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A20943 A treatise of the knovvledge of God, as excellently as compendiously handled by the famous and learned divine, Peter Du Moulin, late minister of the Reformed Church in Paris, and professor of theologie in the Vniversitie of Sedan. Faithfully translated out of the originall by Robert Codrington, Master of Arts; De cognitione Dei. English Du Moulin, Pierre, 1568-1658.; Codrington, Robert, 1601-1665. 1634 (1634) STC 7321; ESTC S118646 41,950 94

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the Ocean diue What stay In summer keepes the tardy Night away Hee wonders at the perpetuall glidings of the streames the growth and vertue of the Plants at the divers formes of living creatures at their motions their inclinations and instincts Finally at the great perfection of the Vniverse that the particular parts thereof are impediments to the contemplation of the whole As in an unfeld Wood the particular hight of every tree would bee remarkable were not the whole Forrest seene to be of an equall hight There is scarce therefore any so strongly dull who observing these will not acknowledge their Author and value with himselfe the greatnesse of the Workeman by the excellence of the Worke. If any Man should behold a Library well furnisht in which the shelues are faire and well set up the books rankt in order all things are kept neate and brusht and handsome Is it credible that any man can bee so sottish as to conceiue that this came done by chance and will not rather impute it to the industry of Man for Confusion comes by chance but Order is by Industry But there is no Library so aptly digested so full so beautifull that may any wayes compare with the perfection and structure of the fabricke of the World A man may carry in the skirt of his garment a promiscuous number of Printers Characters which his garment being shaken hee may also shake and scatter on the ground but will the Characters so aptly fall or will there be so fine an industry in the Chance that some elegant verses or neate Oration may be reade Surely there is no Oration so polite no Verse composed with so much art that may any wayes parallel the Artifice and Beauty of the World This is the first way whereby God affects even barbarous men with some touch of divinity drawing even the perversest understanding to a knowledge of himselfe by these dumbe Masters Psal 19. The Heavens declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy Workes For the invisible things of him from the creation of the World are clearely seene being understood by the things that are made even his power and divinity Adde unto these the naturall preservations and the seedes of honesty and equity and those pricks of conscience which gaule even the most obdurate with secret tortures for this is a confession of good authority whereby men professe that they acknowledge a Iudge to whom accounts are to be given and who doth looke into their manners and their actions Neither doe the Devils and malignant Spirits conduce a little to imprint in our minds a deepe perswasion that there is a God for seeing it is knowen by daily experience how great and hurtfull the power of the Devill is how they raise up tempests send forth diseases tranforme men into Wolues transport Groues and Corne which Pliny reporteth to haue happened in the PROVINCE of Marrucia how they affright men with visions and with perplexing Oracles illude those that craue their counsell and entangle them in errours Surely mankind exposed to the injuries of so many invisible enemies should haue perished nay and the fabricke of the World it selfe would haue dissolv'd did not these Spirits depend on the becke of a supreamer power who bridles their rage and barres them up in the limits of his eternall Providence These are but obvious and careles observations which fall into the vulgar even not mindfull of them But the Philosophers to the true knowledge of God haue gone the higher way for they make them bonds and links with Demonstrations by which they so chaine the understandings that they draw from them what they will Aristotle wrote eight bookes of naturall Philosophy the sixe last whereof containe no other subject but of Motion onely and the affections of it But the last doth end in the first Moover in him who is immoueable for seeing all things that haue motion are moved by some one thing and that againe by another and so forward In this chaine of things motionary wee cannot proceed to what is infinite but wee must needs stay at one first Moover who although hee moue all things is himselfe immoueable Even so in the body of Man the joynts are moved by the Arteries the arteries by the sinnewes the sinnewes by the Spirits animall the Spirits animall by the Spirits vitall the Spirits vitall by the soule which is not moved but by Accident or by Another that is by the motion of another as Wisedome walketh in a wise man or as the Governour of a ship sitting at the helme doth so rest that notwithstanding by the motion of the ship hee is moved himselfe But if there be any thing that moues it selfe it must bee compounded of parts and one part must bee moved of another But the First Being must needs be most purely simple and not composed of parts Besides it is easie to bee seene by evident demonstration that in the order of Efficient causes it is impossible to proceed unto what is infinite for if there was no chiefe and primary Cause there would be no second nor any third Cause and so of the rest so that by this meanes there would be no Cause at all besides wee should never arriue unto the last effect for before wee could travaile to it infinite Causes must be gone over now that is infinite which cannot bee gone through and of which as there is no beginning so there is no ending Neither doe the divers degrees of Goodnesse and wisedome by which Angels are better and wiser then men and men themselues differ among themselues availe a little to the knowledge of God and of divine perfection For this Axiome doth stand unshaken that qualities suppose Heate or Whitenesse are more or lesse imperfect according as they are neerer or farther off from the Soveraigne degree of perfection or are distant from the chiefe degree of Heate or Whitenesse Among creatures therefore that is the better which commeth most neere to the chiefe or primary Goodnesse But this Soveraigne Goodnesse what is it else but God who is Goodnesse it selfe For as in the order of efficient causes so in degrees of Vertue and Perfection there can be no procedencie to what is infinite but it must needs be that there must be some chiefe and primary Perfection Adde againe to this what all the World confesseth that it is impossible that any thing should make it selfe for if any thing could make it selfe wee must necessarily then conclude it to haue beene before it was for to doe doth presuppose to be since therfore the heaven could not forme it selfe it must bee formed by some one else who must truely be both of Soveraigne Power and of infinite Wisedome for to so great a worke he had neither patterne whereby to imitate no materialls ready wherewith to worke nor Iourneyman to helpe him For if these had then beene it would bee againe demanded who had created him his Matter or his Men who had
indued them with abilities as to set forward God and helpe him in his worke So that of necessity we must stay at some one who wanteth not the ayde of any and from whom all things are who seeing that of nothing hee hath made all things cannot but bee of an Infinite Power since from Nothing to Something there is an infinite disproportion for sottishly profane is that ridiculous insolence of the Epicure Velleius who in the first Booke of Cicero Of the Nature of the Gods deriding the Creation demandeth what was the foundation what were the tooles what were the Leavers who were the Apprentices in so great a worke Besides the Mistery of Numbers convinceth plainely that there was a beginning of the World and therevpon that it was created by God for every Number ariseth from vnity when therefore dayes are numbred it must needes bee that there was one first Day and therevpon one first Conversion of the heaven for there is no number infinite in Act neither can there bee Dayes infinite in number for if any number were infinite the number of ten would infinitely fill vp that infinite number from whence it would follow that five would arise no oftner then ten and that one halfe would bee no lesse then twice as much nay in that infinite number there would be as many tennes as vnityes which surely cannot stand together and imply a contradiction Besides the terme of life and proportions of men so much contracted in respect of the vigour and the Stature of our forefathers doe not obscurely testifie that there was one first Man and one primary perfection from which by staires Generations haue descended for the Diminution of things cannot bee infinite for should wee runne them over in the Ages past vnto Infinitie wee should at length advance Man vnto a Stature higher then heaven it selfe The Scope of all this is that by Arguments borrowed from the light of humane Reason although but clouded and dusky wee may teach that as the beames of Light shed over all the World doe flow from one beginning namely the Sunne and as Numbers proceede all from vnity and in the body of Man as all the Arteryes and Vitall facultyes proceede from one heart so every Being doth depend and is sustained by one Chiefe and Soveraigne Beeing who should hee withold or but withdraw his Vertue and his Influence All things presently would dissolue and returne into their ancient Nothing No otherwise than if the Sunne being taken from vs whatsoever there is of Light would bee turned into Darkenesse Now if any should demand what moved God to put his hand vnto this Worke the answer is ready For God made all things for himselfe and was mooued with no other consideration than with his owne Loue For God is not onely the efficient Cause of all things but the finall also as the Apostle witnesseth in the second of the Hebrewes where hee alledgeth that God is for whom and by whom all things are All things are for God as hee is the End of all things and most Good all things are by God as hee is the efficient Cause of all things and most great Deseruedly therefore doe wee title God Most Good Most Great but first most Good before most Great for hee is most Good as hee is the End for the End is alwayes the foremost in the Intention and the Efficient Cause is but mooued by it Seeing therefore there is no Reasonable or Intellectuall Agent which vndertaketh any thing without proposing to himselfe the End which ever appeareth Good the most chiefe and Soveraigne AGENT could not worke but for the last and best End And seeing there is nothing better then God nay Seeing all things whatsoever are Good come from God God could not worke for any other End but for himselfe And seeing there is nothing that should bee rather pourtrayed or represented in a picture then what doth seeme most beautifull God who is the first Beauty and the first Light was pleas'd to draw his owne Picture and as in Phidias his Minerva the Artist himselfe hath imprinted in his worke an vndefac'd resemblance of himselfe But seeing now of things created part are Bodies part are Spirits and immateriall Substances among the Spirits the Angels are most eminent next vnto which are the Soules of Men among the Bodyes the first Heaven is aboue all most honourable Wherefore when God in all his creatures hath imprinted some tracks of his power and his wisedome the Spirits by a more speciall priviledge have ingraven in them the image of himselfe and that not drawne by a pencil as Painters vse expressing onely Colours and proportions but such an image as is beheld in a Glasse which represents euen our motions and our Actions For God hath powred into Spirits the Light of vnderstanding and knowledge of the Truth which is as a certaine sparke of the Diuine Light hee hath adorned their Wills whose faculty it is to mooue and produce Actions with Holinesse and Righteousnesse hee hath conferred on them Immortality and a liberty of choyce which are the Lineaments of the Diuine Image and Resemblances of God himselfe Which image of God as it is the most glorious ornament of the Intellctuall creature so there is nothing more vgly than the deformation of it which is occasioned when the Soule the eye of the vnderstanding beeing pulled out by Ignorance and the lineaments of this Image beeing soiled by Vice is turned into a Monster and beeing hated by God hath rendred it selfe so miserable by its owne default that it is not any wayes worthy of the Mercy of God For as the Image of a King stampt on siluer with much rubbing and often fretting against the Ground becomes defaced so in our soules the image of God is deformed addicted to earthly things and as it were wallowed in the mire they are turn'd away from divine contemplation and from the Love of God Nay and in the first body too which is heaven God hath imprinted certaine tokens I had almost sayd a certaine Image of himselfe For God hath turned it into a roundnesse an imitation of his diuine infinitenesse because this figure hath neither beginning nor ending and in the same first Body hee hath engraven no obscure resemblances of his immobility and eternall Rest a rest which is yet notwithstanding in continuall motion For although the Heaven is continually mooved by Parts while one Part doth succeede another so it is that the whole Body resteth neither is it mooved from its place Hee hath also placed in the heavens an imitation of his Power disposing of his Worke in such a method that the elementary bodyes are governed by the heavenly and superiour bodyes worke into the inferiour their powerfull influences And indeed most true is that of Aristotle in his second Booke de Gen. Cap. 10. That the perpetuall durance and continuance of things ought to be imputed to the simple daily motion of the Sun from the East into