Selected quad for the lemma: world_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
world_n day_n lord_n sabbath_n 6,348 5 9.8380 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 28 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE HISTORY OF THE CREATION AS IT IS WRITTEN BY MOSES in the first and second CHAPTERS of GENESIS plainly opened and expounded in severall Sermons preached in London Whereunto is added a short Treatise of GODS actuall Providence in ruling ordering and governing the world and all things therein By G. W. Batchelour of Divinity and Pastour of St. Iohn Evangelist LONDON Printed for John Bartlet at the signe of the gilt Cup neare St. Austins-gate in Pauls Church-yard 1641. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE AND NOBLE Lords FRANCIS Earle of BEDFORD Robert Earle of Warwick William Viscount Say and Seale Edward Viscount Mandevilc Robert Lord Brooke John Lord Roberts and the rest of the Honourable Lords Committees in the upper nou●e of the high Court of Parliament Grace and Peace with multiplicity of all Blessings temporall and eternall Most Noble LORDS THat which the learned Doctours of the Jews doe say of their Masorah to wit That it is an hedge or defence to the Law We Christians may more truly say of our weekly Sabbath the Lords day that it is the hedge of defence to true Christian Religion For as their Masorah which was their Annotations upon all the Scriptures of the old Testament shewing the genuine reading and signification of every word in the Hebrew text with what pricks vowels and accents it ought to be and was anciently written and read by Moses and the Prophets and by tradition from Ezra and other succeeding Fathers in all ages delivered over unto them did serve as an hedge and fence to keep the Scriptures of the old Testament pure from all corruption and alteration so that if any Scribe did in writing any copy of them omit or adde one word or letter or alter and change any vowell point or accent his errour might easily by the notes and rules of their Masorah be discerned and amended So the Lords holy weekly Sabbath being rightly observed according to the Law of God and the first institution and sanctification of it that is First by cessation and rest from all worldly cares and all secular affairs in respect wherof it is called in Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sabbath that is rest and cessation Secondly by devoting it only to the worship and service of God and by sanctifying it with preaching reading and hearing of the word prayer meditation and other works of piety and exercises of true Religion in which respect it is called the Lords day that is the day of the Lord Christ consecrated to his honor and to the service and wor●hip of God in his name It is most certainly as we find by experience a strong hedge and fence to true Christian Religion by which true piety and the true knowledge and worship of God and true Faith in Christ are upheld maintained increased and continued among all Christian nations from generation to generation Without observation of this weekly Sabbath and keeping this day of the Lord Christ holy by holy assemblies the publik and private worship of God the knowledge of Christ the memory of our Redemption by him and of his finishing and perfecting that great work and resting from it in his resurrection the publike preaching reading and hearing of the word and all other exercises of Christian religion which are the most effectuall ordinary meanes of grace and furtherances to eternall life and blessednesse would undoubtedly grow out of use and at length utterly decay and vanish This consideration did move me to insist more largely upon this subject and to make many Sermons upon that Text Gen. 2. 2 3. which briefly relates the first institution of the Sabbath on the seventh day in the first weeke of the world and Gods blessing and sanctifying of every seventh day in every week to be an holy Sabbath to his people Out of which Sermons first publikly preached to mine owne peculiar flocke I did afterwards compose this Treatise at the importunity of some of my best affected hearers and imparted severall written copies of it unto divers of them having at that time no hope to get it licensed for the Presse For by Gods speciall providence I having handled the doctrine of the Creation out of the 1. Chap. of Genesis was by my order of preaching and expounding of that Scripture led along and brought to this Text concerning Gods sanctifying of the seventh day at that very time when a book of liberty for sports on the Lords day was by the Bishops in every Diocesse sent to every Parish Church and commanded to be publickly read by every Minister in time of divine Service in the audience of all the people And because I proceeded to handle this subject as the order of my text did lead me and durst not balk that part of Gods word I was three severall times convented before my Ordinary and admonished under paine of suspension to proceed no further in this doctrine not for any errour which could be objected against any part or passage in it but only because the times would not beare it And because I did not hold it fit nor safe for me to obey man rather then God by concealing from my flock any part of Gods truth and shunning to declare unto them the whole counsell of God I have undergone the high displeasure of that Primate to whose jurisdiction my Church doth belong who upon divers false informations of catchers which have bin imployed to entrap me in my words that they might have something wherof to accuse me hath caused me to be convented before the Kings Majesty and the Lords of his Honourable Privy Counsell and hath charged and accused me to be a Preacher of factious and seditious Doctrine and for many years the great troubler of the City of London Wherupon I was committed close prisoner for two and twenty weeks and through close custody was by sicknesse brought neare unto death and could not obtain so much liberty as to be confined to the limits of my brothers house for the safety of my life upon bayle of a 1000 pound given untill by the testimony of fifty five Neighbour Ministers of best report in and about the City I was declared to be innocent and free from all the crimes of which I was accused Now blessed be God for your happy Assembly in this most hopefull Parliament by which I have been eased of my strait bonds and the times are so changed that this Treatise and divers others of my labours are licensed to passe by the Presse into the publik view of the world I should not have dared to commend it to the sight and grave Judgement of your Honours If your godly Zeale for the sanctifying of the Lords day and for the honouring of the name of the Sabbath which appeared most evidently to us all who of late were present at the time when that scandalous libell intituled Sunday no Sabbath was most accurately and judiciously sifted and examined by your Honours and justly censured and condemned to the fire had
judge any that is by his owne proper act of judgement but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne that he may have a hand in all judgements together with himselfe and Iohn 16. 13 14. speaking of that speciall illumination of mens hearts and inward teaching which seemes most proper to the Spirit he saith it is not of himselfe alone but it is what he hath heard and received from the Father and the Sonne And therefore the second Branch is manifest that the doer of the outward workes of God is Jehovah our God and all the three Persons in God The third Branch comprehends in it the outward moving cause of all these outward workes namely Gods owne will and pleasure for he is said to do them according to his eternall purpose and after the counsell of his owne will This is expressed in the description and in the words of the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whatsoever the Lord pleased that is whatsoever is according to the Lords will and pleasure that he hath done and this is testified in other Scriptures as Psal. 115. 3. where it is said that the Lord doth whatsoever pleaseth him and Isa. 46. 10. where the Lo 〈…〉 saith I will do all my pleasure and Ionah 1. 14. All which places shew that first the Lord hath a mind and pleasure to doe such things and therupon he doth them Also Ephes. 1. 11. It is said he doth worke all things after the counsell of his will And Acts 2. 23. 4. 28. the worke of our Redemption by Christ and all that he did and suffered is said to be done by the determinate counsell of God Therfore this Branch is manifest namely That Gods will and pleasure is the only inward mooving cause of all his outward works and that they are nothing but the execution of his eternall will and decree The fourth Branch by which these outward works are specially distinguished from his inward operation comprehends in it the subject wherein these workes do subsist and the circumstance of time and place wherein they are done For these workes are not done within God himselfe neither doe they subsist in his Essence as his inward operations do but they are Extra Dei essentiam without Gods essence they are done in all the world and upon the creatures some in Heaven and some in Earth others in the Sea and all deepe places as my Text saith and they have their circumstances of time and place as God hath appointed from all eternity The Creation was in the first beginning of time in the first six dayes of the world Gen. 1. The Redemption wrought by Christ in the midst of yeares betweene the Law and the Gospell Hab. 3. 2. and upon the mountaine where Hierusalem stood Isa. 25. 6 7. The great execution shall be at the end of the world in the last day of Judgement and the works of Gods governement and actuall providence as they are divers so they are done at divers times and in divers places of the world as experience teacheth on the very day which the Lord appointed did the flood come upon the old world Gen. 7. 11. In the same day which God had fore-told was Israel delivered out of Aegypt Exod. 21. 41. And howsoever the words of the Apostle Act. 17. 18. intimate that in God and not without him We live moove and have our being yet we are not thus to understand that these things are and that we subsist in Gods Essence and that we are so in God as his inward operations and eternall decrees are But that we all are compassed about with Gods presence and essentiall power which are every where and by him as by the chiefe efficient cause and authour of life motion and being are sustained and upheld in life being and motion continually For to be in God that is to subsist in his essence doth necessarily imply coeternity and consubstantiality with God Quicquid est in Deo Deus est nothing can be within his Essence but it must be coeternall with God and of the same Substance with him Hee who denies this must needes deny God to be immutable and most simple free from all composition Therfore this Branch also is most manifest and doth containe in it nothing but solid Truth The fifth Branch containes in it the manner of Gods outward works to wit that in respect of God himselfe they are done with such power as cannot be resisted and in respect of the event they are certaine infallible and cannot faile This is truely collected from the Text For it is said that all Whatsoever the Lord pleaseth hee doth or hath done which shewes that not one jot of his will and pleasure failes but comes to passe If his will or pleasure could be resisted or any thing prevented which he willeth to worke surely the Divell who is so cunning watchfull and malitious would in some things have defeated God or this either by himselfe or some of his instruments But this Text affirmes the contrary that whatsoever the Lord pleased he hath done in all the world Therfore in respect of God they are all unresistable and in respect of the event infallible And this David testifieth Psal. 115. 3. saying The Lord doth whatsoever pleaseth him And Isa. 46. 10. my counsell shall stand and I will performe all my pleasure yea because these are voluntary workes of God and are willed and decreed in his secret counsell from all eternity as I have noted before therefore they must needs be unresistable for Who can resist his will Rom. 9. 19. The sixth Branch containes the principall use and effects of Gods outward workes namely the making of himselfe knowne in his nature and essentiall attributes and so communicating himselfe to his elect That Gods externall workes doe all serve for this use and doe worke this effect we may gather from the dependance and inference of this Text. For the Psalmist having professed that he knows the Lord to be great and that he is the onely true God above all gods that is who hath all the essentiall properties of the true God he proves it by and from his workes and sheweth that by meanes of them he knoweth it And other Scriptures and experience confirme the same Psal. 19. 1. It is said that the heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy worke day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledge and Rom. 1. 20. The visible things of God are seene from the creation of the world clearly being understood by the things which were made Even his divine Power and God-head So the works of Gods actual providence in governing and upholding the world and in mooving the Heavens and the starres in order doe shew his infinite wisdome and supercelestia'l glory Psal. 8. 1. His overthrowing of his enemies and the persecutors of his Church as in the stood of Noah and in the drowning of Pharaoh and his host do shew his power His
created in time but was from eternity or that it was created of a matter which was uncreated and had a being before the creation even without beginning 2. Of those doting Jewes and others who held that the inferiour visible world was created by the ministerie of Angels 3. Of Heretikes who denied God the Father of Christ preached in the Gospel to be the Creatour of the World and feigned another God Creatour inferiour to him 4. Of the Papists who teach that there be other Creatours besides God even that every Masse-Priest can create of Bread and Wine the true bodie and bloud of the Lord Christ our Creatour and Redeemer yea that same body which is already which was made of a woman borne ●nd crucified and is glorified at Gods right hand in heaven a strange contradiction and horrible blasphemy which God ab●orres as a thing impossible For nothing can be made that which it is already nor receive that being which it hath before-hand 5. Of Atheists and Mockers who deny God and scoffe at the last resurrection and at the ending of this World in the last day all which are manifestly proved by the creation Lastly of all Idolaters who esteem and worship that for God their Creatour which is but the image of a creature and in nature and forme far inferiour to the least creature formed by God Thirdly it serves for reprehension and just reproofe First of them who thinke that God can be worshipped and pleased by mens giving of outward things to him immediately for his owne use as gold silver meat drinke clothes and curious ornaments all which God rejecteth as things unusefull for him upon this very ground and for this reason because hee created the whole World and all things therein are his owne already Psal. 50. and Act. 17. 25. Secondly of them who fret and grudge and too much repine and grieve for the overthrow and destruction of Kingdomes Countries Nations Cities Men or Beasts which God at his pleasure and in his justice doth destroy for mens sins and over-turne withall their glory and being Who is he that in such a case dare mutter against God For hee may doe with his owne what he pleaseth if they offend him he may destroy them and magnifie his justice and glorifie his power in their destruction and he can repaire them at his pleasure Lastly here is for all that trust in God love and serve him plentifull matter of comfort against poverty and all calamities and persecuting enemies No poverty ought to pinch or vexe them for God their portion is more worth then all the world all riches and other things are but the worke of his hands and he can give them when hee will and will give what hee in his wisedome knowes to be necessary and profitable All strength is of him and he can weaken all enemies in a moment so that if he be for us none can stand against us hee can raise sweet out of bitternesse Thus much for creation in generall CHAP. II. Of the creature in generall Names of the creature expounded to shew their nature Instructions concerning the creatures Five Uses made thereof BEfore I passe to the speciall acts or branches of Creation I hold it fit to insist upon the creature in generall which comprehends under it every speciall kind of thing created by any act of creation This History of the Creation though not in any one word yet in one sentence doth expresse the creature in generall that is the whole frame and collection of all things created Chapt. 2. 1. in these words Thus were the heavens and the earth finished and all the host of them or all their furniture that is whatsoever is in them rightly ordered and disposed like an Army well marshalled so the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signifie And other Scriptures both in the Old and New Testament doe oftentimes in one word propound to us the generall consideration of all joyntly together I will therefore first speake of the creature in generall as it comprehends in it the heavens and the earth and all things in them and that in such words and phrases as Gods Spirit in this and other Scriptures is pleased to use for our instruction and for the help and illumination of our weake understandings And in this generall description I will first consider the words and phrases by which the creature in generall is called and will shew what they doe import in their signification Secondly I will from thence and other Scriptures note such instructions as may direct us to the knowledge of the creature in generall And lastly will make some use and application fit and convenient The first name by which the creature in generall is called in the Old Testament is the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies an universality or perfect comprehension of all things By this name the whole universality of things created is called Pro. 16. 4. where it is said that the Lord hath made all things for himselfe not so much as the wicked man is excepted who is made for the day of evill Also Isa. 44. 24. the Lord saith I am Jehovah that maketh all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Answerable to this are the Greeke words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by the Greeke Philosophers to signifie the whole universall world or the universality of all things and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is commonly used in the New Testament where there is mention made of the creation and the creature in generall as John 1. 3. By him were all things made And Rom. 11. ult Of him and by him and for him are all things And Colos. 1. 16. and Revel 4. 11. But yet as the Apostle 1 Cor. 15. 27. speaking of Gods putting all things in subjection under Christ saith that hee must be excepted who hath put all things under him so here though the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doe signifie an universality and comprehension of all things yet it is manifest by the word joyned with them that God the Creatour who is said to make and create them is excepted and all other things besides him are included Another name by which the Spirit calls the universality of creatures is the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which answers to the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is alwaies used by Septuagints in their translation of the Old Testament to expresse it By this name the creature in generall is called Heb. 1. 2. and 11. 3. where it is said that God by his Son made the worlds and that the worlds were framed by the word of God And in the Syriack and Hebrew translations the words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and according to their originall and true notation they all doe signifie not onely an eternall duration and continuance from the first
our perfection and happinesse in the sight and knowledge of him Fourthly we may hence observe divers singular prerogatives of the first day which is now by the resurrection of Christ the Lords holy day and the Sabbath of all true Christians That by many speciall prerogatives God did in the creation foreshew his eternall counsell and purpose to make this day his holy day in the dayes of Christ and in the time of the Gospell under the Kingdome of grace 1. This is the first fruits of all time 2. In it was created the glorious frame of the heavens and the first light of the visible World 3. In this day God first shewed by his eternall Word the Son his eternall counsell and purpose and by his Word and Spirit began to bring his purposes to passe and produce things into being 4. In this day darknesse and light were so separated and divided that while the night lasted there was no day in all the inferiour World and while it was day there was no night over all the face of the earth the deep but light in all the World which was then created and brought into forme and perfect being 5. In this day God first shewed his approbation and his pleasure that he approved for good the things which by his eternall Word the Son he did forme and bring into being Therefore without doubt most fit to bee the day of the Lord Christ and sanctified and kept holy to the honour and glory of him who is the first borne of God and the first fruits of them that sleep and the light of the World and in whom God sheweth his counsell and is in him well pleased and by him turnes night into day and brings light out of darknesse and brings us to eternall rest in the highest heavens which were created in the beginning of the first day CHAP. VII The second dayes worke Of the skie and things now created All made by the power of God in Christ. The use of the firmament How called heaven All was created wisely and orderly Vse ANd God said Let there bee a Firmament in the midst of the waters and let it divide the waters from the waters 7. And God made the Firmament and divided the waters which were under the Firmament from the waters which were above the Firmament and it was so 8. And God called the Firmament heaven and the evening and the morning were the second day In these words wee have abriefe historie of the second dayes worke in the creation of the World wherein wee are to consider these five things 1. The thing created 2. The creation and bringing of it into being 3. The use of it 4. The name which God gave unto it 5. How by this worke there came in an evening and a morning which where the second day First for the thing created it is in the originall text called by a generall name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may signifie any thing which is spread abroad or stretched farre and wide according to the etymologie of it For the Hebrew verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which it is derived in all Scriptures wheresoever it is used doth signifie the act of spreading any thing abroad stretching it out and laying it wide-open to view as Exod. 39. 3. Numb 16 38. and Ier. 10. 9 it signifies beating out of gold silver or brasse into thinne broad plates that is spreading them broad by violent beating Exod. 40. 19 It is used to signifie the spreading abroad of the tent over the Tabernacle Psalme 139. 6. and Isa. 42. 5. and 44. 24. It is used to signifie the stretching out of the earth above the waters farre and wide Iob 37. 18. it signifies the spreading out of the skie and of the thinne cloudes and 2 Sam. 22. 43. it is used to signifie spreading abroad as a man spreads clay by stamping it with his feet and by a Metonymic of the effect it is used to signifie stamping with the feet as men stamp clay and spread it abroad Ezech. 6. 11. and 25. 6. These are the places of Scriptures in which onely that word is used So then this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being derived of it must needs signifie a thing which is stretched out like a tent or canopie or spread abroad as plates of gold and silver are by beating and clay by stamping The Greeke Septuagints transiate this Word every where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a thing which though it bee farre stretched out yet it is so surely established that it abides still in the place which God hath appointed for it And the vulgar Latine with divers later translaters following the Greeke Septuagints translate it Firmamentum the firmament that is a thing firmely set and established in a place which cannot from thence bee driven out and leave the place empty And although this word may according to the notation of it signifie any thing stretched out or spread abroad or laid wide open and is once onely used to signifie broad plates of brasse beaten out for a covering and that in the plurall number Num. 16. 38. yet in all other places of Scripture it is used in the singular number for the skie which God hath from the beginning stretched out over the globe of the Earth and the Sea as here in this Chapter and Psalme 19. 1. and 150. 1. and Dan. 12. 3. and Ezech. 1. 22. and 10. 1. Now what this skie or firmament is that is a great question among the learned Divers of the Ancients as Basil Ambrose Beda and others doe by this firmament understand the starry heavens First because it is said in the 8. verse that God called this firmament heaven Secondly because it is said that when God made the Sun Moone Starres hee set them in the firmament of heaven vers 17. Thirdly because they doe imagine that there is a watery heaven above the starry heaven which consists of water congealed like to Cristall and doth temper the heat of the Sun Moone and Stars and out of this heaven they conceive that God poured the waters which drowned the old World because it is said Gen. 7. 11. that the windowes of heaven were opened and God rained on the earth But others doe hold that by the firmament here is meant the whole heavens that is both the first heavens the spacious regions of the aire and also the middle that is the firie and starry heavens and the third that is the highest heavens First because it is said that God called the firmament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heaven and this word is used in the Scriptures to signifie all these three heavens And as the highest heaven is called by this name Psalme 11. 4. the Lords throne is in heaven and Psalme 148. where it is said Praise Him O heaven of heavens So the middle and starry heavens as Gen. 22. 17. where wee read of the Starres of heaven and also
it demonstrated in all the parts The Manner of Creation in foure things Angels had no hand in the Creation Foure uses of the Point THe first thing now to be stood upon is the creation in generall as it is described in the generall nature of it by the name the Author or causes and the time when it first began and when it was done and that chiefely in this first verse First Creation is here set forth by the name of it in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 created Secondly by the Author or sole efficient cause of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God Thirdly by the time when God began the creation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning and wherein he perfected that worke in six dayes Fourthly by the forme and manner of it vers 3 God said and it was done First the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 created if it bee rightly understood according to the true and proper signification of it in this place may give great light to the matter in hand I will therefore first distinguish it according to the severall significations in which it is used in the Scriptures and will shew in what sense it is here to be taken and then will come neere to the matter First it signifies properly that extraordinary miraculous worke of God by which he gives a substance and substantiall being to things which before were not and doth make them either of nothing or of some matter which hath in it selfe no naturall fitnesse or disposition to receive such a forme or to be turned into such a substance thus it is used Deut. 4. 32. in these words from the day that God created man And Psal. 148. 5. He commanded and they were created Secondly by a metaphore this word signifies the extraordinary works of God which are very like unto the creation because they are done by a supernaturall power and suddenly brought forth as it were out of nothing when there was no meanes or naturall disposition going before Thus the 〈◊〉 of regeneration in which the wicked corrupt heart of man 〈◊〉 by nature is unfit for any holinesse and most prone to wickednesse is changed in a moment by the Spirit of God and becomes a cleane creature and a new man is called creating Psal. 51. 12. Thus are all great and miraculous works of God called creating When hee raiseth up wonderfull strength out of weakenesse and by them who are as nothing doth overthrow mighty gyants and strong armies this is called creating Exod 34. 10. When God of a stubborne stiff-necked nation and of a people scattered despised and counted worse than nothing raiseth up and maketh a most holy people and glorious Church as he will doe in the last conversion of the Jewes this is called commonly in the Prophets by the name of Creation as Psal. 102. 18. and Isa. 43. 7. and 65. 18. And when the Lord in his just wrath doth raise up evill and destruction to the wicked out of good things which naturally turne to good this is called creating Isa. 45. 7. and 〈◊〉 ●●ery raysing up of things without meanes as Psal. 104. 30● When God suddenly beyond meanes or expectation by the supernatur●ll power of his Spirit reneweth the face of the earth it is called creating But in this place the word is to be taken in the proper sense for making thing● either of nothing or of matter made of nothing and of it selfe unfit and without naturall disposition for receiving any such forme as that which God doth give unto it The word thus expounded sheweth what creation is even a making of things out of nothing or of rude matter undisposed for such a forme and being as God in an instant frameth one of it And so it differs from all other kindes of making and producing things as from naturall generation of living cr●atures and of clowds raine thunder and the rest which are made by an ordinary power out of matter fitted for the forme of things produced and from all artificall making of thing● as house and other things made by art of matter fitted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The second thing by which creat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the author and cause of it expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word is not here used metaphorically to signifie Angels false Gods and men who are ministers and vicegerents under God as it is sometimes used in Scripture but it is here taken in the sense which is most common and frequent in the originall that is for the true God and is one of his sacred Names And it is a word of the plurall number and in many places is joyned with verbes of the plurall number and that for this end to teach us that though God whose name this is bee but one in nature and essence yet in that unity of essence and in that one eternall Jehovah there is a pluralitie that is a Trinity of Persons This word therefore doth here plainely intimate unto us that Creation is an action of the whole Trinity and that it is the joint worke of all the three Persons even of God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost and this shewes that neither Angels nor false Gods but Jehovah the true God is the Author of the Creation as appeares Cap. 2. 7. The third thing by which the Creation is described is the time of it both the first time in which God began to create and did create the highest heaven and the rude masse the earth and also the progresse of time in which God created all visible things in order and finished the whole frame of the visible world This is expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning and in other parts of the Chapter which mention the particular dayes in which every thing was made For this word though sometimes it signifies Eternity and intimates unto us the eternall being of the Son of God together with the Father from all eternity and before all worlds as Prov. 8. 22. where eternall Wisdome saith The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his works of old and John 1. 1. In the beginning was the Word yet most commonly and frequently in the Scriptures being laid downe absolutely as in this place it signifies either the first moment and beginning of all time as in this verse or else the first six dayes of the creation or any one of them in which dayes God made finished the whole frame of heaven and earth and all the host of them as Isa. 46. 10. where God is said to declare and foretell the end of all things from the beginning that is from the six dayes of the creation in which God began to speake to man and foretell 〈◊〉 end and Joh. 8. 44. where the Divell is called a ●urtherer from the beginning that is from the last day of the Creatiō in which God made the Divell marred man and brought him
under death The time of the creation as here I take it in generall is not onely the first moment of time as in this verse it signifies but also the six dayes mentioned distinctly in the rest of the Chapter For the highest heaven and the rude matter the earth were created in the first moment of time and all other things in the space of six dayes as the historie most plainely teacheth Some besides that which I have observed from this word doe gather also that the time and moneth of the yeare in which God created the World was the seventh moneth which wee call September The ground of their conjecture is a Cabalisticall conceit of some Jewish Rabbins to wit because the letters of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth in September are the same with the letters of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies here in the beginning and therefore as the letters of the one word if they be transposed make up the other word so both words agree in one time and this beginning was in the moneth September But their ground is deceitfull First because September which is the seventh moneth is called in the pure Scripture Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 King 8. 2. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a word of the corrupt Rabbinicall Hebrew tongue and therefore Gods Spirit alluded not to it Secondly the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath the letter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it more than the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so they doe not perfectly agree Thirdly the Rabbins and Cabalists doe not agree among themselves in this conceit For some of them have another conceit that the letters of this word are the same with the two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first or chiefe house that is the Sanctuary Others that it hath the same letters which make up the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the Covenant of fire to shew the purity of the burnt offerings made by fire And many other such conceits they have concerning this word which to repeat were losse of time I am not ignorant that some learned men and judicious divines doe hold this opinion of the worlds creation in Autumne and September but for other reasons especially because Autumne is the time when all fruits come to perfection and therefore Gods creating of all things perfect was in that time of the yeare But this is no good reason for many creatures have their perfection and glory in the Spring-time as hearbs flowers and such like And birds and beasts doe chiefely breed in the Spring and the Spring revives the things of the earth and makes them fresh and greene And the cause why many fruits come not to perfection till Autumne is the corruption of the earth and the curse laid on it for mans sinne In the creation things when they first began were perfect and so would they be in the Spring and all the yeare if man had not brought a curse upon them Therefore I leave such curious points as not needfull to be determined or if I incline to any opinion concerning the time of the yeare it is that the world was created in the Spring when the day and night are equall and both of one length in all the world that is in the moneth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Abib which is part of March and part of Aprill For this God seemes to teach Exod. 12. 2. where hee injoines the Israelites to account that for the first moneth of the yeare contrary to the custome and account of the Egyptians which they had before followed The fourth thing by which the creation is described is the Object or effects that is the things created even the Heavens and the Earth and all things in them For it is said God created the heaven and the earth The fifth thing is the Forme and manner of the creation to wit by saying Let it be done and it was done this appeares vers 3 6 9. which implies also the matter and the end Now here a question may bee moved concerning this word of God whether it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word spoken and uttered with a sound like that which God spake from Mount Sinah in giving the Law or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the inbred facultie of reason and understanding or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an inward thought of God caused by outward objects or whether it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the substantiall and eternall Word the Sonne of God First it cannot be a word spoken and uttered with a sound for that requires aire as the medium of it and there was none when God said Let there be light there was no eare to heare nor any use of such words Secondly it cannot be any inward thought of God now beginning to thinke of the creation and being of things for this purpose was in God as all thoughts are from all eternity Neither is this word the Son of God now spoken that is begotten and not till now as some hereticks dreamed and this saying of God the begetting of the Son For the Son is God the creatour coequall and coeternallo the Father and that God which said Let there be light and Let there be a firmament c. Wherefore the true meaning of that speech is this That as God the Father Son and Holy Ghost had decreed and purposed from all eternity to create all things out of nothing so in the beginning in the first moment of time the Father by his eternall Word the Son and by his Spirit not as instruments but chiefe agents with himselfe did actually put his decree in execution and that so quickly as a word can bee spoken with the tongue which hath before been conceived in the heart and that all was done at Gods beck and command most easily without any toi●e or labour and that as the word spoken is the revealing of mans will so the creation was the declaring of Gods eternall will and purpose by the open execution of it and in a word that God by his Wisedome Will Goodnesse and Power which are his attributes by which as by a speaking word hee is made knowne to men did create and make all things and for an end not in vaine for his word is never in vaine Now from these things laid down plainly in the words of this first verse and in the verses following wee may gather this description of creation in generall viz. That it is the first outward act or worke of God Almighty the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost performed in the first beginning of time by which hee immediatly brought all things out of nothing according to his eternall purpose and gave the first being to the world and every creature therein when as they were not and that by his owne infinite goodnesse wisedome power and will actually working and like a powerfull Word and
commandement bringing all things to passe out of meere nothing or that which was as nothing made of nothing without any instruments toile labour alteration or delay for the revelation of himselfe and for the communion of his goodnesse and glory This description truely gathered from this text and this historie is in whole and in every part confirmed by other testimonies of Gods holy infallible Word First creation is an outward act or work because it is not within God himselfe but his making of things and giving to them a being different from his own essence Secondly it is Gods first outward act because it was the giving of the first being to all kindes of creatures in which and upon which hee exerciseth all other outward works these two points are manifest and need no further proofe But as for the third point the Author or first cause God the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost wee have manifest proofe of it in Scripture able to satisfie any reasonable mind First that the Lord Jehovah the only true God not Angels is alone the Creatour of all things Holy Job testifieth saying that hee alone spreadeth out the heavens and treadeth upon the waves of the Sea Job 9. 8. And Isa. 44. 24. I saith Jehovah am the Lord that maketh all things that stretcheth forth the heavens alone that spreadeth abroad the earth by my selfe Secondly that all the three Persons are equall in this worke and as they all are one God so are one Creatour of all things it is manifest Job 35. 10. Where the Creatour of all things is called in the plurall number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my makers that is more Persons than one even three Persons in one God and Psal. 149. 2. Let Israel rejoyce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them that made him and Eccles. 12. 1. Remember thy Creators 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Isa. 54. 5. The Lord thy makers is thine husbands the Lord of hostes is his name For the Father in particular there is no doubt all confesse him to be the Creatour and so the Scriptures testifie Prov. 8. 22 23. and Heb. 1. 2 3. For the Son also we have plaine texts that by him all things were made and nothing without him John 13. 10. and Joh. 5. 17 19. 1 Cor. 8. 6. Col. 1. 16. Heb. 1. 10. And as the Spirit is one God with the Father and the Sonne so his hand wrought with them in the Creation as appeares Gen. 1. 2. Where it is said the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters that is cherished the rude masse as the Hen doth her egges by sitting on them and so gave forming vertue to them so the Hebrew word signifieth and Job 26. 13. God is said by his spirit to have garnished the heavens and Job 33. 4. The spirit of God hath made me saith Elihu and Psal. 33. 6. By the Word of the Lord that is the Sonne were the heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth that is his spirit Fourthly for the time of the Creation we need not stand much upon proofe of it This Text sheweth that it began in the beginning or first moment of time And in six dayes it was perfected and fully finished as the rest of the Chapter sheweth It was of old that God founded the earth and made the heavens as the Psalmist testifieth Psal. 102. 25. that is in the first beginning of times And reason tells us that time being a circumstance and inseparable companion of creatures visible must of necessity begin together with their being Yet one thing is worthy to be noted in the time namely That whereas God was able in the first moment to create all things as he did the highest heavens and the rude masse which is called the earth in my Text and which was the common matter of all the visible world yet he did distribute and divide the creation into divers acts which are distinguished one from another by the effects that is the creatures made and by the severall times and dayes also wherein they were performed Which point wee will insist upon as it well deserves when we come to the several acts performed particularly in severall dayes of the Creation The fifth point in the description is the generall object and effect of creation to wit all things and the first being of them For here the object and effect concurre and are altogether the same The world and all things therein and the first matter of which they were made as they are the onely things about which the act of creation is exercised so they are the object of creation And as they are things made by the creation so they are effects of it Now this generall object and effect as it is truly gathered from the enumeration of all the kindes of things created which are numbred in this Chapter and the next and is plainely expressed in the description so it is abundantly testified in all the Scriptures as Isa. 44. 24. and Coloss. 1. 16. and Exod. 20. 11. where all things in heaven and earth visible and invisible are said to bee made created and formed by God Yea the first rude matter it selfe out of which the inferior world was made is here in my Text said to be created by God And this is confirmed by reason drawn from the nature of God and his Name Jehovah For God as this Name signifieth is an absolute essence of himselfe and the first being of all and the Author of all being Therefore every thing which is or hath being must needs be of him and be his creature The sixth point in the description is the matter out of which God created all things under which we comprehend two things First the matter improperly so called or Terminum à quo from whence God brought the first being of all things immediately And that was either negative even nothing or their not being at all or positive their being in Gods eternall purpose onely This was the first matter which God had to worke upon in the first immediate act of creation Secondly the matter properly so called that is either the rude masse made of nothing which was without forme and void or the foure Elements which had in them no forme or being of the things created and so were as nothing in respect of that being which God gave to every particular thing which he made of them For proofe of this we have a plain testimonie Heb. 11. 3. where the Apostle saith By faith we underst and that the worlds were framed by the word of God So that the things which are seen were not made of things which doe appeare Here it is plaine that hee speakes 1. Of creation in generall in that hee saith The worlds were framed 2. In that he denies the visible world to be made of any naturall things which doe appeare to any sense hereby hee shewes that their first matter was made of
labour and motion nor from idlenesse to businesse nor from strength to faintnesse or wearinesse nor from perfect to more perfect neither was any good added to him by the creation For as Saint James saith though every good and perfect gift is from above and cometh downe from God the Father of lights yet with him there is no variablenesse or shadow of change Jam. 1. 17. And Isa. 40. 20. Hast thou not knowne saith the Prophet hast thou not heard that the everlasting God the Lord the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary there is no searching of his wisdome he giveth power to the faint c. Yea it were against all reason to thinke that God could be weary or faint in the creation in which he gave not onely all strength but also being to all things And seeing in the creation God did nothing but what hee willed and purposed so to doe and then to doe when he purposed and as he had willed to doe and seeing hee was infinite and all sufficient and most blessed in himselfe from all eternity if creation could not adde any perfection to him or any glory it onely revealed his glory upon others and communicated his goodnesse to them without change in himselfe or addition to his essence If any object and say that God by creation became Lord and Possessour of all creatures which being good were pleasant to him and therefore something was added to him even Lordship Dominion and Delight I answer that God in himselfe and before his owne eyes had all things actually present to him from all eternity and as sole Lord did possesse them before they had any being in themselves and therefore the addition in the creation was not to him but to the things created to which hee gave being and when hee created things in time according to his eternall purpose he received nothing to himselfe but gave to all things their being and their goodnesse 4. The fourth particular wherein the forme and manner of creation doth consist is this That things were created and brought into perfect being without any delay at all even in a moment of time and that creation is not a successive forming of things by alteration and change which requires some tract of time but a making of them perfect in a moment and bringing of them at once into perfect being This is intimated in this Chapter where wee reade that Gods creating was but this Hee said Let things be and they were that is hee made them in a moment as it were by a word and so quickly and readily as a word is spoken To which adde the testimony of David Psal. 33. 9. God spake and the e●rth was made he commanded and it stood fast And Psal. 148. 5. where hee saith of the heavens and of the Heaven of heavens and the Sun Moon and Starres that God commanded and they were created And indeed this is manifest by reason drawne from the nature of creation which is a making of things out of nothing and giving a forme and being which was not even in things which were made of matter before created as wee see in the foure Elements and in things brought out of them there was something even the substantiall forme of them made immediately of nothing now between the being of something and nothing there is no medium or intermiddle state therefore every thing created was created in an instant though many in a day and divers kinds one after another and not altogether in the same moment The eight and last thing in the description is the end of the creation to wit Gods revealing himselfe and communicating his glory throughout all ages of the world and for ever This is confirmed divers waies in holy Scripture First by testimonies which affirme that for God and his glory all things were made that is for the revelation and communion of God and his glory Pro. 16. 4. God hath made all things for himselfe even the wicked for the day of wrath And Isa. 43. 7. I have called him for my glory And Ver 21. This people have I formed for my selfe they shall shew forth my praise And Rom. 11. 36. For of him and by him and to him are all things Secondly by testimonies which shew that in the event creation doth turne to Gods glory for the revealing of him to the comfort of his Saints as Psal. 8. 1. and 19. 1 2. where it is said that the beholding of the creation makes Gods Name excellent And the Heavens declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy-worke For certainly that which in time proves to bee the end that God propounded as an end before all times for hee is infinite in wisdome and providence Thirdly the holy men of God moved by Gods Spirit exhort all people to praise God for his workes of creation and pray that they may apply them to that end as Psal. 145. 10. Let all thy workes praise thee O Lord. And Psal. 148. 5. Let them praise the Name of the Lord for hee commanded and they were created Thus much for the confirmation of the description and every point of doctrine therein contained I come to the use First this doctrine serves for direction and instruction divers waies in that it shewes God to bee the author of creation and creation to be his outward worke and all things to be made by him Hereby first it leads us in a ready way to come to the knowledge of Gods wisdome power goodnesse and such like excellent attributes even by directing us to behold God in them and to discerne his eternall power and Godhead that hee is not like the Idols and false gods of the Heathen but a God of eternity before all things and all times because hee is the Creatour of them all And that whatsoever excellency is in any creature it is in God above all measure And therefore when wee see the mighty masse of the world let us thinke how great is hee which made this of nothing When we see the glory of the Sun Moon and Starres and of the whole Heavens let us thinke how glorious is hee who made this glory When wee discerne the goodnesse sweetnesse power and vertue which is in things created let us conceive that all these are without measure in God and in all excellency Secondly by this consideration it teacheth us that God onely is the true Lord and Possessour of heaven and earth worthy to be honoured served and worshipped of all and to be sought unto by praier and that all thankes are to bee given to him for all good things that hee hath right and power to dispose all things at his pleasure to whom hee will and that wee ought not to murmure at his disposing neither hath any man right to any thing but by his gift and his permission Secondly this Doctrine serves for confutation 1. Of Philosophers who held that the World was not
the Scriptures plainly testifie that God founded the world in wisdome Prov. 3. 19. that in wisdome hee hath made all things Psal. 104. 24. and that wisdome had an hand in ordering all things Prov. 8. Therefore the creation of the World was in perfect beauty and comelinesse 3. The third thing which we learne from these names is That the deformity of the world the enmity of creatures the corruption of man and the confusion of things created were not in the world nor in the creatures thereof at the first neither are they Gods handy-worke nor things by him created for the world is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a beautifull frame And the Scriptures call the worlds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things of being and continuance not things deformed corrupt and perishing This also the Scriptures shew Gen. 3. that the earth was cursed for mans sake and mans sinne came from himselfe and the Serpent And Deut. 28. 23. and Levit. 26. God himselfe in the Law professeth that for disobedience and sin of rebellious people hee doth make their heaven over them as brasse and their earth as iron And Eccl. 7. 29. it is said that God made man upright but they have sought out many inventions I might here also observe from the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the world was also made in a beautifull and pleasant season even the pleasant time of the Spring in all probability but I love not to build opinions on such weake foundations And from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies long lasting ages I might observe the ages of the world and discusse the question about the ages and years from the creation but they may more seasonably be touched hereafter when we come to speake of the particular branches of the creation Now I come to the Use of these considerations First they serve to make the thoughts and conceits of Atheists and carnall Philosophers hatefull to us to wit that the world is eternall and had no beginning neither shall have end For here wee see that all things universally were created of nothing and are creatures formed by God It is a point of faith above all naturall reason to understand that the worlds were made of nothing as the Apostle shewes Heb. 11. 3. And that was it which made Aristotle and other witty and learned Philosophers led by reason doubt of the creation of the world Beside when they observed the stability of the heavens and heavenly host and their beautifull order and incorruptible being this did further them in this conceipt and made them thinke there should be no end of it But Gods Word teacheth the contrary and sheweth that all things were created and made out of nothing except only God himselfe and though they were made perfect and good fit to flourish for ever and some of them have still a great remnant of that glory and perfection as the heavens which change little in many ages yet by mans sin they are corrupted and made changeable and so much more by how much more neere they come to man And this the Philosophers felt and perceived insomuch that many of them did acknowledge the creation and the end of the world and even Aristotle himselfe though he could not conceive that the world should be made of nothing by the course of nature yet hee did acknowledge God the Father Maker and Preserver of it and so likewise shall all be confounded who are not settled in this truth Therefore let us looke up to God and beleeve his Word and hate all blind conceipts of worldly wise men and see and behold in the most rationall and wise naturall men denying this truth of the worlds creation that the wisdome of the world is foolishnesse and the imaginations of the flesh enmity against God Secondly this consideration of creation and beginning of all the world serves to make us more admire Gods eternity and to ravish us with the consideration of it If there could be a man found on earth who had lived ever since the time of Christ or since the daies of Adam or Noah wee would highly esteem him and seeke to him from the uttermost parts of the earth as the Queen of Sheba did to Solomon But behold all this world is but of short continuance created of God not many thousands of yeares ago God is before it even from all eternity And this world shall perish but he endureth for ever Psal. 102. And therefore if wee wonder at the long lasting heavens and the surely founded earth how much more ought we to admire the eternitie of God the ancient of daies before all daies and times and without beginning or end Thirdly though this world be beautifull by reason of some reliques of perfection and beauty remaining from the creation yet seeing it had a beginning and is corrupted by sin and hastens towards an end let us not set our hearts on it or any worldly thing but looke up to God and have our hope and our affections firmly set on him whose beauties of holinesse shall not fade as the fashion of this world doth but his glory endureth for ever Fourthly we may here see that the world was created for us for our use not for any need which God had of it for God was infinitely blessed in himselfe without it from all eternity and certainly in that God did not create it and time with it many thousands of yeares before he did this is a strong evidence that God is all-sufficient in himselfe and hath for himselfe no need of any creature Lastly it serves to make us hate sin as the Divels poyson and turne from it and be affraid to communicate with it as wee doe with things created by God because it is not of Gods forming but is the corruption of mans nature poysoned and defaced and all enmity which is among the creatures vexing and destroying one another came in by sin and all the pleasure which men take therein is corrupt sinfull and against pure nature Wherefore let us ascribe all deformity disorder and discord in the world to mans sin as the proper cause thereof CHAP. III. Of Creation immediate and mediate The Hebrew words expounded Sundry Doctrines proposed and made usefull Some questions discussed 1. Of the time of the yeare wherein the world was created 2. Of the number of the yeares since this was Of the highest heavens 5. points proposed THe creation and creature in generall being described out of these words and the rest of the history of the creation in this and the next Chapter I proceed to the severall parts and speciall branches of the creation which I will unfold in that order in which they are here laid downe and will describe the severall kinds of creatures which God created together with the state and condition wherein God created them The worke of creation considered in generall comprehends in it two speciall branches as I have noted
Evangelist useth them doe signifie eternity but in that he saith The Word was that is had already a being with God in the beginning when hee began to give being to all other things this proves by necessary consequence that the Word was eternall and therefore the common exposition stands sure that here the word Bereshith signifies the beginning or first part of time The second word of this Text that is Bara created signifies the giving of first being to all things either simply out of nothing or out of matter undisposed for the forme introduced as I have noted before And by a Metaphor it signifies great and mighty workes which resemble the creation but here it signifies absolute creation or giving the first being to the highest heavens and to the rude masse or matter of the visible world out of meere nothing for they were created of no matter before existing as all doe hold and of their creation onely this Verse speakes That the third word Elohim being of the plurall number signifies three persons in one God the Creatour and that the creation was the worke of all the three persons in the Trinity I have before shewed Here let mee adde further a Cabalisticall proofe gathered from the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the act of creation and consists of three Hebrew letters which are the first letters of the three Hebrew words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifie the Father the Son and the Spirit And therefore if the Caballisticall art be of any credit this act of creating is the work of all the three persons the Father the Son and the holy Spirit one and the same God The two last words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heaven and the earth do here signifie as I have noted before the highest heaven and the earth which was without forme and void that is the rude masse and common matter of the visible world Some learned men do by heaven and earth understand the whole world in the same sense as the words are Chapt. 2. 1. By heaven they conceive the highest heaven the visible starry heaven and the whole firmament of the aire to be meant by earth the lowest globe of the earth which hath the sea intermingled with it and by creating they understand the whole worke of creation in generall and not that first speciall act by which God made the highest heavens and the rude masse and matter of the visible world onely The main reason which they have to prove this is drawn from the Hebrew Articles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is joyned with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is prefixed before the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 earth The first of which Articles consists of the first and last letter of the Hebrew Alphabet and so implies an universall comprehension of all things which were created both the first and the last The other to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is of plaine demonstration and sheweth that this heaven and earth as they now stand are said to be created here in these words But this exposition is plainly overthrown by the Text it selfe and the reason answered without any difficulty First the act of creation spoken of and intended in this Verse is that which was performed in the beginning that is in the first moment of time so the Text affirmes but the whole world and all creatures in heaven and earth were not made in the first moment of time nor in the first day but in sixe daies therefore the whole world is not meant in these words nor all creatures in heaven and earth Secondly if the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be of generall comprehension then each of these words should signifie the whole world for it is added to each of them and so the other word should be superfluous in this place Thirdly we may safely grant that these words are of generall comprehension and yet we need not expound them of any other heaven then the highest heaven nor of any other earth then the first rude masse out of which the whole visible world was made which was without forme and void as it is testified in the next words Verse 2. For this heaven did comprehend in it the highest heaven and all the host and inhabitants of it the Angels actually And this earth or rude masse did potentially comprehend in it the whole visible world which afterwards in the sixe daies was actually formed out of it and therefore I take this to be the best exposition to understand by the heaven the highest heaven onely where the Angels and blessed Saints have their dwelling together with the host thereof And by the earth to understand as the next Verse sheweth the rude masse out of which God after formed the whole visible and mutable world consisting of the starry heavens and of the aire water and earth with all things in them As for them who here by heaven and earth understand the whole world actually formed and made and them who understand the common seed and rude matter of the heavens both highest and invisible and also the visible heavens and the inferiour world they exclude out of this history of the creation the distinct and speciall narration of the creation of the highest heavens and of the glorious host thereof the Angels and super-celestiall Spirits contrary to that which Moses himselfe plainly teacheth Chapt. 2. 1. where repeating summarily the whole creation in generall which he had before distinctly related and in all the parts thereof described in the first Chapter he saith Thus were the heavens and the earth finished and all the host of them that is the Angels among the rest for they are called the heavenly host Luke 2. 13. From the words thus expounded we may gather an excellent description of the first speciall act of creation which is called simple and absolute creation and of the two particular branches thereof to wit That it is that act of creation whereby God in the first beginning did create and give the first being out of nothing to the highest heavens and to the earth that is the first rude masse and matter of the visible world The parts of this act are two The first is that act of simple creation by which God created out of nothing and gave a most perfect glorious being to the highest heaven and to all things therein contained The second is that act of simple creation by which God gave the first imperfect being to that rude earth the masse which was the common matter out of which hee formed the whole inferiour visible and mutable world In this description of the first act of simple creation and of each branch thereof wee may observe foure things The first is the matter both generall and speciall laid downe in the word Bara created Secondly the author of it God the Father Sonne and
which seem to eclipse the truth The most weighty Objections are gathered from Scripture termes and phrases as for example from the name which the Scripture giveth to the world and the ages thereof to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which comes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifies a being alwaies for so the world is called Heb. 11. 3. Also 2 Tim. 1. 9. and Tit. 1. 2. the times of the world are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting times as the Greek words signifie The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting is two waies taken in Scripture and in humane writings also First it signifies an eternall being without beginning or end even a being before and after all times and so God onely is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting 1 Tim. 6. 16. and the Spirit is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eternall Heb. 9. 14. Secondly this word signifies a being in all times from the first beginning to the last end of time but no more not before nor after and thus the world and the ages thereof are called everlasting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The places objected prove this sense because in them the Apostle sheweth that these everlasting times had something going before them and were but times which have a beginning and end And therefore these objected places make much for this doctrine and not against it The Objections of Aristotle are drawne 1. from incorruptibility which he imagined to be in the heavens 2. from this that the world was not generated nor made of any pre-existent matter neither could be brought into being by any naturall generation 3. from the eternity of motion which he thought to prove by this That no motion can be found in nature but hath another motion going before it All these may easily be answered for first the heavens are corruptible by nature and the visible heavens shall perish and that the highest heavens are incorruptible it is not by power of their nature but of the will of God preserving them Secondly though the world was not made of matter pre-existent nor by naturall generation yet it may have a beginning supernaturall being created miraculously of nothing by Gods omnipotent hand as all miraculous things are done which neverthelesse are not eternall nor endure for ever Thirdly though in naturall things we find no motion which hath not another motion going before it yet it is not so in the creation which was a worke farre above the course of nature so that these Objections are of no force to disprove this doctrine All that Aristotle with his subtle wit could devise was nothing but this That the world was not made by the course of nature neither did come into being by naturall generation nor was framed out of an eternall masse of matter as Plato and other Philosophers dreamed Also that there was no time before the world neither shall there be any time wherein the world shall not be and that the world is as durable and lasteth as long as all times all which we grant without feare and yet it doth not follow that the world is eternall For that is properly eternall which never had beginning neither in time nor with time nor before time but as for time it selfe it hath a beginning and an end as I shall shew in the next place Therefore let us hate and abhorre all Atheisticall dreames of the worlds eternity The second thing which I observe from this word Bereshith in the beginning which signifieth in this place the first being or moment of time is this That time it selfe is but an adjunct or circumstance of things created and had a beginning and shall have an end with the mutable and moveable world For proofe of this we need seek no further but to the fifth Verse where it is said The evening and the morning were the first day that is time was produced by the Word of God even the first day together with the things therein created and so it followes of all the daies of the first weeke they are said to be made with the workes created in them And indeed in reason it must needs be so because time is nothing else but the continuance of things created and the measure of the motions which are in the created world a day is the measure of the Suns course from East to West and round about to the East againe An houre is the time in which the Sun runs the foure and twentieth part of his dayes motion A weeke is the space of seven daies and a yeare the time whi●e the Sun goeth his course through the twelve Signes of the Zodiack and the whole time of the world consists of yeares moneths and daies Now all these had a beginning and have an end yea there was no day till light and darknesse were made and distinguished no moneth nor yeare till the Sunne and the Moon were set in their course therefore time had a beginning and is not eternall There were some things before all times and ages of the world 2 Tim. 1. 9. Tit. 1. 2. First this serves to admonish us to cast off all vaine thoughts and imaginations of time going before the creation of the world It is the folly of many when they reade of the worlds creation but so many thousand yeares ago to dreame of time before creation and to question what God did in that time A witty old man did once answer this question as Saint Austin saith rather tauntingly then solidly viz. That God in those times was making an hell for such curious inquisitors But the true answer is there was no time nor any thing to be done in time but God was only in himselfe most blessed by contemplation of himselfe in absolute eternity in which there is neither before nor after no beginning nor end For where there was no day nor night nor haven to move nor any thing to be measured by time there could be no time at all Secondly this truth serves to make us see our owne vanity and the weaknesse of our owne reason and understanding Let a man of the strongest braine and wit and the deepest reach in the world doe what he can and strive and straine to the utmost he shall not by hum●ne reason and capacity conceive how any thing can be without time How God could be before the world when there was no time or what eternity should be but a long time without beginning or end And yet this is Gods truth as my Text saith which cannot lye that time was not till the creation Let us therefore here learne to see our owne weaknesse and the short reach of our reason Let us acknowledge that while wee have our soules imprisoned in our mortall bodies looking onely through the narrow grates of our outward senses we shall never be able to see or to comprehend things spirituall and eternall so as they are And let
this put us in mind to be humble here and to rest in hope that the eternity and the eternall joyes of heaven are such as neither eye hath seen nor eare heard nor mans heart conceived And let us labour to walke by faith and not by sight as the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 5. 7. So much for the Doctrines There be also two questions which here offer themselves to be discussed The first is What time of the yeare the world was created and which day moneth were the first of the world without the knowledge of this we cannot exactly tell how long it is since the world was created The second is How long it is since that first beginning wherein God created the heavens and the earth For Moses doth carefully set them downe untill his time and so also doe the succeeding Prophets which sheweth that this knowledge is not to be neglected For the first question Some hold that the world was created in September in the time of the Autumnall equinoctiall Others that it was created in the Spring time and in March when the day and night are equall and of one length in all the world Both these opinions are maintained by reasons and arguments produced out of Gods Word but the reasons which are brought to prove the latter opinion I conceive to be more strong and solide and therefore I doe incline to beleeve that the world was created in the Spring time and not in Autumne and that others may be better confirmed in this truth I will propound the reasons on both sides and will answer the one and confirme the other The maine Arguments which tend to prove that the world was created in September are foure especially The first because September was from the beginning observed and accounted for the first moneth of the yeare both by the Israelites and Forefathers and also by the Egyptians and other Nations For Exod. 12. 2. it appeares that March for a speciall reason was made the first moneth to the Israelites because in that moneth they came out of Egypt And that till then both they and the Egyptians accounted September the first moneth I answer that the Egyptians did erroneously begin their yeare in Autumne and the Israelites living with them did for civill respects follow their account And therefore when they were to depart out of Egypt God did both reach and command them the right observation in Abib or March Exod. 12. 2. and called them to the true ancient and originall forme of beginning the yeare in the Vernall equinoctiall which is in Abib that is March Yea the Caldeans and Persians who were of better credit then the Egyptians did alwaies from the beginning account March the first moneth of the yeare therefore this Argument is of no force Secondly they argue that September was the moneth wherein the yeare of Rest and the yeare of Jubile did begin by Gods appointment as appeares Levit. 25. 9. for on the tenth day of that moneth God commanded the Israelites to sound the Trumpet of Jubile in all the land and so to begin their yeare of Jubile and Release Therefore that is the true beginning from the creation I answer to this two waies First that as the yeare of Rest was not the first but the seventh and the last of the seven and the yeare of Jubile was the next year after seven Sabbaths of years So the Lord did still follow the number of seven and would have it begin in September because it was the seventh moneth and not the first by the order of creation Secondly the moneth of September when all the fruit is taken from the ground and men begin to sow and plant for the next yeare is the fittest time for to begin the yeare of Rest and of Jubile wherein every man was to re-enter into his land which he had sold as appeares Vers. 10 11. and this was the cause of beginning in September not because it was the first moneth of the world and of the yeare reckoned from the creation but because it was the fittest for men to give up the land empty to the owners when they had gathered in the corne and fruit and cleared the ground and so this Argument is of no force Thirdly they argue That the time wherein all things naturally come to prefection is most likely to be the time wherein God created the world and all things therein perfect in their kind and that is Autumne and September as experience teacheth Therefore it is most likely to be the first moneth from the creation This Argument is divers waies defective First the state of the world in the creation was far different from that state of things which now is ever since mans fall and corruption Then all times were both Spring and Harvest and trees did both blossome and beare perfect fruit at all times of the yeare Therefore no certaine Argument can arise from this ground Secondly if any time be more perfect then another and retaine perfection from the creation it is most likely to be the Spring time for in the Spring all things begin to revive and shoot forth of the earth as they did in the creation then are the fields most fresh and green and full of beautifull flowers as in the state of innocency And as for Summer and Harvest they doe but ripen things which the Spring hath quickened and nourished and hasten them to corruption and not to perfection causing them to die and wither Yea verily if the earth had not been cursed for mans sin it would now bring forth in the Spring not onely flowers and blossomes and Spring fruits but also all other kinds of fruit Therefore this is a weak Argument As for their fourth Argument which is Cabalisticall drawne from the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth in September agreeing with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth in the beginning in the same letters I have answered it before and shewed that they differ in one letter to wit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore it is but a fallacie But now for the beginning of the yeare naturally in the moneth of March which is called by the Hebrewes Abib and Nisan as being the moneth in which the world was created and that the world was created in the Vernall equinoctiall when day and night were equall in all the world divers of the Ancients affirme and hold as Athanasius Ambrose Theodoret Cyril Damascene Beda and others and with them many judicious and learned Divines of later times doe concurre as Junius Polanus and others Their reasons are very strong forcible and convincing which cannot be gain-said First they prove it out of the Scriptures Gen. 8. 13. where that moneth is called the first of the yeare by account from the creation wherein the waters were dried up from the earth and it began to bring forth fruit for Noah and the
creatures with him so that in the next moneth there was food for him the creatures and birds and beasts began to breed and multiply in the earth Now that could not be in September and October when the fruits and herbes begin to decay and wither Certainly Noah turned not out the creatures against Winter to seek food from the earth that was no time to breed aboundantly It is March wherein the earth begins to bring forth and April the second moneth is that wherein the creatures comming out of the Arke might find grasse herbes and other food and Noah might sow and plant against Summer and Harvest Therefore undoubtedly March is the first moneth from the creation Secondly they prove it from Exod. 12. 2. where God recalls the Israelites from the Egyptian observation to the old beginning of the yeare from the creation and to account Abib or March the first moneth as the Text sheweth Thirdly the Spring time is every way fittest for the beginning of the world and of the naturall yeare then things begin to flourish in all the earth as they did in the creation then is the aire most temperate and healthfull for the bodies of men as it was in the creation then day and night are equall in all the world and the daies begin to grow longer then the night in the country of Eden and Babylonia which was the place of Paradise where Adam was created But in September daies begin to shorten and all herbes to wither and fruits to fall from the trees Therefore March is the fittest moneth for the time of the creation Fourthly the Caldeans Persians and all cunning Astronomers did by their art and skill discerne and by tradition from the first fathers were taught that March was the first moneth of the year and that in the Spring time the world was created To these let me adde one Argument more drawne from the incarnation and passion of Christ For it is most likely that the moneth in which God appointed Christ to be incarnate by conception in the wombe of the Virgin and also to suffer for the worlds redemption was the moneth and season of the yeare in which the world was created For so the time in which God sent forth his Son made of a woman and made under the Law and to redeem them that were under the Law comes to be the fulnesse of time as the Apostle calls it Galat. 4. 4. Now this was the moneth of March for Christ being borne on the shortest day of the yeare as Saint Austen and the Ancients who lived within a few ages after Christ by tradition had learned and did teach must needs be conceived in March nine moneths before in the Vernall equinoctiall And in the same moneth hee suffered for our redemption and rising from death triumphed over death the Divell and all the powers of darknesse even at the time of the Passover as the Gospel testifieth which feast was kept in the first moneth Abib Exod. 12. 2. and 13. 4. that is in March as all confesse And so we see Gods performing of his promise in the fulnesse of time was his keeping of his word to a day giving Christ to be conceived in the very day of the yeare wherein he was promised to our first parents and to suffer for Adams sinne in the same day of the weeke and of the moneth in which Adam was made and marr'd by sin as some of the learned Fathers have observed Even as he delivered Israel out of Egypt at the end of 430. yeares on the selfe same day when the terme of yeares was accomplished Exod. 12. 41. Therefore I conceive that the time of the creation and of the fall of our first Parents and of the first promise of Christ was in the same first moneth in which he was conceived and also perfected mans redemption that is in Abib the moneth of March and so he was sent forth in fulnesse of time as the Apostle saith The second question which ariseth from the word Beginning is about the number of yeares which have been since the creation For if there was a beginning of things in which the world was created as the Text here sheweth then there must be a certaine number of yeares since that beginning which number if we can find out and prove from Scripture it will much confirme us in the truth of the creation and of the whole History of Gods Word Now about this number of years there is much difference among the learned but the best computation is that which is grounded on those testimonies of Scripture which doe most excellently chaine together the holy Chronicle and by that computation the world was created 3960. yeares before the death of Christ and the day of Adams fall being upon the sixth day of the weeke even towards the evening of the same day wherein he was created was that day 3960. yeares before the day of Christs death which also was on the sixth day of the weeke in the same moneth of the yeare To confirme us in this truth wee have most excellent testimonies of Scripture First the age of Adam when he begat Seth counted together with the ages of the succeeding fathers before the birth of their succeeding sons make up in all unto the birth of Noah from Adams creation 1056. years Gen. 5. and from Noahs birth to the Floud is 600. yeares that is in all 1656. yeares from the Creation to the Floud Arphaxad the son of Shem borne two yeares after the Floud Gen. 11. 10. his birth as the ages of the Fathers from him to Terah there reckoned doe shew was before Terah's death 425. yeares Now the two yeares between his birth and the Floud together with the said number of 425. being added to the yeares before the Floud make up from the creation to the death of Terah 2083. yeares Immediately after Terah's death God called Abraham and removed him out of Charan into the land of Canaan but gave him no inheritance therein but onely promised to give it to him and his seed for a possession Act. 7. 4 5. and that in his seed all the families of the earth should be blessed Gen. 12. 1 2 3. and this promise was 430. yeares before the Law was given by Moses Galat. 3. 17. which was immediately after the departure of Israel out of Egypt that is the fiftieth day after when they and their fathers from Abrahams first peregrination in Canaan had sojourned 430. years Exod. 12. 40. And from Israels coming out of Egypt to the building of the Temple in the fourth yeare of Solomons reigne is 480. yeares 1 Kin 6. 1. from thence to the death of Solomon is 36. yeares Then Israel departed from Judah and continued 390. yeares in their iniquities Ezech. 4. 1 2. to the destruction of Jerusalem and burning of the Temple 19. yeares after the beginning of the 70. yeares captivity from the end of which captivity to Christs
death is seventy sevens of yeares Daniel 9. that is 490. yeares all which make 3960. yeares from the creation Now from Christs death which was in the 33. yeare of his age or 33. after his birth it is in this present yeare 1623. the full number of 1590. yeares which being added to 3960. before Christs death make from the creation 5550. yeares Now this computation of yeares together with the clearing of the former question may serve First to discover unto us divers waies the admirable providence of God in that he doth so order all things that the time of the incarnation of Christ the second Adam should fall in the same moneth with the creation of the first Adam and the day of redemption from sinne and death should be the same day of the week and of the moneth with the day of Adams falling into sin and bringing all mankind into bondage to hell and death And that in the holy Scriptures which were written by holy men of God in severall ages the true computation of times and yeares should be put upon record and reserved and kept safe through all ages untill this day in the midst of so many dangers and among so many alterations and changes which have happened in the world Surely he who is so provident in ordering the circumstance of times and preserving the records of them even his holy Oracles when the Nation of Jewes to whom they were committed in trust is cast off and scattered over all the earth will much more keep his promises and fulfill all prophecies and predictions every one in the set time and season which he hath appointed Secondly this exact record of times and of the very moneth of the creation and of the redemption serves to confirme us in the verity and truth of those things which are written concerning the beginning and creation of the world and the redemption of mankind by Jesus Christ comming in the exact fulnesse of time to redeem the world according to Gods promises when severall witnesses or writers who never conferred nor consulted one with another doe agree in their relations not only in the maine matters but in the circumstances of time also no man can have any least pretence or colour of doubting And thus doe the writers of the holy Scriptures who lived in severall ages they exactly agree in the histories of creation and redemption even to the circumstances of times the very daies and moneths wherein they were performed And therefore let us firmly beleeve them and rest on the truth of them for we have sure grounds of beleeving but not any pretence or colour of doubting Thirdly hereby it is made manifest that the world being created in time and onely so long ago as is before shewed was made onely for us and for our benefit who live under time and not for the eternall God to adde any good or any blessednesse to him who was all-sufficient and most blessed in himselfe from all eternity and both could and would have made the world millions of yeares before if it might have been profitable to himselfe Wherefore let us hereby be stirred up to use the world as a gift and as talents given to us by God to be well imployed and study to honour him by all worldly things created Fourthly hereby we may justly be moved to admire the eternity of God when we see the whole time of the world to be but 5550. yeares which are before him but as 5. daies and an halfe For a thousand yeares with him are but as one day 2 Pet. 3. 8. Wherefore as holy David when hee compared Gods eternity with the temporary being of the heavens and the earth and their inclining to decay and changes like a vesture and wearing garment did admire Gods infinite and eternall Majesty So let us all be after the same manner affected with reverence of God and admiration of his eternity when we compare the ages of the world even the longest of them the thousands of yeares since the creation to be but as so many daies with the Lord who liveth and abideth the same for ever The fourth thing in this Text is the object and effect of Gods first worke of creation to wit the heavens and the earth First the Heavens come to be considered together with the creatures here comprehended under that name and that these things may more plainly appeare to our understanding we must first search and sift out the true sense and signification of the word Heaven in this Text and then come to the instructions which doe thence naturally arise The name by which it hath pleased the Spirit of God in this place to call the Heavens is in the Originall Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shamajim concerning the signification and Etymologie whereof the learned much differ among themselves Some make it a compound of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth there and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth waters because above in the aire which is the lowest and nearest heaven and in the clouds water is engendered and in showres distills from thence Some compound it of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is fire and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters because the heavens seem to be made of both the Sun Moon and Starres resemble fire and the rest of the heavens resemble calme and still waters Some derive this name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies astonishment because if a man doe stedfastly behold and consider either the glory or the wonderfull height and compasse of the heavens they are things which will dazle his eyes and make his heart astonished But the best derivation of the word which is grounded upon the best reasons is that which some late Writers have observed to wit that it is derived of the simple Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth there and is never used but when we speake of being in a place which is remote and distant from us For as the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here signifies the place present so this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there signifies a place remote and distant from us and the being of things there in that place Now the heavens are the utmost and most remote place from the earth which is set in the middle and about the center of the round world and upon which men doe live in this world Therefore this derivation doth agree very aptly to the heavens Secondly of a place which is most excellent wee are wont to say There there is the best being and in a kind of vehement and affectionate speech we use to double the word And heaven is the most excellent place and therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is of the duall number and signifies as much as There there or there double is most fitly derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there Thirdly the heavens are divided most properly into two heavens
use for comfort and confidence to all the elect and faithfull people of God in the midst of all troubles which befall them in this life and when dangers and worldly enemies beset them round about also for confirmation and strengthening of them against all the assaults and temptations of the Divell For if the glorious Angels which are ministering spirits for their good which also love them rejoyce at their conversion watch for their safety and are their fellow servants under one Lord Christ be such heavenly powerfull and active spirits even by creation so excellent in strength so lively quick and ready at hand to help in a moment when God gives the watch-word what need we feare or faint so long as wee cleave to God and sticke to his truth Hee is a tender and loving father and Christ our high Priest hath a feeling of our infirmities and doth pity us he will be ready to help and he hath mighty instruments and ministers even thousands and ten thousand thousands ready to save and deliver us from all enemies as he did Daniel from the Lyons and his three fellowes from the fiery furnace Or if hee doth not send them to deliver us out of the troubles of this life yet hee will at our death send his Angels to carry our soules with triumph to heaven as Eliah was carried up in a fiery Chariot and the soule of Lazarus is said to bee carried up by them into Abrahams bosome Wherefore let us not feare either multitude malice or might of enemies but carefully serve God and confidently rest on the Lord Christ our Redeemer and Saviour Secondly These Doctrines serve to discover divers errours concerning the nature and substance of Angels as that grosse opinion of Peter Lombard who held that the Angels are corporeall substances because the Divell and evill Angels shall suffer the torment and feele the paines of hell fire which hath no power but over bodily creatures Also that opinion of the Gentiles and Cardanus who held that the Angels were mortall and corruptible creatures both these are here discovered to be erroneous For the first is builded on a grosse conceipt that the fire of hell is elementall and corporcall fire which as it burneth and consumeth bodily substances over which it hath power so it in time wasteth it selfe and goeth out but indeed the fire of Hell is the fire of Gods wrath which burneth and tormenteth worse then elementarie fire but consumeth not neither shall ever be quenched as our Saviour testifieth The second opinion is also confuted by these doctrines which have proved Angels to be spirits or spirituall substances which though they may bee stained with sin yet they cannot bee dissolved as men are in death by the separation of soule and body not corrupted as mens bodies are in the grave but the evill Angells shall live in eternall torment and their substance shall never be corrupted and consumed and the holy and blessed Angels are immortall and shall live in glory for ever and there shall be no end of their blessednesse CHAP. V. Of the Creation of the Earth The names whereby it is called Properties of it All creatures have being of God with Vses The World is all mutable and appointed so to be Vses The creation and redemption of the World wherein they resemble one another Vses The holy Ghost is of one and the same nature with the Father and the Sonne THe Second thing created next after the highest heaven with the inhabitants thereof the Angels is the Earth as my text here faith in these wordes and the Earth But wee must not here understand by Earth this earth or drie land upon which men and beasts doe live and move and have their being and which is beautified and adorned with trees plants greene herbes and flowers and replenished with stones and metals of all sorts For that was created together with the waters of the Sea and brought into forme and replenished in the third day as appeares in the 9. 10. 11. verses of this Chapter But here by Earth wee are to understand a certaine rude matter and masse without forme and void out of which God made all the inferiour visible World and all things therein contained so the wordes following in the second verse plainely shew The earth was without forme and void and darknesse was upon the face of the deep Now that wee may know what creature this Earth was wee are to consider these 3 things First the severall names by which it is called Secondly the properties by which it is described Thirdly the meanes by which it was upheld in being and disposed to bee the common matter of all othervisible things created afterwards First the names by which it is called are three 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the earth 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deep 3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters First it is called the earth because of the grossenesse unmoveablenesse and impurity of it For the earth is of all elements most grosse heavy impure and confused not fit to move out of the place wherein it is most untractable and not ready to apply it selfe to any other thing and hard to bee turned into the forme of other things without labour and working of it This first rude and informed masse which God created out of nothing is here declared by this name Earth to have beene like the earth very impure and confused dull and unfit for motion resembling at the first the earth rather then any purer element Secondly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the deep here also in the text which word signifies a great deep or devouring gulfe as it were of troubled waters also troubled and confounded with mixture of mud and myre which though in respect of the troubled mixture and confusion it hath a resemblance of earth yet it is bottomlesse there is no solidity in it no ground or stay to bee found at all Thus much the Hebrew word signifies according to the notation and common use of it Thirdly it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 waters also in this text because of the waterish fluxibility which was in it by meanes of which it was unstable and unsettled and also because it was an huge deep like the great waters of the Sea Now it may seeme strange that this one and the same rude masse should bee like earth and like a bottomlesse depth of myre or quick-sand and like waters all at once which are things different and unlike one to another especially the thinne flowing element of water and the grosse dull unmoveable earth And therefore the learned Expositors labour thus to qualifie the meaning of the words they say it was a confused masse even the matter of all the elements mingled together and because the earth and water are the most grosse and impure and did most of all appeare in it therefore it is called earth and water and the deep which is a
man lost by sin even heavenly glory and immortality yet all this profits nothing without the work of the Spirit Christ with all his sufferings and obedience unto death and all his righteousnesse and fullfilling of the law are as a Fountaine sealed up and treasures hid and locked up in darknesse so that none can partake of him or them for redemption and salvation without communion of the holy Ghost which God in our regeneration doth shed on us aboundantly through Christ. This Spirit dwelling in Christ and the faithfull makes them one mysticall body with Christ sons and heires of God makes his satisfaction their ransome for actuall redemption and reconciliation and his righteousnes their righteousnes for justification This Spirit also doth renue them after the image of God and transformes them into the image of Christ in all holinesse that they may bee fit to see and enjoy God and thus hee brings them to the fruition of perfect blessednesse and to the inheritance incorruptible and undefiled which never fadeth And Gods blessings are through Christs mediation poured out upon all creatures for their sakes And hereupon it is that all gifts and graces which tend to make men perfect and unchangably blessed are ascribed to the Spirit as wisedome knowledge faith hope love meekenesse patience courage strength prayer and in a word all holinesse and perfection and whensoever God is said to give any of these gifts to men in an effectuall and saving manner and measure hee is said to give them the Spirit of grace wisedome zeale and supplication as appeares Isa. 11. 2. Zach. 12. 10. Yea common illumination and all extraordinary supernaturall gifts which are given to unregenerate reprobates for the revealing of Christ as the gift of prophecie to Balaam and Saul and the change of heart in Saul from cowardly pusillanimity to fortitude and magnanimity the gift of miracles to Iudas also illumination tast of the heavenly gift joy in the holy Word of God given to backsliders Heb. 6. are the worke of the holy Ghost assisting them and inspiring them from without for the Churches good not inwardly dwelling and working in them for their owne salvation Wherefore let us count it no reproach that wee have no hope of being in an happy and blessed estate no assurance that wee are in the way to perfection till wee feele the Spirit of God dwelling and working in us moving our hearts and conforming us to the image of Christ and that wee rejoyce in this and this is our glorying that wee are not carnall but spirituall They who think it enough for the obtaining of perfection and salvation to know beleeve and professe that in Christ there is as sufficient matter of satisfaction for the redeeming of all mankind as there was in the rude masse without forme matter enough for the whole visible World and all creatures therein doe much deceive themselves for many who know and beleeve all this doe perish and none are saved or perfected by Christ but onely they who are by the Spirit dwelling in them united to Christ and regenerated and renued after his image This Spirit is the earnest of our inheritance and witnesseth to us our adoption hee makes us new creatures and a free willing people hee sanctifieth us to bee an holy Temple for himselfe to dwell in purgeth out sinfull corruption mortifieth the deeds of the flesh so that sin cannot reigne in our mortall bodies There is one thing more which I may not passe over here in silence to wit that this text doth prove plainely that the Spirit of God the third person in the Trinity is one and the same God with the Father and the Son of the same uncreated nature and substance the almighty Creatour and Preserver of all things in heaven and in earth visible and invisible To sustaine a rude matter without forme and void and to make it subsist is a worke of power farre above the power of any thing created and to compasse and comprehend the whole matter and masse of the visible World and to assist and cherish by present vertue every part thereof at once is a strong argument and plaine proofe of divine and infinite power and omnipotency proper to Iehovah the one onely true God and all this is here testified of the Spirit of God in these words and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters that is as the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Merachepheth and here used in the originall signifieth did sit upon and cherish that mightie masse as an Hen doth sit upon and cherish her egges that they may bee formed into chickens Therefore the Spirit of God is here proved to bee one and the same God with the Father and the Son and the almighty Creatour former and preserver of the whole World and all things therein To which purpose the Scriptures also speake fully in other places where the heavens and the host of them are said to bee made by the Word and Spirit of God as Psalme 33. 6. and that when God sends out his Spirit things are created as Psalme 104. 30. and that God by his Spirit garnished the heavens Iob 26. 13. and that hee is present by his preserving and sustaining power in all places Psalme 139. 7. which places prove the Spirit of God to bee Iehovah the Creatour and Former of all things and the true God in whom wee all live move and have our being This point which I have proved and confirmed by many other strong arguments already in my discourse of the Trinitie as it discovers the desperate malice impudency and Atheisme of the Remonstrants the Disciples of Socinus and Arminius who call into question the Deitie of the holy Ghost and his unitie with the Father and the Son and his right to bee prayed unto and worshipped with Divine worship so it is of singular comfort to the faithfull whose bodies are Temples of the holy Ghost in that it assures them that God is their portion and dwells in them and they are begotten of his seed in regeneration and are partakers of the Divine nature and heaven is their inheritance CHAP. VI. Of the first dayes worke What the light was What it is God said Let there be light How be called the light day and the darkenesse night Of a day naturall and civill That the night was before the day How a day was before the Sunne was Prerogatives of the first day VErs 3 4 5. And God said Let there be light and there was light And God saw the light that it was good And God divided the light from the darknesse And God called the light day and the darknesse hee called night and the evening and the morning were the first day After that darknesse had continued upon the face of the deep and the whole matter of this inferiour World had remained full of darknesse for the space of one night God by his powerfull Word created Light the first
perfect creature and element of the visible World and commanded it to shine out of darknesse and this was the morning of the first day In the words wee may observe these foure things First the creation of light in the 3. vers Secondly Gods approbation of it in these words God saw the light that it was good Thirdly Gods separation of it from the darknesse vers 4. Fourthly Gods nomination or naming of the light day and the darknesse night and so compounding these two light and darknesse into the first whole day of the World vers 5. In the first thing which is the creation of light the first of all perfect creatures in this visible World two things come to bee sifted and examined for our right understanding thereof First the thing created Light what is thereby here meant Secondly the manner of creating it God said Let light bee and it was so Concerning the first I find divers and severall opinions of the learned Saint Augustine lib. 1. in Genes ad literam cap. 3. and Rupertus lib. 1. de Trinit cap. 10. doe by this light understand the highest heavens and the Angels which are not a corporeall but a spirituall light but this cannot bee the truth for this light is said to bee that which is called the day and is opposed to the darknesse of the night here in this mutable and visible World the shining whereof doth distinguish day from the night which cannot bee said of the Angels and the highest heavens which were not made out of darknesse nor out of the rude unformed masse as this light was which God commanded to shine out of darknesse as the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 4. 6. Secondly others as Beda Lyra and Lombard doe by this light understand a bright cloud carried about and making a difference of day and night Nazianzene and Theadoret doe think that it was the same light which now is in the Sun Moone and Starres subsisting at the first in one bodie and afterwards divided into severall parts when God made the Sun Moone and Starres out of it Basil thought that it was light without a subject Aquinas that it was the light of the Sun made imperfect at the first and of this opinion is Pererius also Catharinus held that it was the Sun it selfe made first of all which is directly contrary to the expresse words of the 16. vers which affirme that the Sun was made the fourth day Iunius by light here understands the element of fire In this variety of opinions I hold it the best and surest way of finding out the truth to seeke it out of the word used in the originall text The Hebrewword 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or which is here translated Light besides the tropicall and spirituall senses in which it is used in those Scriptures which call God the light in whom is no darknesse and the light and salvation of his people and doe call Gods regenerate people light in the Lord doth more properly signifie two things First that naturall bodie or substance which among all the parts and creatures of the visible World is most bright and shining in it selfe and gives light to others as for example the Sun Moone and Starres are called Lights Psalme 136. 7. and the element of fire is called by this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Light Ezech. 5. 2. Secondly it signifies and that most frequently in the Scripture the light that is the shining brightnesse of the heavens and of the Sun Moone and Starres and of the element of fire burning in a lamp or torch or other combustible matter Here I doe not take the word in this latter sense onely for a shining brightnesse for then God had created an accident or quality without a subject which is a thing against nature of things created for common reason and experience shew that never did any qualitie subsist of it selfe without a substance by course of nature no light can be but in some created body as in the heavens fire or aire But hereby light wee are to understand of necessity some notable part of this great frame of the visible World which God first framed out of the rude masse which was without forme and void before mentioned yea that part which is most bright shining and resplendent and doth by light and brightnesse which is naturall in it shine forth and enlighten other things Now that cannot bee any of these lower elements the water and the earth for they have no such light in them and besides it is manifest that they were formed out of the grossest and most dark part of the common masse on the third day vers 9. Neither can it bee the spacious region of the aire which is extended and spread abroad farre and wide over all the round globe of the earth and the waters and reacheth up to the etheriall region of the visible heavens even to the sphaere of the Moone and is called the lowest heaven or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the broad expansion or firmament in the midst of the waters For that was formed the second day as appeares in 6. 7. 8. vers It must needs therefore bee the firmament of the visible heavens which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The large and farre stretched firmament of the midle heaven even the fiery or etheriall region wherein God on the fourth day formed and set the great lights of the Sun Moone and Starres vers 14. 16. For first those heavens were framed and made of the most pure and refined part of the masse which is the common matter of the visible World and are most bright and shining full of light and brightnesse and undoubtedly as in place and order they are the next to the highest heavens so they were created next after them in the first day and are here called by the name of Light because all the light of this visible World is in them and from them shineth into the aire and giveth light upon the earth Secondly there is no particular mention made by Moses in this Chapter of the framing of these heavens among all the works of the six dayes except it bee in this word Light and it is most incredible that hee would omit the creation of them which are the most excellent and glorious part of the visible frame of the World especially seeing hee doth exactly and particularly name and relate the creation of all other parts and the day wherein they were created I am not ignorant that Aristotle and the most learned naturall Philosophers of his sect did hold that the visible heavens are eternall and unchangable and of a matter and substance different from the foure elements fire aire water and earth and were not made of the same common matter Also divers learned Christians and Schoolemen doe thinke that these heavens were created together with the highest heavens immediatly of nothing in the beginning when time first began to bee and are mentioned in the
day or the first day I answere that Gods day which is most truly and properly so called is the time of light and in it their is no night or darknesse For God speakes of a naturall day distinct from the night but Moses speakes of a civill day which comprehends in it the space of 24. houres in which the Sun runnes round about the World with the heavens which day includes in it a day and a night and here observe that Gods day is all light and mans day is mixt of light and darknesse Thirdly it may asked whether the night or the day went before in the first day of the creation The Answer is that the night or time of darknesse was first and it is likely that darknesse did over-spread the face of the deep the space of a night that is 12. houres before God formed the light and setled the visible heavens in their place and that after the light was created it did shine forth for the space of 12. houres more before God went about to make the firmament which was the second dayes work and so the first day of the World was of the same length with all other civill or Astronomicall dayes that is 24 houres divided equally between light and darknesse The words of the text shew that darknesse overspread all the masse of the inferiour World for a time before the light was formed Also in naming the six dayes of the creation the evening that is the time of darknesse is rehearsed first before the morning which is the 〈◊〉 of light Also Gods people began their dayes of the weeke and of the yeare with the night and reckoned the Sabbath and other solemne dayes from evening to evening as appeares Levit. 23. 32. Fourthly it may bee asked how the firie or visible heavens could by their light make a day before the Sun was created seeing the light of the same heavens together with the light of the Moone and the Starres added thereto cannot make a day but it is night where the Sun is absent and the light of it not seene not withstanding the light of the heavens and of the Moone and Starres I answere that the light of the heavens without Sun Moone and Starres is sufficient to make a bright day in the place where they are and there it is alwayes day though by reason of the spacious regions of the aire and the great distance betweene them and the earth their light doth not shine to us to make a day of light without the beames of the Sun but it is dark night in that part of the earth where their light onely appeares Now in the first day before the firmament was made that is the region of the aire purged and refined out of the masse by the sinking and settling of the earthy and waterish matter towards the center there was no need of light further then the body of the heavens reached that is to the upper face of the rude masse not yet formed but remaining rude and full of darknesse And therefore so farre as the visible World was brought into forme they did give most clear day light and as all had before bin overspread with darknesse for the space of a night so all was now overspread with light for a dayes space and so the first day of the creation was one halfe all night and another halfe all day in all the visible World even in all parts thereof which were then created and brought into perfect forme and being From this text thus opened wee may observe divers points of instruction First we learne that as there are three Persons in that one God which created the World by his own infinite power so every Person is a creatour and God the Father by his eternall Word the Son did extend and shew forth his power to the framing of every creature and by his Spirit did give all forme and perfection to them As the word Elohim used in the first verse notes more Persons so here and in the verse before wee see the Persons distinguished and all three working in the framing of the World and all the creatures therein First God the Father is brought in creating Secondly by his Word that is not by a sound of the voice or a word uttered for there was then no aire to receive such a sound but by his eternall Word bringing things into being according to his eternall Counsell and decree Thirdly by his Spirit moving upon the face of the waters and cherishing the rude and common matter of the whole visible World yet void and unformed and preparing it for the receiving of the severall formes of all creatures in the severall parts of it Which point excellently confirmes our faith in the true Doctrine of the blessed Trinitie and confutes Sabellius Servetus the Socinians and Arminians who denied the eternall Deity of the Son and the holy Ghost and overthrowes their severall heresies and damnable errours Secondly wee hence learne that all things are possible to God he can as easily and quickly by his eternall Word and power bring greatest things to passe even bring light out of darknesse and the glorious pure spacious visible heavens out of the rude impure and confused masse which was without forme and void as a man of nimble tongue and ready speech can speake a word Which Doctrine other Scriptures doe aboundantly confirme which ascribe to God omnipotency and proclaime him to bee wonderfull in counsell and excellent in working and that nothing is too hard or wonderfull for him to doe as Genes 18. 14. Isa 28. 29. Iob 36. 5. and 42. 2. Which serves to stirre us up to feare admire and reverence God to seek his favour and protection above all things and to rest confidently on him for defence against all enemies and dangers when wee are reconciled to him and have him for our God and our portion Thirdly we may here observe that God is wonderful in wisedome and providence in that the first thing created in this visible World was light even the bright and shining heavens which as above all visible creatures they shew the glory and super-celestial excellency of God in their naturall frame and substance so also give bodily light to the eyes of all bodily living creatures which were to bee made to see and discerne the glorious beauty and admirable frame of his visible works for hereby it came to passe that none of gods visible perfect works of wisedome were for an houre smoothered in darknesse but were all manifest and Gods glory was clearly seene in them so soone as there was a seeing creature able to discerne them This sheweth that God hath done his part to reveale himselfe and man who takes not notice of God in his works to worship him aright is without all excuse And this should stirre us up to labour to see God and to discerne him in his works and to place all
the Spirit in the creation of every thing in the World and without him nothing is made and created The third thing is a maine use for which this firmament was made to serve namely to divide the waters from the waters that is the waters which are below in the Sea and Rivers and are mingled with the earth from the waters which are above in the clouds for wee finde by experience that there is no other thing which divides between those waters but onely the lowest heaven the airie firmament There is also another use hereafter mentioned Verse 20. that is to convey the light from the Sun Moone and Starry heavens to the earth The fourth thing is the name by which God called the firmament that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heaven Indeed according to the common etymologie and notation approved of all the learned this name most properly expresseth the nature of the aire the place of waters and waterish clouds and the starry and highest heavens are so called by reason that they appeare to us in our fight to be one and the same common body or else by a metaphore because there is a great similitude between them and the aire in respect of their purity and brightnesse or as I have formerly noted this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when it is the proper name of the highst heaven may have another derivation of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth there doubled or made in the forme of the duall number and so it is as much as if one should say there there that is there is the place of all places there is the best being in the heaven of heavens and here wee may observe what manifold and wonderfull wisedome there is in the names which God hath given to creatures which hee himselfe named The fifth and last thing to bee considered in this text which is a point of greatest difficultie is How by the framing and continuance of this worke there came in an evening and a morning which are the second day The Sun was not yet created to shine and to give clear day light such as wee now have and therefore how could there bee a day or a morning And the light that is the bright frame of the firie heavens being extended over all the inferiour masse of the inferiour elements not yet formed how could there bee an evening or night and so a whole civill day as the text here speakes All that the learned have devised and written for the removing of these doubts is this Some hold that the light which God created subsisting without a subject did for the space of 12. houres shine and send forth beames and make the morning and againe for the space of 12. houres was contracted and withdrew it selfe and so made the night or evening This is the opinion of Basil and Damascene Others think that light created the first day being a bright cloud which moved about as the Sun doth did shine like fire one while and so made the day and was like a thick cloud of darknesse for another while and so made the night as the pillar of cloud which lead Israel so Beda holds Others thinke it was the light of the Sun created imperfect at the first and moving about with the heavens did make a difference between day and night equally But certainly the light which God created being good that is a perfect creature in his kind and so approved of God as the words of the text shew cannot with any reason bee held to bee any imperfect thing which afterwards was altered or any such mutable and corruptible light as was kindled and quenched for God seeing and approving it for good would not so quickly alter it Wherefore I take the evening or night time of the second day to bee the time wherein God by his word and power was separating the aire and purging it by causing the thick waterish and earthy part to descend and settle downewards towards the center For all that time the vast and spacious wide region of the aire being not purified remained dark and duskish because the light of the firie heaven did not shine thorough it and that was the evening or night of the second day but the aire being made pure perfect and settled in his naturall place received the light of the heavens into it for the space of 12. houres before God began to create the other elements which were the first works of the third day And this was a day of light cleare enough for the creatures then made though not so light as when the Sun was made and this evening and morning made the second day as the text saith And thus we see the true sense and meaning of the text and what is the second day and the work thereof from whence wee may observe some points of Doctrine First wee hence learne that God proceeds most wisely and orderly in the creation of the World declaring manifestly that hee doth nothing in vaine nor makes any thing before it is usefull and necessarily for the communicating of his goodnesse to his creatures but doth all for the benefit of others and addes nothing to himselfe neither hath need to receive glory from any creature If God had made the Sun and Starres before hee made the aire or the earth men might have imagined that hee had made the Sun and lights of heaven not for the use of men and other earthly creatures but either because hee had need of them in the heavens to adde glory to himselfe or else to remaine for a time without use and in vaine But in that hee made not the glorious lights at the first before the aire through which they might shine and give light to the earth Hereby hee sheweth that hee created all things wisely and orderly the most needfull things in the first place and nothing before there was use of it nothing which remained unprofitable for one houre and that in creating the World hee neither sought nor needed any addition of glory to himselfe but made the glorious Sun and lights for to shew and to impart his glory to men and his goodnesse to other creatures Let us all see Gods wisedome and goodnesse and labour to imitate him in them and as he doth all for our use not his owne profit so let us not seek any thing in the World for our owne vaine ends but make the setting forth of his glory the end of all our labours and strive to doe his will and pleasure not our owne nor the will and commandement of any man when wee perceive it to bee contrary and not according to the will and word of God Secondly in that the light of the second day which shined onely in the aire and through it to the earth and deep was not a cleare but obscure light in comparison of the first day and the dayes after the Sun Moone and Starres were made not much brighter then
the night of the three last dayes Hereby God did foreshew that the aire and this lowest World is the place of Satans Kingdome wherein hee doth rage and tyrannize with great power after his fall untill hee be cast into Hell at the last day which also other Scripture● shew as Eph. 22. where Satan is called the Prince of the aire and Revel 16. 17. the Kingdome of Satan is called the aire and Ioh. 14. 30. our Saviour calls him the Prince of this World Wherefore let us not place our felicity here in the things of this World nor hope for peace and rest in this lowest airy heaven where Satan ruleth and rageth Hee who preacheth for things here hee speakes into the aire 1 Cor. 14. 9. Hee who wrastleth for a prize here hee beateth the aire and strives for uncertainties 1 Cor. 9. 26. Let us looke up higher to the Heaven of heavens to the Country and City which is above and where Christ is there let our heart bee Verse 9. CHAP. VIII The third dayes worke Of Water and Earth distinct elements Of the names of Earth and Sea Of Herbes Plants and Trees All earthly things nothing to God Wee are Pilgrimes on earth Vses God ruleth the most tumultuous creatures Vse ANd God said Let the waters under the Heaven bee gathered together unto one place and let the drie land appeare and it was so Verse 10. And God called the drie land Earth and the gathering together of the Waters called hee Seas and God saw that it was good Verse 11. And God said Let the Earth bring forth grasse herbe yeelding seed and the fruit tree yeelding fruit after his kind whose seed is in it selfe upon the Earth and it was so Verse 12. And the Earth brought forth grasse and herbe yeelding seed after his kind and the tree yeelding fruit whose seed was in it selfe after his kind and God saw that it was good Verse 13. And the evening and the morning were the third day The third dayes worke is the creation of the Earth and the Seas and the separating of them one from another in place and the calling of them by their names also the creation of the Herbes Plants and Trees out of the Earth all which made up a third dayes worke In the 9. verse wee have the creation of the two grossest and lowest elements the Water and the Earth laid downe very briefely and withall the separation of the Water from the Earth into one place and the appearance of the earth above the waters The first words And God said shew that God by his eternall Word the Son created these inferiour elements and all thing in them and still the Son works with the Father in all the works of creation These next words Let the waters under the heaeen bee gathered together unto one place and let the drie land appeare seeme not to speake at all of the creation of the waters or of the earth but onely of the separation of the waters into one place and causing the dry land to appeare by it selfe Some Expositors gather from these words that the earth and the waters were created before and that the earth being made perfectly round in the lowest place and framed of the heaviest and grossest part of the rude matter which settled about the center was all covered with the waters which were made of the purer part of that rude masse which remained after the creation of the spacious firmament the airie heaven and the naturall place of the waters was above the earth betweene it and the aire I easily beleeve and acknowledge that the earth being made of the heaviest part of the rude matter doth occupie and possesse the lowest place about the middle center of the round World and that the naturall place of the water which is a purer and lighter element in which place God first created it and gave it being is the place next above the earth compassing it round on every side and if the element of water were in quantity more then the hollow places of the earth could conteine it would overflow all the upper face of the earth or if God should bring the earth into a perfect round globe without risings up of hils or hollow valleyes the waters of the Sea would stand in the upper place next above it between the aire and the earth For wee see and find by daily experience that as heavier elements do descend downwards when they are in lighter elements and doe by naturall motion tend to the lower place as for example drops of raine-water being ingendered in the aire descend downward and the earth and every part of it whether a stone or lump of clay or clod of earth will sinke downe move towards the bottom in a lake of standing water and in a vessell full of water So also the lighter and thinner elements doe naturally ascend above the heavier and seeke the higher place and cannot but by violence bee kept under them or in the same place with them for wee see that sparks and flames of fire being in the aire will continually ascend upward till they come to the place above it and if aire be closed up in a bladder and by some weight held downe in the bottom of a pond or some great vessell of water if it bee let loose by opening or bursting the bladder it will presently flie up and make speedy way in bubbles to the top of the waters and if waters bee either ingendered in the earth under the ground or by secret conveyances bee driven from the Sea into the earth it will continually spring up till it cometh to the top of the earth and hence it is that wee have so many springs of water rising out of the earth But I cannot beleeve that the earth and the waters of the Sea were created distinct elements before the third day because no words in this Historie of the creation doe before this day mention any creation of water and earth as they are elements perfectly formed and distinct one from another Indeed the rude masse which was without forme and void is called Earth and the Deep and the Waters not because it had the forme of these or was any one of them but was onely the matter of which they were made and because it was like earth for the grossnesse of it and like water or a deep quagge or muddy lake for the instability of it And although it is said before that God made the airie heaven to divide between the waters above in the clouds and the waters below under the aire in the Sea and the Rivers yet it doth not follow that these waters were created before or that then immediatly it did divide betweene them but that it was made to divide between them afterwards when they were created Yea itis plaine that therewas no raine in the aire nor clouds nor mists nor vapours ascending up from the earth till after the earth was furnished
third dayes worke that is the creation of grasse herbes plants and trees Where note onely these two things First what were these things created Secondly how they were created and brought into being The first is grasse or greene herbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is that which of it selfe springs up without setting or sowing The second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 herbe bearing seed that is all herbes which are set or sowne and increase by mans industry The third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is trees and plants which are of a woodie substance which beare fruit and have their seed which turns to fruit in themselves they are not multiplied onely by sowing of seed but live all the year and many yeares without sowing and multiply by rootes slips graffes and the like These were the things which God is here said by his creating Word and power to bring out of the earth every one perfect in their kind Secondly for the manner of creating them they were not created immediatly of nothing nor of any other element besides the earth and then put into the earth there to grow But God by his powerfull Word without any help of mans tillage Raine or Sun did make them immediatly out of the earth and every one perfect in their kind grasse and heroes with flowers and seeds and trees with large bodies branches leaves and fruits growing up suddenly as it were in a moment by Gods Word and power And thus much I gather not onely from the words of the text which run thus God said Let the Earth bring forth grasse herbes and trees but also from the words Chap. 2. 5 6. where it is said that God formed every plant when yet it was not in the Earth and every herb when as yet it grew not up that is before they had any seed or roote hidden or sowne in the earth from whence they might spring and grow up and also without help of raine or dew or any culture or tillage Now all these things being thus formed by the word of God were approved by God for good and perfect in their kind And so the evening that is the time of darknesse over the earth while the waters covered it and before the drie land appeared above the waters which was about twelve houres a nights space and the morning that is the time of light after the drie land appeared and the light of the firie heavens shined upon it through the aire which as yet was most pure and cleare without clouds mists or vapours which time of light was other twelve houres made up a third day Thus we see that in the three first daies before the creation of the Sun Moon and Starres the night was a time of darknes and the day a time of light in all that part of the World where night and day are said to have been and in respect of which part of the World they are called evening and morning as for example After that the light the firie heavens were created and made out of the rude masse full of darknesse there was no more night or darknesse but all light in the heavens ever since for they are a day and light to themselves and that which is night and day with us is all alike with them even cleare day light So likewise after the creation of the light all was darknesse in the rest of the rude masse which was not yet formed and the time that it lay in darknesse before the airy heaven was perfectly purified and made is called the evening or night but after that the firmament that is the spacious element of the aire was created and brought into perfect being and puritie it received into it the light of the firie heavens which shined through it and the time of that shining into the aire is called the morning or day light and this day light shines still in the highest region of the aire above the ascent of the clouds and there is no more night of darknesse in that region but as cleare light as that of the second and third day onely in the rest of the rude masse there did remaine darknesse untill God created out of it at once the two lowest elements the waters and the earth and the time while the waters covered the earth and kept the light of heaven from it is called the evening or night of the third day but when the drie land and the hils and mountaines of the earth were raised up above the waters and the great vast hollow valley which is the place of the Sea and receptacle of the waters was made in it then the light of the heavens did shine through the aire unto the upper face of the earth and of the waters and so continued untill the herbes plants and trees were made no clouds or mists or vapours made the lower region of the aire darke and this was the time of morning or day light on earth the third day Thus much for the opening of the third dayes work of creation and how the times of light and darknesse that is the evening and morning did make up the third day From this dayes work and from the things created and the manner of creation divers things may bee observed for our instruction First wee see that the two lowest elements Earth and Sea though they appeare to bee great and huge vast things yet to God working by his eternall Word the making and separating of them was but a peece of a dayes work and all the grasse herbes plants and trees which are innumerable and full of all admirable variety they were but another peece of a dayes worke they were not onely made and brought into being but also to their perfect growth full of flowers seed and fruite in a little time as it were in a moment Hence we may learne that all this World here below wherein the sonnes of men live together with all creatures which se●ve for their use it is as nothing in the hand of God and of small moment All the herbes plants and trees which Solomon with all his wisedome could scarcely come to know were with the Earth Sea and all Waters made perfect in one day This is that which the Lord proclaimes by the Prophet Isa. 40. 15 17. where it is said that all nations are as a drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the balance before him All nations are before him as nothing and they are counted to him lesse then nothing and vanity Which Doctrine serves to admonish us to despise all earthly riches and possessions in comparison of God who is the portion of the godly and faithfull also it serves to confound and put to shame all proud carnall worldlings who glory and boast in a little nothing and to make glad and fill with joy Gods people who have a true right and interest in God by their spirituall union and communion which they have with Christ by one
Spirit even the holy Ghost dwelling in him as the head and in them as members of the same mysticall body Secondly from the name of the earth we learne that this World is a race and pilgrimage and a place of travell and warfare and here is not the rest of man neither is here his abiding place This the Scriptures proclaime every where Iacob the Father of Israel who had the land of Canaan promised to him and his seed for an inheritance for ever hee counted his life as a pilgrimage on earth and saith in his old age Few and evill have my dayes been Gen. 47. 9. And David saith Psalme 119. 19. I am a stranger upon earth and Psalme 39. 12. I am a stranger and sojourner with thee as all my Fathers were Iob calls mans life a few dayes and full of trouble which fleet as a shadow and continueth not Iob 14. 1 2. Saint Paul cals it a restelesse race like that of men who runne for a prize 1 Cor. 9. 24. 26. and Heb. 12. 1. Wee are here like Noah's dove which being sent out of the Arke found no rest for the soale of her foote till shee returned thither againe Here wee have no continuing Citie Hebr. 13 14. neither is here our rest Mich. 2. 10. till our Soules returne to God who gave them wee shall alwayes be in a pilgrimage and never find quiet rest This Doctrine is of good use to keep and restraine us from dreaming of setled rest here on earth and from seeking to build our nests sure in the tops of earthly rocks for many generations and to stirre us up to put on resolution and courage to labour and travell and strive and run as men doe in a race and for masteries while wee live on earth For our life is short and fleeth away as a shadow and the art and divine skill of gaining heaven and getting the Crowne of glory doth require much studie sweating toile and industrie and wee cannot attaine to it but by hearing reading studying and meditating in Gods Word day and night Secondly it discovers worldlings to bee dreaming and doating fooles who put trust and confidence in things of this World and build great houses purchase lands and large revenues and think that their houses shall continue for ever The Prophet justly compareth such men to a dreamer who being hungrie doth dreame that hee eateth but when hee awaketh his soule is empty in his thirst he dreameth that he is drinking but when he awaketh hee is faint and his soule hath appetite Isa. 29. 8. This is the case of foolish and brutish worldings who see how the forme and fashion of the World passeth away and yet seeing will not see but still dreame of setled rest and dwelling on earth Thirdly though the Seas are such as the name signifieth which God gave to them that is troubelous and tumultuous and doe dreadfully rage and roar yet seeing God is above them as their Lord and Creatour and when hee made them such saw that they were good and usefull and profitable for man this teacheth that God ruleth over the most tumultuous creatures of the World and maketh the most outrageous roarers work for the good of his people First hee makes them serve to shew the power dread and terrour of him their creatour that all may feare and stand in awe of him for if the creatures be so dreadfull and terrible much more God the Creatour who gave them their being And as God makes them worke feare so also admiration in men so David sheweth Psalme 46. and Psalme 107. 24. Secondly hee makes them worke for the good of his people and for the safety of his Church by destroying and devouring their wicked enemies persecutors and oppressors as wee see in the red Sea drowning Pharaoh and his host and as wee have seene in the year 88. when the Sea wind and stromes scattered and devoured the Armado of our bloudy enemies who came enraged with furie and furnished with all weapons of cruelty and instruments of death to destroy our Land and the Church of God in it The consideration whereof serves to make us east our selves upon God in all times of trouble and to comfort our selves in him knowing that as hee is the Lord mighty above all and a terrour to the most terrible and hath in his hand power to save us from all troubles so hee is gracious and willing to save us And though hee sometimes suffers the swelling waves to rise and the tempestuous stormes and Seas to threaten and put us in feare and danger yet it is not in wrath but in wisedome because for the present hee sees them to bee good for us CHAP. IX The fourth dayes worke Of the lights substantiall bodies The place of them Their Vse For signes seasons dayes and yeares Of the Sun Moone and Starres No instruments used in the creation Note the great wisedome of God in the order of creation This World not made to bee the place of our immutable perfection Vses of each of these ANd God said Let there bee Lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night and let them bee for signes and for seasons and for dayes and for yeares 15. And lot them bee for lights in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the Earth and it was so 16. And God made two great lights the greater light to rule the day and the lesse light to rule the night he made also the Starres 17. And God set them in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the Earth 18. And to rule over the day and the night and to divide the light from the darknesse and God saw that it was good 19. And the evening and the morning were the fourth day These words containe a briefe Historie of the fourth dayes worke in the creation in which wee may observe First Gods powerfull commanding the worke to bee done by his eternall Word in the 14. and 15. Verses Secondly his bringing of the worke to passe by that eternall Word in the 16 17 18. Verses Thirdly Gods approbation of the worke and so perfecting that day First wee see God still proceeds in the worke of creation by his powerfull Word and saith Let there be Lights The things which hee commands to bee done are two First that there shall bee lights in the firmament of heaven that is the Sun Moone and Starres which are the lights created out of the first element even that light which was made the first day that is the body of the visible firie heavens The second that they shall bee for speciall use 1. To divide the day from the night 2. To bee for signes seasons dayes and yeares 3. To bee for lights in the firmament of heaven to give light upon the Earth That these lights are not bare lights without a subject but bright shining substantiall bodies which have light
in themselves and send forth beames of light into other pure elements and cleare transparent bodies no man can deny for the Hebrew word here in my text is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies lamps torches or other things which shine forth and give light and the words following Verse 16. shew plainely that these lights are the Sun Moone and Starres which rule the day and the night by the light which they give to the earth The greatest doubt here is about the place where God commanded them to bee to wit the firmament of heaven For if wee take the word firmament of heaven for the spacious region of the aire as wee have expounded it before Verse 6 7 8. then men will conceive that the Sun Moone and Starres have their place in the airie region and not in the firie region of the visible heavens which is a thing contrary to reason and experience and to the common judgement of all the learned and to the holy Scriptures For clearing of this doubt wee have two answers ready at hand either of which may satisfie The first that as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heaven signifies not onely the airy region wherein the fowles doe flie Verse 20. and above which there are waters in the clouds as appeares Verse 7. but also the highest heaven Verse 1. and the firie heavens which are called the starry heaven Gen. 15. 5. and the garnished heaven Iob 26. 13. and which are the heavens next unto the highest and in comparison of which the highest is called the heaven of heavens 1 Kings 8. 27. and the third heaven 2 Cor. 12. 2. So also the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here translated firmament and signifies a broad spreading or a thing which is broad spread and stretched out farre and wide may very well here in this place bee used to signifie the firie region of the starry heaven spread abroad farré more large and wide then the airy region and then this is the meaning that God commanded lights to bee and made lights and set them in the firie region or firmament which is above the airy firmament in which sense the word firmament is used Psalme 19. 1. and Dan. 12. 3. Secondly if any should not bee satisfied with this first answere which is cleare and sufficient but should still hold that the word firmament is here used to signifie the airy heaven as in the 7. and 20. Verses Then this may serve for a second answere that God commanded lights to be that is the Sun Moone and Starres to have a being and created them out of the firie heavens in which they have their place of being but hee gave them bright light for this end and purpose that they might shine through the region of the aire and might multiplie their beames in it and so bee therein for lights to the earth The words of the text in the originall doe not expressely affirme that God made them of the matter of the airy region the firmament or that hee there placed them but onely that he gave them to be lights and to shine through the aire upon the earth though the bodie substance of Sun Moone and Stars be set and placed in the starry heaven or firmament yet they are lights in the airy firmament and through it give light to the earth And this I prove by a demonstration gathered from the text it selfe For where the Sun and Moone and Starres are given to divide betweene day and night and to bee for seasons dayes and yeares and to rule over the day and over the night there God gave them to bee for lights This is most certaine and manifest for the Sun doth no other way rule the day nor the Moone the night but onely by their light by appearing one while not another in the severall hemisphaeres of heaven to the earth below Now they divide the day from the night and make difference of seasons dayes and yeares onely in the lowest heavens and in the earth for above in the starry heaven the Sun Moone and Starres doe shine all alike continually there is one perpetuall day of light and no night or darkenesse from the beginning to the end of the World It is the suns appearing to one side of the earth for a time once in 24. houres which makes the day and the absence and not appearing of it for the rest of the 24. houres to that side of the earth which makes the night there and both day and night make a civill day and seven such dayes a Week and four weekes a Moneth had 12 moneths a Year and the seasons of Summer Winter Spring and Autumne have place onely on earth and in the lowest airie heaven not in the starry heaven Therefore God gave them and set them to be lights that is to give light in the aire and to the earth And thus the doubt is fully cleared and the first thing opened to wit Gods commanding lights to bee in the firmament of heaven The second thing commanded is the use of those Lights The first use is to divide the day from the night that is the time of light from the time of darknesse For clearing or which point wee are to consider First what is here properly meant by day and night and how the lights divide them one from another Secondly how there could be a division betweene day and night before these Lights the Sun Moone and Starres were made First by day we are here to understand not the space of the Sun Moone and Starres compassing the earth which is the space of 24. houres for that day consists of an evening and a morning and comprehends in it one night and some call it a naturall and some a civill and some an astronomicall day but here by day wee are to understand the time while the Sun the greatest light shines and gives light upon the face of the earth And by night the time while the Moone and Starres doe onely appeare and give their dimme light upon the earth which some call an artificiall and civill day and night but others doe more proper●● call it a naturall day and a naturall night The day in this sense hath no night in it and the night in this sense is no part of the day but these two being the one the time of darknesse or dimme light the other the time of cleare light are so opposite that they cannot both bee at once in one and the same part of the World Now as the visible World consists of divers maine parts or elements and the motions of the Sun Moone and Starres are most variable among themselves so the day and night taken in this proper sense are most variable First the day as it is a time of light doth in respect of some parts of the World comprehend in it the whole time from the first creation of the Sun and of the starry
heavens the making of which brought in the first morning or day-light as for example Ever since the firie heavens were made and created a bright shining substance they have retained their light continually and so there hath beene a continuall day in them and no night nor darknesse although the light of them by reason of the vast distance doth not make day here on earth Also ever since the Sun was created it shineth most cleare in the firie or starry heaven from East to West and from the North to the South-Pole when the Sun sets in the West from our sight it shineth bright in the face of the full Moone which is then rising in the East part of heaven or else the Moone would bee darke and enclypsed All the shadow which the earth makes in the heavens by comming betweene the Sun and that part of the heaven which is most opposite is very little neare about the compasse of the body of the Moone as in every great eclypse of the Moone may easily bee seene and discerned Likewise that light which was the day light of the second day continueth still in the superiour region of the aire and in the lowest regions also when there are no clouds mists or vapours And the light of the Sun also appeares continually in the most part of the highest regions of the aire even under our Hemisphare and in our Horizon when the Sun is furthest from our sight And as there is alwayes day light in the middle heavens so there is alwayes night and darknesse in the midst of the earth and through all the body of it from the upper face to the center which is the very middle and heart of it Secondly in those places of the World which are directly under the North and South poles the day that is the time of the Sons being in theirsight is just halfe a year and the night also that is the time of the Suns absence from their sight is another halfe year Thirdly under the equinoctiall line which cuts the heavens equally in the middle betweene the North and South poles the day and night are alwayes equall each one 12. houres because the Sun and Moone and Starres doe appeare so long and are hid just so long againe And thus dayes and nights varie according to the severall parts of the World and divers climats of the earth And ever since that God did make the lights in heaven the Sun Moone and Starres they have made the division betweene the darknesse which wee call night and the light which wee call day as God here appointed For the time while the Sun shines and rules by giving greatest light in any part of the World that is called the day light and the time while the Sun is out of sight and the Moone and Starres onely shine and rule that is called the night because it is a time of dimme light which is darknesse in comparison of the Sun light as appeares in the words of the 16. Verse The second thing which comes to bee considered in the first use of these lights is the division and distinction betweene day and night before this fourth dayes worke when these lights were made for this use For clearing of this point wee are to call to minde somethings which I have opened before and withall adde some few things more which will make the truth manifest First we are to know and perswade our selves that there is no difference or division betweene day and night but onely in this inferiour visible World which wee see with bodily eyes For in the heaven of heavens which is above the visible World there is no darknesse neither can bee at any time but there is the inheritance of the Saints in light and the light thereof is spirituall and to us supernaturall And in Hell wheresoever that is there is nothing but blacknesse of darknesse for ever 2 Pet. 2. 17. Iude 13. Secondly the time of day-light which is called the morning and the time of night and of darknesse which is called the evening in the three first dayes did much differ from the evening and morning that is the time of darknesse and light in the rest of the dayes after that the Sun Moone and Starres were made For the evening that is the time of darknesse or night in the first day was onely the time while all this inferiour World remained in that rude informed masse without forme and void which was all over-spread with darknesse and had no light in it And the morning that is the time of light and of day was the time after that God formed the light that is the firie or starry heavens for they were in themselves full of light and had cleare day in them without the Sun before the light of them was united in the Sun Moone and Starres I say from the forming of them untill God began to create the spacious airie firmament it was cleare day in so much of the visible World as was perfectly formed that is in the firie heavens which are called light and that was twelve houres at the least But when God began to create out of the rude masse full of darknesse the lowest heavens the aire which is a spacious region while the earthy and waterish parts were setling downward and the aire was a purging and growing into purity untill it became pure and cleare there was a time of darknesse and dimnesse in it which I conceive to bee the space of a night about twelve houres And the time after that it was made pure and received into it the light of the heavens shining clearly in it was the morning or time of day-light sufficient for so much of the World as was then created which was twelve houres more and made up the second day Then God began to create the water and the drie land and while the earth was setling downward to the center and the waters being made of the thinner and lighter part of the masse which remained did cover the face of the earth which was created round in the middle of them this was the space of twelve houres and it was a time of darknesse upon the earth which lay hid and covered with all the waters which are now in the Seas and Rivers and this was the night of the third day upon earth But after that God made the great and hollow vallies which are now the receptacles of the waters and made the hils and drie land stand up and appeare above the waters being gathered into that hollow place there was a time of day-light for the light of the heavens which then had in them all that light which is now gathered and united in the bodies of the Sun Moone and Starres did shine upon the face of the earth for the space of twelve houres in which God made the grasse and the herbes bearing seced and the trees of all kinds bearing fruits and this was the third day Now after this day ended
earth And although the Moone being the lowest and nearest of all the heavenly lights unto the earth and therefore more dimme in it selfe and of a more impure bodie and substance as appeares by the cloudy specks in it shining very little of it selfe may in that respect bee called one of the least lights yet because it borrowes light from the Sun shining in the face of it as in a looking glasse and because it is 18. times lower then the Sun and nearer to us then the earth is lower then it as Mathematicians have observed and so it is nearer to the earth then the Sun almost 18. hundred thousand miles therefore in our eyes it appeares the greatest of all the lights next to the Sun And Moses here speaking according to the capacity of the vulgar and our outward senses and the sensible effects of light which the Moone gives to the earth cals it one of the two great lights And as hee gives to the Sun the office and prerogative of ruling the day because the sight and presence of the Sun makes the day light and smoothers and obscures all other lights in the day time so hee gives to the Moone the office of ruling the night because when it appeares in the night it giveth more light to us here on earth then all the other Starres Thus wee see that as God said so every thing which was made in the fourth day came to passe God himselfe made every thing by his eternall Word according to his owne eternall Counsell minde and will And therefore no marvell though hee gives approbation to this dayes worke also which is the third maine thing in the text expressed in these words And God saw that it was good And so the Sun having shined for the space of twelve houres till it had passed through one Hemisphaere or halfe of heaven that time or morning of light together with the evening or time of darknesse going before it and caused by clouds mists and vapours over-shadowing the Earth is called the fourth day Now this History of the fourth dayes worke as I have expounded it affords us some points of instruction First in that herbes grasse plants and trees were made perfect in their kinde before any Raine or Dew or Sun Moone and Starres were created Hence wee may learne that God used no instruments nor helpe of any creatures in the creation of any thing but made and formed every creature himselfe by his eternall Word and Spirit who are with him one and the same Iehovah infinite almighty and omnipotent For further proofe whereof there are many testimonies in the holy Scriptures as Isa. 40. 21. 22. and 66. 2. where the Lord appropriateth to himselfe and to his owne hand the creating and making of heaven and earth and Ioh. 1. 3. and Colos. 1. 16. where all things are said to bee created by the eternall Word the Son and also by the Spirit Psalme 33. 6. This Doctrine admonisheth us to give all the glory of the wisedome power and goodnesse shewed in the creation to God alone and to acknowledge that all things created even the whole World and all things therein are the Lords also to make us admire his rich bountie to render all thanks to his holy Majesty for all the profit benefit and comforts which wee receive from any of Gods creatures Secondly wee may hence learne and observe the wisedome and wise providence of God in making every thing in due season and nothing before there was need of it for the creatures which were next in order to bee made for hee did not create the lights of Sun Moone and Starres together with the starry heavens which is the place of them untill hee was about to create living things which could not well bee nor move according to their kinde without such lights shining in the earth and in the waters Which wise providence of God is a patterne and direction to us to doe all things in order in the first place things necessarie and usefull for the well-being and bringing to passe of things which are afterwards to bee done and nothing which may bee and remaine without use and profit As God would not make the Sun Moone and Starres together with the first light the firie heavens on the first day because then there was no use nor necessitie of them but deferred the creation of them untill the fourth day when there was use and necessity to make a cleare day-light and living creatures endued with life sense and sight were to bee made in the two next dayes following whose life without such cleare day light would have beene but like the shadow of death So let us bee carefull then to provide things necessary and usefull when wee see and perceive that wee shall have present use of them and not bee like foolish prodigall and fantasticall builders who build stately houses like palaces with large barnes stables and stals when neither they nor theirs are in any way or possibility to furnish them with corne horses or cattell or to make use of them for fit and necessary habitation Thirdly though the glory of God doth more appeare in light of day then in darknesse of night and it was and is in Gods power to make more great lights and divers Sunnes in severall places of the heaven to shine in all the World at once and to make a perpetuall day on earth yet hee made them so that on the earth in this lower and inferiour World there should bee as much night as day and darknesse as light whereby hee teacheth us even from the creation that this earthly World was not made to bee the place of mans immutable perfection and blessednesse but a place of changes and alterations wherein by reason of darknesse the Prince of darknesse may rule rage and tyrannise by himselfe and his wicked instruments and drive us to seeke a better rest and an incorruptible and undefiled inheritance reserved in heaven in the place of perpetuall light The whole booke of the wise Preacher is an ample testimony of this truth and a large commentary upon this Doctrine for it wholy tends to make men loath this inferiour World under the Sun wherein there is nothing but changes and vanity of vanities and all is vanitie Wherefore let us not seeke for immutability nor unchangable peace and prosperity here on earth lest wee bee found as foolish as those builders who build and set up goodly houses on a sandy foundation which may easily bee beaten downe and ruined with every wind wave and tempest They who settle their rest on earth and here seeke perfect felicity and immutable blessednesse they trust under the shadow and shelter of a gourd which may grow up in one night and in the next night wither away and perish and bring much griefe and sorrow to them which will vex them and drive them like Ionah to impatiency and anger against God their Creatour
and brittle they are the more wee take care for them and have a continuall eye over them so men ought to bee more carefull over their Wives because they are the weaker sex and to give them more respect honour and shield and more to esteeme of them by having a constant eye towards them and keeping them in their sight and presence as much as may bee and so much more because they are coheires of the grace of life and must draw joyntly together as under the same yoke in the way to heavenly happinesse This Doctrine of truth written in our hearts in the creation should bee a guide and direction unto us all in the whole course of our lives It directs Men how to esteeme their Wives and to beare themselves towards them and Women how to behave themselves before their Husbands that the one ought not cast the other behind as an unfit and unworthy mate and companion the Man must not run too farre before and leave his Wife behind either in worldly estate or in grace and in the way to heaven nor the Wife draw back and lagge behind either through careleseness or mean conceipt of her owne frame nature and sex but both must draw cheeke by cheeke and side by side and by joynt strength and endeavour draw on pull and put forward one another as a couple that are by the yoke which God imposed on them in the creation fast tied together This is the will and law of God and they that walke by this true rule peace prosperity and blessing shall bee on them all their dayes and the end of their labour shall bee an eternall Sabbath in heaven Secondly it serves to reprove the great corruption which is daily seene among Men and Women in this miserable World by meanes of which the World appeares to bee very much out of frame Some men like Turkes and Italians make no account of their wives but as of slaves to serve their lust and as footestooles to tread upon and trample at their pleasure Some like savage Indians make them drudges to toile and labour for them as Oxen and Horses and to serve them as servants and slaves Some account them weake creatures not capable of any great knowledge or wisedome and thereupon neglect the care and pains of instructing them and teaching them and imparting their knowledge to them drawing and pulling them on in the same way and causing them to go on with themselves in an equal pace And so again some women esteeme their husbands as men that are bound to serve please humour and flatter them in all things which they desire and that the maine care of the man should bee to deck adorne and set forth his wife as his Idoll in all costly apparell and toyish painting and vanities as if shee were made to feed his eyes with her ornaments and vanishing beauty And on the other side some out of a base mind and slothfulnesse thinke it belongs not to them to bee fellow builders of the family equall to their husband in honest care labour and industry for the common good of the family or in grace and spirituall gifts in all which they must bee partakers in their measure and proportion Let such transgressors of the law of nature bee assured that as they come short of common humanity so much more of the grace and glory of God The third thing in the history of womans creation is the consequents of it The first that God brought her to the man vers 22. The Second that Adam accepted her as an help meet for him that is as his second selfe a most pleasing and delightsome companion of his life and most helpfull to build up mankind ver 23. upon which Moses by inspiration of Gods spirit inferres by way of necessary conclusion an excellent doctrine which hath both a morall and propheticall meaning First a naturall morall sense to wit First that a mans wife is nearer to him and ought to be esteemed dearer than his naturall parents and to her he must cleave though it be with leaving them Secondly that in creating the woman and joyning her to man in marriage God did prefigure and fore-shew the infinite love of Christ to his Church and the love of the Church to Christ and the spirituall and mysticall union which is between them as is noted Eph. 5. 32. The third consequent is the nakednesse of the man and woman which was without shame or any inconvenience in their first creation before their fall ver 25. First it is said that God brought her to the man that is so soone as God had made and formed her of mans rib he presented her to him to be his wife and so an help meet for him we must not thinke that this bringing of her to him was onely a setting of her before his eyes and shewing her to his sight but that God withall declared to the man how and whereof he had made her even of a rib taken out of him and did offer her to him for a wife and equall consort so much the phrase of bringing her to him doth import From whence we learne That the marriage of man and wife is the ordinance of God in the state of innocency and God is the first Author of it and the first match-maker between man and woman in the first creation Our Saviour also testifieth this in the gospell Mat. 19. 6. saying that by vertue of Gods first ordaining of marriage man and woman married together are no more twaine but one flesh And whatsoever God hath thus joyned together no man ought to put asunder And there is good reason why God should be the first author of marriage Because it is the onely lawfull meanes of bringing forth people to God and of propagation of mankind and it is such a ground and foundation of the Church that without it God cannot have an holy seed as the Prophet intimates Mal. 2. 15. which point serves First to shew that marriage is honourable in it selfe in the nature of it among all men and women of all sorts orders and degrees as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 13. 4. And the Popes and Church of Rome in counting marriage a kind of fleshly uncleanenesse and defilement discover themselves to be opposers of Gods ordinance and violaters of the law of nature Secondly to shew that the best celebration of marriage is when it is solemnly celebrated and man and woman joyned together by Gods publike Ministers who stand in the place of God as Ambassadours and are his mouth to blesse his people For then God is after a secondarie manner the author and match-maker And his ordinance being thus observed and the marriage blessed by his ministers there may be more hope of blessing upon it and upon the parties joyned together Thirdly this In going about marriage men and women ought chiefly first of all to consult with God to looke
Iudaeus lib. de mund opific. did conceive Paradise to bee no earthly or bodily place but to bee spiritually understood which opinion Epiphanius proves to bee against reason because trees growing out of the ground and rivers shew that it was a garden planted on the earth and earthly not spirituall Some have held that the whole World was Paradise and that this garden did extend it selfe over all the earth which then was wholly a place of pleasure and delight which is also very absurd for then Adam had beene cast out of the whole earth when God cast him out of the garden and the land of Cush and of Havilah and Assyria towards which the rivers did run after they were gone out of the garden had beene out of the World Besides wee read in the Scriptures that Eden in which the garden was planted was a speciall country in Mesopotamia neare Haran and Goz●n and the people thereof did trade with Tirus 2 King 19. 12. and Ezech. 27. 23. Ephrem held it to bee a remote place beyond the vast Ocean Sea and unknowne tous Damascene in his book 2 de fide chap. 14. held it to bee a place higher then all the earth Beda and Rupertus held it to bee a place next unto heaven reaching up to the Sphaere of the Moone Alexander Hales and Tostatus thought it to bee a place in the aire farre below the Moone Others who held it to bee a speciall place in the earth doe much vary and differ among themselves Luther conceived that it contained in it all Mesopotamia Syria and Egypt Others thought that it comprehended all Asia and Africa Others that it was that part of Syria which is called the region of Damaseus because there was the Kings forrest of goodly Cedars which is called Paradise Nehem. 2. 8. and there is a towne called by the name of Eden and Paradise which is mentioned as some thinke Amos 1. 5. The Opinion of Bonaventure is that the place of it is under the Aequinoctiall Bellarmine in his booke de gratia primi hominis chap. 10. confesseth that it must needs bee an earthly and bodily place planted with trees but farre remote from knowledge of men and that no man can define where it is that it was not destroyed in the generall deluge and flood of Noah but remaines to this day And that Enoch and Eliah were translated thither and there are kept to fight with Antichrist in the end of the World This Opinion is contrary to truth and contradicts it selfe First the Scriptures testifie that Eliah was not translated into an unknowne place on earth but went up to heaven in a firie chariot Secondly that the waters of Noah's flood did prevaile 15. cubits above the highest mountaines And therefore if Paradise was an earthly place as Bellarmine holds it must needs bee destroyed in the generall deluge Gen. 7. 20. Yea if Paradise had beene preserved safe from the flood it had beene needlesse and vaine labour for Noah to build such an huge arke God might have saved him and all the creatures with him in the garden of Paradise Thirdly Moses doth here plainely define where this garden was and whosoever with understanding reads this History may easily define where it was But where it is now none can define for it is destroyed and onely the place of it remaines still But not to trouble my discourse with particular confutations of these severall opinions the very text it selfe and that exposition which I have made of it by the helpe of other Scriptures doth as it were with one blast blow them all away like chaffe and with one stroke dash them all in pieces For this text tels us that this garden was planted in the earth and God made the trees in it to grow out of the ground that the speciall place of the earth in which God planted it was Eden that is a place in Mesopotamia and Babylonia knowne by that name and mentioned by Rabshekeh among the countries which the Assyrian Kings had conquered scituate betweene Iudea and Assyria and neare unto Assyriah 2 King 19. 12. and by Ezekiel cap. 27. 23. mentioned among the countries and cities which from Mesopotamia did trade with Tyrus The text also tels us that it was in Eden Eastward or on the East-side watered with a river which came out of Eden from the other part thereof which river having divided it selfe into foure streames that it might run through severall parts of the garden and water it did no more meet in one but from thence that is from the garden was parted and became foure speciall rivers taking their course and compasse towards severall lands to wit Pishon to the land of Havilah Gihon to the land of Cush Hiddekel to the land of Assyriah and Euphrates through Babylonia and Chaldaea all which are to Iewes and naturall Israelites who ever since the captivity of Israel to Assyriah and of Iuda to Babylon doe live a dispersed and scattered people in those countries knowne by those old names to these dayes as appeares in the Itinerarie of Benjamin Tudalensis the Iew and divers other histories Now these things being plainely laid downe in the text explained by other Scriptures the places and rivers being often mentioned in histories and knowne to the Iewes who dwell in those parts untill this day there is now no least colour or show of reason left for the divers opinions before rehearsed they all appeare to be vaine erroneous the manifest truth of this text overthrowes them all at once And now from hence wee may learne a profitable point of instruction viz. That nothing is more vaine and uncertaine then the opinion of witty and learned Men both ancient Fathers and later Writers and Schoolemen while they follow their owne reason their owne witty conceipts without warrant from the Word of God There is no sure or certaine ground which a man may safely rest upon for the right understanding of the Scriptures but onely the word of God it selfe either speaking plainely in the very text it selfe or by other places and testimonies which are more full and plaine compared with the obscurer texts By this meanes onely the Spirit of God doth enlighten our hearts and understanding to know infallibly the true sense and meaning of them Besides many other proofes which serve to confirme this which I omit as not necessary at this present wee have a firme argument from our Saviours owne words Iohn 16. ver 13 14. where hee saith that now under the Gospell the Spirit speakes not of himselfe by simple and immediate inspiration without any word as in the Prophets of old but whatsoever hee shall heare that shall hee speake and hee shall take of mine and shall shew it unto you that is hee shall inspire and enlighten men onely by my word which I have spoken with mine owne mouth and by the Prophets and holy Men of God who
to the manifestation of his glory and the eternall salvation of his elect in Christ. The glory of God is two wayes made manifest by his actuall providence First in a more generall way by a more generall providence Secondly by a more speciall way which is called his speciall providence First by the generall th● whole World is ruled by an universall motion and all things in the World every one according to the proper nature and naturall disposition and inclination of it For as the Apostle saith Hee giveth to all life and breath and all things and in him wee all live move and have our being Act. 17. 25 28. Hee by his mighty word sustaineth all things Hebr. 1. 3. His name is excellent in all the World in which he sheweth his glory Psalme 8. 1. The Heavens declare his glory and the firmament sheweth his handy-worke day unto day uttereth speech and night unto night sheweth knowledge and that by the Suns going round about the World and discovering by his light all things from one end of Heaven and Earth to another Psalme 19. 1 2. This generall providence appeares First by his consecration of things Secondly by his destruction of so many as hee in his just will and judgement thinks fit Thirdly by his governing of all things according to his eternall counsell and just will First hee doth universally conserve and uphold all things in the World by the light motion and influence which hee hath given to the heavens in the creation which are continually turned about by his counsels that they may doe whatsoever hee commandeth them upon the face of the World in the Earth Iob 37. 12. Hee maketh his Sun to shine on the evill and on the good and sendeth raine on the iust and uniust Matth. 5. 45. Hee giveth food to all flesh Psalme 136. 27. H●● giveth meat to the beasts and feedeth the young ravens which crie Psalme 147. 9. He provideth for the fowles of the aire their food though they neither sow nor reape and cloatheth the grasse of the field Matth. 6. 26 30. This conservation is first by succession For when any creatures passe away hee maketh others of their race and kind to succeed by a continuall generation and propagation as it were by a continued creation The forming and fashioning of men in the wombe is ascribed to him Iob 10. 8. 9 10. and 31. 15. and Psalme 139. 13. So that as men and other living creatures dye their off spring and progeny succeed in their place and by this meanes he doth renue the face of the Earth Psalme 104. 30. and not onely one generation of living creatures passeth away and another commeth in the place so that the earth is alwayes replenished but day and night succeed continually by the going and returning of the Sun and the winde whorleth about continually going and returning according to his circuits The waters doe all run into the Sea and yet the Rivers are supplied by springs which come from the Sea by secret passages under the Earth as the wise-Man sheweth Eccles. 1. 4 5 6 7. Secondly hee preserveth all things universally by changing mutable things from an evill to a good and from a lesse good to a better condition Hee girdeth the weake with strength Job 12. 18. 1 Sam 2. 4. Hee maketh the barren wombe fruitfull Psalme 113. 9. Hee turneth the wildernesse into standing pooles of water and dry ground into water springs and maketh the barren desert a fruitfull field Psalme 107. 35. Isa. 41. 18. and 51. 3. Hee raiseth the needy out of the dust and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill 1 Sam. 2. 8. and Psalme 113. 7. And because the universality of creatures cannot bee preserved without Gods carefull keeping and preserving every particular therefore God hath an eye to every singular thing and his provident hand is reached forth to every one of them in so much that our haires are numbred and not one small sparrow can fall on the ground without him Matth. 10. 29 30. Hee cloathed the grasse of the field even every Lillie Matth. 6. 30. Hee reckons up our teares Psalme 56. 9. and is with every one in his going out and comming in in his downe sitting and uprising Psalme 139. 1. 2. Isa. 27. 28. Secondly his generall providence appeareth and is exercised in the destruction which hee himselfe according to his just will bringeth upon the whole Earth or upon whole Nations and Cities or upon some notable persons The destruction of the whole World in the dayes of Noah came by his hand and providence for hee said Behold I will bring a flood of waters and will destroy all flesh Gen. 6. 13. and hee foretold his purpose so to doe an hundred yeares before And the destruction of Sodome and Gomorrha was by fire which hee rained upon them Gen. 19. Hee smotte Egypt with plagues and destroyed the first borne and also Pharaoh and his host Exod. 12. and 14. Psalme 135. 10. And the Cana●nites by Joshua and Israel Josh. 10. and 11. and Senacheribs host 2 King 19. And the murmuring Israelites together with Corah Dathan and Abiram Num. 16. Vzzah 2. Sam. 6. 6. Herod Act. 12. and many others By this destroying and abolishing of men and other creatures and by his consuming and wasting of them by smitting the earth with barrennesse and sending pestilence and warre hee makes men know that hee is Jehovah the righteous Iudge and the Nations to see and feele that they are but mortall men as the Psalmist testifieth Psalme 9 21. and 46. 11. Thirdly this generall providence is seene in his government of all things according to his owne just will and good pleasure Hee doth after a generall manner rule inferiour things by the light and influence of the Heavens and of the Sun Moone and Starres By the Sun hee rules the day and by the Moone and Starres hee governes the night Psalme 136. 8. 9. And as his eyes are upon all things and upon all the wayes and workes of men so hee fashioneth their hearts Psalme 33. 15. Hee keepeth the waters of the Sea within their bounds beyond which they doe not passe Psalme 104. 9. Hee hath a set time and season for every thing and for every purpose under Heaven Eccles. 3. 1. And this government hee exerciseth by motion and direction of motions and by cohibition First by motion for hee moveth all things not onely the mindes wils of men by turning their hearts at his pleasure Ier. 12. 24. Act. 17. 28. Psalme 105. 25. and Prov. 21. 1. but also things without life by a naturall inclination which hee giveth to every thing in his kind as the Psalmist sheweth in the Sun Moone and Starres the windes and the waters Psalme 104. 19. 25. And as hee moveth every creature so hee directeth all their motions as appeares Psalme 37. 23. Prov. 20. 24. Ier. 10. 23. In so much that what men