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A22641 St. Augustine, Of the citie of God vvith the learned comments of Io. Lod. Viues. Englished by I.H.; De civitate Dei. English Augustine, Saint, Bishop of Hippo.; Healey, John, d. 1610.; Vives, Juan Luis, 1492-1540. 1610 (1610) STC 916; ESTC S106897 1,266,989 952

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The knowledge De genes ad lit lib. 4. Where hee calleth it morning when the Angells by contemplating of the creation in themselues where is deepe darkenesse lift vp themselues to the knowledge of God and if that in him they learne all things which is more certaine then all habituall knowledge then is it day It growes towards euening when the Angels turne from God to contemplate of the creatures in themselues but this euening neuer becommeth night for the Angells neuer preferre the worke before the worke man that were most deepe darke night Thus much out of Augustine the first mentioner of mornings euenings knowledges What wee must thinke of Gods resting the seauenth day after his sixe daies worke CHAP. 8. BVt whereas God rested the seauenth day frō al his workes sanctified it this is not to be childishly vnderstood as if God had taken paines he but spake the word and a by that i●…telligible and eternal one not vocall nor temporal were all things created But Gods rest signifieth theirs that rest in God as the gladnesse of the house signifies those y● are glad in the house though some-thing else and not the house bee the cause thereof How much more then if the beauty of the house make the inhabitants glad so that wee may not onely call it glad vsing the continent for the contained as the whole Thea●…er applauded when it was the men the whole medowes bellowed for the Oxen but also vsing the efficient for the effect as a merry epistle that is making the readers merry The●…fore the scripture affirming that God rested meaneth the rest of all things in God whom he by himself maketh to rest for this the Prophet hath promised to all such as he speaketh vnto and for whom he wrote that after their good workes which God doth in them or by them if they first haue apprehended him in this life by faith they shal in him haue rest eternal This was prefigured in the sanctification of the Saboath by Gods command in the old law whereof more at large in due season L. VIVES BY a that intelligible Basil saith that this word is a moment of the will by which wee conceiue better of things What is to be thought of the qualities of Angels according to scripture CHAP. 9. NOw hauing resolued to relate this holy Cities originall first of the angels who make a great part thereof so much the happier in that they neuer a were pilgrims let vs see what testimonies of holy wri●…t concerne this point The scriptures speaking of the worlds creation speake not plainly of the Angels when or in what order they were created but that they were created the word heauen includeth In the beginning God created heauen and earth or rather in the world Light whereof I speake now are there signified that they were omitted I cannot thinke holy writ saying that God rested in the seauenth day from all his workes the same booke beginning with In the beginning God created heauen and earth to shew that nothing was made ere then Beginning therefore with heauen earth and earth the first thing created being as the scripture plainely saith with-out forme and voide light being yet vn made and darknesse being vpon the deepe that is vpon a certaine confusion of earth and waters for where light is not darknesse must needes be then the creation proceeding and all being accomplished in sixe dayes how should the angels bee omitted as though they were none of Gods workes from which hee rested the seuenth day This though it be not omitted yet here is it not plaine but else-where it is most euident The three chil●… sung in their himne O all yee workes of the Lord blesse yee the Lord amongst which they recken the angels And the Psalmist saith O praise God in the heauens 〈◊〉 him in the heights praise him all yee his angells praise him all his hoasts praise 〈◊〉 s●…e and Moone praise him sta●…res and light Praise him yee heauens of heauens 〈◊〉 the waters that be aboue the heauens praise the name of the Lord for hee spake the 〈◊〉 and they were made he commanded they were created here diuinity calls the ●…ls Gods creatures most plainly inserting them with the rest saying of all He sp●…ke the word and they were made who dares thinke that the Angels were made after the sixe daies If any one bee so fond hearken this place of scripture confounds him vtterly e When the starres were made all mine angels praised mee with a loude voice Therefore they were made before the starres and the stars were made the fourth day what they were made the third day may wee say so God forbid That dayes worke is fully knowne the earth was parted from the waters and two ●…nts tooke formes distinct and earth produced all her plants In the second day then neither Then was the firmament made betweene the waters aboue and below and was called Heauen in which firmament the starres were created the fourth day c Wherefore if the angels belong vnto Gods sixe dayes worke they are that light called day to commend whose vnity it was called one day not the first day nor differs the second or third from this all are but this one doubled v●…to 6. or 7. sixe of Gods workes the 7. of his rest For when God said Let there be light there was light if we vnderstand the angels creation aright herein they are made partakers of that eternall light the vnchangeable wisdome of God all-creating namely the onely be gotten sonne of God with whose light they in their creation were illuminate and made light called day in the participation of the vnchangeable light day that Word of God by which they all things else were created For the true light that lightneth euery man that cōmeth into this world this also lightneth euery pure angell making it light not in it selfe but in God from whom if an Angell fall it becommeth impure as all the vncleane spirits are being no more a light in God but a darknesse in it selfe depriued of all perticipation of the eternall light for Euill hath no nature but the losse of good that is euill L. VIVES NEuer were a pilgrims But alwayes in their country seeing alwayes the face of the father b When the starres Iob. 38 7. So the Septuagints doe translate it as it is in the te●…t c Wherefore if The Greeke diuine put the creation of spirituals before that of things corporall making God vse them as ministers in the corporall worke and so held Plato Hierome following Gregorie and his other Greeke Maisters held so also But of the Greekes Basil and Dionysius and almost all the Latines Ambrose Bede Cassiodorus and Augustine in this place holds that God made althings together which agreeth with that place of Ecclesiasticus chap. 18. vers 1. He that liueth for euer made althings together Of the vncompounded vnchangeable Trinity the Father the Sonne
vnto the consummation So then as there are two regenerations one in faith by Baptisme and another in the flesh by incorruption so are there two resurrections the first That is now of the soule preuenting the second death The later Future of the bodie sending some into the second death and other some into the life that despiseth and excludeth all death whatsoeuer Of the two resurrections what may bee thought of the thousand years mentioned in Saint Iohns Reuelation CHAP. 7. SAint Iohn the Euangelist in his Reuelation speaketh of these two resurrections in such darke manner as some of our diuines exceeding their owne ignorance in the first doe wrest it vnto diuers ridiculous interpretations His words are these And I sawe an Angell come downe from Heauen hauing the keye of the bottomlesse pitte and a great chaine in his hand And hee tooke that Dragon that old Serpent which is the deuill and Sathan and bound him a thousand yeares ●…d hee cast him into the bottomlesse pitte and shut him vppe and sealed the dores vpon him that hee should deceiue the people no more till the thousand yeares were fulfilled For after hee must bee loosed for a little season And I saw seates and they set vpon them and iudgement was giuen vnto them and I saw the soules of them which were slaine for the testimonie of IESVS and for the worde of GOD and worshipped not the beast nor his Image neither had taken his marke vpon their fore-heads or on their handes and they liued and reigned with CHRIST a thousand yeares But the rest of the dead men shall not liue againe vntill the thousand yeares be finished this 〈◊〉 the first resurrection Blessed and Holy is hee that hath his part in the first resurrection for on such the second death hath no power but they shall be the Priests of GOD and of CHRIST and reigne with him a thousand yeares The chiefest reason that mooued many to thinke that this place implied a corporall resurrection was drawne from a the thousand yeares as if the Saints should haue a continuall Sabboth enduring so long to wit a thousand yeares vacation after the sixe thousand of trouble beginning at mans creation and expulsion out of Paradise into the sorrowes of mortalitie that ●…ce it is written One daie is with the LORD as a thousand yeares and a thous●…d yeares as one daie therefore sixe thousand yeares beeing finished as the sixe daies the seauenth should follow for the time of Sabbath and last a thousand yeares also all the Saints rising corporallie from the dead to ●…elebrate it This opinion were tolerable if it proposed onely spirituall deights vn●…o the Saints during this space wee were once of the same opinion our selues but seeing the auouchers heereof affirme that the Saints after this resurrection shall doe nothing but reuell in fleshly banquettes where b the cheere shall exceed both modesty and measure this is grosse and fitte for none but carnall men to beleeue But they that are really and truely spirituall doe call those Opinionists c Chiliasts the worde is greeke and many bee interpreted Millenaryes or Thousand-yere-ists To confute them heere is no place let vs rather take the texts true sence along with vs. Our LORD IESVS CHRIST saith No man can enter into 〈◊〉 strong mans house and take away his goods vnlesse hee first binde the strong man and then spoyle his house meaning by this strong man the deuill because hee alone was able to hold man-kinde in captiuity and meaning by the goods hee would take away his future faithfull whome the deuill held as his owne in diuers sinnes and impieties That this Stong-man therefore might bee bound the Apostle sawe the Angell comming downe from heauen hauing the keye of the bottomlesse pitte and a great chaine in his hand And hee tooke sayth hee the Dragon that olde serpent which is the deuill and Sathan and bound him a thousand yeares that is restrayned him from seducing or with-holding them that were to bee set free The thousand yeares I thinke may bee taken two waies either for that this shall fall out in the last thousand that is d on the sixth daie of the workes continuance and then the Sabboth of the Saints should follow which shall haue no night and bring them blessednesse which hath no end So that thus the Apostle may call the last part of the current thousand which make the sixth daie a thousand yeares vsing the part for the whole or else a thousand yeares is put for eternity noting the plenitude of time by a number most perfect For a thousand is the solid quadrate of tenne tenne times tenne is one hundered and this is a quadrate but it is but a plaine one But to produce the solide multiply ten by a hundered and there ariseth one thousand Now if an hundered bee some-times vsed for perfection as wee see it is in CHRISTS wordes concerning him that should leaue all and follow him saying Hee shall receiue an hundered-fold more which the Apostle seemeth to expound saying As hauing nothing and yet possessings althings for hee had sayd before vnto a faithfull man the whole worlde is his ritches why then may not one thousand bee put for consummation the rather in that it is the most solide square that can bee drawne from tenne And therefore wee interprete that place of the Psalme Hee hath alway remembered his couenant and promise that hee made to a thousand generations by taking a thousand for all in generall On. And ●…ee cast him into the bottomlesse pitte hee cast the deuills into that pitte that is the multitude of the wicked whose malice vnto GODS Church is bottomlesse and their hearts a depth of enuie against it hee cast him into this pitte not that hee was not there before but because the deuill beeing shut from amongst the Godly holds faster possession of the wicked for hee is a most sure hold of the deuills that is not onelie cast out from GODS seruants but pursues them also with a causelesse hate forward And shut him vppe and sealed the dore vpon him that hee should deceiue the people no more till the thousand yeares were expired he sealed that is his will was to keepe it vnknowne who belonged to the diuell and who did not For this is vnknowne vnto this world for we know not whether he that standeth shall fall or he that lieth along shall rise againe But how-so-euer this bond restraineth him from tempting the nations that are Gods selected as he did before For God chose them before the foundations of the world meaning to take them out of the power of darkenesse and set them in the kingdome of his sonnes glory as the Apostle saith For who knoweth not the deuils dayly seducing and drawing of others vnto eternall torment though they bee none of the predestinate Nor is it wonder i●… the diuell subuert some of those who are euen regenerate in Christ and walke in his wayes For
the founders of the citty did decree the same doe the destroyers of it And what if the one did it to increase the multitude of their cittizens when the other did it to preserue the multitude of their foes Let this then and what soeuer besides fitly may bee so vsed be vsed as an answer of our Lord Iesus Christ his flock and that pilgrim-citty of God vnto all their wicked enemies L. VIVES A a Sanctuarie It is a sacred place from whence it is not lawfull to draw any man for thence is the name deriued comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rapio to draw or pull and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the primi●… letter And so by a figure called Lambdacismus is made asylum for asyrum Serui●… 〈◊〉 8. Aenead Though indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is tollere to take away as Homer vseth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He tooke away the goodly armes After that Hercules was dead his nephews and post●…itie fearing the oppression of such as their grand-father had iniured built the first sanctuary at Athens naming it the temple of Mercy out of which no man could bee taken And this Statius testifieth also Now Romulus and Remus built one betweene the tower and the Capitoll calling the place where it stood Inter-montium intending hereby that the multitude of offendors flocking hether for hope of pardon would bee a meane to ●…ent the number of inhabitants in this new Citie To what God or Goddesse it was 〈◊〉 it is vnknowne Dionisius saith hee cannot tell Some say vnto Veiouis But the gr●…e of the Sa●…tie is honoured vpon the fourth of the Nones of February as Ouid writ●… Pastorum 2. In Greece and Asia haue beene many sanctuaries Tiberius Caesar being out of liking with their too much licence tooke from them almost all their liberties and priuiledges as Tacitus and Suetonius do report Of such of Gods elest as liue secretly as yet amongst the Infidels and of such as are false Christians CHAP. 34. AND let this Cittie of Gods remember that euen amongst her enemies there are some concealed that shall one day be her Citizens nor let her thinke it a fruitlesse labour to beare their hate a vntill shee heare their confession as she hath also as long as shee is in this pilgrimage of this world some that are pertaker of the same sacraments with her b that shall not bee pertakers of the Saints glories with her who are partly knowne and partly vnknowne Yea such there are that spare not amongst Gods enemies to murmure against his glory whose character they beare vpon them going now vnto Playes with them and by and by vnto the Church with vs. But let vs not despaire of the reformation of some of these we haue little reason seeing 〈◊〉 we haue many secret and predestinated friends euen amongst our most 〈◊〉 aduersaries and such as yet know not themselues to be ordained for 〈◊〉 ●…dship For the two citties of the predestinate and the reprobate are in this world confused together and commixt vntill the generall iudgement make a separation of the originall progresse and due limits of both which cities what I thinke fitte to speake by Gods helpe and furtherance I will now be●… to the glory of the Cittie of God which being d compared with her 〈◊〉 will spread her glories to a more full aspect L. VIVES VNtill a shee heare their confession At the last discouery where euery man shall confesse himselfe which shall bee then when the bookes of mens consciences are opened that is in the world to come b That shall not be partakers According to the words of Christ Many are called but few are chosen c Untill the generall iudgement So it is in the Gospell The Angels shall seperate the euill from the middest of the iust in the end of the world d Compared with her contrary So Aristotle saith Contraries placed together shew both the fuller What subiects are to be handled in the following discourse CHAP. 35. BVt we haue a little more to say vnto those that lay the afflictions of the Romaine estate vpon the profession of Christianitie which forbiddeth men to sacrifice vnto those Idols For we must cast vp a summe of all the miseries or of as many as shal suffice which that Citie or the prouinces vnder her subiection endured before those sacrifices were forbidden All which they would haue imputed vnto our religion had it beene then preached and taught against these sacrifices when these miseries befell Secondly wee must shew what customes and conditions the true God vouchsafed to teach them for the increasing of their Empire a that God in whose hand are al the kingdomes of the earth and how their false Gods neuer helped them a iotte but rather did them infinite hurt by deceit and inducement And lastly we will disprooue those who though they be confuted with most manifest proofes yet will needs affirme still that their gods are to be worshipped and that not for the benefites of this life but for those which are belonging to the life to come Which question vnlesse I be deceiued will be b farre more laborious and worthier of deeper consideration in the which we must dispute against the Philosophers c not against each one but euen the most excellent and glorious of them all and such as in many points hold as we hold and namely of the immortality of the soule and of the worlds creation by the true God and of his prouidence whereby he swayeth the whole creation But because euen these also are to be confuted in what they hold opposite vnto vs wee thought it our dutie not to bee slacke in this worke but conuincing all the contradictions of the wicked as God shall giue vs power and strength to aduance the veritie of the Cittie of God the true zeale and worship of God which is the onely way to attaine true and eternall felicitie This therefore shall bee the method of our worke and now from this second exordium we will take each thing in due order L. VIVES THat God a in whose hand for Christ saith Math. 28. 18. All power is giuen vnto me in heauen and earth b More laborious Operosior harder of more toyle c Not against each one not against euery common Philosopher or smatterer for so is quilibet taken sometimes as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is often in the Greeke In this Chapter Augustine shewes briefly both what he hath done already and how he meanes to proceede Finis Libri primi THE CONTENTS OF THE SECND BOOKE OF THE Citie of God 1. Of the method that must of necessity be vsed in this disputation 2. A repitition of the contents of the first booke 3. Of the choise of an history that will shew the miseries that the Romaines endured when they worshipped their Idols before the increase of Christian religion 4. That the worshippers of Pagan gods neuer receiued honest instruction from them but vs●…d all filthinesse in their
then either Architas or Timeus d 〈◊〉 Africans bordring on the Ocean Atlas was the first King brother to Sa●… 〈◊〉 to Caelus A great Astronomer Hee taught his Sonne Hesperus and many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for hee had seauen daughters all married to the Heroës that had Sonnes 〈◊〉 ●…ous then the Parents Hee taught diuers of the vulgar also whence the 〈◊〉 Libia where Hercules learnt it and disputed of it e Egiptians Their Philosophy 〈◊〉 but most part from Chaldea chiefely from Abraham though they as Diodo●…●…ibe ●…ibe it to Isis and Osiris Uulcan Mercury and Hercules How euer sure it is 〈◊〉 Philosophy was diuine and much false and filthy f Indians There Philoso●…●…ed Brachmans of whome read Philostratus his Uita Apollon Thyan and Stra●… 〈◊〉 of Alexander the Macedonian his conquests g Persians They had the 〈◊〉 Zoroaster taught h Cladaees The chiefe Astrologians and diuinators of the 〈◊〉 ●…e read Diodorus lib. 3. i Scythians Their Philosophers whilom contended 〈◊〉 ●…tians for antiquity a nation valiant plaine iust harmelesse doing more by na●…●…en Greece with all her laborious discipline k Galles or Frenchmen They had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Caesar Comment Gallic Bell. and Poets also which were both Philosophers and 〈◊〉 Saronidae Dio. l. 6. they had also the wisards that the people came vnto for trifles No 〈◊〉 ●…gst them might be offered without a Philosopher that was a Naturalist diuine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and these ruled all in all places Their Druides as Strabo saith lib. 4. were both 〈◊〉 ●…d Moralists l Spaniards In Spaine before siluer and gold were found there was 〈◊〉 ●…ny Philosophers and the people liued wounderfull religiously euery society had 〈◊〉 ●…y the yeare chosen out of the most learned and iudicious ranke of men equity 〈◊〉 ●…or of iustice then without lawes clangor yet the Turdetani now called the 〈◊〉 had certaine wounderfull old lawes written few or no controuersies were 〈◊〉 and those that were did either concerne vertuous emulation the reasons of 〈◊〉 gods of good manners or of some such theames which the learned disputed of 〈◊〉 and called the women to bee auditors Afterwards certaine mountaines that 〈◊〉 ●…all within brake out and burned and the melted gould and siluer left ad●… such fine ●…uffes in mens mindes so shewing this to the Phaenicians who were 〈◊〉 ●…erall marchants of the world they bartered of their mettalls away to them for 〈◊〉 ●…o value The Phaenicians spying this gaine acquainted diuers of the Asians and 〈◊〉 therewith and so came often thether with a multitude of men sometimes with 〈◊〉 and otherwhiles with but two or three Marchants shippes Now many either 〈◊〉 ●…e and the soyle or else louing gold better then their gods set vp their rests in 〈◊〉 ●…d by one tricke or other found meanes to contract alliance with others and then 〈◊〉 ●…y to send Colonyes into Spaine out of all Asia and the Iles adiacent and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their villenies amongst the filly ignorant soules Then began the Spaniards to 〈◊〉 ●…ir owne wealth to fight to prey one vpon another first priuately and soone after in whole armies afterward to flat nations warre waged vnder alien leaders the Ph●…nicians a●… first the authors both of their present and future misfortunes Then good manners got them gone equity was sent packing away and lawes came vp together with digging of metta●…s and other traffiques so that farewell Philosophy and all artes grew almost to vtter ruine 〈◊〉 they were not written but onely passed by tradition from mouth to eare But that which remained of theē was renewed by some wel-wishing wits in the time of the Romaine peace b●… first the Gothes and afterward the Saracins rooted them vtterly from amongst the vulga●… There is an old memorial extant of the ancient times written in greek and Latine I hope by 〈◊〉 to illustrate the original of any natiue coūtry m Of the elements That is such as conceiue to further thē the elements such as think them the orignalls of al neuer leaue GOD any thing to doe whose will disposeth all things n For that which is knowne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sath the greeke o His inuisible 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is both Creation and the thing created V●… thinketh that this inuisibility is meant of the fome and fabrik of heauen and earth according to that of the Psalme The heauens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth the workes of his hands And we find Aristotle and many more to gather by the world externall shape of the world that there is a God that hath a prouidence and care of the world and the same they gather by the course and motion of times by the order of our life and of the whole vniuerse wherein such things could not be done but by that most wise and glorious gouernor o●… the said vniuerse Augustine translateth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 constitutions to make it imply that men may conceiue the secrets of GOD by his workes euen from the worlds first constitution to perswade vs that this knowledge had existence before Christ his comming or Moyses lawe eue●… from the first creation of the world And this me thinkes is nearest vnto Pauls minde whom this place disputeth against the Philosophers telling them that when or where euer they liue they may finde a god the gouernor and father of all vniuersity and that for so followes the sequele and that by the workes which he hath made may his inuisibility bee certainly gathered p Eternall vertue Not onely his secret wisdome and iustice but his illustrious deity and power vnlesse you take away And so and let the rest depend vpon the former for the greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying coniunction was the cause that qoqque was thrust into the Latine interpretatation q In him we liue The ancients called GOD the life that is diffused throughout the vniuerse and the aire also so that this is true howsoeuer that in him wee liue wee moue and haue our beeing Aratus also said that al waies courts hauens and all places and things were full of Ioue which his interpretor attributeth to the ayre r In which place The Romaines and Greekes worshipped mens statues for gods the Egiptians beasts What the excellence of a religious Christian is in these Philosophicall artes CHAP. 10. NOw if a christian for want of reading cannot vse such of their words as fits disputations because hee neuer heard them or cannot call that part tha●… treates of nature either naturall in Latine or physicall in Greeke nor that tha●… inquires the truth rationall or Logicall nor that which concernes rectifying of manners and goodnesse of ends Morall or Ethicall yet thence it followes not that he knowes not that from the true God is both Nature whereby hee made vs like his Image Reason wherby we know him and Grace wherby we are blessed in beeing vnited to him This then is the cause why wee prefer these
before the other the other spent their wittes in seeking out of the causes of things the meanes of learning and order of life these knowing GOD found th●… their was both the cause of the whole creation the light of all true learning and the fount of all felicity So that what Platonists or others soeuer held th●…s of GOD they held as we doe But wee choose rather to deale with the a Pl●…tonists then others because their workes are most famous for both the Greekes whose language is very greatly ' esteemed of the nations do●… preserue and extoll them and the Latines mooued by their excelle●… and glory learning them more willingly themselues and by recordi●… them in their tongues also left them the more illustrious and plaine to vs and to all posterity L. VIVES VVIth the a Platonists From Plato and Aristotles time vnto Aphrodiseus that liued vnder Seuerus and his sonne Aristotle was rather named amongst the learned then either read or vnderstood Aprodiseus first aduentured to explaine him and did set many on to search farther into the author by that light hee gaue yet did Plato keepe aboue him still vntill the erection of publike schooles in France and Italy that is as long as the Greeke and Latine tongues were in account but when learning grew Mercenary and Mimicall all their aime was gaine and contention and verbosity and sond subtility with vile fained wordes of arte and friuolous quillets then was Aristotles logike and physikes held fit for their purpose and many better bookes of his throwne aside But as for Plato because they vnderstood him not nay and Aristotle much lesse yet because hee teacheth no trickes oh neuer name him I speake not this to imply Aristotles learning more insufficient then Plato's but it is a shame that Plato a holy Philosopher should bee thrust by and Aristotles best part also and the rest so read that he must speake their pleasures beeing such fooleries as not Aristotle no not any mad man of his time would haue held or divulged Whence Plato might haue that knowledge that brought him so neare the Christian doctrine CHAP. 11. NOw some of our Christians admire at these assertions of Plato comming soneere to our beleefe of God So that some thinke that at his going to Egipt h●…e heard the Prophet a Hieremye or got to read some of the prophets bookes in his trauell these opinions I haue b else-where related But by all true chronicles supputation Plato was borne an 100. yeares after Ieremy prophecied Plato liued 81. yeares and from his death to the time that Ptolomy King of Egipt demanded the Hebrew prophecies and had them translated by the 70. Iewes that vnderstood the greeke also is reckned almost 60. yeares So that Plato in his trauell could neither see Hieremy beeing dead nor read the scriptures beeing not as yet translated into the greeke which he vnderstood c vnlesse as he was of an infatigable studie he had had them read by an interpretor yet so as hee might not translate them or coppy them which Ptolomy as a friend might intreate or as a King command but onely carry away what he could in his memory Some reason there is for this because Genesis beginneth thus In the beginning GOD treated heauen and earth and the earth was without forme and voide and darkenesse ●…as vpon the deepe the Spirit of GOD mooued vpon the wate●…s And Plato in his d Ti●…s saith that GOD first e ioyned the earth and the fire Now it is certaine that f hee meaneth heauen by fire so that here is a correspondence with the other In the beginning GOD created heauen and earth Againe hee saith that the two g meanes conioyning these extremities are water and ayre this some may thinke he had from the other The spirit of GOD mooued vpon the waters not minding in what sence the scripture vseth the word Spirit and because h ayre is a spirit therefore it may bee hee gathered that hee collected 4. elements from this place And whereas hee saith a Philosopher is a louer of God th●…re is nothing better squareth with the holy scriptures but that especially which maketh mee almost confesse that Plato wanted not these bookes that whereas the Angel that brought Gods word to Moyses being asked what his name was that bad him goe free the Israelites out of Egipt answered his name was i I am that I am And thus shalt thou say to the children of Israell I am hath sent me to you as if that in comparison of that which truely is being immutable the things that are immutable are not Plato stuck hard vpon this and commended it highly And I ma●…e a doubt whether the like be to be found in any one that euer wrote before Plate except in that booke when it was first written so I am that I am and thou shalt tell them that I am sent me to you But wheresoeuer he had it out of others bookes before him or as the Apostle saith Because that which is knowne of God is manifest vnto them for God hath shewed it them For the inuisible things of him that i●… his eternall power and god-head are seene by the creation of the world being considered in his workes This maketh mee chose to deale with the Platonists in our intended question of naturall Theology namely whether the seruice of one GOD or many suffice for the felicity of the life to come For as touching the seruice of one or many for the helpes of this temporall life I thinke I haue said already sufficient L. VIVES PRophet a Hieremy Hee went with the two Tribes Beniamin and Iuda into Egipt and was there stoned at Tanis there the inhabitants honour him for the present helpe his tombe giues thē against the stinging of serpents b Else-where De Doctr. xpian 2. Euseb●… saith Hieremy began to prophecy the 36. Olympiade and Plato was borne the 88. of the Septuagines hereafter c Unlesse as he was Iustin Martyr in Paracl ad gent Euseb. de pr●…p Theodor. de Graec. affect all affi●…me that Plato had much doctrine from the Hebrew bookes Herevpon Numenius the Philosopher said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what is Plato but Moyfes made Athenian And Aristobulus the Iewe writting to Philometo●… saith as Eusebius citeth it Plato did follow our law in many things for his diuers allegations haue prooued him an obseruer of it in particular things and that in many For the Pentate●…ch was translated before Alexanders time yea before the Persian Monarchy whence hee and Pythagoras had both very much d Timaeus So because Timaeus the Locrian is induced as disputing of the wor●…d h●… had Plato heard in Italy and he wrote of the world in the dorike tongue out of which booke Plato hath much of his doctrine e Ioyned the earth The words are tra●…slated by Tully thus Corporeum aspectabilem itemque tractabilem esse necessarium est nihil porrò igni vacuum
deuill 〈◊〉 from hence-forth The truth of the Gospell tells the faithfull that 〈◊〉 bee like the Angels and that they shall goe to life eternall But if 〈◊〉 ●…re neuer to fall from blisse and they bee not sure wee are aboue 〈◊〉 like them but the truth affirming and neuer erring that wee 〈◊〉 their like and equalls then are they sure of their blessed eternitie whereof those other being vncertaine for it had beene eternall had they beene certaine of it it remaines that they were not the others equalls or if they were these that ●…ood firme had not this certaintie of knowledge vntill afterwards Vnlesse we will say that which Christ saith of the Deuill Hee hath beene a murtherer 〈◊〉 ●…he beginning and abode not in the truth is not onely to be vnderstood from the beginning of mankinde that is since man was made whom hee might kill by deceiuing but euen from the beginning of his owne creation and therefore because of his auersion from his creator and b proud opposition herein both erring and seducing was d●…bard ●…uen from his creation from happinesse because he could not delude the power of the Almighty And he that would not in piety hold with the truth in his pride counterfeits the truth that the Apostle Iohns saying The deuill sinneth from the beginning may be so vnderstood also that is euer since his creation he reiected righteousnesse which none can haue but a will subiect vnto God Whosoeuer holds thus is not of the heretikes opinion called the c Manichees nor any such damnations as they that hold that the Deuill had a wicked nature giuen him in the beginning they do so doate that they conceiue not what Christ said He aboade not in the truth but thinke he said He was made enemie to th●… truth But Christ did intimate his fall from the truth wherein if he had remained hee had perticipated it with the holy Angels and beene eternally blessed with them L. VIVES WEr●… a created The time betweene their creation and rebellion was so little that it seemed none b Proud opposition So the approoued copyes do read c Manichees Hearing that the Deuill sinned from the beginning they thought him created sinfull and vicious by nature rather then will for that is naturall and inuoluntary in one which the creator in●…eth him with in his creation How this is meant of the Deuill He abode not in the truth because there is no truth in him CHAP. 14. BVT Christ set downe the reason as if wee had asked why hee staid not in the truth because there is no truth in him Had he stood in it truth had beene in him The phrase is improper it saith He aboade not in the truth because there is 〈◊〉 truth in him whereas it should renuerse it say there is no truth in him because ●…e aboade not therein But the Psalmist vseth it so also I haue cryed because thou h●… ●…ard 〈◊〉 ô God whereas properly it is Thou hast heard me ô God because I haue cried But he hauing said I haue cryed as if he had beene asked the reason adioyned the cause of his crie in the effect of gods hearing as if he said I shew that I cryed bec●…use thou hast heard ●…e ô God The meaning of this place The Deuill sinneth from the beginning CHA. 15. ANd that that Iohn saith of the Deuill The a deuill sinneth from the beginning 〈◊〉 ●…hey b make it naturall to him it can be no sinne But how then will they 〈◊〉 the Prophets as Esayes prefiguring the Prince of Babilon saith How art t●… 〈◊〉 ●…rom heauen O Lucifer sonne of the morning and Ezechiel Thou hast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods garden euery precious stone was in thy raiment This prooues him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so doth that which followes more plainly Thou wast perfect i●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…y t●… wast created c. Which places if they haue none other fit●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do prooue that he was in the truth but abode not therein that 〈◊〉 place H●… 〈◊〉 not in the truth prooues him once in the truth but not per●…uering ●…nd that also He sinneth from the beginning meaneth the beginning of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from his pride but not from his creation Now must the place of Iob con●…●…he deuill He c is the beginning of Gods works to be deluded by the Angels 〈◊〉 ●…f the Psalme this dragon whom thou hast made to scorne him are to bee ta●… God had made the deuil at first fit for the Angells to deride but y● that 〈◊〉 ●…ned for his punishment after his sin Hee is the beginning of Gods workes 〈◊〉 is no nature in the smallest beast which God made not from him is all 〈◊〉 ●…sistence and order wherefore much more must the creature that is an●… by the natural dignity haue their preheminence of al Gods other works L. VIVES 〈◊〉 a deuill Wee may not drawe nay wrest the gospell to those gramm●…ticismes A mo●… or two breakes no square in this phrase from the beginning So we say Enuy in bro●… from the beginning a little time doth not prooue this false b They The Mani●…●…as and those that say the Angells could not sin in the moment of their creati●… it because otherwise the author of their worke should beare the blame rather then 〈◊〉 worke And so Origen seemes to hold saying The serpent opposed not the truth nor was 〈◊〉 go vpon his belly euer from the point of his creation But as Adam and Eue were a while 〈◊〉 ●…o was the serpent no serpent one while of his beeing in the Paradice of delight for 〈◊〉 not malice In Ezechiel So Augustine thought that the first parents offended not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were created c He is Iob. 44. the words to bee deluded by the Angells are 〈◊〉 Septuagints Of the different degrees of creatures wherein profitable vse and reasons order doe differ CHAP. 16. 〈◊〉 ●…ll things that God made and are not of his essence the liuing is before ●…ad the productiue before these that want generation in their liuing ●…ue before the sencelesse as beasts c. before trees in things sensitiue ●…able before the vnreasonable as Man before beasts in things rea●…●…mortalls before mortalls as Angels before men but this is by natures 〈◊〉 they esteeme of these is peculiar and different as the diuers vses are 〈◊〉 some sencelesse things are preferred before some sensitiue so farre that 〈◊〉 power we would roote the later out of nature or whether we know or 〈◊〉 what place therein they haue put them all after our profit For who ●…ther haue his pantry ful of meate thē mice or possesse pence then fleas 〈◊〉 for mans esteeme whose nature is so worthy will giue more often●… a horse then for a seruant for a ring then a maide So that in choice 〈◊〉 of him that respects the worth often controlls him that respects his ●…de or pleasure nature pondering euery thing simply in it selfe
and 〈◊〉 thing respectiuely for another the one valuing them by the light of 〈◊〉 the other by the pleasure or vse of the sense And indeede a certaine 〈◊〉 loue hath gotten such predominance in reasonable natures that al●… generally all Angells excell men in natures order yet by the lawe of ●…nesse good men haue gotten place of preferment before the euill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the vice of malice is not naturall but against nature following the will not the creation in sinne CHAP. 17. 〈◊〉 in respect of the deuills nature not his will wee doe vnderstand 〈◊〉 place a right He was the beginning of Gods workes For where the vice of 〈◊〉 in the nature was not corrupted before a vice is so contrary to 〈◊〉 that it cannot but hurt it b therefore were it no vice for that nature that 〈◊〉 God to doe so but that it is more naturall to it to desire adherence with God c The ●…ill wil then is a great proofe that the nature was good But as God is the 〈◊〉 Creator of good natures so is hee the iust disposer of euill wills that when they vse good natures euill hee may vse the euill wills well Therevpon hee 〈◊〉 that the deuills good nature and euill will should bee cast downe and de●…d by his Angells that is that his temptations might confirme his Saints whom the other sought to iniur●… And because God in the creating of him foresaw both his euill will and what good God meant to effect thereby therefore the Psalmist saith this Dragon whom thou hast made for a scorne that in that very creation that it were good by Gods goodnesse yet had God foreknowledge how to make vse of it in the bad state L. VIVES THe a vice Socrates and the Stoickes held vertue naturall vice vnnaturall For follow the conduct of the true purity of our nature seperated frō depraued opinion we shall neuer sin b Therefore If it did the nature that offendeth more real good to offend then forbeare it were no offence nor error but rather a wise election and a iust performance c The euill will Thence arise all sinnes and because they oppose nature nature resisteth them whereby offending pleases their will but hurts the nature the will being voluntarily euill their nature forced to it which were it left free would follow the best for that it loues and goe the direct way to the maker whose sight at length it would attaine Of the beauty of this vniuerse augmented by Gods ordinance out of contraries CHAP. 18. FOr God would neuer haue fore-knowne vice in any worke of his Angell or Man but that hee knew in like manner what good vse to put it vnto so makeing the worldes course like a faire poeme more gratious by Antithetique figures Antitheta a called in Latine opposites are the most decent figures of all elocution some more expresly call them Contra-posites But wee haue no vse of this word though for the figure the latine and all the tongues of the world vse it b S. Paul vseth it rarely vpon that place to the Corynthes where he saith By the arm●… of righteousnesse on the right hand and the left by honor and dishonor by euill report and good as deceiuers and yet true as vnknowne and yet knowne as dying and behold 〈◊〉 li●…e as chastned and yet not killed as sorrowing and yet euer glad as poore and yet make 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ritch as hauing nothing yet possessing althings Thus as these contraries opposed doe giue the saying an excellent grace so is the worlds beauty composed of contrarieties not in figure but in nature This is pla●…e in Ecclesiasticus in this verse Against euill is good and against death is life so is the Godly against the sinner 〈◊〉 looke for in all thy workes of the highest two and two one against one L. VIVES AN●…a a are Contraposites in word and sentence Cic. ad Heren lib. 4. calleth it 〈◊〉 Co●…position saith Quintilian con●…tion or 〈◊〉 is diuersly vsed First in opposition of 〈◊〉 ●…o one as feare yeelded to boldnesse shame to lust it is not out witte b●… your helpe Secondly of sentence to sentence as He may rule in orations but must yeeld in iudgements 〈◊〉 There also is more to this purpose so as I see no reason why Augustine should say the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with vs. b S. Paul Augustine makes Paul a Rhetorician Well it is tolerable 〈◊〉 saith i●…d one of vs said so our eares should ring of herefie presently 〈◊〉 are so ready 〈◊〉 some mens ●…ongue ends because indeed they are so full of it themselues The meaning of that place God seperated the light from darkenesse CHAP. 19. ●…erefore though the hardnesse of the Scriptures be of good vse in produ●…ing many truths to the light of knowledge one taking it thus and another ●…et so as that which is obscure in one place bee explaned by some other 〈◊〉 by manifest proofes Whether it be that in their multitude of opini●…e light on the authos meaning or that it bee too obscure to bee at●…nd yet other truths vpon this occasion be admitted yet verily I thinke ●…urdity in Gods workes to beleeue the creation of the Angels and the se●… of the cleane ones from the vncleane then when the first light Lux ●…de Vppon this ground And God separated the light from the darkenesse ●…od called the light day and the darkenkesse he called night For hee onely was 〈◊〉 discerne them who could fore-now their fall ere they fell their de●… of light and their eternall bondage in darkenesse of pride As for the 〈◊〉 wee see viz this our naturall light and darkenesse hee made the two 〈◊〉 lights the Sunne and the Moone to seperate them Let there be lights saith 〈◊〉 firmament of the Heauen to seperate the day from the night And by and 〈◊〉 God made two great lights the a greater light to rule the day and the 〈◊〉 rule the night Hee made both them and the starres And God sette 〈◊〉 the firmament of heauen b to shine vppon the earth and to rule in the 〈◊〉 night and to seperate the light from darkenesse but betweene that light 〈◊〉 the holy society of Angells shining in the lustre of intelligible truth 〈◊〉 opposite darkenesse the wicked Angels peruersly falne from that light 〈◊〉 ●…ee onely could make seperation who fore-knoweth and cannot but 〈◊〉 all the future euils of their wils not their natures L. VIVES 〈◊〉 The greater light to rule or to begin y● day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the Septuagints trans●… 〈◊〉 both rule beginning principium is vsed somtimes for rule as in Ps. 110. v. 3. 〈◊〉 or that they might shine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some of the Latines haue vsed the infinitiue 〈◊〉 the coniunction Pestis acerba boum pecorumque aspergere virus saith Virgil. Of that place of scripture spoken after the seperation of the light and darkenes And God saw the light
that it was good CHAP. 20. 〈◊〉 may we ouerslip y● these words of God Let there be light there was light 〈◊〉 immediatly seconded by these And God saw the light that it was good not 〈◊〉 ●…ad seperated the light and darknes and named them day and night least ●…d haue seemed to haue shewne his liking of the darknes as wel as y● light ●…ras the darknes which the conspicuous lights of heauen diuide from the 〈◊〉 inculpable therfore it was said after it was not before And God saw that 〈◊〉 And God saith he Set them in the firmament of heauen to shine vpon the ●…d to rule in the day and night and to seperate the light from the darknes and 〈◊〉 that it was good Both those he liked for both were sin-les but hauing sayd 〈◊〉 be light and there was so hee adioines immediatly And God saw the light 〈◊〉 good And then followeth God seperated the light from the darknes and 〈◊〉 the light day and the darknesse night but heere he addeth not And God 〈◊〉 it was good least hee should seeme to allow well of both the one beeing ●…turally but voluntary euill Therfore the light onely pleased the Creator the Angelicall darknesses though they were to bee ordained were not to bee approued L. VIVES IMmediately a seconded The Scripture speaking of the spirituall light the Angels before y● part of this light that is part of the Angels became dark God approued the light that is all the Angels whom he had made good light but speaking of our visible light made the fourth day God approueth both light and darknes for that darknes God created and it was not euil as y● Angels that became dark were therfore were not approued as the fourth daies darknesse was Of Gods eternal vnchanging will and knowledge wherein he pleased to create al things in forme as they were created CHAP. 21. VVHat meanes that saying that goeth through all and God saw that it was good but the approbation of the worke made according to the work-mans art Gods wisedome God doth not see it is good beeing made as if he saw it not so ere it was made But in seeing that it is good being made which could not haue beene made so but that hee fore-saw it hee teacheth but learneth not that it is good Plato a durst go further and say That God had great ioy in the beauty of the Vniuerse He was not so fond to thinke the newnesse of the worke increased Gods ioy but hee shewed that that pleased him beeing effected which had pleased his wisedome to fore-know should be so effected not that Gods knowledge varyeth or apprehends diuersly of thinges past present and future He doth not foresee thinges to come as we do nor beholds things present or remembers thinges past as wee doe But in a maner farre different from our imagination Hee seeth them not by change in thought but immutably bee they past or not past to come or not to come all these hath he eternall present nor thus in his eye and thus in his minde he consisteth not of body and soule nor thus now and otherwise hereafter or heretofore his knowledge is not as our is admitting alteration by circumstance of time but b exempted from all change and all variation of moments For his intention runnes not from thought to thought all thinges hee knowes are in his vnbodily presence Hee hath no temporall notions of the time nor moued he the time by any temporall motions in him-selfe Therfore hee saw that which hee had made was good because he fore-saw that he should make it good Nor doubted his knowledge in seeing it made or augmented it as if it had beene lesse ere he made it he could not do his works in such absolute perfection but out of his most perfect knowledge VVherfore if one vrge vs with who made this light It sufficeth to answer God if wee be asked by what meanes sufficeth this God said let there be light and there was light God making it by his very word But because there are three necessary questions of euery creature who made it how hee made it and wherefore hee made it God sayd quoth Moyses let there bee light and there was light and God saw the light that it was good Who made it God How God sayd but let it be and it was wherfore It was good No better author can there bee then God no better art then his Word no better cause why then that a good God should make a good creature And this c Plato praysed as the iustest cause of the worlds creation whether he had read it or heard it or got it by speculation of the creatures or learned it of those that had this speculation L. VIVES PLato a durst not In his Timaeus The father of the vniuerse seeing the beauty of it and the formes of the eternall goddes approued it and reioyced b Expelled from all Iames 1. 17. in whom is no variablenes nor shadowing by turning Hierome contra Iouin reades it in whome is no difference or shadowing by moment Augustine vseth moment also whether referring it to time or quality I know not For neyther retyres at all from his light to a shadow nor is any the least shadow intermixt with his light Momentum is also a turning a conuersion or a changeable motion comming of moueo to moue it is also an inclination as in balances This place may meane that God entertaines no vicissitude or passe from contrary to contrary as we doe c Plato Let vs see saith hee What made the Worldes Creator go about so huge a worke Truly hee excelled in honesty and honesty enuyeth not any m●…an and therefore hee made all things like him-selfe beeing the iustest cause of their originall Concerning those that disliked some of the good Creators creatures and thought some things naturaly euil CHAP. 22. YEt this good cause of the creation Gods goodnesse this iust fit cause which being well considered would giue end to all further inuestigation in this kind some heretikes could not discerne because many thinges by not agreeing with this poore fray le mortall flesh beeing now our iust punishment doe offend and hurt it as fire cold wilde beastes c. These do not obserue in what place of nature they liue and are placed nor how much they grace the vniuerse like a fayre state with their stations nor what commodity redounds to vs frō them if we can know how to vse them in so much that poyson a thing one way pernicious being conueniently ministred procureth health and contrary wise our meat drinke nay the very light immoderately vsed is hurtfull Hence doth Gods prouidence advize vs not to dispraise any thing rashly but to seeke out the vse of it warily and where our wittte and weakenesse failes there to beleeue the rest that is hidden as wee doe in other thinges past our reach for the obscurity of the vse
by feare of misery My mother Blanche a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 had w●…t to tell me wh●…n I was a childe that the Syrens sung 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 in faire wether hhoping the later in the first and fearing the first in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our hope Not of vnhappinesse but vnhappy of the happinesse to come 〈◊〉 G●… from Hee toucheth the Platomists controuersie some holding the soules giuen of GOD 〈◊〉 others that they were cast downe for their guilt and for their punnishment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 k sportes of soules A diuersity of reading but let vs make good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the state of the first man and man-kinde in him CHAP. 21. ●…rd question of Gods power to create new things without change of 〈◊〉 because of his eternitie being I hope sufficiently handled wee may 〈◊〉 that he did farre better in producing man-kinde from one man onely 〈◊〉 had made many for whereas he created some creatures that loue to be 〈◊〉 in deserts as Eagles Kites Lyons Wolues and such like and others 〈◊〉 rather liue in flockes and companies as Doues Stares Stagges a 〈◊〉 and such like yet neither of those sorts did hee produce of one alone 〈◊〉 many together But man whose nature he made as meane betweene An●…asts that if hee obeyed the Lord his true creator and kept his hests 〈◊〉 be transported to the Angels society but if hee became peruerse in 〈◊〉 offended his Lord God by pride of heart then that hee might bee cast ●…h like a beast and liuing the slaue of his lusts after death bee destinate ●…all paines him did hee create one alone but meant not to leaue him ●…th-out another humaine fellow thereby the more zealously commend●… concord vnto vs men being not onely of one kinde in nature but also ●…dred in affect creating not the woman hee meant to ioyne with man ●…did man of earth but of man and man whom hee ioyned with her not of 〈◊〉 of himselfe that all man-kinde might haue their propagation from one L. VIVES 〈◊〉 Da●… in the diminutiue because it is a timorous creature neither wilde no●… 〈◊〉 God fore-knew that the first Man should sinne and how many people hee was to translate out of his kinde into the Angels society CHAP. ●…22 〈◊〉 was not ignorant that Man would sinne and so incurre mortallitye 〈◊〉 for him-selfe and his progenie nor that mortalls should runne on in 〈◊〉 of iniquitie that brute a beasts should liue at more attonement 〈◊〉 betweene them-selues whose originall was out of water and earth 〈◊〉 whose kinde came all out of one in honor of concord for Lyons ne●… among them-selues nor Dragons as men haue done But God fore-saw 〈◊〉 that his grace should adopt the godly iustifie them by the holy spirit ●…ir sinnes and ranke them in eternall peace with the Angels the last 〈◊〉 dangerous death being destroyed and those should make vse of Gods●…g ●…g all man-kinde from one in learning how well God respected vnity in 〈◊〉 L. VIVES 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Any place will holde bruite-beasts without contention sooner then 〈◊〉 m●…n is Wool●…e to man as the Greeke Prouerbe saith Pli●… lib. 7. and all other ●…gree among them-selues and oppose strangers The sterne Lion fights not with 〈◊〉 nor doth the Serpent sting the Serpent the beasts and fishes of the sea a●… with their owne kinde But man doth man the most mischiefe Dic●… saith Tully wrote a booke of the death of men He is a free and copious Peripatetique and herein hauing reckned vp inondations plagues burning exceeding aboundance of bea●… and other externall causes he compares then with the warres and seditions wherewith man hath destroyed man and finds the later farre exceeding the former This warre amongst men did Christ desire to haue abolished and for the fury of wrath to haue grafted the heate of zeale and charity This should bee preached and taught that Christians ought not to bee as wars but at loue one with another and to beare one with another mens minds are already to forward to shed bloud and do wickedly they neede not be set on Of the nature of mans soule being created according to the image of God CHAP. 23. THerefore God made man according to his a image and likenesse giuing him a soule whereby in reason and vnderstanding hee excelled all the other creatures that had no such soule And when hee had made man thus of earth and either b breathed the soule which he had made into him or rather made that breath one which he breathed into him for to breath is but to make a breth then c out of his side did hee take a bone whereof he made him a wife and an helpe as he was God for we are not to conceiue this carnally as wee see an artificer worke vp any thing into the shape of a man by art Gods hand is his power working visible things inuisibly Such as measure Gods vertue and power that can make seedes of seeds by those daily and vsuall workes hold this rather for a fable then a truth But they know not this creation and therefore thinke vnfaithfully thereof as though the workes of ordinary conception and production are not strange to those that know them not though they assigne them rather to naturall causes then account them the deities workes L. VIVES HIs a Image Origen thinkes that man is Christs image and therfore the scripture calls man Gods image for the Sonne is the fathers image some thinke the Holy Ghost is ment in the simyly But truely the simyly consists in nothing but man and the likenesse of God A man saith Paul is Gods image It may be referred to his nature and in that he is Gods likenesse may be referred to his guifts immortallity and such wherein he is like God b Breathed It is a doubt whether the soule were made before infused after or created with the body Aug de gens ad lit li. 7. saith that the soule was made with the other spiritual substances infused afterwards and so interpreteth this place Hee breathed into his face the breath of life Others take it as though the soule were but then made and so doth Augustine here c Out of his Why the woman was made after the man why of his ribbe when he was a sleepe and how of his rib read Magister sentent lib. 2. Dist. 18. Whether the Angels may be called creators of any the least creature CHAP. 24. BVt here wee haue nothing to doe with a them that hold the diuine essence not to medle with those things at all But b those that follow Plato in affirming that all mortall creatures of which man is the chiefe were made by the lesser created Gods through the permission or command of the creator and not by him-selfe that framed the world let them but absure the superstition wherein thy seeke to giue those inferiors iust honors and sacrifices and they shall quickly avoid the error of this
opinion for it is not lawfull to hold any creature be it neuer so small to haue any other Creator then God euen before it could be vnderstood But the Angells whome they had rather call Gods though c at his command they worke in things of the world yet wee no more call them creators of liuing things then we call husband-men the creators of fruites and trees L. VIVES WIth a ther●… With the Epicurists that held althings from chance or from meere nature without GOD althings I meane in this subl●…ary world which opinion some say was A●…les or with the heretikes some of whome held the diuills creators of al things corporal b Those that Plato in his Timaeus brings in God the Father commanding the lesser Gods to make the lesser liuing creatures for they are creatures also and so they tooke the immortall beginning of a creature the soule from the starres imitating the Father and Creator and borrowing parcells of earth water and ayre from the world knit them together in one not as they were knit but yet in an insensible connexion because of the combination of such small parts whereof the whole body was framed One Menander a Scholler of Symon Magus said the Angells made the world Saturninus said that 7. Angells made it beyond the Fathers knowledge c Though The Angells as Paul saith are Gods ministers and deputies and do ●…y things vpon earth at his command for as Augustine saith euery visible thing on earth is under an Angelicall power and Gregory saith that nothing in the visible would but is ordered by a visible creature I will except Miracles if any one contend But Plato as he followeth M●…s in the worlds creation had this place also of the creation of liuing things from the Scripures for hauing read that God this great architect of so new a worke said ●…et vs make 〈◊〉 after our owne Image thought he had spoken to the Angells to whose ministery he supposed mans creation committed But it seemed vnworthy to him that God should vse them in ●…king of man the noblest creature and make all the rest with his own hands and therfore he thought the Angels made all whose words if one consider them in Tullies translation which I vse he shal find that Plato held none made the soule but God and that of the stars which ●…ully de 〈◊〉 1. confirmes out of Plato saying that the soule is created by God within the elementary body which he made also and the lesser Gods did nothing but as ministers c●…e those which hee ●…ad first created and forme it into the essence of a liuing creature Seneca explanes Pla●… more plainely saying That when God had laid the first foundation of this rare and excellent frame of nature and begun it he ordayned that each peculiar should haue a peculiar gouernor and though himselfe ●…ad modelled and dilated the whole vniuerse yet created he the lesser gods to be his ministers 〈◊〉 vice-gerents in this his kingdome That no nature or forme of any thing liuing hath any other Creator but God CHAP. 25. WHereas there is one forme giuen externally to all corporall substances according to the which Potters Carpenters and other shape antiques and figures of creatures and another that containeth the efficient causes hereof in the secret power of the vniting and vnderstanding nature which maketh not onely the natural formes but euen the liuing soules when they are not extant The first each artificer hath in his brayne but the later belongs to none but God who formed the world and the Angells without either world or Angells for from that 〈◊〉 all diuiding and all effectiue diuine power which cannot be made but makes and which in the beginning gaue rotundity both to the Heauens Sunne from the same had the eye the apple and all other round figures that wee see in nature their rotundity not from any externall effectiue but from the depth of that creators power that said I fill heauen and earth and whose wisdome reacheth from end to end ordering all in a delicate Decorum wherefore what vse he made of the Angels in the creation making all himselfe I know not I dare neither ascribe them more then their power nor detract any thing from that But with their fauours I attribute the estate of althings as they are natures vnto God onely of whome they thankefully aknowledge their being we do not then call husbandmen the creators of trees or plants or any thing else fot we read Neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giueth the increase No not the earth neither though it seemes the fruitful mother of al things that grow for wee read also God giueth bodies vnto what hee will euen to euery seed his owne body Nor call wee a woman the creatrixe of her child but him that said to a seruant of his Before I formed thee in the wombe I knew thee although the womans soule being thus or thus affected may put some quality vpon her burthen b as we read that Iacob coloured his sheepe diuersly by spotted stickes yet shee can no more make the nature that is produced then shee could make her selfe what seminall causes then soeuer that Angells or men do vse in producing of things liuing or dead or c proceed from the copulation of male and female d or what affections soeuer of the mother dispose thus or thus of the coullour or feature of her conception the natures thus or thus affected in each of their kindes are the workes of none but God whose secret power passeth through all giuing all being to all what soeuer in that it hath being e because without that hee made it it should not bee thus nor thus but haue no being at all wherefore if in those formes externall imposed vpon things corporall we say that not workemen but Kings Romulus was the builder of Rome and Alexander of f Alexandria because by their direction these citties were built how much the rather ought we to call God the builder of nature who neither makes any thing of any substance but what hee had made before nor by any other ministers but those hee had made before and if hee withdraw his g efficient power from things they shall haue no more being then they had ere they were created Ere they were I meane in eternity not in time for who created time but he that made them creatures whose motions time followeth L. VIVES THat a all-diuiding All diuiding may be some addition the sence is good without it b As we Pliny saith that looke in the Rammes mouth and the collour of the veines vnder his tongue shal be the colour of the lambe he getteth if diuers diuers and change of waters varieth it Their shepehards then may haue sheep of what collour they will which Iacob knew well inough for he liking the particolours cast white straked rods into the watring places at Ramming
time that the sight of them might forme the Images of such collours in the conception and so it did Gen. 30. c Proceed The same Pliny lib 7. saith that the mind hath are collection of similitudes in it wherein a chance of sight hearing or remembrance is of much effect the images taken into the conceit at the time of conception are held to be powerfull in framing the thing conceiued and so is the cogitation of either party how swift soeuer it be wherevpon is more difference in man then in any other creature but the swiftnes of thought and variety of conceites formeth vs so diuersly the thoughts of other creatures being immoueable and like themselues in all kinds Thus much Pliny The Philosophers stand wholly vpon immagination in conception At Hertzogenbosh in Brabant on a certaine day of the yeare whereon they say there chiefe Church was dedicated they haue publike playes vnto the honor of the Saints as they haue in other places also of that country some act Saints and some deuils one of these diuels spying a pretty wench grew hot in al hast danceth home casting his wife vpon a bed told her he would beget a yong diu●…l vpon her so lay with her the woman conceiued the child was no sooner borne but it began to dance was rust of the shape that we paynt our deuills in This Margueret of Austria Maximilians Daughter Charles the 〈◊〉 told Iohn Lamuza King Ferdinands graue ambassador and now Charles his 〈◊〉 in Aragon a man as able to discharge the place of a Prince as of a Lieu●…enant d What ●…ctions Child-bearing women do often long for many euill things as coales and ashes I 〈◊〉 one long for a bit of a young mans neeke and had lost her birth but that shee bitte of his ●…ke vntill he was almost dead shee tooke such hold The Phisicians write much hereof ●…d the Philosophers somewhat Arist de animall They all ascribe it to the vicious humors in the stomake which if they happen in men procure the like distemper e Because So read the old bookes f Alexandria Asia Sogdia Troas Cilicia India and Egipt haue al cities called Alexandria built by Alexander the great this that Augustine meanes of is that of Egipt the most famous of all sytuate vpon the Mediterrane sea neare Bicchieri the mouth of Nile called now Scanderia or Scandaroun g Efficient Fabricatiuam pertayning to composition and diui●… of matter in things created by it selfe for these are not the workes of creation Angells 〈◊〉 beasts and liuelesse things can effect them The Platonists opinion that held the Angells Gods creatures and man the Angells CHAP. 26. ANd Plato would haue the lesser Gods made by the highest to create all other things by taking their immortall part from him and framing the mortall themselues herein making them not the creators of our selues but our bodies onely And therefore Porphiry in holding that the body must be avoyded ere the soule be purged and thinking with Plato and his sect that the soules of bad liuers were for punishment thrust into bodies into beasts also saith Plato but into mans onely saith Porphiry affirmeth directly that these gods whom they wil haue vs to worship as our parents creators are but the forgers of our prisons and not our formers but only our iaylors locking vs in those dolorous grates and wretched setters wherfore the Platonists must either giue vs no punishmēt in our bodies or else make not those gods our creators whose worke they exhort vs by all meanes to avoid to escape though both these positions be most false for the soules are neither put into bodies to be thereby punished no●… hath any thing in heauen or earth any creator but the maker of heauen and earth For if there be no cause of our life but our punishment how a is it that Plato saith the world could neuer haue beene made most beautifull but that it was filled with all kind of creatures But if our creation albe it mortall be the worke o●… God how i●… i●… punishment then to enter into Gods benefites that is our bodies b and if God as Plato saith often had all the creatures of the world in his prescience why then did not hee make them all would he not make some and yet in his vnbounded knowledge knew how to make all wherefore our true religion rightly affirmes him the maker both of the world and all creatures therein bodies and soules of which in earth man the chiefe Piece was made alone after his Image for the reason shewed before if not for a greater yet was he not left alone for there is nothing in the world so sociable by nature and so iarring by vice as man is nor can mans ●…re speake better either to the keeping of discord whilst it is out or expelling it when it is entred then in recording our first Father whom God created single from him to propagate all the rest to giue vs a true admonition to preserue an vnion ouer greatest multitudes And in that the woman was made of his ribbe was a plaine intimation of the concord that should bee betweene man and wife These were the strange workes of God for they were the first Hee that beleeues them not must vtterly deny all wonders for if they had followed the vsuall course of nature they had beene no wonders But what is there in all this whole worke of the diuine prouidence that is not of vse though wee know it not The holy Psalme saith Come and behold the workes of the Lord what wonders hee hath wrought vpon the earth Wherefore why the Woman was made of Mans ribbe and what this first seeming wonder prefigured if God vouchsafe I will shew in another place L. VIVES HOw a is it that Plato His words are these GOD speaketh to the lesser Gods Marks what I say vnto you we haue three kindes remaining all mortall which if wee omit the creation will not bee perfect for wee shall not comprehend all kindes of creatures in it which wee must needs doe to haue it fully absolute b And if GOD There also hee saith that God hath the Ideas of all creatures mortall and immortall in him-selfe which he looked vpon the immortall ones when hee made the things that should neuer perish the mortall in the rest I aske not here whether that God be those Ideae or whether they bee some-thing else the Platonists know not them-selues c The concord that should Because the woman was not made of any externall parts but of mans selfe as his daughter that there might bee a fatherly loue of his wife in him and a filiall duty towards him in the wife shee was taken out of his side as his fellow not out of his head as his Lady nor out of his feete as his seruant That the fulnesse of man-kinde was created in the first man in whom God fore-saw both who
God knoweth those that bee his and the deuill cannot draw a soule of them vnto damnation For this God knoweth as knowing all things to come not as one man seeth another in presence and cannot tell what shall be-come either of him hee seeth or of him-selfe here-after The diuell was therefore bound and locked vp that hee should no more seduce the nations the Churches members whom he had held in errour and impiety before they were vnited vnto the Church It is not said that hee should deceiue no man any more but that he should deceiue the people no more whereby questionlesse hee meaneth the Church Proceed vntill the thousand yeares bee fulfilled that is either the remainder of the sixth day the last thousand or the whole time that the world was to continue Nor may wee vnderstand the deuill so to bee barred from seducing that at this time expired hee should seduce those nations againe whereof the Church consisteth and from which hee was forbidden before But this place is like vnto that of the Psalme Our eyes waite vpon the Lord vntill hee haue mercy vpon vs for the seruants of God take not their eyes from beholding as soone as he hath mercy vpon them or else the order of the words is this Hee ●…t him vp and sealed the doore vpon him vntill a thousand yeares were fulfilled all that commeth betweene namely that he should not deceiue the people hauing no necessary connexion here-vnto but beeing to bee seuerally vnderstood as if it were added afterwards and so the sence runne thus And he shut him vp and sealed the dore vpon him vntill a thousand yeares were fulfilled that hee should not seduce the people that is therefore hee shutte him vp so long that he should seduce them no more L. VIVES FRom the a thousand Iohns mention of a thousand yeares in this place and Christs words I will not drinke hence-forth of the fruite of the vine vntill that day that I drinke it new with you in my Fathers kingdome together with many Prophecies touching Christs kingdome in Hierusalem made some imagine that Christ would returne into the world raise the Saints in their bodyes and liue a thousand yeares heere on earth in all ioy peace and prosperitie farre exceeding the golden age of the Poets or that of Sybilla and Esayas The first Author of this opinion was Papias Bishop of Hierusalem who liued in the Apostles times Hee was seconded by Irenaeus Apollinarius Tertullian lib. de fidelium Victorinus 〈◊〉 Lactantius Diuin Instit. lib. 7. And although Hierome deride and scoffe at this opinion in many places yet in his fourth booke of his Commentaries vpon Hieremy hee saith that hee dare not condemne it because many holy martyrs and religious Christians held it so great an authority the person some-times giueth to the position that we must vse great modesty in our dissention with them and giue great reuerence to their godlynesse and grauity I cannot beleeue that the Saints held this opinion in that manner that Cerinthus the heretique did of whome wee read this in Eusebius Cerinthus held that Christ would haue an earthly kingdome in Hierusalem after the resurrection where the Saints should liue in all societie of humaine lusts and concupiscences Besides against all truth of scripture hee held that for a thousand yeares space this should hold with reuells and mariage and other works of corruption onely to de●…iue the carnall minded person Dionisius disputing of S. Iohns reuelation and reciting some ancient traditions of the Church hath thus much concerning this man Cerinthus quoth he the author of the Cerinthian heresie delighted much in getting his sect authority by wresting of scripture His heresie was that Christs Kingdome should bee terrestriall and being giuen vp vnto lust and gluttony himselfe he affirmed nothing but such things as those two affects taught him That all should abound with banquets and belly-chere and for the more grace to his assertions that the feasts of the law should be renewed and the offring of carnall sacrifices restored Irenaeus publisheth the secresie of this heresie in his first booke they that would know it may finde it there Thus farre Eusebius Hist. Eccl. lib. 3. wherefore this was not Papias his opinion whose originall Hierome would otherwise haue ascribed vnto Cerinthus who was more ancient then Papias a little though both liued in one age nor would Iraeneus haue written against Cerinthus for he allowed of Papias his opinion neither did all the sects agree in one as touching this thousand yeares but each one taught that which seemed likeliest vnto him-selfe and no wonder in so vaine a fiction Dionisius of Alexandria as Hierome affirmeth In Esai lib. 18. wro●… an elegant worke in derision of these Chiliasts and there Golden Hierusalem their reparation of the temple their bloud of sacrifices there Sabbath there circumsitions there birth there mariages there banquets there soueraignties their warres and tryumphs c. b The cheare shall exceed So saith Lactantius The earth shall yeeld her greatest faecundity and yeeld her plenty vntilled The rockie mountaines shall sweate hony the riuers shall runne wine and the fountaines milke To omit Cerinthus his relations which are farre more odious c Chiliast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a thousand d On the sixt day There is a report that in the bookes of Elias the Prophet it was recorded that the world should last 6000. yeares 2000. vnder vanity vnto Abraham 2000. vnder the law vnto Christ. and 2000. vnder Christ vnto the iudgement This by the Hebrewes account for the LXX haue aboue 3000. yeares from Adam to Abraham And in Augustines time the world lackt not 400 yeares of the full 6000. So that now our Vulgar accoumpt is aboue 6700. yeares Namely from Our Sauiour 1522. Whom Eusebius and such as follow the LXX affirme to haue beene borne in the yeare of the world 5100. and somewhat more Therefore Augustine saith that the later end of the 6000. yeares passed along in his time And Lactantius who liued before Augustine vnder Constantine saith that in his time there was but 200. of the 6000. yeares to runne Of the binding and loosing of the Diuell CHAP. 8. AFter that saith S. Iohn he must be loosed for a season Well although the Diuell be bound and lockt vp that he should not seduce the Church shall hee therefore be looosed to seduce it God forbid That Church which God predestinated and setled before the worlds foundation whereof it is written God knoweth those that be his that the Deuill shall neuer seduce and yet it shal be on earth euen at the time of his loosing as it hath continued in successiue estate euer since it was first erected for by and by after hee saith that the Diuill shall bring his seduced nations in armes against it whose number shal be as the sea sands And they went vp saith hee vnto the plaine of the earth and compassed the tents of the Saints about and
his workes which GOD began to make For we our selues also bee the seauenth day when wee shall be replenished and repaired with his benediction and sanctification There being freed from toyle wee shall see because hee is GOD which wee our selues would haue beene when we fell from him hearing from the Seducer Ye shal be as goods and departing from the true GOD by whose meanes we should be gods by participation of him not by forsaking him For what haue wee done without him but that we haue fayled from him and gone back in his anger Of whom we being restored and perfected with a greater grace shall rest for euer seeing that he is GOD with whom we shal be replenished when hee shal be all in all for our good workes also although they are rather vnderstood to bee his then ours are then imputed vnto vs to obtaine this Sabbath because if wee shall atrribute them vnto our selues they shal be seruile when it is sayd of the Sabboth Yee shall not doe any seruile worke in it For which cause it is sayd also by the Prophet Ezechiel And I haue giuen my Sabbaths vnto them for a signe betweene mee and them that they might know that I am the LORD which sanctifie them Then shall wee know this thing perfectly and wee shall perfectly rest and shall perfectly see that he is GOD. If therefore that number of ages as of daies bee accompted according to the distinctions of times which seeme to bee expressed in the sacred Scriptures that Sabbath day shall appeare more euidently because it is found to be the seauenth that the first age as it were the first day bee from Adam vnto the floud then the second from thence vnto Abraham not by equality of times but by number of generations For they are found to haue a tenth number From hence now as Mathew the Euangelist doth conclude three ages doe follow euen vnto the comming of CHRIST euery one of which is expressed by foureteene Generations From Abraham vnto Dauid is one from thence euen vntill the Transmigration into Babilon is another the third from thence vnto the incarnat Natiuity of CHRIST So all of them are made fiue Now this age is the sixt to bee measured by no number because of that which is spoken It is not for you to know the seasons which the father hath placed in his owne powre After this age GOD shall rest as in the seauenth day when GOD shall make that same seauenth day to rest in himselfe which wee shal be Furthermore it would take vp a long time to discourse now exactly of euery one of those seuerall ages But this seauenth shal be our Sabbath whose end shall not be the euening but the LORDS day as the eight eternall day which is sanctified and made holy by the resurrection of CHRIST not onely prefiguring the eternal rest of the spirit but also of the body There we shall rest and see wee shall see and loue wee shall loue and we shall praise Behold what shal be in the end without end For what other thing is our end but to come to that Kingdome of which there is no end b I thinke I haue discharged the debt of this great worke by the helpe of GOD. Let them which thinke I haue done too little and they which thinke I haue done too much grant mee a fauorable pardon But let them which thinke I haue performed enough accepting it with a kinde congratulation giue no thankes vnto me but vnto the LORD with me Amen L. VIVES HOw a great shall that felicity be Innumerable things might be sayd but Augustine is to bee imitated in this and wee must neither speake nor write any thing rashly of so sacred and holy a matter neither is it lawfull for vs to search out that by Philosophy and disputations of men which the LORD hath commaunded to be most secret neither hath vnuailed to the eies nor vttered to the eares nor hath infused into the thoughts and vnderstandings of mortall men It is his will that we should beleeue them to bee great and admirable and onely to hope after them then at last to vnderstand them when we being made partakers of our desire shall behold openly all things being present and with our eyes and so conioyned and affixed vnto our selues that we may so know as we are now knowne neither ought we to enquire whether that blessednesse be an action of the vnderstanding or rather of the will whether our vnderstanding shal behold al things in GOD or whether it shal be restrained from some things least if we enquire these things ouer contentiously there be neither blessednesse of our vnderstanding nor of our will nor wee see any thing in GOD. Althings shal be full of ioyes and beatitudes not onely the will and vnderstanding but the eyes eares hands the whole body the whole minde the whole soule Wee shall see al things in GOD which wee will and euery one shal be content with the degree of his owne felicity nor will enuy another whom hee shall behold to bee nearer vnto GOD because euery man shal be so blessed as hee shall desire I thinke a I haue discharged the debt of this great worke And I likewise thinke that I haue finished no lesse worke and disburdened my selfe of no lesse labour then Augustine thinketh hee hath done For the burden of these meane and light Commentaries hath beene as heauy to our imbecillity and vnskilfullnesse as the admirable burden of those volumes was to the vigor and strength of his wit learning and sanctity If I haue sayd any thing which may please let the Reader giue thankes vnto GOD for mee if any thing which may displease let him pardon me for GODS sake and let things well spoken obtaine fauour for things il-spoken But if he shall kindly amend and take away the errors he shall deserue a good turne of me and the Readers which peraduenture relying vpon me might be deceiued FINIS An alphabeticall Index pointing out memorable matters contained in these bookes of the Citty of God A ARion who hee was fol. 24 Ttilius Regulus fol. 26 Abraham no murtherer fol. 37 Agamemnon who hee was fol. 34 Atis who he was fol. 56 Alcibiades his law fol. 64 Aeschines who he was fol. 69 Aristodemus who he was ibid. Attelan Comedies fol. 73 Athens lawes imitated in Rome fol. 78 Agrarian lawes fol. 84 Apollo and Neptune build Troy fol. 108 Anubis who he was fol. 76 Aedile his office fol. 103 Athenian ambassadors fol. 90 Ages of men fol. 117 Aesculapius who he was fol. 120 Aetnas burning fol. 157 Assyrian monarchie fol. 161 Anaximander who hee was fol. 299 Anaximines who hee was fol. 300 Anaxogoras who he was ibid. Archelaus who hee was ibid. Aristippus who he was fol. 302 Antisthenes who he was ibid. Atlas who he was fol. 313 Aristole who hee was fol. 318 Academia what it was ibid. Alcibiades who he was fol. 507 Arke
5. 44. Abbot Agatho Ancid 4. Virg. A●…g log 8. Apuleius accused of Magick Magike forbidden The elements chai●…ed The deuills hab●…ion Rom 1. 21. 22. 23. Isay 19 1 Luc. 1. Luc. 1. Mat 16. ●…6 Mat 8. 29 Spirits and deuills called into Images Psal. 96. 1. Cor. 1. 8. 4. How man doth make the deuill god The deuills benef●…es hurtfull De Philosoph Orac. Malice The Martires memory succeeded the Idols Mercuries tombe The Necia pla●…es Three Aesculapi●… The Crocodile The Mercury Hermopolis Trismegistus Cyp●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Martires not to be adored Plaies of the passion of Iesus Christ vnlawfull The Louanists want this Isis. Ceres Wheate put barley out of credit In cōuiuio Daemones D●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pas●… An history of a Philosopher tha●… was in a sto●… at sea 〈◊〉 of 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pa●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phantasie Opinion Affects how 〈◊〉 man Pyey 〈◊〉 Angells why called after the affect that their offices rele●…e T●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sub●…s ●…o pas●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Circian colours Apule●… his description of ma●… The deuills miserable immortality Plotine Eudemon●… Gen●… Lare●… 〈◊〉 The golden 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Daemon L●…res Lemures Ma●…s The di●… eternally miserable Enuy. Phil 2. God not polluted by being present vnto wise men God incōprehensible God is to be partly kno●…ne of his creatures God assumed man All this commen●…ary the Lovanists do l●…aue quite out Daemon vsed alway in the scripture on the worst part 〈◊〉 ●…t it is 〈…〉 Daem●… Ma●… 1. ●…4 Math 4. Christs miracles Temptation The diuels knowledge The diuels o●…en decemed Loue of f●…e obi●…s The cert●…y of Gods w●… ●…s 50. 1. P●… 130. 2. ●…s 95 3. ●…s 96 4 5. Mar. 1. 24. Ps. 82. 6. Men called Gods Why. Cor 1. 8. ver 5. 6 The diuel●… not to be worshipped 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods seruants La●… Dul●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hier. 17 Mat. 5. 14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psa. 116. 12 13. R●…ligon The sum of ●…lle eligion Neighbors who bee they Our friend our second selfe Psal. 15. 2 Psa. 51 16 17. 〈◊〉 Psal. 50 1●… 13. Ver. 14 15 Mich. 6 6 7. 8 Heb. 13. 16 Mercy ●…el 30. 23 Rom. 12 1 Verse 2. Psam ●…3 28 The christ●…ans sacrifice The sacrament of the altar Psal. 87. 2 Gen. 17 1●… Gen. 21 Gen●…s Ge●… 9 Exod. 14 Exod. 15 ●…od 23 The Teletae Goetia Magike Pharmacy Theurgy Plato's law Platos gods Psellus his Daemones Porphyries gods The deuills apparitions 2. Cor. 11. 14 Pro●… Lib. 2. Chaeremon Porphyryes 〈◊〉 of the gods that loue sacrifices Isis. Osyris Man a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All time 〈◊〉 to God 〈◊〉 33 〈◊〉 Whether the Fathers ●…aw God or no. Heb 2. 2. Io 5 37. Exo. 33. 20 ve●…se 23. Lycurgus M●… 6. 2●… 29. 30. God●… pro●… Periurgikes T●… 〈◊〉 excell the Pagans The angels 〈◊〉 god Procurare Actius Naeuius Augur The 〈◊〉 ●…pent Claudia a Vestall Iugler●… Illusion●… A●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 t●…e 〈◊〉 Exod. 13. ●…os 4. Ios. 6. 1 King●… 5. The diuels vvorke vvonders for their vvorship Ps. 72. Offices The Angels refuse honours Apoc. 19. Acts. 〈◊〉 The church a sacrifice Hovv The Mart●…rs the diuels conquerers Heroes and Semigods 〈◊〉 He●… Rap●… Prose●…p lib. 2. Scipio African Sin onely ●…euers man from God Exorcisme Porphyry his opinion of the Trinity Heed must bee had of discourse of the Trinity The Sabellian Heretikes Whether the Phylosophers kne●… the ●…inity Serapis his answere Plotine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 24. Pride 〈◊〉 one from light of the mistery of redemption Io. 1. 14. Io. 6. 60. Io. 8. 25. The 〈◊〉 ●…s 73. 28. Ps. 83. The flesh is cleansed by the heart Rom. 8. 24. Christ 〈◊〉 vpon h●…m whole m●…n Virgil. E●… 4. The Theurgikes cannot purge or cleanse 〈◊〉 sp●… 1. Cor. Abd. 1. Esay 33. The wisdome of the word foolishnesse Amelita Plato's opinion of th●… worlds crea●…on The Kings l●…gh way Genes 22 Psalm 60 Iohn 14 Esay 2 Luk. 24 A rec●…pitulation of the former ten book●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…7 2 〈◊〉 4●… 1 〈◊〉 ●…6 How God speaketh vnto man No Godhead of the sonnes waisted in his assumption of man Faith concernes things inuisible Sens●… To see Whether the world be created M●…odorus 〈◊〉 Time Eternity Gal. 4. 26. Knowledge of a creature Gods rest not personall but efficient Iob. 38. 7●… Vnitie in 〈◊〉 Religious phrases God ●…ly 〈◊〉 〈…〉 A pure conscience Ioh. 8. 44. 〈◊〉 1. 3. 8. Th●… 〈◊〉 Iohn 8. 44 Ps●… 17. 16. 〈◊〉 ●…4 12 〈◊〉 28. 13. 〈◊〉 15. Iob. 40. Psal. 104 Good 〈◊〉 better 〈◊〉 bad Angells Iob. 40 〈◊〉 ●…ill C●… 1 6 7 8 9 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 th●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Louvaine copie defectiue Gen 1. 4. 5. Darknes Gen. 1. Plato The iust cause of the worlds creation Nothing ●…aturaly ●…ell Questons in the consideration of nature The holy spirit 〈◊〉 perso●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lou●…aine copy defectiue The parts of a vvorke man Vse Fruit. Fruiti●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 W●… 1●… The number of sixe Pro. 24. 16. The number of ●…auen Ps. 104. Mat. 18. 10. A beginning Iohn 13. Ps. 104. 30. Eph. 5. 8. Iame●… 4. Gen. 1. Ps. 95. Waters aboue heauen Elements how commixtures The seat of the brayne God the onely immutable good To adhere v●…o God Exod. 3. Essence Apo●…a Gods enemies Vice and 〈◊〉 Exod. 8 Natures absolute excellence euen in things that punish man Punishment of malefactor in the sunne The goodnesse of fire Salamander Eccl. 10. Psal. 19. The diuine essence neuer can faile T●… inordinate loue of things bad not the things ●…selues The fall from good the cause of euill Psal. 73. The creation of the Angells Eze. 28. 12 The dgree●… of grace The Egiptian yeares The Greeke histories 〈◊〉 th●…n the Egiptian●… in the computation of the Monarchies The liberty that the old wri●…ers vsed in computation of time The monthly years Nothing co●…uall that hath an extreame Ecc. 1. 9. 10 Rom 6. 〈◊〉 Thess. 4. Psal. 12. 7. Reuolution of times Is●… 65. 17. God eternall Psal. 11. Rom. 11. 14 Wis●… 3. Times 〈◊〉 12 〈◊〉 2 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what they are Arguments against the creation of things in time 2. Cor. 10 1●… Gods vvorking his resting 〈◊〉 Number 〈◊〉 W●… 11 17 M●… 10 30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Genes 〈◊〉 Psal. 148 Secula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True felicity Our life 〈◊〉 to death Rom. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The goodnesse of obedience Dis●… amongst men vvor●… Gen. 2. Breathing in his face 1. Cor. 11. Angells the creators of nothing Angells Gods deputies and ●…rs Gen. 1. 〈◊〉 Cor. 37. 1. Cor. 1538 Hier. 1. Pli●…ib 8. A child like a d●…uill Iohn Lamuza Womens longing that are with child Alexandria Psal. 46. 8. In Timaeo Mariage commended in the creation Psa. 25. 10 The Louaynists are deafe on this side but not blind they can see to leaue out all this The forsaking of God ●…e death of the soule Ma●… 10. 28 Death by sinne Psal 49 ●…0 Infants weaker the●… the young of any other creature Why death remaineth after baptis●… Gen. 2.