God which is as little subject to change as his Essence They shall perish thou shalt change them As he had before ascribed to God the foundation of Heaven and Earth * verse 25. so he ascribes to God here the destruction of them Both the beginning and end of the World are here ascertained There is nothing indeed from the present appearance of things that can demonstrate the cessation of the world The Heaven and Earth stand firm the motions of the heavenly Bodies are the same their beautie is not decayed Individuals corrupt but the Species and Kinds remain The Successions of the Year observe their due order but the Sin of Man renders the change of the present appearance of the world necessary to accomplish the design of God for the glory of his Elect. The Heavens do not naturally perish as some fancied an old age of the world wherein it must necessarily decay as the Bodies of Animals do or that the parts of the Heavens are broken off by their rubbing one against another in their motion and falling to the Earth are the Seeds of those things that grow among us * Plin. Hist lib. 2. cap. 3. The Earth and Heavens He names here the most stable parts of the world and the most beautiful parts of the Creation those that are freest from corruptibility and change to illustrate thereby the Immutability of God that though the Heavens and Earth have a Prerogative of fixedness above other parts of the world and the Creatures that reside below the Heavens remain the same as they were created and the Center of the Earth retains its fixedness and are as beautiful and fresh in their age as they were in their youth many years ago notwithstanding the change of the Elements Fire and Water being often turned into Air so that there may remain but little of that Air which was first created by reason of the continual transmutation yet this firmness of the Earth and Heavens is not to be regarded in comparison of the unmoveableness and fixedness of the Being of God As their beauty comes short of the glory of his Being so doth their firmness come short of his stability Some by Heavens and Earth understand the Creatures which reside in the Earth and those which are in the Air which is called Heaven often in Scripture but the ruin and fall of these being seen every day had been no fit illustration of the unchangeableness of God They shall perish they shall be changed 1. They may perish say some they have it not from themselves that they do not perish but from thee who didst endue them with an incorruptible nature They shall perish if thou speakest the word Thou canst with as much ease destroy them as thou didst create them But the Psalmist speaks not of their possibility but the certainty of their perishing 2. They shall perish in their qualities and motion not in their substance say others They shall cease from that motion which is designed properly for the generation and corruption of things in the Earth but in regard of their substance and beauty they shall remain As when the strings or Wheels of a Clock or Watch are taken off the material parts remain though the motion of it and the use for discovering the time of the day ceaseth * Coccei in loc To perish doth not signify alway a falling into nothing an annihilation by which both the matter and the form are destroyed but a ceasing of the present apearance of them a ceasing to be what they now are as a man is said to perish when he dies whereas the better part of man doth not cease to be The figure of the Body moulders away and the matter of it returns to Dust but the Soul being immortal ceaseth not to act when the Body by reason of the absence of the Soul is uncapable of acting So the Heavens shall perish the appearance they now have shall vanish and a more glorious and incorruptible frame be erected by the power and goodness of God The dissolution of Heaven and Earth is meant by the
righteous person to keep the truth Isa 26.2 And it is as positively said that he that abides not in the Doctrine of Christ hath not God 2 Epist John 9. but he that doth hath both the Father and the Son So much of uncertainty so much of nature so much of firmness in duty so much of Grace We can never honour God unless we finish his work as Christ did not glorifie God but in finishing the work God gave him to do * John 17.4 The nearer the world comes to an end the more is Gods immutability seen in his promises and predictions and the more must our unchangeableness be seen in our obedience Heb. 10.23 25. Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering and so much the more as you see the day approaching The Christian Jews were to be the more tenacious of their faith the nearer they saw the day approaching the day of Jerusalems destruction prophesied of by Daniel * Dan. 9.26 which accomplishment must be a great argument to establish the Christian Jews in the profession of Christ to be the Messiah because the destruction of the City was not to be before the cutting off the Messiah Let us be therefore constant in our profession and service of God and not suffer our selves to be driven from him by the ill usage or flatter'd from him by the Caresses of the world 1. T is reasonable If God be unchangeable in doing us good it is reason we should be unchangeable in doing him service If he assure us that he is our God our I am he would also that we should be his people His we are If he declare himself constant in his promises he expects we should be so in our obedience As a spouse we should be unchangeably faithful to him as a Husband As subjects have an unchangeable allegiance to him as our Prince He would not have us faithful to him for an hour or a day but to the death * Rev. 2.10 And it is reason we should be his and if we be his Children imitate him in his constancy of his holy purposes 2. T is our glory and interest To be a reed shaken with every wind is no commendation among men and t is less a ground of praise with God It was Jobs glory that he held fast his integrity * Job 1.22 In all this Job sinned not In all this which whole Cities and Kingdoms would have thought ground enough of high exclamations against God And also against the temptation of his Wife he retained his integrity Job 2.9 Dost thou still retain thy integrity The Devil who by Gods permission stript him of his goods and health yet could not strip him of his grace As a Traveller when the wind and snow beats in his face wraps his cloak more closely about him to preserve that and himself Better we had never made profession than afterwards to abandon it such a withering profession serves for no other use than to aggravate the crime if any of us fly like a coward or revolt like a Traytor What profit will it be to a Souldier if he hath withstood many assaults and turn his back at last If we would have God Crown us with an immutable glory we must Crown our beginnings with a happy perseverance Rev. 2.10 Be faithful to the Death and I will give thee a Crown of life Not as tho this were the cause to merit it but a necessary condition to possess it Constancy in good is accompanied with an immutability of Glory 3. By an unchangeable disposition to good we should begin the happiness of Heaven upon Earth This is the perfection of blessed Spirits those that are nearest to God as Angels and glorified Souls they are immutable Not indeed by nature but by grace yet not only by a necessity of grace but a liberty of Will Grace will not let them change and that grace doth animate their Wills that they would not change an immutable God fills their understandings and affections and gives satisfaction to their desires The Saints when they were below tried other things and found them deficient But now they are so fully satisfied with the beatifick vision that if Satan should have entrance among the Angels and Sons of God 't is not likely he should have any influence upon them he could not present to their understandings any thing that could either at the first glance or upon a deliberate view be preferrable to what they enjoy and are fixed in Well then let us be immoveable in the Knowledge and Love of God 'T is the delight of God to see his Creatures resemble him in what they are able Let not our Affections to him be as Jonah's Goard growing up in one Night and withering the next Let us not only fight a good Fight but do so till we have finished our course and imitate God in an unchangeableness of holy purposes and to that purpose examin our selves daily what fixedness we have arrived unto And to prevent any temptation to a revolt let us often possess our minds with thoughts of the immutability of Gods Nature and Will which like Fire under Water will keep a good matter boiling up in us and make it both retain and increase its heat 4. Let this Doctrin teach us to have recourse to God and aim at a near conjunction with him When our Spirits begin to flag and a cold aguish temper is drawing upon us let us go to him who can only fix our hearts and furnish us with a Ballast to render them stedfast As he is only immutable in his Nature so he is the only Principle of Immutability as well as Being in the Creature Without his Grace we shall be as changeable in our appearances as a Chamelion and in our turnings as the Wind. When Peter trusted in himself he changed to the worse It was his Masters recourse to God for him that preserved in him a reducing Principle which changed him again for the better and fixed him in it * Luke 22.32 It will be our Interest to be in conjunction with him that moves not about with the Heavens nor is turned by the force of Nature nor changed by the accidents in the world but sits in the Heavens moving all things by his powerful Arm according to his infinite Skill While we have him for our God we have his Immutability as well as any other Perfection of his Nature for our advantage The nearer we come to him the more stability we shall have in our selves the further from him the more lyable to change The Line that is nearest to the place where it is first fixed is least subject to motion the further it is stretched from it the weaker it is and more liable to be shaken Let us also affect those things which are nearest to him in this perfection the righteousness of Christ that shall never wear out and the graces of the Spirit that shall never burn
cannot be ignorant of any Creature which he is the cause of so that he knows all things not by an understanding of them but by an understanding of himself by understanding his own Power as the efficient of them his own Will as the orderer of them his own Goodness as the adorner and beautifier of them his own Wisdom as the disposer of them and his own Holiness to which many of their actions are contrary * Kendall against Goodwin of Foreknowledg As he sees all things possible in his own Power because he is able to produce them so he sees all things future in his own Will decreeing to effect them if they be good or Decreeing to permit them if they be Evil. In this Glass he sees what he will give Being to and what he will suffer to fall into a deficiency without looking out of himself or borrowing Knowledg from his Creatures he knows all things in himself And thus his Knowledg is more noble and of a higher elevation than ours or the knowledg of any Creature can be he knows all things by one comprehension of the causes in himself Proposition 2. God knows all things by one act of intuition This the Schools call an intuitive knowledg This follows upon the other for if he know by his own Essence he knows all things by one act there would be otherwise a division in his Essence a first and a last a nearness and a distance As what he made he made by one word so what he sees he pierceth into by one glance from Eternity to Eternity As he Wills all things by one act of his Will so he knows all things by one act of his Understanding he knows not some things discursively from other things nor knows one thing successively after another As by one act he imparts Essence to things so by one act he knows the nature of things 1. He doth not know by Discourse as we do That is By deducing one thing from another and from common notions drawing out other rational conclusions and arguing one thing from another and springing up various consequences from some Principle assented to but God stands in no need of reasonings the making inferences and abstracting things would be stains in the infinite Perfection of God here would be a mixture of knowledg and ignorance while he knew the Principle he would not know the consequence and conclusion till he had actually deduc'd it one thing would be known after another and so he would have an ignorance and then a knowledg and there would be different conceptions in God and knowledg would be multiplyed according to the multitude of objects as it is in humane Understandings But God knows all things before they did exist and never was ignorant of them Acts 15.18 known unto God are all his Works from the beginning of the World He therefore knows them all at once the knowledg of one thing was not before another nor depended upon another as it doth in the way of Humane reasoning Suarez vol. 1. de Deo lib 3. cap. 2. p. 133 134. Tho' indeed some make a vertual Discourse in God that is tho' God hath a simple knowledg yet it doth vertually contain a Discourse by the flowing of one knowledg from another as from the knowledg of his own Power he knows what things are possible to be made by him and from the knowledg of himself he passes to the knowledg of the Creatures but this is only according to our Conception and because of our weakness they are apprehended as two distinct acts in God one of which is the reason of another As we say that one Attribute is the reason of another as his Mercy may be said to be the reason of his Patience and his Omnipresence to be the reason of the knowledg of present things done in the World God indeed by one simple act knows himself and the Creatures but when that Act whereby he knows himself is conceived by us to pass to the knowledg of the Creatures we must not understand it to be a new Act distinct from the other but the same act upon different terms or objects such an order is in our understandings and conceptions not in God's 2. Nor doth he know successively as we do That is not by Drops one thing after another This follows from the former a knowledg of all things without Discourse is a Knowledg without Succession Gamach in Aquin. q. 14. cap. 1. p. 119. The knowledg of one thing is not in God before another one act of knowledg doth not beget another in regard of the objects one thing is before another one year before another one Generation of men before another one is the cause the other is the effect In the Creatures there is such a Succession and God knows there will be such a Succession but there is no such order in Gods knowledg for he knows all those Successions by one glance without any succession of knowledg in himself Man in his view of things must turn sometimes his Body sometimes only his Eyes he cannot see all the Contents of a Letter at once and tho' he beholds all the lines in the page of a Book at once and a whole Country in a Map yet to know what is contain'd in them he must turn his eye from word to word and line to line and so spin out one thing after another by several acts and motions We behold a great part of the Sea at once * saith Epiphanius but not all the dimensions of it for to know the length of the Sea we move our eyes one way to see the breadth of it we turn our eyes another way to behold the depth of it we have another motion of them And when we cast our eyes up to Heaven we seem to receive in at an instant the whole tent of the Hemisphere yet there is but one object the eye can attentively pitch upon and we cannot distinctly view what we see in a lump without various motions of our eyes which is not done without succession of Time Amyrant morale chresti Tom. 3. p. 137. And certainly the Understanding of Angels is bounded according to the measure of their Beings so that it cannot extend it self at one time to a quantity of objects to make a distinct application of them but the objects must present themselves one by one But God is all Eye all Understanding as there is no succession in his Essence so there is none in his Knowledg his understanding in the nature and in the act is infinite as it is in the Text. He therefore sees Eternally and Universally all things by one act without any motion much less various motions the various changes of things in their substance qualities places and relations withdraw not any thing from his Eye nor bring any new thing to his Knowledg he doth not upon consideration of present things turn his mind from past or when he beholds
thing in the World as it is that he should be mistaken in his own Essence for knowing himself comprehensively he must know all other things infallibly Since he is Essentially Omniscient he is no more capable of error in his Understanding than of Imperfection in his Essence his Counsels are as unerring as his Essence is perfect and his knowledg as infallible as his Essence is free from defect Again since God knows all things with a knowledg of Vision because he Wills them his Knowledg must be as infallible as his purpose now his purpose will certainly be effected what he hath thought shall come to pass and what he hath purposed shall stand Isa 14.24 His Counsel shall stand and he will do all his pleasure Isa 46.10 There may be interruptions of nature the foundations of it may be out of course but there can be no bar upon the Author of nature he hath an infinite power to carry on and perfect the resolves of his own Will he can effect what he pleases by a Word Speech is one of the least motions yet when God said let there be Light there was Light arising from Darkness No reason can be given why God knows a thing to be but because he infallibly Wills it to be Again Suarez Vol. 2● p. 228. The Schools make this difference between the knowledg of the good and bad Angels that the good are never deceived for that is repugnant to their Blessed State for deceit is an evil and an imperfection inconsistent with that perfect Blessedness the good Angels are possessed of and would it not much more be a stain upon the Blessedness of that God that is Blessed forever to be subject to deceit His knowledg therefore is not an Opinion for an Opinion is uncertain a man knows not what to think but leans to one part of the Question propos'd rather than to the other If things did not come to pass therefore as God knows them his knowledg would be imperfect and since he knows by his Essence his Essence also would be imperfect if God were expos'd to any Deceit in his Knowledg he knows by himself who is the highest Truth and therefore it is impossible he should err in his Understanding Proposition 6. God knows immutably His Understanding else could not be infinite every thing and every act that is mutable is finite it hath its bounds for there is a term from which it changeth and a term to which it changes Tileni Syntagina Part 1. Disp 13. Thel 13. There is a change in the Understanding when we gain the knowledg of a thing which was unknown to us before or when we actually consider a thing which we did not know before tho' we had the Principles of the Knowledg of it or when we know that distinctly which we before knew confusedly None of these can be ascribed to God without a manifest disparagement of his infiniteness Our knowledg indeed is alway arriving to us or flowing from us we pass from one degree to another from worse to better or from better to worse but God loses nothing by the Ages that are run nor will gain any thing by the Ages that are to come If there were a variation in the knowledg of God by the daily and hourly Changes in the World he would grow wiser than he was he was not then perfectly wise before A Change in the objects known infers not any change in the understanding exercised about them the Wheel moves round the Spokes that are lowest are presently highest and presently return to be low again but the eye that beholds them changes not with the motion of the Wheels Gods knowledg admits no more of increase or decrease than his Essence doth Since God knows by his Essence and the Essence of God is God himself his knowledg must be void of any Change The knowledg of possible things arising from the knowledg of his own power cannot be changed unless his power be chang'd and God become weak and impotent the knowledg of future things cannot be chang'd because that knowledg ariseth from his Will which is irreversible the Counsel of the Lord that shall stand Prov. 19.21 so that if God can never decay into weakness and never turn to inconstancy there can be no variation of his knowledg He knows what he can do and he knows what he will do and both these being immutable his knowledg must consequently be so too It was not necessary that this or that Creature should be and therefore it was not necessary that God should know this or that Creature with a knowledg of Vision but after the Will of God had determin'd the existence of this or that Creature his knowledg being then determin'd to this or that object did necessarily continue unchangeable God therefore knows no more now than he did before and at the end of the World he shall know no more than he doth now and from Eternity he knows no less than he doth now and shall do to Eternity Tho' things pass into Being and out of Being the knowledg of God doth not vary with them for he knows them as well before they were as when they are and knows them as well when they are past as when they are present Proposition 7. God knows all things perpetually i. e. in act Since he knows by his Essence he always knows because his Essence never ceaseth but is a pure act so that he doth not know only in habit but in act Men that have the knowledg of some Art or Science have it always in habit tho' when they are asleep they have it not in act A Musitian hath the habit of Musick but doth not so much as think of it when his Senses are bound up But God is an unsleepy eye Plato 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he never slumbers nor sleeps he never slumbers in regard of his Providence and therefore never slumbers in regard of his knowledg He knows not himself nor any other Creature more perfectly at one time than at another he is perpetually in the act of knowing as the Sun is in the act of shining the Sun never ceas'd to shine in one or other part of the World since it was first fixed in the Heavens nor God to be in the act of Knowledg since he was God and therefore since he always was and always will be God he always was and always will be in the act of knowledg always knowing his own Essence he must alway actually know what hath been gone and ceas'd from Being and what shall come and arise into Being As a Watchmaker knows what Watch he intends to make and after he hath made it tho' it be broken to pieces or consumed by the Fire he still knows it because he knows the Copy of it in his own mind Some therefore in regard of this perpetual act of the Divine Knowledg have called God not Intellect us but the intellection of intellections we have no proper
and Pagan Oracles gained so much Credit upon this Foundation were they established and the Enemies of Mankind owned for a true God I say from the Prediction of future things tho' their Oracles were often ambiguous many times false yet those poor Heathens framed many ingenious excuses to free their Adored Gods from the charge of falsity and imposture And shall we not adore the true God the God of Israel the God Blessed for ever for this incommunicable Property whereby he flies above the Wings of the Wind the understandings of men and Cherubims Sabund Theol. natural Tit. 84. somewhat changed Consider how great it is to know the Thoughts and Intentions and Works of one man from the beginning to the end of his life to foreknow all these before the Being of this man when he was lodged afar off in the Loyns of his Ancestors yea of Adam how much greater is it to foreknow and know the Thoughts and Works of three or four men of a whole Village or Neighbourhood 'T is greater still to know the imaginations and actions of such a multitude of men as are contained in London Paris or Constantinople how much greater still to know the intentions and practises the clandestine contrivances of so many Millions that have do or shall swarm in all quarters of the World every person of them having Millions of Thoughts Desires Designs Affections and Actions Let this Attribute then make the Blessed God honourable in our eyes and adorable in all our affections especially since it is an Excellency which hath so lately discovered it self in bringing to Light the hidden things of darkness in opening and in part confounding the wicked Devices of Bloody men Especially let us adore God for it and admire it in God since it is so necessary a Perfection that without it the goodness of God had been impotent and could not have relieved us for what help can a distressed person expect from a man of the sweetest disposition and the strongest arm if the eyes which should discover the danger and direct the defence and rescue were closed up by blindness and darkness Adore God for this wonderful Perfection 7. In the consideration of this excellent Attribute what low thoughts should we have of our own knowledg and how humble ought we to be before God There 's nothing man is more apt to be proud of than his Knowledg 't is a Perfection he glories in but if our own Knowledg of the little outside and barks of things puffs us up the consideration of the infiniteness of Gods Knowledg should abate the Tumor As our Beings are nothing in regard to the infiniteness of his Essence so our Knowledg is nothing in regard of the vastness of his understanding We have a spark of Being but nothing to the heat of the Sun We have a drop of Knowledg but nothing to the Divine Ocean What a vain thing is it for a shallow Brook to boast of its Streams before a Sea whose depths are unfathomable As it is a vanity to brag of our Strength when we remember the Power of God and of our Prudence when we glance upon the Wisdom of God so 't is no less a vanity to boast of our Knowledg when we think of the Understanding and Knowledg of God How hard is it for us to know any thing Pascall p. 17● too much noise deafs us and too much light dazels us too much distance alienates the object from us and too much nearness bars up our sight from beholding it When we think our selves to be near the knowledg of a thing as a Ship to the Haven a puff of Wind blows us away and the object which we desired to know eternally flies from us we burn with a desire of knowledg and yet are opprest with the darkness of ignorance we spend our days more in dark Egypt than in enlightened Goshen In what narrow bounds is all the knowledg of the most intelligent persons included Amyrant de praedest p. 116. 117. somewhat changed How few understand the exact Harmony of their own bodies the nature of the life they have in common with other Animals who understands the nature of his own faculties how he Knows and how he Wills how the Understanding Proposeth and how the Will embraceth how his spiritual Soul is united to his material Body what the nature is of the operation of our Spirits nay who understands the nature of his own body the offices of his sences the motion of his Members how they come to obey the command of the Will and a Thousand other things What a vain weak and ignorant thing is man when compar'd with God yet there is not a greater Pride to be found among Devils than among ignorant men with a little very little flashy knowledg Ignorant man is as proud as if he knew as God! As the consideration of Gods Omniscience should render him honourable in our eyes so it should render us vile in our own God because of his knowledg is so far from disdaining his Creatures that his Omniscience is a Minister to his Goodness No knowledg that we are possess'd of should make us swell with too high a conceit of our selves and a disdain of others We have infinitely more of ignorance than knowledg Let us therefore remember in all our thoughts of God that he is God and we are men and therefore ought to be humble as becomes men and ignorant and foolish men to be as weak Creatures should lie low before an Almighty God and impure Creatures before a Holy God false Creatures before a Faithful God finite Creatures before an Infinite God so should ignorant Creatures before an All-Knowing God All Gods Attributes teach admiring thoughts of God and low thoughts of our selves 8. It may inform us how much this Attribute is injured in the World The first error after Adams eating the forbidden Fruit was the denyal of this as well as the Omnipresence of God Gen. 3.10 I heard thy voice in the Garden and I hid my self as if the thickness of the Trees could screen him from the eye of his Creator And after Cains Murder this is the first Perfection he affronts Gen. 4.9 Where is Abel thy Brother saith God How roundly doth he answer I know not as if God were as weak as man to be put off with a Lye Man doth as naturally hate this Perfection as much as he cannot naturally but acknowledg it he wishes God stript of this eminency that he might be incapable to be an inspector of his Crimes and a searcher of the Closets of his heart In wishing him deprived of this there is a hatred of God himself for it is a loathing an Essential Property of God without which he would be a pitiful Governor of the World What a kind of God should that be of a Sinners wishing that had wanted Eyes to see a Crime and Righteousness to punish it The want of the consideration of this Attribute is
the thronging multitudes Our groans are as audible and intelligible to him as our words and he knows what is the mind of his own Spirit though exprest in no plainer language than sobs and heavings * Rom. 8.27 Thus David cheers up himself under the neglects of his Friends Psal 38.9 Lord my desire is before thee and my groaning is not hid from thee Not a groan of a panting Spirit shall be lost till God hath lost his knowledge Not a Petition forgotten while God hath a Record nor a Tear dried while God hath a Bottle to reserve it in * Psal 56.8 Our secret works are also known and observed by him not only our outward labour but our inward love in it Heb. 6.10 If with Isaac we go privately into the Field to meditate or secretly cast our Bread upon the Waters he keeps his Eye upon us to Reward us and returns the Fruit into our own Bosoms * Mat. 6.4.6 Yea though it be but a Cup of cold Water from an inward Spring of love given to a Disciple He sees your works and your labour and faith and patience in working them * Rev. 2.2 all the marks of your industry and strength of your intentions and Will be as exact at last in order to a due Praise as to open Sins in order to a just Recompence * 1 Cor. 4.5 6. The Consideration of this excellent Attribute affords Comfort in the Afflictions of good Men. He knows their Pressures as well as hears their Cries * Exod. 3.7 His Knowledge comes not by information from us but his Compassionate listening to our Cries springs from his own Inspection into our Sorrows He is affected with them before we make any discovery of them He is not ignorant of the best Season when they may be usefully inflicted and when they may be profitably removed The Tribulation and Poverty of his Church is not unknown to him Rev. 2.8 9. I know thy Works and Tribulation c. He knows their Works and what Tribulation they meet with for him He sees their extremities when they are toiling against the Wind and Tide of the World * Mark 6.48 Yea the natural exigencies of the multitude are not neglected by him he discerns to take care of them Our Saviour considered the three days fasting of his Followers and miraculously provides a Dish for them in the Wilderness No good Man is ever out of Gods Mind and therefore never out of his Compassionate Care His Eye pierceth into their Dungeons and pities their Miseries Joseph may forget his Brethren and the Disciples not know Christ when he walks upon the Midnight Waves and Turbulent Sea * Barlow's Man 's Refuge p. 29 30. but a Lyons Den cannot obscure a Daniel from his Sight nor the depths of the Whales Belly bury Jonah from the Divine Understanding He discerns Peter in his Chains and Stephen under the Stones of Martyrdom He knows Lazarus under his tatter'd Rags and Abel wallowing in his Blood His Eye and Knowledge goes along with his People when they are transplanted into Foreign Countreys and sold for Slaves into the Islands of the Grecians for he will raise them out of the place Joel 3.6 7. He would defeat the hopes of the Persecutors and applaud the Patience of his People He knows his People in the Tabernacle of Life and in the Valley of the Shadow of Death Psal 23. He knows all penal Evils because he commissions and directs them He knows the Instruments because they are his Sword * Psal 17.13 and he knows his gracious Sufferer because he hath his Mark He discerns Job in his Anguish and the Devil in his Malice By the direction of this Attribute he orders Calamities and rescues from them Thou hast seen it for thou beholdest mischief and spight * Psal 10.14 That is the Comfort of the Psalmist and the Comfort of every Believer and the Ground of committing themselves to God under all the injustice of Men. 7. 'T is a Cofmort in all our Infirmities As he knows our Sins to charge them so he knows the weakness of our Nature to pity us As his infinite Understanding may scare us because he knows our Transgressions so it may relieve us because he knows our natural mutability in our first Creation He knows our frame he remembers that we are dust * Psal 103.14 'T is the reason of the precedent Verses why he removes our Transgression from us why he is so backward in Punishing so patient in waiting so forward in pitying Why He doth not only remember our Sins but remember our frame or forming what brittle though clear Glasses we were by Creation how easie to be crackt He remembers our impotent and weak Condition by Corruption what a sink we have of vain imaginations that remain in us after Regeneration he doth not only consider that we were made according to his Image and therefore able to stand but that we were made of Dust and weak Matter and had a sensitive Soul like that of Beasts as well as an intellectual Nature like that of Angels and therefore liable to follow the dictates of it without exact care and watchfulness If he remembred only the first there would be no issue but Indignation but the Consideration of the latter moves his Compassion How miserable should we be for want of this Perfection in the Divine Nature whereby God remembers and reflects upon his past act in our first frame and the mindfulness of our Condition excites the motion of his Bowels to us Had he lost the knowledge how he first framed us did he not still remember the mutability of our Nature as we were form'd and stampt in his Mint How much more wretched would our Condition be than it is If his remembrance of our Original be one ground of his Pity the sense of his Omniscience should be a ground of our Comfort in the stirring of our infirmities He remembers we were but Dust when he made us and yet remembers we are but Dust while he preserves and forbears us 8. 'T is some Comfort in the fears of some lurking Corruption in our Hearts We know by this whither to address our selves for the search and discovery of it Perhaps some Blessings we want are retarded some Calamities we understand not the particular cause of are inflicted some Petitions we have put up hang too long for an Answer and the Chariot Wheels of Divine Goodness move slow and are long in coming Let us beg the Aid of this Attribute to open to us the Remoras to discover what base Affection there is that retards the Mercies we want or attracts the Affliction we feel or bars the Door against the return of our supplications What our dim sight cannot discover the clear Eye of God can make visible to us Job 10.2 Shew me wherefore thou contendest with me As in want of Pardon we particularly plead his Mercy and in our desires for the
Will as a Natural Faculty concurs in the act or motion God doth not act in this in a way of Absolute Power without an Infinite Wisdom suting himself to the Nature of the things he acts upon He doth not change the Physical Nature though he doth the Moral As in the Government of the World he doth not make heavy things ascend nor light things descend ordinarily but guides their Motions according to their Natural qualities So God doth not strain the Faculties beyond their due pitch He lets the nature of the Faculty remain but changes the Principle in it The Understanding remains Understanding and the Will remains Will. But where there was before Folly in the Understanding he puts in a Spirit of Wisdom and where there was before a stoutness in the Will he forms it to a pliableness to his offers He hath a Key to fit every Ward in the Lock and opens the Will without injuring the Nature of the Will He doth not change the Soul by an alteration of the Faculties but by an alteration of something in them Not by an Inroad upon them or by meer power or a blind Instinct but by proposing to the Understanding something to be known and informing it of the Reasonableness of his Precepts and the Innate goodness and excellency of his Offers and by inclining the Will to love and embrace what is proposed And things are propos'd under those Notions which usually move our Wills and Affections We are moved by things as they are good pleasant profitable we entertain things as they make for us and detest things as they are contrary to us Nothing affects us but under such qualities and God sutes his Encouragements to these Natural Affections which are in us His Power and Wisdom go hand in hand together his Power to act what his Wisdom orders and his Wisdom to conduct what his Power executes He brings Men to him in ways suted to their Natural dispositions The stubborn he tears like a Lion the gentle he wins like a Turtle by sweetness he hath a Hammer to break the stout and a Cord of Love to draw the more pliable Tempers He works upon the more Rational in a way of Gospel Reason upon the more Ingenuous in a way of kindness and draws them by the Cords of Love The Wise-men were led to Christ by a Star and Means suted to the knowledge and study that those Eastern Nations used which was much in Astronomy He worketh upon others by Miracles accommodated to every ones sense and so proportions the Means according to the Nature of the Subjects he works upon 4. The Wisdom of God is apparent in his Discipline and Penal Evils The Wisdom of Human Governments is seen in the matter of their Laws and in the Penalties of their Laws and in the proportion of the Punishment to the Offence and in the good that redounds from the Punishment either to the Offender or to the Community The Wisdom of God is seen in the Penalty of Death upon the Transgression of his Law both in that it was the greatest Evil that Man might fear and so was a convenient means to keep him in his due bound and also in the proportion of it to the Transgression Nothing less could be in a Wise Justice inflicted upon an Offender for a Crime against the highest Being and the Supream Excellency But this hath been spoken of before in the Wisdom of his Laws I shall only mention some few it would be too tedious to run into all 1. His Wisdom appears in Judgments in the suting them to the qualities of Persons and nature of Sins He deviseth evil Jer. 18.11 his Judgments are fruits of Counsel He also is wise and will bring Evil Isai 31.2 Evil sutable to the Person offending and Evil sutable to the Offence committed As the Husbandman doth his Threshing Instruments to the Grain He hath a Rod for the Cummin a tenderer Seed and a Flayl for the harder so hath God greater Judgments for the obdurate Sinner and lighter for those that have something of tenderness in their Wickedness Isai 28.27 29. Because he is wonderful in Counsel and excellent in working so Some understand the place With the froward he will shew himself froward He proportions punishment to the Sin and writes the cause of the Judgment in the Forehead of the Judgment it self Sodom burned in Lust and was consumed by Fire from Heaven The Jews sold Christ for Thirty pence and at the Taking of Jerusalem Thirty of them were sold for a Penny So Adonibezek Cut off the Thumbs and great Toes of others and he is served in the same kind Judg. 1.7 The Babel Builders design'd an indissoluble union and God brings upon them an unintelligible Confusion And in Exod. 9.9 the Ashes of the Furnace where the Israelites burnt the Egyptian Bricks sprinkled towards Heaven brought Boyls upon the Egyptian Bodies that they might feel in their own what Pain they had caused in the Israelites flesh and find by the smart of the inflamed Scab what they had made the Israelites endure The Waters of the River Nilus are turned into Blood wherein they had stifled the breath of the Israelites Infants And at last the Prince and the flower of their Nobility are drowned in the Red Sea 'T is part of the Wisdom of Justice to proportion punishment to the Crime and the degrees of Wrath to the degrees of Malice in the Sin Afflictions also are wisely proportion'd God as a wise Physician considers the nature of the humor and strength of the Patient and sutes his Medicines both to the one and the other 1 Cor. 10.13 2. In the seasons of Punishments and Afflictions He stays till Sin be ripe that his Justice may appear more equitable and the Offender more inexcusable Dan. 9.14 he watches upon the evil to bring it upon Men. To bring it in the just Season and order for his righteous and gracious Purpose his Righteous purpose on the Enemies and his Gracious purpose on his People Jerusalems Calamity came upon them when the City was full of People at the Solemnity of the Passover that he might Mow down his Enemies at once and Time their Destruction to such a moment wherein they had Timed the Crucifixion of his Son He watched over the Clouds of his Judgments and kept them from pouring down till his People the Christians were provided for and had departed out of the City to the Chambers and Retiring places God had provided for them He made not Jerusalem the Shambles of his Enemies till he had made Pella and other places the Arks of his Friends As Pliny tells us The Providence of God holds the Sea in a calm for fifteen days that the Halcyons little Birds that frequent the Shoar may build their Nests and hatch up their Young The Judgment upon Sodom was suspended for some hours till Lot was secured | Daille sur 1 Cor. 10. p. 390. God suffer'd not the Church to be Invaded
by Violent Persecutions till she was establish'd in the Faith He would not expose her to so great Combats while she was weak and feeble but gave her time to fortifie her self to be render'd more capable of bearing up under them He stifled all the motions of Passion the Idolaters might have for their Superstition till Religion was in such a condition as rather to be increased and purified than extinguish'd by Opposition Paul was s●cured from Neroes Chains and the Nets of his Enemies till he had broke off the Chain of the Devil from many Cities of the Gentiles and catched them by the Net of the Gospel out of the Sea of the World Thus the Wisdom of God is seen in the Seasons of Judgments and Afflictions 3. It is apparent in the gracious issue of Afflictions and Penal Evils It is a part of Wisdom to bring Good out of Evil of Punishment as well as to bring Good out of Sin The Church never was so like to Heaven as when it was most Persecuted by Hell The Storms often cleans'd it and the Lance often made it more healthful Jobs Integrity had not been so clear nor his Patience so illustrious had not the Devil been permitted to afflict him God by his Wisdom out-wits Satan when he by his Temptations intends to pollute us and buffet us God orders it to purifie us he often brings the clearest light out of the thickest darkness makes Poysons to become Medicines † Turretin Serm. p. 53. Death it self the greatest Punishment in this Life and the entrance into Hell in its own Nature he hath by his Wise contrivance made to his People the Gate of Heaven and the passage into Immortality Penal Evils in a Nation often end in in a publick Advantage Troubles and Wars among a People are many times not destroying but Medicinal and cure them of that Degeneracy Luxury and Effeminateness they contracted by a long Peace 4. This Wisdom is evident in the various Ends which God brings about by Afflictions The attainment of various Ends by one and the same Means is the fruit of the Agents Prudence By the same Affliction the Wise God corrects sometimes for some base Affection excites some sleepy Grace drives out some lurking Corruption refines the Soul and ruines the Lust discovers the greatness of a Crime the Vanity of the Creature and the Sufficiency in himself The Jews bind Paul and by the Judge he is sent to Rome whi● his Mouth is stopt in Judea 't is open'd in one of the greatest Cities of the World and his Enemies unwittingly contribute to the increase of the knowledge of Christ by those Chains in that City ‖ Acts 28.31 that triumphed over the Earth And his afflictive Bonds added Courage and Resolution to others Phil. 1.14 Many waxing confident by my Bonds which could not in their own Nature produce such an effect but by the order and contrivance of Divine Wisdom In their own nature they would rather make them disgust the Doctrine he suffered for and cool their Zeal in the propagating of it for fear of the same disgrace and hardship they saw him suffer * Daille sur Philip. Part 1. pag. 116 117. But the Wisdom of God changed the nature of these Fetters and conducted them to the glory of his Name the encouragement of others the increase of the Gospel and the comfort of the Apostle himself Phil. 1.12 13 18. The Sufferings of Paul at Rome confirm'd the Philippians a People at a distance from thence in the Doctrine they had already received at his hands Thus God makes Sufferings sometimes which appear like Judgments to be like the Viper on Pauls hand Acts 28.6 a means to clear up Innocence and procure favour to the Doctrine among those Barbarians How often hath he multiplied the Church by Death and Massacres and increased it by those means used to annihilate it 5. The Divine Wisdom is apparent in the Deliverances he affords to other parts of the World as well as to his Church There are delicate composures curious threds in his Webs and he works them like an Artificer A goodness wrought for them curiously wrought Psal 31.19 1. In making the Creatures subservient in their Natural order to his gracious Ends and Purposes He orders things in such a manner as not to be necessitated to put forth an extraordinary Power in things which some part of the Creation might accomplish Miraculous productions would speak his Power but the ordering the Natural course of things to occasion such effects they were never intended for is one part of the glory of his Wisdom And that his Wisdom may be seen in the course of Nature he conducts the Motions of Creatures and acts them in their own strength and doth that by various windings and turnings of them which he might do in an instant by his Power in a Supernatural way Indeed sometimes he hath made Invasions on Nature and suspended the Order of their Natural Laws for a season to shew himself the Absolute Lord and Governour of Nature Yet if frequent Alterations of this nature were made they would impede the knowledge of the Nature of things and be some bar to the discovery and glory of his Wisdom which is best seen by moving the wheels of Inferiour Creatures in an exact regularity to his own Ends. He might when his little Church in Jacobs Family was like to starve in Canaan have for their preservation turn'd the Stones of the Country into Bread but he sends them down to Egypt to procure Corn that a way might be opened for their removal into that Country the Truth of his Prediction in their Captivity accomplish'd and a way made after the declaration of his great Name Jehovah both in the fidelity of his Word and the greatness of his Power in their Deliverance from that Furnace of Affliction He might have struck Goliah the Captain of the Philistines Army with a Thunderbolt from Heaven when he Blasphemed his Name and scar'd his People but he useth the Natural strength of a Stone and the Artificial motion of a Sling by the Arm of David to confront the Giant and thereby to free Judea from the ravage of a potent Enemey He might have delivered the Jews from Babylon by as strange Miracles as he used in their Deliverance from Egypt He might have plagu'd their Enemies gather'd his People into a Body and protected them by the bulwark of a Cloud and a Pillar of Fire against the Assaults of their Enemies But he uses the differences between the Persians and those of Babylon to accomplish his Ends. How sometimes hath the veering about of the Wind on a sudden been the loss of a Navy when it hath been upon the point of Victory and driven back the Destruction upon those which intended it for others And the accidental stumbling or the Natural fierceness of a Horse flung down a General in the midst of a Battle where he hath lost his life
Will which no Effects which he hath wrought can drain and put to a stand As he can raise Stones to be Children to Abraham * Mat. 3.9 so with the same mighty Word whereby he made one World he can make Infinite numbers of Worlds to be the Monuments of his Glory After the Prophet Jeremy 32.17 had spoke of Gods Power in Creation he adds And nothing is too hard for thee For one World that he hath made he can create Millions For one Star which he hath beautified the Heavens with he could have garnisht it with a Thousand and multiplied if he had pleased Rom. 4.17 every one of those into Millions for he can call things that are not not some things but all things possible The barren Womb of Nothing can no more resist his Power now to educe a World from it than it could at first No doubt but for one Angel which he hath made he could make many Worlds of Angels He that made one with so much ease as by a Word cannot want Power to make many more till he wants a Word The Word that was not too weak to make One cannot be too weak to make Multitudes If from One Man he hath in a way of Nature multiplied so many in all Ages of the World and covered with them the whole Face of the Earth he could in a Supernatural way by One Word multiply as many more 'T is the breath of the Almighty that gives life Job 33.4 He can create infinite Species and kinds of Creatures more than he hath created more variety of Forms For since there is no searching of his Greatness there is no conceiving the numberless possible effects of his Power The Understanding of Man can conceive Numberless things possible to be more than have been or shall be And shall we imagine that a Finite Understanding of a Creature hath a greater Omnipotency to conceive things possible than God hath to produce things possible When the Understanding of Man is tyr'd in its Conceptions it must still be concluded That the Power of God extends not only to what can be conceiv'd but infinitely beyond the measures of a Finite faculty Touching the Almighty we cannot find him out he is excellent in power and in judgment Job 36.23 For the Understanding of Man in its Conceptions of more kind of Creatures is limited to those Creatures which are It cannot in its own Imagination conceive any thing but what hath some foundation in and from something already in Being It may frame a new kind of Creature made up of a Lion a Horse an Ox but all those parts whereof its Conception is made have distinct Beings in the World though not in that composition as his Mind mixes and joyns them But no question but God can create Creatures that have no resemblance with any kind of Creatures yet in Being 'T is certain that if God only knows those things which he hath done and will do and not all things possible to be done by him his knowledge were finite so if he could do no more than what he hath done his Power would be finite 1. Creatures have a power to act about more objects than they do The Understanding of man can frame from one Principle of Truth many Conclusions and Inferences more than it doth Why cannot then the Power of God frame from one first Matter an infinite number of Creatures more than have been created The Almightiness of God in producing real Effects is not inferiour to the Understanding of man in drawing out real Truths An Artificer that makes a Watch supposing his li●e and health can make many more of a different form and motion And a Limner can draw many Draughts and frame many Pictures with a new variety of Colours according to the richness of his Fancy If these can do so that require a preexistent Matter fram'd to their hands God can much more who can raise beautiful Structures from nothing As long as men have matter they can diversifie the matter and make new Figures from it So long as there is nothing God can produce out of that nothing whatsoever he pleases We see the same in Inanimate Creatures A spark of Fire hath a vast Power in it it will kindle other things increase and enlarge it self Nothing can be exempt from the active force of it It will alter by consuming or refining whatsoever you offer to it It will reach all and refuse none and by the efficacious power of it all those new Figures which we see in Metals are brought forth When you have exposed to it a multitude of things still add more it will exert the same strength yea the vigour is increased rather than diminisht The more it catcheth the more fiercely and irresistibly it will act you cannot suppose an end o● its operation or a decrease of its strength as long as you can conceive its duration and continuance This must be but a weak shadow of that infinite Power which is in God Take another Instance in the Sun It hath power every year to produce Flowers and Plants from the Earth and as is able to produce them now as it was at the first lighting it and rearing it in the Sphear wherein it moves And if there were no kind of Flowers and Plants now created the Sun hath a power residing in it ever since its first Creation to afford the same warmth to them for the nourish●ng and bringing them forth Whatsoever you can conceive the Sun to be able to do in regard of Plants that can God do in regard of Worlds produce more Worlds than the Sun doth Plants every year without weariness without languishment The Sun is able to influence more things than it doth and produce numberless effects but it doth not do so much as it is able to do because it wants matter to work upon God therefore who wants no matter can do much more than he doth He can either act by second Causes if there were more or make more second Causes if he pleas'd 2. God is the most free Agent Every free Agent can do more than he will do Man being a free Creature can do more than ordinarily he doth will to do God is most free as being the Spring of Liberty in other Creatures He acts not by a necessity of Nature as the waves of the Sea or the motions of the Wind and therefore is not determin'd to those things which he hath already called forth into the World If God be infin●tely wise in contrivance he could contrive more than he hath and therefore can effect more than he hath effected He doth not act to the extent of his Power upon all occasions 'T is according to his will that he works Eph. 1. 'T is not according to his work that he wills his work is an evidence of his will but not the rule of his will His Power is not the rule of his Will but h●s Will is the disposer of
truly in it self all Power who wrought them without Engines without Instruments and therefore this Power must be infinite and possessed of an unalterable vertue of acting If it be eternal it must be infinite and hath neither beginning nor end what is eternal hath no bounds 〈◊〉 it be eternal and not limited by time it must be infinite and not to be restrain'd by any finite Object His Power never begun to be nor ever ceaseth to be it cannot languish men are fain to unbend themselves and must have some time to recruit their tyred spirits But the Power of God is perpetually vigorous without any interrupting qualm Isa 40.28 Hast thou not known hast thou not heard that the everlasting God the Lord the Creator of the ends of the Earth fainteth not neither is weary That Might which suffered no diminution from Eternity but hatcht so great a World by brooding upon nothing will not suffer any dimness or decrease to Eternity This Power being the same with his Essence is as durable as his Essence and resides for ever in his Nature 8. The Eighth Consideration for the right understanding of this Attribute The impossibility of Gods doing some things is no infringing of his Almightiness but rather a strengthning of it 'T is granted that some things God cannot do or rather as Aquinas and others 't is better to say such things cannot be done than to say that God cannot do them to remove all kind of imputation or reflection of weakness on God ‖ Robins observat p. 14. and because the reason of the impossibility of those things is in the nature of the things themselves 1. First Some things are impossible in their own nature Such are all those things which imply a Contradiction as for a thing to be and not to be at the same time for the Sun to shine and not to shine at the same moment of time for a Creature to act and not to act at the same instant One of those parts must be false for if it be true that the Sun shines this moment it must be false to say it doth not shine So it is impossible that a rational Creature can be without reason 'T is a contradiction to be a rational Creature and yet want that which is essential to a rational Creature So it is impossible that the Will of man can be compelled because Liberty is the Essence of the Will while it is Will it cannot be constrain'd and if it be constrain'd it ceaseth to be Will. * Magalano de scientiâ Dei part 2. c. 6. § 3. God cannot at one time act as the Author of the Will and the Destroyer of the Will 'T is impossible that Vice and Virtue Light and Darkness Life and Death should be the same thing Those things admit not of a Conception in any Understanding Some things are impossible to be done because of the incapability of the subject as for a Creature to be made infinite independent to preserve it self without the Divine concourse and assistance So a Brute cannot be taken into communion with God and to everlasting spiritual Blessedness because the Nature of a Brute is uncapable of such an Elevation A rational Creature only can understand and relish spiritual delights and is capable to enjoy God and have communion with him Indeed God may change the nature of a Brute and bestow such Faculties of Understanding and Will upon it as to render it capable of such a Blessedness but then 't is no more a Brute but a rational Creature but while it remains a Brute the excellency of the Nature of God doth not admit of communion with such a Subject So that this is not for want of Power in God but because of a deficiency in the Creature To suppose that God could make a Contradiction true is to make himself false and to do just nothing 2. Some things are impossible to the Nature and Being of God As to dye implies a flat repugnance to the Nature of God To be able to die is to be able to be cashierd out of being If God were able to deprive himself of life he might then cease to be He were not then a necessary but an uncertain contingent being and could not be said only to have Immortality as he is † 1 Tim. 6.16 He cannot dye who is life it self and necessarily Existent He cannot grow old or decay because he cannot be measur'd by time And this is no part of Weakness but the perfection of Power His Power is that whereby he remains for ever fixed in his own everlasting being that cannot be reckoned as necessary to the Omnipotence of God which all Mankind count a part of weakness in themselves God is Omnipotent because he is not Impotent and if he could dye he would be Impotent not Omnipotent Death is the feebleness of Nature 'T is undoubtedly the greatest impotence to cease to be Who would count it a part of Omnipotency to disenable himself and sink into nothing and not being The impossibility for God to dye is not a fit Article to impeach his Omnipotence this would be a strange way of arguing a thing is not powerful because it is not feeble and cannot cease to be powerful for Death is a cessation of all Power ‖ August God is Almighty in doing what he will not in suffering what he will not To dye is not an active but a passive Power a defect of a Power God is of too noble a Nature to perish Some things are impossible to that eminency of Nature which he hath above all Creatures as to walk sleep feed these are Imperfections belonging to Bodies and compounded Natures If he could walk he were not every where present Motion speaks Succession If he could encrease he would not have been perfect before 3. Some things are impossible to the glorious perfections of God God cannot do any thing unbecoming his holiness and goodness any thing unworthy of himself and against the perfections of his Nature God can do whatsoever he can will As he doth actually do whatsoever he doth actually will so it is possible for him to do whatsoever it is possible for him to will He doth whatsoever he will and can do whatsoever he can will but he cannot do what he cannot will He cannot will any unrighteous thing and therefore cannot do any unrighteous thing God cannot love sin this is contrary to his Holiness he cannot violate his Word this is a denial of his Truth he cannot punish an Innocent this is contrary to his Goodness he cannot cherish an impenitent Sinner this is an injury to h●s Justice He cannot forget what is done in the World this is a disgrace to his Omniscience he cannot deceive his Creature This is contrary to his faithfulness none of these things can be done by him because of the perfection of his Nature Would it not be an imperfection in God to absolve the Guilty and condemn the Innocent Is
Body of Man should be polisht in the lower parts of the Earth as he calls the Womb verse 15. in so short a time with Members 〈◊〉 a various form and usefulness each labouring in their several functions Can any man give an exact account of the manner how the Bones do grow in the womb Eccles 11.5 'T is unknown to the Father and no less hid from the Mother and the wisest Men cannot search out the depths of it 'T is one of the Secret works of an Omnipotent Power secret in the manner though open in the effect So that we must ascribe it to God as Job doth Thine hands have made me and fashioned me together round about Job 10.8 Thy hands which formed Heaven have formed every Part every Member and wrought me like a Mighty workman The Heavens are said to be the work of Gods hands and Man is here said to be no less The forming and propagation of Man from that Earthy matter is no less a wonder of Power than the structure of the World from a rude and indispos'd Matter † Trismegist in Serm. Greek in the Temple p. 57. A Heathen Philosopher descants elegantly upon it Dost thou understand my Son the forming of Man in the womb who erected that noble Fabrick who carv'd the Eyes the Christal-windows of light and the conductors of the Body who bor'd the Nostrils and Ears those Loop-holes of scents and sounds who stretched out and knit the Sinews and Ligaments for the fastning of every Member who cast the hollow Veins the Channels of Blood set and strengthned the Bones the Pillars and Rafters of the Body who digg'd the Pores the sinks to expel the filth who made the Heart the repository of the Soul and formed the Lungs like a Pipe What Mother what Father wrought these things No none but the Almighty God who made all things according to his pleasure 't is He who propagates this Noble piece from a pile of Dust Who is born by his own advice who gives stature features sence wit strength speech but God 'T is no less a wonder that a little Infant can live so long in a dark Sink in the midst of filth without breathing And the eduction of it out of the Womb is no less a wonder than the forming increase nourishment of it in that Cell A wonder that the life of the Infant is not the death of the Mother or the life of the Mother the death of the Infant This little Creature when it springs up from such small beginnings by the Power of God grows up to b● one of the Lords of the World to have a Dominion over the Creatures and propagates its kind in the same manner All this is unaccountable without having recourse to the Power of God in the government of the Creatures And to add to this wonder Consider also what multitudes of Formations and Births there are at one time all over the World in every of which the Finger of God is at work and it will speak an unwearied Power 'T is admirable in one Man more in a Town of Men still more in a greater and larger Kingdom a vaster World there is a Birth for every Hour in this City were but 168 born in a Week though the Weekly Bills mention more What is this City to Three Kingdoms what Three Kingdoms to a populous World Eleven Thousand and eighty will make one for every Minute in the Week what is this to the Weekly propagation in all the Nations of the Universe besides the generation of all the Living Creatures in that Space which are the works of Gods fingers as well as Man What will be the result of this but the notion of an unconceivable unwearied Almightiness alway active alway operating 3. It appears in the Motions of all Creatures All things live and move in him Acts 17.28 by the same Power that Creatures have their Beings they have their Motions They have not only a Being by his powerful Command but they have their minutely Motion by his Powerful concurrence Nothing can act without the Almighty influx of God no more than it can exist without the Creative Word of God 'T is true indeed the ordering of all Motions to his Holy ends is an act of Wisdom but the motion it self whereby those Ends are attained is a work of his Power 1. God as the first Cause hath an influence into the motions of all second Causes As all the Wheels in a Clock are moved in their different motions by the force and strength of the principal and primary Wheel if there be any defect in that or if that stand still all the rest languish and stand idle the same moment All Creatures are his Instruments his Engines and have no Spirit but what he gives and what he assists Whatsoever Nature works God works in Nature Nature is the Instrument God is the Supporter Director Mover of Nature that what the Prophet saith in another case may be the language of universal Nature Lord thou hast wrought all our works in us Isai 26.12 They are our works subjectively efficiently as second causes Gods works originally concurrently The Sun moved not in the Valley of Ajalon for the space of many hours in the time of Joshua † Josh 10.13 nor did the Fire exercise its consuming quality upon the Three Children in Nebuchadnezzars Furnace ‖ Dan. 3.25 He withdrew not his supporting Power from th ir Being for then they had van●shed but his influencing Power from their qualities whereby their motion ceas'd till he return'd his influential concurrence to them which evidenceth that without a perpetual derivation of Divine Power the Sun could not run one stride or inch of its race nor the Fire devour one grain of light Chaff or an inch of Straw Nothing without his sustaining Power can continue in Being nothing without his co-working Power can exercise one mite of those qualities it is possessed of All Creatures are wound up by him and his hand is constantly upon them to keep them in perpetual motion 2. Consider the variety of motions in a single Creature How many motions are there in the Vital parts of a Man or in any other Animal which a Man knows not and is unable to number The renewed motion of the Lungs the Systoles and Diastoles of the Heart the Contractions and Dilatations of the Heart whereby it spouts out and takes in Blood the power of Concoction in the Stomach the motion of the Blood in the Veins c. all which were not only setled by the Powerful hand of God but are upheld by the same preserv'd and influenc'd in every distinct motion by that Power that stampt them with that Nature To every one of those there is not only the sustaining Power of God holding up their Natures but the motive Power of God concurring to every motion for if we move in him as well as we live in him then every particle of our motion
is exercised by his concurring Power as well as every moment of our Life supported by his preserving Power What an infinite variety of motions is there in the whole World in universal Nature to all which God concurs all which he conducts even the motions of the meanest as well as the greatest Creatures which demonstrate the indefatigable Power of the Governour 'T is an Infinite Power which doth act in so many varieties whereby the Soul forms every Thought the Tongue speaks every Word the Body exerts every Action What an Infinite Power is that which presides over the birth of all things concurs with the motion of the Sap in the ●ree Rivers on the Earth Clouds in the Air every drop of Rain fleece of Snow crack of Thunder Not the least motion in the World but is under an actual influence of this Almighty Mover And lest any should scruple the Concurrence of God to so many Varieties of the Creatures motion as a thing utterly unconceivable let them consider the Sun a natural image and shadow of the Perfections of God doth not the power of that finite Creature extend it self to various Objects at the same moment of time How many Insects doth it animate as Flies c. at the same moment throughout the World How many several Plants doth it erect at its appearance in the Spring whose Roots lay mourning in the Earth all the foregoing Winter What multitudes of Spires of Grass and nobler Flowers doth it Midwife in the same hour It warms the Air melts the Blood cherishes Living Creatures of various kinds in distinct places without tiring And shall the God of this Sun be less than his Creature 3. And since I speak of the Sun consider the Power of God in the Motion of it * A Lapide in 1. cap. Gen. 16. Lessius de Perfect divin p. 90 91. The vastness of the Sun is computed to be at the least 166 Times bigger than the Earth and its distance from the Earth some tell us to be about Four Millions of Miles whence it follows that it is whirl'd about the World with that swiftness that in the space of an Hour it runs a Million of Miles which is as much as if it should move round about the surface of the Earth Fifty times in one hour * Lessius de Providen p. 633. Voss de Idol lib. 2. cap. 2. which vastness exceeds the swiftness of a Bullet shot out of a Canon which is computed to fly not above Three mile in a Minute So that the Sun runs further in one Hours space than a Bullet can in Five thousand if it were kept in motion so that if it were near the Earth the swiftness of its motion would shatter the whole frame of the World and dash it in pieces so that the Psalmist may well say It runs a race like a strong Man Psal 19.5 What an Incomprehensible Power is that which hath communicated such a strength and swiftness to the Sun and doth daily influence its Motion especially since after all those years of its motion wherein one would think it should have spent it self we behold it every day as vigorous as Adam did in Paradice without limping without shattering it self or losing any thing of its natural Spirits in its unwearied motion How great must that Power be which hath kept this great body so intire and thus swiftly moves it every day Is it not now an Argument of Omnipotency to keep all the strings of Nature in tune to wind them up to a due pitch for the harmony he intended by them to keep things that are contrary from that Confusion they would naturally fall into to prevent those Jarrings which would naturally result from their various and snarling qualities to preserve every Being in its true nature to propagate every kind of Creature order all the Operations even the meanest of them when there are such innumerable Varieties But let us consider that this Power of preserving things in their station and motion and the renewing of them is more stupendous than that which we commonly call Miraculous We call those Miracles which are wrought out of the track of Nature and contrary to the usual stream and current of it which Men wonder at because they seldom see them and hear of them as things rarely brought forth in the World when the truth is there is more of Power exprest in the ordinary station and motion of Natural causes than in those extraordinary exertings of Power Is not more Power signaliz'd in that whirling motion of the Sun every hour for so many Ages than in the suspending of its motion one Day as it was in the days of Joshua That Fire should continually ravage and consume and greedily swallow up every thing that is offer'd to it seems to be the effect of as admirable a Power as the stopping of its appetite a few moments as in the case of the Three Children Is not the rising of some small Seeds from the ground Faucher sur Act. Vol. 2. p. 47. with a multiplication of their numerous posterity an effect of as great a Power as our Saviours seeding many Thousands with a few Loaves by a secret augmentation of them Is not the Chimical producing so pleasant and delicious a Fruit as the Grape from a dry Earth insipid Rain and a sour Vine as admirable a token of Divine Power as our Saviours turning Water into Wine Is not the cure of Diseases by the application of a simple inconsiderable Weed or a slight Infusion as wonderful in it self as the Cure of it by a powerful word What if it be naturally design'd to heal what is that Nature who gave that Nature who maintains that Nature who conducts it cooperates with it Doth it work of it self and by its own strength why not then equally in all in one as well as another Miracles indeed affect more because they testifie the immediate operation of God without the concurrence of second Causes not that there is mere of the Power of God shining in them than in the other II. This Power is evident in Moral Government 1. In the restraint of the Malicious nature of the Devil Since Satan hath the Power of an Angel and the Malice of a Devil what safety would there be for our Persons from destruction what security for our Goods from rifling by this invisible potent and envious Spirit if his Power were not restrain'd and his Malice curb'd by one more Mighty than himself How much doth he envy God the glory of his Creation and Man the use and benefit of it How desirous would he be in regard of his passion how able in regard of his strength and subtilty to overthrow or infect all Worship but what was directed to himself to manage all things according to his lusts turn all thing topsie-turvy plague the World burn Cities Houses plunder us of the supports of Nature waste Kingdoms c. if he were not held in
beaten down and like Lazarus hath seemed to lie in the Grave for some days that the Power of God might be more visible in her sudden resurrection and lifting up her head above the Throne of her Persecutors 2. In his Judicial proceedings The Deluge was no small testimony of his Power in opening the Cisterns of Heaven and pulling up the Sluces of the Sea He doth but call for the waters of the Sea and they pour themselves upon the face of the Earth Amos 9.6 In Forty days time the Waters overtopt the highest Mountains fifteen Cubits Gen. 7.17 19 20. and by the same Power he afterwards reduc'd the Sea to its proper Channel as a roaring Lion into his Den. A shower of Fire from Heaven upon Sodom and the Cities of the Plain was a signal display of his Power either in creating it on the sudden for the execution of his Righteous sentence or sending down the Element of Fire contrary to its nature which affects ascent for the punishment of Rebels against the light of Nature How often hath he ruin'd the most flourishing Monarchies led Princes away spoil'd and overthrown the Mighty Which Job makes an Argument of his Strength Job 12.13 14. Troops of unknown People the Goths and Vandals broke the Romans a Warlike People and hurl'd down all before them They could not have had the thought to succeed in such an Attempt unless God had given them strength and motion for the executing his Judicial Vengeance upon the People of his Wrath. How did he evidence his Power by dawbing the Throne of Pharaoh and his Chamber of Presence Exod. 8.3 as well as the Houses of his Subjects with the slime of Frogs turning their Waters into Blood Exod. 7.20 and their Dust into biting Lice raising his Militia of Locusts against them causing a Three days Darkness without stopping the motion of the Sun Taking off their First-born the excellency of their strength in a Night by the stroke of the Angels Sword He takes off the Chariot Wheels of Pharoah and presents him with a Destruction where he expected a Victory brings those Waves over the heads of him and his Host which stood firm as Marble Walls for the safety of his People The Sea is made to swallow them up that durst not by the order of their Governour touch the Israelites It only sprinkled the one as a type of Baptism and drowned the other as an image of Hell Thus he made it both a Deliverer and a Revenger the Instrument of an offensive and defensive War Isai 40.23 24. He brings Princes to nothing and makes the Judges of the Earth as vanity Great Monarchs have by his Power been hurl'd from their Thrones and their Scepters like Venice-Glasses broken before their faces and They been advanced that have had the least hopes of Grandure He hath pluckt up Cedars by the Roots lopt off the Branches and set a Shrub to grow up in the place dissolv'd Rocks and establisht Bubbles Luke 1.52 He hath shewed strength with his arm he hath scattered the proud in the imagin●tion of their hearts he hath put down the mighty from their seat and exalted them of low degree And these things he doth magnifie his Power in 1. By ordering the nature of Creatures as he pleases By restraining their force or guiding their motions The restraint of the destructive qualities of the Creatures argues as great a Power as the change of their Natures yea and a greater The qualities of Creatures may be chang'd by Art and Composition as in the preparing of Medicines but what but a Divine Power could restrain the operation of the Fire from the Three Children while it retain'd its heat and burning quality in Nebuchadnezzars Furnace The operation was curb'd while its nature was preserved All Creatures are called his Host because he Marshals and ranks them as an Army to serve his purposes The whole Scheme of Nature is ready to favour Men when God orders it and ready to punish Men when God comm●ssions it He gave the Red Sea but a check and it obeyed his Voice Psal 106.9 He rebuked the Red Sea also and it was dried up the motion of it ceased and the Waters of it were rang'd as defensive Walls to secure the march of his People And at the motion of the Hand of Moses the Servant of the Lord the Sea recovered its violence and the Walls that were framed came tumbling down upon the Egyptians heads * Exod. 14.27 The Creator of Nature is not led by the necessity of Nature He that setled the order of Nature can change or restrain the order of Nature according to his Soveraign pleasure The most necessary and useful Creatures he can use as Instruments of his Vengeance Water is necessary to cleanse and by that he can deface a World Fire is necessary to warm and by that he can burn a Sodom From the Water he form'd the Fowl † Gen. 1.21 and by that he dissolves them in the Deluge Fire or Heat is necessary to the Generation of Creatures and by that he ruines the Cities of the Plain He orders all as he pleases to perform every tittle and punctilio of his purpose The Sea observ'd him so exactly that it drowned not one Israelite nor saved one Egyptian Psal 106.11 There was not One of them left And to perfect the Israelites Deliverance he followed them with Testimonies of his Power above the strength of Nature When they wanted Drink he orders Moses to strike a Rock and the Rock spouts a River and a Channel is formed for it to attend them in their Journey When they wanted Bread he drest Manna for them in the Heavens and sent it to their Tables in the Desart When he would declare his Strength he calls to the Heavens to pour down Righteousness and to the Earth to bring forth Salvation Isai 45.8 Though God had created Righteousness or Deliverance for the Jews in Babylon yet he calls to the Heavens and the Earth to be assistant to the design of Cyrus whom he had raised for that purpose as he speaks in the beginning of the Chapter vers 1 2 3 4. As God created Man for a supernatural end and all Creatures for Man as their immediate end so he makes them according to opportunities subservient to that supernatural end of Man for which he created him He that spans the Heavens with his fist can shoot all Creatures like an Arrow to hit what mark he pleases He that spread the Heavens and the Earth by a Word and can by a Word fold them up more easily than a Man can a garment ‖ Heb. 1.12 can order the streams of Nature Cannot he work without Nature as well as with it beyond Nature contrary to Nature that can as it were fillip Nature with his finger into that Nothing whence he drew it Who can cast down the Sun from his Throne clap the distinguisht parts of the World together and
his hand without his positive Will He hath an Arm not to be moved a Hand not to be wrung aside God is represented on his Throne like a Jasper Stone Revel 4.3 as one of Invincible Power when he comes to Judge the Jasper is a Stone which withstands the greatest force * Grot. in loc Though Men resist the Order of his Laws they cannot resist the Sentence of their punishment nor the Execution of it None can any more exempt themselves from the Arm of his Strength than they can from the Authority of his Dominion As they must bow to his Soveraignty so they must sink under his Force A Prisoner in this World may make his Escape but a Prisoner in the World to come cannot Job 10.7 There is none that can deliver out of thine hand There is none to deliver when he tears in pieces Psal 50.22 His Strength is uncontroulable hence his Throne is represented as a Fiery flame Dan. 7.9 As a spark of Fire hath power to kindle one thing after another and increase till it consumes a Forrest a City swallow up all combustible Matter till it consumes a World and many Worlds if they were in Being What power hath a Tree to resist the Fire though it seems mighty when it outbraves the Winds What Man to this day hath been able to free himself from that Chain of Death God clapt upon him for his Revolt And if he be too feeble to rescue himself from a Temporal much less from an Eternal Death The Devils have to this minute groaned under the Pile of Wrath without any success in delivering themselves by all their strength which much surmounts all the strength of Mankind nor have they any hopes to work their rescue to Eternity How foolish is every Sinner Can we poor Worms strut it out against Infinite Power We cannot resist the meanest Creatures when God Commissions them and puts a Sword into their hands They will not no not the Worms be startled at the glory of a King when they have their Creators Warrant to be his Executioners † Acts 12.23 Who can withstand him when he commands the Waves and Inundations of the Sea to leap over the Shore when he divides the Ground in Earthquakes and makes it gape wide to swallow the Inhabitants of it when the Air is corrupted to breed Pestilences when Storms and Showers unseasonably falling putrifie the Fruits of the Earth what Created Power can mend the matter and with a prevailing Voice say to him What dost thou There are two Atributes God will make glister in Hell to the full his Wrath and his Power Rom. 9.22 What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known endured with much Longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted for destruction If it were meer Wrath and no Power to second it it were not so terrible but 't is Wrath and Power both are joyn'd together 'T is not only a sharp Sword but a powerful Arm and not only that for then it were well for the damned Creature To have many sharp blows and from a strong Arm this may be without putting forth the highest strength a Man hath But in this God makes it his design to make his Power known and conspicuous He takes the Sword as it were in both hands that he may shew the strength of his Arm in striking the harder blow and therefore the Apostle calls it 2 Thess 1.9 the Glory of his Power which puts a Sting into this Wrath and it is called Revel 19.15 the fierceness of the wrath of the Almighty God will do it in such a manner as to make Men sensible of his Almightiness in every stroke How great must that Vengeance be that is backed by all the Strength of God When there will be a powerful Wrath without a powerful Compassion when all his Power shall be exercised in Punishing and not the least mite of it exercis'd in Pitying how irresistible will be the load of such a weighty Hand How can the dust of the Ballance break the mighty Bars or get out of the Lists of a powerful Vengeance or hope for any grain of Comfort Oh that every obstinate Sinner would think of this and consider his unmeasurable boldness in thinking himself able to grapple with Omnipotence What force can any have to resist the presence of him before whom Rocks melt and the Heavens at length shall be shrivell'd up as a Parchment by the last Fire As the Light of Gods face is too dazeling to be beheld by us so the Arm of his Power is too Mighty to be opposed by us His Almightiness is above the reach of our Pot-sheard strength as his Infiniteness is above the capacity of our Purblind Understandings God were not Omnipotent if his Power could be rendred ineffectual by any Use II A Second Vse of this Point from the Consideration of the Infinite Power of God is of Comfort As Omnipotence is an Ocean that cannot be fathom'd Comfort so the Comforts from it are streams that cannot be exhausted What Joy can be wanting to him that finds himself folded in the Arms of Omnipotence This Perfection is made over to Believers in the Covenant as well as any other Attribute I am the Lord your God therefore that Power which is as essential to the Godhead as any other Perfection of his Nature is in the rights and extent of it assured unto you Nay may we not say It is made over more than any other because it is that which animates every other Perfection and is the Spirit that gives them Motion and Appearance in the World If God had exprest himself in particular as I am a True God a Wise God a Loving God a Righteous God I am yours what would all or any of those have signified unless the other also had been implyed as I am an Almighty God I am your God In Gods making over himself in any particular Attribute this of his Power is included in every one without which all his other Grants would be insignificant 'T is a Comfort that Power is in the hand of God it can never be better placed for he can never use his Power to injure his confiding Creature If it were in our own hands we might use it to injure our selves 'T is a Power in the hand of an indulgent Father not a hard-hearted Tyrant 'T is a just Power His right hand is full of Righteousness Psal 48.10 because of his Righteousness he can never use it ill and because of his Wisdom he can never use it unseasonably Men that have strength often misplace the actings of it because of their Folly and sometimes employ it to base ends because of their Wickedness But this Power in God is alway awakned by Goodness and conducted by Wisdom 't is never exercis'd by Self-will and Passion but according to the Immutable Rule of his own Nature which is Righteousness How Comfortable is it to think that you have a
the Arms of a Redeemer by whom the Guilt is wip'd of and the filth shall be totally washed away Though he hates their sin and cannot but hate it yet he loves their Persons as being united as Members to the Mediator and Mystical Head A man may love a gangren'd Member because 't is a Member of his own Body or a Member of a dear Relation but he loaths the gangrene in it more than in those wherein he is not so much concern'd Though God's hatred of Believers Persons is removed by Faith in the Satisfactory Death of Jesus Christ yet his Antipathy against sin was not taken away by that Blood nay it was impossible it should It was never design'd nor had it any capacity to alter the unchangeable Nature of God but to manifest the unspottedness of his Will and his eternal Aversion to any thing that was contrary to the Purity of his Being and the Righteousness of his Laws 4. Perpetually This must necessarily follow upon the others He can no more cease to hate Impurity than he can cease to love Holiness If he should in the least instant approve of any thing that is filthy in that moment he would disapprove of his own Nature and Being there would be an interruption in his love of himself which is as Eternal as it is Infinite How can he love any sin which is contrary to his Nature but for one moment without hating his own Nature which is essentially contrary to sin Two Contraries cannot be loved at the same time God must first begin to hate himself before he can approve of any evil which is directly opposite to himself We indeed are changed with a Temptation sometimes bear an affection to it and sometimes testifie an indignation against it but God is always the same without any shadow of change and is angry with the wicked every day Psal 7.11 that is uninterruptedly in the nature of his Anger though not in the effects of it God indeed may be reconciled to the Sinner but never to the sin for then he should renounce himself deny his own Essence and his own Divinity if his inclinations to the love of Goodness and his aversion from Evil could be changed if he suffered the Contempt of the one and encouraged the Practise of the other 4. God is so holy that he cannot but love Holiness in others Not that he owes any thing to his Creature but from the unspeakable holiness of his Nature whence affections to all things that bear a resemblance of him do flow as Light shoots out from the Sun or any glittering Body 'T is essential to the infinite Righteousness of his Nature to love Righteousness wherever he beholds it Psal 11.7 The righteous Lord loveth righteousness He cannot because of his Nature but love that which bears some agreement with his Nature that which is the curious Draught of his own Wisdom and Purity He cannot but be delighted with a Copy of himself He would not have a holy Nature if he did not love Holiness in every Nature His own Nature would be denied by him if he did not affect every thing that had a Stamp of his own Nature upon it There was indeed nothing without God that could invite him to manifest such Goodness to man as he did in Creation But after he had stampt that rational Nature with a Righteousness convenient for it it was impossible but that he should ardently love that Impression of himself because he loves his own Deity and consequently all things which are any Sparks and Images of it And were the Devils capable of an act of Righteousness the Holiness of his Nature would incline him to love it even in those dark and revolted Spirits 5. God is so holy that he cannot positively will or encourage sin in any How can he give any Encouragement to that which he cannot in the least approve of or look upon without loathing not only the Crime but the Criminal Light may sooner be the cause of Darkness than Holiness it self be the cause of Unholiness absolutely contrary to it 'T is a Contradiction that he that is the Fountain of Good should be the source of Evil as if the same Fountain should bubble up both sweet and bitter Streams salt and fresh * Jam. 3.11 Since whatsoever Good is in man acknowledges God for its Author it follows that men are Evil by their own fault There is no need for men to be incited to that to which the Corruption of their own Nature doth so powerfully bend them Water hath a forcible principle in its own Nature to carry it downward it needs no force to hasten the motion God tempts no man but every man is drawn away by his own Lust Jam. 1 13.14 All the preparations for glory are from God Rom. 9.23 but men are said to be fitted to destruction Verse 22. but God is not said to fit them they by their Iniquities fit themselves for ruine and he by his long suffering keeps the destruction from them for a while 1. First God cannot command any Vnrighteousness As all Vertue is summ'd up in a love to God so all Iniquity is summ'd up in an enmity to God Every wicked Work declares a man an Enemy to God Col. 1.21 Enemies in your minds by wicked Works If he could command his Creature any thing which bears an enmity in its Nature to himself he would then implicitly command the hatred of himself and he would be in some measure a hater of himself He that commands another to deprive him of his Life cannot be said to bear any love to his own Life God can never hate himself and therefore cannot command any thing that is hateful to him and tends to a hating of him and driving the Creature further from him In that very moment that God should command such a thing he would cease to be Good What can be more absur'd to imagine then that infinite Goodness should enjoyn a thing contrary to it self and contrary to the essential Duty of a Creature and order him to do any thing that bespeaks an enmity to the Nature of the Creator or a deflouring and disparaging his Works God cannot but love himself and his own Goodness he were not otherwise Good and therefore cannot order the Creature to do any thing opposite to this Goodness or any thing hurtful to the Creature it self as Unrighteousness is 2. Nor can God secretly inspire any Evil into us 'T is as much against his Nature to incline the heart to sin as it is to command it As it is impossible but that he should love himself and therefore impossible to enjoyn any thing that tends to a hatred of himself by the same reason it is as impossible that he should infuse such a Principle in the heart that might carry a man out to any act of Enmity against him To enjoyn one thing and incline to another would be an Argument of such insincerity unfaithfulness contradiction to
Understanding could not have been imputed to him as his Crime because it would have been not a voluntary but a necessary effect of his Nature had there been an error in the first Wheel the error of the next could not have been imputed to the Nature of that but to the irregular motion of the first Wheel in the Engine The sin of Men and Angels proceeded not from any natural defect in their Understandings but from Inconsideration He that was the Author of Harmony in his other Creatures could not be the Author of Disorder in the chief of his Works Other Creatures were his Footsteps but man was his Image † Gen. 1.26 27. Let us make man in our image after our likeness Which though it seems to imply no more in that place than an Image of his Dominion over the Creatures yet the Apostle raises it a peg higher and gives us a larger Interpretation of it Col. 3.10 And have put on the New-man which is renewed in knowledge after the Image of him that created him making it to consist in a resemblance to his Righteousness Image say some notes the form as Man was a Spirit in regard of his Soul Likeness notes the quality implanted in his Spiritual Nature The Image of God was drawn in him both as he was a Rational and as he was a holy Creature The Creatures manifested the being of a Superiour Power as their Cause but the Righteousness of the first Man evidenced not only a Soveraign Power as the Donor of his being but a holy Power as the Patern of his Work God appeared to be a holy God in the Righteousness of his Creature as well as an Understanding God in the Reason of his Creature while he formed him with all necessary knowledge in his Mind and all necessary uprightness in his Will The Law of Love to God with his whole soul his whole mind his whole heart and strength was originally writ upon his Nature All the parts of his Nature were framed in a Moral Conformity with God to answer this Law and imitate God in his Purity which consists in a love of himself and his own Goodness and Excellency Thus doth the clearness of the Stream point us to the purer Fountain and the brightness of the Beam evidence a greater splendor in the Sun which shot it out 2. His Holiness appears in his Laws as he is a Law-giver and a Judge Since Man was bound to be subject to God as a Creature and had a capacity to be ruled by the Law as an understanding and willing Creature God gave him a Law taken from the depths of his holy Nature and suted to the Original Faculties of Man The Rules which God hath fixed in the World are not the Resolves of bare Will but result particularly from the Goodness of his Nature They are nothing else but the Transcripts of his Infinite detestation of sin as he is the unblemisht Governour of the World This being the most adorable Property of his Nature he hath imprest it upon that Law which he would have inviolably observed as a perpetual Rule for our Actions that we may every moment think of this beautiful Perfection God can command nothing but what hath some similitude with the rectitude of his own Nature All his Laws every Paragraph of them therefore scent of this and glitter with it Deut. 4.8 What Nation hath Statutes and Judgments so righteous as all this Law I set before you this day and therefore they are compar'd to fine Gold that hath no speck or dross * Psal 19.10 This Purity is evident 1. In the Moral Law or Law of Nature 2. In the Ceremonial Law 3. In the Allurements annext to it for keeping it and the Affrightments to restrain from the breaking of it 4. In the Judgments inflicted for the Violation of it 1. In the Moral Law Which is therefore dignified with the title of holy twice in one Verse Rom. 7.12 Wherefore the Law is holy and the Commandment is holy just and good It being the express Image of God's Will as our Saviour was of his Person and bearing a resemblance to the Purity of his Nature The Tables of this Law were put into the Ark that as the Mercy Seat was to represent the Grace of God so the Law was to represent the Holiness of God † Psal 19.1 The Psalmist after he had spoken of the Glory of God in the Heavens wherein the Power of God is exposed to our view introduceth the Law wherein the Purity of God is evidenc'd to our Minds ‖ Vers 7 8. c. perfect pure clean righteous are the titles given to it 'T is clearer in Holiness than the Sun is in brightness and more mighty in it self to command the Conscience than the Sun is to run its Race As the Holiness of the Scripture demonstrates the Divinity of its Author so the Holiness of the Law doth the Purity of the Law-giver 1. The purity of this Law is seen in the Matter of it It prescribes all that becomes a Creature towards God and all that becomes one Creature towards another of his own rank and kind The Image of God is compleat in the Holiness of the first Table and the Righteousness of the second which is intimated by the Apostle Eph. 4.24 the one being the Rule of what we owe to God the other being the Rule of what we owe to man There is no good but it enjoyns and no evil but it disowns 'T is not sickly and lame in any part of it not a good action but it gives it its due praise and not an evil action but it sets a condemning mark upon The Commands of it are frequently in Scripture call'd Judgments because they rightly judge of good and evil and are a clear light to inform the Judgment of Man in the knowledge of both By this was the Understanding of David enlightned to know every false way and to hate it * Psal 119.104 There is no Case can happen but may meet with a determination from it It teaches men the noblest manner of living a life like God himself honourably for the Law-giver and joyfully for the subject It directs us to the highest End sets us at a distance from all base and sordid Practises it proposeth Light to the Understanding and Goodness to the Will It would Tune all the Strings set right all the Orders of Mankind It censures the least Mote countenanceth not any stain in the Life Not a wanton Glance can meet with any justification from it * Mat. 5.28 not a rash Anger but it frowns upon † Mat. 5.22 As the Law-giver wants nothing as an Addition to his Blessedness so his Law wants nothing as a Supplement to its perfection Deut. 4 2. What our Saviour seems to add is not an Addition to mend any defects but a restoration of it from the corrupt Glosses wherewith the Scribes and Pharisees had eclipst the brightness of
of the Act As the good Judge that Condemned the Prisoner out of Conscience concurred with the evil Judge who condemned the Prisoner out of private Revenge not in the Principle and Motive of Condemnation but in the Material part of Condemnation So God assists in that Action of a Man wherein Sin is placed but not in that which is the Formal reason of Sin which is a privation of some Perfection the Action ought Morally to have 3. It will appear further in this that hence it follows that the Action and the viciousness of the Action may have two distinct Causes That may be a cause of the one that is not the cause of the other and hath no hand in the producing of it God concurs to the Act of the Mind as it Counsels and to the external Action upon that Counsel as he preserves the Faculty and gives strength to the Mind to consult and the other parts to execute yet he is not in the least tainted with the Viciousness of the Action Though the Action be from God as a concurrent Cause yet the ill quality of the Action is solely from the Creature with whom God concurs The Sun and the Earth concur to the production of all the Plants that are formed in the womb of the one and Midwiv'd by the other The Sun distributes Heat and the Earth communicates Sap 't is the same Heat dispersed by the one and the same Juyce bestowed by the other It hath not a sweet Juyce for one and a sowr Juyce for another This general Influx of the Sun and Earth is not the immediate cause that one Plant is poysonous and another wholsom but the Sap of the Earth is turned by the Nature and quality of each Plant If there were not such an Influx of the Sun and Earth no Plant could exert that poyson which is in its Nature but yet the Sun and Earth are not the cause of that poyson which is in the Nature of the Plant. If God did not concur to the motions of Men there could be no sinful Action because there could be no Action at all yet this Concurrence is not the cause of that Venom that is in the Action which ariseth from the Corrupt Nature of the Creature no more than the Sun and Earth are the cause of the Poyson of the Plant which is purely the effect of its own Nature upon that general Influx of the Sun and Earth The Influence of God pierceth through all Subjects but the Action of Man done by that Influence is vitiated according to the Nature of its own Corruption As the Sun equally shines through all the Quarrels in the Window if the Glass be bright and clear there is a pure splendor if it be Red or Green the splendor is from the Sun but the discolouring of that Light upon the Wall is from the quality of the Glass † Zanch. Tom. 2. lib. 3. cap. 4. qu. 4. p. 226. But to be yet plainer The Soul is the Image of God and by the Acts of the Soul we may come to the knowledge of the Acts of God the Soul gives motion to the Body and every Member of it and no Member could move without a concurrent virtue of the Soul if a Member be Paralitick or Gouty whatsoever motion that Gouty Member hath is derived to it from the Soul but the Goutyness of the Member was not the Act of the Soul but the fruit of Ill humors in the Body the lameness of the Member and the motion of the Member have two distinct causes the motion is from one cause and the Ill motion from another As the Member could not move irregularly without some Ill humor or cause of that distemper so it could not move at all without the activity of the Soul So though God concur to the act of Understanding Willing and Execution why can he not be as free from the Irregularity in all those as the Soul is free from the Irregularity of the m●●ion of the Body while it is the cause of the motion it self There are two Illustrations generally used in this case that are not unfit the motion of the Pen in writing is from the hand that holds it but the Blurs by the Pen are from some fault in the Pen it self And the Musick of the Instrument is from the hand that touches it but the Jarring from the faultiness of the Strings both are the causes of the motion of the Pen and Strings but not the blurs or jarrings 4. 'T is very congruous to the Wisdom of God to move his Creatures according to their particular Natures but this Motion makes him not the cause of Sin Had our Innocent Nature continued God had moved us according to that Innocent Nature but when the state was changed for a Corrupt one God must either forbear all concourse and so annihilate the World or move us according to that Nature he finds in us If he had overthrown the World upon the entrance of Sin and created another upon the same terms Sin might have as soon defac'd his second Work as it did the first and then it would follow that God would have been alway building and demolishing It was not fit for God to cease from acting as a Wise Governour of his Creature because Man did cease from his Loyalty as a Subject Is it not more agreeable to Gods Wisdom as a Governour to concur with his Creature according to his Nature than to deny his concurrence upon every Evil determination of the Creature God concurr'd with Adams mutable Nature in his first act of Sin he concurr'd to the act and left him to his Mutability If Adam had put out his hand to eat of any other unforbidden Fruit God would have supported his Natural faculty then and concurr'd with him in his motion When Adam would put out his hand to take the Forbidden Fruit God concurr'd to that Natural action but left him to the choice of the Object and to the use of his mutable Nature And when Man became Apostate God concurs with him according to that condition wherein he found him and cannot move him otherwise unless he should alter that Nature Man had contracted God moving the Creature as he found him is no cause of the Ill motion of the Creature As when a Wheel is broken the space of a foot it cannot but move ill in that part till it be mended He that moves it uses the same motion as it is his Act which he would have done had the Wheel been sound the motion is good in the Mover but bad in the Subject 'T is not the fault of him that moves it but the fault of that Wheel that is moved whose breaches came by some other cause A Man doth not use to lay aside his Watch for some Irregularity as long as it is capable of motion but winds it up Why should God cease from concurring with his Creature in its vital Operations and other actions of his
Will because there was a flaw contracted in that Nature that came right and true out of his hand And as he that winds up his disordered Watch is in the same manner the cause of its motion then as he was when it was regular yet by that act of his he is not the cause of the false motion of it but that is from the deficiency of some part of the Watch it self So though God concurs to that Action of the Creature whereby the Wickedness of the Heart is drawn out yet is not God therefore as Unholy as the Heart 5. God hath one End in his Concurrence and Man another in his Action So that there is a Righteous and often a gracious End in God when there is a base and unworthy End in Man God concurs to the substance of the Act Man produceth the circumstance of the Act whereby it is Evil. God orders both the Action wherein he concurs and the Sinfulness over which he presides as a Governour to his own Ends. In Josephs case Man was sinful and God merciful his Brethren acted Envy and God design'd Mercy Gen. 45.4 5. They would be rid of him as an Eyesore and God concurr'd with their Action to make him their Preserver Gen. 50.20 Ye thought evil against me but God meant it unto good God concur'd to Judas his action of betraying our Saviour he supported his Nature while he contracted with the Priests and supported his Members while he was their Guide to apprehend him God's end was the manifestation of his choicest love to Man and Judas his end was the gratification of his own Covetousness The Assyrian did a Divine Work against Hierusalem but not with a Divine end * Isa 10.5.6 ● He had a mind to enlarge his Empire enrich his Coffers with the Spoil and gain the Title of a Conqueror he is desirous to Invade his Neighbours and God employs him to punish his Rebels but he means not so nor doth his heart think so He intended not as God intended The Axe doth not think what the Carpenter intends to do with it But God used the rapine of an Ambitious Nature as an Instrument of his Justice As the exposing Malefactors to wild Beasts was an ancient Punishment whereby the Magistrate intended the execution of Justice and to that purpose used the natural fierceness of the Beasts to an end different from what those ravaging Creatures aim'd at God concur'd with Satan in spoiling Job of his Goods and scarifying his Body God gave Satan license to do it Job 1.12 21. and Job acknowledges it to be God's act But their ends were different God concurred with Satan for the clearing the Integrity of his Servant when Satan aim'd at nothing but the provoking him to Curse his Creator The Physician applies Leeches to suck the superfluous blood but the Leeches suck to glut themselves without any regard to the intention of the Physician and the welfare of the Patient In the same act where men intend to hurt God intends to correct so that his concurrence is in a holy manner while men commit unrighteous actions A Judge commands the Executioner to execute the Sentence of Death which he hath justly pronounced against a Malefactor and admonisheth him to do it out of love to Justice the Executioner hath the Authority of the Judge for his Commission and the protection of the Judge for his Security The Judge stands by to countenance and secure him in the doing of it but if the Executioner hath not the same intention as the Judge viz. a love to Justice in the performance of his Office but a private hatred to the Offender the Judge though he commanded the fact of the Executioner yet did not command this Error of his in it and though he protects him in the Fact yet he owns not this corrupt disposition in him in the doing of what was enjoyn'd him as any act of his own To Conclude this Since the Creature cannot act without God cannot lift up a Hand or move his Tongue without God's preserving and upholding the Faculty and preserving the power of Action and preserving every Member of the Body in its actual Motion and in every circumstance of its Motion we must necessarily suppose God to have such a way of concurrence as doth not intrench upon his Holiness We must not equal the Creature to God by denying its dependence on him Nor must we imagine such a concurrence to the sinfulness of an act as stains the Divine Purity which is I think sufficiently salv'd by distinguishing the matter of the act from the evil adhering to it For since all evil is founded in some good the evil is distinguishable from the good and the deformity of the action from the action it self which as it is a created act hath a dependance on the will and influence of God And as it is a sinful act is the product of the will of the Creature 6. Proposition The holiness of God is not blemisht by proposing Objects to a man which he makes use of to sin There is no Object propos'd to man but is directed by the Providence of God which influenceth all motions in the World and there is no Object propos'd to man but his active Nature may according to the goodness or badness of his disposition make a good or an ill use of That two men one of a charitable the other of a hard-hearted disposition meet with an indigent and necessitous Object is from the Providence of God yet this indigent person is relieved by the one and neglected by the other There could be no action in the World but about some Object there could be no Object offer'd to us but by Divine Providence the active Nature of man would be in vain if there were not Objects about which it might be exercis'd Nothing could present it self to man as an Object either to excite his Grace or awaken his Corruption but by the conduct of the Governour of the World That David should walk upon the Battlements of his Palace and Bathsheba be in the Bath at the same time was from the Divine Providence which orders all the affairs of the World * 2 Sam. 117. and so some understand Jer. 6.21 Thus saith the Lord I will lay stumbling blocks before this People and the Fathers and Sons together shall fall upon them Since they have offered Sacrifices without those due qualifications in their hearts which were necessary to render them acceptable to me I will lay in their way such Objects which their Corruption will use ill to their further sin and ruin so Psal 105.25 He turned their heart to hate his people that is by the multiplying his People he gave occasion to the Egyptians of hating them instead of caressing them as they had formerly done But God's Holiness is not blemisht by this for 1. This proposing or presenting of Objects invades not the liberty of any man The Tree of the Knowledge of Good
when that Fire is removed they return to their natural quality of hardness and brittleness the positive act of the Fire is to melt and soften and the softness of the Rosin is to be ascribed to that but the hardness is from the Rosin it self wherein the Fire hath no influence but only a negative act by a removal of it So when God hardens a man he only leaves him to that stony heart which he derived from Adam and brought with him into the world All mens understandings being blinded and their wills perverted in Adam God's withdrawing his Grace is but a leaving them to their natural pravity which is the cause of their further sinning and not God's removal of that special light he before afforded them or restraint he held over them As when God withdraws his preserving Power from the Creature he is not the efficient but deficient cause of the Creatures destruction so in this case God only ceaseth to bind and damm up that sin which else would break out 2. The whole positive cause of this hardness is from mans corruption God infuseth not any sin into his Creatures but forbears to infuse his Grace restrain their Lusts which upon the removal of his Grace work impetuously God only gives them up to that which he knows will work strongly in their hearts And therefore the Apostle wipes off from God any positive act in that uncleaness the Heathens were given up to Rom. 1.24 Wherefore God gave them up to uncleaness through the lusts of their own hearts And verse 26. God gave them up to vile affections but they were their own affections none of Gods inspiring by adding through the lusts of their own Hearts Gods giving them up was the Logical cause or a cause by way of Argument their own Lusts were the true and natural cause their own they were before they were given up to them and belonging to none as the Author but themselves after they were given up to them The Lust in the Heart and the temptation without easily close and mix interests with one another As the Fire in a Coal pit will with the fuell if the streams derived into it for the quenching it be dam'd up The naturall Passions will run to a temptation as the Waters of a River tumble towards the Sea When a man that hath bridled in a high mettled-Horse from running out gives him the Rains or a Huntsman takes off the string that held the Dog and lets him run after the Hare are they the immediate cause of the motion of the one or the other no but the mettle and strength of the Horse and the natural inclination of the Hound both which are left to their own motions to pursue their own natural instincts Man doth as naturally tend to sin as a stone to the Center or as a weighty thing inclines to a motion to the Earth T●s from the propension of mans nature that he drinks up iniquity like water and God doth no more when he leaves a man to sin by taking away the Hedge which stopt him but leave him to his natural Inclination As a man that breaks up a damm he hath placed leaves the Streams to run in their natural Chanel or one that takes away a prop from a Stone to let it fall leaves it only to that nature which inclines it to a descent both have their motion from their own Nature and man his Sin from his own Corruption * Amyrald de predest p. 107. The withdrawing the Sun-beams is not the cause of Darkness but the Shadiness of the Earth nor is the departure of the Sun the cause of Winter but the coldness of the Air and Earth which was temper'd and beaten back into the bowels of the Earth by the vigor of the Sun upon whose departure they return to their natural state The Sun only leaves the Earth and Air as it found them at the beginning of the Spring or the beginning of the Day If God do not give a man Grace to melt him yet he cannot be said to communicate to him that nature which hardens him which man hath from himself As God was not the cause of the first sin of Adam which was the root of all other so he is not the cause of the following sins which as branches spring from that root mans free-will was the cause of the first sin and the corruption of his nature by it the cause of all succeeding sins God doth not immediately harden any man but doth propose those things from whence the natural Vice of man takes an occasion to strengthen and nourish itself Hence God is said to harden Pharao'hs Heart ‖ Exod. 7.13 by concurring with the Magicians in turning their rods into Serpents which stiffened his Heart against Moses conceiving him by reason of that to have no more power than other men and was an occasion of his further hardning And Pharaoh is said to harden himself * Exod. 8.32 that is in regard of his own natural passion 3. God is holy and righteous because he doth not withdraw from man till man deserts him To say that God withdrew that Grace from Adam which he had afforded him in Creation or any thing that was due to him till he had abused the Gifts of God and turned them to an end contrary to that of Creation would be a reflection upon the Divine Holiness God was first deserted by man before man was deserted by God and man doth first contemn and abuse the common Grace of God and those reliques of natural light that enlighten every man that comes into the World † John 1 9. before God leaves him to the hurry of his own Passions Ephraim was first joyned to Idols before God pronounced the fatal sentence Let him alone ‖ Hos 4.17 And the Heathens first changed the glory of the incorruptible God before God withdrew his common Grace from the corrupted creature * Rom. 1.23 24. and they first served the Creature more then the Creator before the Creator gave them up to the slavish Chains of their vile affections † Ver. 25 26. Israel first cast off God before God cast off them but then he gave them up to their own Hearts Lusts and they walked in their own Counsels Psa 81.11 12. Since sin entred into the World by the fall of Adam and the blood of all his posterity was tainted Man cannot do any thing that is formally good not for want of faculties but for the want of a righteous habit in those faculties especially in the Will yet God discovers himself to man in the works of his hands he hath left in him footsteps of natural reason he doth attend him with common motions of his Spirit corrects him for his faults with gentle Chastisements He is neer unto all in some kind of Instructions He puts many times providential bars in their way of sinning but when they will rush into it as the Horse into
Throne * Rev. 4.8 10. a Metaphor taken from the triumphing Generals among the Romans who hung up their victorious Laurels in the Capitol dedicating them to their Gods acknowledging them their Superiors in strength and Authors of their victory This self-emptiness at the consideration of Divine Purity is the note of the true Church represented by the 24 Elders and a note of a true Member of the Church whereas boasting of Perfection Merit is the property of the Antichristian tribe that have mean thoughts of this adorable Perfection think themselves more righteous than the unspotted Angels What a self annihilation is therein a good man when the sense of Divine Purity is most lively in him yea how detestable is he to himsel There is as little proportion between the holiness of the Divine Majesty and that of the most righteous Creature as there is between a nearness of a Person that stands upon a Mountain to the Sun and of him that beholds him in a Vale one is nearer than the other but it is an advantage not to be boasted of in regard of the vast distance that is between the Sun and the elevated Spectator 3. This would make us full of an affectionate Reverence in all our approaches to God By this Perfection God is rendred venerable and fit to be reverenc'd by his Creature and magnificent thoughts of it in the Creature would awaken him to an actual reverence of the Divine Majesty Psal 111.9 Holy and reverend is his name a good opinion of this would engender in us a sincere respect towards him we should then serve the Lord with fear as the Expression is Psal 2.11 that is be afraid to cast any thing before him that may offend the eyes of his Purity Who would venture rashly and garishly into the presence of an eminent Moralist or of a righteous King upon his Throne The fixedness of the Angels arose from the continual prospect of this What if we had been with Isaiah when he saw the Vision and beheld him in the same glory and the heavenly Quire in their reverential Posture in the Service of God would it not have barred our wandrings and stak'd us down to our Duty Would not the fortifying an Idea of it in our Minds produce the same effect 'T is for want of this we carry our selves so loosely and unbecomingly in the Divine Presence with the same or meaner Affections than those wherewith we stand before some vile Creature that is our Superiour in the World as though a piece of filthy Flesh were more valuable than this Perfection of the Divinity How doth the Psalmist double his Exhortation to men to sing Praise to God Psal 47.6 Sing praise to God sing praises sing praise to our King sing praise because of his Majesty and the Purity of his Dominion And verse 8. God reigns over the Heathen God sits upon the Throne of his Holiness How would this elevate us in Praise and prostrate us in Prayer when we praise and pray with an understanding and insight of that Nature we bless or implore as he speaks verse 7. Sing ye praise with understanding The holiness of God in his Government and Dominion the holiness of his Nature and the holiness of his Precepts should beget in us an humble respect in our Approaches The more we grow in a sense of this the more shall we advance in the true performance of all our Duties * Amyrald Moral Tom. 5. p. 462. Those Nations which ador'd the Sun had they at first seen his Brightness wrapped and maskt in a Cloud and paid a veneration to it how would their Adorations have mounted to a greater point after they had seen it in its full brightness shaking off those Vails and chasing away the Mists before it what a profound reverence would they have paid it when they beheld it in its Glory and Meridian Brightness Our reverence to God in all our Addresses to him will arrive to greater degrees if every act of Duty be usher'd in and season'd with the thoughts of God as sitting upon a Throne of Holiness we shall have a more becoming sense of our own Vileness a greater ardor to his Service a deeper respect in his Presence if our Understanding be more clear'd and possessed with Notions of this Perfection Thus take a view of God in this part of his Glory before you fall down before his Throne and assure your selves you will find your hearts and services quickned with a new and lively Spirit 4. A due sense of this Perfection in God would produce in us a fear of God and arm us against Temptations and Sin What made the Heathens so wanton and loose but the representations of their Gods as vitious Who would stick at Adulteries and more prodigious Lusts that can take a Pattern for them from the Person he adores for a Deity Upon which account Plato would have Poets banish'd from his Commonwealth because by dressing up their Gods in wanton garbs in their Poems they encourag'd wickedness in the People But if the thoughts of Gods holiness were imprest upon us we should regard sin with the same eye mark it with the same detestation in our measures as God himself doth So far as we are sensible of the Divine Purity we should account sin vile as it deserves we should hate it intirely without a grain of love to it and hate it perpetually Psal 119.104 Through thy Precepts I get understanding therefore I hate every false way He looks into God's Statute-Book and thereby arrives to an understanding of the Purity of his Nature whence his hatred of Iniquity commenc'd This would govern our Motion check our Vices it would make us tremble at the hissing of a Temptation When a Corrup ion did but peep out and put forth its head a look to the Divine Purity would be attended with a fresh Con●oy of Strength to resist it There is such Fortification as to be wrapped up in the sense of this This would fill us with an awe of God we should be asham'd to admit any filthy thing into us which we know is detestable to his pure Eye As the approach of a grave and serious Man makes Children hasten their Trifles out of t●e way so would a Consideration of this Attribute make us cast away our Idols and fling away our ridiculous thoughts and designs 5. A due sense of this Perfection would inflame us with a vehement desire to be conform'd to him All our Desires would be ardent to regulate our selves according to this Pattern of Holiness and Goodness which is not to be equalled the Contemplating it as it shines forth in the Face of Christ will transform us into the same Image † 2 Cor. 3.19 Since our lapsed state we cannot behold the holiness of God in it self without affrightment nor is it an Object of Imitation but as tempered in Christ to our view When we cannot without blinding our selves look upon the Sun
God is a Good which hath no taint of Evil nothing can be so Supream an Evil as God is Supream Goodness He is only Good without capacity of increase He is all Good and unmixedly Good none Good but God A Goodness like the Sun that hath all Light and no Darkness That is the second thing He is the Supream and chief Goodness 3. This Goodness is Communicative None so Communicatively Good as God As the Notion of God includes Goodness so the Notion of Goodness includes Diffusiveness without Goodness he would cease to be a Deity and without Diffusiveness he would cease to be Good The being Good is necessary to the being God For Goodness is nothing else in the Notion of it but a strong inclination to do Good either to find or make an Object wherein to exercise it self according to the Propension of its own Nature And it is an Inclination of Communicating it self not for its own interest but the good of the Object it pitcheth upon Thus God is good by Nature and his Nature is not without activity he acts conveniently to his own Nature † Ps 119.68 Thou art good and dost good And nothing accrues to him by the Communications of himself to others since his blessedness was as great before the frame of any Creature as ever it was since the Erecting of the World so that the Goodness of Christ himself encreaseth not the lustre of his Happiness † Psal 16.2 My Goodness extends not to thee He is not of a Niggardly and Envious Nature He is too Rich to have any cause to envy and too Good to have any will to envy He is as liberal as he is Rich according to the capacity of the Object about which his Goodness is exercised The Divine Goodness being the Supream Goodness is Goodness in the highest Degree of Activity Not an idle enclos'd pent up Goodness as a Spring shut up or a Fountain sealed bubling up within it self but bubling out of it self A Fountain of Gardens to water every part of his Creation He is an Oyntment powr'd forth † Cant. 1.5 Nothing spreads it self more than Oyl and takes up a larger space wheresoever it drops It may be no less said of the Goodness of God as it is of the fulness of Christ † Eph. 1.23 He fills all in all He fills Rational Creatures with Understanding Sensitive Nature with Vigor and Motion the whole World with Beauty and Sweetness Every Tast every Touch of a Creature is a Tast and Touch of Divine Goodness Divine Goodness offers it self in one spark in this Creature in another spark in the other Creature and altogether make up a Goodness inconceivable by any Creature The whole Mass and extracted Spirit of it is infinitely short of the Goodness of the Divine Nature imperfect shadows of that Goodness which is in himself Indeed the more excellent any thing is the more nobly it acts How remotely doth Light that excellent brightness of the Creation disperse it self How doth that glorious Creature which God hath set in the Heavens spread its Wings over Heaven and Earth roul it self about the World cast its Beams upward and downward insinuate into all Corners pierce the Depths and shoot up its Rays into the Heigths encircle the higher and lower Creatures in its Arms reach out its Communications to influence every thing under the Earth as well as dart its Beams of light and heat on things above or upon the Earth Nothing is hid from it † Psal 19.6 not from its power nor from its sweetness How Communicative also is Water a necessary and excellent Creature How active is it in a River to nourish the living Creatures engendred in its Womb Refresheth every Shore it runs by promotes the propagation of Fruits for the Nourishment and bestows a Verdure upon the Ground for the delight of Man and where it cannot reach the higher Ground in its Substance it doth by its Vapours mounted up and concocted by the Sun and gently distilled upon the Earth for the opening its Womb to bring forth its Fruits † Tom. 2. p. 926. God is more prone to communicate himself than the Sun to spread its Wings or the Earth to mount up its Fruits or the Water to multiply living Creatures Goodness is his Nature Hence were there internal Communications of himself from Eternity Diffusions of himself without himself in time in the Creation of the World like a full Vessel running over He Created the World that he might impart his Goodness to something without him and diffuse larger measures of his Goodness after he had laid the first Foundation of it in its Being And therefore he Created several sorts of Creatures that they might be capable of various and distinct measures of his Liberality according to the distinct capacities of their Nature but imparted most to the Rational Creature because that is only capable of an Understanding to know him and Will to embrace him He is the highest Goodness and therefore a Communicative Goodness and acts excellently according to his Nature 4. God is necessarily good None is necessarily Good but God he is as necessarily Good as he is necessarily God His Goodness is as inseparable from his Nature as his Holiness He is Good by Nature not only by will as he is Holy by Nature not only by will he is Good in his Nature and Good in his Actions and as he cannot be bad in his Nature so he cannot be bad in his Communications He can no more act contrary to this Goodness in any of his actions than he can un-God himself 'T is not necessary that God should Create a World he was at his own choice whether he would Create or no But when he resolves to make a World 't is necessary that he should make it good because he is Goodness it self and cannot act against his own Nature He could not Create any thing without Goodness in the very act The very act of Creation or Communicating being to any thing without himself is in it self an act of Goodness as well as an act of Power Had he not been Good in himself nothing could have been endued with any Goodness by him In the act of giving Being he is Liberal the Being he bestows is a Displaying his own Liberality He could not confer what he needs not and which could not be deserved without being Pountiful Since what was nothing could not Merit to be brought into Being the very act of giving to nothing a Being was an act of choice Goodness He could not Create any thing without Goodness as the Motive and the necessary Motive His Goodness could not necessitate him to make the World but his Goodness could only move him to resolve to make a World He was not bound to erect and fashion it because of his Goodness but he could not frame it without his Goodness as the moving cause He could not Create any thing but he must Create
of the Body and Service of the Soul What is there in the whole Structure that doth not inform us of the Goodness of God 2. But what is this to that goodness which shines in the Nature of the Soul Who can express the wonders of that Comeliness that is wrapt up in this Mask of Clay A Soul endued with a clearness of Understanding and freedom of Will Faculties no sooner fram'd but they were able to produce the Operations they were intended for A Soul that excelled the whole World that comprehended the whole Creation A Soul that evidenced the extent of its Skill in giving names to all that variety of Creatures which had issued out of the hand of Divine Power * Gen. 2.19 A Soul able to discover the Nature of other Creatures and manage and conduct their Motions In the Ruines of a Palace we may see the Curiosity display'd and the Cost expended in the building of it In the Ruines of this fallen Structure we still find it capable of a mighty Knowledge a Reason able to regulate Affairs govern States order more Mighty and Massy Creatures find out witty Inventions There is still an Understanding to irradiate the other Faculties a Mind to contemplate its own Creator a Judgment to discern the differences between Good and Evil Vice and Vertue which the Goodness of God hath not granted to any lower Creature These Excellent Faculties together with the Power of Self-reflection and the swiftness of the Mind in running over the things of the Creation are astonishing Gleams of the vast Goodness of that Divine Hand which ennobled this Frame To the other Creatures of this World God had given out some small Mites from his Treasury but in the Perfections of Man he hath opened the more secret parts of his Exchequer and liberally bestow'd those Doles which he hath not expended upon the other Creatures on Earth 3. Besides this He did not only make Man so noble a Creature in his Frame but he made him after his own Image in Holiness He imparted to him a Spark of his own Comeliness in order to a communion with himself in Happiness had Man stood his ground in his tryal and used those Faculties well which had been the gift of his Bountiful Creator He made Man after his Image after his own Image † Gen. 1.26 27. That as a Coyn bears the Image of the Prince so did the Soul of Man the Image of God Not the Image of Angels though the speech be in the Plural Number Let us make Man 'T is not to a Creature but to a Creator Let us that are his Makers make him in the Image of his Makers God Created Man Angels did not Create him God Created Man in his own Image not therefore in the Image of Angels The Nature of God and the Nature of Angels are not the same Where in the whole Scripture is Man said to be made after the Image of Angels God made Man not in the Image of Angels to be conformed to them as his Prototype but in the Image of the Blessed God to be conformed to the Divine Nature That as he was conform'd to the Image of his Holiness he might also partake of the Image of his Blessedness which without it could not be attained For as the felicity of God could not be clear without an unspotted Holiness so neither can there be a glorious Happiness without Purity in the Creature This God provided for in his Creation of Man giving him such accomplishments in those two Excellent Pieces of Soul and Body that nothing was wanting to him but his own will to instate him in an invariable Felicity He was possessed with such a Nature by the hand of Divine Goodness such a loftiness of Understanding and purity of Faculties that he might have been for ever Happy as well as the standing Angels And he was placed in such a Condition that moved the envy of fallen Spirits He had as much Grace bestow'd upon him as was proportionable to that Covenant God then made with him The Tenor of which was That his Life should continue so long as his Obedience and his Happiness endure so long as his Integrity And as God by Creation had given him an Integrity of Nature so he had given him a power to persist in it if he would Herein is the Goodness of God display'd that he made Man after his own Image 4. As to the Life of Man in this World God by an immense Goodness Copied out in him the whole Creation and made him an Abridgment of the higher and lower World a little World in a greater one The Link of the two Worlds of Heaven and Earth as the Spiritual and Corporeal Natures are united in him the Earth in the Dust of his Body and the Heavens in the Chrystal of his Soul He hath the upper Springs of the Life of Angels in his Reason and the neather Springs of the Life of Animals in his Sense God display'd those Vertues in Man which he had discover'd in the rest of the lower Creation but besides the communication which he had with Earth in his Nature God gave him a participation with Heaven in his Spirit A meer Bodily Being he hath given to the Heavens Earth Elements a Vegetative Life or a Life of Growth he hath vouchsafed to the Plants of the Ground He hath stretched out his Liberality more to Animals and Beasts by giving them Sense All these hath his Goodness linkt in Man Being Life Sense with a richer Dole than any of those Creatures have receiv'd in a Rational Intellectual Life whereby he approacheth to the Nature of Angels This some of the Jews understood * Gen. 2.7 God breathed into his Nostrils the Breath of Life and Man became a living Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Breath of Lives in the Hebrew not one sort of Life but that variety of Lives which he had imparted to other Creatures All the Perfections scattered in other Creatures do unitedly meet in Man So that Philo might well call him every Creature the Model of the whole Creation His Soul is Heaven and his Body is Earth † Eugubin lib. 5. cap. 9. So that the Immensity of his Goodness to Man is as great as all that Goodness you behold in Sensitive and Intelligible things 5. All this was free Goodness God Eternally possessed his own Felicity in himself and had no need of the Existence of any thing without himself for his satisfaction Man before his Being could have no good qualities to invite God to make him so Excellent a Fabrick For being nothing he was as unable to allure and merit as to bring himself into Being Nay he Created a Multitude of Men who he foresaw would behave themselves in as ungrateful a manner as if they had not been his Creatures but had bestow'd that rich variety upon themselves without the hand of a Superior Benefactor How great is this Goodness that hath made us Models
of the whole Creation tied together Heaven and Earth in our Nature when he might have rankt us among the lower Creatures of the Earth made us meer Bodies as the Stones or meer Animals as the Brutes and denied us those Capacious Souls whereby we might both know him and enjoy him What could Man have been more unless he had been the Original which was impossible He could not be greater than to be an Image of the Deity an Epitome of the whole Creation Well may we cry out with the Psalmist * Psal 8.1 4. O Lord our Lord How Excellent is thy Name the Name of thy Goodness in all the Earth How more particularly in Man What is Man that thou art mindful of him What is a little Clod of Earth and Dust that thou shouldest ennoble him with so rich a Nature and Engrave upon him such Characters of thy Immense Being 6. The Goodness of God appears in the Conveniencies he provided for and gave to Man As God gave him a Being Morally perfect in regard of Righteousness so he gave him a Being Naturally perfect in regard of delightful Conveniencies which was the fruit of Excellent Goodness Since there was no quality in Man to invite God to provide him so Rich a World nor to bestow upon him so Comely a Being 1. The World was made for Man Since Angels have not need of any thing in this World and are above the Conveniencies of Earth and Air it will follow that Man being the noblest Creature on the Earth was the more immediate End of the visible Creation All Inferior things are made to be subservient to those that have a more excellent Prerogative of Nature and therefore all things for Man who exceeds all the rest in Dignity As Man was made for the honour of God so the World was made for the support and delight of Man in order to his performing the Service due from him to God The Empire God settled Man in as his Lieutenant over the Works of his Hands when he gave him possession of Paradise is a clear manifestation of it God put all things under his Feet and gave him a deputed Dominion over the rest of the Creatures under himself as the absolute Soveraign * Psal 8.6 7 8. Thou madest him to have Dominion over the Works of thy Hands thou hast put all things under his Feet all Sheep and Oxen yea and the Beasts of the Field the Foul of the Air and the Fish of the Sea yea and whatsoever passeth through the Paths of the Sea What less is witnest to by the Calamity all Creatures were subjected to by the Corruption of Mans Nature Then was the Earth Curs'd and a black Cloud flung upon the Beauty of the Creation and the strength and vigor of it languisheth to this day under the Curse of God † Gen. 2.17 18. and groans under that vanity the Sin of Man subjected it to * Rom. 8.20 22. The Treasons of Man against God brought Misery upon that which was fram'd for the use of Man As when the Majesty of a Prince is violated by the Treason and Rebellion of his Subjects all that which belongs to them and was before the free Gift of the Prince to them is forfeit their Habitations Palaces Cattle all that belongs to them bear the Marks of his Soveraign fury Had not the Delicacies of the Earth been made for the use of Man they had not fallen under the Indignation of God upon the Sin of Man God Crown'd the Earth with his Goodness to gratifie Man gave Man a right to serve himself of the delightful Creatures he had provided † Gen. 1.28 29 30. yea and after Man had forfeited all by Sin and God had washt again the Creature in a Deluge he renews the Creation and delivers it again into the hand of Man binding all Creatures to pay a Respect to him and Recognize him as their Lord either spontaneously or by force * Gen. 9.2 3. and commissions them all to fill the heart of Man with food and gladness And he loves all Creatures as they conduce to the good of and are serviceable to his prime Creature which he set up for his own glory And therefore when he loves a Person he loves what belongs to him He takes care of Jacob and his Cattle Of Penitent Nineveh and their Cattle † Jonah 4.11 As when he sends Judgments upon Men he destroys their Goods 2. God richly furnisht the World for Man He did not only Erect a stately Palace for his Habitation but provided all kind of Furniture as a Mark of his Goodness for the Entertainment of his Creature Man He Archt over his Habitation with a bespangled Heaven and Floor'd it with a solid Earth and spread a curious wrought Tapestry upon the Ground where he was to tread and seemed to sweep all the Rubbish of the Chaos to the two uninhabitable Poles When at the first Creation of the Matter the Waters cover'd the Earth and rendred it uninhabitable for Man God Drain'd them into the proper Chanels he had founded for them and set a bound that they might not pass over that they turn not again to cover the Earth * Gen. 1.9 They fled and hasted away to their proper Stations † Psal 104.7 8 9. as if they were ambitious to deny their own Nature and content themselves with an Imprisonment for the convenient Habitation of him who was to be appointed Lord of the World He hath set up standing Lights in the Heaven to direct our Motion and to regulate the Seasons The Sun was Created that Man might see to go forth to his Labour * Psal 104.22 23. Both Sun and Moon though set in the Heaven were form'd to give light on the Earth † Gen. 1.15 17. The Air is his Aviary the Sea and Rivers his Fish-ponds the Valleys his Granary the Mountains his Magazine The first afford Man Creatures for Nourishment the other Metals for Perfection The Animals were Created for the support of the life of Man the Herbs of the Ground were provided for the maintenance of their Lives and gentle Dews and moistening Showers and in some places slimy Flouds appointed to render the Earth fruitful and capable to offer to Man and Beast what was fit for their Nourishment He hath peopled every Element with a variety of Creatures both for necessity and delight all furnisht with useful qualities for the Service of Man There is not the most despicable thing in the whole Creation but it is endued with a Nature to contribute something for our Welfare either as Food to Nourish us when we are Healthful or as Medicine to Cure us when we are Distemper'd or as a Garment to Cloath us when we are Naked and Arm us against the Cold of the Season or as a refreshment when we are weary or as a delight when we are sad All serve for Necessity or Ornament either to spread our Table
support our security by something which might appear more formal and solemn than a bare word By this the Divine Goodness provides against our Spiritual faintings and shews us by real Signs as well as Verbal Declarations that the Covenant sealed by the Blood of Christ is unalterable and thereby would fortifie and mount our hopes to degrees in some measure suitable to the kindness of the Covenant and the dignity of the Redeemer's Blood And it 's yet a further degree of his Goodness that he hath appointed us so often to Celebrate it whereby he shews how careful he is to keep up our tottering Faith and preserve us constant in our obedience obliging himself to the performance of his Promise and obliging u● to the payment of our Duty 2. His Goodness is seen in the Sacrament in giving us in it an union and communion with Christ There is not only a Commemoration of Christ dying but a Communication of Christ living The Apostle strongly asserts it by way of Interrogation * 1 Cor 1● The Cup of Blessing which we bless is it not the Communion of the Blood of Christ The Bread which we break is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ In the Cup there is a communication of the Blood of Christ a conveyance of a Right to the Merits of his Death and the Blessedness of his Life We are not less by this made one Body with Christ than we are by Baptism † 1 Cor. 12.13 And put on Christ living in this as well as in Baptism * Gal. 3.27 That as his taking our infirm Flesh was a real Incarnation so the giving us his Flesh to eat is a Mystical Incarnation in Believers whereby they become one Body with him as Crucified and one Body with him as Risen For if Christ himself be receiv'd by Faith in the Word † Colos 2.6 He is no less received by Faith in the Sacrament When the Holy Ghost is said to be receiv'd the Graces or Gifts of the Holy Ghost are receiv'd So when Christ is receiv'd the Fruits of his Death are really partaked of The Israelites that eat of the Sacrifices did partake of the Altar * 1 Cor. 10.18 i. e. had a communion with the God of Israel to whom they had been Sacrificed and those that eat of the Sacrifices offer'd to Idols had a fellowship with Devils to whom those Sacrifices were offer'd Verse 20. Those that partake of the Sacraments in a due manner have a communion with that God to whom it was Sacrificed and a communion with that Body which was Sacrificed to God Not that the Substance of that Body and Blood is wrapped up in the Elements or that the Bread and Wine are transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ but as they represent him and by vertue of the Institution are in Estimation himself his own Body and Blood by the same reason as he is call'd Christ our Passeover he may be call'd Christ our Supper † 1 Cor. 5.7 For as they are so reckon'd to an unworthy Receiver as if they were the real Body and Blood of Christ because by his not discerning the Lords Body in it or making light of it as common Bread he is judged guilty of the Body and Blood of Christ guilty of treating him in as base a manner as the Jews did when they Crown'd him with Thorns * 1 Cor. 11.27.29 By the same reason they must be reckon'd to a worthy Receiver as the very Body and Blood of Christ So that as the unworthy Receiver eats and drinks Damnation the worthy Receiver eats and drinks Salvation It would be an empty Mystery and unworthy of an Institution by Divine Goodness if there were not some communion with Christ in it There would be some kind of deceit in the Precept Take Eat and Drink this is my Body and Blood a conveyance of Spiritual vital influences to our Souls For the natural End of eating and drinking is the nourishment and increase of the Body and preservation of Life by that which we eat and drink The infinite Wise gracious and true God would never give us empty Figures without accomplishing that which is signified by them and suitable to them How great is this Goodness of God he would have his Son in us one with us straitly joyn'd to us as if we were his proper Flesh and Blood In the Incarnation Divine Goodness united him to our Nature in the Sacrament it doth in a sort unite him with his purchas'd Priviledges to our Persons we have not a communion with a part or a Member of his Body or a drop of his Blood but with his whole Body and Blood represented in every part of the Elements The Angels in the Heaven enjoy not so great a priviledge They have the honour to be under him as their Head but not that of having him for their Food they behold him but they do not taste him And certainly that Goodness that hath condescended so much to our weakness would impart it to us in a very glorious manner were we capable of it But because a Man cannot behold the Light of the Sun in its full splendor by reason of the infirmities of his Eyes he must behold it by the help of a Glass and such a communication through a coloured and Opake-glass is as real from the Sun it self though not so glorious but more shrowded and obscure 'T is the same light that shines through that Medium as spreads it self gloriously in the open Air though the one be maskt and the other open-fac'd To conclude this by the way we may take notice of the neglect of this Ordina●●● If it be a token of Divine Goodness to appoint it 't is no sign of our estimation of Divine Goodness to neglect it He that values the kindness of his friend will accept of his invitation if there be not some strong impediments in the way or so much familiarity with him that his refusal upon a light occasion would not be unkindly taken But though God put on the disposition of a Friend to us yet he looseth not the authority of a Soveraign and the humble familiarity he invites us to doth not diminish the conditi●n and duty of a Subject A Soveraign Prince would not take it well if a Favourite should refuse the offer'd honour of his Table The Viands of Godare not to be slighted Can we live better upon our poor pittance than upon his Dainties Did not Divine Goodness condescend in it to the weakness of our Faith and shall we conceit our Faith stronger than God thinks it If he thought fit by those Seals to make a Deed of Gift to us shall we be so unmannerly to him and such enemies to the security he offers us over and above his word as not to accept it Are we unwilling to have our Souls enflamed with love our Hearts filled with comfort and arm'd against the attempts of our Enemies 'T
we be to approve of his actions and not have an ill will towards him for his Goodness or towards those he is pleased to make the Subjects of it Since all his Doles are given to invite Man to Repentance * Rom. 2.4 to envy them those Goods God hath bestow'd upon them is to envy God the Glory of his own Goodness and them the felicity those things might move them to aspire to 'T is to wish God more contracted and thy Neighbour more miserable But a deep sense of his Soveraign Goodness would make us rejoyce in any marks of it upon others and move us to bless him instead of censuring him 7. It would make us thankful What can be the most proper the most natural Reflection when we behold the most magnificent Characters he hath imprinted upon our Souls the conveniency of the Members he hath compacted in our Bodies but a Praise of him Such Motion had David upon the first Consideration * Psal 139.14 I will praise thee for I am fearfully and wonderfully made What could be the most natural Reflection when we behold the rich Prerogatives of our Natures above other Creatures the provision he hath made for us for our delight in the beauties of Heaven for our support in the Creatures on Earth What can reasonably be expected from uncorrupted Man to be the first motion of his Soul but an extolling the bountiful hand of the invisible Donor who ever he be This would make us venture at some endeavours of a grateful acknowledgment though we should despair of rendring any thing proportionable to the greatness of the Benefit and such an acknowledgment of our own weakness would be an acceptable part of our gratitude Without a due and deep sense of Divine Goodness our praise of it and thankfulness for it will be but cold formal and customary our Tongues may bless him and our Heart slight him And this will lead us to the third Exhortation 3. Which is that of thankfulness for Divine Goodness The absolute Goodness of God as it is the Excellency of his Nature is the Object of Praise The Relative Goodness of God as he is our Benefactor is the Object Thankfulness This was always a Debt due from Man to God he had Obligations in the time of his Integrity and was then to render it he is not less but more oblig'd to it in the State of Corruption The Benefits being the greater by how much the more unworthy he is of them by reason of his Revolt The Bounty bestow'd upon an Enemy that merits the contrary ought to be received with a greater Resentment than that bestow'd on a Friend who is not unworthy of Testimonies of Respect Gratitude to God is the Duty of every Creature that hath a sense of it self The more Excellent Being any enjoy the more devout ought to be the acknowledgment How often doth David stir up not only himself but summon all Creatures even the insensible ones to joyn in the Consort * Psal 148. He calls to the Deeps Fire Hail Snow Mountains and Hills to bear a part in this work of Praise Not that they are able to do it actively but to shew that Man is to call in the whole Creation to assist him passively and should have so much Charity to all Creatures as to receive what they offer and so much affection to God as to present to him what he receives from him Snow and Hail cannot bless and praise God but Man ought to praise God for those things wherein there is a mixture of trouble and inconvenience something to molest our sense as well as something that improves the Earth for Fruit. This God requires of us for this he instituted several Offerings and requir'd a little Portion of Fruits to be presented to him as an acknowledgment they held the whole from his Bounty And the end of the Festival Days among the Jews was to revive the memory of those signal acts wherein his Power for them and his Goodness to them had been extraordinarily evident 'T is no more but our Mouths to Praise him and our Hand to Obey him that he exacts at our hands He commands us not to expend what he allows us in the Erecting stately Temples to his Honour all the Coyn he requires to be paid with for his Expence is the offering of Thanksgiving * Psal 50.14 And this we ought to do as much as we can since we cannot do it as much as he Merits for who can shew forth all his praise Psal 106.2 If we have the Fruit of his Goodness 't is fit he should have the Fruit of our Lips * Heb. 13.15 The least Kindness should inflame our Souls with a kindly Resentment Though some of his Benefits have a brighter some a darker aspect towards us yet they all come from this common Spring His Goodness shines in all there are the footsteps of Goodness in the least as well as the smiles of Goodness in the greatest the meanest therefore is not to pass without a regard of the Author As the Glory of of God is more illustrious in some Creatures than in others yet it glitters in all and the lowest as well as the highest administers matter of Praise But they are not only little things but the choicer favours he hath bestow'd upon us How much doth it deserve our acknowledgment that he should contrive our Recovery when we had plotted our Ruine That when he did from Eternity behold the Crimes wherewith we would incense him he should not according to the Rights of Justice cast us into Hell but prize us at the Rate of the Blood and Life of his only Son in value above the Blood of Men and Lives of Angels How should we bless that God that we have yet a Gospel among us that we are not driven into the utmost Regions that we can attend upon him in the face of the Sun and not forced to the secret obscurities of the Night Whatsoever we enjoy whatsoever we receive we must own him as the Donor and read his Hand in it Rob him not of any Praise to give to an Instrument No Man hath wherewithal to do us good nor a heart to do us good nor opportunities of benefiting us without him When the Cripple received the soundness of his Limbs from Peter he praised the Hand that sent it not the Hand that brought it * Acts 3.6 Verse 8. He praised God When we want any thing that is good let the goodness of Divine Nature move us to Davids practice to thirst after God * Psal 42.1 And when we feel the motions of his Goodness to us let us imitate the Temper of the same Holy Man * Psal 103.2 Bless the Lord O my Soul and forget not all his benefits 'T is an unworthy Carriage to deal with him as a Traveller doth with a Fountain kneel down to drink of it when he is thirsty and turn his back
as his own peculiar for his own glory and service By this Redemption there results to God a right over our bodies over our Spirits over our services as well as by Creation and to shew the strength of this right the Apostle repeats it you are bought a purchase cannot be without a price paid but he adds price also bought with a price To strengthen the Title purchase gave him a new right and the greatness of the price established that right The more a man pays for a thing the more usually we say he deserves to have it he hath paid enough for it It was indeed price enough and too much for such vile Creatures as we are III. The third thing is The Nature of this Dominion 1. This Dominion is Independent His Throne is in the Heavens the Heavens depend not upon the Earth nor God upon his Creatures Since he is Independent in regard of his Essence he is so in his dominion which flows from the excellency and fulness of his Essence As he receives his Essence from none so he derives his dominion from none All other dominion except paternal Authority is rooted originally in the wills of men * Raynaud Theolog. Natural p. 760 761 762. The first Title was the consent of the People or the conquest of others by the help of those People that first consented And in the exercise of it Earthly dominion depends upon assistance of the Subjects and the Members being joyn'd with the head carry on the work of Government and prevent Civil dissentions in the support of it it depends upon the Subjects Contributions and Taxes The Subjects in their strength are the Arms and in their Purses the Sinews of Government But God depends upon none in the foundation of his Government he is not a Lord by the Votes of his Vassals Nor is it successively handed to him by any Predecessor nor constituted by the power of a Superior Nor forced he his way by War and conquest nor precariously attained it by suit or flattery or bribing promises He holds not the right of his Empire from any other he hath no Superior to hand him to his Throne and settle him by Commission He is therefore called King of Kings and Lord of Lords having none above him A great King above all Gods Psal 95.3 Needing no Licence from any when to act nor direction how to act or assistance in his action He owes not any of those to any person he was not ordered by any other to Create and therefore receives not orders from any other to rule over what he hath created He received not his power and wisdom from another and therefore is not Subject to any for the rule of his Government He only made his own Subjects and from himself hath the sole Authority his own will was the cause of their beings and his own will is the director of their actions He is not determined by his Creatures in any of his motions but determins the Creatures in all His actions are not regulated by any Law without him but by a Law within him the Law of his own Nature 'T is impossible he can have any rule without himself because there is nothing Superior to himself Nor doth he depend upon any in the exercise of his Government he needs no Servants in it when he uses Creatures it is not out of want of their help but for the manifestation of his wisdom and power What he doth by his Subjects he can do by himself The Government is upon his Shoulder Isaiah 9.6 To shew that he needs not any supporters All other governments flow from him all other Authorities depend upon him Dei Gratiâ or Dei Providentiâ is in the style of Princes As their being is deriv'd from his power so their Authority is but a branch of his dominion They are governors by Divine Providence God is Governour by his sole nature All motions depend upon the first Heaven which moves all but that depends upon nothing The Government of Christ depends upon God's increated dominion and is by Commission from him Christ assum'd not this honour to himself But he that said unto him thou art my Son bestow'd it upon him He put all things under his feet but not himself 1 Cor. 15.27 When he saith all things are put under him he is excepted which did put all things under him He sits still as an independent Governour upon his Throne 2. This dominion is Absolute If his Throne be in the Heavens there is nothing to controul him If he be independent he must needs be ●bsolute since he hath no cause in conjunction with him as Creator that can share with him in his right or restrain him in the disposal of his Creature His Authority is unlimited in this regard the Title of Lord becomes not any but God properly Tiberius tho●ght none of the best though one of the subtilest Princes accounted the Title of Lord a reproach to him Since he was not absolute * Sueton. de Tiberio cap. 27. 1. Absolute in regard of Freedom and Liberty 1. Thus Creation is a work of his meer Soveraignty he Created because it was his pleasure to Create Rev. 4.11 He is not necessitated to do this or that He might have chosen whether he would have fram'd an Earth and Heavens and laid the foundations of his Chambers in the Waters He was under no obligation to reduce things from nullity to existence 2. Preservation is the fruit of his Soveraignty When he had called the World to stand out he might have ordered it to return into its dark den of nothingness ript up every part of its foundation or have given being to many more Creatures than he did If you consider his absolute soveraignty why might he not have devested Adam presently of those rational perfections wherewith he had endow'd him And might he not have metamorphos'd him into some Beast and elevated some Beast into a rational nature Why might he not have degraded an Angel to a Worm and advanc'd a Worm to the nature and condition of an Angel Why might he not have revokt that grant of dominion which he had passed to man over all Creatures It was free to him to permit sin to enter into the Earth or to have excluded it out of the Earth as he doth out of Heaven 3. Redemption is a fruit of his Soveraignty By his absolute Soveraignty he might have confirmed all the Angels in their standing by Grace and prevented the revolt of any of their members from him and when there was a revolt both in Heaven and Earth it was free to him to have call'd out his Son to assume the Angelical as well as the humane nature or have exercised his dominion in the destruction of Men and Devils rather than in the Redemption of any he was under no obligation to restore either the one or the other 4. May he not impose what terms he pleases May he not impose what Laws
by theft from the Christian Granting many years indulgences upon slight performances the repeating so many Ave-Maries and Pater-Nosters in a day Canonizing Saints claiming the Keyes of Heaven and disposing of the honours and glory of it And proposing Creatures as objects of Religions Worship wherein he answers the Character of the Apostle 2 Thes 2.4 Shewing himself that he is God in challenging that power which is only the right of Divine Soveraignty exalting himself above God in indulging those things which the Law of God never allow'd but hath severely prohibited This controuling the Soveraignty of God not allowing him the rights of his Crown is the Soul and Spirit of many errors Why are the decrees of election and praeterition denyed because men will not acknowledge God the Soveraign disposer of his Creature Why is effectual calling and efficacious grace denyed because they will not allow God the proprietor and distributer of his own goods Why is the satisfaction of Christ deny'd because they will not allow God a power to vindicate his own Law in what way he pleaseth Most of the errors of men may be resolv'd into a denyal of God's Soveraignty All have a tincture of the first evil sentiment of Adam 2. The Soveraignty of God is contemned in the practices of men 1. As he is a Law-giver 1. When Laws are made and urg'd in any State contrary to the Law of God 'T is part of God's Soveraignty to be a Law-giver not to obey his Law is a breach made upon his right of Government But it is Treason in any against the Crown of God to Mint Laws with a stamp contrary to that of Heaven whereby they renounce their due subjection and vy with God for Dominion snatch the supremacy from him and account themselves more Lords than the Soveraign Monarch of the World When men will not let God be the Judge of good and evil but put in their own vote controuling his to establish their own Such are not content to be as Gods subordinate to the supream God to sit at his feet Nor co-ordinate with him to sit equal upon his Throne but paramount to him to over-top and shadow his Crown A boldness that leaves the serpent in the first temptation under the Character of a more commendable modesty who advised our first Parents to attempt to be as Gods but not above him and would enervate a Law of God but not enact a contrary one to be observ'd by them Such was the usurpation of Nebuchadnezzar to set up a Golden Image to be ador'd Dan. 3. as if he had power to mint Gods as well as to conquer men to set the stamp of a Deity upon a peice of Gold as well as his own Effigies upon his currant Coyn. Much of the same nature was that of Darius by the motion of his flatterers to prohibit any Petition to be made to God for the space of 30 dayes as though God was not to have a Worship without a License from a doting peice of clay Dan. 6.7 * Trap. in loc So Henry the Third of France by his Edict silenced Masters of Families from praying with their Houshoulds And it is a farther contempt of God's Authority when good men are opprest by the sole weight of power for not observing such Laws * Faucheur vol. 2. p. 663. 664. as if they had a real Soveraignty over the Consciences of men more than God himself When the Apostles were commanded by an Angel from God to preach in the Temple the Doctrine of Christ Act. 5.19 20. they were fetcht from thence with a Guard before the Councel v. 26. And what is the Language of those States-men to them as absolute as God himself could speak to any Transgressors of his Law ver 28. Did not we straitly command you that you should not teach in this Name 'T is sufficient that we gave you a command to be silent and publish no more this Doctrine of Jesus 'T is not for you to examine our decrees but rest in our order as Loyal Subjects and comply with your Rulers They might have added though it be with the damnation of your souls How would those over-rule the Apostles by no other reason but their absolute pleasure And though God had espous'd their cause by delivering them out of the Prison wherein they had lockt them the day before Yet not one of all this Councel had the wit or honesty to entitle it a fighting against God but Gamaliel ver 39. So foolishly fond are men to put themselves in the place of God and usurp a jurisdiction over mens Consciences And to presume that Laws made against the interest and command of God must be of more force than the Laws of God's enacting 2. The Soveraignty of God is contemn'd in making additions to the Laws of God The Authority of a Sovereign Law-giver is invaded and vilified when an inferior presumes to make orders equivalent to his Edicts 'T is a Praemunire against Heaven to set up an Authority distinct from that of God or to enjoyn any thing as necessary in matter of worship for which a Divine Commission cannot be shewn God was alway so tender of this part of his prerogative that he would not have any thing wrought in the Tabernacle not a Vessel not an instrument but what himself had prescribed Exod. 25.9 According to all that I shew thee after the pattern of the Tabernacle and the pattern of all the Instruments thereof even so shall ye make it which is strictly urg'd again ver 40. Look that thou make them after their pattern Look to it beware of doing any thing of thine own head and justling with my Authority It was so afterwards in the matter of the Temple which succeeded the Tabernacle God gave the model of it to David and made him understand in writing by his hand upon him even all the works of this pattern 1 Chron. 28.19 Neither the Royal Authority in Moses who was King in Jesurun nor in David who was a man after God's own heart and called to the Crown by a special and extraordinary providence nor Aaron and the High Priests his Successors invested in the Sacerdotal Office had any Authority from God to do any thing in the framing the Tabernacle or Temple of their own heads God barr'd them from any thing of that nature by giving them an exact pattern so dear to him was alwayes this flower of his Crown And afterwards the power of appointing Officers and Ordinances in the Church was delegated to Christ and was among the rest of those Royalties given to him which he fully compleated for the edifying of the body Ephes 4.11 12. And he hath the Elogy by the Spirit of God to be faithfull as Moses was in all his house to him that appointed him Heb. 3.2 Faithfulness in a trust implyes a punctual observing directions God was still so tender of this that even Christ the son should no more do any thing in this
Garden one follow'd immediately the other Gen. 2.15 16. The Lord God took the man and put him into the Garden of Eden to dress it and the Lord God commanded the man saying of every Tree of the Garden thou mayest freely eat but of the Tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it c. Nothing was to be enjoyed by man but upon the condition of obedience to his Lord and it is observ'd that in the description of the Creation God is not call'd Lord till the finishing of the Creation and particularly in the forming of man Gen. 2.7 And the Lord God form'd man Though he was Lord of all Creatures yet it was in man he would have his soveraignty particularly manifested and by man have his Authority specially acknowledged The Law is prefac'd with this Title I am the Lord thy God Exod. 20.2 Authority in Lord sweetness in God the one to enjoyn the other to allure obedience and God enforceth several of the commands with the same Title And as he begins many precepts with it so he concludes them with the same Title I am the Lord Levit. 19.37 and in other places In all his communications of his Goodness to man in ways of blessing them he stands upon the preservation of the rights of his soveraignty and manifests his graciousness in favour of his Authority I am the Lord your God your God in all my perfections for your advantage but yet your soveraign for your obedience In all his condescensions he will have the rights of this untoucht and unviolated by us When Christ would give the most pregnant instance of his condescending and humble kindness he urgeth his Authority to ballast their Spirits from any presumptuous eruptions because of his humility John 13.13 You call me Master and Lord and you say well for so I am He asserts his Authority and presseth them to their duty when he had seem'd to lay it by for the demeanour of a Servant and had below the dignity of a Master put on the humility of a mean underling to wash the Disciples feet all which was to oblige them to perform the command he then gave them ver 14. in Obedience to his Authority and imitation of his Example 4. All Creatures obey him All Creatures punctually observe the Law he hath imprinted on their nature and in their several capacities acknowledge him their soveraign they move according to the inclinations he imprinted on them The Sea contains it self in its bounds and the Sun steps not out of its sphear the Stars march in their Order they continue this day according to thy Ordinance for all are thy Servants Psal 119.91 If he Orders things contrary to their primitive nature they obey him When he speaks the word the devouring fire becomes gentle and toucheth not a hair of the Children he will preserve The hunger-starv'd Lions suspend their ravenous nature when so good a morsel as Daniel is set before them And the Sun which had been in perpetual motion since its Creation obeys the writ of ease God sent it in Joshua's time and stands still Shall insensible and sensible Creatures be punctual to his Orders passively acknowledge his Authority Shall Lions and Serpents obey God in their places and shall not man who can by reason argue out the soveraignty of God and understand the sence and goodness of his Laws and actively obey God with that will he hath enricht him with above other Creatures Yet the truth is every sensitive yea every senseless Creature obeys God more than his rational more than his gracious Creatures in this World The rational Creatures since the fall have a prevailing principle of corruption Let the Obedience of other Creatures incite us more to imitate them and shame our remissness in not acknowledging the dominion of God in the just way he prescribes us to walk in Well then let us not pretend to own God as our Lord and yet act the part of Rebels Let us give him the reverence and pay him that obedience which of right belongs to so great a King Whatsoever he speaks as a true God ought to be beleiv'd whatsoever he orders as a Soveraign God ought to be obey'd Let not God have less than man nor man have more than God 'T is a common principle writ upon the reason of all men that respect and observance is due to the Majesty of a man much more to the Majesty of God as a Law-giver 2. As this Doctrine presents us motives so it directs us to the manner and kind of our Obedience to God 1. It must be with a respect to his Authority As the veracity of God is the formal object of faith and the reason why we believe the things he hath reveal'd so the Authority of God is the formal object of our obedience or the reason why we observe the things he hath commanded There must be a respect to his will as the rule as well as to his Glory as the end 'T is not formally obedience that is not done with a regard to the order of God though it may be materially obedience as it answers the matter of the Precept As when men will abstain from excess and rioting because it is ruinous to their health not because it is forbidden by the great Law-giver This is to pay a respect to our own conveniency and interest not a Conscientious observance to God a regard to our health not to our Soveraign a kindness to our selves not a justice due to the rights of God There must not only be a consideration of the matter of the Precept as convenient but a consideration of the Authority of the Law-giver as Obligatory Thus saith the Lord Ushers in every order of his directing our eye to the Authority enacting it Jeroboam did God's will of prophesie in taking the Kingdom of Israel And the devils may be subservient in God's will or providence but neither of them are put upon the account of obedience because not done intentionally with any Conscience of the Soveraignty of God God will have this owned by a regular respect to it So much he insists upon the honour of it that the Sacrifice of Christ God-man was most agreeable to him not only as it was great and admirable in it self but also for that ravishing obedience to his will which was the Life and Glory of his Sacrifice whereby the justice of God was not only owned in the Offering but the Soveraignty of God owned in the Obedience Phil. 2.8 He became obedient unto death Wherefore God highly exalted him 2. It must be the best and most exact obedience The most Soveraign Authority calls for the exactest and lowest observance the highest Lord for the deepest homage being he is a great King he must have the best in our flock Mal. 1. Obedience is due to God as King and the choicest obedience is due to him as he is the most excellent King The more majestick and noble