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

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the body of Divinity First I will begin with the Creation and will labour to unfold the nature of it in generall And then I will proceed to the handling of all the speciall works therof every one distinctly by it self in particular Secondly I will passe from thence to the works of Gods actuall providence under which comes the government and preservation of the world and of al things created and the ordering and disposing of every thing to the proper end of it More especially the fall of man into sin misery and guilt of damnation And the Redemption of man from misery and his Restauration to grace and glory by the application and fruition of Redemption and by true spirituall union and communion with Christ the Redeemer and with God the Father in him by the inhabitation of the Holy Ghost Thus much for the generall Doctrin of Gods outward works laid down in this Text and for the division of them in their severall heads and kinds unto which all the particular outward works may be reduced FINIS 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 OF THE CREATION OF THE VVORLD GEN. 1. 1. In the beginning God created the Heaven and the Earth IN this Chapter the historle of the Creation is most plainely and succinctly written by Moses and the workes of the six dayes are distinctly laid downe according to the order wherein God created and made all creatures in heaven and earth In the second Chapter some things which were but more briefely and generally laid downe in the first Chapter to wit the creation of plants herbes and trees and of birds and beasts and especially of man and woman and the creation of the garden of Eden with other circumstances are more plainely and fully related And therefore I have made choice of those two Chapters the words whereof doe give us ground and occasion to handle the doctrine of the creation and to discusse of all points therein needfull to be knowne for the glory of God and our own profit and comforts In the whole history comprehended in these two Chapters the Spirit of God offers to our consideration two things First the creation as it is a worke of God together with the severall parts and degrees of it Secondly the creatures produced by that work even the whole world and all things therein contained that is the heavens and the earth all the host of them Creation is here described First generally according to the common nature of it as it concernes all creatures and is the making of them all Secondly it is distinguished and described particularly according to the severall parts and branches thereof as it concernes severall kindes of things created First Creation is described generally by the name the Author or cause and by the time and forme of it throughout this whole Chapter Secondly it is distinguished into two branches or degrees The first is simple or absolute and immediate creation which is a making of something out of nothing The other is secondary creation that is a making of perfect things out of an imperfect matter which was before created of nothing and was of it selfe most unfit for any such substantiáll forme and being as was raised out of it Simple or absolute creation which is a making of things out of nothing is laid downe in the first verse And that is here distinguished into two particular branches according to the number of the things created the Heaven and the Earth The first is the creation of the highest heavens and all the host of them as the spirit of God by Moses expounds himselfe more plainely Chap. 2. 1. This was a most perfect creating and making of things perfect in nature forme and being out of nothing and that in an instant The second is the creating of the earth that is a rude imperfect masse and confused Chaos or deep which was without forme and void and fit for no substantiall forme or perfect being as yet neither could subsist but by the spirit supernaturally susteining it For so the word Earth is expounded in the next verse even to be that rude masse and deep which he made of nothing that it might be the common matter of all the inferiour visible world and of the creatures therein conteined The second maine branch of creation which I call secondary or mediate creation and which is a making of things perfect out of an imperfect matter created of nothing is laid downe historically throughout these two Chapters where the creation of the severall kindes of creatures in the six dayes is described particularly And this hath also two particular branches The first is the creating of things out of the first rude confused matter which was without forme and void and full of darknesse such was the creating of the foure elements 1. Fire called light 2. The Aire called the firmament 3. The Waters or the Seas 4. The Earth or drye land The second is the creating of things perfect out of the second matter which was beforehand formed and disposed into the forme and substance of elements such was the creation of the Sunne Moone and Starres in the heavens and of the foules in the aire and fishes in the sea and beasts on earth which were all created of the second matter that is of the matter of the elements brought into forme There is besides these branches of creation another particular creation mixt of simple and secondary creation namely the creation of man who in respect of his body was made of the dust of the earth by secondary or mediate creation and in respect of his soule was created by God as the Angels were immediatly of nothing by a simple absolute and immediate creation This is also described First generally in this Chapter verse 26 27. and also distinctly and particularly Cap. 2. 7. And as this history doth describe the act or worke of creation both generally and particularly in all the b●anches thereof so also all the Creatures or kindes of things created The Creatures are here distinguished according to the time and order of their creation Some of them were created in the first beginning of time in the first moment wherein time first began to wit the highest heaven with the inhabitants thereof the Angels and the earth that is the rude masse or first common matter of the inferiour world and all the creatures therein Some of them were created in the progresse of time or in times distinct even in six severall dayes to wit all the rest of the creatures and they are distinguished by the time and order of their creation Some were created the first day some the second and the rest severally in the rest of the six dayes and they are described by their severall names and natures as shall appeare hereafter when they come to be handled distinctly CHAP. I. Of the Creation in generall What the Hebrew word signifieth Of the Author Time Object and Forme of the Creation A description of
for himself and them so far as was needfull in his kind and in that naturall estate and what was just for him to do and how to beare himself uprightly towards God and all his creatures That he had the knowledge and understanding of all these things sufficiently to make him perfect and happie in that estate and that there was no errour or ignorance in him of any thing which was meet for him to know appears most plainely by divers things First by Gods giving to man dominion and rule over all living creatures and puting him in the garden to dresse it and puting all the earth in Subjection to him which God would never have done being infinitly wise and just except he had knowne man to be one who understood and knew the nature of the earth and all Herbes Plants and Trees in it and by his reason wisdome and knowledge was able to rule all Creatures with discretion and to order them according to their severall natures and to dresse the garden and subdue the earth Secondly by Adams naming of all the Creatures every one by such a name as did shew the nature of it so that God did approve and confirme the names Gen. 2. 19 and every Creature did in all likelyhood come to Adam being called by that name Thirdly by the understanding which he had of the nature of the woman when God shewed her to be formed of his Rib and presently giving her the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Woman or shee Man Gen. 2. 23. Fourthly by Adams free conversing with God and hearing of his voice without fear or dread which was a strong evidence of an upright heart and pure conscience and that he knew God and his goodnesse and that though God was greater then he could comprehend yet God would not hurt him but uphold him so long as he did obey Gods will revealed to him Secondly man did resemble God in the perfect liberty and freedome of his will and in the perfect conformity of it to the revealed and knowne will of God and in the readinesse and naturall forwardnesse of it to will whatsoever good was within his power and of himself to will nothing which was unjust and evill by these things he resembled the free will and liberty of God and his justice and equitie in all his doings That mans will was most free to good and that he had power of will to obey God appeares First by this that the Law of God was written in his heart as the rule of his life and actions and that so deeply that it remaines in the heart of his corrupt seed in some measure cannot be quite blotted out As he knew by his understanding and in his minde so he was willing in his heart to will and to do all accordingly of himself would never have fallen if the Devill that Spirituall wickednesse had not by the Serpent seduced and deceived him Secondly by the power and Dominion which God gave to him over all Creatures visible which he would not have done if man had not been as ready in will as perfect in knowledge to rule them aright It is not knowledge alone but uprightnesse of heart and will and power and freedome to will just things justly which God requires to make an able and sufficient Ruler as David testifieth in his last words Thirdly it is manifest by the commaundement which God gave to man to be obeyed under paine of death which he being a good God would never have imposed on man if mans will had not been free and upright for then he had laid a snare which man could not have avoided and had required more of man then man by his naturall power was able to performe Thirdly man was also conformable to God and to his just will goodnesse purity and happinesse in all the desires and affections of his heart and soule He of himself desired no more but that which God gave him and allowed him hee loved God as his Creatour and the author of all his good He did rejoice in Gods favour love and bountie He delighted himself in all the naturall gifts which God had given him and in the good creatures of God there was perfect Harmonie and sweet consent between his reason understanding will and his desires and affections whatsoever he knew to be good and just that he freely willed desired and affected there was no disorder discord or repugnancy and dissention in any power or faculty of Soule or Body no least cause of griefe but all joy and content And of himself he never would have desired more then God had given nor coveted an higher estate if Satan had not suggested such desire and seduced him This and indeed all the whole perfect uprightnesse of man in all the powers and faculties of his Soule in his understanding will desires and affections is most clearly confirmed by plaine testimonies of holy Scripture First by the last verse of this Chapter where it is said that when God had created man Male and Female and finished the Creation he saw every thing which he had made and behold it was very good If man was very good then was he upright in all the faculties of the Soule in his understanding will desires and affections and there could be no discord among them for that is evill and miserable Secondly we have the testimony of the wise Preacher Eccles. 7. 30. that God made man upright that is in Originall righteousnesse conformable in his upright reason understanding will and affections to the just revealed will of God Thirdly experience teacheth that the things which make man ashamed are ignorance and errour in mind and understanding perversnesse of will disorderly lusts and affections and deformity and distemper either in Soule or Body Now Man and Woman had no cause of shame in them neither were they ashamed when they were naked and went uncovered in all parts as wee reade Chap. 2. 25. and therefore in the state of innocencie all these causes of shame were far from him and he most free from them The Secondary conformity of man to God which is in man according to his Body consists in things which belong to the body and to the outward visible man First wee must not conceive that God is any kind of body or bodily substance as blasphemous Vorstius and other Arminians have written neither that God hath a forme and shape like a mans body as the Anthromorphites of old dreamed For it is manifest that in him who is infinit and so present in all places that he is in his whole essence in every place should have any difference or limitation or dimension or measure of severall parts which is necessarily required in the forme shape and substance of mans body and every bodily thing But yet because in the most wise and artificiall frame and naturall temper of mans body and the most fit disposition and order of all parts by which
above man in innocency whose best dwelling was but an earthly Paradise or Garden furnished with fruits which might be eaten up and consumed and such were the Angels as the former Doctrine hath plainly proved Therefore this conclusion necessarily flowes from that Doctrine and is proved and confirmed by it But we have for further confirmation both plaine testimonies and arguments in the holy Scriptures The royall Prophet David being ravished with the contemplation of the supercelestiall glory appearing in the secondary beames thereof which shine in the visible heavens and in the Sun Moon and Starres cries out in admiration and wonders that God dwelling in such admirable glory and having such excellent and glorious company and attendants about him should vouchsafe to look upon man or have any regard of him What is man saith he that thou art mindfull of him or the sonne of man that thou visitest him Psal. 8. 4. But in the next words he goeth further and speaks fully to the point and shewes that Christ himselfe according to his humanity though conceived and borne most pure and holy was made lower then the Angels thou hast made him saith he a little or for a little while lower then the Angels that is Christ in the nature of man which he took upon him for so the Apostle expounds these words of David Hebr. 2. 6. And Psal. 103. 20. Yee Angels saith he which excell in power Our Saviour also in the Gospel sheweth plainly that the Angels in heaven are so excellent in nature and substance as the elect Saints glorified shall be after the last resurrection and their most glorious and blessed condition which farre excels Adam in innocency shall be like unto the Ange's Matth. 22. 30. Saint Peter in plaine words saith that Angels are farre greater then men in power and might 2 Pet. 2. 11. Saint Paul calls them Angels of light 2 Corinth 11. 14 and the Angels of Gods power 2 Thes. 1. 7. he numbers them with principalities and powers which farre excell the nature of man Rom. 8. 38. Whensoever he sets forth the greatest excellency of things created greater then in men he doth instance in Angels as 1 Cor. 13. 1. though I speak with tongues of men and Angels And Galat. 1. 8. If I or an Angell from heaven and 4. 14. Ye received me as an Angell of God yea as Christ Jesus In a word whereas man is an earthly creature framed out of dust in respect of his visible part his body Angels are pure heavenly spirituall substances framed immediately out of nothing by the simple and absolute act of creation And whereas mans better part the soule though it be a spirit yet was not created a perfect compleat creature but made to subsist in the body and cannot be in full perfection without it Angels are spirits complete and perfect in themselves without subsistence in any other creature as shall appeare hereafter And therefore Angels are by creation and in nature and substance farre above man in his best naturall estate even in the state of innocency First this shewes most clearly that all the love and favour which God extends to man in Christ and in giving Christ to be mans Saviour and Redeemer by taking mans nature upon him and making full satisfaction therein to justice for him and in saving man from hell and damnation and exalting him to heavenly glory is on Gods part most free and voluntary arising meerly and wholly from the good pleasure of his owne will and not from any merit worth and excellency which he at first created or since found in mans nature If the naturall excellency of any creature could procure Gods speciall favour or deserve his bountie or move him to shew mercy to any creature which hath sinned and by sin is fallen into misery surely the Angelicall nature should have been more respected of God then the nature of man and Angels being fallen should more easily have found mercy at his hand For as this Doctrine hath proved Angels are by creation and in nature and substance the chiefest and most excellent of all Gods creatures far excelling man in power might purity and being And yet when Angels and man were both fallen and found guilty charged with folly and involved in misery God passed by the Angels and shewed no mercy to them neither gave his Son to take upon him the nature of Angels and to be their Saviour and Redeemer but so many of them as sinned and kept not their first estate but left their habitation he hath reserved in everlasting chaines of darknesse unto the judgement of the great day 2 Pet. 2. Jud. 6. But for man who is of lesse worth and farre inferiour by nature he hath given his Sonne to take mans nature upon him to be incarnate and made flesh and hath sent him forth in the forme of fraile and sinfull flesh made of a woman and made under the Law and hath delivered him up to a cursed death and to hellish agonies pangs and sorrowes that he might redeem this fraile worme of the earth miserable and sinfull man from hell and damnation unto which the Angels which sinned are reserved under darknesse and to exalt him far above the state of innocency in which he was created and his best naturall estate in Paradise unto the high estate of heavenly glory with the elect holy and blessed Angels which is farre above that mutable state of glory in which the Angels were first created and from which so many of them did fali Wherefore let us admire this free grace of God and stand amazed at his wonderfull and supertranscendent bounty to mankind And whatsoever mercy we receive from him in our deliverance from any evill or whatsoever blessing and benefit of bounty and goodnesse in advancing us to this state of grace or glory let us wholly ascribe it to the good pleasure of his owne free will and not to any merit in our selves or any excellency created in our nature And let no man glory in his naturall wit or wisdome and knowledge gotten by learning and study nor boast in his owne strength but as it is written Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord and triumph in this that he knoweth Gods free grace and aboundant mercy in Jesus Christ and hath the sweet taste and experience of it in his owne soule Secondly this serves to magnifie in our eyes both the large measure of Gods bounty to his elect in Christ and also the infinite power and excellency of Christ his mediation and the dignity and worth of his person in which hee hath so dignified our fraile nature by assuming it upon himselfe and uniting it personally to his Godhead that hee hath exalted it farre above the most glorious and excellent state of the Angels in heaven That Angels are the best and chiefest of all Gods creatures by creation and in nature and substance farre more excellent then man in his best naturall estate of
counsell along with them in all their doings and doe nothing rashly but so as God by his Word puts into their heart they shall bee holy and wise in their degree as God is wise and holy and by holinesse shall come to see God and the reward and end of their doings shall bee glory honour immortality and eternall life Rom. 2. 7. Secondly seeing God hath made all things in wisedome and according to his eternall Counsell this serves to stirre us up so to behold and consider all things created by God as that wee may see and discerne his wisedome in their very frame and if wee doe not see and discerne the image of Gods wisedome and goodnesse in them all and a good use of them all let us blame our owne blindnesse and ignorance and not vilifie or dis-esteeme any worke or any creature of God But if wee finde any creature which seemes unprofitable or hurtfull altogether and serving for no good use let us know that it is mans sin which hath made the creatures subject to vanity and hatefull and hurtfull to men And yet in the meane time Gods wisedome appeares in ordering and disposing to a good use even by the enmity hurtfulnesse loathsome poison and filthinesse which is in them to chastise and correct his owne people and to put them in remembrance of their sinfulnesse and corruption that they may forsake and mortifie it by repentance or to punish the impenitent and execute just vengance on the wicked in the day and time of his visitation And upon these considerations let us all so often as wee see or remember the unprofitablenesse loathsomnesse and poison which is in some creatures bee stirred up to repent of our sinnes which have brought them under this corruption for a scourge of our dis-obedience and let us firmely beleeve that God in wisedome useth them to punish the wicked and to correct his people and hee will make us see in all his wisedome shining clearly at the last But now from the Word of God I proceed to that which hee set himselfe to doe by his eternall Word according to his will and purpose this is in these words Let the waters bring forth aboundantly every moving creature that hath life and let the fowle she above the Earth The things which here God sets himselfe to create are of two sorts First all creatures which live and have their being in the element of water all fishes and other creatures which live in the Sea Rivers Lakes and all other waters Secondly all fowles birds and flying things which flie above the Earth in the open region of the aire The first sort are all called by this generall name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated the moving creature and in the Hebrew signifieth a creature which is most notable for these two properties First that it is a living creature which moves not by going upon feet onely or by flying with wings but by creeping or sliding and moving forwards as wee see fishes doe in the water and creeping things doe in and upon the earth Secondly that it breeds and brings forth young in great aboundance more then any other creatures doe as wee see the fishes which by the multitude of spawne would increase beyond all measure and number if by one meanes or other the spawne were not devoured and consumed For the Hebrew verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated the moving creature is derived is used as in my text so in other Scriptures frequently first to signifie creeping or moving forward without feet as Gen. 7. 21. and Levit. 11. 19. and secondly also to bring forth aboundantly as here and also of the creation which God wrought and by which hee made the whole frame of the World perfect and complete and every way fully furnished This last worke is described by Moses first generally briefely and summarily in the 26. Verse and from thence to the end of this first Chapter And secondly the creation of the Woman is more particularly related Chap. 2. from the 18. Verse to the end of that Chapter Verse 26. And God said Let us make man in our owne image and after our likenesse c. 27. So God created man in his owne image c. 28. And God blessed them and said Be fruitfull and multiplie and replenish the earth c. In this History of the creation of mankinde wee may observe these speciall things which are most notable and worthy to bee opened First Gods consultation about the creation of mankind in the 26. Verse And God said Let us make man in our image Secondly Gods creating of mankind according to his owne eternall Counsell which is laid downe summarily and more generally that God made them 1 in his owne image 2 male and female Verse 27. This creation of mankind is more plainely and particularly laid downe in the next Chapter where Moses relates First how God made the man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nosthrils the breath of life and Man became a living soule Verse 7. Secondly how God made the female the Woman to bee an helpe meet for man and that of a Rib taken out of the mans side in a deep sleep Verse 21. 22. c. Thirdly that they were both naked and were not ashamed Verse 25. These things are to bee noted in the creation of mankind The third thing is the blessing wherewith God blessed them joyntly together the Man and the Woman and it comprehends in it two things First the blessing of fruitfulnesse that they should multiply and replenish the earth with mankind Secondly the honour dominion and prerogative which God gave to them to subdue the earth and to have dominion over all other living creatures this is expressed Chap. 1. 28. The fourth is the meat and bodily food which God assigned to man in the creation Verse 29. but with limitation restraint from the fruit of one tree Chap. 2. 16 17. As for other creatures which live on the earth hee assigned the greene herbe or grasse to them for food Verse 30. The fifth thing is the place of mans habitation the garden of Eden the earthly paradise which is described Chap. 2. 8 9 c. The last thing is Gods viewing of all things which hee had made after the creation of the Man and the Woman and his placing of them in paradise which was the accomplishment of the creation and the last worke and his approbation of every creature for very good and perfect in his kind this is expressed in the 31. Verse The first thing is Gods consultation concerning the creation of mankind wherein wee are to consider these particulars 1. Who it is that saith Let us make 2. With whom hee doth thus consult and conferre 3. What is the thing consulted about even the making of man in their owns image
15. In a word common sense and reason teach us that if the Woman be made in the image of the Man and the Man is made in Gods image then Women must needs beare Gods image and likenesse But the truth is God being still the same both in the creation of the Man and of the Woman and creating both by the same wisedome and power hee needed not to take Adam for his paterne whereby to make the Woman but made her in his owne image as hee did man and so in all things like to man the different sexe onely excepted This serves to admonish and stirre up women to bee carefull diligent and industrious so to beare themselves as they that are made after Gods image so to order their lives conversation as they who expect the glory of heaven and must by passing through the state of grace here and by conforming themselves to Christ both in his death by mortification and in his life by sanctification come to the fulnesse of glory in Heaven and bee made conformable and like to Christ in his glorious body and coheires of God with him Secondly it serves to reprove the wicked and profane men of the World whose wickednesse is transcendent and their profanenesse most horrible and impious in that base esteeme which they have of the female sexe and the vile account which they make of woman-kind who thinke and speake of women that they have no soules nor any part in Gods image and are utterly uncapable either of grace in this World or glory in the World to come Like and equall unto which in their profane impiety are common strumpets and whorish women the shame and staine of woman-kind who prostitute themselves to all filthinesse and so live as if they were made onely to serve the lusts of unreasonable men of bruitish lust I proceed to the more speciall things which are more distinctly laid downe concerning the creation of mankind where I will first insist upon the creation of the male and female and the matter of which they were made and of the manner and order in which God formed them Which that wee may distinctly understand wee must looke forward to the 7. Verse of the 2. Chapter where the creation of mankind is more particularly rehearsed in these words and the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nosthrils the breath of life and man became a living soule In the Hebrew text the man is here called Adam not as by his proper name but as it is the common name of all mankind for so much the article which is prefixed before it doth shew and therefore as the Greeke so also our English Translators doe translate this word not Adam but Man God formed man of the dust For in the first creation the man comprehended in him all mankind even the Woman who then was a Rib in his side and afterward was taken out and formed into a Woman The matter of which God formed Adam is said to bee the dust of the ground and here he useth another word not used before in the creation of other things that is the word formed for hee doth not say that God made or created but formed man and true it is that whole man was not made of dust but onely the substance of his bodie and therefore it is said that God formed man to wit in respect of his body of the dust of the ground that is hee framed and fashioned it of dust as a potter formes a pot of clay and brought it into that forme and shape which all perfect bodies of mankind doe beare untill this day And this is the first beginning of the being both of the Man and also of the Woman who was created here a Rib at the first in Mans side and afterwards taken out and made into a Woman First in that Iehovah Elohim the Lord God is here said to forme man that is to frame his body of dust and to bring it into the forme and shape which it beares in all mankind Hereby wee are taught that God did neither consult with Angels about mans creation nor assume them or any other creatures into the fellowship of this worke but God himselfe alone who is Iehovah one God in essence and substance and yet Elohim that is more Persons even three Persons in that one undivided essence did forme the very body of man and brought it into that forme and temper that it might bee a fit subject of the soule which is a spirituall substance And this all other Scriptures confirme which attribute the creation of mankind to God alone as Deut. 4. 32. and Isa. 45. 12. with many other places where the creation of man upon earth is ascribed unto God onely and where holy and faithfull men speaking as they were moved by the holy Ghost confesse themselves the worke of Gods hands as Iob 10. 3. and God their maker and former Iob 36. 3. and Malac. 2. 10. and God the potter and themselves his formed worke Isa. 64. 8. This Doctrine well weighed is of excellent use First to make us ascribe all our excellency and all our well being to God that wee may give him the glory of them and that wee may beare our selves before God as before our creatour and may ever remember that whatsoever service wee are able to performe either with our soules or bodies it is wholy due to God and none other but onely in him and by commandement and warrant from his holy and infallible Word Seeing God alone hath created us and given us all our being even the forme and shape of our bodies wee must not thinke it enough to keepe our selves to God and to serve him in spirit onely but wee must serve and worship him with our bodies also and with all parts and members of our bodies Although God many times makes men instruments and meanes to convey health life being and well being to us as naturall Parents to bring us into being and life and to nourish and bring us up and as Kings and Rulers and wise Magistrates to bee Saviours of our bodily lives from death and other dangers and to procure safety peace and well being to us and in this respect and for these causes wee doe owe love honour and service to them in and under God yet in no case may wee in things which tend not to the honour but dishonour of God and are contrary to his Word and Will and offensive to his Majesty obey serve and honour them In such cases let us say as the Apostles did to the high-Priests and Rulers of the Iewes We ought to obey God rather then men and whether it be right and lawfull to obey you more then God judge yee Act. 4. 19. and 5. 29. All Potentates Kings and Rulers because they are men and have no power but from God must not looke that any should serve and obey them rather then God or
in things which they command contrary to Gods commandements Yea they must remember that they are Gods creatures and handi-worke and ought to employ all their power and authority to the honour of God If otherwise they abuse the talents which God hath lent them let them know that God will one day call them to a reckoning and give them the reward of evill unfaithfull and unprofitable servants even eternall destruction and torment in Hell where shall be howling and wayling and gnashing of teeth Secondly this serves to shew that whosoever offers wrong and injury to any of mankind by cutting mangling or any way defacing their 〈…〉 age and deforming their bodies by afflicting or some way corrupting their soules or by taking away their lives and naturall being without speciall warrant and cōmmandement from God they are notoriously injurious to God himselfe they scorne despise mis-use and deface Gods Workmanship they provoke God to wrath and jealousie and hee surely will bee avenged on such doings And here wee have matter as of dread and terrour to all cruell Tyrants and unmercifull men so of hope and comfort to all who suffer injury and wrong at their hands As the first sort have just cause to feare and tremble so often as they thinke on God the avenger of such wrong so the other have cause to hope that God will not wholy forsake them being the worke of his owne hands nor leave them to the will and lust of the wicked his enemies but will in his good time save them and send them deliverance Thirdly this discovers the abomination and filthinesse of all Idolaters who being the workmanship of God the Lord and wise creator of all things doe most basely bow downe to images and altars and debase themselves to worship humane inventions and the worke of mens hands which are dumbe Idols of wood and stone and lying vanities It is just with God to cast out and expose all such people to ignominy shame and confusion in this world and in the world to come into that place of darknesse where the Divell and all such as forsake God and rebell against the light which from the creation shines to them shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the face and presence of God and from the glory of his power Secondly in that God is here said to forme man of the dust of the ground not of clay well tempered and wrought but of dust which of it selfe is most unfit to be compacted and made into a stedfast shape and which is counted so base and so light that every blast of wind drives it away and in Scripture the basest things are resembled to it Hence wee may learne two things First that God in the creation even of mans body shewed his infinite power and wisedome in bringing dust of the earth which is the basest thing of all into the forme and shape of mans body which is the most excellent of all visible bodies and a fit house and temple not onely of a reasonable living soule but also of Gods holy spirit as other Scriptures plainly affirme This point appeares so plainly in the Text that I need not spend time in further confirmation of it the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 formed here first used implies an excellent forme and the upright face of man Here therefore I will adde for illustration sake the words of David which are very pertinent to this purpose Psal. 139. 14 15 16. where speaking of Gods forming and fashioning him in the wombe of the living substance even the seed blood and flesh of his parents saith he I will prayse thee for I am fearefully and wonderfully made Marvelous are thy workes and that my soule knoweth right well My substance was not hid from thee when I was made in secret and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy booke were all my members written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them Here we see with what feare admiration and astonishment David considers mans frame and the curious workmanship of his body when God forms it in the mothers womb by lively instruments and of a lively matter and substance How much more may we conclude that Gods creating of Adams body which was the most curious naturall body that ever was made is most admirable and deserves more reverence feare and astonishment at our hands being made without instruments out of the basest matter and substance even dust of the earth Surely in this God shewed wisedome and power beyond all admiration The Vse of this doctrine is to stirre us up so often as we thinke of our creation in Adam to laud and praise Gods wisedome and power to feare and reverence God and to admire his curious workmanship And although the matter of which God framed mans body was the basest of all even dust of the ground yet let us not thinke ever a whit more meanly of our creation but so much more admire Gods workmanship in our bodies For to make a curious worke in gold silver or of some beautifull precious and plyable mettall is not rare nor so excellent but to frame of the basest matter the dust of the ground the chiefest worke and even the Master-piece of all works in the visible world that is the body of Adam in the state of innocency this is worthy of all admiration and is a just motive and provocation to stirre us up to praise and to extoll with admiration the wisedome and power of God especially if wee consider the most excellent forme of mans body and upright stature together with the head comely face hands and other members every way fitted and composed to bee instruments of a reasonable soule and to rule and keepe in order and subjection all living creatures Secondly in that the dust of the ground the basest part of the earth is the matter out of which mans body the beautifull Palace and Temple of his Soul was formed in the excellent state of innocency Hence wee learne that man is by nature and in his best naturall being given to him in the creation but a dusty earthy substance in respect of his body and in respect of his Soul an inhabitant of an house of clay the foundation whereof is in the dust But some perhaps will object against the collection of this Doctrine from the base and fraile matter of which mans body was formed and will thus argue That the state and condition of creatures is not to bee esteemed by the matter of which they were made but by the forme and being which God gave to them as for example the Angels together with the highest heaven were created immediatly of nothing as well as the rude unformed masse which is called earth and yet they are most glorious spirits and the rude masse is not to bee compared to them Yea man was created
according to his inferiour part the body of dust which is a created substance better then nothing of which the Angels were made and yet the Angels in nature far excell man Therefore mans creation of dust doth not prove him to bee so fraile a creature seeing God gave him such an excellent forme To this I answer that to bee created immediatly of nothing is in it selfe a more excellent worke and shewes greater power then to bee made of a meane inferiour matter For when things are said to bee created of nothing the meaning is not that they are made of nothing as of a matter but that they are made of no matter at all but have their whole being from God and his infinite power and so may bee if God will most excellent But when man is said to be formed of dust the meaning is that dust is a part of his substance even the matter of which hee consists and that his body according to the matter is a dusty earthy substance and his Soul though a spirituall substance created of nothing yet dwelling in that body is an inhabitant of an earthly Tabernacle and house of clay founded in the dust Secondly though the frame of mans body is in it selfe most excellent and surpasseth all bodily formes and his Soul is a spirituall substance endowed with reason yet all these were of mutable excellency in the best naturall estate of innocency and could not continue in that excellency but by dependance upon God and cleaving fast to him and by his hand and power sustaining them continually which by promise hee was not bound to doe in that estate And therefore wee may truly gather from the matter of which God formed mans body that hee was in his best naturall being in respect of his body but a dusty substance such as might returne to dust by falling off from God by sin and disobedience yea undoubtedly as God in framing man his chiefest visible creature of dust intended to shew his wisedome and power and to glorifie his goodnesse so also hee teacheth man thereby his owne naturall frailty and mutability how unable hee is of himselfe to abide in honour and excellency And this hee shewes most plainely Gen. 3. 19. where hee saith to man alluding to his creation Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt returne Wee have also an excellent argument to this purpose Iob 14. 18 19. and 15. 15. where the Lord is said to charge his Angels with folly and to lay no trust in his servants and the heavens are not cleare in his sight how much lesse can hee find steadfastnesse in men who dwell in houses of clay which have their foundation in the dust that is seeing the heavenly spirits are not immutably pure in Gods sight but some of the Angels hath God charged with folly to wit such as did fall and to the rest hee hath added supernaturall light of his Spirit and so hath made them Saints immutably holy much lesse is man immutably pure and steadfast by nature whose better part the Soul is by creation made to dwell in an house of clay a body made of dust To this purpose serve those Scriptures of the Prophets and Apostles which compare man in his first creation to clay in the hand of the potter Ier. 18. 9. Rom. 9. 21 which affirme that the first Adam was of the Earth earthy 1 Cor. 15 47. that is in his first creation hee was of an earthy and dusty substance First this serves by discovering unto man his frailty and mutability in his best naturall being to humble every man in his owne eyes and to make him lowly and to withdraw his heart from pride and all high conceipts of any worth in himselfe and to teach us all to ascribe all the unchangable purity which wee finde in ourselves and all our steadfastnesse to the free grace of God in Christ and not to any power of our owne free will or to the excellency of our naturall frame and being If man in his first creation and best naturall being was but of earth and dust an earthy and dusty creature and before that death entered into the World while hee had yet power of free will to obey God and to depend on him was mutable and might fall into sin and disobedience and by sin might bring and did bring death upon himselfe and all his posterity how much more now in the state of nature corrupted is every Son of man a very masse of corruption and frailty yea vanity and abominable filthinesse who drinketh iniquity like water as it is written Iob 15. 16. Wherefore Let no man glory in any naturall power or prerogative nor hope to stand by his owne strength much lesse to merit or purchase by any works of nature or power of free will the least grace supernaturall which tends to bring him to heavenly happinesse and glory unchangeable For man as hee is flesh and blood that is an earthly creature cannot possibly come to inherite the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 15. 50. Secondly this discovers the madnesse and desperate blindnesse of Pelagians and Papists who teach that a man by the right use of his naturall power and free-will may procure spirituall grace from God and even the Spirit of regeneration and faith working by love by which hee may merit and purchase to himselfe eternall life and heavenly glory and felicity as a just and condigne reward of his works If Angels cannot bee made steadfast and trusty without supernaturall light added to them much lesse can earthy man who by sin is become filthy and abominable worke out his owne salvation by meriting and purchasing the heavenly reward Oh let us all hate and abhorre all such conceipts which wholly tend to the frustrating and evacuating of Christs merits and satisfaction and to make them seeme vaine and needlesse Be not deceived God is not mocked they who sow such tares and feed like swine on the huskes of their owne works and on things which nature teacheth they are enemies to the grace of God which is given onely in Iesus Christ and together with him by communion of his Spirit After the creation of mans Body of dust immediatly followes the creation of his Soule which is to bee understood in these words And breathed into his nosthrils the breath of life and man was a living Soule For no sooner was mans body brought into frame but God breathed into him the breath of life that is caused him to breathe with the breath of life even those vitall spirits which are the band of union by which the Soule is united to the body and in the first instant wherein he created the vitall spirits he also created the spiritual substance of his Soule in his body immediatly of nothing by his omnipotent hand Some are opinion that mans Soule was first created a Spirit subsisting by it selfe before his body was formed and when the body was formed a
fit subject for it then instantly God infused it into the body and by it did give life and breath to the body Some thinke that the body was formed and the Soule in the same instant created together with it as Damascene lib. 2. de fide cap. 12. Aquinas and others And Cyrill thinks that Gods breathing into mans face the breath of life was the infusion of the holy Ghost into man and that man in the creation had the holy Spirit given to dwell in him and was sanctified and endowed with supernaturall grace and holinesse Some thinke that Gods breathing into mans nosthrils was his inspiring into man a reasonable Soule as a part of himselfe so Rabby Moses Maymonides But by breathing into mans face I doe not understand any materiall breathing or blast but that God in causing breath of life to breathe through mans nosthrils did withall create the Soule in the body and by meanes of this reasonable Soule created in the body and united to the body by vitall spirits and breath man became a living Soule that is a living reasonable creature living onely a perfect naturall not an holy spirituall life The Apostle expounds these words in this Sense 1 Cor. 15. and doth make this a maine difference betweene the first man Adam and Christ the second Adam that the first Adam was onely a naturall Man endowed with a naturall living Soule but to be a quickning Spirit that is to bee sanctified by the holy Ghost and endowed with spirituall life is proper to Christ in his creation for in him the Spirit dwelt from his first conception Hence wee learne That the image of God in which mans was created was onely naturall and did consist in naturall gifts which naturally flow from his reasonable Soule and not in any supernaturall gifts of the holy Ghost as true holinesse and the like The words of Saint Paul last before named doe fully prove this I will here onely adde one strong Reason and invincible argument to prove it fully And that is drawne from the mutability of man in the creation and from his fall by which Gods image was defaced in him For it is most certaine that hee who hath in him that image of God which consists in true holinesse and in spirituall and supernaturall gifts hee is not mutable nor subject to fall away because hee hath the holy Ghost dwelling in him who is greater then he that dwels in the World 1 Ioh. 4. that is then the Divell who worketh powerfully in the children of disobedience For all true holinesse and all spirituall graces are the proper worke of the holy Ghost dwelling in man as all the Scriptures testifie But Adam in innocency and honour lodged not therein one night Psalme 49. 12. The Divell at the first onset gave him the foile in his greatest strength of nature and best estate which Divell with all his temptations and all the powers of darknesse and spirituall wickednesses the little ones of Christs flocke doe overcome by the power of the holy Ghost and his graces which they have in their fraile earthen vessels Therefore the image of God in which man was created was naturall onely This discovers Gods goodnesse free grace and bounty beyond all measure and all conceipt and comprehension of humane reason in that it shewes how God by mans fall malice and corruption which made him a slave of Hell and Death did take occasion to bee more kind and bountifull to man and to shew more love and goodnesse to him by repairing the ruines of his fall and renuing him after a better image then that which hee gave him in the creation and making him better after his sin and fall then hee was before in the state of innocency when hee had of himselfe no inclination to any sin or evill and bringing him to grace spirituall in Christ and to an image which cannot bee defaced and to a state firme and unchangable when wee rightly consider these things wee have no cause to murmur at Gods voluntary suffering of man to fall from his estate which was perfect and pure naturall but rather to rejoyce in God and to blesse his name and to magnifie his goodnesse for turning his fall to our higher rising and exaltation and lifting us up by Christ from hell and misery to heavenly glory which never fadeth and to a state spirituall and supernaturall not subject to change and alteration Secondly this Doctrine overthrowes the foundation and false ground upon which Papists and Pelagians doe build and seeke to establish their false and erroneous opinion concerning the apostasie of the Saints regenerate and their falling from supernaturall grace and Iosing the Spirit of regeneration which errour they seeke to establish by this argument Because Adam in innocency had the holy Ghost shed on him and was endued with spirituall and supernaturall gifts of holinesse from which hee did fall by sin and transgression But here wee see there is no such matter Adams image was onely naturall uprightnesse not spirituall supernaturall and true holinesse Hee was but a perfect naturall Man and a living Soule Christ the second Adam onely is called the quickning Spirit because through him onely God sheds the holy Ghost on men and hence it is that though Adam did fall away from his estate which was onely naturall yet the Saints regenerate and called to the state of grace in Christ can never fall away totally nor finally into apostacy because they have the seed of God even the holy Ghost dwelling and abiding in them CHAP. XIII Of the womans creation in particular How without her all was not good Woman not made to be a servant Of giving names to the creatures No creature but woman a meet companion for man Vses Of the rib whereof woman was made Of Adams deepe sleepe Five Points thence collected Of Gods bringing Eve to Adam and two Points thence Of Adams accepting Eve for his wife and calling her bone c. w 〈…〉 h divers points thence Of their nakednesse demonstrating the perfection of the creation GEn. 2. 18 19 20 21. And the Lord said It is not good that the man should be alone I will make an helpe meet for him And every beast and every fowle God brought to Adam to see what hee would call them c. And Adam gave names to them all but for Adam there was not found an helpe meet for him And the Lord God caused a deepe sleep to fall upon Adam and he slept and he tooke one of his ribs and made it a Woman and brought her to the Man c. These words and the rest which follow in this Chapter containe a particular description of the creation of the Woman which before was touched generally and summarily Chap. 1. 27. in these words Male and female created hee them In this History of the Womans creation wee may observe three speciall things First the preparation to it or the antecedents
to suffer and dye and bee made the price and ransome of our redemption and for the perfecting of this worke hee doth in and by and through his Son give and communicate his holy and eternall Spirit to dwell in their earthly tabernacles to unite them to Christ in one body to bring them to communion of all his benefits and to renue them after his glorious image of true holinesse Here therefore is ground of hope and matter of rejoycing to all the elect and faithfull and great incouragement against all feare and shame of wounds stripes and all deformities which cruell persecutors and mangling tyrants can inflict on their bodies For the future beauty and glory which is purchased for them by Christ and prepared for them at last shall cover wash away and utterly abolish all when hee shall appeare in glory Thirdly wee are hereby admonished that the distempers deformities and all defects and infirmities which appeare in our bodies whereof wee may bee ashamed are not of God the Creatour but proceed wholly from our sin and fall in Adam and from our owne surfeting and intemperance For God made mankind most perfect in Soule and Body even with full perfection of beauty in the first creation as this Doctrine teacheth And therefore so often as wee are ashamed of our deformities and our nakednesse let us with griefe remember our fall and bee much more ashamed of our sins and lay the blame on our selves and not on the Lord God our Creatour CHAP. XIV Of the estate and condition of our first parents In five things 1. The blessing of fruitfulnesse A speciall blessing Vses Marriage free for all men Colonies 2. Dominion over all living creatures Foure Requisites thereto Degrees of it Absolute and Dependent Vnlimited and Limited Restored in Christ. 3. Food for man Not the living creatures in innocency 4. Mans habitation Eden What. Of the rivers Twelve opinions about Paradise Of the two trees in Paradise Why the tree of life How of the knowledge of good and evill 5. Of Gods image ANd God blessed them and said unto them Be fruitfull and multiply and replenish the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the fowles of the aire and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth Vers. 29. And God said Behold I have given you every herbe bearing seed which is upon all the face of the earth and every tree in which is the fruit of a tree yeelding seed to you it shall be for meat Vers. 30. And to every beast and foule and creeping thing wherein there is life I have given greene herbe for meat and it was so After the History of the particular creation of the Woman with the immediate Antecedents and Consequents thereof The next thing in order is the historicall description of the state and condition of our first parents in the creation in their integrity and innocency before their fall and corruption while Gods image imprinted on them remained perfect both in their Soules and Bodies so that they had no least blemish or infirmity in their naked bodies whereof they might bee ashamed In this their first state of innocency there are divers things mentioned by Moses and historically laid downe in this History of the Creation which are to bee unfolded in order The first is the blessing of fruitfulnesse wherewith God blessed them so soone as hee had created them male and female This is laid downe in these words And God blessed them and said unto them Bee fruitfull and multiply and replenish the Earth Verse 28. The second is the power and dominion which God gave them over the earth and over all living creatures in the water aire and earth this is in the last words of the Verse and subdue it and have dominion over the fishes fowles and beasts The third thing is the bountifull gift of all herbes bearing seed and of all fruits growing upon Trees which God gave to mankind for bodily food Verse 29. And his free gift of green herbe or grasse for meat to the birds beasts and creeping things Verse 30. The fourth thing is the place of their habitation the garden which God planted in Eden this is described Chap. 2. 7. and so a-long to the 16. Verse The fifth thing which is the chiefest of all and which is first of all mentioned in the creation of Man and Woman is the image of God in which they were both created This requires a more large discourse for the understanding of it and for that cause I have deferred the handling of it to the last place next before the conclusion of the whole creation even his viewing and approbation of every thing which hee had made for very good laid downe Verse 31. The first is the blessing of fruitfulnesse for the multiplication and increase of mankind even to the filling and replenishing of the Earth and the subduing of it In describing this blessing Moses doth her first lay downe the blessing in a generall word saying God blessed them Secondly hee sheweth more particularly wherein this blessing doth consist to wit in bodily fruitfulnesse for the increase of mankind in these words Be fruitfull and multiply Thirdly the aboundance of the blessing and large extent of fruitfulnesse even to the replenishing of the Earth and subduing of it First whereas God is said to blesse them the meaning is that God gave them the gift of fruitfulnesse so soone as hee had made them in his owne image male and female For the Hebrew word which is here used signifieth first and primarily to bow the knee or to kneele downe as appeares Gen. 24. 11. 2. Chron. 6. 13. Psalme 95. 6. Dan. 6. 10. And because bowing of the knee is a kind of submitting and applying of the body in kindnesse to some person to doe him some kind and pleasing service hereupon this word is translated and used in the Scriptures to signifie First Gods applying of himselfe to men and as it were bowing downe from the high throne of his Majesty to shew himselfe kind unto them by giving them many both earthly and spirituall blessings in this life yea and himselfe with all his goodnesse to bee their portion and to make them fully blessed in glory Secondly it is used to signifie mans applying of himselfe to God by bending his knees and his speech to praise God and to laud and extoll his name and to render pleasing thanks to his Majesty and also one mans applying of his speech to another and with bowed knees to salute him as Gen. 24. 60. and 2 King 4. 29. Also the action of Parents publike Ministers and superiour Persons whom God hath set over others bowing downe towards them and applying themselves to them to wish all blessings unto them and to pronounce them blessed of God as Melchisedeck blessed Abraham Gen. 14. and Isaac blessed Iacob Gen. 27. and Iacob
Prov. 12. 24. and makes their substance precious Verse 27. and their soules fat Prov. 13. 4. and causeth even women to bee praised in the gates Prov. 31. And that man is by nature active and cannot brooke idlenesse it appeares plainely by the stirring nature of children who are never quiet nor content unlesse they bee busied one way or other and by the restlessenesse which is in wicked men who devise mischiefe on their beds and have working heads and cannot cease from doing something rather evill exercises then bee idle Now this being a manifest truth may justly provoke and stirre us up to loath and abhorre idlenesse sloth and lazinesse as speciall marks and igominious brands of naughty persons miserably degenerated from humane nature and from the frame and disposition wherein they were at the first created by God It was not good for Adam in innocency to live idly and without exercise but hee must bee busied as in mind by contemplation on Gods works so in body by ruling the creatures dressing and keeping the garden when aboundance of all things flowed to him without toile or labour much more will it be hurtfull dangerous and pernicious to us who are a people corrupted and in our whole frame out of order perverse and froward If wee give way to sloth and idlenesse for if wee labour not wee cannot have what to eat but poverty will come upon us like an armed man If wee bee idle and negligent in honest and good labour our perverse rebellious and restlesse nature will lead us into evill exercises and wicked works As standing lakes of water grow corrupt stinking and unwholesome and ground not laboured stirred up and tilled will bring forth corrupt stinking weeds bryars thornes and thistles So our corrupt nature if it bee not exercised and busied about vertuous actions and profitable labours will grow more corrupt noysome and filthy and will carry us away into frowardnesse vanity and sinfull practises which will make us loathsome to God and men and will speedily plunge us into misery and eternall perdition Thirdly wee here see and are plainely taught that man in innocency had aboundance of all good things needfull for profit pleasure and full contentment and wanted nothing which could bee required for earthly happinesse to make him blessed in this World and fully content with his estate and condition First his reason and understanding could not conceive neither did hee know any good which hee wanted and did not possesse whereof hee was by nature capable all wordly goods hee had at will and of heavenly and spirituall good which was supernaturall hee had no knowledge nor understanding Secondly hee had all provocations to move him to serve God and all bonds to tye and knit his heart in love to God and to make him wholly obedient to God and dutifull and serviceable to him in his whole heart and soule body mind and strength Hee had food at will most sweet wholesome and delicate in all variety and aboundance without any care toile or labour the Earth brought it forth of her owne accord the wholesome and pure aire did cherish it and the Sun and Heavens by their warme influence did ripen perfect and prepare it to his hand Hee had a most pleasant dwelling a garden beautified with all earthly ornaments and a Paradise of pleasure and delight Hee was high in honour dignity and promotion above all living creatures both by Sea and Land and had rule and Dominion over them all His exercise was without toile labour or paine sweet and pleasant Hee had for the exercise of his minde all Gods works the contemplation whereof might fill his soule with delight and joy in God his Creatour and for the exercise of his bodily strength and activity hee had the dressing and keeping of the garden which was a worke of pleasure and delight not of paines and labour for it needed no digging planting culture or tillage his businesse also was without care and feare for there were no theeves to annoy him no evill beasts to hurt and spoile his garden and to trouble waste his habitation so that without further proofe this Doctrine is most cleare in and from the text The consideration whereof is of excellent use to confirme us in this assurance perswasion and beliefe that God in no respect any cause or Author of mans sin and fall neither did give him the least occasion of discontent with his present estate that by seeking to soare up higher hee should catch a fearefull downefall into sin and bring himselfe in bondage to death Hell and the Divell For wee see God gave him all occasions and aboundance of blessings as strong provocations to provoke him to love his heavenly Majesty and as firme bands to bind and tye him to obedience It was the Divell who first breathed pride into man to aspire and soare above his estate and suggested into his heart evill surmises and thoughts of God that God did seeke to keepe him from a better estate by restraining him from the tree of knowledge which by eating of the fruit thereof hee might obtaine and become like to God Wherefore let no man charge God with giving the least occasion of discontent to man to provoke him to sin but let us bee humbled with the sight of our owne mutability frailty and vanity who in our first Parents and best estate were so fragile and mutable and much more now being corrupted and made subject to vanity and slaves of corruption CHAP. XV. Of the image of God on man in innocency Sundry opinions of it What the word signifieth Zelem and Demuth Image of God naturall and supernaturall Differences betweene the image of the first and second Adam Images essentiall and accidentall Particulars of Gods image on Adam in soule and body Vses of all ANd God said Let us make man in our image after our likenesse Verse 27. So God created man in his owne image in the image of God created hee him Male and female created hee them The generall Doctrine of the creation of our first Parents in the image of God I have heretofore laid open out of these words It now remaines that I proceed to the Doctrine and Description of that image of God in the speciall and particular points thereof which I reserved to the last place because it is the maine thing which discovers to us the excellent state of man in innocency As for the blessing of fruitefulnesse for the increase of mankind and mans Dominion over the creatures plenty and variety of bodily food and a pleasant habitation the earthly Paradise they are but externabona outward benefits but the image of God containes in it internall blessings of the soule of the whole man as well as externall outward benefits therefore I have first dispatched them now come to that image of God in which did consist the highest pitch of mans naturall perfection felicity In
second Adam Christ in which hee was formed by the holy Ghost and into which all the elect are changed and renued when they are regenerate and made new creatures in him may serve for excellent use as I shall shew when I have described the image of God wherein our first Parents were created and have laid downe by way of Doctrine the particulars wherein it doth consist But before I can distinctly describe the Image of which my text here speakes I must yet a little more distinctly shew the severall sorts of images which are images of God and of other things There are images which are essentiall and perfect to wit every person begotten by another of his owne nature and images which are accidentall and imperfect An essentiall image is either absolute and most perfect or lesse perfect The essentiall image which is most perfect and absolute is one person begotten by another of the same undivided substance and being in all essentiall properties equall and alike distinct onely by personall properties and subsistence Thus the eternall Son of God is the image of the Father of whom he is begotten from all eternity of the same nature and individuall substance For the second person the Son considered according to his divinity simply as God before his assuming of our fraile nature is said to bee in the forme of God that is his person is of the same essence glory and majesty with the Father and hee thought it no robbery to bee equall with God that is to have all essentiall properties of God equall which the Father as the Apostle testifieth Philip. 2. 6. and in this respect hee is called the image of the invisible God Coloss. 1. 15. and the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse image of his person Hebr. 1. 3. which words though they have respect to Christ as hee is the Word made flesh and God incarnate revealing God in his goodnesse wisedome justice mercy power and the like yet they must not bee limited to his incarnation but are extended to his deity as hee is the eternall Word the Son the second Person by whom the Father created all things and who with the Father doth uphold and sustaine all things as the words immediatly following doe shew For indeed the eternall Word the Son is in the forme of God one and the same God of the same substance glory and majesty with the Father and onely distinguished in personall properties relatiom and subsistence And therefore hee alone can truely bee called the image of God in this sense which is most perfect and absolute The essentiall or substantiall image which is lesse perfect then the other is either naturall or supernaturall A naturall essentiall image is one person begotten by another of the same nature and kind of substance and equall and alike in the same kind of naturall properties but not of the same singular substance and individuall properties thus every Son of man is the image of the Father which begets him for though hee hath a severall soule and body and severall properties which are of the same kind but not the same singular with those of his Father yet because his body and soule and all the faculties of it are of the same kind and in the outward forme resembles his Father and his Father may bee seene as it were in him therefore hee is his Fathers image and made in his likenesse A supernaturall essentiall image is a nature or person who is so begotten of God by the holy Ghost given to bee and abide in him as the immortall seed of God that hee is made partaker of the divine nature that is hath not onely supernaturall and spirituall gifts wrought in him by which hee is made fit to see and enjoy God but also is united to God and God becomes his portion for ever This image is either primary or secondary The primary image of this kind is onely Christ as hee is man or the humane nature of Christ which God formed and made in the womb of the virgin so pure and holy by the holy Ghost from the first conception in which the holy Ghost came upon her and the power of the Almighty over-shadowed her Luk. 1. that it was not onely most pure and holy and full of the holy Ghost from the first being of it but also was personally assumed and united to the eternall Son of God the second Person in the blessed Trinity and so became the first borne of every creature Coloss. 1. 15. and the first fruits which doe sanctifie the whole masse of the elect 1 Cor. 15. 23. and hee head from whom the Spirit is derived unto all the elect Ephes. 4. 15 so that they become a kind of first fruits of Gods creatures Iam. 1. 18. The secondary supernaturall image is every elect regenerate child of God begotten and borne of his Spirit shed on them through Christ Tit. 3. 6. and so created a new man after God in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth and made partakers of the divine nature one with God in Christ and by Christ Ioh. 17. 23. I call this a secondary image because the elect become this image not immediatly but after a secondary manner by deriving the Spirit from Christ and by union with God in him I call it a supernaturall image because it is above mans nature and belongs not to him in the creation nor consists in any naturall properties or resemblance And I call it an essentiall image because every regenerate man hath in him the holy Ghost dwelling as the soule of his soule quickning the whole man which Spirit is of the same essence with the Father and the Son And in respect of this Spirit and his gifts dwelling in his tabernacles their bodies and furnishing them throughout they are truely called and are indeed a new image of God and new creatures All these sorts of images are to bee excluded out of this text for our first parents are not here said to bee created after God essentially or supernaturally but onely in the accidentall and naturall image of God as I have in part shewed before and shall also hereafter more fully shew in all the particulars The accidentall or imperfect image of a thing or of a person is a thing or person so framed and made by another as by a paterne and after the likenesse of that paterne that it doth very much resemble it in likenesse and similitude but yet is not every way equall nor in all things fully alike nor of the same nature and substance with it In an image of this kind there are required two things necessarily First that the thing which is the image bee very like that whereof it is the image yea so like that it must resemble and represent either the nature and essentiall forme of it or the outward forme and figure or some speciall properties and proper qualities of it or all these together and yet in
a different substance Secondly that it bee formed and made by that whereof it is the image and according to the paterne of it Where any of these two is wanting there can bee no image at all as for example One egge is like another in nature substance and all naturall properties yet that egge is not the image of the other because the one is not made by the other as the paterne of it so wee may say of an apple or a figge and of many other things but the forme of an egge or apple made in chalke or paste or wax is the image of an egge or apple though not so like it as another egge or apple and farre different in nature and substance because it is formed by it as by a paterne And againe though an egge bee formed in the body and of the naturall substance of a bird and sometimes wormes are bred in the bodies of men and beasts and the egge resembles the bird in whitenesse or in variety of other colours and the wormes seeme like mans flesh in whom they are bred both in colour and substance and in life sense and motion yet they cannot bee called images because they are not like in shape nor outward forme nor in any property but onely in some qualities and small resemblance But the picture or statue made after a man and in many things like him though more like another man then him yet it is his image and not the image and picture of another so the figure of a man appearing in a glasse when hee stands before it though it differs in nature and substance and is but a vanishing shadow yet because in outward shape forme and colour it is very like and is expressed in the glasse by him looking in it therefore is his image And the impression of a stamp or seale made in wax or well tempered clay is the image of that stampe or seale though it bee not perfectly like by reason of some small defects in the wax clay or stamping and the impression of another seale engraven with the same figure or letters may bee in all points more like and yet not the image of it because it was not made after it but by another seale engraven with the same figure Now then that wee may plainely see that man was created and how hee was created in the image of God and made after his likenesse and that hee is a true accidentall image of God his Creatour Wee are to observe and take notice of these two things First that God did frame mans nature even his whole soule and body after himselfe with intent that both his substance and naturall properties and endowments might take their patterne from him his Creatour that is in a word God himselfe was the originall and chiefe patterne by which alone man was made and formed Secondly that though divers other creatures had in divers things more resemblance of God then man had as the heavens in large comprehension of the visible World the Sun in glorious brightnesse beauty and Majesty the highest heaven in glory and immutability And all creatures as they have essence and being and were made good and perfect in their kind have some more some fewer impressions and resemblance of God in his essence and attributes yet none can bee called the image of God among all visible creatures but onely man because though God formed all things after his owne will wisedome and goodnesse yet hee made no visible creature living or without life so farre resembling himselfe in his nature and essentiall properties that it might justly or with good reason bee called his image but onely man As man alone of all creatures under heaven was made in the image of God so man alone doth so plainely resemble God is so stamped with the impression of Gods properties and in his whole nature and frame is made so fit a subject for God to dwell in and to bee conformed to God and wherein God may shew his wisedome power goodnesse liberty of will justice mercy and other attributes that hee onely of all visible creatures can truely bee called the image of God Let us now therefore in the next place come to the things wherein this image of God did consist and in respect of which things man is said to bee created in the image of God and to bee the image of God his creatour First it is a most certaine truth that the image of God in which man was created is nothing else but the conformity of man unto God and man is truly called the image of God in respect of all those things wherein hee doth more then any other visible creatures resemble God in his divine essence and properties Now this conformity of man unto God is twofold primary or secondary Primarie conformity is seated in the Soule of man or in man according to his soule the chiefe part of his substance Secondary conformitie is that which is in man according to his bodie and consists in the body and in things which belong to his body Conformitie of Man to God in his Soule is either in the Nature of substance of his Soule or in the naturall Faculties Properties and Endowments of it First conformity to God in the Substance of his Soule is the similitude which mans Soule hath unto the nature and substance of God in that mans Soule is not a Corporeall substance as all visible Creatures are nor a Materiall body created of any former matter but it is a pure Spirit even a spirituall incorporeall invisible and living substance and so it is called 1 Cor. 2 11. Heb. 12. 23. and both here in my text and 1 Cor 15. 45. a Living Soule which lives and gives life to the body and in these things it is like unto God who in his nature and being is a Spirit or a spirituall substance as our Saviour affirmes Joh. 4. 24. is called the Invisible God Coloss. 1. 15. Tim. 1. 17. and the Living God Psal. 42. 2. Ier. 10. 10. Ioh. 6. 96. and his Eternall power and Godhead are called Invisible things Rom 1. 20. yea as God saith of himselfe Isa 40. 18. So wee may truely say of mans Soule that it cannot truely be likened to any visible thing neither can any bodily substance resemble it Conformity to God in the naturall faculties properties and indowments of his Soule is the likenesse and similitude which man in respect of his reason understanding liberty of will desires and affections all upright and perfect had unto Gods wisedome knowledge goodnesse libertie justice mercy and the like First man in his perfect understanding naturall light wisedome and knowledge did resemble Gods wisedome and knowledge of all things For man in his creation and naturall integritie did rightly know God and himselfe and did perfectly understand all the workes and the nature of all the creatures of God and what was good both
it is a fit subiect for a reasonable Soule and the principall parts of it fit instruments for the severall faculties of the Soule whereby to performe their many and severall workes and operations the wisedome power and goodnesse of God did shine forth of mans body more then in all visible creatures and the Image of God appeared in it Mans eyes sight and all outward senses did represent Gods omniscience and knowledge of all things his hands did shew and represent Gods power to do and worke whatsoever he will his armes did represent Gods strength and power to save his People and to destroy his enemies The beauty comelinesse naturall majesty which appeared in mans body upright stature by which he did overlooke all creatures as one most fit to rule them did shew forth and represent the glory and majestie of God and his Lordship dominion providence and power by which he governs all things In a word though mans body was mutable in the Creation and state of innocency and might fall from that state yet so long as man did continue in that state and did not sin he had that lively vigour perfect temper of body which did free him from death and all evills which tend to hurt and destruction which also was able to uphold him in life and strength for ever if sin had not entred and so in some sort he was immortall and impassible not subject to death or any passion and suffering of hurt and evill in his body and so there was in his body some likenesse of Gods immortalitie For proofe of this wee have good arguments in Scripture First God himself sheweth that murther and shedding of mans bloud is a defacing of his Image in which he created man and for that cause he threatens revenge of murther and of violence offered to Mans bloud Gen. 9. 5 6. Now murther and shedding of mans bloud ●s a defacing of mans body therefore the body also is a secondarie Image of God Secondly the Scriptures which set forth Gods attributes and workings by severall parts of mans body as his omniscience and providence by Eyes Psal. 33. 18. 2. Cron. 16. 9. his activity and working by Hands as Exod. 15. 16. Psal. 44. 3. Isa. 51. 9. his love and mercy by Bowells as Isa. 63. 15. Jer. 31. 20. his punishing and revenging Iustice by breath of mouth and nostrills Psal. 38. 15. and Isa. 11. 4. his secret thoughts counsells and purposes by Heart Psal. 33. 11. his utterance of his mind and will by Mouth Jer. 9. 12. these Metaphors do shew that the body of man and chiefe parts of it have some similitude of Gods attributes and workes and so mans body is secondarily the Image and likenesse of God Thirdly the Scriptures shew that death is the wages of Sin and all mortality and subjection to evills and passions which tend to hurt and corruption came in by mans disobedience and fall as appears Rom. 5. 12. and 6. 23. and by Gods commination Gen. 2. 19. But in the Creation and state of innocencie man had in him no Sin nor any inclination of himself to any evill or Sin therefore he was after a sort ●mmortall and incorruptible in his body and had even in it a similitude of Gods immortality Fourthly the body was in all things conformable to the Soule fit and ready in all things to follow the motions of the Soule to be directed and moved by the upright reason will and affections and to doe all workes unto which they move it and therefore as the Soule was made in the primary Image and likenesse so the body in the secondary Image and likenesse of God Lastly to conclude this doctrine of Gods Image in which man was created wee may not unfitly affirme and with good reason hold that though man in the state of innocency before the promise of Christ had no Supernaturall gifts nor any part of the Spirituall Image of the second Adam but was onely a perfect naturall man and not immediatly proximâ potentiâ capable of supernaturall grace nor of the Divine nature yet because his nature and whole frame was such as had a possibility or remote power to be made partaker of the Holy Ghost united to God in Christ and made pattaker of the Divine nature and a new creature or new man framed after God therefore he in this respect may be said to be Created in the Image of God that is in such a forme and of such a nature as had a possibility to become like unto Christ and a new creature made in the Spirituall Image of God Now this Doctrine of Gods Image briefly and compendiously proved in all parts is of excellent use First this discovers the infinite riches of the bounty of God passing all bounds and declares his goodnesse to be like a great deep which can never be sounded in that he hath overcome all our evill and malice towards him with his great goodnesse to us and and when wee had forfeited our being and his Image in which he created us good and perfect with all naturall perfections and did justly deserve to degenerate and be turned into the Image of the Divell and to become in the likenesse of his malice and and misery he out of his owne meere mercy and free grace and bounty did give his Sonne and the Sonne did freely undertake to humble himself to become a second Adam made in a better Image even an heavenly and spirituall that he might not onely suspend the execution of Gods just sentence upon mankind and procure to the first Adam and all his posterity the continuance of their naturall being for a time and of some reliques of the Image which they had wholly forfeited but also might renue a great number chosen out of mankind and restore them to a better even an heavenly Image by transforming and changing them into his spirituall and supernaturall Image and making them conformable to it and partakers of the Divine nature by the mysticail dwelling and powerfull operation of his spirit in them Here is that which may dazle the eyes of men and the sight of Angells when they looke into it and which may astonish all hearts of men and confound all humane reason when they thinke of it and heare it preached That God infinitely just and holy to hate and punish Sin should by our evill and Sin committed against him and his just will and Law take occasion to be more good and to shew greater goodnesse to us and when wee deserved to have no being but in Hell and eternall misery hath raised us up to the spirituall state of grace from which we cannot be hurled and cast downe by all the powers of darkenesse and by which wee shall ascend to the blessed state of Heavenly and Eternall glory Here is love surpassing all knowledge the depth whereof wee may admire and adore in silence but neither can our hearts conceive nor our tongues expresse the
fulnesse thereof Secondly this former discourse shewes what a vaine and foolish thing it is for Christian people to be so wedded to the opinions of godly learned men in all points which have beene formerly received and commonly beleeved or to be so strongly conceipted and perswaded of their full understanding and perfect knowledge of all the Scriptures and of all truth taught in the written word of GOD that whatsoever they have taught and commonly held they will cleave too till death and they will receive and embrace no truth nor any exposition of any Scripture which hath not beene before observed taught and published in the Sermons and writings of the godly learned Ancient Fathers and the soundest Orthodox moderne Divines I confesse the Scriptures alone dayly read and heard by men of ordinary capacity and learning are able to make them wise to Salvation For the way to life may easily be discerned by their guidance and direction But there are degrees of knowledge and divers measures of gifts and when a man knoweth enough to bring him on in an ordinarie way to life yet there is still more knowledge to be learned and a greater depth of knowledge to be found in the Scriptures which are doubtfull obscure and more hard to be understood and many new expositions of divers places which more plainly and fully confirme solid truthes formerly beleeved which he that searcheth out and discovereth doth thereby get more strength in faith and growth in grace and more spirituall joy and comfort and runs on faster and more speedily and steadfastly in the way to Salvation Wee see here for example the common opinion of Ancient and moderne writers to goe currant that there is but one kind of Image of God in man and that the Image unto which Christ restores us is the very same in which Adam was created that Adam had power by that Image to obtaine Heavenly glory and to grow up to that estate which the elect Saints come to in Christ that Christ restores no more but that which Adam lost and unto which he should have attained after some time of continuance in innocency that he was created in holinesse as well as Christ and true Christians are and so partaker of the Holy Ghost And when any thing is taught out of the Scriptures to the contrary many mouthes even of more learned men are opened to gainsay and oppose And yet you see the Scriptures more narrowly sifted do teach most plainely to the contrary and have not any plaine speech tending to prove these common opinions yea the Scriptures which are alledged for them are so applied expounded do prove the contrary if they be well weighed and considered with a cleare judgement not forestalled with prejudice and partialitie wherefore let us wholly depend on Gods word and not on mens reason or jugdement to subject either the Scriptures or the sense of them thereunto and let us still more and more thirst after increase of knowledge and understanding of Divine truths hid in the harder places of Gods written word knowing that these are the last times wherein knowledge shall be increased as wee read Dan. 12. 4. Let us not consider the Person which preacheth and teacheth but what is by him taught If new expositions and Doctrines not formerly taught yea crossing the common opinions be proved by better grounds and clearer evidence of Scripture and tend more to advance other saving truthes to beate downe errours and to increase Piety and godly affection in men let men take heed and beware of rash opposition and gainesaying lest they be found to fight against God while they stand too much for the authority of men though such as have beene holy and godly servants of Christ and famous in their generations Thirdly this doctrine of Gods Image in Adam doth both discover and also minister strong arguments whereby to confute divers erroneous opinions much dissenting and dissonant from the solid truth and word of God to wit not onely those mentioned before but others also as that Gods Image was onely originall righteousnesse or justice and that the naturall faculties of Soule and Body did not concurre to it that the whole Image of God in Adam was utterly lost by his fall and is quite abolished till it be repaired and restored by Christ with divers others of the same stampe concerning which I finde many hot disputations among the learned all which appeare superfluous if this doctrine were well weighed and made a rule whereby to measure them for it will like a just measure shew which of them come short and which goe too farre beyond the truth and true line of holy Scriptures Lastly in this wee see as in a cleare glasse the dignity and excellency of humane nature above the nature of all other visible creatures in that he was made completely in Gods Image and conformable to God and like to him in his whole frame and in all faculties of Soule and parts and members of body And let this stirre us up to walke worthy and beseeming such a nature and frame and labour to keep both our whole Soule and Spirit and all members of our bodies unspotted and unstained with sinne which is the defacing of Gods Image and let us reverence Gods Image in other men especially seeing it is repaired and made of a better kind by Christ and above all take heed of cruelty and of defacing Gods Image in any part by cuting of members and mangling the bodies of men especially of Gods Saintes whose bodies are Temples and Tabernacles of God by his Spirit Thus much concerning the first externall worke of God the creation and the state wherein God created man and wherein the state of Innocency did consist CHAP. XVI Of the actuall providence of God The Obiect of it What the word signifieth in 3. things Proofe that there is a providence by Texts and Arguments Description shewing what it is demonstrated in the parts and branches of it Providence generall and speciall Acts of it Speciall providence in saving the elect by Christ what and in what parts Uses THe next great externall worke of God after the creation is his actuall providence by which hee doth rule and dispose all things created and doth order all actions which are done and all events which come to passe in the World to the manifestation of his glorious goodnesse This great worke of God doth reach through all other externall works which are done either by God himselfe or any other and doth comprehend with in the compasse of it all Gods works which hee doth in the World whether they bee works of wisedome and power in ruling and preserving his creatures or workes of iustice in punishing and destroying or workes of mercy and grace in redeeming repairing and saving the World and in bringing his chosen to eternall blessednesse Yea there is no worke done nor any event which comes to passe at any time or in any
in all his outward actions which hee doth either immediatly by himselfe or mediatly by the ministery of his subordinate instruments and it also over-ruleth and disposeth things which are evill which are not done by God himselfe moving the doers of them but come to passe by the permission and sufferance of him wittingly and willingly suffering his creatures to abuse the power which they have from him This point is manifest by the Lords owne words Isa. 45. 7. where hee saith I forme the light and create darknesse I make peace and create evill I the Lord do all these things And by that speech of the Prophet Amos. Chap. 3. 6. Shall there be evill in a City and the Lord hath not done it The true sense and meaning of which words Saint Augustine doth notably expresse where he saith nothing is done unlesse God omnipotent doth will that it be done either by doing it himselfe or suffering it to be done for it could not be done if he did not suffer it neither verily doth he unwillingly without or against his will but willingly and with his will suffer every thing to be To which purpose hee hath divers other speeches as that God being good would not suffer any evill to be done unlesse as he is omnipotent he could bring good out of them neither is that done without Gods will which is done against his will that is his word and approbation In the second maine part there are divers speciall branches shewing the speciall things whereby Gods actuall providence is distinguished from his other outward actions The first is that it consists in Gods ruling ordering and governing the whole World and watching over his creatures with a carefull eye The second that it comprehends in it Gods doing of all good and his permission and suffering of all evill The third that by it God disposeth all things which are done in the World to the manifestation of his glory and the eternall salvation of his elect in Christ. The fourth and last is that it is no other exercise of wisedome power goodnesse mercy and justice but in executing things which hee hath decreed from all eternity even ruling ordering and disposing all things wisely after the counsell of his owne will For the first point to wit that God exerciseth his actuall providence in ruling ordering and disposing the whole World and all therein as supreme Lord King Iudge and Ruler thereof the Scriptures aboundantly testifie as Gen. 18. 25. and Psalm 50. 6. Psalm 82. 1. and 2. Chron. 19. 6. where God is said to bee the Iudge of all the Earth yea the Iudge both in Heaven and Earth who sitteth chiefe among all Iudges and is with them in the iudgement Also in those places where the Kingdome Dominion and Rule over all is said to belong to God and hee is said to bee the King which reigneth and ruleth all to the utmost ends of the Earth yea to be a great King above all Gods and the onely potentate King of Kings and Lord of Lords as I Chron. 29. 10. 11. Psalm 10. 16. and 29. 10. and 4. 27. and 95. 3. and his Kingdome is said to rule over all Psalm 103 19 and that not for a time but from generation to generation Psalm 145. 13. It is he who setteth bounds to the tumultuous Seas beyond which they cannot passe Iob 38. 8. Psalm 104. 9. and ruleth over the raging waves Psalm 89. 9. and stilleth th●● when they arise And that hee hath a watchfull eye over all creatures even to preserve man and beast it appeares Psalm 36. 6. and that as his eyes are upon them that feare him and hope in his mercy to deliver their soule from death and to keep● them alive in famine Psalm 33. 18. 19 So his face is against them that do evill to cut off the remembrance of them Psalm 34. 16. The second point is that Gods providence is exercised both in the doing of all good and in permitting and suffering wittingly and willingly all evill which commeth to passe in the World and so it consists of two parts action and permission This also is fully proved and confirmed Isa. 41. 23. and 45. 7. where the Lord proves himselfe to bee the onely true God by disposing all things both forming the light and making peace by his active hand and power and also creating evill and darknesse by permitting and giving up the Divell and his wicked instruments to abuse his power which hee hath given them to doe evill and to worke wickednesse as wee see in Pharaoh whose heart hee is said to harden yea and to raise him up by giving him up to his owne lusts and into the hand of Satan who hardened him and made his heart obdurate so that the more God plagued him with great plagues which naturally tend to breake a stout heart and to pull downe pride the more did his corruption rise up and rebell and the more did Satan stirre him up against God and his people and made him run desperatly into the devouring gulfe of destruction Wee see this also in Gods permitting Satan to afflict Iob and to tempt him to blasphemy by stripping him naked of all that hee had tormenting his body and battering his soule with sore temptations of his wife and friends and with skaring dreames and terrible visions as wee read Iob 1. and 2. and 7. 14. Also the Apostle in expresse words affirmeth that God being provoked by mens wilfull sins doth in just wrath give them to uncleanesse through the lusts of their owne hearts and to vile affections and a reprobate minde to worke all iniquity with greedinesse Rom. 1. 24 26 28. and doth give them the Spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and eares that they should not heare Rom. 11. 8. not by putting such a Spirit into them so as hee sheddeth his Spirit on men through Christ but by suffering Satan the Spirit of lying and of all blindnesse and wickednesse to enter into them which hee would doe into all men if God did not restraine him and by casting them out of his protection as wee see in the evill Spirit which vexed Saul and in the lying Spirit which deceived Ahab by entering into his Prophets and speaking lyes by their mouths 1 Sam. 16. 14. and 2 King 22. 22. And thus wee see that in all evils of sin Gods providence is exercised by way of voluntary permission But as for all good things which come to passe God hath in them an approving will and a working hand and worketh in men both to will and to doe yea every thought and purpose of good 2 Cor. 3. 5. Philip. 2. 13. and without him we can doe nothing Ioh. 15. 5. So that in all morall duties and in all good and godly workes God worketh in men by his Spirit immediatly and giveth them hearts will and power to doe them and they are but his instruments to performe these good things as
Ioseph professeth ascribing all his piety and charity which hee shewed in nourishing his bretheren and their families to God And all naturall good things God worketh either immediatly by his owne hand alone as in the creation wherein hee gave being to all things without any meanes at all or by instruments and meanes which hee himselfe hath first created hee giveth light by the Sun Moone and Starres and by them and the whole Heavens which are turned about by his counsels and by their influ●nce hee refresheth and nourisheth all creatures on Earth and also doth by them both use correction and shew mercy Iob 37. 12 13. and Matth. 5. 45. There are besides these other things which are good and profitable not simply in their owne nature but by accident and in some respect as for example for men to abstaine from marriage and from begetting children for the increase of mankind is not a thing naturally or morally good in it selfe being a refraining from the use of Gods ordinance but yet in case of urgent necessity when Gods Ministers and Servants doe live in times and places of persecution and are driven to flee and wander from place to place naked and destitute of meanes whereby to maintaine Wives and Children Saint Paul tells us it is good for a Man to live single and not to touch a Woman 1 Cor. 7. 1 35. for by this meanes he shall avoid much distraction and more freely attend the service of God Also for men to fast and afflict their bodies by abstaining from comfortable nourishment and necessary food for a time is not simply good in it selfe but yet it is profitable for taming the proud and rebellious flesh and for furthering of our humiliation in times of private and publike calamities when Gods hand is heavy upon us or upon our Land and the feare of his threatning judgments which hang over our heads doe terrifie us these and such like are called good things that is profitable expedient and by accident and in some respect and condition good Other things there bee which in their owne nature are evill and hurtfull and evils of affliction and punishment as crosses of Gods people and plagues which though they hurt and destroy the outward man and the flesh yet by God grac● they worke to the saving of their soules and the amendment of their lives as wee read Psalme 119. 67 71. and 1 Cor. 5. 5. and 11. 32. and in that respect are called good And the plagues and destructions which befall the wicked which to them are dreadfull and wofull evils and curses but as they tend to the deliverance of Gods Church from their 〈…〉 rsecutions and oppressions to the purging of his land and the magnifying of Gods justice and power so they are good in the issue and event and in respect of Gods purpose intending good by them Now in all these God hath an active and working band as well as a permitting will and his actuall providence ruleth in them Hee gives men the gift of continency and power over their owne wils to live single and to make themselves Eunuches for his Kingdomes sake as our Saviours words shew Matth. 19. 11 12. and the words of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 37. Hee cals upon men in his word and by his grace stirres them up to fasting weeping mourning and afflicting of their bodies for the greater humiliation of their soules Joel 1. 14. and 2. 12. and Zach. 12. 10. Hee doth sometimes by his owne hand afflict his people when hee sends among them sore diseases which are the stroke of his hand Job 36. 18. and Psalme 39. 10. and by his owne immediate hand hee strikes and consumes the wicked Iob 34. 25 26. as wee see in the drowning of the old World in the destruction of Pharaoh Ananias and Saphyra and divers others Sometimes hee doth by good instruments afflict and punish his people and plague and consume the wicked as by his Angell hee punished Israels sin and Davids pride 2 Sam. 24. 17. and destroyed the host of Senacherib 2 King 19. and smotte Herod Act. 12. And by Joshua Moses David destroyed the Canaanites and the Philistines and other enemies of his Church Sometimes by evill instruments hee afflicteth and punisheth his owne people and plagueth and destroyeth the wicked by Absalom and Shimei hee punished David and by wicked Jehu hee destroyed the wicked family of Ahab by Satan and the wicked Sabaeans and Chald●ans hee afflicted and tryed Job and by the proud King of Ashur hee punished Israel and Judah and destroyed the Idolatrous nations as appeares Isa. 10. where hee is called the rod of Gods wrath and proud Nebuchadnezar is called his servant in punishing his people the Iewes and destroying the obstinate among them and in crushing the wicked nations Ier. 25. 9. For he in whom all doe live move and have all being Act. 17. 28. gave to those wicked Kings power and might and though their owne lusts and unsatiable desire and ambition stirred them up and so ●he act was in the wicked themselves yet hee over-ruled and disposed their malice to performe his purpose and to execute his most just judgements And thus wee see that Gods actions are most wise and just in those evils which hee executeth by wicked instruments and that which they doe with a wicked mind and for an evill end God doth justly give them power to doe and permits them to abuse his power to their owne ends when hee purposeth to direct all to a good end and so doth And therefore though no evill is done in the World but by his providence yet is hee no author or efficient cause of sin the sinfulnesse of the action is of the evill instruments and the power of it and the disposing of it to good that onely is Gods And although men who are limited by Gods law may doe no least sin or evill for a good end that greatest good may come thereof and if they doe it is sin in them yet God who is supreme Lord of all and whose will is the rule of all righteousnesse and who by his omnipotency can raise out of the greatest evill a farre greater good and can make the Divels malice and mans fall the occasion of bringing Christ into the World and a way to shew his infinite goodnesse and mercy in saving and redeeming his elect and to magnifie his glorious power and justice in their eyes by destroying the wicked with eternall destruction the sight whereof brings them to a more full fruition of his glory and makes them farre more sensible of his goodnesse to them and of their owne eternall blessednesse hee may doe what seemes good to his heavenly wisedome and evill so farre as he willeth it and hath an hand in the ordering of it is no sin but doth more shew his goodnesse and unspotted purity and holinesse The third thing is that God by his actuall providence disposeth all things which are done in the World
had a beginning Reas. 1. Reas. 2. Psal. 107. Use 1. Love not the world being so movable Use 2. Arme against Atheisme As in some Objections answered Object 1. Answ. Object 2. Answ. Doctr. 2. T 〈…〉 had 〈◊〉 b●ginning Use 1. Use 2. See thy own wea●nesse 1 Cor. 2. 9. Quest. 1. The world began in the Spring Argum. 1. Answ. Argum. 2. Answ. Argum. 3. Answ. Argum. 4. Answ. Argum. 1. Argum. 2. Argum. 3. Argum. 4. Argum. 5. August in serm de natal Dom. Quest. 2. Use 1. Gods providence to be noted and admired Use 2. Truth of creation and redemption hereby demonstrated Use 3. All made for us and to be used for God Use 4. Note and admire Gods eternity Psal. 102. 25 26. 4. Derivation of the word signifying Heavens 1. 2. 3. 4. Diversity of its significations 1 2. 3. Foure things signified by Heavens 1 2 3. 4. Doctr. 1. Doctr. 2. Doctr. 3. Doctr. 4. Doctr. 5. Excellencie of heaven Reason 1. Reason 2. Reason 3. Reason 4. Reason 5. Reason 6. Object Answ. Use 1. To confute the otherwise minded Use 2. Admire the bounty of God to his chosen Use 3. Be ashamed of thy earthly mindednesse And prepare for heaven Use 4. Be thankfull for this good provision Use 5. Comfort in all afflictions Rom. 8. 18. 2 Cor. 4 17. Use 6. Against the Chiliasts Angels comprehended in the name Heavens 1. 2. 3. Points concerning them Of their names Doctr. 1. Angels had a beginning Reason 1. Reason 2. Obj●ct 1. Ansir Object 2. Answ. Use 1. Use 2. Angels not to be worshipped Doctr. 2. Angels all created by God Use 1. Christ is Lord of the Angels Mat. 18. Use 2. Mal. 3. 1. Doctr. 3. Angels made in the beginning of the creation Use. Doctr. 4. Angels are first and best creatures Use. Excellencie of the Angels Doctr. 5. Angels made in heaven to inhabit heaven Reason 1. Reason 1. Reason 3. Use 1. Gods infinite power hereby demonstrated Use 2. Confutation of contrary errours Job 9. 7. 37. 12. Angels the chiefest of the creatures 1. 2. Use 1. The love of God to man hereby commended Use 2. And the love of Christ not taking the nature of Angels but mans Use 3. Love and reverence the Angels Use 4. Comfort hereby to the godly Angels are heavenly spirits 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Enchirid. ad Laur. cap. 18. 7. 1. They are spirits 2. Entire complete spirits 3. Heavenly spirits 4. 5. They are like to God 1. 2. 3. 6. 7. They are finite in nature Heb. 12. Of the assumed bodies of Angels How Angels are in a place The number of them very great Their motion wondrous quick Of the fal● and standing of Angels Vse 1. Comfort by the ministery of Angels Vse 2. Confutation of contrary errors Gen. 1. 2. What the earth here is The names of it 1. 2. 3. Properties of it 1. 2. 3. What the Spirit moving is 〈◊〉 1 Ioh. 5. 7. 2. 1. Doctr. all creatures have being of God Vse 1. He is the● Lord of all Vse 2. All our right is from God 2. Doctr. The World is all mutable and appointed so to be Vse 1. Trust not in any earthly thing Vse 2. Thinke not changes in the World to come by chance Similitude of the Creation and Redemp tion Vse 1. Vse 2. All whom Christ saves renewed by the Spirit 4. Doctr. Vse Gen. 1. 2 Cor. 4. 6. What the Light was Of Gods saying lee light be 〈◊〉 3. 4. 1. Quest. Ans. 2. Quest. Ans. 3. Quest. Ans. 4. Quest. Ans. 1. Doctr. Three Persons in the Godhead Vse 2. Doctr. All things possible to God Vse 3. Doctr. God wonderfull in wisedome and providence Vse 4. Doctr. Prerogatives of the first day 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Verse 6 7 8. Of the things now created The skie meant by the firmament Reas. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. How a day without the Sun Doctr. 1. All created wisely orderly Vse Doctr. 2. Vse Verse 9. Of Water and Earth distinct elements 1. 2. Of the name of the Earth And of the Sea 1. 2. Of herbes plants and trees Doctr. 1. All earthly things nothing to God Vse Doctr. 2. Wee strangers here in a pilgrimage Vse 1. Vse 2. Doctr. 3. God ruleth the most tumultuous creatures 1. 2. Vse Verse 14. Of these lights that they are substantial bodies Quest. The place of them Answ. 1. Arsw. 2. The use of them 2. 2. 3. Of the Sun Of the Moone Doctr. 〈◊〉 No instruments used in the creation Vse Doctr. 2. Great wisedome of God in the Creation Vse Doctr. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 4. Vse Jon. 4. Verse 20. God do 〈…〉 all on good advice Doctr. Vse 1. Bee followers of God as deare children Vse 〈◊〉 How to view the crea● 〈◊〉 Rom 〈◊〉 12. Of fishes Their two notable properties 1. 2. Creation of mankind male female 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Of the consultation in making man Who consults With whom It was for 3. reasons 1. 2. 3. Doctr. 1. Man the chiefest of creatures Doctr. 2. Doctr. 3. Of the name Adam used two wayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctr. Woman as capable of grace and glory 〈◊〉 man Object Answ. Vse 1. Vse 2. Doctor Man was made by God alone Vse 1. Vse 2. Danger of them that wrong man Vse 3. The sin of idolaters Doctr. 1. Mans body being of dust was wondrously made Vse 1. Doctr. 2. Man at best a dusty substance Object Answ. 1. 2. Vse 〈◊〉 For humility and thankfulnesse Vse 2. Against Pelagians and Papists The creation of mans soule Opinions 1. 2. 3. 4. Doctrine No supernaturall gifts in the soule of Adam Reason Vse 1. Our estate better by regeneration then by creation Vse 2. No Apostasie of Saints All good and Adam good yet not to bee alone how Doctr. 1 In Christ a better thing intended then the creation Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Doctr. 2. Vse More gained in Christ then lost in Adam Doctrine Woman not made to bee a servant Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Of giving names to the creatures Doctrine Adam perfect in natural knowledge Vse The best naturall knowledge cannot uphold Doctr. None but Woman a meet companion for Man Vse 1. Vse 2. Of the rib where of Woman was made Of Adams deep sleep Doctr. 1. Out of Christ dying the Church is raised Vse 1. Vse 2. 3. 4. Doctr. 2. Vse Doctr. 3. Doctr. 4. Doctr. 5. Wives are continuall companions of our lives Vse 1. Gal. 6. 16. Vse 2. 3. Consequents 1. 2. 3. 1. Of Gods bringing Eve to Adam Doctr. 1. Marriage the ordinance of God Reas. 1. Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Vse 4. Doctr. 2. Marriage is of one Man with one Woman Mal. 2. 15. Vse 2. 〈◊〉 Doctrine Marriage must bee free and voluntary Reas. Vse A reproofe to many 2. Doctrine What guides must lead to marriage Vse 3. Doctr. 1. Vse 1. Vse 2. Doctr. 2. Similitude of manners the best ground of love Vse 1. A rule for ●husing Vse 2. 3. Consequent