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A57655 Leviathan drawn out with a hook, or, Animadversions upon Mr. Hobbs his Leviathan by Alex. Rosse. Ross, Alexander, 1591-1654. 1653 (1653) Wing R1960; ESTC R1490 70,857 139

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the Arabian hereticks about two hundred and seventeen years after Christ these were called {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} that is mortall soules The Psychopanvychits of this age come somewhat neer these Arabians for though they hold not the death or dissolution of the soul yet they say it sleeps with the body in the grave this error therefore Mr. Hobbs is no novelty yet we are beholding to you that you will maintain nothing in it till the sword establish it and then you will be content to approve of it But what if the sword should dethrone Christ and set up Mahumet Must that sword be obeyed Concerning the place of hell and the nature of hell fire I will not dispute with you seeing the Scripture doth not punctually set down and in proper terms either the one or the other yet we may collect by some passages of holy writ that hell is in the lower parts of the world for when it speaks of hell it still names a discent or going down Core went down to hell the rich glutton in hell lifted up his eyes towards Abraham The ●eart is said to rise the out of bottomless ●it and yet stands with reason that the place of the damned should be as remote from heaven as may be which can be no where but in the bowels of the earth The names of {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} in Greek and infernus in Lutine intimate so much the exactest description we have of hell is in Isa. 30. 33. Tophet is ordained of old c. he hath made it deep and large the pile thereof is fire and much wood the breath of the Lord like a stream of Brimston doth kindle it The Angels are said to be cast down to hell 2. Pet. 2. 4. And Christ descended into hell all which shew that it is beneath us and this visible world Because the Prophets in the old Testament by allegorical terms describe the happiness of Christs Church under the Gospel therefore Mr. Hobbs will needs cap. 38. have these phrases to be understood of an earthly kingdom after the resurrection but the Prophets speak of pleasant rivers and fields of woods and groves of horses and charriots of eating and drinking and all kinde of earthly delights which if Mr. Hobbs understand literally I shall think his opinion relisheth too much of the Alcoran and that he reviveth again the heresie of Cerinthus which the Fathers of the Church hath long since exploded as being too gross and carnal and such as none will beleeve but carnal men Nulla modo ista possunt nisi a carnalibus credi as St. Austin saith l. 20. de civit c. 7. The kingdom of God consisteth not in meat and drink saith the Apostle the words that they speak are spirit and truth and are spiritually to be understood if we shall be like the Angels after the resurrection as our Saviour assures us what other delights can we have then but such as they enjoy now why should not heaven be the place of our abode as well as theirs they need not the earth to reside in now neither shall we then But he saith That the subjects of God should have any place higher then his foot-stool seemeth not sutable to the dignity of a King It may be so Mr. Hobbs of you speak of earthly Kings who pride themselves in their supposed greatness and stand upon punctilios but it is not so with the King of heaven who made no scruple to wash his servants feet and to tell them that they should sit with him upon twelve thrones to jude the twelve tribes of Israel And assures us that he will grant to him who overcometh to sit down with him in his throne even as I saith he also overcame and am set down with my Father in his throne Rev. 1. 21. And St. Iohn tells us that Christ hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father Rev. 1. 6. It will not then be unsutable to his dignity if we ascend higher then his footstool In his forty one chapter he tells us That the Kingdom of Christ is not to begin till the general resurrection What hath Christ been all this while a King without a Kingdom or hath his Church been all this time a people without a King sheep without a Shepherd a body without a head Are Christians in a worse condition then other people And is not Christ highly wronged who having conquered a kingdom with his blood and having got the victory over all his enemies is notwithstanding now 1652. years without his kingdom and must be without it till the general resurrection How can this stand that he should so many yeers since by his Apostles and their successors subdue so many nations to his obedience by that sharpe two edged sword of his mouth and yet all this while have no kingdom could Alexander in three yeers space subdue so many kindoms and Christ after so many hundred years be without his kingdom what is become of his rod of Iron by which he was to rule the stubborn Gentiles How can this stand that he ascended up on high led captivity captive and gave liberal gifts to men yea likewise hath prescribed divers laws ordinances hath distributed divers rewards● and inflicted divers punishments and yet is no King he confesseth to Pilate that he was even at that time a King when he stood before him ready to suffer death for his subjects but withal acknowledgeth that his kingdom was not of this world and therefore refuseth to be an earthly king When Satan profferred him all the kingdoms of the world Matth. 4. And when the Jews sought to make him King he absented himself If he was a King in his humiliation shall he now be no King in his glory and exaltation Now Mr. Hobbs gives us a reason cap. 41. why Christs K●ngdom begins not till the resurrection Because then he shall reward every man according to his work and this is to excute the office of a King This is a feeble reason for a King may be a King though he differ the rewards or punishments which his subjects have deserved Shall we say that David was not king because he did not reward Ioab Shimei and the sons of Barzillai according to their works but left that to his son Solomon both to reward Barzillai's sons for their good service to David in his affliction and to punish Iob with death for the murthering of Abner and Amasa and likewise Shimei for his railling against the king There is a time for all things even for punishments and rewards and if the differing of these do argue no king he may then as well say that God himself is no King who differred the drowning of the world one thouand six hundred years And the punishing of the Amorites four hundred years And so doth put off the rewarding of men till the world to come But he tells us That Christ ascribed kingly power
to the Scribes and Pharisees because they sit in Moses chair But then Christ should have wronged the Roman Governors in whom he acknowledged kingly power by paying tribute and by submitting himself to be judged by them Their sitting then in Moses chair doeth not imply kingly power but their power in expounding the law of Moses And it is as weak an inference to say that Christ is not King of his Church Because he would not divide the inheritance between the two brethren or because he came to save the world not to judge it For dividing of inheritances belonging not to Christs spiritual kingdom neither was it the end of Christs comming to judge that is to condemn the world for the Greek word signifieth both but to save it for his name was Jesus a Saviour because he came to save his people from their sins And no less weak is this reason The time of Christs preaching is called regeneration therefore it is no kingdom Regeneration is not the time but the fruit and effect of Christs preaching and so far is regeneration from being inconsistent with Christs Kingdom that our Saviour tells us in plain tearms except we be regenerate we cannot enter into the Kingdom of God Iohn 3. In his two and fortty chapter he broacheth a strange wheemsie concerning the blessed Trinity in saying That God who hath been represented that is personated thrice to wit by Moses by Christ and by the Apostles may properly enough be said to be three Persons as represented by the Apostles the holy Spirit by which they spake is God as represented by Christ the Son is that God as represented by Moses and the high Priests the Father is that God Hence the names of Father Son and Holy Ghost in the signification of the Godhead are never used in the old Testament for they are Persons that is they have their names from representing which could not be till divers men had represented Gods Person c. Here is strange stuffe For first The word Person in the Trinity was never taken by Divines for a Visard a personating or representation but for a peculiar way of subsisting therefore by the Greek Church the word {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} was used till wanton and idle wits began to ●aise differences about that word and then {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} was used answering to the Latine word Persona and is defined thus {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} by Iustin Martyr and Dam●s●en an eternal or unbeginning manner of an eternal existing so that in the same essence there is a threefold way of subsisting The Fathers existence is from himself the Sons from the Father the Spirits from both so in man there is the soul the intellect and will these three are but one essence yet differently subsisting the soul of it self the intellect from the soul and the wil● from both Secondly if personating or representing makes the persons in the Trinity it will follow that there have been and are more then three persons nay I may truly say innumerable for God hath been represented not onely by Moses but by Iosuah also and his successors by Aaron the high Priest and all his successors by all Judges also and Kings who are therefore called gods there must be then as many persons as there have been personatings or representations and in this respect the Trinity may be called a Legion or rather innumerable persons Thirdly Why should God be called the Holy Spi●●● as he was represented by the Apostles rather then by being personated by Moses or by Christ his reason is because the Apostles spoke by the Spirit I pray did not Moses and Christ speak by the same Spirit St. Peter saith that the holy men of old spake as the Spirit moved them Or why is God by him called Father as he was represented by Moses rather then as he was represented by Christ Was there more Paternity in Moses then in any other man or in Christ who by Isaiah is called the everlasting Father Or why is he called Father as personated by the high Priests F●u●thly It is untrue what he saith that the n●●es of Father Son and Holy Ghost are never used in the old Testament For Psal. 89. which contains not only a prophesie of Solom●n but also of Christ it is thus written He shall cry unto me thou art my Father Psal. 89. 26. and Isa. 9. he is called the everlasting Father So Psal 2. Christ is called Son Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee And Isa. 9. For unto us a Son is given So the third Person or Spirit is mentioned The Spirit of God moved upon the Waters Gen. 1. Now that this was no winde as some have thought is plain because air was created afterwards and this Spirit is said to move or by moving to cherish the waters but the winde is an enemy to the waters both in regard of its siccity and imp●tuosity neither is the winde ever called the Spirit of God as we have shewed already So Ioel. ● I will pour my Spirit upon all flesh And Zach ●● I will pour upon the house of David and the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication But he saith that these names are not used in the signification of the God-head but he is deceived for when the child Christ is called the everlasting Father by Isaiah this cannot be in signification of his humanity for how can a little child be an everlasting Father but in respect of his God-head He saith Cap. 42. If the Supreme King have not his regal power in this world by what authority can obedience be required to his Officers This is not to be doubted but the Supreme King hath his regal power in this world for this cause he tells his Apostles after his resurrection That all power was given to him in heaven and in earth therefore he sends them abroad into all nations of this world teaching them to observe all things which he had commanded them Matth. 28. If then he hath regal power in the world why should not his Officers be obeyed 'T is true Christs Kingdom is not of this world will it therefore follow that it is not in this world For if in this world he subdueth the nations to his Scepter by the sword of his word if he leads captivity captive if he giveth gifts unto men if he prescribe laws and punisheth the offendors shall we not say he hath Kingly power in this world if the Kings and Potentates of the earth have submitted their scepters to his Heraulds have received his yoak and have placed his cross upon their crowns in sign of subjection is he not their Supreme King whose dominion here is called the Kingdom of grace his other Kingdom in the next world shal be the kingdom of glory which M. Hobs confounds with this of grace as for the coercive or commanding power of Ministers which he
truth in things as well as in words for entity can be no more without truth then the fire without heat or the Sun without light And when he saith that Geometry is the only science which God hath left into man He is injurious to Arithmatick whose principles are no less certain firm indemonstrable and evident then those of Geometry He enveighs much against book learning but in this he speaks without book for he calls in derision school knowledge Pedantry Pedantry is that knowledge which is taught to young Scollers and indeed the best books are read to them and they are instructed in the knowledge of the best things both in divine and humane litterature being fit that new vessels be seasoned with the best liquor Quo ●emel est imbuta c. So the preceps of divinity and philosophy to this profound Rabbi whose learning passeth all understanding are but Pedantry but in speaking against the Schools he fouls his own nest for whence had he the knowledge which he now rejects but out of them as for his own supposed learning which he hath without them it is such as will never be thought worthy to be called Pedantry nor shall it ever be honoured to be taught in Schools nor shall Aristotle Plato Cicero Thomas and other eminent men need to fear lest Mr. Hobbs's whimsies and dreams thrust their solid and grave learning out of doors He accounteth these subsequent assersions absurd namely That faith is infused or inspired when nothing can be poured or breathed into any thing but body and that extention is body c. I would know how saith being a gift from without and not born with us should enter into us If not by inspiration or infusion And if nothing can be poured or breathed but body then it must follow that Adam's soul was a body for it was breathed into Adam and that the Holy Ghost is a body for he is said to be poured upon all flesh by the prophets Ioel and Zachariah but if by the spirit be understood spiritual vertues or graces then in Mr. Hobbs his judgment this will be counted an absurd assertion but I hope he hath more Religion in him then to think the Holy Scripture speaks absurdly neither is there any absurdity in calling extension a body seeing not a substantial but a mathematical body is meant to distinguish it from superficies and line He will not have colour to be in the body nor sound in the air Where then is colour which is its subject is it in a spirit I know no other subject in which it can be inherent except one of these two If there be any there name it and if sound be not in the air how come we to hear it He should do well to prove his new assertions as wel as to deny the old so he holds it absurd to say That a living creature is a genus or general thing But the contrary is plain for this proposition man is a living creature were absurd because identical if living creature were not a general but a particular thing it must also follow that a horse were not a living creature or that a man and a horse were the same particular thing seeing he admits of no general thing any one may see here whether the ancient and wise Philosophers or this new Misosopher be most guilty of absurdities neither is it absurd to say That the nature of a thing is its definition Seeing man the thing defined is the same with rational creature which is his definition Nor is there absurdity in this speech Mans command is his will seeing there is no other commanding faculty in man but his will neither are Metaphors Tropes and other Rhetorical figures absurd speeches except he will accuse the Holy Ghost of absurdity who useth them so frequently in scripture and if these words Hypostatical Transubstantiate c. be absurd words let him impart better and more significant terms and we shall think him though not a good Philosopher yet a good Grammarian In his sixth chapter he makes animal and voluntary motion the same but absurdly for the motion of spirits is voluntary not animal and the motion of men in their sleep is animal not voluntary for many in their sleep speak those words and perform those actions of which they are both ashamed and afraid when they are awakened if to speak were an animal motion as he saith then beasts could speak for they are animals He saith That which we neither desire nor hate we are said to contemn But this is not so for I neither desire nor hate the Kingdom of Persia and yet I contemn it not whatsoever I hate I contemn but I contemn many things which I hare not When he distinguisheth Religion from Superstition I hear the voice of Leviathan not of a Christian For saith he Fear of power invisible feigned by the minde or from tales publ●ckly allow● is Religion not allowed Superstition and when the power imagined is truly such as we imagine true Religion It seems then both Religion and Superstition are grounded upon tales and imagination onely they differ in this that tales publickly allowed beget Religion not allowed Superstition but what will he say of the Gentiles among them tales were publickly allowed were they therefore religious and not superstitious and is Religion grounded upon fiction or imagination even true Religion I thought that faith and not imagination had been the substance and ground of things not seen that the just live by faith not by imagination that by faith we are saved by faith we are justified by faith we overcom the world not by fancy fiction or imagination We must mend the Creed if Mr. Hobbs his religion be true and insteed of saying I beleeve in God we must say I imagine or feign in my minde an invisible power In this also he contradicts himself for if the power be invisible how can it be imagined seeing as he saith before imagination is onely of things perceived by the sense and it is so called from the image made in seeing He will not have the will to be a rational appetite because then there could be no voluntary acts against reason But the School doctrine stands firm that the will is a rational appetite and that there can be no voluntary acts against reason because the object of the will is a known good for we cannot will or affect what we know not and knowledge in man is never without reason which regulates the will besides each man in willing aimes at an end which cannot be attained withous its medium nor this ordered without reason either true or apparent Part 1. cap. 7. He seems to make faith and opinion the same thing when he saith That in belief are two opinions one of the saying of the man the other of his vert●e but in this he makes the Christian mans happiness very incertain and builds it upon a tottering foundation for opinion is meerly
Gods word By the same means he may prove that Aristotle's Logick or Hippocrate's Aphorisms are the undoubted word of God for in them is nothing contrary to it But was not Peter's reason contrary to Gods word when he would have disswaded Christ from suffering whereas all the prophets had spoken that Christ ought to have suffered those things and to enter into his glory Luke 24. 26. And no less weak is his argument cap. 32. by which he will prove that divine dreams are not of force to win belief from any man that knows dreams are for the most part natural and may proceed from former thoughts c. He may as well infer that the pen-men of the Holy Scriptures are not of force to win belief from us seeing the prophet saith All men are lyers what if it had said that men for the most part are lyers there had been less reason to have inferred that the pen-men of Scriptures were such and yet Mr. Hobbs will infer that because dreams are for the most part natural therefore divine dreams are of no credit that such dreams are of force sufficient to win belief is plain by the dreams of Ioseph Iacob's son and Ioseph the husband of Mary with divers others in Scripture cap. 33. He is troubled that Moses before his death should write that he died that his Sepulcher was not known to this day but in this he troubles himself needlessly for he writes of his death and sepulcher by anticipation which is an usual way of writing amongst some besides the Jewish tradition is that Iosua wrote that last chapter of Deuteronomy long after the death of Moses Cap. 33. So he is troubled about the words of Moses Gen. 12. 6. which are And the Canaanite was then in the land Hence he infers that Moses wrot not that book but one who wrot when the Canaanite was not in the land for Moses dyed before he came to it but I say that if the Canaanite was not in the land when he wrot these words The Canaanite was then in the land he wrot a lye but indeed Moses wrot the History and writes no waies absurdly in showing that the Canaanite was then in the land but purposely to let us see the condition of Gods children in this life who though they have right to all they enjoy yet the wicked keep them under and they live in fear still of their enemies as Abraham did of the Canaanites who domineered in that land which Abraham received from God and at the same time he receiv'd it such like exceptions he makes against some other writers of the old Testament but they are of no moment or validity therefore I will spend no paper nor time in their refuration In his thirty fourth chapter he tells us That there is no real part of the universe which is not also a body and that bodies are called substances because subject to various accidents and that an incorporeal substance is as if a man should say an incorporeal body If there were no real parts of the universe but bodies then the universe were not universe but an imperfect system as d●ficien● in the most noble of all created entities● to wit incorporeal substances but God made the world perfect consisting both of material and immaterial substances such are Angels and Mens souls which are neither corporeal in their beeing nor operation for if they were corporeal they must be mortal and corruptible and compounded at least of matter and form they must be also quantitative local by circumscription and movable by physical motion all which are absurd and if a substance be the same that a body is then he must make God corporeal for he is a substance now to say that a thing is called substance because subject to changes is vain for substances are so called because they subsist by themselves and not in another entity as accidents do besides accidents may be called subjects because one accident may be the subject of another as the superficies of a wall is the subject of colours but accidents can never be called substances for they cannot subsist of themselve● By the spirit of God moving upon the face of the waters Gen. 1. 2. He will have to be meant a winde because if God himself were understood then motion must be attributed to him and place I know in this he follows Tertullian's opinion but the Church hath constantly held that there is meant not a winde but the spirit of God by which place they both prove the mystery of the Trinity the first person being expressed by the word Elo●●m the second by the word Berisheth or Beginning and the third by the word Ruah or Spirit they also by the same place prove the dignity and power of baptism in the waters of which Sacrament the Spirit moveth as in the beginning and indeed it is childish to think that a winde should be there meant for what use could there be of a winde then before the creatures were produced And wheras he is afraid to ascribe motion and place to God it seems he hath not well observed the Scripture phrase which ordinarily speaketh of God Anthropopathos as if he were a man therefore he is said sometimes to speak to see to hear to discend to laugh to be angry to greet to rejoyce and in this History of the Creation he is said to speak to bless to walk in the Garden to examine Adam to condemn the Serpent c. Now whereas Mr. Hobbs saith that the spirit here mentioned is the same that is spoken of Gen. 8. 1. I will bring my Spirit upon the Earth He is mistaken and misalledgeth the words for thus it is written And God made a winde to pass over the Earth for winde in Scripture is never called the Spirit of God The spirit then that dried up the waters of the flood was the same that afterwards divided the red Sea for Moses and the Israelites to pass through to wit a drying winde which God had raised He saith The word Ghost signifieth nothing but the imaginary inhabitants of the brain But there he is also mistaken for it signifieth a real immaterial substance which we call from the Latin word Spirit and so it was alwaies used by the Saxons and at this day Gheest and Gheist in low and high Dutch do signifie the same thing or spirit Cap. 34. When Christ walked on the waters the Disciples thought they had seen a spirit or fantasm which Mr. Hobbs will have to be an aerial body But I wonder who ever saw an aerial body the two grosser Elements are visible to us but not the two superior by reason of their subtilty and purity And he is deceived also in saying That the delusions of the brain are not common to many at once For I have observed that divers men together have seen imaginary castles temples armed men and such like apparitions in the clouds Now Spirits or Angels have been
whilst they were alive teach the contrary when they are dead Again wise men have urged obedience to their laws upon the doctrine of separated spirits so did Moses by shewing his laws came from God who is a separated essence so did Lyc●rgus Solon Numa Mohomet and others But saith he Upon this ground faith wisdom and other vertues are sometimes poured into a man and blown into him from heaven as if the vertuous and their vertues could be asunder That ●aith wisdom other graces are sometimes poured into or upon men is no paradox in divinity seeing Gods word which cannot lie assureth us thereof I will pour my spirit upon all flesh Joel 2. I will pour upon the house of David the spirit of grace and supplication Zech. 12. God poured his gifts upon the Gentiles Acts 10. And so the Scripture useth the word blowing or breathing or inspiring which is all● one thing all Scripture is by divine inspiration 2 Tim 3. 16. Men spoke in old time as they were inspired or blown into by the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 1. 21. And I pray what dangerous or absurd doctrine is it to say bec●use mens souls are 〈◊〉 tal and immat●rial God inspireth from heaven● his gifts into them but indeed the souls immortality is not the ground why God inspireth his graces for then he would inspire the most wicked souls that are with his graces for they are also immortal the ground then of this inspiration is his own good pleasure being a free dispenser of his gifts neither needs he fear that we by this doctrine will make the vertuous and their vertues to be asunder for the vertues of vertuous men are not theirs till they be bestowed Again he saith Who will endeavour to obey the laws if he expects obedience to be poured into him I reply who will expect obedience to be poured into him if he endeavour to obey the law Again obedience is an act of the will now acts are not infused but habits Besides I answer him with Thomas every good man yeelds obedience to Magistrates because he is bound thereto by the law of nature where we see inferiour movers obey the motion of the superiour and likewise by the law of God which teacheth him to be subject to principalities and powers and to obey magistrates Tit. 3. 1. To submit himself to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be the King as supreme or unto Governors as unto them that are sent by Him 1 Pet. 2. 13. A good man hath faith and he knows that faith in Christ includes obedience for Christ himself taught obedience both By precept and practise he is also a just man and justice requires that he should give to every man his due but obedience is due to superiours obedience then needs no inspiration but such reasons now if any will maintain erroneous opinions as he alledgeth upon the doctrine of the souls immortality who can help it Men may build stuble and hay upon the best foundation which is Christ Jesus as the Apostle sheweth Shall we deny the souls immortality because of some errors grounded thereon then by the same reason deny the Scripture deny Christ himself He laughs cap. 45. at the words circumscriptive and definitive used in the schooles which he saith are insignificant words for the circumscription of a thing is nothing else but the defining of its place Here he sheweth his ignorance in the school termes for though circumscribing be the defining of a thing yet the defining or confining is not the circumscribing thereof Angels are in a place or rather space definitive because they are so confined to one ubi that they cannot at the same instant be in another yet without any circumscription of parts to the parts of the superficies in the ambient body or place for in a spirit there are no parts therefore no circumscription though there is a confining or definition to the ubi when we say that all the soul is in every part of the body he asks Whether God is served with such absurdities He should first prove this to be an absurdity and then inform us whether this tenet of the souls indivisibility be any part of Gods worship but indeed it is no more absurd to say that the soul is all in every part of the body then to say that the Sun or moon is all in every mans eye for one pa●t of the Sun is not in my eye and another part in your eye but all the Sun is in my eye and all the Sun is in millions of eyes at the same instant of time He would have us tell him How an incorporeal substance is capable of torment and pain in hell fire The ●●●stion is not how but whether or not the soul be cap●ble of pain if you doubt of this put your finger in the fire and tell me if your soul be not capable of pain or grief which is a torment I shewed before out of Austin that God hath a way to torment souls in fire though unknown to us neither can we tell how the soul goeth hence without the body into heaven onely we can tell him that when our bodies return to dust our souls return to God that gave them Eccles. 12. As for the School-men at which he carps I deny not but there are in some mens opinions many needless questions and subtilties so there are likewise among them many excellent passages and useful distinctions in this life there is no perfection where gold is there is dross and the best corn is not without chaff he is a fool that will re●use to drink wine because there be lees in the barrel He saith cap. 46. That what is written in the Metaphysicks is for the most part repugnant to natural reason He should have given us some in●●ances that we might have answered him but to speak of things in general is to say nothing yet that the Reader may perceive both the use of Metaphysicks and how consonant that knowledge is to natural reason I will set down here a few Metaphysical maximes 1. One entity hath but one specifical essence 2. The essence receiveth not augmentation nor diminution 3. As every thing desireth to preserve its entity so it doth its unity 4. Unity is before multitude 5. Truth is consonant to truth 6. Every entity is good 7. Beauty excites affection 8. Evil is not appetible 9. Every thing compounded is dissoluble 10. whatsoever is compounded hath parts and principles 11. In an universe is contained all particulars 12. The whole is greater then the parts 13. The first entity is simply infinite 14. The abstract is before the concret 15. The measure is before the thing measured 16. The subject is the matter of its accident 17. The cause is before the effect 18. Nothing can be its own cause 19. As the essence so the knowledge of the effect depends from the cause 20. The proximate cause being put the effect follows 21.
that it was a winde not the holy Spirit which in the Creation moved on the waters that the dove and fierytongues may be called Angels that Christ hath no spiritual kingdom here on earth that he did not cast out devils but onely cured madness that Satan did not enter into Iudas that we may dissemble in matter of religion that we may disobey Christ and his Apostles without sin Such and much more like stuff and smoke doth this Leviathan send out of his nostrils as out of a boyling pot or caldron Job 41. 〈◊〉 This is the sperma caete or spawn which this whale casteth out a whale I say that hath not swallowed up Ionah the prophet but Cerinthus the heretick and vomited up the condemned opinions of the old hereticks and chiefly the Anthropomorphits Sabellians Nestorians Saduceans Arabeans Tacians or Eucratits Manichies Mahumetans and others for in holding life eternal to be onely on earth he is a Cerinthian and Mahumetan in giving to God corporiety he is an Anthropomorphit Manichean Tertullianist and Audaean in holding the three Persons to be distinct names and essences represented by Moses Christ and the Apostles he is a Sabellian Montanist Aetian and Priscillianist in saying that Christ personated God the Son he is a Nestorian giving him two personalities for no person can personate himself ●id denying spirits he is a Saducean in making the soul to rest with the body till the resurrection he is an Arabian in making the soul of man corporeal he is a Luciferian by putting a period to hell torments he is an Originist by teaching dissimulation in religion he is a Tacian or Encratit in making God the cause of injustice or sin he is a Manichee in slighting Christs miracles he is a Iew and in making our natural reason the word of God he is Socinian In discovering of these errors I quarrel not with Mr. Hobbs but with his book which not onely I but many more who are both learned and judicious men look upon as a piece dangerous both to Government and Religion All the hurt I wish him is true illumination a sanctified heart and Christian sobriety that he may retract what is amiss And so I bid him and thee farewel A. R. In doctissimum marinae belluae domitorem AL ROSSEUM ALcides clava Lernaeum perculit hydram Sed tu Ros calamo monstra marina d●mas Quantum Leviathan superavit viribus hydram Tantum Ros superas Amphytrioniadem D. C. The Preface BEing desired by some of my friends a while ago to peruse Mr. Hobbs his Leviathan and deliver my opinion of it I have done accordingly I finde him a man of excellent parts and in this book much gold and withal much dross he hath mingled his wine with too much water and imbittered his pottage with too much Coloquintida there are some of his positions which may prove of dangerous consequence to green heads and immature judgments who look no farther then the superficies or outside of things thinking all to be gold that glisters and all wholesome food that is pleasing to the tast under green grass lurch oftentimes snakes and serpents such as Euridice perceive not till they be stung to death I have therefore not to wrong Mr. Hobbs but to vindicate the truth for in Republica libera oportet linguas esse liberas adventured upon his Leviathan which I do not finde so fierce and t●rrible as he in Job that people should be cast down at the sight of him this may be drawn out with a Hook and held even with a single bridle I will onely touch such passages and not all but some as deserve Animadversions wherein I will be both brief and modest aiming rather at verity then victory though he slights all learned men as Iob's Leviathan doth all humane strength and prideth himself too much in his scales LEVIATHAN Drawn out with an HOOK OR ANIMADVERSIONS UPON Mr HOBB's Book Called LEVIATHAN By ALEXANDER ROSS IN His introduction he calls Nature The art whereby God hath made and governs the World God made not the world by Nature for Nature had no beeing till God made it and when he made it it was neither the exemplary nor adjuvant cause of the creation the world could not be made by that which had no beeing till it was made and when it was made it was nothing else but the form and matter of things the one being the active the other the passive nature and both but parts of the universe if again by nature that we may make a favourable construction of his phrase he meaneth the ordinary power of God the world was not made thus by his ordinary power he governs it but by his extraordinary power he made it which power is never called natural but miraculous neither again is Nature Art as he calls it though both be principles because Nature is an internal Art an external principle I say external in respect of essence though it may be internal in regard of site albeit Art as it is an habit and in the minde of the Artificer is altogether external but take it for the effect of Art it may be internal in the thing made by Art as may be seen in the motions of a watch He gives us a bad definition of life when he saith Life is but the motion of limbs for life is not motion but the cause of motion there may be life in the limbs when there is no motion as in sleep and in histerical women and there may be motion in the limbs without life as when they are moved violently by some external mover and there is life where there be no limbs at all as in the soul and there is motion where there is no life at all as in a wooden leg. In the first chapter he tells us That the cause of sense is the external object which presseth the organ either immediately as in the tast and touch or imediately as in the other senses The object indeed is the cause both material and efficient of sensation but not of sense that is of the act of seeing but not of the faculty the soul is the cause of this neither doth the object press immediately upon the organ of tast or touch but ●mediately for the organ of tast is the nervous part of the tongue the medium is the spungy flesh and salival humidity for the dry tongue tasteth not the organ of tact is the nerve the medium is the flesh and skin called Epidemis But when he says that seeming or fansie is that which men call sense He makes deception and sense one thing for quod videtur non est what seems to be hath no beeing therefore in Euripides mad Orestes is counselled by his sister to be quiet because saith she {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} thou seest none of those things which thou supposeth thou seeth or knowest sense then is not fancy for what we fancy we see not but seem to see
conjectural and of probabilities onely whereas faith makes its object certain end withal he makes these phrases the same To have faith in to trust to and to beleeve a man but Saint Austin and the Church ever since have made these distinct phrases for credere Deo is to beleeve that God is true credere Deum is to beleeve there is a God which wicked men and evil Angels may do but credere in Deum is to love God and to relie on him and to put our trust in him which none do but good men therefore Mr: Hobbs is injurious to Christianity when he saith That to beleeve in God as it is in the Creed is meant no● trust in the person but confession of the doctrine If so then the Devil may as boldly and with as great comfort say the Creed as any Christian for he beleeves and trembles ●aith Saint Iames and we know these evil spirits confessed Christ to be the Son of God and he is no less injurious to God when he will have us beleeve in the Church saying Our belief faith and trust is in the Church whose words we take and acqui●sse therein but the Apostles in their Creed have taught us otherwaies namely That we beleeve the Catholick Church but we beleeve in God the Father Almighty and in Jesus Christ and in the H●ly Ghost He makes Devils Demoniacks and Mad-men to signifie in Scripture the same thing for thus he writes Whereas many of those Devils are said to confess Christ Is it not necessary to interpret those places otherwise then that those mad-men confessed him And shortly after I see nothing at all in the Scripture that requires a belief that Demoniacks were any other thing but mad-men Yes there be divers things that make it necessary for him to beleeve that these were distinct 1. The letter of the text from which we should not digress except we were urged by an inconvenience which is not here 2. The Authority of the Church in which he saith he doth beleeve Now the Church alwaies took these for distinct creatures to wit Devils Demoniacks and Mad-men 3. The honour of Christ for wherein was the power of his Divinity seen if these were ordinary Mad-men seeing madness is curable by physick and every common Physician It tended more to Christ's honour that the Devil whose Kingdom he came to destroy should confess he divinity then that mad-men should acknowledge it 4. Christ came to call Jews and Gentiles by working of miracles but to cast out Devils and to cure Demoniacks was a greater miracle then to cure mad-men 5. The New Testament distinguisheth Demoniacks from mad-men for these are called Demoniacks not mad and Saint Paul is termed mad by the Athenians and not a Demoniack so Devils are never called mad-men in Scripture nor madmen called Devils besides as all mad-men are not Demoniacks so all Demoniacks are not mad-men for the Devil entered into Iudas Iscariot he became a demoniack or possessed by the Devil and yet he was no mad-man but I doubt me Mr. Hobbs is mad himself in thinking all learned men to be mad except himself he thinks the School-men mad because their terms cannot be translated or are not intelligible in vulgar languages by this he may as well ascribe madness to Lawyers and Physitians as to Divines for their terms of 〈◊〉 ●t cannot be well translated nor can vulgar capacities easily understand them nor is it much material whether they do or not Church and State can subsist well enough though the vulgar sort understand not the terms of School divinity if these terms are not intelligible by dull heads and shallow brains the fault is in themselves not in the terms for quicquid recipitur ad modum recipientis recipitur non ad modum recepti Blinde men must not accuse the Sun of obscurity because they cannot see him neither are the words of Suarez which he alledgeth for an example so obscure as he would make them for to an intelligent man the words are very plain to wit That the first cause hath no necessary influence upon the second by reason of subordination which is a help to their working Here be two things remarkable 1. That the second causes work by reason of subordination to the first cause ● That the first cause worketh not necessarily upon the second but voluntarily If this dish please not Mr. Hobbs his pallat he must blame his mouth which is out of tast and not the meat which is both wholesom and savory In his tenth chapter he uttereth strange Paradoxes 1. That to pitty is to dishonour 2. That good Fortune if lasting is a sign of Gods favour 3. That covetousness of great riches and ambition of great honours are honourable 4. That an unjust action so it be joyned with power is honorable for honour consisteth onely in the opinion of power therefore the heathen gods are honoured by the Poets for their thefts and adulteries and at first among men piracy and theft were counted no dishonour 1. Pitty is rather honour then dishonour for when a father pittieth his child a King his subject or a Master his servant do they dishonour them When we desire God to pitty us do we desire him to dishonour us him whom we dishonour we pitty not and whom we pitty we dishonour not pitty proceeds of love dishonour of hatred 2. If lasting good fortune be a sign of Gods favour it seems then that the Turks are highly in Gods favour for their good fortune hath continued these many hundreth years Whether was poor and starved Lazarus or that rich glutton who fared dilitiously every day highest in Gods favour 3. Who ever afore Mr. Hobbs made ambition honourable and covetousness which Saint Paul calls the root of all evil Can sin be honorable which brought shame and dishonour upon mankinde in respect of sin man did not abide in honour but became like the beasts that perish If ambition of great honors be honorable then were the evil Angels and Adam most honorable when they affected to be like God himself which is the greatest and highest honour that can be then were Caligula Domitian Heliogabalus and others who affected divine honours most honorable Midas coveted great riches when he wished all might be gold he touched therefore in this he was most honorable but if it be honour to offend God to transgress his law to incur his displeasure and suffer eternal pains let them who list injoy this honour I will have none of it non equidem tali me digner honore 4. He makes unjust actions joyned with power honourable Then unjust actions without power deserve no honour it is even as Seneca complaineth in his time parva furta puniuntur magna in triumphis aguntur Petty theeves are hanged but great robberies are honoured He spoke it with grief when a cruel tyrant ruled or rather misruled the Empire But otherwaies where there is government unjust actions are punished not
like the most excellent men but rather like to God himself Latius regnes avidum d●●ando spiritum quam si Lybiam remotis Gadibus jungas c. What availed it Alexander to conquer the world and not to conquer himself to be a slave to his vices and not subject to his laws And I pray why should not a Prince be as well subject to his own laws as to his oaths covenants and promises there is nothing so honorable for a King as to keep his word and to observe the laws which he not onely made but by oath and promise tied himself to obey And surely this is the very law of nature which as Mr. Hobbs saith is divine and cannot by any man or common-wealth be abrogated Neither is there any inconvenience to set the law as a Judge above the Prince for as Aristotle tells us Polit. l. 3. c. 11. The law where it is plain and perspicuous ought to beat rule because without it no King nor● Common-wealth can govern And secondly Because the law is just not subject to partiality passion and affection as Princes and other men are and indeed Princes should be so far from disobeying their own laws that they should be the life and soul of the law which of it self is but a dead letter therefore the common saying of that good Emperor Aurelius was Rex viva Lex No Common-wealth can be happy or continue long but where the Prince is as well subject to the law as the People his example will move them to obedience Nec sic inflectere sensus humanos● edicta valent ac vita regentis therefore the counsel of Pitta●us was good Let not them break the law who make the Law par●to legi quisquis legem sanxerit Cap. 29. He is angry with those who say That every private man hath a property in his goods Among the Turks indeed no private man hath any property at all under Christian Princes private men live more happily who enjoy a property yet not simply absolute if we consider that the Prince hath a right to our goods in cases of necessity as in his own and Countries defence and such like cases in this regard no man is born for himself nor hath any man an absolute property in his own life which he ought when occasion urgeth lay down for his Country Dulce decorum pro patria mori therefore Plato saith well That our Country requires a share in our birth the property then of the subject excludeth not the Princes right in cases of necessity but onely his arbitrary power Hence are these sayings Omnia rex imperio possidet singuli dominio Again Ad reges potestas omnium pertinet ad singulos proprietas The power here spoke of is meant of his just lawful not of his arbitrary tyrannical power In his thirty one chapter he makes a needless distinction between the objects of love hope and fear shewing That love hath reference to goodness hope and fear to power the subject of praise is goodness the subject of magnifying and blessing is power David knoweth no such distinction who in the 18. Psalm he loves God for his strength or power and in another Psalm he fears him for his mercy or goodness There is saith he mercy with thee therefore shalt thou be feared So he makes Gods goodness and not his power the object of his hope or belief Psal. 27. I hoped to see the goodness of God in the land of the living so likewise he praiseth God for his strength or power as well as for his goodness Praise him saith he for his mighty acts praise him for his excellent greatness Psal. 150. and in divers Psalms he magnifyeth God for his salvation as well as for his power Now when he saith that this name God is his own name of relation to us he is deceived for this is no name of relation at all his names of relation to us are Creator Redeemer Father Lord King Master c. In his third Part and Chap. 1. He saith That our natural reason is the undoubted word of God But I doubt Leviathan himself for all his great strength and power cannot make this good for Gods word is infallible so is not our natural reason which faileth in many things Gods word saith That a Virgin did conceive and bear a Son That God became man That our bodies shall rise again out of the dust but our natural reason saith this is impossible therefore when St. Paul preached the resurrection to the Athenians who wanted not natural reason enough they thought he had been mad How comes it that the Apostle saith The natural man understandeth not the things of Gods spirit And Christ tells Peter That flesh and blood that is natural reason had not revealed the mystery of his Divinity to him but his Father in Heaven and St. Paul saith That he received not the Gospel of man nor was he taught it but by the revelation of Jesus Christ Gal. 1. 12. And that he was not taught by mans wisdom but by the Holy● Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 13. How comes it I say that the Scripture speaks thus in villifying natural reason if it be the infallible word of God yea what need was there of any written word at all if our natural reason be that infallible word doubtless Adam by his fall lost much of his knowledge and natural reason Peter made use of his natural reason when he undertook to disswade Christ from going up to Ierusalem and there to suffer and die but Christ tells him that he favoured the things that be of men but not of God Mat. 16. 23. Our natural reason saith he cap. 32. Is a talent not to be folded up in the napkin of an implicit faith This I grant but I hope he will permit that our natural reason be subject to an explicit faith without which it is impossible to please God and not onely must our reason be subdued to faith but every imagination in us must be cast down and every high thing that exalteth it self against the knowledge of God and every thought must be brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ 2. Cor 10. 5. And whereas he saith cap 32. That our reason must be imployed in the purchase of justice peace and true religion If reason could procure or purchase these blessings the Gentiles of old the Jews and Mahume●ans of latter years might have had them as well as we for in natural reason they are not inferior to us every one of these following the dictates of reason think they have the true Religion as for justice and peace they can never be purchased by reason but by ●aith therefore saith the Apostle being justified by faith we have peace with God through Jesus Christ our Lord but his reason by which he would prove that our natural reason is the undoubted word of God is very feeble for saith he There is nothing contrary to it in
Christ therefore as he is revealed to us in his word is the foundation of our faith besides By faith we are the sons of God saith the Apostle Gal. 3. But we were in a bad condition if ourfiliation depended on the authority of Princes or reputation of Pastors In his forty fourth chapter he expounds these words of Matth. 9. 34. Belzebub the Prince of Devils that is He hath principality over fantasins that appear in the air So that he makes Demons fantasms or spirits of illusion to signifie allegorically the same thing But I do not read that Devils in Scripture are called fantasms or fantasms named Devils when the Disciples Mat. 14. saw Jesus walking on the sea they thought they had seen a fantasm did they mean the devil by this word So when Christ Mat. 4. was tempted of the devil is it meant that he was tempted by a fantasm Devils are spirits and real substancet and not phantasms or fictions of the brain as we shewed be●ore of Angels I deny not but Satan may represent to the outward sense as well as to the inward or imagination divers shapes of things to delude men which shapes may be called fantasms as that which Suidas calls a diabolical fantasm {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} which indeed was but a deluding shadow or fantasm and not the Devil himself who is an invisible spirit therefore although there be in the heathen Poets fabulous doctrines concerning Demons we must not hence infer with Mr. Hobbs That Demons are but idols or fantasms of the brain without any real nature of their own distinct from human fancy For so he may as wel infer that God is but a fancy because the Poets have delivered many ●abulous doctrines concerning the gods He that afflicted Job tempted Christ bu●●etted Paul and hath been from the beginning an enemy to the womans seed is more then a fantasm or idol of the brain Cap. 44. After Mr. Hobbs hath toyled himself in vain to prove that Christ hath no kingdom in this world at last is content to allow Christ the kingdom of grace which is as much as we desire for we know that the kingdom of glory is not yet come Christ then is King of his Church militant here and raigneth in the hearts of his faithful and performs all the offices of a King even in this world by prescribing laws by ruling defending rewarding punishing though not in so ample a maner as hereafter he also conquereth and subdueth the enemies of his Church though not fully till the consummation of the world He also enlargeth the territories and bounds of his Kingdom that he might fulfil the prophesies and make good his Fathers gift Psal. 2. I have given thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession This is that kingdom which is in the new Testament so often called the kingdom of God and of heaven this is that kingdom which in the resurrection Christ will deliver up to God his Father 1 Cor. 15. He cannot yet digest cap. 44● the souls immortality for three reasons First because the tree of life was to preserve man immortal Secondly what needed Christs sacrifice to recover mans immortality if he hath not lost it Thirdly must the wicked and heathen also enjoy eternal life I answer The tree of life was to preserve man immortal but not the soul which is immortal by nature as being a spirit and not subject to corruption as bodies which are compounded of corruptible materials and of contrary elements Secondly Christs sacrifice was to recover mans immortality but not the souls which was not lost now as a part cannot be the whole nor the whole a part so neither can the soul ●be man nor man the soul Thirdly eternal life which the wicked enjoy is a life of misery and such as they would be willing to exchange for death neither is it more strange that wicked men should enjoy eternal life then wicked Angels both enjoying this immortality as a due punishment for their sins now whereas he saith That eternal life was not essential to humane nature but consequent to the vertue of the tree of life I grant that man is not naturally immortal yet the soul of man is but I deny that life eternal was a consequent to the vertue of any tree for no tree can be capable of such a vertue neither was the tree of life any other then a Sacrament of mans immortality if he had pesevered in his obedience therefore God debarred him because of his transgression from it in that he would not have his Sacraments abused by profane hands But he tells us That when everlasting death is called everlasting life in torments it is a figure never used but in this very case I answer That this figure is used in other cases as when Christ saith Let the dead go bury the dead there natural life is called death So when the Apostle ●aith We were dead in our sins and trespasses he used the same figure in another case for there the delight we have in sin is called death this figure is used in the law in another case for captives slaves prisoners and such like miserable men are said to be civily dead St. Paul in another case useth this figure when he saith I am crucified that is dead to the world to wit in his affections and so they who include themselves in a monastery are said to be dead to the world But he saith that this doctrine of the souls imnortality is founded onely on some of the obscurer places of the new Testament I pray what obscurity is there in this place Thou shalt be this night with me in Paradise What was to be with Christ in Paradise not the good thiess body then it must needs be his soul So when Christ preached to the spirits in prison what were these spirits Shaddows onely or fancies such as Virgil speaks of Umbrae ibant tenues simulachraque luce carentum Bodies they could not be they must needs then be souls So when Christ saith That body and soul shall be cast into hell fire there cannot be meant as Mr. Hobbs expounds it body and life for then Christ should speak non-sence when he saith Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul Mat. 10. 28. That is fear not them that can take away the life of the body but are not able to take away the life of the life But he objecteth That the soul in Scripture is taken sometimes for the whosle man or living creature I grant it is so taken sometimes Synecdochically will it therefore ●ollow that it is never taken properly So this word flesh is sometimes tropically used for the whole man is therfore never used properly He tells us cap. 44. That this window gives entrance to the dark doctrine of eternal torments of purgatory of walking ghosts and exorcisms The doctrine of eternal torments is
not so dark as he takes it it is in plain termes set down in Scripture to be an eternal separation from God everlasting fire everlasting shame and contempt c. Neither is it a doctrine either erroneous or dangerous that we should for fear of teaching it deny the souls immortality suppose also that the doctrine of pugatory walking ghosts and exorcisms were erroneous and grounded on the souls immortality must we deny this for for fear of these errors Must we deny the Scriptures because they have been windows to give entrance to divers heresies What doctrine is so sound orthodox and true which is not abused by wanton luxurious and pernitious wits As for ghost walking that has no relation to the souls immortality for if by ghost he meant the soul that walked usually among the Gentiles till the body was buried a hundred years as Vrigil saith Centum errant annos and then it rested in the grave with the body as Mr. Hobbs would have it So Virgil speaks of the soul of Polidorus Aen. 3. Animamque sepulcro condimus and of Deiph●bus magna manes t●r voce vocavi Aen. 6. His soul was called upon by Anaeas to come to his grave Again this ghost walking was neither of the soul nor of the body but of the shaddow image phancy or similitude of the body So Aen. 4 Omnibus um●bra locis adero saith Queen Dido So on her death bed she speaks Magna mei sub terras ibit imago So the shaddow and similitude of Creusa appeared to Aenaeas Infelix simulachrum Atque ipsius umbra Creusae Aen. 2. So Lucretius out of Ennius who were no great friends to the souls immortality held that neither the soul nor the body went to hell but onely the shaddows or similitudes of men Et si preterea tamen esse Acberusia templa Ennius aeternis exponit versibus edens Quo neque permanent animae neque corpora nosira Sed quaedam simulachra modis pallentia miris Lucr. l. 1. When Christ saith Mar. 9. 1. There be som that stand here who shall not tast of death till they have seen the Kingdom of God come with power This Kingdom Mr. Hobbs will have to be spoken of Christs transfiguration I know some of the Ancients were of this opinion but it is very improbable that Christ should call a vision the Kingdom of God and a Kingdom with power therefore it is more likely that he meant the kingdom of grace or of his Church which began to spread after his resurrection with power when at the preaching of fisher-men the world began to submit to the scepter of Christ which some that stood there that is the Apostles saw before they tasted of death who are called some in respect of the people who also stood there as may be seen Mark 8. 34. Again whereas Christs kingdom began at his resurrection Mr. Hobbs demands a reason why Christians ever since pray thy kingdom come The reason is because that kingdom we pray for is not yet come to wit the kingdom of Glory nor is the kingdom of Grace totally come or in its full plenitude because all nations are not as yet subdued to Christs Scepter He gives us cap. 44. a pretty interpretation of Solomons words Eccles. 12. 7. The spirit shall return to God that gave it That is saith he God onely knows but not man● what becomes of mans spirit when he expireth This interpretation is somewhat far fe●ched which if it be allowed the word of God will prove no better then a nose of wax When Luke 8. 55. the rulers daughter being dead it is said her spirit returned to her again the meaning must be● according to Mr. Hobbs his interpretation that her spirit did not indeed return but onely she knew and none but she what became of it So Zach. 1. 16. Thus saith the Lord I am returned to Jerusalem with mercies The meaning is that Jerusalem onely knew what was become of God Besides when Solomon saith The dust shall return to the earth and the spirit shall return unto God I would know whether the dust truely returns to the earth if it returns why doth not the soul truly return to God Seeing with the same breath the same phrase is uttered by Solomon as for the question Solomon makes Eccles. 3. 21. Who knoweth that the spirit of man goeth upward and that the spirit of the beast goeth downward doth not sound so in the Hebrew but thus Who knoweth the spirit of man that goeth upward and so both the French and our last English translations have it and so have the Latin Geneva version The Septuagints read it thus Who hath seen the spirit of man and the Geneva translation hath who have observed the spirit So that Solomon questioneth not the immortality of the soul but sheweth the difficulty of knowing the nature thereof or the manner how it leaves the body and mounteth upward towards heaven the place of its original He proves cap. 44. there is no natural immortality of the soul by Solomon Eccles. 3. 19. That which befalleth the sons of man befalleth beasts as the one dyeth so dyeth the other they have all one breath and a man hath no preheminence a bove a beast In these words Solomon doth not speak of the soul at all but of the body onely as may bee seen in the words immediately following All go into one place all are of the dust and all turn to dust again I hope the beleeves better of Solomon then to make him speak so brutishly as though mans divine soul were made of dust and resolved into dust again or as if there were no difference between mans soul and the breath of beasts In respect then of our animal nature or corporeal part we eat drink sleep breath and dye like the beasts but this concerns nothing at all the reasonable soul of man by which he is ● specifically different from beasts He saith That Enoch's translation makes as much for the immortality of the body as of the soul I deny it not and therefore infer That if it makes for the immortality of the body much more makes it for the immortality of the soul therefore this place of Gen. 5. 24. Enoch walked with God and he was not for God took him is alledged by Divines to prove mans immortality after the resurrection Again he saith That this is a hard saying of Solomons Better is he that hath not yet been then they who have been if the soul be immortal But I say that this saying is no waies hard for better it is to have no being morally then to have a miserable beeing therefore the immortality of a wicked mans soul adds to his unhapiness For this cause Christ saith of Iudas That it had been good for him if he had never been born Besides when Christ tels us That God is the God of Abraham c. and therefore Abraham was then alive Mr. Hobbs saith That Abraham Isaac
to the creatures but it were very absurd to think that diseases should speak and discourse with Christ should question and beseech him and acknowledge his Divinity as these Devils did But he proceeds and says That he hath not observed out of Scripture that any man was ever possessed with any other corporeal spirit but that of his own That some men have been possessed with other spirits besides their own is plain by many places of Scripture but whether these spirits were corporeall or incorporeall is not the question though neither Divinity nor Philosophy doth acknowledge any corporeall spirits properly The Wind indeed is sometimes called a Spirit and so is the Sun but the word Spirit is there used improperly and in a large sense so are these subtile vapou●s in the Nerves and Arteries called Animal and Vitall Spirits by the Physicians though indeed they be bodies Now that Spirits properly so called● such as Angels and Mens souls cannot be corporeall is plain because they have not quantity nor are in a place by circumscription nor move Physically Many Angels may be in the same ub● a legion of spirits that is 6500 may be in the same man and yet Mr Hobbs cannot observe that ever any man hath been possessed with any other spirit then that of his own Besides if Spirits were corporeall their bodies must be either Homogeniall or Heterogeniall Not Homogenial for different operations such as are in Angels require different organs Not Heterogenial ●or so we must make Angels and the souls of men to be composed of different and contrary entities and consequently subject to dissolution and corruption All which are grosse absurdities Again Angels can passe through gresse bodies without penetration of dimensions which shew they have not quantity and consequently are immateriall For the purest body that is cannot passe through another but the other body must yeeld give place Lastly if there were not incorporeall spirits the world would be imperfect as being destitute of Incorporeall substances which with the corporcall make up the Universe and compleat it He saith Chap. 45 That Christ went himself into the wilderness and that this carrying of him up and down from the wildernesse to the City and from thence into a mountain was a vision I know he went of himself to be tempted he being no wayes forced but of his own accord undertook to buckle with Satan our Arch-enemy that we might the more boldly enter with him Yet the Scripture ●aith That he was led by the spirit but I cannot admit that this temtation of Christ was but a vision for then we shall have smal comfort by Christs temtation if it were not reall but imaginary or in a vision and if we shall admit this to be a vision we may suspect the rest of his sufferings to be but visions to the great dishonor of our Saviour and his Evangelists who wrot his History and also to the discomfort of all Gods children But how came Mr Hobbs to be so wise as to know this to be a vision of which the Evangelists make such an exact historicall narration When in Scripture any thing is done in a dream or vision the dream or vision is mentioned as the Angell appeared to Joseph in a dream Matth. 2. Peter saw a sheet let down from heaven in a vision Acts 10. The wise men were warned by the Angell in a dream Matth. 2. Paul saw the man of Macedonia in a vision Acts 11. The Lord spake to Paul in a vision Acts 18. but in this temtation of Christ there is no mention of any vision therefore we conclude it was reall and in saying so we need not fear that either Christ was possessed or carried away violently by the devill as Mr. Hobbs would infer because our Savviour for our comfort and salvation suffered himselfe to be both tempted and carried by the devill as afterward he permitted himself to be apprehended and scourged and crucified by the devils Instruments And albeit Satan could not from that high mountain shew to the Lord all the kingdomes of the world yet he could point to the understanding their places and situation He is offended cap. 45. That the use of exorcism hath hitherto so prevailed in the Church by the doctrine of incorporeal spirits Incorporeal spirits are no more the cause of exorcisms then corporeal substances are {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} is but to adjure and adjuration is used as well against men as spirits the high Priest did not think that Christ when he stood before him was an incorporeal spirit yet he adjureth or exorciseth him by the living God Mat. 26. He tells us That there were many Demoniacks in the Primitive Church and few mad-men whereas now there are many mad-men and few Demoniacks which proceeds not from the change of nature but of names That the use of exorcism hath so prevailed in the Church should administer cause of comfort not of grief in that our Saviour hath not left his Church destitute of helps and arms against the devil who takes delight to torment men here by possessing their bodies and to torment them hereafter by insinuating into their souls inticing them to consent to all kinde of iniquity that so he may bring them with himself into eternal misery Now our Saviour was the chief exorcist himself for he by his power and word cast ou● devils this gift he bestowed on his Apostles that they should cast ou● devils in his name and therefore the Disciples after they were sent abroad by Christ and had returned rejoyced that the devils were subject to them and this gift of exorcism was bestowed sometimes on wicked men as we may see Mat. 7. of those who in the last day will say to Christ We have cast out devils in thy name And we read Acts 19. of the 7. sons of Scaeva who took upon them to exorcise evil spirits in the name of the Lord Jesus because Paul had practised exorcism with such good success We see how the spirit of divination by Paul's command in the name of Jesus Christ came out of the damosel Acts 16. Exorcism then is a gift of God not temporary to continue onely in the Apostles but lasting and to remain in the Church till the end of the world otherwise we should be in a sad condition if when Satan possesseth any of her members there were no remedy against him ●ut we have remedies left us to wit ●asting and prayer for our Saviour tells us that there is a kinde of devil which is not cast out but by prayer and fasting Mat. 16. Now that there are some possessed in these latter daies is apparent by divers histories that mention strange effects of people possessed which are more then natural and at which Physitions are amazed for as their diseases are preternatural so be their cures Melanc●●●●n his Epistles tells us of a woman in his time who lived in Saxome she being possessed by the devil
in her fits would speak Greek and Latin sentences which she never before had heard She foretold the Sa●on war in these words {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ● {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} that is There will be tribulation upon the earth and wrath in this peopl● He mentions another Demoniack who by the prayers of the congregation was freed from the devil which at certain times used to torment her I could allegde many examples of modern Demoniacks out of Del Rio Wierus Bodin Zacuta ●●ularts memorable histories and others which physick could not cure but were cured by Christian exorcisms that is by prayers fastings and almes of the Congregation Demones a nobis adjurantur t●rquentur spiritualibus flagris orationis flagellis exire coguntu● We adjure and torment the devils our spiritual whips scourging prayers force them to go o●t saith Lactantiae I know some superstitious ceremonies have been and are still used in exorcisms which I allow not but I do not like Mr. Hobbs his slighting of Christs miracles and his Apostles when he tels us That Demoniacks were many in the primitive Church and few mad-men whereas now there are many mad-men and few Demoniacks which proceed not from the change of nature Is not this to extenuate Christs miracles who came to destroy the works of the devil and to cast out the prince of this world And is it not likewise to make the Evangelists imposters in publishing those cures for miraculous which were not and calling ordinary and natural diseases by the termes of devils and evil spirits He will not cap. 45. have it Satan that entred into Iudas though St. Luke writes so But an hostile and trayterous intention of selling Christ for as by the holy Ghost are meant frequently graces and good inclinations so by entring of Satan may be understood wicked cogitations To Mr. Hobbs Satan is any thing so he may not be a spirit or incorporeal substances Sometimes he is but a fancy shaddow dream or apparition sometimes is madness palsy lunacy or any other melady here he is a traytorous intention but indeed there was more then a trayterous intention that entred into Iudas at last the intention to betray Christ was put into the heart of Iudas by Satan John 13. 2. But when he had received the sop Satan himself entered into him and as St. Austin on that place saith took full possession of him John 13. 27. And though I should yeeld that sometimes the holy Ghost is put for the graces of the spirit yet it will not follow that Satan is used in Scripture for any evil suggestion or intention Again Satan doth not presently intrude himself into any man but first prepares his way by his Harbingers that is suggestions and evil thoughts which having made the soul fit for him he enters and takes possession and thus he dealt with Iudas Again I would know of Mr. Hobbs whether it was Satan in the Serpent or onely a treacherous intention that moved him to speak and seduce Eve Lastly why should we take his bare word for Gospel and prefer this his whimsie to the belief of the whole Church and the stream of all interpreters In his forty sixth chapter he spurnes at all learning except his own and that with such a magisterial spirit and so supercilious scorn as if Aristotle Plato Zenn the Peripateticks Academicks Stoicks Colledges Schooles Universities Synagogues and all the wise men of Europe Asia and Affrick hitherto were scarce worthy to carry his books With him Logick is but captions of words Aristotles Metaphisicks are absurd his politicks repugnant to government his Ethicks ignorant the Natural Phylosophy of the Schooles is a dream rather then a science set forth in senseless and insignificant language Aristotles Philosophy is vain and many such like expressions which shews how little he hath of the spirit of humility and modesty I finde not too much learning but too much pride makes some men mad true learning is alwaies joyned with humility the deepest rivers saith Seneca make the least sound the Cypress tree is tall but fruitless the Apple-tree is low but fruitful and the more it s laden the more it stoops that man that slights all but himself will be slighted of all but himself intemperance in words argue impotency of minde and as the Court saith He is an unjust man that prefers his own wit to all others Homine imperito nihil quid quam injustius qui nisi quod ipse facit nil rectum putat He cannot but fowle his own hands that ca●●eth dirt in the face of his betters Every wise man will employ his eyes at home will look upon the wallet that hangs at his own back will descend into himself and then he shall see how small cause he hath to despise other mens gifts when he considereth the defects of his own Tecum babita disces quam sit tibi curta supellex He that thinks to rear up the imaginary tower of his own fame upon the ruins of other mens will finde he builds upon a sandy foundation and indeed makes castles in the air St. Austins counsel is good in this case He that will build high must lay his foundation low Si vis magnam fabricam construere celsitudinis de fundamento prius incipe humilitatis Hercules cannot be pulled down by pigmies nor can the rocks be shaken though the frothy waves beat against them Eminent men like solid trees the more they are shaken the stronger they grow saith Seneca Quid miraris bonos viros ut confirmentur concuti Non est arbor solidane● fortis nisi in quam frequens ventus incursat ipsa enim vexatiene constringitur radices certius figit We are bound to acknowledge with thankfulness the paines and industry of those brave men which have intiched us with such monuments of learning which the Universities of the world have received and do to this day cherish and maintain with such applause and not to require them with scorn and contempt this is ingratitude in the highest degree I wish therefore that Mr. Hobbs had used more solidity in his arguments and less impotency in his expressions against those eminent lights of learning and not with Leviathan to cast against them smoak out of his nostrils as out of aseething Pot or Caldron To use the word of God in Iob for I doubt me Mr. Hobbs will never be brought in competition with Aristotle but now let us receive his accusation against Aristotles Philosophy He saith cap. 46. That this doctrine of separated essences will fright men from obeying the laws of their Country I should think rather that this doctrine would fright men from disobeying the laws for if God commands obedience to the laws and subjection to the higher powers is it likely that he will permit spirits to walk to disswade men from obedience Or will the spirits of those holy men who taught subjection to Magistrates
calls him the miracle of nature his works the gift of God and a principal organ of God for enriching the world with so much excellent learning and that they are ungrate wretches who do not acknowledge it but will rail against him ●or it P. Martyr sheweth that Aristotles pains were profitable his artisice great his industry excellent and his rules most notable Zanchie saith that he is of all Philosophers the most excellent and that his method is most clear 〈◊〉 calls him with admiration a man of men the onely Eagle of Philosophy whose stile is fraughted with Attick eloquence and that they who write or speak against him are dunces silly people and such whose books are fit for nothing but for the fire Scaliger calls such barbarous wits Rats Kites Crows Ravens Owles and Bats To conclude I would have Mr. Hobbs take notice that I have no quarrel against him but against his tenets I honor his worth and learning but dislike his opinions I know not his person but I know and respect his parts if there be any thing amiss in these my Animadversions for we are all apt to mistake I shall thank him if he will set me right and inform me better for I never had so great an opinion of my self as not to yeeld to reason and such as are able to convince my understanding The God of truth direct us all into the way of truth Amen FINIS The Contents of each Chapter controverted INTRODUCTION THe world was not made by art or nature Life● is not the motion of the limbs Chap. 1. The object causeth sensation not sense Fancy and sense different Colour figured nothing Sensible qualities are not motions Motion produceth not motion Outward and inward senses distinct Fancy not the same in waking and dreaming men Chap. 2. A natural appetite in things inanimate but without knowledge Imagination is not decaying sense Memory and imagination different Chap. 3. Things future have a being Prophesie is not guessing No absurdity to say the soul is all in all and all in every part To be born no act of the minde Some faculties are not acquired Universalities are not names Truth in things as well as in names Geometry not the ōnely Science Chap. 3 4. Phylosophy how Pedantry Chap. 5. Many things infused besides bodies Extension how a body Colour is in bodies and sound in the air A living creature is generical The nature of a thing is its definition Tropes and figures are not absurd speeches Chap. 6. Animal and voluntary not the same Contempt and hatred not the same Superstition and Religion not the same Faith and Imagination not the same The will is a rational appetite Chap. 7. Belief is not opinion To have faith in to trust to and to beleeve a man not the same What is to beleeve in God Our belief is not in the Church Chap. 8. Devils Demoniacks and mad-men not the same Schoole terms and Suarez intelligible Chap. 10. Pitty is not dishonour Lasting good fortune is no sign of Gods favour Ambition is not honorable nor covetousness Injustice with power is not honourable Goodness no less honorable then greatness Chap. 11. Felicity consisteth not in desire Chap. 12. Felicity is in injoying Phylosophy a supporter of the Church The want of it the cause of confusion and contradictions Chap. 15. All men are not equal by nature Some are naturally fit for service Some for Dominion Inequality necessary Chap. 16. Christ did not personate God Chap. 18. Covenants are not bare words nor do all depend on the sword Princes may but should not be injurious to their subjects Men indy injure themselves Injury Iniquity and Injustice the same thing Chap. 20. Kings and Tyrants different how Samuel describeth a King Moses a Tyrant Chap. 21. David did injury to Uriah How he offended against God onely Freedom is not the same under a Monarchy and Democracy Aristotles reason why under Democracy there is more liberty then under a Monarchy Chap. 28. Mr. Hobbs contradicts himself concerning the power which Subjects give to their Soveraigns Pride is no cause of submission to government but of Rebellion rather Chap. 49. The danger of acting against conscience is no presumption but a duty to judge of good and evil Faith is not attained by reason and study but by infusion and inspiration Faith is a miracle An account may be given of inspired faith Prophesie and Faith not the same Faith may stand with civil obedience Princes are subject to their own laws How every private man hath a property in his good Chap. 31. The subjects of hope love and fear often confounded God is not a name of relation Natural reason and the word of God different Reason must be subject to faith Our natural reason cannot purchase justice peace and religion Natural reason is sometimes contrary to Gods word Divine dreams are of force to win belief Chap. 33. How Moses's words are to be understood concerning his own Sepulcher And the Canaanite in Abraham's time being in the land Gen. 12. Chap. 34. Spirits are real parts of the universe though not corporeal Why substances are so called The spirit that moved on the waters was not a winde The word Ghost what it signifieth Aerial bodies not visible delusions may be seen by many at once How spirits are in a place Angels are not fancies or dreams Why called gods Why they appeared in mans shape The Dove and fiery tongues were not Angels Why Angels are distinguished by names How evil Angels suffer by fire How we shall be like the Angels in the resurrection Faith excludes reason Chap. 31. Divers places of Scripture mis-alleadged by Mr. Hobbs for his earthly kingdom and refuted What Holam is and Paradise and the new Jerusalem There is reason and authority to prove our happiness in heaven Divers places of Scripture expounded to this purpose and Mr. Hobbs his texts brought to the contrary refuted The souls immortality proved by Scripture Chap. 38. Christ proves as well the souls immortality as the resurrection of the body to the Saduces The souls immortality proved by Scripoure A place in Job explained The opinion of Christs earthly kingdom and the souls sleep are old heresies Hell is in the lower parts of the earth How the Prophetical speeches concerning Christs Kingdom are to be understood We shall ascend higher then Gods foot-stool Chap 41. Christ hath not been all this while since his resurrection without a Kingdom Differring of punishments and rewards here no argument that Christ hath no Kingdom What it is to sit in Moses's chair Other places of Scripture expounded Chap. 42. The blessed Trinity vindicated and proved out of the old Testament Christs Kingdom is in this world though not of this world Dissimulation in religion condemned The Apostles made laws and had power to command Disobedience a great sin Minister and servant the same thing Princes why shepherds their baptism doth not authorise them to preach Urim and Thum●im given to Aaron not to Moses The Romans had the legislative power over the Iews Excommunication a punishment Christs Kingdom is spiritual though the subjects are cloathed with flesh In Common-wealths there is a dependance as well as a coherence Heresie what it is and who be Hereticks Chap. 45. Our faith depends not upon mans reputation and authority Chap. 44. Devils and Fantasims or Idols are not the same Christs Kingdom here is the Kingdom of Grace The soul how immortal The wicked live eternally The tree of life Life sometimes called death The soul how taken in Scripture The Scripture is plain for the souls immortality Ghost-walking what it is Eternal torments no dark doctrine Christs Transfiguration was not the Kingdom of God Solomons words Eccles. 12. 7. and Eccles. 3. 21. concerning the soul expounded And Eccles. 3. 19. Enoch's translation Better be dead then live in misery Abraham's soul is alive actually That the torments of the wicked are eternal proved Man shall not be in the same condition after the resurrection that Adam was after his fall Chap. 45. Devils which Christ cast out were not diseases Angels and Mens souls are not corporeal spirits Christs temptation in the desart was real and no vision Exorcisms useful in the Church how Many possessed in these latter times It was Satan and not a treacherous intention that entered into Judas Chap. 46. Mr. Hobbs taxed for his exorbitant speeches against Aristotle and the other Phylosophers Men are not frighted from obedience by separated essences Graces are inspired or poured into us Inspiration excludeth not obedience to the laws The tearms definitive and circumscriptive distinguished The soul is all in every part of the body Incorporeal substances capable of torment Metaphysick not repugnant to natural reason proved by divers maximes Quantity increaseth and decreaseth with the matter What St. Paul means by vain Phylosophy God is no wales the author of injustice or sin The appetite of the State and of private men is not the same Aristotle vindicated from calling kingly or any other government but popular tyrannical How these words of Aristotle are to be understood Men should not govern but the laws Mr. Hobbs his new Tenent rejected Chap. 47. Romanists and Presbyterians do not hold that the Kingdom of glory is in this world Pontifex Maximus at Rome above the civil State Aristotle Phylosophy and School-Divinity vindicated Mr. Hobbs is censured for slighting Aristotle who is highly commended and his obtrectators reproved by divers eminent Protestant writers FINIS Part 1● cap. 1. Part. 1. cap. ● Part 1. cap. 3. Part 1. cap. 3. 4. Part 1. cap. 5. Part 1. cap. 6. Part 1. cap. 8. Part 1. cap. 10. Part 1. cap. 11. Part. 1. cap. 12. Part. 1. cap. 15. Part. 1. cap. 16. Part 2. cap. 18. Part 2. cap. 21. Part 2. cap. 21. Part. 1. cap. 21. Part 2. cap. 28. Part. 2. cap. 29. Cap. 31. Part 3. cap. 32. cap. 34. cap. 38. cap. 41 cap. 4● Cap. 44.