Select Discourses TREATING 1. Of the true Way or Method of attaining to Divine Knowledge. 2. Of Superstition. 3. Of Atheism. 4. Of the Immortality of the Soul. 5. Of the Existence and Nature of God. 6. Of Prophecy. 7. Of the Difference between the Legal and the Evangelical Righteousness, the Old and the New Covenant, etc. 8. Of the Shortness and Vanity of a pharisaic Righteousness. 9 Of the Excellency and Nobleness of True Religion. 10. Of a Christians Conflicts with, and Conquests over, Satan. By JOHN SMITH, late Fellow of Queen's College in Cambridge. As also a SERMON preached by SIMON PATRICK (than Fellow of the same College) at the AUTHOR's FUNERAL: WITH A brief Account of his LIFE and DEATH. Hebrews 11. 4.— 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. LONDON, Printed by J. Flesher, for W. Morden Bookseller in Cambridg, Anno Domini M DC LX. To the READER. THE intendment of this Preface is not to court the Reader into an high esteem of either these Discourses or their Author, (the Discourses will best speak what they are, and for the Author, his own Works will praise him;) but only to give a clear and plain Account of what concerns This Edition, and withal to observe Something concerning the Discourses themselves and the Author of them, not unnecessary perhaps for the Reader to be acquainted with. The Papers now published I received from the Author's Of this Edition. Executor, Mr. Samuel Cradock (than Fellow of Emmanuel College, now Rector of North-Cadbury in Somerset-shire,) whose Beneficence to the public in imparting these Treasures I thought worthy to be here in the first place gratefully remembered. Having taken a more general view of these, and some other, Papers (divers of which were lose and scattered, not being written by the Author in any Book,) my First care was to collect such as were Homogeneal and related to the same Discourse; as also to observe where any new additional Matter was to be inserted; (For the Author, whose Mind was a rich & fruitful soil, a bountiful & ever-bubling Fountain, sometimes would superadd upon further thoughts some other Considerations to what he had formerly delivered in public; and this he would do sometimes after he had gone off from that Argument, and though Matter of a different nature had come between.) This employment I found at first sufficiently perplexed and toilsome; but through more than once reading over the Manuscripts, I got through those difficulties, and dispatched that First trouble. And I am well assured that the severed Parts, and also the additional Considerations, are brought to their due and proper places where the Author himself would have disposed them, if he had transcribed his Papers. And now I found that I stood in need of more Hands and Eyes than mine own for the fair transcribing of the Papers (otherwise impossible to be printed) as also for the examining of the material Quotations in this Volume: and in this Labour I had the assistance of some Friends to whom the memory of the Author was very precious. As for some short Allusions and Expressions borrowed out of ancient Authors, serving rather for Ornament then Support of the Matter in hand, there seemed to be less need of being solicitous about all of them: But for the other Testimonies, which are many and weighty, there were but Few (some possibly among such a number of Quotations might escape) that were not examined; and I am sure that this labour was not unnecessary and in vain, how wearisome soever it was, especially where the Authors, or the places in the Authors, were not mentioned. And then for the sake of such Readers whose Education had not acquainted them with some of the Languages wherein many of the Testimonies were represented, (being otherwise men of good accomplishments, and capable to receive the designed benefit of these Papers) it seemed expedient to render the Latin, but especially the Hebrew and Greek, Quotations into English; (except in such places where, the substance and main importance of the Quotations being insinuated in the neighbouring words, a Translation was less needful.) For the Author seldom translated the Hebrew, and more seldom the Greek, but into Latin; as considering that he delivered these Discourses in the College-Chappel before an Auditory not needing any such Condescensions as are requisite in the publishing of these Papers for the benefit of some Readers. To dispatch this First part of the Preface which concerns the Preparations to this Edition, I shall add only one thing more; That whereas the Papers now published (especially those that contained the Six first Discourses) were written in the Author's own Copy without any Distinction or Sections, (uno tenore & continuâ serie, as the Jews observe of the ancient writing of the Law, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The whole Law was but as one Verse;) it seemed expedient for the Reader's accommodation to distinguish them into several Discourses or Treatises (the Title-page to each Discourse giving a General account of the Matter contained therein) and the Discourses themselves into Chapters and Sections (except the Discourses were short, as two or three of them are, which therefore have the Contents set in the Beginning) and before the Chapters to give a Particular account of the Chief matters therein contained; that so the Reader might have a clearer and fuller view (as of the strength and importance, so also) of the Contexture of the whole, and the Coherence of the several Parts of the respective Discourses: which otherwise would not be so easily discerned by every Reader, especially where there are some Excursions and Digressions in any of the Treatises, (things not unusual in the Writings or Discourses of other men, when the Notion does strongly affect and possess their Minds, and their fancies are therefore more active and vigorous) and some such Digressions the Reader will meet with here more than once; though even therein he will see that the Author did still respicere titulum, and kept the main design always in his Eye. Nor does the Author in these Digressions lead the Reader a little out of the way, only to see a Reed shaken with the wind, an ordinary trifle, some slight and inconsiderable Object; but for better purposes; that he might the better present to the perspicacious Reader something which is worthy his Observation: and therefore these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being usually of such importance, need not be severely censured by rigid Methodists, if any such chance to read these Treatises. This is a plain Account of some Instances of the care and labour preparatory to this Edition; of all which I accounted the Author of these Discourses to be most Of the Author. worthy: For I considered him as a Friend, one whom I knew for many years, not only when he was Fellow of Queen's Col. but when a Student in Emman. Col. where his early Piety and the remembering his Creator in those days of his youth, as also his excellent improvements in the choicest parts of Learning, endeared him to many, particularly to his careful Tutor, than Fellow of Emman. Col. afterwards Provost of King's College, Dr. Whichcote; to whom for his Directions and Encouragements of him in his Studies, his seasonable provision for his support and maintenance when he was a young Scholar, as also upon other obliging Considerations, our Author did ever express a great and singular regard. But besides I considered him (which was more) as a true Servant and Friend of God: and to such a one, and what relates to such, I thought that I owed no less care and diligence. The former Title [a Servant of God] is very often in Scripture given to that incomparable person Moses: incomparable for his * Act. 7. 22. Philosophical accomplishments and knowledge of Nature, as also for his Political Wisdom, and great abilities in the Conduct and managing of affairs; and in speaking excellent sense, strong and clear Reason in any business and Case that was before him; for he was mighty in words and in deeds, Acts 7. (and of both these kinds of Knowledge wherein Moses excelled, as also in the more recondite and mysterious knowledge of the Egyptians, there are several Instances and Proofs in the Pentateuch written by him:) incomparable as well for the loveliness of his Disposition and Temper, the inward ornament and beauty of a * Num. 12. 3. meek and humble Spirit, as for the extraordinary amiableness of his outward person; and incomparable for his unexampled * Heb. 11. 24, etc. Self-denial in the midst of the greatest allurements and most tempting advantages of this world. And from all these great Accomplishments and Perfections in Moses, it appears how excellently he was qualified and enabled to answer that Title [The Servant of God] more frequently given to him in Scripture then unto any other. The other Title [a Friend of God] is given to Abraham, the Father of the Faithful, an eminent Exemplar of Self-resignation and Obedience even in * Rom. 4. Heb. 11. Jam. 2. Trials of the greatest difficulty: and it is given to him thrice in Scripture, 2 Chron. 20. 7. Esay 41. 8. James 2. 23. and plainly implied in Genes. 18. 17. Shall I hid from Abraham, etc. but expressed in the Jerusalem Targum there, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and in * De Verbis, Resipuit Noe. Philo Jud. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nor is less insinuated concerning Moses, with whom God is said to have spoken, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Num. 12. 8. mouth to mouth, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Exod. 33. 11. mouth to mouth, as a man speaketh unto his friend. And how fitly and properly both these Titles were verified concerning our Author, who was a faithful, hearty and industrious Servant of God, counting it his Duty and Dignity, his Meat and Drink to do the will of his Master in heaven, and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from his very Soul, and with good will, (the * Ephes. 6. 6, 7. characters of a good Servant) and who was dearly affected towards God, and treated by God as a Friend; may appear from that Account of him represented in the Sermon at his Funeral. I might easily fill much Paper, if I should particularly recount those many Excellencies that shined forth in him: But I would study to be short. I might truly say, That he was not only * Rom. 5. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, both a Righteous and truly Honest man, and also a Good man. He was a Follower and Imitator of God in Purity and Holiness, in Benignity, Goodness and Love, a Love enlarged as God's Love is, whose Goodness overflows and spreads itself to all, and his tender mercies are over all his works. He was a * Ephes. 6. Lover of our Lord Jesus Christ in Sincerity, a Lover of his Spirit and of his Life, a Lover of his Excellent Laws and Rules of holy life, a serious Practiser of his Sermon in the Mount, that Best Sermon that ever was Mat. ch. 5, 6, 7. preached, and yet none more generally neglected by those that call themselves Christians; though the observance of it be for the true Interest both of men's Souls and of Christian States and commonwealths; and accordingly (as being the surest way to their true Settlement and Establishment) it is compared to the building upon a Rock, Matth. 7. 24. To be short, He was a Christian not only * Act. 26. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, more than a little, even wholly and altogether such; a Christian * Rom. 2 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, inwardly and in good earnest: Religious he was, but without any Vaingloriousness and Ostentation; not so much a talking or a disputing, as a living, a doing and an obeying Christian; one inwardly acquainted with the Simplicity and Power of Godliness, but no admirer of the pharisaic forms and Sanctimonious shows (though never so goodly and specious) which cannot and do not affect the adult and strong Christians, though they may and do those that are unskillful and weak. For in this weak and low state of the divided Churches in Christendom weak and slight things (especially if they make a fair show in the flesh, as the Apostle speaks,) are most esteemed; whereas in the mean time the weightier matters of the Law, the most concerning and Substantial parts of Religion are passed over & disregarded by them, as being grievous to them, & no way for their turns, no way for their corrupt interests, fleshly ease, and worldly advantages. But God's thoughts are not as their thoughts: The * Rom. 2. 29. Circumcision which is of the heart, and in the spirit, is that whose praise is of God, though not of men; and * Luk. 16. 15. that which is highly esteemed amongst men, is abomination in the sight of God. What I shall further observe concerning the Author, is only this, That he was Eminent as well in those Perfections which have most of Divine worth and excellency in them, and rendered him a truly godlike man; as in those other Perfections and Accomplishments of the Mind, which rendered him a very Rational and Learned man: and withal, in the midst of all these great Accomplishments, as Eminent and Exemplary in unaffected Humility and true Lowliness of Mind. And herein he was like to Moses that Servant and Friend of God, who was most meek and lowly in heart (as our Lord is also said to be, Mat. 11. in this, as in all other respects, greater than Moses who was vir mitissimus) above all the men which were upon the face of the Earth, Num. 12. And thus he excelled others as much in Humility as he did in knowledge, in that thing which, though in a lesser degree in others, is apt to puff up and swell them with Pride and Self-conceit. But Moses was humble, though he was a Person of brave parts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ as Josephus speaks of him, and having had the advantages of a most * Acts 7. 21, 22. ingenuous Education was admirably, accomplished in the choicest parts of knowledge, and * learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians; whereby some of the ancients understood the Mysterious Hieroglyphical learning, Natural Philosophy, music, physic, and mathematics. And for this last (to omit the rest) how excellent this Humble man, the Author, was therein, did appear to those that heard him read a mathematic Lecture in the Schools for some years, & may appear hereafter to the Reader, if those Lectures can be recovered. To conclude, He was a plainhearted both Friend and Christian, one in whose Spirit and mouth there was no guile; a profitable Companion; nothing of vanity and trislingness in him, as there was nothing of sowrness & Stoicism. I can very well remember, when I have had private converse with him, how pertinently and freely he would speak to any Matter proposed, how weighty, substantial and clearly expressive of his Sense his private Discourses would be, and both for Matter and Language much-what of the same importance & value with such Exercises as he studied for, and performed in public. I have intimated some things concerning the Author; much more might be added: but it needs not, there being (as I before insinuated) already drawn a fair and lively Character of him by a worthy Friend of his in the Sermon preached at his Funeral; for the publishing whereof and annexing it (as now it is) to these Discourses, he was importuned by Letters from several hands, and prevailed with: wherein if some part of the Character should seem to have in it any thing of Hyperbolism and Strangeness, it must seem so to such only who either were unacquainted with him & Strangers to his worth, or else find it an hard thing not to be Envious, and a difficulty to be Humble. But those that had a more inward converse with him, knew him to be one of those * Hebr. 11. of whom the world was not worthy, one of the * Psal. 16. Excellent ones in the Earth; a person truly Exemplary in the temper and constitution of his Spirit, and in the well-ordered course of his life; a life unius quasi coloris, sine actionum dissensione (as I remember Seneca doth express it somewhere in his Epistles) all of one colour, everywhere like itself: and Eminent in those things that are worthy of Praise and Imitation. And certainly a just Representation of those Excellencies that shined in him (as also a faithful Celebration of the like Accomplishments in others) is a doing honour to God who is wonderful in his Saints, (if I may with some apply to this sense that in Psal. 68 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) and it may be also of great use to others, particularly for the awakening & obliging them to an earnest endeavouring after those heights and eminent degrees in Grace and virtue and every worthy Accomplishment, which by such Examples they see to be possible & attainable through the assistances which the Divine Goodness is ready to afford those Souls which press toward the mark and reach forth to those things that are before. The Lives and Examples of men eminently Holy and Useful in their generation, such as were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, are ever to be valued by us as great Blessings and Favours from Heaven, and to be considered as excellent Helps to the Advancement of Religion in the World: and therefore there being before us these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as S. Basil speaks in his first Epist. and a little afterwards in the same Ep.) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, such living Pictures, moving and active Statues, fair Ideas and lively Patterns of what is most praiseworthy, lovely and excellent; it should be our serious care that we be not, through an unworthy and lazy Self-neglect, Ingentium Exemplorum parvi imitatores, to use Salvian's expression; it should be our holy ambition to transcribe their virtues and Excellencies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to make their noblest and best Accomplishments our own by a constant endeavour after the greatest resemblance of them, and by being followers of them, as they were also of Christ, who is the fair and bright Exemplar of all Purity and Holiness, the highest and most absolute Pattern of whatsoever is Lovely and Excellent and makes most for the accomplishing and perfecting of Humane Nature. Having observed Some things concerning This Edition Of the Discourses. and the Author of these Discourses, I proceed now (which was the Last thing intended in this Preface) to observe something concerning the several Discourses and Treatises in this Volume. And indeed some of these Observations I ought not in justice to the Author to pretermit: and all of them may be for the benefit of at least some Readers. The First Discourse Concerning the true Way or Method of attaining to Divine knowledge, and an increase therein, was intended by the Author as a necessary Introduction to the ensuing Treatises; and therefore is the shorter: yet it contains 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (to use Plutarch's Expression) excellent Sense and solid Matter well beaten and compacted and lying close together in a little room, many very seasonable Observations for this Age, wherein there is so much of fruitless Notionality, so little of the true Christian life and practice. Shorter yet are the Two next Tracts Of Superstition and Atheism, which were also intended by the Author to prepare the way for some of the following Discourses upon which the Author purposed to enlarge his Thoughts. Yet as for that Tract Of Superstition, some things that are but briefly intimated by the Author therein, may receive a further Explication from his other Discourses, more especially from the Eighth, viz. Of the Shortness and Vanity of a pharisaic Righteousness, or Page 347. An Account of the false Grounds upon which men are apt vainly to conceit themselves to be Religious. And indeed what the Author writes concerning that more refined, that more close and subtle Superstition (by which he understands the formal and specious Sanctity and vain Religion of pharisaic Christians, who yet would seem to be very abhorrent from Superstition, and are apt to call every thing Babylonish and Antichristian that is not of their way) I say what he writes concerning This in both these (or any other) Discourses, he would frequently speak of, and that with Authority and Power. For being possessed of the inward life and power of true Holiness, he had a very strong and clear sense of what he spoke, and therefore a great and just indignation (as against open and gross Irreligion, so also) against that vainglorious, slight and empty Sanctity of the spiritual Pharisees, who would (as our Saviour speaks of the old Pharisees, Mark 7.) make void and very fairly disannul the Commandments of God, the weightier things of Religion, the indispensable concernments of Christianity; while in stead of an inward living Righteousness and entire Obedience they would substitute some external Observances and a mere outward, liveless and slight Righteousness, and in the room of the New creature made after God set up some Creature of their own, made after their own image, a Self-framed Righteousness: they being strict in some things which have a show of Wisdom and Sanctity, things less necessary and more doubtful, and where the H. Scripture hath not placed the Kingdom of God, but in the mean time lose and careless in their plain duty toward God and toward their Neighbour, in things holy and divine, unquestionably just and good; yet to make some compensation for their being deficient in things strictly and necessarily required, and primarily pleasing to God, and to excuse themselves, they would express a more than ordinary diligence and zeal in some easy and little things, as all the most specious observances of Formal Christians are, and not worthy to be named with those great Instances of the Power of Godliness, such as Hearty and Universal Obedience, Entire Self-resignation, a being crucified to the world, plucking out of the right eye, and cutting off of the right hand, Mortification of the more dear and beloved Sins, and the closer tendencies and inclinations to Sin and Vanity, and the like. This is a short character of the pharisaic and conceited Righteousness; and in our Author's plain discovering the thinness and slightness thereof, and free reproving of these false Religionists, it appears that the same Nobleness of Mind and Spirit was in him which was also in Christ Jesus, who never expressed himself with so much vehemency and smartness, as when he was to reprove the Pharisees in his days, those Patterns of Matth. 23. Formal Christians in all ages. For there is nothing more grievous to the sincerely-religious Soul, than Affectation and Canting in Religion, empty (though specious) shows of Sanctity, great pretendings to Spirituality and higher degrees of Grace, when to the free-spirited and discerning Christian it clearly appears that such Boasters are but low and weak things, * Heb. 5. unskillful and unexperienced in the word and way of Righteousness, and manifestly short of being plain Moral men; and that they are Sensual, having not the Spirit, nor bringing forth those lovely and well-relished fruits of the Spirit, mentioned Gal. 5. 22. but on the contrary the corrupt fruits of the Flesh grow out of their Hearts, and the works of the Flesh there mentioned are manifested in them: So far are they from being crucified (and not alive) to the world and the world to them, so far are they from having crucified the Flesh with the affections and lusts, that they do * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 8. Col. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, mind and earnestly affect, favour and relish, the things of the Flesh, and of the Earth; aspiring as much after power and greatness, as selfseeking and self-pleasing, as great lovers of themselves, loving the world and the things in the world, making haste to be rich, thirsting still after more of this world, pursuing worldly advantages and interests, with as much craft and policy, as much solicitude and eagerness, with as unsatisfied desires, as those do whom they call Worldly and Carnal. So of old the gnostics called all others but themselves Carnal and Animal men; they only were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, others were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as Irenaeus l. 1. tells us:) whereas in truth none were more Sensual, more unspiritual, than they who by their unevangelical lives were the great spots and blemishes of the Christian profession. But to let these alone, and to return to the former, (with whom our Author had to do in both these Treatises, and in the 2, 3, and 4. chapters of his seventh Treatise) I shall add this word of faithful Admonition; Be not deceived, God is not mocked: God will not be put off with empty pretences and pharisaic appearances (how glorious and precious soever in the eyes of men.) God will not be flattered with goodly praises, nor satisfied with words and notions, when the Life and Practice is a real contradiction to them. God will not be satisfied with a specious Form of Godliness, when men under this Form are Lovers of themselves, covetous, 2 Tim. 3. proud, highminded, fierce, lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God, and are manifestly under the power of these and the like Spiritual (if not also Fleshly) wickednesses. For the Power of sin within can (it seems) easily agree and consist with the Form of Godliness without: but two such contrary Powers as the Power of Godliness and the Power of Sin, two such contrary Kingdoms as the Kingdom of the Spirit and the Kingdom of the Flesh, which is made up of many petty and lesser Principalities of * Titus 3. 3. various Lusts and Pleasures, warring sometimes amongst themselves, but always confederate in warring against the Soul; these so contrary Powers and Kingdoms cannot stand together nor be established in one Soul. Be wise now therefore and be ye instructed O ye sanctimonious Pharisees, ye blind leaders of the blind, and know the things that belong unto your peace: for the day of the Lord will come that shall burn as an oven, when all those fine cover, wherewith men thought to hid their ungodlike dispositions, shall be torn from them and cast into the Fire; and in this day shall even these weak and beggarly Elements melt with a fervent heat, and for Hypocrites, Gal. 4. all their paint shall then drop off, and their deformity shall appear: in this day all affected modes of Religion shall be rendered despicable, and all disguises and artificial dresses (whereby false Christians thought to hid their crookednesses) shall be plucked off, and all things shall appear as they are. Verily there is a God that judgeth in the Earth: he will judge of men by other measures and rules than they used here, whereby they deceived themselves and others. God is for Reality and Truth: He desires Truth in the inward parts, his delight is in sincere and single minds. It will then appear That he that walks uprightly, walks surely; and That he that doth the will of God, abideth for ever, Prov. 10. 1 John 2. If what the Author, out of great Charity to the Souls of men, has observed concerning these things were seriously considered and laid to heart, Christianity would then recover its reputation, and appear in its own primitive lustre and native loveliness, such as shined forth in the lives of those First and Best Christians, who were Christians in good earnest, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and were distinguished from all other men in excelling and outshining them in whatsoever things were true, venerable, just, pure, lovely, and of good report. Then would the true Power of Godliness manifest itself; which signifies infinitely More than a Power to dispute with heat and vehemency about some Opinions, or to discourse volubly about some matters in Religion, and in such Forms of words as are taking with the weak and unskillful: More than a power to pray without a Form of words; (for these and the like may be, and frequently are, done by the formal and unspiritual Christian:) More than a Power to deny themselves in some things that are easy to part with, and do not much cross their inclinations, their self-will, their corrupt designs and interests, nor prejudice their dear and more beloved lusts and pleasures, their profitable and advantageous Sins: and More than a power to observe some lesser and easier Commands, or to perform an outward obedience arising out of slavish Fear, void of inward Life and Love, and a Complacency in the Law of God (of which temper our Author discourses at large.) For concerning such cheap and little strictnesses as these it may be enquired, What do you more than others? Do not even Publicans and Pharisees the same? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; what excellent and extraordinary thing do you? what hard or difficult thing do you perform, such as may deserve to be thought a worthy Instance and real Manifestation of the Power of Godliness? except such things are to be accounted hard or extraordinary, which are common to the real and to the formal Christian, and are performable by unregenerate and natural men, and are no peculiar Characters of Regeneration. No, these and the like performances by which such Religionists would set off themselves, are but poor and inconsiderable things, if compared with the mighty acts and noble achievements of the more excellent (though less ostentatious) Christians, who through Faith in the Goodness and Power of God have been enabled to do all things through Christ, knowing both how to abound, and how to be abased, etc. Phil. 4. enabled to overcome the World without them, and the Love of the World within them; enabled to overcome themselves, (and for a man to rule his own Spirit is a greater instance of power and valour then to take a City, as Solomon judgeth Prov. 16.) enabled to resist the powers of darkness, and to quit themselves like men and good soldiers of Jesus Christ, giving many signal overthrows to those Lusts that war against their Souls, and to the mightiest and strongest of them, the Sons of Anak: and by engaging in the hardest Services of this Spiritual warfare, wherein the pharisaic boasters dare not follow them, they show that there is a Spirit of power in them, and that they can do more than others. These are some of the Exploits of strong and healthful Christians; and for the encouraging of them in these Conflicts which shall end in glorious Conquests and joyous Triumphs, the Author hath in the Tenth and last Discourse suggested what is worthy our Consideration. But I must not forget that there remains something to be observed concerning some other Treatises: and having been so large in the last Observation (which was not unnecessary, the world abounding, & ever having abounded, with spiritual Pharisees) I shall be shorter in the rest. And now to proceed to the next, which is of Atheism; This Discourse (being but Preparatory to the ensuing Tracts) is short: yet I would mind the Reader, that what is more briefly handled here, may be supplied and further cleared out of the Fifth Discourse, viz. Of the Existence and Nature of God, of which (if the former part seem more Speculative, subtle and Metaphysical, yet) the Latter and Greater part, containing several Deductions and Inferences from the Consideration of the Divine Nature and Attributes, is less obscure, and more Practical, as it clearly directs us to the best (though not much observed) way of glorifying God, and being made happy and blessed by a Participation and Resemblance of him; & as it plainly directs a man to such Apprehensions of God as are apt and powerful to beget in him the Noblest and dearest Love to God, the sweetest Delight, and the most peaceful Confidence in him. One thing more I would observe to the Reader concerning the Discourse Of Atheism, and the same I would desire to be observed also concerning the next, that large Treatise Of the Immortality of the Soul, especially of the former part thereof; and it is shortly this, That the Author in these Treatises pursues his discourse with a particular reflection on the Dogmata and Notions of Epicurus and his followers, especially that great admirer of him, Lucretius, whose Principles are here particularly examined and refuted. These were the men whose Opinions our Author had to combat with; He lived not to see Atheism so closely and craftily insinuated, nor lived he to see Sadduceism and Epicurism so boldly owned and industriously propagated, as they have been of late, by some who being hearty desirous That there were no God, no Providence, no Reward nor Punishment after this life, take upon them to deride the Notion of Spirit or Incorporeal Substance, the Existence of Separate Souls, and the Life to come: and by infusing into men's Minds Opinions contrary to these Fundamental Principles of Religion, they have done that which manifestly tends to the * This was of old confessed, and boasted of by Lucretius more than once in his Poems. overthrow of all Religion, the destruction of Morality and virtuous living, the debauching of Mankind, the consuming and eating out of any good Principle left in the Conscience which doth testify for God and Goodness, and against Sin and Wickedness, and to the defacing and expunging of the Law written in men's hearts; and so the holy Apostle judges of the Epicurean Notions and discourses, (a taste of which he gives in that passage, 1 Cor. 15. Let us eat and drink, for to morrow we die, and then there's an End of all, no other life or state,) and he expresseth his judgement concerning the evil and dangerousness of these doctrines and their teachers, partly in a Verse out of Menander, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Evil communications corrupt good manners, and in what he subjoins v. 34. besides many other passages in this Chapter in opposition to the doctrine of the Sadducees and Epicureans: and to the same purpose he speaks in 2. Tim. 2. 16, 17, 18. concerning those that denied the Doctrine of the Resurrection or any Future State and the Life to come. The sum and substance of the Apostles judgement concerning these Epicurean principles is plainly this, That these Principles properly and powerfully tend to the corrupting of men's Minds and Lives, to the advancement of Irreligion and Immorality in the world; That they are no benign Principles to Piety and a Good life. 'Tis true that some of the more wary and considerate modern Epicureans, may express some care to live inoffensively, and to keep out of danger, and to maintain a reputation in the world as to their converse with others, (and herein they mind their worldly interests and the advantages of this present life, the only life which they have in their eye) they may also express a care in avoiding what is prejudicial to health and a long life in this world: But all this is short of a true and noble Love of Goodness; and if in these men there be any appearance of what is Good and praiseworthy, they would have been really better, if they had been of other Principles, and had believed in their Hearts That there is a Providence, a Future state, and Life to come, and had lived agreeably to the Truths of the Christian Philosophy, which do more ennoble and accomplish and every way better a man, than the Principles of the Epicurean Sect. But to return, We have before observed. That our Author in these Two Treatises pursued his design in opposition to the Master-Notions and chief Principles of Epicurus and Lucretius of old: I shall only add this, That if any of this Sect in our days has done more then revived and repeated those Principles, if any such has superadded any thing of any seeming force and moment to the pretensions of the old Epicureans mentioned in these Tracts, the Reader may find it particularly spoken to and fully answered by One whom our Author highly esteemed, Mr. Henry More, in his late Treatise Of the Immortality of the Soul, and in another Discourse entitled An Antidote against Atheism, and in the Appendix thereunto annexed. I pass on to the Discourse of prophecy, which, as it cost the Author more pains (I believe) then any of the other, (it containing many considerable inquiries in an Argument not commonly treated of, and more than vulgar Observations out of ancient Jewish writers,) so did it (together with the former part of the next Discourse) require more labour to prepare it for the Press and the benefit of the Reader than any of the other Tracts, by reason of the many Quotations, especially the Hebrew one's, to be examined: in the perusing of which there would sometimes occur a dubious and dark Expression, and then I thought it safest to confer with our Hebrew Professor, Dr. Cudworth, for whom the Author had always a great affection and respect. It's true, This Elaborate Treatise is of a more Speculative nature than any of the rest, yet is it also useful, and contains sundry Observations not only of Light and knowledge but also of Use and Practice. For, besides that in this Treatise several Passages of Scripture are illustrated out of Jewish Monuments, (which is no small instance of its Usefulness,) there are Two Chapters (to name no more) viz. 4, and 8. (the longest in this Treatise) which more particularly relate to Practice, and might be (if well considered) available to the bettering of some men's manners. The matter of the Fourth Chapter treating of the Difference between the true Prophetical Spirit and Enthusiastical impostures is seasonably useful, and of no small importance. Not to mention any latter Experiments and Proofs how powerful such Enthusiastical impostures have been to disquiet and endanger several parts of Christendom, it appears by good History (and the Event is yet apparent) how strangely that Political Enthusiast, Mahomet, has befooled a very great part of the world by his pretensions of being inspired and taught by the divine Spirit whispering in his ear, by his Epileptical fits, pretended Visions and Revelations. Thus Mahomet's Dove hath as wonderfully prevailed in the World as of old the Roman Eagles: although yet (which may abate our wondering at this success) this imposturous and pretendedly-inspired Doctrine was not propagated and promoted with a dovelike Spirit, but with force of Arms; Mahumetanism cut out its way by the Sword, the worst instrument for propagating of Religigion; to say nothing of the advantages it had from its compliance with Flesh and blood and a Sensual life, and from the Ignorance, Rudeness and Barbarism of that people to whom that impure Prophet communicated his Alcoran, a people capable of any doctrine how absurd and irrational soever. Whereas Christianity was at first promoted and made its way in the world by methods more innocent and worthy of the Doctrine of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ that true and great Prophet, of whom the Voice from heaven was, * Matthew 17. See also Acts 3. 22. Deut. 18. 15. Hear ye him: after whose revelation of the Counsel and Will of God to man, there is not to be expected any new (and by him unrevealed) Doctrine as pertaining to Life and Godliness and necessary to Salvation. Neither is the Eighth Chapter, treating of the Dispositions preparatory to prophecy, without its Usefulness; there being an easy appliableness of what is contained therein to such as are pretenders to Prophesying, according to the more general importance of that Word; and it may be both a just Reproof and a sober Advice to those who being full of themselves, swelled with Self-conceit, and puffed up with an opinion of their own knowledge and Abilities (which yet is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Job 15. a windy and vain knowledge, a knowledge falsely so called, 1 Tim. 6.) and being wise and righteous in their own eyes, take upon them to be most talkative & dogmatical, pert and magisterial, Desiring to be Teachers, although they understand neither what they say, nor 1 Tim. 1. whereof they affirm; and therefore Modesty and Sparingness of speech and Swiftness to hear would better become such then Empty Confidence and Talkativeness, and a pouring out words without knowledge, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for indeed this is the true account of these men and their performances, the weakness and insignificancy of which (notwithstanding the strong voice and loud noise of the speakers) are easily discerned by those who in understanding are men, and have put away childish things. What I would further intimate concerning this Treatise Of prophecy, is briefly this, That though it be one of the largest Treatises in this Volume, yet there are some parts and passages in it which I think the Author would have more enlarged and filled up, had he not hastened to that which according to the method designed by him he calls The Third Great Principle of Religion. But of this I have given an account in an * Page 280. Advertisement at the end of this Treatise, as also of the adjoining next to it. The Discourse Of the Legal and the Evangelical Righteousness, etc. which Discourse is a much Practical as the former was Speculative. Nor was the composure of that Treatise more painful to the Author, than the elaborating of this, at least the former half of this, wherein the Author has traversed— loca nullius ante Trita solo— the more unknown Records and Monuments of Jewish Authors, for the better stating the Jewish Notion of the Righteousness of the Law; the clearing of which in chap. 2, and 3. as also the settling the Difference between That Righteousness which is of the Law, and That which is of Faith, between the Old and the New Covenant, and the Account of the Nature of Justification and Divine Acceptance, etc. are all of them of no small use and consequence, but together with the Appendix to this Tract (made up of certain brief but comprehensive Observations) they offer to the Reader what is not unworthy of his serious consideration. Of the Eighth Discourse, showing the Vanity of a pharisaic Righteousness or Godliness falsely so called, I have spoken before. The next Discourse, largely treating of the Excellency and Nobleness of True Religion and Holiness, shows the Author's Mind to have been not slightly tinctured and washed over with Religion, but rather to have been double-dyed, throughly imbued and coloured with that generosum honestum, as the satirist not unfitly styles it,— incoctum generoso pectus honesto. But the Author's Life and Actions spoke no less; and indeed there is no language so fully expressive of a man as the language of his Deeds. Those that were throughly acquainted with him, knew well That as there was in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as'twas said of Solomon) a largeness and 1 Kings 4. 29. vastness of Heart and Understanding, so there was also in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Psal. 51. 12. , a free, ingenuous, noble Spirit, most abhorrent of what was sordid and unworthy; and this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as the Lxx. translate that Hebrew) is the genuine product of Religion in that Soul where it is suffered to rule, and (as S. James speaks of Patience) to have her perfect work. The Style in this Tract may seem more raised and sublime then in the other, (which might be perhaps from the Nature and quality of the subject matter, apt to heighten expressions;) but yet in this (as in the other Tracts) it is free from the Vanity of Affectation, which a Mind truly ennobled by Religion cannot stoop to, as counting it a pedantic business, and a certain argument of a Poorness and Weakness of Spirit in the either Writer or Speaker. But if in this Tract the Style seem more magnificent, yet in the Tenth and Last Discourse (viz. Of a Christian's Conflicts and Conquests) it is most familiar. The Matter of it is very Useful and Practical: for as it more fully and clearly acquaints a Christian with the more dangerous and unseen Methods of Satan's activity, (concerning which the Notions and Conceptions of many men are discovered here to be very short and imperfect;) so it also acquaints him with such Principles as are available to beget in him the greatest Courage, Spirit and Resolution against the day of battle, chase away all lazy faintheartedness and despair of Victory. This for the Matter. The Style is (as I said) most familiar. This Discourse was delivered in public at Huntingdon, where one of Queen's College is every year on March 25. to preach a Sermon against Witchcraft, Diabolical Contracts, etc. I shall only add this, That when he preached in lesser Country-Auditories (particularly at Achurch near Oundle in Northamptonshire, the place of his Nativity) as it was his care to preach upon arguments of most practical concernment, so was it also his Desire and Endeavour to accommodate his Expressions to ordinary vulgar Capacities; being studious to be understood, and not to be ignorantly wondered at by amuzing the People either with high unnecessary Speculations, or with hard Words and vain Ostentations of scholastic Learning (the low design of some that by such arts would gain a poor respect to themselves, for such (and no better) is all that stupid respect which is not founded upon knowledge and judgement:) He was studious, I say, there to speak unto men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Edification, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what was significant and easy to be understood, as the * 1 Cor. ●4. 3, & 9 Apostle doth phrase it, and to express his Mind in a way suitable to the apprehensions of Popular Auditories. And as for the Discourses now published, they also were delivered (being College-Exercises) in a way not less suitable to that Auditory: and therefore it may not be thought strange, if sometimes they seem for Matter and Style more remote from vulgar capacities. Yet even in these Discourses what is most Practical, is more easily intelligible by every honest-hearted Christian. And indeed, that the whole might be made more familiar and easy, and more accommodate to the use of any such, I thought it would be very expedient (as to cast the Discourses into Chapters, so) before every Chapter to propose to the Readers view the full Scope, Sense and Strength of the principal Matters contained therein: & I could willingly have spared such a labour (the greater, when busied about the Notions and Conceptions of another, and not our own,) if I had not conceived it to be greatly helpful and beneficial to some Readers: besides another advantage to them hereby, viz. That they may the more easily find out and select any such particular Matters in these Discourses, as they shall think most fit or desirable for their perusal. Thus have I given the Reader some account of what seemed fit to be observed concerning these Ten Discourses, which now present themselves to his free and candid judgement. And now if in the reading of these Tracts enriched with Arguments of great variety there should occur any Passage wherein either He or I may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it need not be a matter of wonder; for what Book (besides that Book of Books, the Bible) has not something in it that speaks the Author Man? It would not have displeased our Author in his life-time to have been thought less than Infallible. He was not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he was no fond Self-admirer, nor was he desirous that others should have his person, his opinion and judgement, in admiration: he was far from the humour of Magisterial dictating to others, not ambitious to be called of men, Rabbi, Rabbi, as were and are the old & the Matthew 23. modern Pharisees; nor of the number of those who are inwardly transported and tickled, when others applaud their judgement and receive their Dictates with the greatest veneration and respect; but very peevish and sour, disturbed and out of order, when any shall express themselves dissatisfied and otherwise minded, or go about modestly to discover their mistakes. No, he was truly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a lover of Truth, and of Peace and Charity. He loved an ingenuous and sober Freedom of Spirit, the generous Berean-like temper and practice (agreeable to the * Apostle's prudent and faithful advice) of proving all things, and holding fast 1 Thess. 5. that which is good. But to return, It's possible that some Passages in these Tracts which seem dubious, may, upon a patiented considering of them, if the Reader be unprejudiced & one of a clear Mind & Heart, gain his assent; and what upon the first reading seems obscure and less grateful, may upon another view, and further thoughts, clear up and be thought worthy of all acceptation. It is not with the fair Representations and Pictures of the Mind as with other Pictures; these of the Mind show best the nearer they are viewed, and the longer the Intellectual Eye dwells upon them. There is only one thing more which I ought not to forget to mind the Reader of, and it is shortly this, That he would please to remember that the now-published Tracts are Posthumous works; and then affording that charity, candour and fair respect which is commonly allowed to such works of Worthy men, I nothing doubt but he will judge them too good to have been buried in obscurity; although its likely, if the Author himself had revised them in his life-time with an intent to present them to public view, they would have received from his happy hand some further polishing and enlargements. He could have easily obliged the world with other Discourses of as valuable importance, if he had lived and been so minded. But it pleased the only-wise God (in whose hand our breath is) to call for him home to the Spirits of just men made perfect, after he had lent him to this unworthy world for about Five and thirty years. A short life his was if we measure it by so many years; but if we consider the great Ends of Life and Being in the world, which he fulfilled in his generation, his great Accomplishments qualifying him for eminent Service, and accompanied with as great a readiness to approve himself a good and faithful Servant to his gracious Lord and Master in heaven, his life was not to be accounted short, but long; and we may justly say of him what is said by the Author of the Book of Wisdom concerning Enoch, that great Exemplar of holiness and the shortest-lived of the patriarches before the flood, (for he lived but 365 years, as many years as there are days in one year,) * Ch. 4. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He being consummated in a short time, fulfilled a long time. For (as the same Author doth well express it in some * preceding verses) Ver. 8, 9 Honourable age is not that which standeth in length of time, nor that which is measured by number of years: But Wisdom is the grey hair unto men, and an unspotted life is old age. Thus much for the Papers now published. There are some other pieces of this Author's (both English and Latin) which may make another considerable Volume, especially if some papers of his (in other hands) can be retrieved. For my particular, I shall wish and endeavour that not the least Fragment of his may be concealed, which his Friends shall think worthy of publishing: and I think all such Fragments being gathered up may fitly be brought together under the Title of Miscellanies. If others who have any of his Papers shall please to communicate them, I doubt not but that there will be found in some of his Friends a readiness to publish them with all due care and faithfulness. Or if they shall think good to do it themselves and publish them apart, I would desire and hope that they would bestow that labour and diligence about the preparing them for public view and use, as may testify their respect both to the Readers benefit and the honour of the Author's memory. And now that this Volume is finished through the good guidance and assistance of God, the Father of lights and the Father of mercies, (whose rich Goodness and Grace in enabling me both to will and to do, and to continue patiently in so doing, notwithstanding the many tedious difficulties accompanying such kind of labour, I desire humbly to acknowledge;) now that the severed Papers are brought together in this Collection to their due and proper places, (as it was said of the Bones scattered in the valley, that they came together, bone to his bone, Ezek. 37.) what remains but that the Lord of life, he who giveth to all things life and breath, be with all earnestness and humility implored, That he would please to put breath into these (otherwise dry) Bones, that they may live; That besides this Paper-life (which is all that Man can give to these Writings) they may have a living Form and Vital Energy within us; That the Practical Truths contained in these Discourses may not be unto us a Dead letter, but Spirit and Life? That He who teacheth us to profit, would prosper these Papers for the attainment of all those good Ends to which they are designed; That it would please the God of all grace to remove all darkness and prejudice from the Mind and Heart of any Reader, and whatsoever would hinder the fair reception of Truth; That the Reader may have an inward, Practical and feeling knowledge of the Doctrine which is according to Godliness, and live a life worthy of that Knowledge; is the Prayer of His Servant in Christ Jesus, JOHN WORTHINGTON. Cambridge, December 22. 1659. [In this Epistle pag. seven. lin. alt. for mouth to mouth, r. face to face.] The CONTENTS of the several DISCOURSES in this Volume. DISCOURSE I. Of the true WAY or METHOD of attaining to DIVINE KNOWLEDGE. SEct. I. That Divine things are to be understood rather by a Spiritual Sensation than a Verbal Description, or mere Speculation. Sin and Wickedness prejudicial to True Knowledge. That Purity of Heart and Life, as also an Ingenuous freedom of judgement, are the best Grounds and Preparations for the Entertainment of Truth. Page. 1. Sect. II. An Objection against the Method of Knowing laid down in the former Section, answered. That Men generally, notwithstanding their apostasy, are furnished with the Radical Principles of True Knowledge. Men want not so much Means of knowing what they ought to do, as Wills to do what they know. Practical Knowledge differs from all other Knowledge, and excels it. pag. 13. Sect. III. Men may be considered in a Fourfold capacity in order to the perception of Divine things. That the Best and most excellent Knowledge of Divine things belongs only to the true and sober Christian; and that it is but in its infancy while he is in this Earthly Body. pag. 17. DISCOURSE II. OF SUPERSTITION. THE true Notion of Superstition well expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. an over-timorous and dreadful apprehension of the Deity. A false Opinion of the Deity the true Cause and Rise of Superstition. Superstition is most incident to such as Converse not with the Goodness of God, or are conscious to themselves of their own unlikeness to him. Right apprehensions of God beget in man a Nobleness and freedom of Soul. Superstition, though it looks upon God as an angry Deity, yet it counts him easily pleased with flattering Worship. Apprehensions of a Deity and gild meeting together are apt to excite Fear. Hypocrites to spare their Sins seek out ways to compound with God. Servile and Superstitious Fear is increased by Ignorance of the certain Causes of Terrible Effects in Nature etc. as also by frightful Apparitions of Ghosts and Spectres. A further Consideration of Superstition as a Composition of Fear and Flattery. A fuller Definition of Superstition, according to the Sense of the Ancients. Superstition doth not always appear in the same Form, but passes from one Form to another, and sometimes shrouds itself under Forms seemingly Spiritual and more refined. pag. 25. DISCOURSE III. OF ATHEISM. THat there is a near Affinity between Atheism & Superstition. That Superstition doth not only prepare the way for Atheism. but promotes and strengthens it. That Epicurism is but Atheism under a mask. A Confutation of Epicurus his Master-notion, together with some other pretences and Dogmata of his Sect. The true Knowledge of Nature is advantageous to Religion. That Superstition is more tolerable than Atheism. That Atheism is both ignoble and uncomfortable. What low and unworthy notions the Epicureans had concerning Man's Happiness: and what trouble they were put to How to define, and Where to place true Happiness. A true belief of a Deity supports the Soul with a present Tranquillity and future Hopes. Were it not for a Deity, the World would be unhabitable. p. 41. DISCOURSE iv OF THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL. CHap. I. The First and main Principles of Religion, viz. 1. That God is. 2. That God is a rewarder of them that seek him: Wherein is included the Great Article of the Immortality of the Soul. These two Principles acknowledged by religious and serious persons in all Ages. 3. That God communicates himself to mankind by Christ. The Doctrine of the Immortality of the Soul discoursed of in the first place, and why? pag. 59 Chap. II. Some Considerations preparatory to the proof of the Souls Immortality. pag. 63. Chap. III. The First Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. That the Soul of man is not Corporeal. The gross absurdities upon the Supposition that the Soul is a Complex of fluid atoms, or that it is made up by a fortuitous Concourse of atoms, which is Epicurus his Notion concerning Body. The Principles and Dogmata of the Epicurean Philosophy in opposition to the immaterial and incorporeal nature of the Soul, asserted by Lucretius, but discovered to be false and insufficient. That Motion cannot arise from Body or Matter. Nor can the power of Sensation arise from Matter: Much less can Reason. That all Humane knowledge hath not its rise from Sense. The proper function of Sense, and that it is never deceived. An Addition of Three Considerations for the enforcing of this first Argument, and further clearing the Immateriality of the Soul. That there is in man a Faculty which 1. controls Sense: and 2. collects and unites all the Perceptions of our several Senses. 3. That Memory and Prevision are not explicable upon the supposition of Matter and Motion. pag. 68 Chap. iu. The Second Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. Actions either Automatical or Spontaneous. That Spontaneous and Elicite Actions evidence the distinction of the Soul from the Body. Lucretius his Evasion very slight and weak. That the Liberty of the Will is inconsistent with the Epicurean principles. That the Conflict of Reason against the Sensitive Appetite argues a Being in us superior to Matter. pag. 85. Chap. v The Third Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. That Mathematical Notions argue the Soul to be of a true Spiritual and Immaterial Nature. pag. 93. Chap. vi The Fourth Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. That those clear and stable Ideas of Truth which are in Man's Mind evince an Immortal and Immaterial Substance residing in us, distinct from the Body. The Soul more knowable than the Body. Some passages out of Plotinus and Proclus for the further confirming of this Argument. pag. 96. Chap. VII. What it is that, beyond the Highest and most subtle Speculations whatsoever, does clear and evidence to a Good man the Immortality of his Soul. That True Goodness and virtue begets the most raised Sense of this Immortality. Plotinus his excellent Discourse to this purpose. pag. 101. Chap. VIII. An Appendix containing an Enquiry into the Sense and Opinion of Aristotle concerning the Immortality of the Soul. That according to him the Rational Soul is separable from the Body and Immortal The true meaning of his Intellectus Agens and Patiens. pag. 106. Chap. IX. A main Difficulty concerning the Immortality of the Soul [viz. The strong Sympathy of the Soul with the Body] answered. An Answer to another Enquiry, viz. Under what account Impressions derived from the Body do fall in Morality. p. 112. DISCOURSE v OF THE EXISTENCE & NATURE OF GOD. CHap. I. That the Best way to know God is by an attentive reflection upon our own Souls. God more clearly and lively pictured upon the Souls of Men, then upon any part of the Sensible World. pag 123. Chap. II. How the Contemplation of our own Souls, and a right reflection upon the Operations thereof, may lead us into the knowledge of 1. The Divine Unity and Omniscience, 2. God's Omnipotence, 3. The Divine Love and Goodness, 4. God's Eternity, 5. His Omnipresence, 6. The Divine freedom and Liberty. p. 126. Chap. III. How the Consideration of those restless motions of our Wills after some Supreme and Infinite Good, leads us into the knowledge of a Deity. pag. 135. Chap. IV. Deductions and Inferences from the Consideration of the Divine Nature and Attributes. 1. That all Divine productions are the free Effluxes of Omnipotent Love and Goodness. The true Notion of God's glory what it is. Men very apt to mistake in this point. God needs not the Happiness or Misery of his Creatures to make himself glorious by. God does most glorify himself by communicating himself: we most glorify God when we most partake of him, and resemble him most. pag. 140. Chap. v A second Deduction. 2. That all things are supported and governed by an Almighty wisdom and Goodness. An Answer to an Objection made against the Divine Providence from an unequal distribution of things here below. Such quarrelling with Providence ariseth from a Paedanticall and carnal notion of Good and Evil. pag. 144. Chap. vi A third Deduction. 3. That all true Happiness consists in a participation of God arising out of the assimilation and conformity of our Souls to him; and, That the most real Misery ariseth out of the apostasy of Souls from God. No enjoyment of God without our being made like to him. The Happiness and Misery of Man defined and stated, with the Original and Foundation of both. pag. 147. Chap. VII. A fourth Deduction. 4. The fourth Deduction acquaints us with the true Notion of the Divine Justice, That the proper scope and design of it, is to preserve Righteousness, to promote & encourage true Goodness. That it does not primarily intent Punishment, but only takes it up as a mean to prevent Transgression. True Justice never supplants any that itself may appear glorious in their ruins. How Divine Justice is most advanced. pag. 151. Chap. VIII. The fifth and last Deduction. 5. That seeing there is such an intercourse and Society as it were between God and Men, therefore there is also some Law between them, which is the Bond of all Communion. The Primitive rules of God's Oeconomy in this world, not the sole Results of an Absolute Will, but the sacred Decrees of Reason and Goodness. God could not design to make us sinful or Miserable. Of the Law of Nature embosom'd in Man's Soul, how it obliges man to love and obey God, and to express a Godlike spirit and life in this world. All Souls the offspring of God; but Holy Souls manifest themselves to be, and are more peculiarly, the Children of God. pag. 154. Chap. IX. An Appendix concerning the Reason of Positive Laws. pag. 158. Chap. X. The Conclusion of this Treatise concerning the Existence and Nature of God, showing how our Knowledge of God comes to be so imperfect in this State, while we are here in this terrestrial Body. Two ways observed by Plotinus, whereby This Body does prejudice the Soul in her Operations. That the better Philosophers and more contemplative Jews did not deny the Existence of all kind of Body in the other state. What meant by Zoroaster's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. What kind of knowledge of God cannot be attained to in this life. What meant by Flesh and Blood, 1 Cor. 15. pag. 162. DISCOURSE vi OF prophecy. CHap. I. That prophecy is the way whereby Revealed Truth is dispensed and conveyed to us. Man's Mind capable of conversing and being acquainted as well with Revealed or Positive Truth, as with natural Truth. Truths of Natural inscription may be excited in us and cleared to us by means of prophetical Influence. That the Scripture frequently accommodates itself to vulgar apprehension, and speaks of things in the greatest way of condescension. pag. 169. Chap. II. That the Prophetical Spirit did not always manifest itself with the same clearness and evidence. The Gradual difference of Divine illumination between Moses, the Prophets, and the Hagiographi. A general survey of the Nature of prophecy properly so called. Of the joint impressions and operations of the Understanding and fancy in prophecy. Of the four degrees of prophecy. The difference between a Vision and a Dream. pag. 176. Chap. III. How the Prophetical Dreams did differ from all other kinds of Dreams recorded in Scripture. This further illustrated out of several passages of Philo Judaeus pertinent to this purpose. pag. 183. Ch. iu. A large account of the Difference between the true Prophetical Spirit and Enthusiastical impostures. That the Pseudo-Prophetical Spirit is seated only in the Imaginative Powers and Faculties inferior to reason. That Plato and other Wise men had a very low opinion of this Spirit, and of the Gift of Divination, and of Consulting the Oracles. That the True Prophetical Spirit seats itself as well in the Rational Powers as in the Sensitive, and that it never alienates the Mind, but informs and enlightens it. This further cleared by several Testimonies from Gentile and Christian Writers of old. An Account of those Fears and Consternatioons which often seized upon the Prophets. How the Prophets perceived when the Prophetical influx seized upon them. The different Evidence & Energy of the True & false Prophetical Spirit. p. 190. Chap. v An Enquiry concerning the Immediate Efficient that represented the Prophetical Visions to the fancy of the Prophet. That these Representations were made in the Prophet's fancy by some Angel. This cleared by several passages out of the Jewish Monuments, and by Testimonies of Scripture. pag. 210. Chap. vi The Second Enquiry, What the meaning of those Actions is that are frequently attributed to the Prophets, whether they were Real, or only Imaginary and Scenical. What Actions of the Prophets were only Imaginary and performed upon the Stage of fancy. What we are to think of several Actions and res gestae recorded of Hosea, Jeremy & Ezekiel in their prophecies. p. 220. Chap. VII. Of that Degree of Divine inspiration properly called Ruach hakkodesh, i. e. The Holy Spirit. The Nature of it described out of Jewish Antiquities. Wherein this Spiritus Sanctus differed from prophecy strictly so called, and from the Spirit of Holiness in purified Souls. What Books of the Old Testament were ascribed by the Jews to Ruach hakkodesh. Of the Urim and Thummim. pag. 229. Chap. VIII. Of the Dispositions antecedent and preparatory to prophesy. That the Qualifications which did fit a man for the Prophetical Spirit were such as these, viz. Inward Piety, True wisdom, a Pacate and Serene temper of Mind, and a due cheerfulness of Spirit; in opposition to Viciousness, Mental crazedness and inconsistency, unsubdued Passions, black Melancholy and dull Sadness. This illustrated by several Instances in Scripture. That music was greatly advantageous to the Prophets and Holy men of God, etc. What is meant by Saul's Evil Spirit. pag. 240. Chap. IX. Of the Sons or Disciples of the Prophets. An Account of several Schools of Prophetical Education, as at Naioth in Rama, at Jerusalem, Jericho, Gilgal, etc. Several passages in the Historical Books of Scripture pertinent to this Argument explained. pag. 252. Chap. X. Of Bath Kol, i. e. Filia Vocis: That it succeeded in the room of prophecy: That it was by the Jews counted the Lowest degree of Revelation. What places in the New Testament are to be understood of it. pag. 257. Chap. XI. Of the Highest Degree of Divine Inspiration, viz. the Mosaical. Four Differences between the Divine Revelations made to Moses, and to the rest of the Prophets. How the Doctrine of men Prophetically inspired is to approve itself by Miracles, or by its Reasonableness. The Sympathy and Agreeableness between an Holy Mind and Divine Truth. pag. 261. Chap. XII. When the Prophetical Spirit ceased in the Jewish Church. The Cessation of prophecy noted as a famous Epocha by the Jews. The restoring of the Prophetical Spirit by Christ. Some passages to this purpose in the New Testament explained. When the Prophetical Spirit ceased in the Christian Church. That it did not continue long, proved by several Testimonies of the ancient Writers. pag. 267. Chap. XIII. Some Rules and Observations concerning Prophetical Writ in general. pag. 272. DISCOURSE VII. OF THE RIGHTEOUSNESS Legal. Evangelical. CHap. I. The Introduction, showing What it is to have a right Knowledge of Divine Truth, and What it is that is either Available or Prejudicial to the true Christian Knowledge and Life. pag. 285. Chap. II. An Enquiry into that Jewish Notion of a Legal Righteousness, which is opposed by S. Paul. That their notion of it was such as this, viz. That the Law externally dispensed to them (though it were, as a Dead letter, merely without them) and conjoined with the power of their own freewill, was sufficient to procure them Acceptance with God, and to acquire Merit enough to purchase Eternal Life, Perfection and Happiness. That this their Notion had these two Grounds; First, An Opinion of their own selfsufficiency, and that their freewill was so absolute and perfect, as that they needed not that God should do any thing for them but only furnish them with some Laws to exercise this Innate power about. That they asserted such a Freedom of Will as might be to them a Foundation of Merit. pag. 288. Chap. III. The Second ground of the Jewish Notion of a Legal Righteousness, viz. That the Law delivered to them on Mount Sinai was a sufficient Dispensation from God, and all that needed to be done by him to bring them to Perfection and Happiness: and That the Scope of their, Law was nothing but to afford them several ways and means of Merit. The Opinion of the Jewish Writers concerning Merit and the Reward due to the Works of the Law. Their distinguishing of men in order to Merit and Demerit into three sorts, viz. Perfectly righteous, Perfectly wicked, and a middle sort betwixt these. The Mercenary and Low Spirit of the Jewish Religion. An Account of what the cabalists held in this Point of Legal Righteousness. pag. 297. Chap. iu. The Second Enquiry, Concerning the Evangelical Righteousness or the Righteousness of Faith, and the true difference between the Law and the Gospel, the Old and the New Covenant, as it is laid down by the Apostle Paul. A more General Ansiver to this enquiry, together with a General observation of the Apostle's main End in opposing Faith to the Works of the Law, viz. To beat down the Jewish proud conceit of Merit. A more particular and Distinct answer to the Enquiry, viz. That the Law or Old Covenant is considered only as an External administration, a dead thing in itself, a Dispensation consisting in an Outward and Written Law of Precepts: but the Gospel or New Covenant is an Internal thing, a Vital Form and Principle of Righteousness in the Souls of men, an Inward manifestation of Divine Life, and a living Impression upon the Minds and Spirits of Men. This proved from several Testimonies of Scripture. pag. 308. Chap. v Two Propositions for the better understanding of the Doctrine of Justification and Divine Acceptance. 1. Prop. That the Divine judgement and estimation of every thing is according to the truth of the thing; and God's acceptance or disacceptance of things is suitable to his judgement. On what account S. James does attribute a kind of Justification to Good works. 2. Prop. God's justifying of Sinners in pardoning their Sins carries in it a necessary reference to the sanctifying of their Natures. This abundantly proved from the Nature of the thing. pag. 325. Chap. vi How the Gospel-righteousness is conveyed to us by Faith, made to appear from these two Considerations. 1. The Gospel lays a strong foundation of a cheerful dependence upon the Grace and Love of God, and affiance in it. This confirmed by several Gospel-expressions containing plainly in them the most strong Motives and Encouragements to all ingenuous addresses to God, to all cheerful dependence on him, and confident expectation of all assistance from him. 2. A true Evangelical Faith is no lazy or languid thing, but an ardent breathing and thirsting after Divine grace and righteousness: it looks beyond a mere pardon of sin, and mainly pursues after an inward participation of the Divine nature. The mighty power of a living Faith in the Love and Goodness of God, discoursed of throughout the whole Chapter. pag. 332. Chap. VII. An Appendix to the foregoing Discourse; How the whole business and Undertaking of Christ is eminently available both to give full relief and ease to our Minds and Hearts, and also to encourage us to Godliness or a godlike righteousness, briefly represented in sundry Particulars. pag. 343. DISCOURSE VIII. OF THE SHORTNESS OF A pharisaic Righteousness. CHap. I. A General account of men's Mistakes about Religion. Men are no no where more lazy and sluggish, and more apt to delude themselves, then in matters of Religion. The Religion of most men is but an Image and Resemblance of their own fancies. The Method propounded for discoursing upon those words in S. Matthew. 1. To discover some of the Mistakes and False Notions about Religion. 2. To discover the Reason of these Mistakes. A brief Explication of the Words. pag. 349. Chap. II. An Account of men's Mistakes about Religion in 4 Particulars. 1. A Partial obedience to some Particular Precepts. The False Spirit of Religion spends itself in some Particulars, is confined, is overswayed by some prevailing Lust. Men of this spirit may by some Book-skill, and a zeal about the Externals of Religion, lose the sense of their own Guiltiness, and of their deficiencies in the Essentials of Godliness, and fancy themselves nearly related to God. Where the true Spirit of Religion is it informs and actuates the whole man, it will not be confined, but will be absolute within us, and not suffer any corrupt Interest to grow by it. p. 353. Chap. III. The Second Mistake about Religion, viz. A mere compliance of the Outward man with the Law of God. True Religion seats itself in the Centre of men's Souls, and first brings the Inward man into Obedience to the Law of God: the superficial Religion intermeddles chief with the Circumference and Outside of men; or rests in an outward abstaining from some Sins. Of Speculative and the most close and Spiritual wickedness within. How apt men are to sink all Religion into Opinions and External Forms. pag. 357. Chap. iu. The Third Mistake about Religion, viz. A constrained and forced Obedience to God's Commandments. The Religion of many (some of whom would seem most abhorrent from Superstition) is nothing else but Superstition properly so called. False Religionists, having no inward sense of the Divine Goodness, cannot truly love God: Yet their sour and dreadful apprehensions of God compel them to serve him. A slavish spirit in Religion may be very prodigal in such kind of serving God as doth not pinch their Corruptions; but in the great and weightier matters of Religion, in such things as prejudice their beloved Lusts, it is very needy and sparing. This servile Spirit has low and mean thoughts of God, but an high opinion of its Outward services, as conceiting that by such cheap things God is gratified and becomes indebted to it. The different Effects of Love and Slavish fear in the truly, and in the falsely, Religious. pag. 361. Chap. v The Fourth and last Mistake about Religion, When a mere Mechanical and Artificial Religion is taken for that which is a true Impression of Heaven upon the Souls of men, and which moves like a new Nature. How Religion is by some made a piece of Art, and how there may be specious and plausible Imitations of the Internals of Religion as well as of the Externals. The Method and Power of fancy in contriving such Artificial imitations. How apt men are in these to deceive both themselves and others. The Difference between those that are governed in their Religion by fancy, and those that are actuated by the Divine Spirit and in whom Religion is a living Form. That True Religion is no Art, but a new Nature. Religion discovers itself best in a Serene and clear Temper of Mind, in deep Humility, Meekness, Self-denial, Universal love of God and all true Goodness. p. 366. DISCOURSE IX. OF THE EXCELLENCY and NOBLENESS OF RELIGION. CHap. I. 1. The Nobleness of Religion in regard of its Original and Fountain: it comes from Heaven and moves towards Heaven again. God the First Excellency and Primitive Perfection. All Perfections and Excellencies in any kind are to be measured by their approach to, and Participation of, the First Perfection. Religion the greatest Participation of God: none capable of this Divine Communication but the Highest of created being's: and consequently Religion is the greatest Excellency. A twofold Fountain in God whence Religion flows, viz. 1. His Nature. 2. His Will. Of Truth Natural and Revealed. Of an Outward and Inward Revelation of God's Will. pag. 380. Chap. II. 2. The Nobleness of Religion in respect of its Nature, briefly discovered in some Particulars. How a man actuated by Religion 1. lives above the world; 2. converses with himself, and knows how to love, value and reverence himself, in the best sense; 3. lives above himself, not being content to enjoy himself, except he may enjoy God too, and himself in God. How he denies himself for God. To deny a man's self, is not to deny Right Reason, for that were to deny God, in stead of denying himself for God. Self-love the only Principle that acts wicked men. The happy privileges of a Soul united to God. pag. 385. Chap. III. 3. The Nobleness of Religion in regard of its Properties, etc. of which this is one, 1. Religion enlarges all the Faculties of the Soul, and begets a true Ingenuity, Liberty and Amplitude, the most Free and Generous Spirit in the Minds of Good men. The nearer any Being comes to God, the more large and free; the further is slides from God, the more streightened. Sin is the sinking of man's Soul from God into sensual Selfishness. An account when the most Generous freedom of the Soul is to be taken in its just proportions. How Mechanical and Formal Christians make an Art of Religion, set it such bounds as may not exceed the scant Measure of their Principles; and then fit their own Notions as so many Examples to it. A Good man finds not his Religion without him, but as a living Principle within him. God's Immutable and Eternal Goodness the Unchangeable Rule of his Will. Pecvish, self-willed and Imperious men shape out such Notions of God as are agreeable to this Pattern of themselves. The Truly Religious have better apprehensions of God. pag. 392. Chap. iu. The Second Property discovering the Nobleness of Religion, viz. That it restores man to a just power and dominion over himself, enables him to overcome his Self-will and Passions. Of Self-will, and the many Evils that flow from it. That Religion does nowhere discover its power and prowess so much, as in subduing this dangerous and potent Enemy. The Highest and Noblest Victories are those over our Self-will and Passions. Of Self-denial, and the having power over our Wills; the Happiness and the Privileges of such a State. How that Magnanimity and Puissance which Religion begets in Holy Souls differs from and excels that Gallantry and Puissance which the great Nimrods' of this world boast of. pag. 397. Chap. v The Third Property or Effect discovering the Nobleness of Religion, viz. That it directs and enables a man to propound to himself the Best End, viz. The Glory of God, and his own becoming like unto God. Low and Particular Ends and Interests both debase and straighten a man's Spirit: The Universal, Highest and Last End both ennobles and enlarges it. A man is such as the End is he aims at. The great power the End hath to mould and fashion man into its likeness. Religion obliges a man (not to seek himself, nor to drive a trade for himself; but) to seek the Glory of God, to live wholly to him; and guides him steadily and uniformly to the One Chief Good and Last End. Men are prone to flatter themselves with a pretended aiming at the Glory of God. A more full and distinct explication of what is meant by a man's directing all his actions to the Glory of God. What it is truly and really to glorify God. God's seeking his Glory in respect of us is the flowing forth of his Goodness upon us: Our seeking the Glory of God is our endeavouring to partake more of God, and to resemble him (as much as we can) in true Holiness and every Divine virtue. That we are not nicely to distinguish between the Glory of God and our own Salvation. That Salvation is nothing else for the main but a true Participation of the Divine Nature. To love God above ourselves, is not to love him above the Salvation of our Souls; but above our particular being's and above our sinful affections, etc. The Difference between Things that are Good relatively, and those that are Good absolutely and Essentially: That in our conformity to these God is most glorified, and we are made most Happy. pag. 403. Chap. vi The Fourth Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it begets the greatest Serenity and Composedness of Mind, and brings the truest Contentment, the purest and most satisfying Joy and Pleasure to every holy Soul. God, as being that Uniform chief Good, and the One last End, does attract and fix the Soul. Wicked men distracted through a Multiplicity of Objects and Ends. How the restless Appetite of our Wills after some Supreme Good leads to the knowledge (as of a Deity, so) of the Unity of a Deity. How the Joys and Delights of Good men differ from and far excel those of the Wicked. The Constancy and Tranquillity of the Spirits of Good men in reference to External troubles. All Perturbations of the Mind arise from an Inward rather than an Outward Cause. The Stoics Method for attaining 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and true rest examined, and the Insufficiency of it discovered. A further Illustration of what has been said concerning the peaceful and Happy State of Good men, from the contrary State of the Wicked. pag. 412. Chap. VII. The Fifth Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it advanceth the Soul to an holy boldness and humble familiarity with God, and to a comfortable confidence concerning the Love of God towards it, and its own Salvation. Fearfulness, Consternation of Mind and frightful passions are consequent upon Sin and gild. These together with the most dismal deportments of Trembling and amazement are agreeable to the nature of the Devil, who delights to be served in this manner by his worshippers. Love, Joy and Hope are most agreeable to the nature of God, and most pleasing to him. The Right apprehensions of God are such as are apt to beget Love to God, Delight and Confidence in him. A true Christian is more for a solid and well-grounded Peace then for high raptures and feelings of joy. How a Christian should endeavour the Assurance of his Salvation. That he should not importunately expect or desire some extraordinary manifestations of God to him, but rather look after the manifestation of the life of God within him, the foundation or beginning of Heaven and Salvation in his own Soul. That Self-resignation, and the subduing of our own Wills, are greatly available to obtain Assurance. The vanity and absurdity of that Opinion, viz. That in a perfect resignation of our Wills to God's will, a man should be content with his own Damnation and to be the subject of Eternal wrath in Hell, if it should so please God. pag. 423. Chap. VIII, The Sixth Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it Spiritualizes Material things, and carries up the Souls of Good men from Sensible and Earthly things to things Intellectual and Divine. There are lesser and fuller representations of God in the Creatures. To converse with God in the Creation, and to pass out of the Sensible World into the Intellectual, is most effectually taught by Religion. Wicked men converse not with God as shining out in the Creatures; they converse with them in a Sensual and Unspiritual manner. Religion does spiritualise the Creation to Good men: it teaches them to look at any Perfections or Excellencies in themselves and others, not so much as Theirs or That others, but as so many Beams flowing from One and the Same Fountain of Light; to love them all in God, and God in all; the Universal Goodness in a Particular Being. A Good man enjoys and delights in whatsoever Good he sees otherwhere, as if it were his own: he does not fond love and esteem either himself or others. The Divine temper and strain of the ancient Philosophy. pag. 429. Chap. IX. The Seventh and last Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it raiseth the Minds of Good men to a due observance of and attendance upon Divine Providence, and enables them to serve the Will of God, and to acquiesce in it. For a man to serve Providence and the Will of God entirely, to work with God, and to bring himself and all his actions into a Compliance with God's Will, his Ends and Designs, is an argument of the truest Nobleness of Spirit; it is the most excellent and divine life; and it is most for man's advantage. How the Consideration of Divine Providence is the way to inward quietness and establishment of Spirit. How wicked men carry themselves unbecomingly through their impatience and fretfulness under the disposals of Providence. The beauty and harmony of the various Methods of Providence. pag. 435. Chap. X. 4. The excellency of Religion in regard of its Progress, as it is perpetually carrying on the Soul towards Perfection. Every Nature hath its proper Centre which it hastens to. Sin and Wickedness is within the attractive power of Hell, and hastens thither: Grace and Holiness is within the Central force of Heaven, and moves thither. 'Tis not the Speculation of Heaven as a thing to come that satisfies the desires of Religious Souls, but the real Possession of it even in this life. Men are apt to seek after Assurance of Heaven as a thing to come, rather than after Heaven itself and the inward possession of it here. How the Assurance of Heaven rises from the growth of Holiness and the powerful Progress of Religion in our Souls. That we are not hastily to believe that we are Christ's, or that Christ is in us. That the Works which Christ does in holy Souls testify of him, and best evidence Christ's spiritual appearance in them. pag. 439. Chap. XI. 5. The Excellency of Religion in regard of its Term and End, viz. Perfect Blessedness. How unable we are in this state to comprehend and describe the Full and Perfect state of Happiness and Glory to come. The more Godlike a Christian is, the better may he understand that State. Holiness and Happiness not two distinct things, but two several Notions of one and the same thing. Heaven cannot so well be defined by any thing without us, as by something within us. The great nearness and affinity between Sin and Hell. The Conclusion of this Treatise, containing a serious Exhortation to a diligent minding of Religion, with a Discovery of the Vanity of those pretences which keep men off from minding Religion. pag. 443. DISCOURSE X. OF A CHRISTIANS CONFLICTS with, & CONQUESTS over, SATAN. CHap. I. The Introduction, Summarily treating of the perpetual Enmity between God, the Principle of Good, and the Principle of Evil, the Devil: as also between Whatsoever is from God and that which is from the Devil. That Wicked men by destroying what there is from God within them, and divesting themselves of all that which hath any alliance to God or true Goodness, and transforming themselves into the Diabolical image, fit themselves for correspondence and converse with the Devil. The Fears and Horrors which infest both the Apostate Spirits and Wicked men. The weakness of the Devil's kingdom; Christ's success against it. pag. 455. Chap. II. The First observable, That the Devil is continually busy with us. The Devil considered under a double notion. 1. As an Apostate Spirit which fell from God. The great danger of the devil's activity, not only when he presents himself in some corporeal shape, but when he is unseen and appears not. The weakness and folly of those who are afraid of him only when he appears embodied. That the Good Spirit of God is active for the Good of Souls. How regardless men are of the gentle motions of the Divine Spirit; and how unwatchful and secure under the Suggestions of the Evil Spirit. How we may discover the Devil in his Stratagems and under his several disguises and appearances. pag. 458. Chap. III. 2. Of the activity of the Devil considered as a Spirit of apostasy and as a Degenerate nature in men. That the Devil is not only the name of one Particular thing, but a Nature. The Difference between the Devil and Wicked men is rather the Difference of a Name then of Natures. The Kingdom and Tyranny of the Devil and Hell is chief within, in the Qualities and Dispositions of men's Minds. Men are apt to quarrel with the Devil in the name and notion, and defy him with their Tongues, while they entertain him in their Hearts, and comply with all that which the Devil is. The vanity of their pretended Love to God, and Hatred of the Devil. That there is nothing Better than God himself, for which we should love him; and to love him for his own Beauty and Excellency is the best way of loving him. That there is nothing worse than Sin itself, for which we should hate it; and to hate it for its own deformity is the truest way of hating it. How Hell and Misery arises from within men. Why Wicked men are so insensible of their Misery in this life. pag. 462. Chap. iu. The Second Observable, viz. The Warfare of a Christian life. True Religion consists not in a mere passive capacity and sluggish kind of doing nothing, nor in a melancholy sitting still or slothful waiting, etc. but it consists in inward life and power, vigour and activity. A discovery of the dulness and erroneousness of that Hypothesis, viz. That Good men are wholly Passive and unable at any time to move without some external impetus, some impression and impulse from without upon them: or, That all Motions in Religion are from an External Principle. Of the Quality and Nature of the true Spiritual Warfare, and of the Manner and Method of it. That it is transacted upon the inner Stage of men's Souls, and managed without Noise or pompous Observation; and without any hindrance or prejudice to the most peaceful, sedate and composed temper of a religious Soul. This further illustrated from the consideration of the false and pretended Zeal for God and his kingdom against the Devil; which though it be impetuous, and makes a great noise, and a fair show in the world, is yet both impotent and ineffectual. pag. 469. Chap. v The Third Observable, viz. The Certainty of Success and victory to all those that resist the Devil. This grounded upon 1. The Weakness of the Devil and Sin considered in themselves. 2. God's powerful assisting all faithful Christians in this warfare. The Devil may allure and tempt, but cannot prevail, except men consent and yield to his suggestions. The Devil's strength lies in men's treachery and falseness to their own Souls. Sin is strong, because men oppose it weakly. The Error of the Manichees about a Principium mali defended by men in their lives and practices. Of God's readiness to assist Christians in their Spiritual Conflicts; his Compassionate regards and the more special respects of his Providence towards them in such occasions. The Conclusion, discovering the Evil and Horridness of magic, Diabolical Contracts, etc. pag. 474. A DISCOURSE Concerning The true WAY or METHOD of attaining to DIVINE KNOWLEDGE. Psal. 3. 10. The Fear of the Lord is the Beginning of wisdom: a good Understanding have all they that do his Commandments. John 7. 17. If any man will do his Will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God— Clem. Alexandr. Strom. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉— 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉— 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A PRAEFATORY DISCOURSE CONCERNING The true Way or Method of attaining to DIVINE KNOWLEDGE. Section I. That Divine things are to be understood rather by a Spiritual Sensation than a Verbal Description, or mere Speculation. Sin and Wickedness prejudicial to True Knowledge. That Purity of Heart and Life, as also an Ingenuous freedom of judgement, are the best Grounds and Preparations for the Entertainment of Truth. Sect. II. An Objection against the Method of Knowing laid down in the former Section, answered. That Men generally, notwithstanding their apostasy, are furnished with the Radical Principles of True Knowledge. Men want not so much Means of knowing what they ought to do, as Wills to do what they know. Practical Knowledge differs from all other Knowledge, and excels it. Sect. III. Men may be considered in a Fourfold capacity in order to the perception of Divine things. That the Best and most excellent Knowledge of Divine things belongs only to the true and sober Christian; and That it is but in its infancy while he is in this Earthly Body. SECT. I. IT hath been long since well observed, That every Art & Science hath some certain Principles upon which the whole Frame and Body of it must depend; and he that will fully acquaint himself with the Mysteries thereof, must come furnished with some Praecognita or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that I may speak in the language of the Stoics. Were I indeed to define Divinity, I should rather call it a Divine life, than a Divine science; it being something rather to be understood by a Spiritual sensation, then by any Verbal description, as all things of Sense & Life are best known by Sentient and Vital faculties; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Greek Philosopher hath well observed, Every thing is best known by that which bears a just resemblance and analogy with it: and therefore the Scripture is wont to set forth a Good life as the Prolepsis and Fundamental principle of Divine Science; wisdom hath built her an house, and hewn out her seven pillars: But the fear of the Lord is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning of wisdom, the Foundation of the whole fabric. We shall therefore, as a Prolegomenon or Preface to what we shall afterward discourse upon the Heads of Divinity, speak something of this True Method of Knowing, which is not so much by Notions as Actions; as Religion itself consists not so much in Words as Things. They are not always the best skilled in Divinity, that are the most studied in those Pandects which it is sometimes digested into, or that have erected the greatest Monopolies of Art and Science. He that is most Practical in Divine things, hath the purest and sincerest Knowledge of them, and not he that is most Dogmatical. Divinity indeed is a true Efflux from the Eternal light, which, like the sunbeams, does not only enlighten, but heat and enliven; and therefore our Saviour hath in his Beatitudes connext Purity of heart with the Beatifical Vision. And as the Eye cannot behold the Sun, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, unless it be sunlike, Plotin. En. 1. l. 6. and hath the form and resemblance of the Sun drawn in it; so neither can the Soul of man behold God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, unless it be Godlike, hath God form in it, and be made partaker of the Divine Nature. And the Apostle S. Paul, when he would lay open the right way of attaining to Divine Truth, he saith that Knowledge puffeth up, but it is Love that edifieth. The knowledge of Divinity that appears in Systems and Models is but a poor wan light, but the powerful energy of Divine knowledge displays itself in purified Souls: here we shall find the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the ancient Philosophy speaks, the land of Truth. To seek our Divinity merely in Books and Writings, is to seek the living among the dead: we do but in vain seek God many times in these, where his Truth too often is not so much enshrined, as entombed: no; intrate quaere Deum, seek for God within thine own soul; he is best discerned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plotinus phraseth it, by an Intellectual touch of him: we must see with our eyes, and hear with our ears, and our hands must handle the word of life, that I may express it in S. John's words. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Soul itself hath its sense, as well as the Body: and therefore David, when he would teach us how to know what the Divine Goodness is, calls not for Speculation but Sensation, taste and see how good the Lord is. That is not the best & truest knowledge of God which is wrought out by the labour and sweat of the Brain, but that which is kindled within us by an heavenly warmth in our Hearts. As in the natural Body it is the Heart that sends up good Blood and warm Spirits into the Head, whereby it is best enabled to its several functions; so that which enables us to know and understand aright in the things of God, must be a living principle of Holiness within us. When the Tree of Knowledge is not planted by the Tree of Life, and sucks not up sap from thence, it may be as well fruitful with evil as with good, and bring forth bitter fruit as well as sweet. If we would indeed have our Knowledge thrive and flourish, we must water the tender plants of it with Holiness. When Zoroaster's Scholars asked him what they should do to get winged Souls, such as might soar aloft in the bright beams of Divine Truth, he bids them bathe themselves in the waters of Life: they ask what they were; he tells them, the four Cardinal virtues, which are the four Rivers of Paradise. It is but a thin, airy knowledge that is got by mere Speculation, which is ushered in by Syllogisms and Demonstrations; but that which springs forth from true Goodness, is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Origen speaks, it brings such a Divine light into the Soul, as is more clear and convincing then any Demonstration. The reason why, notwithstanding all our acute reasons and subtle disputes, Truth prevails no more in the world, is, we so often disjoin Truth and true Goodness, which in themselves can never be disunited; they grow both from the same Root, and live in one another. We may, like those in Plato's deep pit with their faces bended downwards, converse with Sounds and Shadows; but not with the Life and Substance of Truth, while our Souls remain defiled with any vice or lusts. These are the black Lethe-lake which drench the souls of men: he that wants true virtue, in heavn's logic is blind, and cannot see afar off. Those ● Pet. ●. filthy mists that arise from impure and terrene minds, like an Atmospheare, perpetually encompass them, that they cannot see that Sun of Divine Truth that shines about them, but never shines into any unpurged Souls; the darkness comprehends it not, the foolish man understands it not. All the Light and Knowledge that may seem sometimes to rise up in unhallowed minds, is but like those fuliginous flames that arise up from our culinary fire, that are soon quenched in their own smoke; or like those foolish fires that fetch their birth from terrene exudations, that do but hop up & down, and flit to and fro upon the surface of this earth where they were first brought forth; and serve not so much to enlighten, as to delude us; nor to direct the wand'ring traveller into his way, but to lead him farther out of it. While we lodge any filthy vice in us, this will be perpetually twisting up itself into the thread of our finest-spun Speculations; it will be continually climbing up into the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Hegemonicall powers of the Soul, into the bed of Reason, and defile it: like the wanton ivy twisting itself about the Oak, it will twine about our judgements and Understandings, till it hath sucked out the Life and Spirit of them. I cannot think such black oblivion should possess the minds of some as to make them question that Truth which to Good men shines as bright as the Sun at noonday, had they not foully defiled their own Souls with some hellish vice or other, how fairly soever it may be they may dissemble it. There is a benumbing Spirit, a congealing Vapour that ariseth from Sin and Vice, that will stupefy the senses of the Soul; as the Naturalists say there is from the Torpedo that smites the senses of those that approach to it. This is that venomous Solanum, that deadly Nightshade, that derives its cold poison into the Understandings of men. Such as Men themselves are, such will God himself seem to be. It is the Maxim of most wicked men, That the Deity is some way or other like themselves: their Souls do more than whisper it, though their lips speak it not; and though their tongues be silent, yet their lives cry it upon the housetops, & in the public streets. That Idea which men generally have of God is nothing else but the picture of their own Complexion: that archetypal notion of him which hath the supermacie in their minds, is none else but such an one as hath been shaped out according to some pattern of themselves; though they may so clothe and disguise this Idol of their own, when they carry it about in a pompous Procession to expose it to the view of the world, that it may seem very beautiful, and indeed any thing else rather than what it is. Most men (though it may be they themselves take no great notice of it) like that dissembling Monk, do aliter sentire in Scholis, aliter in Musaeis, are of a different judgement in the Schools from what they are in the retirements of their private closerts. There is a double head, as well as a double heart. men's corrupt hearts will not suffer their notions and conceptions of divine things to be cast into that form that an higher Reason, which may sometime work within them, would put them into. I would not be thought all this while to banish the belief of all Innate notions of Divine Truth: but these are too often smothered, or tainted with a deep dye of men's filthy lusts. It is but lux sepulta in opaci materia, light buried and stifled in some dark body, from whence all those coloured, or rather discoloured, notions and apprehensions of divine things are begotten. Though these Common notions may be very busy sometimes in the vegetation of divine Knowledge; yet the corrupt vices of men may so clog, disturb and overrule them, (as the Naturalists say this unruly and masterless matter doth the natural forms in the formation of living creatures) that they may produce nothing but Monsters miserably distorted & misshapen. This kind of Science, as Plotinus speaks, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, companying too familiarly with Matter, and receiving and imbibing it into itself, changeth its shape by this incestuous mixture. At best, while any inward lust is harboured in the minds of men, it will so weaken them, that they can never bring forth any masculine or generous knowledge; as Aelian observes of the Stork, that if the Night-owle chanceth to sit upon her eggs, they become presently as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and all incubation rendered impotent and ineffectual. Sin and lust are always of an hungry nature, and suck up all those vital affections of men's Souls which should feed and nourish their Understandings. What are all our most sublime Speculations of the Deity, that are not impregnated with true Goodness, but insipid things that have no taste nor life in them, that do but swell like empty froth in the souls of men? They do not feed men's souls, but only puff them up & fill them with Pride, Arrogance and Contempt and tyranny towards those that cannot well ken their subtle Curiosities: as those Philosophers that Tully complains of in his times, qui disciplinam suam ostentationem scientiae, non legem vitae, putabant, which made their knowledge only matter of ostentation, to venditate and set off themselves, but never caring to square and govern their lives by it. Such as these do but Spider-like take a great deal of pains to spin a worthless web out of their own bowels, which will not keep them warm. These indeed are those silly Souls that are ever learning, but never come to the knowledge of the Truth. They may, with Pharaoh's lean kine, eat up and devour all Tongues and Sciences, and yet when they have done, still remain lean and ill-favoured as they were at first-Jejune and barren Speculations may be hover and fluttering up and down about Divinity, but they cannot settle or fix themselves upon it: they unfold the Plicatures of Truth's garment, but they cannot behold the lovely face of it. There are hidden Mysteries in Divine Truth, wrapped up one within another, which cannot be discerned but only by divine Epoptists. We must not think we have then attained to the right knowledge of Truth, when we have broke through the outward Shell of words & phrases that house it up; or when by a Logical Analysis we have found out the dependencies and coherencies of them one with another; or when, like stout champions of it, having well guarded it with the invincible strength of our Demonstration, we dare stand out in the face of the world, and challenge the field of all those that would pretend to be our rivals. We have many Grave and Reverend Idolaters that worship Truth only in the Image of their own Wits; that could never adore it so much as they may seem to do, were it any thing else but such a Form of Belief as their own wand'ring speculations had at last met together in, were it not that they find their own image and superscription upon it. There is a knowing of the truth as it is in Jesus, as it is in a Christ-like nature, as it is in that sweet, mild, humble, and loving Spirit of Jesus, which spreads itself like a Morning-Sun upon the souls of good men, full of light and life. It profits little to know Christ himself after the flesh; but he gives his Spirit to good men, that searcheth the deep things of God. There is an inward beauty, life and loveliness in Divine Truth, which cannot be known but only then when it is digested into life and practice. The Greek Philosopher could tell those high-soaring gnostics that thought themselves no less than Jovis alites, that could (as he speaks in the Comedy) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and cried out so much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, look upon God, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Without virtue and real Goodness God is but a name, a dry and empty Notion. The profane sort of men, like those old Gentile Greeks, may make many ruptures in the walls of God's Temple, and break into the holy ground, but yet may find God no more there then they did. Divine Truth is better understood, as it unfolds itself in the purity of men's hearts and lives, then in all those subtle Niceties into which curious Wits may lay it forth. And therefore our Saviour, who is the great Master of it, would not, while he was here on earth, draw it up into any Systeme or Body, nor would his Disciples after him; He would not lay it out to us in any Canons or Articles of Belief, not being indeed so careful to stock and enrich the World with Opinions and Notions, as with true Piety, and a Godlike pattern of purity, as the best way to thrive in all spiritual understanding. His main scope was to promote an Holy life, as the best and most compendious way to a right Belief. He hangs all true acquaintance with Divinity upon the doing Gods will, If any man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God. This is that alone which will make us, as S. Peter tells us, that we shall not be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour. There is an inward sweetness and deliciousness in divine Truth, which no sensual mind can taste or relish: this is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that natural man that savours not the things of God. Corrupt passions and terrene affections are apt of their own nature to disturb all serene thoughts, to precipitate our judgements, and warp our Understandings. It was a good maxim of the old Jewish Writers, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy Spirit dwells not in terrene and earthly passions. Divinity is not so well perceived by a subtle wit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as by a purified sense, as Plotinus phraseth it. Neither was the ancient Philosophy unacquainted with this Way and Method of attaining to the knowledge of Divine things; and therefore * Eth. Nicom. l. 1. Aristotle himself thought a Young man unfit to meddle with the grave precepts of Morality, till the heat and violent precipitancy of his youthful affections was cooled and moderated. And it is observed of Pythagoras, that he had several ways to try the capacity of his Scholars, and to prove the sedateness and Moral temper of their minds, before he would entrust them with the sublimer Mysteries of his Philosophy. The Platonists were herein so wary and solicitous, that they thought the minds of men could never be purged enough from those earthly dregs of Sense and Passion, in which they were so much steeped, before they could be capable of their divine metaphysics: and therefore they so much solicit a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as they are wont to phrase it, a separation from the Body, in all those that would 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Socrates speaks, that is indeed, sincerely understand Divine Truth; for that was the scope of their Philosophy. This was also intimated by them in their defining Philosophy to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Meditation of Death; aiming herein at only a Moral way of dying, by loosening the Soul from the Body and this Sensitive life; which they thought was necessary to a right Contemplation of Intelligible things: and therefore besides those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which the Souls of men were to be separated from sensuality and purged from fleshly filth, they devised a further way of Separation more accommodated to the condition of Philosophers, which was their Mathemata, or Mathematical Contemplations, whereby the Souls of men might farther shake off their dependency upon Sense, and learn to go as it were alone, without the crutch of any Sensible or Material thing to support them; and so be a little inur'd, being once got up above the Body, to converse freely with Immaterial natures, without looking down again and falling back into Sense. Besides many other ways they had, whereby to rise out of this dark Body; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as they are wont to call them, several steps and ascents out of this miry cave of mortality, before they could set any sure footing with their Intellectual part in the land of Light and Immortal Being. And thus we should pass from this Topick of our Discourse, upon which we have dwelled too long already, but that before we quite let it go, I hope we may fairly make this use of it farther (besides what we have openly driven at all this while) which is, To learn not to devote or give up ourselves to any private Opinions or Dictates of men in matters of Religion, nor too zealously to propugne the Dogmata of any Sect. As we should not like rigid Censurers arraign & condemn the Creeds of other men which we comply not with, before a full & mature understanding of them, ripened not only by the natural sagacity of our own Reasons, but by the benign influence of holy and mortified Affection: so neither should we over-hastily credere in fidem alienam, subscribe to the Symbols and Articles of other men. They are not always the Best men that blot most paper; Truth is not, I fear, so Voluminous, nor swells into such a mighty bulk as our Books do. Those minds are not always the most chaste that are most parturient with these learned Discourses, which too often bear upon them a foul stain of their unlawful propagation. A bitter juice of corrupt affections may sometimes be strained into the ink of our greatest Clerks, their Doctrines may taste too sour of the cask they come through. We are not always happy in meeting with that wholesome food (as some are wont to call the Doctrinal-part of Religion) which hath been dressed out by the cleanest hands. Some men have too bad hearts to have good heads: they cannot be good at theory who have been so bad at the Practice, as we may justly fear too many of those from whom we are apt to take the Articles of our Belief have been. Whilst we plead so much our right to the patrimony of our Fathers, we may take too fast a possession of their Errors as well as of their sober opinions. There are Idola specûs, Innate Prejudices, and deceitful Hypotheses, that many times wander up and down in the minds of good men, that may fly out from them with their graver determinations. We can never be well assured what our Traditional Divinity is; nor can we securely enough addict ourselves to any Sect of men. That which was the Philosopher's motto, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, we may a little enlarge, and so fit it for an ingenuous pursuer after divine Truth: He that will find Truth, must seek it with a free judgement, and a sanctified mind: he that thus seeks, shall find; he shall live in Truth, and that shall live in him; it shall be like a stream of living waters issuing out of his own soul; he shall drink of the waters of his own cistern, and be satisfied; he shall every morning find this Heavenly Manna lying upon the top of his own soul, and be fed with it to eternal life; he will find satisfaction within, feeling himself in conjunction with Truth, though all the World should dispute against him. SECTION II. AND thus I should again leave this Argument, but that perhaps we may all this while have seemed to undermine what we intent to build up. For if Divine Truth spring only up from the Root of true Goodness; how shall we ever endeavour to be good, before we know what it is to be so? or how shall we convince the gainsaying world of Truth, unless we could also inspire virtue into it? To both which we shall make this Reply, That there are some Radical Principles of Knowledge that are so deeply sunk into the Souls of men, as that the Impression cannot easily be obliterated, though it may be much darkened. Sensual baseness doth not so grossly sully and bemire the Souls of all Wicked men at first, as to make them with Diagoras to deny the Deity, or with Protagoras to doubt of, or with Diodorus to question the Immortality of Rational Souls. Neither are the Common Principles of virtue so pulled up by the roots in all, as to make them so dubious in stating the bounds of virtue and Vice as Epicurus was, though he could not but sometime take notice of them. Neither is the Retentive power of Truth so weak and lose in all sceptics, as it was in him, who being well scourged in the streets till the blood ran about him, questioned when he came home, whether he had been beaten or not. Arrianus hath well observed, That the Common Notions of God and virtue impressed upon the Souls of men, are more clear and perspicuous than any else; and that if they have not more certainty, yet have they more evidence, and display themselves with less difficulty to our Reflexive Faculty than any Geometrical Demonstrations: and these are both available to prescribe out ways of virtue to men's own souls, and to force an acknowledgement of Truth from those that oppose, when they are well guided by a skilful hand. Truth needs not any time fly from Reason, there being an Eternal amity between them. They are only some private Dogmata, that may well be suspected as spurious and adulterate, that dare not abide the trial thereof. And this Reason is not every where so extinguished, as that we may not by that enter into the Souls of men. What the Magnetical virtue is in these earthly Bodies, that Reason is in men's minds, which when it is put forth, draws them one to another. Besides in wicked men there are sometimes distastes of Vice, and Flashes of love to virtue; which are the Motions which spring from a true Intellect, and the faint struggle of an Higher life within them, which they crucify again by their wicked Sensuality. As Truth doth not always act in good men, so neither doth Sense always act in wicked men: they may sometimes have their lucida intervalla, their sober fits; and a Divine spirit blowing and breathing upon them may then blow up some live sparks of true Understanding within them; though they may soon endeavour to quench them again, and to rake them up in the ashes of their own earthly thoughts. All this, and more that might be said upon this Argument, may serve to point out the Way of virtue. We want not so much Means of knowing what we ought to do, as Wills to do that which we may know. But yet all that Knowledge which is separated from an inward acquaintance with virtue and Goodness, is of a far different nature from that which ariseth out of a true living sense of them, which is the best discerner thereof, and by which alone we know the true Perfection, Sweetness, energy, and Loveliness of them, and all that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which can no more be known by a naked Demonstration, than Colours can be perceived of a blind man by any Definition or Description which he can hear of them. And further, the clearest and most distinct Notions of Truth that shine in the Souls of the common sort of men, may be extremely clouded, if they be not accompanied with that answerable practice that might preserve their integrity: These tender Plants may soon be spoiled by the continual droppings of our corrupt affections upon them; they are but of a weak and feminine nature, and so may be sooner deceived by that wily Serpent of Sensuality that harbours within us. While the Soul is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, full of the Body, while we suffer those Notions and Common Principles of Religion to lie asleep within us; that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the power of an Animal life, will be apt to incorporate and mingle itself with them; and that Reason that is within us, as Plotinus hath well expressed it, becomes more and more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it will be infected with those evil Opinions that arise from our Corporeal life. The more deeply our Souls dive into our Bodies, the more will Reason and Sensuality run one into another, and make up a most dilute, unsavoury, and muddy kind of Knowledge. We must therefore endeavour more and more to withdraw ourselves from these Bodily things, to set our Souls as free as may be from its miserable slavery to this base Flesh: we must shut the Eyes of Sense, and open that brighter Eye of our Understandings, that other Eye of the Soul, as the Philosopher calls our Intellectual Faculty, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which indeed all have, but few make use of it. This is the way to see clearly; the light of the Divine World will then begin to fall upon us, and those sacred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, those pure Coruscations of Immortal and everliving Truth will shine out into us, and in Gods own light shall we behold him. The fruit of this Knowledge will be sweet to our taste, and pleasant to our palates, sweeter than the honey or the hony-comb. The Priests of Mercury, as Plutarch tells us, in the eating of their holy things, were wont to cry out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Sweet is Truth. But how sweet and delicious that Truth is which holy and heavenborn Souls feed upon in their mysterious converses with the Deity, who can tell but they that taste it? When Reason once is raised by the mighty force of the Divine Spirit into a converse with God, it is turned into Sense: That which before was only Faith well built upon sure Principles, (for such our Science may be) now becomes Vision. We shall then converse with God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whereas before we conversed with him only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with our Discursive faculty, as the Platonists were wont to distinguish. Before we laid hold on him only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with a struggling, Agonistical, and contentious Reason, hotly combating with difficulties and sharp contests of divers opinions, & labouring in itself, in its deductions of one thing from another; we shall then fasten our minds upon him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with such a serene Understanding, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, such an Intellectual calmness and serenity as will present us with a blissful, steady, and invariable sight of him. SECTION III. AND now if you please, setting aside the Epicurean herd of Brutish men, who have drowned all their own sober Reason in the deepest Lethe of Sensuality, we shall divide the rest of Men into these Four ranks, according to that Method which Simplicius upon Epictetus hath already laid out to us, with a respect to a Fourfold kind of Knowledge, which we have all this while glanced at. The First whereof is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or, if you will, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that Complex and Multifarious man that is made up of Soul & Body, as it were by a just equality and Arithmetical proportion of Parts and Powers in each of them. The knowledge of these men I should call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Plutarch's phrase; a Knowledge wherein Sense and Reason are so twisted up together, that it cannot easily be unravelled, and laid out into its first principles. Their highest Reason is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 complying with their senses, and both conspire together in vulgar opinion. To these that Motto which the Storcks have made for them may very well agree, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, their life being steered by nothing else but Opinion and Imagination. Their higher notions of God and Religion are so entangled with the Birdlime of fleshly Passions and mundane Vanity, that they cannot rise up above the surface of this dark earth, or easily entertain any but earthly conceptions of heavenly things. Such Souls as are here lodged, as Plato speaks, are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heavy behind, and are continually pressing down to this world's centre: and though, like the Spider, they may appear sometime moving up and down aloft in the air, yet they do but sit in the loom, and move in that web of their own gross fancies, which they fasten and pin to some earthly thing or other. The Second is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The man that looks at himself as being what he 2. is rather by his Soul then by his Body; that thinks not fit to view his own face in any other Glass but that of Reason and Understanding; that reckons upon his Soul as that which was made to rule, his Body as that which was born to obey, and like an handmaid perpetually to wait upon his higher and nobler part. And in such an one the Communes notitiae, or common Principles of virtue and Goodness, are more clear and steady. To such an one we may allow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, more clear and distinct Opinions, as being already 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in a Method or course of Purgation, or at least fit to be initiated into the Mysteria minora the lesser Mysteries of Religion. For though these Innate notions of Truth may be but poor, empty, and hungry things of themselves, before they be fed and filled with the practice of true virtue; yet they are capable of being impregnated, and exalted with the Rules and Precepts of it. And therefore the Stoic supposed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that the doctrine of Political and Moral virtues was fit to be delivered to such as these; and though they may not be so well prepared for Divine virtue (which is of an higher Emanation) yet they are not immature for Humane, as having the Seeds of it already within themselves, which being watered by answerable practice, may sprout up within them. The Third is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He 3. whose soul is already purged by this lower sort of virtue, and so is continually flying off from the Body and Bodily passion, and returning into himself. Such in S. Peter's language are those who have escaped the pollutions which are in the world through lust. To these we may attribute a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a lower degree of Science, their inward sense of virtue and moral Goodness being far transcendent to all mere Speculative opinions of it. But if this Knowledge settle here, it may be quickly apt to corrupt. Many of our most refined Moralists may be, in a worse sense than Plotinus means, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, full with their own pregnancy; their Souls may too much heave and swell with the sense of their own virtue and Knowledge: there may be an ill Ferment of Self-love lying at the bottom, which may puff it up the more with Pride, Arrogance, and Self-conceit. These forces with which the Divine bounty supplies us to keep a stronger guard against the evil Spirit, may be abused by our own rebellious Pride, enticing of them from their allegiance to Heaven, to strengthen itself in our Souls, and fortify them against Heaven: like that supercilious Stoic, who when he thought his mind well armed and appointed with wisdom and virtue, cried out, Sapiens contendet cum ipso Jove de felicitate. They may make an airy heaven of these, and wall it about with their own Self-flattery, and then sit in it as Gods, as Cosroes the Persian king was sometime laughed at for enshrining himself in a Temple of his own. And therefore if this Knowledge be not attended with Humility and a deep sense of selfpenury and Self-emptiness, we may easily fall short of that True Knowledge of God which we seem to aspire after. We may carry such an Image and Species of ourselves constantly before us, as will make us lose the clear sight of the Divinity, and be too apt to rest in a mere Logical life (its Simplicius his expression) without any true participation of the Divine life, if we do not (as many do, if not all, who rise no higher) relapse and slide back by vainglory, popularity, or such like vices, into some mundane and external Vanity or other. The fourth is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The true Metaphysical 4. and Contemplative man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who running and shooting up above his own Logical or Self-rational life, pierceth into the Highest life: Such a one, who by Universal Love and Holy affection abstracting himself from himself, endeavours the nearest Union with the Divine Essence that may be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plotinus speaks; knitting his own centre, if he have any, unto the centre of Divine Being. To such an one the Platonists are wont to attribute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a true Divine wisdom, powerfully displaying itself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an Intellectual life, as they phrase it. Such a Knowledge they say is always pregnant with Divine virtue, which ariseth out of an happy Union of Souls with God, and is nothing else but a living Imitation of a Godlike prefection drawn out by a strong servant love of it. This Divine Knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. as Plotinus speaks, makes us amorous of Divine beauty, beautiful and lovely; and this Divine Love and Purity reciprocally exalts Divine Knowledge; both of them growing up together like that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Pausanias sometimes speaks of. Though by the Platonists leave such a Life and Knowledge as this is, peculiarly belongs to the true and sober Christian who lives in Him who is Life itself, and is enlightened by Him who is the Truth itself, and is made partaker of the Divine Unction, and knoweth all things, as S. John speaks. This Life is nothing else but God's own breath within him, and an Infant-Christ (if I may use the expression) form in his Soul, who is in a sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the shining forth of the Father's glory. But yet we must not mistake, this Knowledge is but here in its Infancy; there is an higher knowledge or an higher degree of this knowledge that doth not, that cannot, descend upon us in these earthly habitations. We cannot here see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Speculo lucido; here we can see but in a glass, and that darkly too. Our own Imaginative Powers, which are perpetually attending the highest acts of our Souls, will be breathing a gross dew upon the pure glass of our Understandings, and so fully and besmear it, that we cannot see the Image of the Divinity sincerely in it. But yet this Knowledge being a true heavenly fire kindled from God's own Altar, begets an undaunted Courage in the Souls of Good men, & enables them to cast a holy Scorn upon the poor petty trash of this Life in comparison with Divine things, and to pity those poor brutish Epicureans that have nothing but the mere husks of fleshly pleasure to feed themselves with. This Sight of God makes pious Souls breath after that blessed time when Mortality shall be swallowed up of Life, when they shall no more behold the Divinity through those dark Mediums that eclipse the blessed Sight of it. A SHORT DISCOURSE OF SUPERSTITION. Clem. Alexandr. in Admon. ad Graec. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hierocles in Pythag. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lactantius de Vero cultu. Hic verus est cultus, in quo mens colentis seipsam Deo immaculatam victimam sistit. Ibid. Nihil Sancta & singularis illa Majestas aliud ab homine desiderat, quam solam innocentiam: quam siquis obtulerit Deo, satis piè, satis religiosè litavit. The Contents of the ensuing Discourse. The true Notion of Superstition well expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. an over-timorous and dreadful apprehension of the Deity. A false Opinion of the Deity the true Cause and Rise of Superstition. Superstition is most incident to such as Converse not with the Goodness of God, or are conscious to themselves of their own unlikeness to him. Right apprehensions of God beget in man a Nobleness and freedom of Soul. Superstition, though it looks upon God as an angry Deity, yet it counts him easily pleased with flattering Worship. Apprehensions of a Deity and gild meeting together are apt to excite Fear. Hypocrites to spare their Sins seek out ways to compound with God. Servile and Superstitious Fear is increased by Ignorance of the certain Causes of Terrible Effects in Nature, etc. as also by frightful Apparitions of Ghosts and Spectres. A further Consideration of Superstition as a Composition of Fear and Flattery. A fuller Definition of Superstition, according to the Sense of the Ancients. Superstition doth not always appear in the same Form, but passes from one Form to another, and sometimes shrouds itself under Forms seemingly Spiritual and more refined. Of SUPERSTITION. HAving now done with what we propounded as a Preface to our following Discourses, we should now come to treat of the main Heads and Principles of Religion. But before we do that, perhaps it may not be amiss to inquire into some of those Anti-Deities that are set up against it, the chief whereof are ATHEISM and SUPERSTITION; which indeed may seem to comprehend in them all kind of Apostasy and prevarication from Religion. We shall not be overcurious to pry into such foul and rotten carcases as these are too narrowly, or to make any subtle Anatomy of them; but rather inquire a little into the Original and Immediate Causes of them; because it may be they may be nearer of kin than we ordinarily are ware of, while we see their Complexions to be so vastly different the one from the other. And first of all for SUPERSTITION (to lay aside our Vulgar notion of it which much mistakes it) it is the same with that Temper of Mind which the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (for so Tully frequently translates that word, though not so fitly and emphatically as he hath done some others:) It imports an overtimorous and dreadful apprehension of the Deity; and therefore with Hesychius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are all one, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is by him expounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an Idolater, and also one that is very prompt to * For so that word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must here signify; if indeed it be not corrupted, and to be read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a word which some other Lexicographers use in this case. worship the Gods, but withal fearful of them. And therefore the true Cause and Rise of Superstition is indeed nothing else but a false opinion of the Deity, that renders him dreadful and terrible, as being rigorous and imperious; that which represents him as austere and apt to be angry, but yet impotent, and easy to be appeased again by some flattering devotions, especially if performed with sanctimonious shows and a solemn sadness of Mind. And I wish that that Picture of God which some Christians have drawn of him, wherein sourness and Arbitrariness appear so much, doth not too much resemble it. According to this sense Plutarch hath well defined it in his Book 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this manner, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a strong passionate Opinion, and such a Supposition as is productive of a fear debasing and terrifying a man with the representation of the Gods as grievous and hurtful to Mankind. Such men as these converse not with the Goodness of God, and therefore they are apt to attribute their impotent passions and peevishness of Spirit to him. Or it may be because some secret advertisements of their Consciences tell them how unlike they themselves are to God, and how they have provoked him; they are apt to be as much displeased with him as too troublesome to them, as they think he is displeased with them. They are apt to count this Divine Supremacy as but a piece of Tyranny that by its sovereign Will makes too great encroachments upon their Liberties, and that which will eat up all their Right and Property; and therefore are slavishly afraid of him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, fearing Heaven's Monarchy as a severe and churlish Tyranny from which they cannot absolve themselves, as the same Author speaks: and therefore he thus discloseth the private whisper of their minds, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the broad gates of hell are opened, the rivers of fire and Stygian inundations run down as a swelling flood, there is thick darkness crowded together, dreadful and ghastly Sights of Ghosts screeching and howling, Judges and tormentors, deep gulfs and Abysses full of infinite miseries. Thus he. The Prophet Esay gives us this Epitome of their thoughts, chap. 33. The Sinners in Zion are afraid, fearfulness hath surprised the hypocrites: who shall dwell with the devouring fire? who shall dwell with everlasting burn? Though I should not dislike these dreadful & astonishing thoughts of future torment, which I doubt even good men may have cause to press home upon their own spirits, while they find Ingenuity less active, the more to restrain sin; yet I think it little commends God, and as little benefits us, to fetch all this horror & astonishment from the Contemplations of a Deity, which should always be the most serene and lovely: our apprehensions of the Deity should be such as might ennoble our Spirits, and not debase them. A right knowledge of God would beget a freedom & Liberty of Soul within us, and not servility; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plutarch hath well observed; our thoughts of a Deity should breed in us hopes of virtue, and not gender to a spirit of bondage. But that we may pass on. Because this unnatural resemblance of God as an angry Deity in impure minds, should it blaze too furiously, like the Basilisk would kill with its looks; therefore these Painters use their best arts a little to sweeten it, and render it less unpleasing. And those that fancy God to be most hasty and apt to be displeased, yet are ready also to imagine him so impotently mutable, that his favour may be won again with their uncouth devotions, that he will be taken with their formal praises, and being thirsty after glory and praise & solemn addresses, may, by their pompous furnishing out all these for him, be won to a good liking of them: and thus they represent him to themselves * as Lusian in his De Sacrificiis speaks too truly, though it may be too profanely. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And therefore Superstition will always abound in these things whereby this Deity of their own, made after the similitude of men, may be most gratified, slavishly crouching to it. We will take a view of it in the words of Plutarch, though what refers to the Jews, if it respects more their Rites then their Manners, may seem to contain too hasty a censure of them. Superstition brings in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wallowings in the dust, tumblings in the mire, observations of Sabbaths, prosternations, uncouth gestures, & strange rites of worship. Superstition is very apt to think that Heaven may be bribed with such falsehearted devotions; as Porphyry hath well explained it by this, that it is * Lib. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an apprehension that a man may corrupt and bribe the Deity: which (as he there observes) was the Cause of all those bloody sacrifices, and of some inhuman ones among the Heathen, men imagining 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like him in the Prophet that thought by the fruit of his body and the firstlings of his flock to expiate the sin of his Soul. Micah 6. But it may be we may seem all this while to have made too tragical a Description of Superstition; and indeed our Author whom we have all this while had recourse to seems to have set it forth, as anciently Painters were wont to do those pieces in which they would demonstrate most their own skill; they would not content themselves with the shape of one Body only, but borrowed several parts from several Bodies as might most fit their design and fill up the picture of that they desired chief to represent. Superstition it may be looks not so foul and deformed in every Soul that is died with it, as he hath there set it forth, nor doth it every where spread itself alike: this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that shrowds itself under the name of Religion, will variously discover itself as it is seated in Minds of a various temper, and meets with variety of matter to exercise itself about. We shall therefore a little further inquire into it, and what the judgements of the soberest men anciently were of it; the rather for that a learned Author of our own seems unwilling to own that Notion of it which we have hitherto out of Plutarch and others contended for; who though he hath freed it from that gloss which the late Ages have put upon it, yet he may seem to have too strictly confined it to a Cowardly Worship of the ancient Gentile Daemons, as if Superstition and Polytheism were indeed the same thing, whereas Polytheism or Daemon-worship is but one branch of it: which was partly observed by the learned Casaubon in his Notes upon that Chapter of Theophrastus' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, where it is described to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which he thus interprets, Theophrastus' voce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & Deos & daemons complexus est, & quicquid divinitatis esse particeps malesana putavit antiquitas. And in this sense it was truly observed by Petronius Arbiter, Primus in orbe Deos fecit Timor— The whole progeny of the ancient Daemons, at least in the Minds of the Vulgar, sprung out of Fear, and were supported by it: though notwithstanding, this Fear, when in a Being void of all true sense of Divine goodness, hath not escaped the censure of Superstition in Varro's judgement, whose Maxim it was, as S. Austin tells us, Deum à religioso vereri, à superstitioso timeri: which distinction Servius seems to have made use of in his Comment upon Virgil, Aeneid. 6. where the Poet describing the torments of the wicked in hell, he runs out into an Allegorical exposition of all, it may be too much in favour of Lucretius whom he there magnifies. His words are these, Ipse etiam Lucretius dicit per eos super quos jamjam casurus imminet lapis, Superstitiosos significari, qui inaniter semper verentur, & de Diis & Coelo & locis superioribus malè opinantur; nam Religiosi sunt qui per reverentiam timent. But that we may the more fully unfold the Nature of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the Effects of it, which are not always of one sort, we shall first premise something concerning the Rise of it. The Common Notions of a Deity, strongly rooted in men's Souls, and meeting with the apprehensions of Guiltiness, are very apt to excite this Servile fear: and when men love their own filthy lusts, that they may spare them, they are presently apt to contrive some other ways of appeasing the Deity and compounding with it. Unhallowed minds, that have no inward foundations of true Holiness to fix themselves upon, are easily shaken and tossed from all inward peace and tranquillity: and as the thoughts of some Supreme power above them seize upon them, so they are struck with the lightning thereof into inward affrightments, which are further increased by a vulgar observation of those strange, stupendious and terrifying Effects in Nature, whereof they can give no certain reason, as Earthquakes, thunderings and Lightnings, blazing Comets and other Meteors of a like Nature, which are apt to terrify those especially who are already unsettled and chased with an inward sense of guilt, and, as Seneca speaks, inevitabilem metum ut supra nos aliquid timeremus incutiunt. Petronius Arbiter hath well described this business for us, Primus in orbe Deos fecit Timor, ardua coelo Fulmina cum caderent, discussaque moenia flammis, Atque ictus flagraret Athos— From hence it was that the Libri fulgurales of the Romans, and other such like Volumes of Superstition, swollen so much, and that the pulvinaria Deorum were so often frequented, as will easily appear to any one a little conversant in Livy, who every where sets forth this Devotion so largely, as if he himself had been too passionately in love with it. And though as the Events in Nature began sometimes to be found out better by a discovery of their immediate Natural Causes, so some particular pieces of Superstitious Customs were antiquated and grown out of date, (as is well observed concerning those Charms and Februations anciently in use upon the appearing of an Eclipse, and some others) yet often affrights and horrors were not so easily abated, while they were unacquainted with the Deity, and with the other mysterious Events in Nature, which begot those Furies & unlucky Empusas, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the weak minds of men. To all which we may add the frequent Spectres and frightful Apparitions of Ghosts and Mormos: all which extorted such a kind of Worship from them as was most correspondent to such Causes of it. And those Rites and Ceremonies which were begotten by Superstition, were again the unhappy Nurses of it; such as are well described by Plutarch in his De defect, Oracul. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Feasts and Sacrifices, as likewise observations of unlucky and fatal days, celebrated with eating of raw things, lacerations, fastings, and howl, and many times filthy Speeches in their sacred rites, and frantic behaviour. But as we insinuated before, This Root of Superstition diversely branched forth itself, sometimes into magic and exorcisms, other times into Paedanticall Rites and idle observations of Things and Times, as Theophrastus hath largely set them forth in his Tract 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in others it displayed itself in inventing as many new Deities as there were several Causes from whence their affrights proceeded, and finding out many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appropriate to them, as supposing they ought to be worshipped cum sacro horrore. And hence it is that we hear of those inhuman and diabolical sacrifices called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, frequent among the old Heathens (as among many others Porphyry in his De abstinentia hath abundantly related) and of those dead men's bones which our ecclesiastic Writers tell us were found in their Temples at the demolishing of them. Sometimes it would express itself in a prodigal way of sacrificing, for which Ammianus Marcellinus (an heathen Writer, but yet one who seems to have been well pleased with the simplicity and integrity of Christian Religion) taxeth Julian the Emperor for Superstition. Julianus, Superstitiosus magis quam legitimus sacrorum observator, innumeras sine parsimonia pecudes mactans, ut aestimaretur, si revertisset de Parthis, boves jam defuturos: like that Marcus Caesar, of whom he relates this common proverb, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Besides many other ways might be named wherein Superstition might occasionally show itself. All which may best be understood, if we consider it a little in that Composition of Fear and Flattery which before we intimated: and indeed Flattery is most incident to base and slavish minds; and where the fear and jealousy of a Deity disquiet à wanton dalliance with sin, and disturb the filthy pleasure of Vice, there this fawning and crouching disposition will find out devices to quiet an angry conscience within, and an offended God without, (though as men grow more expert in this cunning, these fears may in some degree abate.) This the ancient Philosophy hath well taken notice of, and therefore well defined 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and useth these terms promiscuously. Thus we find Max. Tyrius in his Dissert. 4. concerning the difference between a Friend and a Flatterer. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The sense whereof is this, The Pious man is God's friend, the Superstitious is a flatterer of God: and indeed most happy and blessed is the condition of the Pious Man, God's friend; but right miserable & sad is the state of the Superstitious. The Pious man, emboldened by a good Conscience and encouraged by the sense of his integrity, comes to God without fear and dread: but the Superstitious being sunk and depressed through the sense of his own wickedness, comes not without much fear, being void of all hope and confidence, and dreading the Gods as so many Tyrants. Thus Plato also sets forth this Superstitious temper, though he mentions it not under that name, but we may know it by a property he gives of it, viz. to collogue with Heaven, Lib. 10. de Legibus; where he distinguisheth of Three kinds of Tempers in reference to the Deity, which he there calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which are, Totall Atheism, which he says never abides with any man till his Old age; and Partial Atheism, which is a Negation of Providence; and a Third, which is a persuasion concerning the god's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that they are easily won by sacrifices and prayers, which he after explains thus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that with gifts unjust men may find acceptance with them. And this Discourse of Plato's upon these three kinds of Irreligious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Simplicius seems to have respect to in his Comment upon Epictetus, cap. 38. which treats about Right Opinions in Religion; & there having pursued the two former of them, he thus states the latter, which he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as well as the other two, as a conceit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, quòd muneribus & donariis & stipis distributione à sententia deducuntur: such men making account by their devotions to draw the Deity to themselves, and winning the favour of Heaven, to procure such an indulgence to their lusts as no sober man on earth would give them; they in the mean while not considering 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that Repentance, Supplications and Prayers, etc. aught to draw us nearer to God, not God nearer to us; as in a ship, by fastening a Cable to a firm Rock, we intent not to draw the Rock to the Ship, but the Ship to the Rock. Which last passage of his is therefore the more worthy to be taken notice of, as holding out so large an Extent that this Irreligious temper is of, and of how subtle a Nature. This fond and gross dealing with the Deity was that which made the scoffing Lucian so much sport, who in his Treatise De sacrificiis tells a number of stories how the Daemons loved to be feasted, and where and how they were entertained, with such devotions which are rather used Magically as Charms and Spells for such as use them, to defend themselves against those Evils which their own Fears are apt perpetually to muster up, and to endeavour by bribery to purchase Heaven's favour and indulgence, as Juvenal speaks of the Satyr. 6. Superstitious Egyptian, Illius lacrymae mentitaque munera praestant Ut veniam culpae non abnuat, ansere magno Scilicet & tenui popano corruptus Osiris. Though all this while I would not be understood to condemn too severely all servile fear of God, if it tend to make men avoid true wickedness, but that which settles upon these lees of Formality. To conclude, Were I to define Superstition more generally according to the ancient sense of it, I would call it Such an apprehension of God in the thoughts of men, as renders him grievous and burdensome to them, and so destroys all free and cheerful converse with him; begetting in the stead thereof a forced and jejune devotion, void of inward Life and Love. It is that which discovers itself Paedantically in the worship of the Deity, in any thing that makes up but only the Body or outward Vesture of Religion; though there it may make a mighty bluster: and because it comprehends not the true Divine good that ariseth to the Souls of men from an internal frame of Religion, it is therefore apt to think that all it's insipid devotions are as so many Presents offered to the Deity and gratifications of him. How variously Superstition can discover & manifest itself, we have intimated before: To which I shall only add this, That we are not so well rid of Superstition, as some imagine when they have expelled it out of their Churches, expunged it out of their Books and Writings, or cast it out of their Tongues, by making Innovations in names (wherein they sometimes imitate those old Caunii that Herodotus speaks of, who that they might banish all the foreign Gods that had stolen in among them, took their procession through all their Country, beating & scourging the air along as they went;) No, for all this, Superstition may enter into our chambers, and creep into our closerts, it may twine about our secret Devotions, & actuate our forms of belief and Orthodox opinions, when it hath no place else to shroud itself or hid its head in; we may think to flatter the Deity by these, and to bribe it with them, when we are grown weary of more pompous solemnities: nay it may mix itself with a seeming Faith in Christ; as I doubt it doth now in too many, who laying aside all sober and serious care of true Piety, think it sufficient to offer up their Saviour, his Active and Passive Righteousness, to a severe and rigid Justice, to make expiation for those sins they can be willing to allow themselves in. A SHORT DISCOURSE OF ATHEISM. Job 21. 14, 15. They say unto God, Depart from us; for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways. What is the Almighty that we should serve him? and what profit should we have if we pray unto him? Plutarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Contents of the ensuing Discourse. That there is a near Affinity between Atheism and Superstition. That Superstition doth not only prepare the way for Atheism, but promotes and strengthens it. That Epicurism is but Atheism under a mask. A Confutation of Epicurus his Master-notion, together with some other pretences and Dogmata of his Sect. The true knowledge of Nature is advantageous to Religion. That Superstition is more tolerable than Atheism. That Atheism is both ignoble and uncomfortable. What low and unworthy Notions the Epicureans had concerning Man's Happiness: and What trouble they were put to How to define, and Where to place true happiness. A true belief of a Deity supports the Soul with a present Tranquillity and future Hopes. Were it not for a Deity, the World would be unhabitable. A SHORT DISCOURSE OF ATHEISM. WE have now done with what we intended concerning Superstition, and shall a little consider and search into the Pedigree of ATHEISM, which indeed hath so much affinity with Superstition that it may seem to have the same Father with it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Superstition could be well content there were no God to trouble or disquiet it, and Atheism thinks there is none. And as Superstition is engendered by a base opinion of the Deity as cruel and tyrannical (though it be afterwards brooded and hatched by a slavish fear and abject thoughts) so also is Atheism: and that sour and ghastly apprehension of God, when it meets with more stout and surly Natures, is apt to enrage them, and cankering them with Malice against the Deity they so little brook, provokes them to fight against it and undermine the Notion of it; as this plastic Nature which intends to form Living creatures, when it meets with stubborn and unruly Matter, is fain to yield to it, and to produce that which answers not her own Idea; whence the Signatures and impressions of Nature sometimes vary so much from that Seal that Nature would have stamped upon them. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. If these melancholic Opinions and disquieting Fears of the Deity mould not the Minds of men into Devotion, as finding them too churlish and untameable to receive any such impressions; they are then apt to exasperate men against it, and stir them up to contend with that Being which they cannot bear, and to destroy that which would deprive them of their own Liberty. These unreasonable fears of a Deity will always be moving into Flattery or Wrath. Atheism could never have so easily crept into the world, had not Superstition made way and opened a backdoor for it; it could not so easily have banished the Belief of a Deity, had not that first accused and condemned it as destructive to the Peace of Mankind; and therefore it hath always justified and defended itself by Superstition: as Plutarch hath well expressed it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Superstition afforded the principle of Generation to Atheism, and afterwards furnished it with an Apology, which though it be neither true nor lovely, yet wants it not a specious pretence. And therefore Simplicius (as we heard before) calls the Notion of Superstition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as having an ill savour of Atheism in it, seeing (as he gives an account of it) it disrobes the Deity of true Majesty and Perfection, and represents it as weak and infirm, clothed with such fond, feeble and impotent passions as men themselves are. And Dionysius Longinus, that noble Rhetorician, fears not to challenge Homer as atheistical for his unsavoury language of the Gods, which indeed was only the Brat of his Superstition. If the Superstitious man thinks that God is altogether like himself (which indeed is a character most proper to such) the Atheist will soon say in his heart, There is no God; and will judge it not without some appearance of Reason to be better there were none; as Plutarch hath discoursed it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; Were it not better for the Gauls and Scythians, not to have had any Notion, fancy or History of the Gods, then to think them such as delighted in the Blood of men offered up in sacrifices upon their Altars, as reckoning this the most perfect kind of Sacrifice and consummate Devotion? For thus his words are to be translated in reference to those ancient Gauls and Scythians, whom almost all Histories testify to have been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which horrid and monstrous Superstition was anciently very frequent among the Heathen, and was sharply taxed by Empedocles of old, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉— This made Lucretius cry out with so much indignation, when he took notice of Agamemnon's diabolical devotion in sacrificing his Daughter Iphigenia to make expiation at his Trojan Expedition, Tantum Relligio potuit suadere malorum. And indeed what sober man could brook such an esteem of himself as this blind Superstition (which overspread the Heathen world and (I doubt) is not sufficiently rooted out of the Christian) fastened upon God himself? which made Plutarch so much in defiance of it cry out, as willing almost to be an Atheist as to entertain the Vulgar Superstition, As for me (saith he) I had rather men should say that there is no such man nor ever was as Plutarch, then to say that he is or was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an inconstant fickle man, apt to be angry, and for every trifle revengeful, etc. as he goes on farther to express this Blasphemy of Superstition. But it may not be amiss to learn from Atheists themselves what was the Impulsive cause that moved them to banish away all thoughts and sober fear of a Deity, what was the Principle upon which this black Opinion was built and by which it was sustained. And this we may have from the confessions of the Epicureans, who though they seemed to acknowledge a Deity, yet I doubt not but those that search into their Writings will soon embrace Tully's censure of them, Verbis quidem ponunt, reipsa tollunt Deos. Indeed it was not safe for Epicurus (though he had a good mind to let the World know how little he cared for their Deities) to profess he believed there was none, lest he should have met with the same entertainment for it that Protagoras did at Athens, who for declaring himself doubtful 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, was himself put to Death, and his books burnt in the streets of Athens, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sub voce Praeconis, as Diogenes Laertius and others record: and indeed the world was never so degenerated any where as to suffer Atheism to appear in public View. But that we may return, and take the Confessions a little of these secret Atheists of the Epicurean sect: and of these Tully gives us a large account in his Books de Finibus and other parts of his Philosophy. Torquatus the Epicurean in his first book de Finibus liberally spends his breath to cool that toomuch heat of Religion, as he thought, in those that could not apprehend God as any other than curiosum & plenum negotii Deum (as one of that Sect doth phrase it Lib. 1. de Nat. Deor.) and so he states this Maxim of the Religion that then was most in use, Superstitione qui est imbutus, quietus esse nunquam potest. By the way, it may be worth our observing, how this monstrous progeny of men, when they would seem to acknowledge a Deity, could not forget their own beloved Image which was always before their eyes; and therefore they would have it as careless of any thing but its own pleasure and idle life as they themselves were. So easy is it for all Sects some way or other to slide into a compliance with the Anthropomorphitae, and to bring down the Deity to a conformity to their own Image. But we shall rather choose a little to examine Lucretius in this point, who hath in the name of all his Sect largely told us the Rise and original of this Design. After a short Ceremony to his following Discourse of Nature, he thus gins his Prologue in commendation of Epicurus his exploit, as he fancies it. Humana ante oculos foedè cùm vita jaceret, In terris oppressa gravi sub Relligione, Quae caput è coeli regionibus ostendebat Horribili aspectu semper mortalibus instans; Primùm Graius homo mortales tendere contra Est oculos ausus, primúsque obsistere contra: Quem nec fama Deûm, nec Fulmina, nec minitanti Murmur compressit Coelum— And a little after in a sorry Ovation, proudly cries out, Quare Relligio pedibus subjecta vicissim Obteritur; nos exaequat victoria coelo. But to proceed; Our Author observing the timorous minds of men to have been struck with this dreadful Superstition from the observation of some stupendious Effects and Events (as he pleaseth rather to call them) in Nature; he therefore, following herein the steps of his great Master Epicurus, undertakes so to solve all those knots which Superstition was tied up into, by unfolding the Secrets of Nature, as that men might find themselves loosened from those saevi Domini and crudeles Tyranni, as he calls the vulgar Creeds of the Deity. And so gins with a simple Confutation of the Opinion of the Creation, which he supposed to contain a sure and sensible Demonstration of a Deity, and to have sprung up from an admiring ignorance of Natural productions. Quip ità Formido mortales continet omnes, Lib. 1. Quod multa in terris fieri coelòque tuentur, Quorum operum Causas nullâ ratione videre Possunt, ac fieri Divino numine rentur. And towards the end of this first Book, Primùm quòd magnis doceo de rebus, & arctis Relligionum animos nodis exsolvere pergo. But herein all the Epicureans (who are not the true, but foster-fathers' of that Natural Philosophy they brag of, and which indeed Democritus was the first Author of) do miserably blunder themselves. For though a lawful acquaintance with all the Events and Phaenomena that show themselves upon this mundane stage would contribute much to free men's Minds from the slavery of dull Superstition: yet would it also breed a sober & amiable Belief of the Deity, as it did in all the Pythagoreans, Platonists and other Sects of Philosophers, if we may believe themselves; and an ingenuous knowledge hereof would be as fertile with Religion, as the ignorance thereof in affrighted and base Minds is with Superstition. For which purpose I shall need only to touch upon Epicurus his master-notion by which he undertakes to salve all difficulties that might hold our thoughts in suspense about a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or a Creator, which is that Plenum (which is all one with Corpus) and Inane, that this Body (which in his Philosophy is nothing else but an Infinity of Insensible atoms moving to and fro in an Empty Space) is, together with that Space in which it is, sufficient to beget all those Phaenomena which we see in Nature. Which however it might be true, Motion being once granted, yet herein Tully hath well scotched the wheel of this overhasty Philosophy, Lib. 1. de Finibus, Cùm in Rerum natura duo sint quaerenda, unum, quae Materia sit ex qua quaeque res efficiatur; alterum, quae Vis sit quae quidque efficiat: de Materia disseruerunt Epicurei; Vim & causam efficiendi reliquerunt. Which is as much as if some conceited piece of Sophistry should go about to prove that an Automaton had no dependency upon the skill of an Artificer, by descanting upon the several parts of it, without taking notice in the meanwhile of some external Weight or Spring that moves it: or, to use his own Similitude, as if one that undertakes to Analyse any Learned Book, should tell us how so many Letters meeting together in several Combinations, should beget all that sense that is contained therein, without minding that Wit that cast them all into their several Ranks. And this made Aristotle, otherwise not overzealous of Religion, soberly to acknowledge some First mover, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And yet could we allow Epicurus this power of Motion to be seated in Nature, yet that he might perform the true task of a Naturalist, he must also give us an account how such a force and power in Nature should subsist: which indeed is easy to do, if we call in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God himself as the Architect and mover of this Divine Artifice; but without some Infinite power, impossible. And we should further inquire, How these movable & rambling atoms come to place themselves so orderly in the Universe, and observe that absolute Harmony & Decorum in all their Motions, as if they kept time with the Musical laws of some Almighty Mind that composed all their lessons & measured out their Dances up and down in the Universe; and also how it comes to pass, if they be only moved by Chance & Accident, that such Regular mutations and generations should be begotten by a fortuitous concourse of atoms, as sometimes they speak of, they having no centre to seat themselves about in an infinite Vacuity, as Tully argues; and how these Bodies that are once moved by some impulse from their former station, return again, or at least come to stay themselves, and do not rather move perpetually the same way the First impulse and direction carried them; or why they do not there rest where their Motion first began to cease, if they were interrupted by any thing without them: or again, if the proper motion of these atoms be always toward some Centre, as Epicurus sometimes is pleased to state the business, Lineis Rectis, as he saith, then how comes there, as Tully replies, to be any Generation? or if there be a Motus declinationis joined with this Motion of Gravity (which was one of Epicurus his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which he borrowed not from Democritus) then why should not all tend the same way? and so all those Motions, Generations and Appearances in Nature all vanish, seeing all Variety of Motion would be taken away which way soever this unhallowed Opinion be stated? Thus we see, though we should allow Epicurus his Principle and fundamental absurdity in the frame of Nature, yet it is too airy and weak a thing to support that massy bulk of Absurdities which he would build upon it. But it was not the lot of any of his stamp to be over-wise (however they did boast most in the title of Sophi) as is well observed of them; for than they might have been so happy too as to have dispelled these thick and filthy mists of Atheism, by those bright beams of Truth that shine in the frame of this inferior world, wherein, as S. Paul speaks, the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is made manifest. Atheism most commonly lurks in confinio scientiae & ignorantiae; when the minds of men begin to draw those gross, earthly vapours of sensual and material Speculations by dark and cloudy disputes, they are then most in danger of being benighted in them. There is a Natural Sense of God that lodges in the minds of the lowest and dullest sort of vulgar men, which is always roving after him, catching at him, though it cannot lay any sure hold on him; which works like a natural Instinct antecedent to any mature knowledge, as being indeed the First principle of it: and if I were to speak precisely in the mode of the Stoics, I would rather call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then with Plutarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But when contentious disputes, and frothy reasonings, and contemplations informed by fleshly affections, conversant only about the outside of Nature, begin to rise up in men's souls; they may then be in some danger of depressing all those Inbred notions of a Deity, and to reason themselves out of their own sense, as the old sceptics did: and therefore it may be it might be wished that some men that have not Religion, had had more Superstition to accompany them in their passage from Ignorance to Knowledge. But we have run out too fare in this Digression: we shall now return, and observe how our former Author takes notice of another piece of Vulgar Superstition, which he thinks fit to be chased away by Atheism, and that is The terrors of the world to come, which he thus sets upon in his Third book, — Animi natura videtur Atque Animae claranda meis jam versibus esse, Et metus ille for as praeceps Acheruntis agendus Funditus, humanam vitam qui turbat ab imo, Omnia suffundens mortis nigrore— And afterwards he tells us how this Fear of the Gods thus proceeding from the former Causes, and from those Spectres and ghastly Apparitions with which men were sometimes terrified, begat all those fantastic rites and ceremonies in use amongst them, as their Temples, sacred Lakes and Pools, their Groves, Altars, Images, and other like Vanities, as so many idle toys to please these Deities with; and at last concludes himself thus into Atheism, as a strong Fort to preserve himself from these cruel Deities that Superstition had made, because he could not find the way to true Religion, Nunc quae sausa Deûm per magnas numina gentes Lib. 5. Pervulgarit, & ararum compleverit urbes, Suscipiendáque curarit solennia sacra, Quae nunc in magnis florent rebúsque locìsque; Unde etiam nunc est mortalibus insitus horror Qui delubra Deûm nova toto suscitat orbi Terrarum, & in festis cogit celebrare diebus; Non ità difficile est rationem reddere verbis. Thus we see how Superstition strengthened the wicked hands of Atheism; so far is a Formal and Ritual way of Religion proceeding from baseness and Servility of Mind (though backed with never so much rigour and severity) from keeping it out. And I wish some of our Opinions in Religion in these days may not have the same evil influences as the notorious Gentile- Superstition of old had, as well for the begetting this brat of Atheism, as I doubt it is too manifest they have for some other. Thus we should now leave this Argument; only before we pass from it, we shall observe two things which Plutarch hath suggested to us. The first whereof is, That howsoever Superstition be never so unlovely a thing, yet it is more tolerable than Atheism: which I shall repeat in his words, * Lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, We should endeavour to take off Superstition from our minds, as a Film from our Eyes; but if that cannot be, we must not therefore pluck out our Eyes, and blind the faith that generally we have of the Deity. Superstition may keep men from the outward acts of sin sometimes, and so their future punishment may have some abatement. Besides that Atheism offers the greatest violence to men's Souls that may be, pulling up the Notions of a Deity, which have spread their Roots quite through all the Powers of men's Souls. The second is this, That Atheism itself is a most ignoble and uncomfortable thing, as Tully hath largely discussed it, and especially Plutarch in the abovenamed Tractate of his, written by way of Confutation of Colotes the Epicurean, who writ a Book to prove That a man could not live quietly by following any other sects of Philosophers besides his own; as if all true good were only conversant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, about the belly, and all the pores and passages of the Body, and the way to true happiness was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or else 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plutarch hath not more wittily then judiciously replied upon him. What is all that Happiness that arifeth from these bodily pleasures to any one that hath any high or noble sense within him? This gross, muddy, and stupid Opinion is nothing else but a Dehonestamentum humani generis, that casts as great a scorn and reproach upon the nature of mankind as may be, and sinks it into the deepest abyss of Baseness. And certainly were the Highest happiness of mankind such a thing as might be felt by a corporeal touch, were it of so ignoble a birth as to spring out of this earth, and to grow up out of this mire and clay; we might well sit down, and bewail our unhappy fates, that we should rather be born Men then Brute beasts, which enjoy more of this world's happiness than we can do, without any sin or guilt. How little of Pleasure these short lives taste here, which only lasts so long as the Indigency of nature is in supplying, and after that, only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a flying shadow, or flitting dream of that pleasure (which is choked as soon as craving Nature is satisfied) remains in the Fancy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plutarch hath well observed in the same Discourse! And therefore Epicurus seeing how slippery the soul was to all Sensual pleasure, which was apt to slide away perpetually from it, and again how little of it the Body was capable of where it had a shorter stay; he and his followers could not well tell where to place this beggarly guest: and therefore, as Plutarch speaks, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, one while they would place it in the Body, and then lead it back again into the Soul, not knowing where to bestow it. And Diodorus, and the Cyreniaci, and the Epicureans, as Tully tells us, who all could fancy nothing but a Bodily happiness, yet could not agree whether it should be Voluptas, or Vacuitas doloris, or something else; it being ever found so hard a thing to define, like that base Matter of which it is begotten, which by reason of its penury & scantness of being's as Philosophers tell us, doth effugere intellectum, and is nothing else but a shady kind of Nothing, something that hath a name but nothing else. I dare say that all those that have any just esteem of humanity, cannot but with a noble scorn defy such a base-born Happiness as this is, generated only out of the slime of this earth: and yet this is all the portion of Atheism, which teaches the entertainers of it to believe themselves nothing else but so many heaps of more refined dust, fortuitously gathered together, which at last must be all blown away again. But a true Belief of a Deity is a sure Support to all serious minds, which besides the future hopes it is pregnant with, entertains them here with Tranquillity and inward serenity. What the Stoic said in his cool and mature thoughts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it is not worth the while to live in a world empty of God and Providence, is the sense of all those that know what a Deity means. Indeed it were the greatest unhappiness that might be, to have been born into such a world, where we should be perpetually tossed up and down by a rude and blind Fortune, and be perpetually liable to all those abuses which the savage Lusts and Passions of the world would put upon us. It is not possible for any thing well to bear up the spirit of that man that shall calmly meditate with himself the true state and condition of this world, should that Mind and wisdom be taken away from it which governs every part of it, and overrules all those disorders that at any time begin to break forth in it. Were there not an Omniscient skill to temper, and fitly to rank up in their due places all those quarrelsome and extravagant spirits that are in the world, it would soon prove an unhabitable place, and sink under the heavy weight of its own confusion; which was wittily signified in that Fable of Phaeton, who being admitted to drive the chariot of the Sun but for one day, by his rude and unskilful guidance of it made it fall down, and burn the world. Remove God and Providence out of the world, and then we have nothing to depend upon but Chance and Fortune, the Humours and Passions of men; and he that could then live in it, had need be as blind as these Lords would be, that he might not see his own misery always staring upon him; and had need be more senseless and stupid, that he might not be affected with it. Psal. 10. 4. The wicked through the pride of his countenance will not seek after God: God is not in all his thoughts. Ecclus 23. 4. O Lord, Father and God of my life, give me not a proud look; but turn away from thy servants a * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sic Edit. Complut. giantlike mind. A Discourse demonstrating THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL. Phocylides. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Epicharmus apud Clem. Alex. Strom. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plotin. Ennead. 4. l. 4. c. 45. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hierocl. in Pythag. aur. carm. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A DISCOURSE OF THE Immortality of the Soul. CHAP. I. The First and main Principles of Religion, viz. 1. That God is. 2. That God is a rewarder of them that seek him: Wherein is included the Great Article of the Immortality of the Soul. These two Principles acknowledged by religious and serious persons in all Ages. 3. That God communicates himself to mankind by Christ. The Doctrine of the Immortality of the Soul discoursed of in the first place, and why? HAving finished our two short Discourses concerning those two Anti-Deities, viz. Superstition and Atheism; we shall now proceed to discourse more largely concerning the main Heads and Principles of Religion. And here we are to take Notice of those two Cardinal points which the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrews makes the necessary Foundations of all Religion, viz. That God is, and That He is a rewarder of them that seek him. To which we should add, The Immortality of the Reasonable Soul, but that that may seem included in the former: and indeed we can neither believe any Invisible reward of which he there speaks, without a Prolepsis of the Soul's Immortality; neither can we entertain a serious belief of that, but the notions of Poena and Praemium will naturally follow from it; we never meet with any who were persuaded of the former, that ever doubted of the latter: and therefore the former two have been usually taken alone for the First principles of Religion, and have been most insisted upon by the Platonists; and accordingly a novel Platonist writing a Summary of Plato's Divinity, entitles his book, De Deo & Immortalitate Animae. And also the Stoical Philosophy requires a belief of these as the Prolepses of all Religion, of the one whereof * Cap. 38. Epictetus himself assures us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Know that the main Foundation of Piety is this, to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 right opinions and apprehensions of God, viz. That he is, and that he governs all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And the other is sufficiently insinuated in that Cardinal distinction of their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and is more fully expressed by Simplicius. For however the Stoics may seem to lay some ground of suspicion, as if they were dubious in this point, yet I think that which Tully and others deliver concerning their opinion herein, may fully answer all scruples, viz. That as they made certain Vicissitudes of Conflagrations and Inundations whereby the World should perish in certain periods of time; so they thought the Souls of men should also be subject to these periodical revolutions; and therefore though they were of themselves immortal, should in these changes fall under the power of the common fate. And indeed we scarce ever find that any were deemed Religious, that did not own these two Fundamentals. For the Sadducees, the Jewish Writers are wont commonly to reckon them among the Epicureans, because though they held a God, yet they denied the Immortality of men's Souls, which the New Testament seems to include, if not especially to aim at, in imputing to them a denial of the Resurrection; which is therefore more fully explained in the Acts, * Chap. 23. 8. where it is added that they held there was neither Angel nor Spirit. And these two Principles are chief aimed at in those two Inscriptions upon the Temple at Delphos, the one, EI, referring to God, by which Title those that came in to worship were supposed to invoke him, acknowledging his Immutable and Eternal nature; the other, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the admonition of the Deity again to all his worshippers, to take notice of the dignity and Immortality of their own Souls, as Plutarch and Tully, as also Clemens Alexandr. expound them. But if we will have the Fundamental Articles of Christian Religion, we must add to the former, The Communication of God to Mankind through Christ; which last the Scripture treats of at large, so far as concerns our practice, with that plainness and simplicity, that I cannot but think, that whosoever shall ingenuously and with humility of Spirit addressing himself to God, converse therewith, will see the bright beams of Divinity shining forth in it, and it may be find the Text itself much plainer than all those Glosses that have been put upon it; though it may be it is not so clear in matters of Speculation, as some Magisterial men are apt to think it is. Now for these three Articles of Faith and Practice, I think if we duly consider the Scriptures, or the Reason of the thing itself, we shall easily find all Practical Religion to be referred to them, and built upon them: The Nature of God and of our own Immortal Souls both show us what our Religion should be, and also the Necessity of it; and the Doctrine of Free grace in Christ, the sweet and comfortable means of attaining to that perfection and Blessedness which the other Belief teaches us to aim at. In pursuing of these we shall first begin with The Immortality of the Soul, which if it be once cleared, we can neither leave any room for Atheism (which those I doubt are not ordinarily very free from that have gross material notions of their own Souls) not be wholly ignorant what God is: for indeed the chief natural way whereby we can climb up to the understanding of the Deity is by a Contemplation of our own Souls. We cannot think of him but according to the measure and model of our own Intellect, or frame any other Idea of him then what the impressions of our own Souls will permit us: and therefore the best Philosophers have always taught us to inquire for God within ourselves; Reason in us, as Tully tells us, being participata similitudo rationis internae: and accordingly some good expositors have interpreted that place in S. John's Gospel chap. 1. He is that true light which enlightens every man that cometh into the world; which if I were to gloss upon in the language of the Platonists, I should do it thus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Eternal word is the light of Souls, which the Vulgar Latin referred to in Signatum est supra nos lumen vultus tui, Domine, as Aquinas Psal. 4. 7. observes. But we shall not search into the full nature of the Soul, but rather make our inquiry into the Immortality of it, and endeavour to demonstrate that. CHAP. II. Some Considerations preparatory to the proof of the Soul's Immortality. BUT before we fall more closely upon this, viz. the demonstrating the Soul's Immortality, we shall premise three things. 1. That the Immortality of the Soul doth not absolutely need any Demonstration to clear it by, but might be assumed rather as a Principle or Postulatum, seeing the notion of it is apt naturally to insinuate itself into the belief of the most vulgar sort of men. men's understandings commonly lead them as readily to believe that their Souls are Immortal, as that they have any Existence at all. And though they be not all so wise and Logical, as to distinguish aright between their Souls and their Bodies, or tell what kind of thing that is that they commonly call their Soul; yet they are strongly inclined to believe that some part of them shall survive another, and that that Soul, which it may be they conceive by a gross Phantasm, shall live, when the other more visible part of them shall moulder into dust. And therefore all Nations have consented in this belief, which hath almost been as vulgarly received as the belief of a Deity; as a diligent converse with History will assure us, it having been never so much questioned by the Idiotical sort of men, as by some unskilful Philosophers, who have had Wit & Fancy enough to raise doubts, like Evil Spirits, but not Judgement enough to send them down again. This Consensus Gentium Tully thinks enough to conclude a Law and Maxim of Nature by, which though I should not universally grant, seeing sometimes error and Superstition may strongly plead this Argument; yet I think for those things that are the matter of our first belief, that Notion may not be refused. For we cannot easily conceive how any Prime notion that hath no dependency on any other antecedent to it, should be generally entertained; did not the common dictate of Nature or Reason acting alike in all men move them to conspire together in the embracing of it, though they knew not one another's minds. And this it may be might first persuade Averro to think of a Common Intellect, because of the uniform judgements of men in some things. But indeed in those Notions which we may call notiones ortae, there a communis notitia is not so free from all suspicion; which may be cleared by taking an Instance from our present Argument. The notion of the Immortality of the Soul is such an one as is generally owned by all those that yet are not able to collect it by a long Series and concatenation of sensible observations, and by a Logical dependence of one thing upon another deduce it from sensible Experiments; a thing that it may be was scarce ever done by the wisest Philosophers, but is rather believed with a kind of repugnancy to Sense, which shows all things to be mortal, and which would have been too apt to have deluded the ruder sort of men, did not a more powerful impression upon their own Souls forcibly urge them to believe their own Immortality. Though indeed if the common notions of men were well examined, it may be some common notion adherent to this of the Immortality may be as generally received, which yet in itself is false; and that by reason of a common prejudice which the earthly and Sensual part of man will equally possess all men with, until they come to be well acquainted with their own Souls; as namely a notion of the Souls Materiality, and it may be its Traduction too, which seems to be as generally received by the vulgar sort as the former. But the reason of that is evident, for the Souls of men exercising themselves first of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Greek Philosopher expresseth, merely by a Progressive kind of motion, spending themselves about Bodily and Material acts, and conversing only with Sensible things; they are apt to acquire such deep stamps of Material phantasms to themselves, that they cannot imagine their own Being to be any other then Material & Divisible, though of a fine Aethereal nature: which kind of conceit, though it be inconsistent with an Immortal and Incorruptible nature, yet hath had too much prevalency in Philosophers themselves, their Minds not being sufficiently abstracted while they have contemplated the highest Being of all. And some think Aristotle himself cannot be excused in this point, who seems to have thought God himself to be nothing else but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he styles him. But such Common Notions as these are, arising from the deceptions and hallucinations of Sense, ought not to prejudice those which not Sense, but some Higher power begets in all men. And so we have done with that. The second thing I should premise should be in place of a Postulatum to our following Demonstrations, or rather a Caution about them, which is, That, to a right conceiving the force of any such Arguments as may prove the Souls Immortality, there must be an antecedent Converse with our own Souls. It is no hard matter to convince any one by clear and evident principles, fetched from his own sense of himself, who hath ever well meditated the Powers and Operations of his own Soul, that it is Immaterial and Immortal. But those very Arguments that to such will be Demonstrative, to others will lose something of the strength of Probability: For indeed it is not possible for us well to know what our Souls are, but only by their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, their Circular and Reflex motions, and Converse with themselves, which only can steal from them their own secrets. All those Discourses which have been written of the Soul's Heraldry, will not blazon it so well to us as itself will do. When we turn our own eyes in upon it, it will soon tell us it's own royal pedigree and noble extraction, by those sacred hieroglyphics which it bears upon itself. We shall endeavour to interpret and unfold some of them in our following Discourse. 3. There is one thing more to be considered, which may serve as a common Basis or Principle to our following Arguments; and it is this Hypothesis, That no Substantial and Indivisible thing ever perisheth. And this Epicurus and all of his Sect must needs grant, as indeed they do, and much more than it is lawful to plead for; and therefore they make this one of the first Principles of their Atheistical Philosophy, Ex nihilo fieri nil, & in nihilum nil posse reverti. But we shall here be content with that sober Thesis of Plato in his Timaeus, who attributes the Perpetuation of all Substances to the Benignity and Liberality of the creator, whom he therefore brings in thus speaking to the Angels, those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he calls them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. You are not of yourselves immortal, nor indissoluble; but would relapse and slide back from that Being which I have given you, should I withdraw the influence of my own power from you: but yet you shall hold your Immortality by a Patent of mere grace from myself. But to return, Plato held that the whole world, howsoever it might meet with many periodical mutations, should remain Eternally; which I think our Christian Divinity doth no no where deny: and so Plotinus frames this general Axiom, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that no Substance shall ever perish. And indeed if we collate all our own Observations & Experience with such as the History of former times hath delivered to us, we shall not find that ever any substance was quite lost; but though this Proteus-like Matter may perpetually change its shape, yet it will constantly appear under one Form or another, what art soever we use to destroy it: as it seems to have been set forth in that old Gryphe or Riddle of the Peripatetic School, Aelia Laelia Crispis, nec mas, nec faemina, nec androgyna, nec casta, nec meretrix, nec pudica; sed omnia, etc. as Fortunius Licetus hath expounded it. Therefore it was never doubted whether ever any piece of Substance was lost, till of latter times some hot-brained peripatetics, who could not bring their fiery and subtle fancies to any cool judgement, began rashly to determine that all Material Forms (as they are pleased to call them) were lost. For having once jumbled and crowded in a new kind of Being, never anciently heard of, between the parts of a Contradiction, that is Matter and Spirit, which they call Material Forms, because they could not well tell whence these new upstarts should arise, nor how to dispose of them when Matter began to shift herself into some new garb, they condemned them to utter destruction; and yet lest they should seem too rudely to control all Sense and Reason, they found out this common tale which signifies nothing, that these Substantial Forms were educed ex potentia Materiae, whenever Matter began to appear in any new disguise, and afterwards again returned in gremium Materiae; & so they thought them not quite lost. But this Curiosity consisting only of words fortuitously packed up together, being too subtle for any sober judgement to lay hold upon, and which they themselves could never yet tell how to define; we shall as carelessly lay it aside, as they boldly obtrude it upon us, and take the common distinction of all Substantial Being for granted, viz. That it is either Body, and so Divisible, and of three Dimensions; or else it is something which is not properly a Body or Matter, & so hath no such Dimensions as that the Parts thereof should be crowding for place, and justling one with another, not being all able to couch together or run one into another: and this is nothing else but what is commonly called Spirit. Though yet we will not be too Critical in depriving every thing which is not grossly corporeal of all kind of Extension. CHAP. III. The First Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. That the Soul of man is not Corporeal. The gross absurdities upon the Supposition that the Soul is a Complex of fluid atoms, or that it is made up by a fortuitous Concourse of atoms: which is Epicurus his Notion concerning Body. The Principles and Dogmata of the Epicurean Philosophy in opposition to the immaterial and Incorporeal nature of the Soul, asserted by Lucretius; but discovered to be false and insufficient. That Motion cannot arise from Body or Matter. Nor can the power of Sensation arise from Matter: Much less can Reason. That all Humane knowledge hath not its rise from Sense. The proper function of Sense, and that it is never deceived. An Addition of Three Considerations for the enforcing of this first Argument, and further clearing the Immateriality of the Soul. That there is in man a Faculty which 1. controls Sense: and 2. collects and unites all the Perceptions of our several Senses. 3. That Memory and Prevision are not explicable upon the supposition of Matter and Motion. WE shall therefore now endeavour to prove That the Soul of man is something really distinct from his Body, of an Indivisible nature, and so cannot be divided into such Parts as should flit one from another; and consequently is apt of its own Nature to remain to Eternity, and so will do, except the Decrees of Heaven should abandon it from Being. And first, we shall prove it ab absurdo, and here do as the Mathematicians use to do in such kind of Demonstrations: we will suppose that if the Reasonable Soul be not of such an Immaterial Nature, than it must be a Body, and so suppose it to be made up as all Bodies are: where because the Opinions of Philosophers differ, we shall only take one, viz. that of Epicurus, which supposeth it to be made up by a fortuitous Concourse of atoms; and in that demonstrate against all the rest: (for indeed herein a particular Demonstration is an Universal, as it is in all Mathematical Demonstrations of this kind.) For if all that which is the Basis of our Reasons and Understandings, which we here call the Substance of the Soul, be nothing else but a mere Body, and therefore be infinitely divisible, as all Bodies are; it will be all one in effect whatsoever notion we have of the generation or production thereof. We may give it, if we please, finer words, and use more demure & smooth language about it then Epicurus did, as some that, lest they should speak too rudely and rustically of it by calling it Matter, will name it Efflorescentia Materiae; and yet lest that should not be enough, add Aristotle's Quintessence to it too: they will be so trim and courtly in defining of it, that they will not call it by the name of Aer, Ignis, or Flamma, as some of the ancient vulgar Philosophers did, but Flos flammae: and yet the Epicurean Poet could use as much chemistry in exalting his fancy as these subtle Doctors do; and when he would dress out the Notion of it more gaudily, he resembles it to * Lucret. lib. 3. Flos Bacchi, and Spiritus unguenti suavis. But when we have taken away this disguise of wanton Wit, we shall find nothing better than mere Body, which will be recoiling back perpetually into its own inert and sluggish Passiveness: though we may think we have quickened it never so much by this subtle artifice of Words and Phrases, a man's newborn Soul will for all this be but little better than his Body; and, as that is, be but a rasura corporis alieni, made up of some small and thin shave pared off from the Bodies of the Parents by a continual motion of the several parts of it; and must afterwards receive its augmentation from that food and nourishment which is taken in, as the Body doth. So that the very Grass we walk over in the fields, the Dust and Mire in the streets that we tread upon, may, according to the true meaning of this dull Philosophy, after many refinings, macerations and maturations, which Nature performs by the help of Motion, spring up into so many Rational Souls, and prove as wise as any Epicurean, and discourse as subtly of what it once was, when it lay drooping in a senseless Passiveness. This conceit is so gross, that one would think it wanted nothing but that witty Sarcasm that Plutarch cast upon Nicocles the Epicurean, to confute it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But because the heavy minds of men are so frequently sinking into this earthly fancy, we shall further search into the entrails of this Philosophy; and see how like that is to a Rational Soul, which it pretends to declare the production of. Lucretius' first of all taking notice of the mighty swiftness and celerity of the Soul in all its operations, lest his Matter should be too soon tired and not able to keep pace with it, he first casts the atoms prepared for this purpose into such perfect spherical & small figures as might be most capable of these swift impressions; for so he, lib. 3. At, quoth mobile tantopere est, constare rotundis Perquam seminibus debet, perquámque minutis, Momine uti parvo possint impulsa moveri. But here before we go any further, we might inquire what it should be that should move these small and insensible Globes of Matter. For Epicurus his two Principles, which he calls Plenum and Inane, will here by no means serve our turn to find out Motion by. For though our communes notitiae assure us that wherever there is a Multiplicity of parts, (as there is in every Quantitative Being) there may be a Variety of application in those parts one to another, and so a Mobility; yet Motion itself will not so easily arise out of a Plenum, though we allow it an empty Space and room enough to play up and down in. For we may conceive a Body, which is his Plenum, only as trinè dimensum, being longum, latum & profundum, without attributing any motion at all to it: and Aristotle in his De Coelo doubts not herein to speak plainly, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that Motion cannot arise from a Body. For indeed this Power of motion must needs argue some Efficient cause, as Tully hath well observed, if we suppose any Rest antecedent; or if any Body be once moving, it must also find some potent Efficient to stay it & settle it in Rest, as Simplicius hath somewhere in his Comment upon Epictetus wisely determined. So that if we will suppose either Motion or Rest to be contained originally in the nature of any Body; we must of necessity conclude some potent Efficient to produce the contrary, or else attribute this Power to Bodies themselves; which will at last grow unbounded and infinite, and indeed altogether inconsistent with the nature of a Body. But yet though we should grant all this which Lucretius contends for, how shall we force up these particles of Matter into any true and real Perceptions, and make them perceive their own or others motions, which he calls Motus sensiferi? For he having first laid down his Principles of all Being, as he supposeth, (neither is he willing to leave his Deities themselves out of the number) he only requires these Postulata to unfold the nature of all by, * Lib. 1. Concursus, motus, ordo, positura, figurae. But how any such thing as sensation, or much less Reason, should spring out of this barren soil, how well tilled soever, no composed mind can imagine. For indeed that infinite variety which is in the Magnitude of parts, their Positions, Figures and Motions, may easily, and indeed must needs, produce an infinite variety of Phaenomena, which the Epicurean philosophy calls Eventa. And accordingly where there is a Sentient faculty, it may receive the greatest variety of Impressions from them, by which the Perceptions, which are the immediate result of a Knowing faculty, will be distinguished: Yet cannot the Power itself of Sensation arise from them, no more than Vision can rise out of a glass, whereby it should be able to perceive these Idola that paint themselves upon it, though it were never so exactly polished, and they much finer than they are or can be. Neither can those small corpuscula, which in themselves have no power of sense, ever produce it by any kind of Concourse or Motion; for so a Cause might in its production rise up above the height of its own nature and virtue; which I think every calm contemplator of Truth will judge impossible: for seeing whatsoever any Effect hath, it must needs derive from its Causes, and can receive no other tincture and impression than they can bestow upon it; that Signature must first be in the Cause itself, which is by it derived to the Effect. And therefore the wisest Philosophers amongst the Ancients universally concluded that there was some higher Principle then mere Matter, which was the Cause of all Life and Sense, and that to be Immortal: as the Platonists, who thought this reason sufficient to move them to assert a Mundane Soul. And Aristotle, though he talks much of Nature, yet he delivers his mind so cloudily, that all that he hath said of it may pass with that which himself said of his Acroatici Libri, or physics, that they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nor is it likely that he who was so little satisfied with his own notion of Nature as being the Cause of all Motion and Rest, as seemingly to desert it while he placeth so many Intelligences about the Heavens, could much please himself with such a gross conceit of mere Matter, that that should be the true Moving and Sentient Entelech of some other Matter; as it is manifest he did not. But indeed Lucretius himself, though he could in a jolly fit of his over-flushed and fiery fancy tell us, Et ridere potest non ex ridentibu' factus, Et sapere, & doctis rationem reddere dictis, Lib. ●. Non ex seminibus sapientibus, atque disertis: yet in more cool thoughts he found his own common notions too sturdy to be so easily silenced; and therefore sets his wits awork to find the most Quintessential particles of Matter that may be, that might do that feat, which those smooth Spherical bodies, Calor, Aer and Ventus (for all come into this composition) could not do: and this was of such a subtle and exalted nature, that his earthly fancy could not comprehend it, and therefore he confesses plainly he could not tell what name to give it, though for want of a better he calls it Mobilem vim, as neither his Master before him, who was pleased to compound the Soul (as Plutarch * Lib. 4. de placitis Philosophorum. relates) of four ingredients, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But because this giantlike Proteus found himself here bound with such strong cords, that notwithstanding all his struggling he could by no means break them off from him, we shall relate his own words the more largely. I find them lib. 3. Sic calor, atque aer, & venti caeca potestas Mista creant unam naturam, & mobilis illa Vis, initîum motus abs se quae dividit ollis: Sensifer unde oritur primum per viscera motus. Nam penitus prorsum latet haec natura, subéstque; Nec magis hac infra quidquam est in corpore nostro; Atque anima'st animae proporrò totius ipsa. Quod genus in nostris membris & corpore toto Mista latens animi vis est, animaeque potestas, Corporibus quia de parvis paucisque creata est. Sic tibi nominis haec expers vis, facta minutis Corporibus, latet— Thus we see how he found himself overmastered with difficulties, while he endeavoured to find the place of the Sensitive powers in Matter: & yet this is the highest that he dares aim at, namely to prove that Sensation might from thence derive its Original, as stiffly opposing any Higher power of Reason; which we shall in lucro ponere against another time. But surely had not the Epicureans abandoned all logic together with some other Sciences (as Tully and Laertius tell us they did) they would here have found themselves too much pressed with this Argument, (which yet some will think to be but levis armaturae in respect of some other) and have found it as little short of a Demonstration to prove the Souls Immortality as the Platonists themselves did: But herein how they dealt, * Enn. 4. l. 7. c. 4. Plotinus hath well observed of them all who denied Lives and Souls to be immortal, which he asserts, and make them nothing but Bodies, that when they were pinched with the strength of any Argument fetched from the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Soul, it was usual amongst them to call this Body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or Ventus certo quodam modo se habens; to which he well replies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Where by this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seems to be nothing meant but that same thing which Lucretius called vim mobilem, and he would not allow it to be any thing else but a Body, though what kind of Body he could not tell: yet by it he understands not merely an Active power of motion, but a more subtle energy, whereby the force and nature of any motion is perceived and insinuated by its own strength in the bodies moved; as if these sorry Bodies by their impetuous justling together could awaken one another out of their drowsy lethargy, and make each other hear their mutual impetuous knocks: which is as absurd as to think a Musical instrument should hear its own sounds, and take pleasure in those harmonious airs that are played upon it. For that which we call Sensation, is not the Motion or Impression which one Body makes upon another, but a Recognition of that Motion; and therefore to attribute that to a Body, is to make a Body privy to its own acts and passions, to act upon itself, and to have a true and proper self-feeling virtue; which * in his Tract, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Porphyry hath elegantly expressed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In the sensations of living creatures the Soul moves, as if unbodied Harmony herself should play upon an Instrument, and smartly touch the well-tuned strings: but the Body is like that Harmony which dwells inseparably in the strings themselves which have no perception of it. Thus we should now leave this Topick of our Demonstration, only we shall add this as an Appendix to it, which will further manifest the Souls Incorporeal and Immaterial nature, that is, That there is a Higher Principle of knowledge in man then mere Sense, neither is that the sole Original of all that Science that breaks forth in the minds of men; which yet Lucretius maintains, as being afraid lest he should be awakened out of this pleasant dream of his, should any Higher power rouse his sleepy Soul: and therefore he thus lays down the opinion of his Sect, Lib. 4. Invenies primis ab sensibus esse creatam Notitiam veri, neque sensus posse refelli: Nam majore fide debet reperirier illud, Sponte sua veris quod possit vincere falsa. But yet this goodly Champion doth but lay siege to his own Reason, and endeavour to storm the main fort thereof, which but just before he defended against the sceptics who maintained that opinion, That nothing could be known; to which he having replied by that vulgar Argument, That if nothing can be known, than neither do we know this That we know nothing; he pursues them more closely with another, That neither could they know what it is to know, or what it is to be ignorant, Quaeram, quom in rebus veri nil viderit ante; Unde sciat, quid sit scire, & nescire vicissim: Notitiam veri quae res falsique crearit. But yet if our Senses were the only Judges of things, this Reflex knowledge whereby we know what it is to know, would be as impossible as he makes it for Sense to have Innate ideas of its own, antecedent to those stamps which the Radiations of external Objects imprint upon it. For this knowledge must be antecedent to all that judgement which we pass upon any Sensatum, seeing except we first know what it is to know, we could not judge or determine aright upon the approach of any of these Idola to our Senses. But our Author may perhaps yet seem to make a more full confession for us in these two points. First, That no sense can judge another's objects, nor convince it of any mistake, Non possunt alios alii convincere sensus, Nec porrò poterunt ipsi reprehendere seize. If therefore there be any such thing within us as controls our Senses, as all know there is; then must that be of an Higher nature than our Senses are. But secondly, he grants further, That all our Sensation is nothing else but Perception, and therefore wheresoever there is any hallucination, that must arise from something else within us besides the power of sense, — quoniam pars horum maxima fallit Propter opinatus animi, quos addimus ipsi, Pro visis ut sint, quae non sunt sensibu' visa. In which words he hath very happily lighted upon the proper function of Sense, and the true reason of all those mistakes which we call the Deceptions of Sense, which indeed are not truly so, seeing they arise only from a Higher Faculty, and consist not in Sensation itself, but in those deductions and Corollaries that our judgements draw from it. We shall here therefore grant that which the Epicurean philosophy, and the peripatetic too, though not without much caution, pleads for universally, That our Senses are never deceived, whether they be sani or laesi, sound or distempered, or whatsoever proportion or distance the Object or medium bears to it: for if we well scan this business, we shall find that nothing of judgement belongs to Sense, it consisting only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in Perception; neither can it make any just observation of those Objects that are without, but only discerns its own passions, and is nothing else but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and tells how it finds itself affected, and not what is the true cause of those impressions which it finds within itself; (which seems to be the reason of that old Philosophical maxim recited by Aristotle l. 3. de Anima, cap. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that these Simulachra were only in our Senses; which notion a late Author hath pursued:) and therefore when the Eye finds the Sun's circle represented within itself of no greater a bigness then a foot-diameter, it is not at all herein mistaken; nor a distempered Palate, when it tastes a bitterness in the sweetest honey, as Proclus a famous Mathematician and Platonist hath well determined, in Plat. Tim. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Senses in all things of this nature do but declare their own passions or perceptions, which are always such as they seem to be, whether there be any such parallelum signaculum in the Object as bears a true analogy with them or not: and therefore in truth they are never deceived in the execution of their own functions. And so doth Aristotle l. 3 de Anima, c. 3. conclude, That error is neither in Sense nor fancy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it is in no faculty but only that in which is Reason. Though it be as true on the other side, that Epicurus & all his Sect were deceived, while they judged the Sun and Moon and all the stars to be no bigger than that Picture and Image which they found of them in their own Eyes; for which silly conceit though they had been for many Ages sufficiently laughed at by wise men, yet could not Lucretius tell how to enlarge his own fancy, but believes the Idolum in his own Visive organ to be adequate to the Sun itself, in despite of all mathematical demonstration; as indeed he must needs, if there were no Higher principle of knowledge than Sense is, which is the most indisciplinable thing that may be, and can never be taught that Truth which Reason and Understanding might attempt to force into it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Though Reason inculcates this notion ten thousand times over, That the Sun is bigger than the Earth, yet will not the Eye be taught to see it any bigger than a foot breadth: and therefore he rightly calls it, as all the Platonical and Stoical philosophy doth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and it may well be put among the rest of the Stoics 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Thus I hope by this time we have found out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, some more noble Power in the Soul then that is by which it accommodates itself to the Body, and according to the measure and proportion thereof converseth with External Matter. And this is the true reason why we are so apt to be mistaken in Sensible objects, because our Souls sucking in the knowledge of external things thereby, and not minding the proportion that is between the Body and them, mindless of its own notions, collates their corporeal impressions with external objects themselves, and judgeth of them one by another. But whensoever our Souls act in their own power and strength, untwisting themselves from all corporeal complications, they then can find confidence enough to judge of things in a seeming contradiction to all those other visa corporea. And so I suppose this Argument will amount to no less than a Demonstration of the Soul's Immateriality, seeing to all sincere understanding it is necessary that it should thus abstract itself from all corporeal commerce, and return from thence nearer into itself. Now what we have to this purpose more generally intimated, we shall further branch out in these two or three Particulars. First, That that Mental faculty and power whereby 1. we judge and discern things, is so far from being a Body, that it must retract and withdraw itself from all Bodily operation whensoever it will nakedly discern Truth. For should our Souls always mould their judgement of things according to those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and impressions which seem to be framed thereof in the Body, they must then do nothing else but chain up errors and Delusions one with another in stead of Truth: as should the judgements of our Understandings wholly depend upon the sight of our Eyes, we should then conclude that our mere accesses and recesses from any Visible Object have such a Magical power to change the magnitudes of Visible Objects, and to transform them into all varieties of figures & fashions; and so attribute all that variety to them which we find in our corporeal perceptions. Or should we judge of Gustables by our taste, we should attribute to one and the selfsame thing all that variety which we find in our own Palates. Which is an unquestionable Argument That that Power whereby we discern of things and make judgements of them different and sometimes contrary to those perceptions that are the necessary results of all Organical functions, is something distinct from the Body; and therefore though the Soul, as Plato hath well observed, be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, various and divisible accidentally in these Sensations and Motions wherein it extends and spreads itself as it were upon the Body, and so according to the nature and measure thereof perceives its impressions; yet it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indivisible, returning into itself. Whensoever it will speculate Truth itself, it will not then listen to the several clamours and votes of these rude Senses which always speak with divided tongues; but it consults some clearer Oracle within itself: and therefore Plotinus, Enn. 4. l. 3. hath well concluded concerning the Body, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, should a man make use of his Body in his Speculations, it will entangle his mind with so many contradictions, that it will be impossible to attain to any true knowledge of things. We shall conclude this therefore, as Tully doth his Contemplation of the souls operations about the frame of Nature, the fabric of the Heavens and motions of the Stars, Animus qui haec intelligit, similis est ejus qui ea fabricatus in coelo est. Secondly, We also find such a Faculty within our own 2. Souls as collects and unites all the Perceptions of our several Senses, and is able to compare them together; something in which they all meet as in one Centre: which * 〈◊〉. 4. l. 7. ●. 6. Plotinus hath well expressed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That in which all those several Sensations meet as so many Lines drawn from several points in the Circumference, and which comprehends them all, must needs be One. For should that be various and consisting of several parts, which thus receives all these various impressions, then must the sentence and judgement passed upon them be various too. Aristotle in his de Anima, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That must be one that judgeth things to be divers; and that must judge too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, setting all before it at once. Besides we could not conceive how such an immense variety of impressions could be made upon any piece of Matter, which should not obliterate and defacen one another. And therefore Plotinus hath well disputed against them who make all Sensation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which brings me to the Third. Thirdly, That Knowledge which the Soul retains in itself of things past, and in some sort Prevision of things 3. to come, whereby many grow so sagacious in foreseeing future Events, that they know how to deliberate and dispose of present affairs, so as to be ready furnished and prepared for such Emergencies as they see in a train and Series of Causes which sometimes work but contingently: I cannot think Epicurus himself could in his cool thoughts be so unreasonable as to persuade himself, that all the shuffling & cutting of atoms could produce such a Divine piece of wisdom as this is. What Matter can thus bind up Past, Present and Future time together? which while the Soul of man doth, it seems to imitate (as far as its own finite nature will permit it to strive after an imitation of) God's eternity: and grasping and gathering together a long Series of duration into itself, makes an essay to free itself from the rigid laws of it, and to purchase to itself the freedom of a true Eternity. And as by its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as the Platonists are wont to speak) its Chronical and successive operations, it unravels and unfolds the contexture of its own indefinite intellectual powers by degrees; so by this Memory and Prevision it recollects and twists them up all together again into itself. And though it seems to be continually sliding from itself in those several vicissitudes and changes which it runs through in the constant variety of its own Effluxes and Emanations; yet is it always returning back again to its first Original by a swift remembrance of all those motions and multiplicity of operations which have begot in it the first sense of this constant flux. As if we should see a sunbeam perpetually flowing forth from the bright body of the Sun, and yet ever returning back to it again; it never loseth any part of its Being, because it never forgets what itself was: and though it may number out never so vast a length of its duration, yet it never comes nearer to its old age, but carrieth a lively sense of its youth and infancy, which it can at pleasure lay a fast hold on, along with it. But if our Souls were nothing else but a Complex of fluid atoms, how should we be continually roving and sliding from ourselves, and soon forget what we once were? The new Matter that would come in to fill up that Vacuity which the Old had made by its departure, would never know what the Old were, nor what that should be that would succeed that: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that new pilgrim and stranger-like Soul would always be ignorant of what the other before it knew, and we should be wholly some other bulk of Being than we were before, as Plotinus hath excellently observed Enn. 4. l. 7. c. 5. It was a famous speech of wise Heraclitus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a man cannot enter twice into the same River: by which he was wont symbolically to express the constant flux of Matter, which is the most unstable thing that may be. And if Epicurus his Philosophy could free this Heap of refined atoms, which it makes the Soul to be, from this inconstant and flitting nature, and teach us how it could be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some stable and immutable thing, always resting entire while it is in the Body; though we would thank him for such a goodly conceit as this is, yet we would make no doubt but it might as well be able to preserve itself from dissolution and dissipation out of this gross Body, as in it: seeing it is no more secured from the constant impulses of that more gross Matter which is restlessly moving up and down in the Body, than it is out of it: and yet for all that we should take the leave to ask Tully's question with his sober disdain; Quid, obsecro, terrâne tibi aut hoc nebuloso & caliginoso coeno aut sata aut concreta videtur tanta vis memoriae? Such a jewel as this is too precious to be found in a dunghill: mere Matter could never thus stretch forth its feeble force, & spread itself over all its own former praeexistencies. We may as well suppose this dull and heavy Earth we tread upon to know how long it hath dwelled in this part of the Universe that now it doth, and what variety of Creatures have in all past Ages sprung forth from it, and all those occurrences & events which have all this time happened upon it. CHAP. iu. The second Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. Actions either Automatical or Spontaneous. That Spontaneous and Elicite Actions evidence the Distinction of the Soul from the Body. Lucretius his Evasion very slight and weak. That the Liberty of the Will is inconsistent with the Epicurean principles. That the Conflict of Reason against the Sensitive Appetite argues a Being in us superior to Matter. WE have done with that which we intended for the First part of our Discourse of the Soul's Immortality: we have hitherto looked at it rather in Concreto then in Abstracto, rather as a Thing complicated with and united to the Body; and therefore considered it in those Operations, which as they are not proper to the Body, so neither are they altogether independent upon it, but are rather of a mixed nature. We shall now take notice of it in those Properties, in the exercise whereof it hath less commerce with the Body, and more plainly declares its own high descent to us, That it is able to subsist and act without the aid and assistance of this Matter which it informs. And here we shall take that course that Aristotle did in his Books de Anima, and first of all inquire, Whether it hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, some kind of Action so proper and peculiar to itself; as not to depend upon the Body. And this soon offers itself in the first place to us in those Elicite motions of it, as the Moralists are wont to name them, which though they may end in those they call Imperate acts, yet have their first Emanation from nothing else but the Soul itself. For this purpose we shall take notice of Two sorts of Actions which are obvious to the experience of every one that observes himself, according to a double Source & emanation of them, which a late Philosopher hath very happily suggested to us. The first are those Actions which arise up within us without any Animadversion; the other are those that are consequent to it. For we find frequently such Motions within ourselves 1. which first are, before we take notice of them, and which by their own turbulence and impetuousness force us to an Advertency: as those Fiery spirits and that inflamed Blood which sometimes fly up into the head; or those gross and Earthly Fumes that disturb our brains; the stirring of many other Humours which beget within us Grief, Melancholy, Anger, or Mirth, or other Passions; which have their rise from such Causes as we were not ware of, nor gave no consent to create this trouble to us. Besides all those Passions and Perceptions which are begotten within us by some external motions which derive themselves through our Senses, and fiercely knocking at the door of our Minds and Understandings force them sometimes from their deepest debates & muse of some other thing, to open to them and give them an audience. Now as to such Motions as these are, it being necessary for the preservation of our Bodies that our Souls should be acquainted with them, a man's Body was so contrived and his Soul so united to it, that they might have a speedy access to the Soul. Indeed some ancient philosopher's thought that the Soul descending more deeply into the Body, as they express it, first begot these corporeal motions unbeknown to itself by reason of its more deep immersion, which afterwards by their impetuousness excited its advertency. But whatsoever truth there is in that Assertion, we clearly find from the relation of our own Souls themselves, that our Soul disowns them, and acknowledgeth no such Motions to have been so busy by her commission; neither knows what they are, from whence they arise, or whither they tend, until she hath duly examined them. But these Corporeal motions as they seem to arise from nothing else but merely from the Machina of the Body itself; so they could not at all be sensated but by the Soul. Neither indeed are all our own Corporeal actions perceived by us, but only those that may serve to maintain a good correspondence & intelligence between the Soul and Body, and so foment & cherish that Sympathy between them which is necessary for the subsistence and well-being of the whole man in this mundane state. And therefore there is very little of that which is commonly done in our Body, which our Souls are informed at all of. The constant Circulation of Blood through all our Veins and Arteries; the common motions of our Animal spirits in our Nerves; the maceration of Food within our stomaches, and the distribution of Chyle and nourishment to every part that wants the relief of it; the constant flux and reflux of more sedate Humours within us; the dissipations of our corporeal Matter by insensible Transpiration, and the accesses of new in the room of it; all this we are little acquainted with by any vital energy which ariseth from the union of Soul and Body: and therefore when we would acquaint ourselves with the Anatomy and vital functions of our own Bodies, we are fain to use the same course and method that we would to find out the same things in any other kind of Animal, as if our Souls had as little to do with any of these in our own Bodies, as they have in the Bodies of any other Brute creature. But on the other side, we know as well, that manythings 2. that are done by us, are done at the dictate and by the commission of our own Wills; and therefore all such Actions as these are, we know, without any great store of discursive inquiry, to attribute to their own proper causes, as seeing the efflux and propagation of them. We do not by a naked speculation know our Bodies first to have need of nourishment, and then by the Edict of our Wills enjoin our Spirits and Humours to put themselves into an hungry and craving posture within us by corroding the Tunicles of the Stomach; but we first find our own Souls solicited by these motions, which yet we are able to gainsay, and to deny those petitions which they offer up to us. We know we commonly meditate and discourse of such Arguments as we ourselves please: we mould designs, and draw up a plot of means answerable thereto, according as the free vote of our own Souls determines; and use our own Bodies many times, notwithstanding all the reluctancies of their nature, only as our Instruments to serve the will and pleasure of our Souls. All which as they evidently manifest a true Distinction between the Soul and the Body, so they do as evidently prove the Supremacy and dominion which the Soul hath over the Body. Our Moralists frequently dispute what kind of government that is whereby the Soul, or rather Will, rules over the Sensitive Appetite, which they ordinarily resolve to be Imperium politicum; though I should rather say, that all good men have rather a true despotical power over their Sensitive faculties, and over the whole Body, though they use it only according to the laws of Reason and Discretion. And therefore the Platonists and Stoics thought the Soul of man to be absolutely freed from all the power of Astral Necessity, and uncontrollable impressions arising from the subordination and mutual sympathy and dependence of all mundane causes, which is their proper notion of Fate. Neither ever durst that bold astrology which presumes to tell the Fortunes of all corporeal Essences, attempt to enter into the secrets of man's Soul, or predict the destinies thereof. And indeed whatever the destinies thereof may be that are contained in the vast volume of an Infinite and Almighty Mind, yet we evidently find a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a liberty of Will within ourselves, maugre the stubborn malice of all Second Causes. And Aristole, who seems to have disputed so much against that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Souls which his Master before him had soberly maintained, does indeed but quarrel with that common sense and Experience which we have of our Souls; this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Soul being nothing else but that Innate force and power which it hath within it, to stir up such thoughts and motions within itself as it finds itself most free to. And therefore when we reflect upon the productions of our own Souls, we are soon able to find out the first Efficient cause of them. And though the subtlety of some Wits may have made it difficult to find out whether the Understanding or the Will or some other faculty of the Soul be the First Mover, whence the motus primò primus (as they please to call it) proceeds; yet we know it is originally the Soul itself whose vital acts they all are: and although it be not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the First Cause as deriving all its virtue from itself, as Simplicius distinguisheth in 1. de An. cap. 1. yet it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, vitally coworking with the First Causes of all: But on the other side, when we come to examine those Motions which arise from the Body, this stream runs so far under ground, that we know not how to trace it to the head of it; but we are fain to analyse the whole artifice, looking from the Spirits to the Blood, from that to the Heart, viewing all along the Mechanical contrivance of Veins and Arteries: neither know we after all our search whether there be any Perpetuum mobile in our own Bodies, or whether all the motions thereof be only by the redundancy of some external motions without us; nor how to find the First mover in nature; though could we find out that, yet we know that there is a Fatal determination which sits in all the wheels of mere Corporeal motion; neither can they exercise any such noble freedom as we constantly find in the Wills of men, which are as large and unbounded in all their Elections as Reason itself can represent Being itself to be. Lucretius, that he might avoid the dint of this Argument, according to the Genius of his Sect feigns this Liberty to arise from a Motion of declination, whereby his atoms always moving downwards by their own weight towards the Centre of the World, are carried a little obliquely, as if they tended toward some point different from it, which he calls clinamen principiorum. Which riddle though it be as good as any else which they, who held the Materiality and Mortality of Souls in their own nature, can frame to salve this difficulty; yet is of such a private interpretation, that I believe no Oedipus is able to expound it. But yet by what we may guess at it, we shall easily find that this insolent conceit (and all else of this nature) destroys the Freedom of Will, more than any Fate which the severest censours thereof, whom he sometimes taxeth, ever set over it. For how can any thing be made subject to a free and impartial debate of Reason, or fall under the Level of freewill, if all things be the mere result either of a Fortuitous or Fatal motion of Bodies, which can have no power or dominion over themselves? and why should he or his great Master find so much fault with the Superstition of the world, and condemn the Opinions of other men when they compare them with that transcendent sagacity they believe themselves to be the Lords of, if all was nothing else but the mere issue of Material motions; seeing that necessity which would arise from a different concourse and motion of several particles of Matter begetting that diversity of Opinions and Wills, would excuse them all from any blame? Therefore to conclude this Argument, Whatsoever Essence finds this freedom within itself, whereby it is absolved from the rigid laws of Matter, may know itself also to be Immaterial; and having dominion over its own actions, it will never desert itself: and because it finds itself non vi alienâ sed suâ moveri, as Tully argues, it feels itself able to preserve itself from the foreign force of Matter, and can say of all those assaults which are at any time made against those sorry mud-walls which in this life enclose it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Stoic did, all this is nothing to me, who am yet free and can command within, when this feeble carcase is able no longer to obey me; and when that is shattered and broken down, I can live any where else without it; for I was not That, but had only a command over It, while I dwelled in it. But before we wholly desert this Head, we may add some further strength to it, from the Observation of that Conflict which the Reasons and Understandings of men maintain against the Sensitive appetite: and wheresoever the Higher powers of Reason in a man's Soul prevail not, but are vanquished by the impetuousness of their Sensual affections through their own neglect of themselves; yet are they never so broken, but they may strengthen themselves again: and where they subdue not men's inordinate Passions and Affections, yet even there will they condemn them for them. Whereas were a Man all of one piece, and made up of nothing else but Matter; these Corporeal motions could never check or control themselves, these Material dimensions could not struggle with themselves, or by their own strength render themselves any thing else than what they are. But this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Greeks call it, this Self-potent Life which is in the Soul of man, acting upon itself and drawing forth its own latent energy, finds itself able to tame the outward man, and bring under those rebellious motions that arise from the mere Animal powers, and to tame and appease all those seditions and mutinies that it finds there. And if any can conceive all this to be nothing but a mere fight of the male-contented pieces of Matter one against another, each striving for superiority and preeminence; I should not think it worth the while to teach such an one any higher learning, as looking upon him to be endued with no higher a Soul then that which moves in Beasts or Plants. CHAP. V. The third Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. That Mathematical Notions argue the Soul to be of a true Spiritual and Immaterial Nature. WE shall now consider the Soul awhile in a further degree of Abstraction, and look at it in those Actions which depend not at all upon the Body, wherein it doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Greeks speak, and converseth only with its own Being. Which we shall first consider in those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Mathematical notions which it contains in itself, and sends forth from within itself; which as they are in themselves Indivisible, and of such a perfect nature as cannot be received or immersed into Matter; so they argue that Subject in which they are seated to be of a true Spiritual and Immaterial nature. Such as a pure Point, Linea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Latitude abstracted from all Profundity, the Perfection of Figures, equality, Proportion, Symmetry and Asymmetry of Magnitudes, the Rise and propagation of Dimensions, Infinite divisibility, and many such like things; which every ingenuous Son of that Art cannot but acknowledge to be the true characters of some Immaterial Being, seeing they were never buried in Matter, nor extracted out of it: and yet these are transcendently more certain and infallible Principles of Demonstration than any Sensible thing can be. There is no Geometrician but will acknowledge Angular sections, or the cutting of an Arch into any number of parts required, to be most exact without any diminution of the whole; but yet no Mechanical art can possibly so perform either, but that the place of section will detract something from the whole. If any one should endeavour to double a Cube, as the Delian Oracle once commanded the Athenians, requiring them to duplicate the dimensions of Apollo's Altar, by any mechanical subtlety; he would find it as impossible as they did, and be as much laughed at for his pains as some of their mechanics were. If therefore no Matter be capable of any Geometrical effections, and the Apodictical precepts of Geometry be altogether unimitable in the purest Matter that fancy can imagine; then must they needs depend upon something infinitely more pure than Matter, which hath all that Stability and Certainty within itself which it gives to those infallible Demonstrations. We need not here dispute with Empedocles, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. We know earth by earth, fire by fire, and water by water, that is, by the Archetypal ideas of all things in our own Souls; though it may be it were no hard matter to prove that, as in this case S. Austin did, when in his Book de Quant, animae, he would prove the Immortality of the Soul from these notions of Quantity, which come not by any possible Sense or Experience which we can make of bodily Being, and therefore concludes they must needs be immediately engraven upon an Immaterial Soul. For though we could suppose our Senses to be the School-Dames that first taught us the Alphabet of this learning; yet nothing else but a true Mental Essence could be capable of it, or so much improve it as to unbody it all, and strip it naked of any Sensible garment, and then only, when it hath done it, embrace it as its own, and commence a true and perfect understanding of it. And as we all hold it impossible to shrink up any Material Quality, which will perpetually spread itself commensurably to the Matter it is in, into a Mathematical point: so is it much more impossible to extend and stretch forth any Immaterial and unbodied Quality or notion according to the dimensions of Matter, and yet to preserve the integrity of its own nature. Besides, in these geometrical speculations we find that our Souls will not consult with our Bodies, or ask any leave of our fancies how or how far they shall distribute their own notions by a continued progress of Invention; but spending upon their own stock, are most free and liberal, and make fancy only to serve their own purpose in painting out not what Matter will afford a copy of, but what they themselves will dictate to it; and if that should be too busy, silence and control it by their own Imperial laws. They so little care for Matter in this kind of work, that they banish it as far as may be from themselves, or else chastise and tame the unruly and refractory nature of it, that it should yield itself pliable to their sovereign commands. These Embodied Bodies (for so this present Argument will allow me to call them) which our Senses converse with, are perpetually justling together, contending so irresistably each for its own room and space to be in, and will not admit of any other into it, preserving their own intervals: but when they are once in their Unbodied nature entertained into the Mind, they can easily penetrate one another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The Soul can easily pile the vastest number up together in herself, and by her own force sustain them all, and make them all couch together in the same space: she can easily pitch up all those Five Regular Bodies together in her own Imagination, and inscribe them one in another, and then entering into the very heart and centre of them, discern all their Properties and several Respects one to another; and thus easily find herself freed from all Material or Corporeal confinement; showing how all that which we call Body, rather issued forth by an infinite projection from some Mind, then that it should exalt itself into the nature of any Mental Being; and, as the Platonists and Pythagoreans have long since well observed, how our Bodies should rather be in our Souls, than our Souls in them. And so I have done with that Particular. CHAP. vi The Fourth Argument for the Immortality of the Soul. That those clear and stable Ideas of Truth which are in Man's Mind evince an Immortal and Immaterial Substance residing in us, distinct from the Body. The Soul more knowable than the Body. Some passages out of Plotinus and Proclus for the further confirming of this Argument. AND now we have traced the Immortality of the Soul, before we were ware, through those Three Relations or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or (if you will) Degrees of knowledge, which Proclus in his Comment upon Plato's Timaeus hath attributed to it, which he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The First is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a naked perception of Sensible impressions, without any work of Reason. The Second, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Miscellaneous kind of knowledge arising of a collation of its Sensations with its own more obscure and dark ideas. The Third, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Discourse and Reason, which the Platonists describe Mathematical knowledge by, which, because it spins out its own notions by a constant series of Deduction, knitting up Consequences one upon another by Demonstrations, is by him called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Progressive kind of knowledge; to which he adds a Fourth, which we shall now make use of for a further Proof of the Immortality of the Soul. There is therefore Fourthly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is a naked Intuition of Eternal Truth which is always the same, which never rises nor sets, but always stands still in its Vertical, and fills the whole Horizon of the Soul with a mild and gentle light. There are such calm and serene ideas of Truth, that shine only in pacate Souls, and cannot be discerned by any troubled or fluid Fancy, that necessarily prove a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, some Permanent & Stable Essence in the Soul of man, which (as Simplicius on Epictet well observes) ariseth only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from some immovable and unchangeable Cause which is always the same. For these Operations about Truth we now speak of, are not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 any Chronical Energies, as he further expresses it, but the true badges of an Eternal nature, and speak a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as Plato is wont to phrase it) in man's Soul. Such are the archetypal ideas of Justice, wisdom, Goodness, Truth, Eternity, Omnipotency, and all those either Moral, physical, or Metaphysical notions, which are either the First Principles of Science, or the Ultimate compliment and final perfection of it. These we always find to be the same, and know that no Exorcisms of Material mutations have any power over them: though we ourselves are but of yesterday, and mutable every moment, yet these are eternal, and depend not upon any mundane vicissitudes; neither could we ever gather them from our observation of any Material thing where they were never sown. If we reflect but upon our own Souls, how manifestly do the Species of Reason, freedom, Perception, and the like, offer themselves to us, whereby we may know a thousand times more distinctly what our Souls are then what our Bodies are? For the former we know by an immediate converse with ourselves, and a distinct sense of their Operations; whereas all our knowledge of the Body is little better than merely historical, which we gather up by scraps and piecemeals from more doubtful and uncertain experiments which we make of them: but the notions which we have of a Mind, i. e. something within us that thinks, apprehends, reasons, and discourses, are so clear and distinct from all those notions which we can fasten upon a Body, that we can easily conceive that if all Body-Being in the world were destroyed, yet we might then as well subsist as now we do. For whensoever we take notice of those Immediate motions of our own Minds whereby they make themselves known to us, we find no such thing in them as Extension or Divisibility, which are contained in every Corporeal essence: and having no such thing discovered to us from our nearest familiarity with our own Souls, we could never so easily know whether they had any such things as Bodies joined to them or not, did not those extrinsical impressions that their turbulent motions make upon them admonish them thereof. But as the more we reflect upon our own Minds, we find all Intelligible things more clear, (as when we look up to the Heavens, we see all things more bright and radiant, then when we look down upon this dark Earth when the sunbeams are drawn away from it:) so when we see all Intelligible Being concentring together in a greater Oneness, and all kind of Multiplicity running more and more into the strictest Unity, till at last we find all Variety and Division sucked up into a perfect Simplicity, where all happily conspire together in the most undivided peace and friendship; we then easily perceive that the reason of all Diversity and Distinction is (that I may use Plotinus his words not much differently from his meaning) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For though in our contentious pursuits after Science, we cast Wisdom, Power, Eternity, Goodness and the like into several formalities, that so we may trace down Science in a constant chain of Deductions; yet in our naked Intuitions and visions of them, we clearly discern that Goodness and wisdom lodge together, Justice and Mercy kiss each other: and all these and whatsoever pieces else the cracked glasses of our Reasons may sometime break Divine and Intelligible Being into, are fast knit up together in the invincible bonds of Eternity. And in this sense is that notion of Proclus descanting upon Plato's riddle of the Soul, [〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as if it were generated & yet not generated] to be understood; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Soul partaking of Time in its broken and particular conceptions and apprehensions, and of Eternity in its comprehensive and stable contemplations. I need not say that when the Soul is once got up to the top of this bright Olympus, it will then no more doubt of its own Immortality, or fear any Dissipation, or doubt whether any drowsy Sleep shall hereafter seize upon it: no, it will then feel itself grasping fast and safely its own Immortality, and view itself in the Horizon of Eternity. In such sober kind of Ecstasies did Plotinus find his own Soul separated from his Body, as if it had divorced it for a time from itself: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. I being often awakened into a sense of myself, and being sequestered from my body, and betaking myself from all things else into myself; what admirable beauty did I then behold, etc. as he himself tells us, En. 4. l. 8. c. 1. Thus is that Intelligence begotten which Proclus l. 2. in Plat. Tim. calls a Correction of Science: his notion is worth our taking notice of, and gives us in a manner a brief recapitulation of our former discourse, showing how the higher we ascend in the contemplation of the Soul, the higher still we rise above this low sphere of Sense and Matter. His words are these, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, Science as it is in the Soul (by which he means the discursive power of it) is blameless, but yet is corrected by the Mind; as resolving that which is Indivisible, and dividing Simple Being as if it were Compounded: as Fansy corrects Sense for discerning with passion and material mixture, from which that purifies its object; Opinion corrects fancy, because it apprehends things by forms and phantasms, which itself is above; and Science corrects Opinion, because it knows without discerning of causes; and the Mind (as was insinuated) or the Intuitive faculty corrects the Scientifical, because by a Progressive kind of Analysis it divides the Intelligible Object, where itself knows and sees things together in their undivided essence: wherefore this only is immovable, and Science or Scientifical reason is inferior to it in the knowledge of true Being. Thus he. But here we must use some caution, lest we should arrogate too much to the power of our own Souls, which indeed cannot raise up themselves into that pure and steady contemplation of true Being; but will rather act with some Multiplicity or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as they speak) attending it. But thus much of its high original may appear to us, that it can (as our Author told us) correct itself, for dividing and disjoining therein, as knowing all to be every way One most entire and simple: though yet all men cannot easily improve their own Understandings to this High degree of Comprehension; and therefore all ancient Philosophers and Aristotle himself made it the peculiar privilege of some men more abstracted from themselves and all corporeal commerce. CHAP. VII. What it is that, beyond the Highest and most subtle Speculations whatsoever, does clear and evidence to a Good man the Immortality of his Soul. That True Goodness and virtue begets the most raised Sense of this Immortality. Plotinus his excellent Discourse to this purpose. AND now that we may conclude the Argument in hand, we shall add but this one thing further to clear the Soul's Immortality, and it is indeed that which breeds a true sense of it, viz. True and real goodness. Our highest speculations of the Soul may beget a sufficient conviction thereof within us, but yet it is only True Goodness and virtue in the Souls of men that can make them both know and love, believe and delight themselves in their own Immortality. Though every good man is not so Logically subtle as to be able by fit mediums to demonstrate his own Immortality, yet he sees it in a higher light: His Soul being purged and enlightened by true Sanctity is more capable of those Divine irradiations, whereby it feels itself in conjunction with God, and by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as the Greeks speak) the Light of divine goodness mixing itself with the light of its own Reason, sees more clearly not only that it may, if it please the supreme Deity, of its own nature exist eternally, but also that it shall do so: it knows it shall never be deserted of that free Goodness that always embraceth it: it knows that Almighty Love, which it lives by, to be stronger than death, and more powerful than the grave; it will not suffer those holy ones that are partakers of it to lie in hell, or their Souls to see corruption; and though worms may devour their flesh, and putrefaction enter into those bones that fence it, yet it knows that its Redeemer lives, and that it shall at last see him with a pure Intellectual eye, which will then be clear and bright, when all that earthly dust, which converse with this mortal body filled it with, shall be wiped out: It knows that God will never forsake his own life which he hath quickened in it; he will never deny those ardent desires of a blissful fruition of himself, which the lively sense of his own Goodness hath excited within it: those breathe and gaspings after an eternal participation of him are but the Energy of his own breath within us; if he had had any mind to destroy it, he would never have shown it such things as he hath done; he would not raise it up to such Mounts of Vision, to show it all the glory of that heavenly Canaan flowing with eternal and unbounded pleasures, and then tumble it down again into that deep and darkest Abyss of Death and nonentity. Divine goodness cannot, it will not, be so cruel to holy souls that are such ambitious suitors for his love. The more they contemplate the blissful Effluxes of his divine love upon themselves, the more they find themselves strengthened with an undaunted confidence in him; and look not upon themselves in these poor bodily relations and dependences, but in their eternal alliances, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as Arrianus sometimes speaks) as the Sons of God who is the Father of Souls, Souls that are able to live any any where in this spacious Universe, and better out of this dark and lonesome Cell of Bodily matter, which is always checking and clogging them in their noble motions, then in it: as knowing that when they leave this Body, they shall then be received into everlasting habitations, and converse freely and familiarly with that Source of Life and Spirit which they conversed with in this life in a poor disturbed and straightened manner. It is indeed nothing else that makes men question the Immortality of their Souls, so much as their own base and earthly loves, which first makes them wish their Souls were not immortal, and then to think they are not: which Plotinus hath well observed, and accordingly hath soberly pursued this argument. I cannot omit a large recital of his Discourse, which tends so much to disparage that flat and dull Philosophy which these later Ages have brought forth; as also those heavy-spirited Christians that find so little divine life and activity in their own Souls, as to imagine them to fall into such a dead sleep as soon as they leave this earthly tabernacle, that they cannot be awakened again, till that last Trumpet and the voice of an Archangel shall rouse them up. Our author's discourse is this, Enn. 4. lib. 7. c. 10. having first premised this Principle, That every Divine thing is immortal, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Let us now consider a Soul (saith he) not such an one as is immersed into the Body, having contracted unreasonable Concupiscence and Anger (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, according to which they were wont to distinguish between the Irascible and Concupiscible faculty) and other Passions; but such a one as hath cast away these, and as little as may be communicates with the Body: such a one as this will sufficiently manifest that all Vice is unnatural to the Soul, and something acquired only from abroad; and that the best wisdom and all other virtues lodge in a purged Soul, as being allied to it. If therefore such a Soul shall reflect upon itself, how shall it not appear to itself to be of such a kind of nature as Divine and eternal Essences are? For wisdom and true virtue being Divine Effluxes can never enter into any unhallowed and mortal thing: it must therefore needs be Divine, seeing it is filled with a Divine nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by its kindred and consanguinity therewith. Whoever therefore amongst us is such a one, differs but little in his Soul from angelical essences; and that little is the present inhabitation in the Body, in which he is inferior to them. And if every man were of this raised temper, or any considerable number had but such holy Souls, there would be no such Infidels as would in any sort disbelieve the Soul's Immortality. But now the vulgar sort of men beholding the Souls of the generality so mutilated and deformed with Vice and Wickedness, they cannot think of the Soul as of any Divine and immortal Being; though indeed they ought to judge of things as they are in their own naked essences, and not with respect to that which extraessentially adheres to them; which is the great prejudice of knowledge. Contemplate therefore the Soul of man, denuding it of all that which itself is not, or let him that does this view his own Soul; then he will believe it to be immortal, when he shall behold it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, fixed in an Intelligible and pure nature; he shall then behold his own Intellect contemplating not any Sensible thing, but eternal things, with that which is eternal, that is, with itself, looking into the intellectual world, being itself made all Lucid, intellectual, and shining with the sunbeams of eternal Truth, borrowed from the First Good, which perpetually rayeth forth his Truth upon all intellectual being's. One thus qualified may seem without any arrogance to take up that saying of Empedocles, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉.— Farewell all earthly allies, I am henceforth no mortal wight, but an immortal Angel, ascending up into Divinity, and reflecting upon that likeness of it which I find in myself. When true Sanctity and Purity shall ground him in the knowledge of divine things, then shall the inward Sciences, that arise from the bottom of his own Soul, display themselves; which indeed are the only true Sciences: for the Soul runs not out of itself to behold Temperance and Justice abroad, but it's own light sees them in the contemplation of its own Being, and that divine essence which was before enshrined within itself. I might after all this add many more Reasons for a further confirmation of this present Thesis, which are as numerous as the Soul's relations & productions themselves are; but to every one who is willing to do his own Soul right, this Evidence we have already brought in is more than sufficient. CHAP. VIII. An Appendix containing an Enquiry into the Sense and Opinion of Aristotle concerning the Immortality of the Soul. That according to him the Rational Soul is separable from the Body and immortal. The true meaning of his Intellectus Agens and Patiens. HAving done with the several Proofs of the Soul's Immortality (that great Principle of natural Theology, which if it be not entertained as a Communis Notitia, as I doubt not but that it is by the Vulgar sort of men, or as an axiom, or, if you will, a theorem of free and impartial Reason, all endeavours in Religion will be very cool and languid) it may not be amiss to inquire a little concerning His opinion whom so many take for the great Intelligencer of Nature and Omniscient Oracle of Truth; though it be too manifest that he hath so defaced the sacred Monuments of the ancient Metaphysical Theology by his profane hands, that it is hard to see that lovely face of Truth which was once engraven upon them (as some of his own Interpreters have long ago observed) and so blurred those fair Copies of divine learning which he received from his predecessors, that his late Interpreters (who make him their All) are as little sometime acquainted with his meaning and design, as they are with that Elder philosophy which he so corrupts: which indeed is the true reason they are so ambiguous in determining his Opinion of the Soul's immortality; which yet he often asserts and demonstrates in his Three Books de Anima. We shall not here traverse this Notion through them all, but only briefly take notice of that which hath made his expositors stumble so much in this point; the main whereof is that Definition which he gives of the Soul, wherein he seems to make it nothing else for the Genus of it, but an Entelechia or Informative thing, which spends all its virtue upon that Matter which it informs, and cannot act any other way then merely by information; being indeed nothing else but some Material 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, like an impression in wax which cannot subsist without it, or else the result of it: whence it is that he calls only either Material Forms, or the Functions and Operations of those Forms, by this name. But indeed he intended not this for a general Definition of the Soul of man, and therefore after he had laid down this particular Definition of the Soul, lib. 2. cap. 1. he tells us expressly, That that which we call the Rational Soul is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or separable from the Body, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because it is not the Entelech of any Body. Which he lays down the demonstration of in several places of all those Three books, by enquiring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he speaks, lib. 1. cap. 1. whether the Soul hath any proper function or operation of its own, or whether all be compounded and result from the Soul and Body together: and in this inquiry finding that all Sensations and Passions arise as well from the Body as from the Soul, and spring out of the conjunction of both of them (which he therefore calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as being begotten by the Soul upon the Body) he concludes that all this savours of nothing else but a Mateterial nature, inseparable from the Body. But then finding acts of Mind and Understanding, which cannot be propagated from Matter, or causally depend upon the Body, he resolves the Principles from whence they flow to be Immortal; which he thus sets down lib. 2. cap. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, Now as for the Mind and theoretical power, it appears not, viz. that they belong to that Soul which in the former Chapter was defined by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but it seems to be another kind of Soul, and that only is separable from the Body, as that which is Eternal and Immortal from that which is Corruptible. But the other Powers or Parts of the Soul (viz. the Vegetative and Sensitive) are not separable, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as some think. Where by these [〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some] which he here refutes, he manifestly means the Platonists and Pythagoreans, who held that all kinds of Souls were immortal, as well the Souls of beasts as of men; whereas he upon that former enquiry concluded that nothing was immortal, but that which is the Seat of Reason and Understanding: and so his meaning is, that this Rational Soul is altogether a distinct Essence from those other; or else that glory which he makes account he reaps from his supposed victory over the other Sects of Philosophers will be much eclipsed, seeing they themselves did not so much contend for that which he decries, viz. an exercise of any such Informative faculties in a state of Separation, neither do we find them much more to reject one part of that complex axiom of * Lib. 3. c. 4. his, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That which is sensitive is not without the Body, but the Intellect or Mind is separable, than they do the other. The other difficulty which Aristotle's opinion seems to be clogged withal is that Conclusion which he lays down lib. 3. c. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is commonly thus expounded, Intellectus patiens est corruptibilis. But all this difficulty will soon be cleared, if once it may appear how ridiculous their conceit is, that from that Chapter fetch that idle distinction of Intellectus Agens & Patiens; meaning by the Agens, that which prepares phantasms, and exalts them into the nature of intelligible species; and then propounds them to the Patiens to judge thereof: whereas indeed he means nothing else by his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but only the Understanding in potentia, and by his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the same in actu or in habitu, as the Schoolmen are wont to phrase it; and accordingly thus lays down his meaning and method of this notion. In the preceding Chapter of that Book, he disputes against Plato's Connate species, as being afraid, lest if the Soul should be prejudiced by any home-born notions, it would not be indifferent to the entertaining of any other Truth. Where, by the way, we may observe how unreasonable his Argument is: for if the Soul hath no such stock of principles to trade with, nor any proper notions of its own that might be a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all Opinions, it would be so indifferent to any, that the foulest error might be as easily entertained by it as the fairest Truth; neither could it ever know what guest it receives, whether Truth, or Falshood. But yet our Author found himself able to swallow down this absurdity, though when he had done he could not well digest it. For he could not but take notice of that which was obvious for any one to reply, That 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and so reflecting upon itself, may find matter within to work upon; and so lays down this scruple in a way not much different from his Masters, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. but the Soul itself is also intelligible, as well as all other intelligible natures are; and in those being's which are purely abstracted from Matter, that which understands is the same with that which is understood. Thus he. But not being Master of this notion, he finds it a little too unruly for him, and falls to inquire why the Soul should not then always be in actu; quitting himself of the whole difficulty at once by telling us, that our souls are here clogged with a Hyle or Matter that cleaves to them, and so all the matter of their knowledge is contained in sensible objects, which they must extract out of them, being themselves only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or in potentia ad intelligendum. Just as in a like argument (Chap. 8.) he would needs persuade us, That the Understanding beholds all things in the glass of fancy; and then questioning how our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or First principles of knowledge should be phantasms, he grants that they are not indeed phantasms, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but yet they are not without phantasms; which he thinks is enough to say, and so by his mere dictate without any further discussion to solve that knot: whereas in all Reflex acts, whereby the Soul reviews its own opinions, and finds out the nature of them, it makes neither use of Sense or phantasms; but acting immediately by its own power, finds itself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Simplicius observes. But to return, This Hyle or Matter which our Author supposeth to hinder a free & uninterrupted exercise of Understanding, is indeed nothing else but the Souls potentiality; and not any kind of divisible or extended nature. And therefore when he thus distinguisheth between his Intellectus Agens and Patiens, he seems to mean almost nothing else but what our ordinary Metaphysitians do in their distinction of Actus and Potentia, (as Simplicius hath truly observed) when they tell us, that the finest created nature is made up of these two compounded together. For we must know that the genius of his Philosophy led him to fancy an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a certain subject or obediential power in every thing that fell within the compass of Physical speculation, or that had any relation to any natural body; and some other power which was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that was of an active and operating nature: and consequently that both these Principles were in the Soul itself, which as it was capable of receiving impressions & species from the fancy, and in a posse to understand, so it was Passive; but as it doth actually understand, so it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Active. And with this Notion he gins his 5. Chap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, Seeing that in every nature there is something which as a First subject is all things potentially, and some Active principle which produceth all things, as Art doth in Matter; it is necessary that the Soul also partake of these differences. And this he illustrates by Light & Colours; resembling the Passive power of the Intellect to Colours, the Active or Energetical to Light: and therefore he says, it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, separable, unmixed, and impassable; and so at last concludes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the state of Separation this Intellect is always that which it is (that is, it is always Active and Energetical, as he had told us before, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the essence of it being activity) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and this only is immortal and eternal, but we do not remember because it is impassable. In which last words he seems to disprove Plato's Reminiscentia, because the Soul in a state of Separation being always in act, the Passive power of it, which then first gins to appear when it is embodied, could not represent or contain any such traditional species as the energetical faculty acted upon before; seeing there was then no fancy to retain them in, as Simplicius expounds it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because in all remembrance we must reflect upon our fancy. And this our Author seems to glance at, it being indeed never out of his eye, in these words we have endeavoured to give an account of, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, But the Passive intellect is corruptible, and without this we can understand nothing in this life. And thus our forenamed Commentator doubts not to gloss on them. CHAP. IX. A main Difficulty concerning the Immortality of the Soul [viz. The strong Sympathy of the Soul with the Body] answered. An Answer to another Enquiry, viz. Under what account Impressions derived from the Body do fall in Morality. WE have now done with the Confirmation of this Point, which is the main Basis of all Religion, and shall not at present trouble ourselves with those difficulties that may seem to encumber it; which indeed are only such as beg for a Solution, but do not, if they be impartially considered, proudly contest with it: and such of them which depend upon any hypothesis which we may apprehend to be laid down in Scripture, I cannot think them to be of any such moment, but that any one who deals freely and ingenuously with this piece of God's truth, may from thence find a far better ansa of answering, than he can of moving of any scruples against the Souls Immortality, which that most strongly every where supposes, & does not so positively & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lay down, as presume that we have an antecedent knowledge of it, & therefore principally teaches us the right Way & Method of providing in this life for our happy subsistence in that eternal estate. And as for what pretends to Reason or Experience, I think it may not be amiss briefly to search into one main difficulty concerning the Soul's Immortality: and that is, That strange kind of dependency which it seems to have on the Body, whereby it seems constantly to comply and sympathise therewith, and to assume to itself the frailties and infirmities thereof, to laugh and languish as it were together with that: and so when the Body is composed to rest, our Soul seems to sleep together with it; and as the Spring of bodily Motion seated in our Brains is more clear or muddy, so the conceptions of our Minds are more distinct or disturbed. To answer this difficulty, it might be enough perhaps to say, That the Sympathy of things is no sufficient Argument to prove the Identity of their essences by, as I think all will grant; yet we shall endeavour more fully to solve it. And for that purpose we must take notice, that though our Souls be of an Incorporeal nature, as we have already demonstrated, yet they are united to our Bodies, not as Assisting forms or Intelligences, as some have thought, but in some more immediate way; though we cannot tell what that is, it being the great arcanum in Man's nature, that which troubled Plotinus so much, when he had contemplated the Immortality of it, that, as he speaks of himself, Enn. 4. lib. 8. c. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But indeed to make such a Complex thing as Man is, it was necessary that the Soul should be so united to the Body, as to share in its passions and infirmities so far as they are void of sinfulness. And as the Body alone could not perform any act of Sensation or Reason, and so itself become a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so neither would the Soul be capable of providing for the necessities of the Body, without some way whereby a feeling and sense of them might be conveyed to it; neither could it take sufficient care of this corporeal life, as nothing pertaining to it, were it not solicited to a natural compunction and compassion by the indigencies of our Bodies. It cannot be a mere Mental Speculation that would be so sensibly affected with hunger or cold or other griefs that our Bodies necessarily partake of, to move our Souls to take care for their relief: and were there not such a commerce between our Souls and Bodies, as that our Souls also might be made acquainted by a pleasurable and delightful sense of those things that most gratify our Bodies, and tend most to the support of their Crasis and temperament; the Soul would be apt wholly to neglect the Body, and commit it wholly to all changes and casualties. Neither would it be any thing more to us then the body of a Plant or Star, which we contemplate sometimes with as much contentment as we do our own bodies, having as much of the Theory of the one as of the other. And the relation that our Souls bear to such peculiar bodies as they inhabit, is one and the same in point of notion and speculation with that which they have to any other body: and therefore that which determines the Soul to this Body more than that, must be some subtle vinculum that knits and unites it to it in a more Physical way, which therefore Proclus sometimes calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a spiritual kind of vehicle, whereby corporeal impressions are transferred to the Mind, and the dictates and decrees of that are carried back again into the Body to act and move it. Heraclitus wittily glancing at these mutual aspects and intercourses, calls them * Plotin. Enn. 4. l. 8. c. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Responsals or Antiphons' wherein each of them catcheth at the others part & keeps time with it; and so he tells us that there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a way that leads upwards and downwards between the Soul and Body, whereby their affairs are made known to one another. For as the Soul could not have a sufficient relation of the state and condition of our Bodies, except it received some impressions from them; so neither could our Souls make use of our Bodies, or derive their own virtue into them as they do, without some intermediate motions. For as some motions may seem to have their beginning in our Bodies, or in some external mover, which are not known by our Souls till their advertency be awakened by the impetuousness of them: so some other motions are derived by our own Wills into our Bodies, but yet in such a way as they cannot be into any other body; for we cannot by the mere Magical virtue of our Wills move any thing else without ourselves, nor follow any such virtue by a concurrent sense of those mutations that are made by it, as we do in our own Bodies. And as this Conjugal affection and sympathy between Soul and Body are thus necessary to the Being of Mankind; so we may further take notice of some peculiar part within us where all this first gins: which a late fagacious Philosopher hath happily observed to be in that part of the Brain from whence all those Nerves that conduct the Animal spirits up and down the Body take their first Original; seeing we find all Motions that first arise in our Bodies, to direct their course strait up to that, as continually respecting it, and there only to be sensated, and all the imperate motions of our Wills issuing forth from the same consistory. Therefore the Animal spirits, by reason of their constant mobility and swift motion, ascending to the place of our Nerves origination, move the Soul, which there sits enthroned, in some mysterious way; and descending at the beck of our Wills from thence, move all the Muscles and joints in such sort as they are guided and directed by the Soul. And if we observe the subtle mechanics of our own Bodies, we may easily conceive how the least motion in these Animal Spirits will, by their relaxing or distending the Nerves, Membranes and Muscles, according to their different quantity or the celerity and quality of their motions, beget all kind of motions likewise in the Organical part of our Bodies. And therefore that our Souls may the better inform our Bodies, they must perceive all their varieties; and because they have such an immediate proximity to these Spirits, therefore also all the Motions of our Souls in the highest way of Reason and Understanding are apt to stir these quick and nimble spirits always attending upon them, or else fix them too much. And thus we may easily see that should our Souls be always acting and working within us, our Bodies could never take that rest and repose which is requisite for the conservation of Nature. As we may easily perceive in all our studies and meditations that are most serious, our Spirits are the more fixed, attending the beck of our Minds. And except this knot whereby our Souls are wedded to our Bodies were unloosed that our Souls were lose from them, they could not act, but presently some Motion or other would be impressed upon our Bodies: as every Motion in our Bodies that is extraordinary, when our Nerves are distended with the Animal spirits, by a continual communication of itself in these Nerves like so many intended Chords to their original, moves our Souls; and so though we always perceive that one of them is primarily affected, yet we also find the other presently by consent to be affected too. And because the Soul hath all Corporeal passions and impressions thus conveyed to it, without which it could not express a due benevolence to that Body which peculiarly belongs to it; therefore as the Motions of these Animal Spirits are more or less either disorderly and confused, or gentle and composed, so those Souls especially who have not by the exercise of true virtue got the dominion over them, are also more or less affected proportionably in their operations. And therefore indeed to question whether the Soul, that is of an Immortal nature, should entertain these corporeal passions, is to doubt whether God could make a Man or not, and to question that which we find by experience in ourselves; for we find both that it doth thus, and yet that the Original of these is sometimes from Bodies, and sometimes again by the force of our Wills they are impressed upon our Bodies. Here by the way we may consider in a moral way what to judge of those Impressions that are derived from our Bodies to our Souls, which the Stoics call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not because they are repugnant to Reason, or are aberrations from it; but because they derive not their original from Reason, but from the Body, which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and are by Aristotle, more agreeably to the ancient Dialect, called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 material or corporeal ideas or impressions. And these we may safely reckon, I think, amongst our Adiaphora in Morality, as being in themselves neither good nor evil, (as all the ancient Writers have done) but only are formed into either by that stamp that the Soul prints upon them, when they come to be entertained into it. And therefore whereas some are apt in the most severe way to censure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, all those Commotions and Passions that first affect our Souls; they might do well more cautelously to distinguish between such of these motions as have their origination in our Bodies, and such as immediately arise from our Souls: else may we not too hastily displace the ancient termini, and remove the landmarks of virtue and Vice? For seeing the Soul could not descend into any corporeal act, as it must do while it is more present to one body then another, except it could partake of the griefs and pleasures of the Body; can it be any more sinful for it to sensate this, than it is for it to be united to the Body? If our Soul could not know what it is to eat or drink, but only by a mere ratiocination, collecting by a dry syllogistical discourse [That meats and drinks preserve the health and fabric of the Body, repairing what daily exhales from it] without sensating any kind of grief in the want, or refreshment in the use, of them; it would soon suffer the Body to languish and decay. And therefore as these Bodily infirmities and passions are not evil in themselves; so neither are they evil as they first affect our Souls. When our Animal Spirits, begot of fine and good blood, gently and nimbly play up and down in our Brains, and swiftly fly up and down our whole Bodies, we presently find our fancies raised with mirth and cheerfulness: and as when our fancies are thus exalted, we may not call this the Energy of Grace; so if our Spleen or Hypochondria, swelling with terrene and sluggish Vapours, send up such melancholic fumes into our heads as move us to sadness and timorousness, we cannot justly call that Vice; nor when the Gall does degurgitate its bitter juice into our Liver, which mingling itself with the blood, begets fiery Spirits that presently fly up into our Brain, and there beget impressions of Anger within us. The like we may say of those Corporeal passions which are not bred first of all by any Peccant humours or distemperatures in our own bodies, but are excited in us by any External objects which by those idola and images that they present to our Senses, or rather those Motions they make in them, may presently raise such commotions in our Spirits: For our Body maintains not only a conspiration and consent of all its own parts, but also it bears a like relation to other mundane bodies with which it is conversant, as being a part of the whole Universe. But when our Soul, once moved by the undisciplined petulancy of our Animal spirits, shall foment and cherish that Irrational Grief, Fear, Anger, Love, or any other such like Passions contrary to the dictates of Reason; it then sets the stamp of sinfulness upon them. It is the consent of our own Wills that by brooding of them brings forth those hateful Serpents. For though our Souls be espoused to these Earthly Bodies, and cannot but in some measure sympathise with them, yet hath the Soul a true dominion of its own acts. It is not the mere passion, if we take it in a physical sense, but rather some inordinate action of our own Wills that entertain it: and these passions cannot force our Wills, but we may be able to chastise and allay all the inordinacy of them by the power of our Wills and Reasons: and therefore God hath not made us under the necessity of sin, by making us men subject to such infirmities as these are which are merely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Greek Philosopher hath well called them, the blossomings and shootings forth of bodily life within us; which is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Humanity. And, if I mistake not, our Divinity is wont sometimes to acknowledge some such thing in our Saviour himself, who was in all things made like to us, our sinfulness excepted. He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with griefs, as the Prophet Esay speaks of him: and when he was in bodily agonies and horrors, the powerful assaults thereof upon his Soul moved him to petition his Father, that if it were possible, that bitter Cup might pass from him; and the sense of death so much afflicted him, that it bred in him the sad griefs which S. Peter expresseth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 2. the pangs or throes of death, and that fear that extorted a desire to be freed from it, as it is insinuated by that in Heb. 5. 7. he was delivered from what he feared; for so the words, being nothing else but an Hebraism, are to be rendered, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And we are wont to call this the language and dictate of Nature which lawfully endeavours to preserve itself, though presently an higher principle must bring all these under a subjection to God, and a free submission to his good pleasure: as it was with our Saviour, who moderated all these passions by a ready resignment of himself and his own Will up to the Will of God; and though his Humanity craved for ease and relaxation, yet that Divine Nature that was within him would not have it with any repugnancy to the supreme Will of God. A DISCOURSE Concerning THE EXISTENCE AND NATURE OF GOD Agapetus ad Justinianum. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. M. T. Cicero l. 1. De Legibus. Ex tot generibus nullum est animal praeter hominem quod habeat notitiam aliquam Dei: ipsisque in hominibus nulla gens est neque tam immansueta, neque tam fera, quae non, etiamsi ignoret qualem habere Deum deceat, tamen habendum sciat. OF THE EXISTENCE AND NATURE OF GOD. CHAP. I. That the Best way to know God is by an attentive reflection upon our own Souls. God more clearly and lively pictured upon the Souls of Men, then upon any part of the Sensible World. WE shall now come to the other Cardinal Principle of all Religion, & treat something concerning God. Where we shall not so much demonstrate That he is, as What he is. Both which we may best learn from a reflection upon our own Souls, as Plotinus hath well taught us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He which reflects upon himself, reflects upon his own original, and finds the clearest Impression of some eternal Nature and Perfect Being stamped upon his own Soul. And therefore Plato seems sometimes to reprove the ruder sor● of men in his times for their contrivance of Pictures and Images to put themselves in mind of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or angelical being's, and exhorts them to look into their own Souls, which are the fairest Images not only of the Lower divine Natures, but of the Deity itself; God having so copied forth himself into the whole life and energy of man's Soul, as that the lovely Characters of Divinity may be most easily seen and read of all men within themselves: as they say Phidias the famous Statuary, after he had made the Statue of Minerva with the greatest exquisiteness of Art to be set up in the Acropolis at Athens, afterwards impressed his own Image so deeply in her buckler, ut nemo delere possit aut divellere, qui totam statuam non imminueret. And if we would know what the impress of Souls is, it is nothing but God himself, who could not write his own name so as that it might be read but only in rational Natures. Neither could he make such without imparting such an Imitation of his own eternal Understanding to them as might be a perpetual Memorial of himself within them. And whenever we look upon our own Soul in a right manner, we shall find an Urim and Thummim there, by which we may ask counsel of God himself, who will have this always born upon its breastplate. There is nothing that so embases and enthralls the Souls of men, as the dismal and dreadful thoughts of their own Mortality, which will not suffer them to look beyond this short span of Time, to see an hour's length before them, or to look higher than these material Heavens; which though they could be stretched forth to infinity, yet would the space be too narrow for an enlightened mind, that will not be confined within the compass of corporeal dimensions. These black Opinions of Death and the nonentity of Souls (darker than Hell itself) shrink up the freeborn Spirit which is within us, which would otherwise be dilating and spreading itself boundlessly beyond all Finite Being: and when these sorry pinching mists are once blown away, it finds this narrow sphere of Being to give way before it; and having once seen beyond Time and Matter, it finds then no more ends nor bounds to stop its swift and restless motion. It may then fly upwards from one heaven to another, till it be beyond all orb of Finite Being, swallowed up in the boundless Abyss of Divinity, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, beyond all that which darker thoughts are wont to represent under the Idea of Essence. This is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Areopagite speaks of, which the higher our Minds soar into, the more incomprehensible they find it. Those dismal apprehensions which pinion the Souls of men to mortality, churlishly check and starve that noble life thereof, which would always be rising upwards, and spread itself in a free heaven: and when once the Soul hath shaken off these, when it is once able to look through a grave, and see beyond death, it finds a vast Immensity of Being opening itself more and more before it, and the ineffable light and beauty thereof shining more and more into it; when it can rest and bear up itself upon an Immaterial centre of Immortality within, it will then find itself able to bear itself away by a self-reflexion into the contemplation of an eternal Deity. For though God hath copied forth his own Perfections in this conspicable & sensible World, according as it is capable of entertaining them; yet the most clear and distinct copy of himself could be imparted to none else but to intelligible and inconspicable natures: and though the whole fabric of this visible Universe be whispering out the notions of a Deity, and always inculcates this lesson to the contemplators of it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plotinus expresseth it; yet we cannot understand it without some interpreter within. The Heavens indeed declare the glory of God, and the Firmament shows his handiwork, and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which may be known of God, even his eternal power and Godhead, as S. Paul tells us, is to be seen in these external appearances: yet it must be something within that must instruct us in all these Mysteries, and we shall then best understand them, when we compare that copy which we find of them within ourselves, with that which we see without us. The Schoolmen have well compared Sensible and Intelligible being's in reference to the Deity, when they tell us that the one do only represent Vestigia Dei, the other Faciem Dei. We shall therefore here inquire what that Knowledge of a Deity is which a due converse with our own naked Understandings will lead us into. CHAP. II. How the Contemplation of our own Souls, and a right reflection upon the Operations thereof, may lead us into the knowledge of 1. The Divine Unity and Omniscience, 2. God's Omnipotence, 3. The Divine Love and Goodness, 4. God's Eternity, 5. His Omnipresence, 6. The Divine freedom and Liberty. IT being our design to discourse more particularly of that knowledge of the Deity that we may learn immediately from ourselves, we shall observe, First, There is nothing whereby our own Souls are 1. better known to us then by the Properties and Operations of Reason: but when we reflect upon our own Idea of Pure and Perfect Reason, we know that our own Souls are not it, but only partake of it; and that it is of such a Nature that we cannot denominate any other thing of the same rank with ourselves by; and yet we know certainly that it is, as finding from an inward sense of it within ourselves that both we and other things else beside ourselves partake of it, and that we have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither do we or any Finite thing contain the source of it within ourselves: and because we have a distinct Notion of the most Perfect Mind and Understanding, we own our deficiency therein. And as that Idea of Understanding which we have within us points not out to us This or That Particular, but something which is neither This nor That, but Totall, Understanding; so neither will any elevation of it serve every way to fit and answer that Idea. And therefore when we find that we cannot attain to Science but by a Discursive deduction of one thing from another, that our knowledge is confined, and is not fully adequate and commensurate to the largest sphere of Being, it not running quite through it nor filling the whole area of it; or that our knowledge is Chronical and successive, and cannot grasp all things at once, but works by intervals, and runs out into Division and Multiplicity; we know all this is from want of Reason and Understanding, and that a Pure and Simple Mind and Intellect is free from all these restraints and imperfections, and therefore can be no less than Infinite. As this Idea which we have of it in our own Souls will not suffer us to rest in any conception thereof which represents it less than Infinite: so neither will it suffer us to conceive of it any otherwise then as One Simple Being: and could we multiply Understandings into never so vast a number, yet should we be again collecting and knitting them up together in some Universal one. So that if we rightly reflect upon our own Minds and the Method of their Energies, we shall find them to be so framed, as not to admit of any other then One Infinite source of all that Reason and Understanding which themselves partake of, in which they live, move and have their Being. And therefore in the old Metaphysical Theology, an original and Uncreated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Unity is made the Fountain of all Particularities and Numbers which have their Existence from the Efflux of its Almighty power. And that is the next thing which our own Understandings 2. will instruct us in concerning God, viz. His eternal Power. For as we find a Will and Power within ourselves to execute the Results of our own Reason and judgement, so far as we are not hindered by some more potent Cause: so indeed we know it must be a mighty inward strength and force that must enable our Understandings to their proper functions, and that Life, Energy and Activity can never be separated from a Power of Understanding. The more unbodied any thing is, the more unbounded also is it in its Effective power: Body and Matter being the most sluggish, inert and unwieldy thing that may be, having no power from itself nor over itself: and therefore the Purest Mind must also needs be the most Almighty Life and Spirit; and as it comprehends all things and sums them up together in its Infinite knowledge, so it must also comprehend them all in its own life and power. Besides, when we review our own Immortal Souls and their dependency upon some Almighty Mind, we know that we neither did nor could produce ourselves; and withal know that all that Power which lies within the compass of ourselves, will serve for no other purpose then to apply several preaexistent things one to another, from whence all Generations and Mutations arise, which are nothing else but the Events of different applications and complications of Bodies that were existent before: and therefore that which produced that substantial Life and Mind by which we know ourselves, must be something much more Mighty than we are, and can be no less indeed then Omnipotent, and must also be the First architect and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of all other being's, and the perpetual Supporter of them. We may also know from the same Principles, That 3. an Almighty Love, every way commensurate to that most Perfect Being, eternally rests in it, which is as strong as that is Infinite, and as full of Life and Vigour as that is of Perfection. And because it finds no Beauty nor Loveliness but only in that and the issues thereof, therefore it never does nor can fasten upon any thing else. And therefore the Divinity always enjoies itself and its own Infinite perfections, seeing it is that eternal and stable Sun of goodness that neither rises nor sets, is neither eclipsed nor can receive any increase of light and beauty. Hence the Divine Love is never attended with those turbulent passions, perturbations, or wrestle within itself, of Fear, Desire, Grief, Anger, or any such like, whereby our Love is wont to explicate and unfold its affection towards its Object. But as the Divine Love is perpetually most infinitely ardent and potent, so it is always calm and serene, unchangeable, having no such ebbings and flow, no such diversity of stations and retrogradations as that Love hath in us which ariseth from the weakness of our Understandings, that do not present things to us always in the same Orient lustre and beauty: neither we nor any other mundane thing (all which are in a perpetual flux) are always the same. Besides, though our Love may sometimes transport us and violently rend us from ourselves and from all Self-enjoyment, yet the more forcible it is, by so much the more it will be apt to torment us, while it cannot centre itself in that which it so strongly endeavours to attract to it; and when it possesseth most, yet is it always hungry and craving, as Plotinus hath well expressed it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it may always be filling itself, but, like a leaking vessel, it will be always emptying itself again. Whereas the Infinite ardour of the Divine Love arising from the unbounded perfection of the Divine Being, always rests satisfied within itself, and so may rather be defined by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and is wrapped up and rests in the same central Unity in which it first gins. And therefore I think some men of later times have much mistaken the nature of the Divine Love, in imagining that Love is to be attributed to God, as all other Passions are, rather secundùm effectum then affectum: whereas S. John, who was well acquainted with this noble Spirit of Love, when he defined God by it, and calls him LOVE, meant not to signify a bare nothing known by some Effects, but that which was infinitely such as it seems to be. And we might well spare our labour, when we so industriously endeavour to find something in God that might produce the Effects of some other Passions in us, which look rather like the Brats of Hell and Darkness than the lovely offspring of Heaven. When we reflect upon all this which signifies some Perfect Essence, as a Mind, wisdom, Understanding, 4. Omnipotency, Goodness, and the like, we can find no such thing as Time or Place, or any corporeal or Finite properties which arise indeed not ex plenitudine, but ex inopia entitatis; we may also know God to be eternal and Omnipresent, not because he fills either Place or Time, but rather because he wanteth neither. That which first begets the Notion of Time in us, is nothing else but that Succession and Multiplicity which we find in our own Thoughts, which move from one thing to another, as the Sun in the Firmament is said to walk from one Planetary house to another, and to have his several Stages to pass by. And therefore where there is no such Vicissitude or Variety, as there can be no sense of Time, so there can be nothing of the thing. Proclus hath wittily observed that Saturn, or (as the Greeks called him) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, was the first of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Mundane Gods, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because Time is necessarily presupposed to all Generation, which proceeds by certain motions and intervals. This World is indeed a great Horologe to itself, and is continually numbering out its own age; but it cannot lay any sure hold upon its own past revolutions, nor can it gather up its infancy and old age, and couple them up together. Whereas an Infinitelycomprehensive Mind hath a Simultaneous possession of its own never-flitting life; and because it finds no Succession in its own immutable Understanding, therefore it cannot find any thing to measure out its own duration. And as Time lies in the Basis of all Finite life, whereby it is enabled by degrees to display all the virtue of its own Essence, which it cannot do at once: so such an Eternity lies at the foundation of the Divinity, whereby it becomes one without any shadow of turning, as S. James speaks, without any Variety or Multiplicity within himself, which all created being's that are carried down in the current of Time partake of. And therefore the Platonists were wont to attribute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Eternity to God, not so much because he had neither beginning nor end of days, but because of his Immutable and Uniform nature, which admits of no such variety of Conceptions as all Temporary things do: And Time they attributed to all created being's, because there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or constant generation both of and in their essence, by reason whereof we may call any of them, as Proclus tells us, by that borrowed expression, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 old and new, being every moment as it were reproduced, and acting something which it did not individually before. Though otherwise they supposed This World, constantly depending upon the Creatour's Omnipotency, might from all Eternity flow forth from the same Power that still sustains it, and which was never less potent to uphold it then now it is: notwithstanding this piece of it which is visible to us, or at least this Scheme or fashion of it, they acknowledged to have been but of a late date. Now thus as we conceive of God's Eternity, we may 5. in a correspondent manner apprehend his Omnipresence; not so much by an Infinite Expanse or Extension of Essence, as by an unlimited power, as Plotinus hath fitly expressed it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For as nothing can ever stray out of the bounds or get out of the reach of an Almighty Mind and Power; so when we barely think of Mind or Power, or any thing else most peculiar to the Divine Essence, we cannot find any of the Properties of Quantity mixing themselves with it: and as we cannot confine it in regard thereof to any one point of the Universe, so neither can we well conceive it extended through the whole, or excluded from any part of it. It is always some Material Being that contends for Space: Bodily parts will not lodge together, and the more bulky they are, the more they justle for room one with another; as Plotinus tells us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Bodily being's are great only in bulk, but Divine Essences in virtue and power. We may in the next place consider that freedom 6. and Liberty which we find in our own Souls, which is founded in our Reason and Understanding; and this is therefore- Infinite in God, because there is nothing that can bound the First Mind, or disobey an Almighty power. We must not conceive God to be the freest Agent, because he can do and prescribe what he pleaseth, and so set up an Absolute will which shall make both Law and Reason, as some imagine. For as God cannot know himself to be any other then what indeed he is; so neither can he will himself to be any thing else than what he is, or that any thing else should swerve from those Laws which his own eternal Nature and Understanding prescribes to it. For this were to make God free to dethrone himself, and set up a Liberty within him that should contend with the royal prerogative of his own boundless wisdom. To be short; When we converse with our own Souls, we find the Spring of all Liberty to be nothing else but Reason; and therefore no Unreasonable creature can partake of it: and that it is not so much any Indifferency in our Wills of determining without, much less against, Reason, as the liberal Election of, and Complacency in, that which our Understandings propound to us as most expedient: And our Liberty most appears, when our Will most of all congratulates the results of our own judgements; and then shows itself most vigorous, when either the Particularness of that Good which the Understanding converseth with, or the weak knowledge that it hath of it, restrains it not. Then is it most pregnant and flows forth in the fullest stream, when its Object is most full, and the acquaintance with it most ample: all Liberty in the Soul being a kind of Liberality in the bestowing of our affections, and the want or scarce measure of it Parsimoniousness and nigardise. And therefore the more the Results of our judgements tend to an Indifferency, the more we find our Wills dubious and in suspense what to choose; contrary inclinations arising and falling within interchangeably, as the Scales of a balance equally laden with weights; and all this while the Soul's Liberty is nothing else but a Fluctuation between uncertainties, and languisheth away in the impotency of our Understandings. Whereas the Divine Understanding beholding all things most clearly, must needs beget the greatest freedom that may be; which freedom as it is bred in it, so it never moves without the Compass of it. And though the Divine Will be not determined always to this or that particular, yet it is never bereft of eternal Light and Truth to act by: and therefore though we cannot see a Reason for all god's actions, yet we may know they were neither done against it nor without it. CHAP. III. How the Consideration of those restless motions of our Wills after some Supreme and Infinite Good, leads us into the knowledge of a Deity. WE shall once more take a view of our own Souls, and observe how the Motions thereof lead us into the knowledge of a Deity. We always find a restless appetite within ourselves which craves for some Supreme and Chief good, and will not be satisfied with any thing less than Infinity itself; as if our own Penury and Indigency were commensurate to the Divine fullness: and therefore no Question has been more canvased by all Philosophy then this, De summo hominis bono, and all the Sects thereof were anciently distinguished by those Opinions that they entertained De finibus Boni & Mali, as Tully phraseth it. But of how weak and dilute a Nature soever some of them may have conceived that Summum Bonum, yet they could not so satisfy their own inflamed thirst after it. We find by Experience that our Souls cannot live upon that thin and spare diet which they are entertained with at their own home; neither can they be satiated with those jejune and insipid morsels which this Outward world furnisheth their Table with. I cannot think the most voluptuous Epicurean could ever satisfy the cravings of his Soul with Corporeal pleasure, though he might endeavour to persuade himself there was no better: nor the most Quintessential Stoics find an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a selfsufficiency and Tranquillity within their own Souls, arising out of the pregnancy of their own Mind and Reason; though their sullen thoughts would not suffer them to be beholden to an Higher Being for their Happiness. The more we endeavour to extract an Autarchy out of our own Souls, the more we torment them, and force them to feel and sensate their own pinching poverty. Ever since our Minds became so dim-sighted as not to pierce into that Original and Primitive Blessedness which is above, our Wills are too big for our Understandings, and will believe their beloved prey is to be found where Reason discovers it not: they will pursue it through all the vast Wilderness of this World, and force our Understandings to follow the chase with them: nor may we think to tame this violent appetite or allay the heat of it, except we can look upward to some Eternal and Almighty goodness which is alone able to master it. It is not the nimbleness and agility of our own Reason which stirs up these hungry affections within us, (for then the most ignorant sort of men would never feel the sting thereof) but indeed some more Potent nature which hath planted a restless motion within us that might more forcibly carry us out to itself; and therefore it will never suffer itself to be controlled by any of our thin Speculations, or satisfied with those airy delights that our Fancies may offer to it: it doth not, it cannot, rest itself any any where but upon the Centre of some Almighty good, some solid and substantial Happiness; like the hungry child that will not be stilled by all the mother's music, or change its sour and angry looks for her smiling countenance; nothing will satisfy it but the full breasts. The whole work of this World is nothing but a perpetual contention for True Happiness, and men are scattered up and down the world, moving to and fro therein, to seek it. Our Souls by a natural Science as it were feeling their own original, are perpetually travailing with new designs and contrivances whereby they may purchase the scope of their high ambitions. Happiness is that Pearl of price which all adventure for, though few find it. It is not Gold or Silver that the Earthlings of this world seek after, but some satisfying good which they think is there treasured up. Neither is it a little empty breath that Ambition and Popularity soars after, but some kind of Happiness that it thinks to catch and suck in with it. And thus indeed when men most of all fly from God, they still seek after him. Wicked men pursue indeed after a Deity in their worldly lusts; wherein yet they most blaspheme; for God is not a mere empty Name or Title, but that Self-sufficient good which brings along that Rest and Peace with it which they so much seek after, though they do most prodigiously conjoin it with something which it is not, nor can it be, and in a true and real strain of blasphemy, attribute all that which God is to something else which is most unlike him, and, as S. Paul speaks of those infatuated Gentiles, Rom. 1. turn the glory of the uncorruptible God into the image of corruptible man, of birds and fourfooted beasts and creeping things. God is not better defined to us by our Understandings then by our Wills and Affections: He is not only the Eternal Reason, that Almighty Mind and wisdom which our Understandings converse with; but he is also that unstained Beauty and Supreme Good which our Wills are perpetually catching after: and wheresoever we find true Beauty, Love and Goodness, we may say, Here or there is God. And as we cannot understand any thing of an Intelligible nature, but by some primitive Idea we have of God, whereby we are able to guests at the elevation of its Being and the pitch of its Perfection; so neither do our Wills embrace any thing without some latent sense of Him, whereby they can taste and discern how near any thing comes to that Self-sufficient good they seek after: and indeed without such an internal sensating Faculty as this is we should never know when our Souls are in conjunction with the Deity, or be able to relish the ineffable sweetness of true Happiness. Though here below we know but little what this is, because we are little acquainted with fruition and enjoyment; we know well what belongs to long and languishment, but we know not so well what belongs to plenty and fullness; we are well acquainted with the griefs and sicknesses of this inbred love, but we know not what its health and complacencies are. To conclude this particular, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Soul hath strong and weighty motions, and nothing else can bear it up but something permanent and immutable. Nothing can beget a constant serenity and composedness within, but something Supreme to its own Essence; as if having once departed from the primitive Fountain of its life, it were deprived of itself, perpetually contesting within itself and divided against itself: and all this evidently proves to our inward sense and feeling, That there is some Higher Good than ourselves, something that is much more amiable and desirable, and therefore must be loved and preferred before ourselves, as Plotinus hath excellently observed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Every thing that desires the enjoyment of the First good, would rather be That then what it is, because indeed the nature of that is much more desirable than its own. And therefore the Platonists, when they contemplate the Deity under these three notions of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and question which to place first in order of understanding, resolve the preeminence to be due to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Simplicius tells us, because That is first known to us as the Architect of the world, and, we may add, as that which begets in us this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, these strong passionate desires whereby all sorts of men (even those that are rude and illiterate) are first known to themselves, and by that knowledge may know what diminutive, poor and helpless, things themselves are, who can never satiate themselves from themselves, and what an Excellent and sovereign goodness there is above them which they ought to serve, and cannot but serve it, or some filthy idol in stead of it; though this mental Idolatry be like that gross and external in this also, that howsoever we attend it not (and so are never the more blameless) yet our worship of these images and pictures of Goodness rests not there, it being some all-sufficient Good that (as we observed before) calls forth and commands our adorations. CHAP. iu. Deductions and Inferences from the Consideration of the Divine Nature and Attributes. 1. That all Divine productions are the free Effluxes of Omnipotent Love and Goodness. The true Notion of God's glory what it is. Men very apt to mistake in this point. God needs not the Happiness or Misery of his Creatures to make himself glorious by. God does most glorify himself by communicating himself: we most glorify God when we most partake of him, and resemble him most. WE have seen how we may rise up to the understanding of the Deity by the contemplation of our own Souls: and now it may seem worthy of the best attention of our Minds to consider some Deductions and Inferences which naturally flow from the true knowledge of the Divine Nature and Attributes. And the First is this, That all Divine productions or operations that terminate in something without Him, are nothing else but the free Effluxes of his own Omnipotent Love and Goodness, which always moves along with them, and never willingly departs from them. When God made the world, it was not out of a piece of Self-Interest, as if he had had any design to advance himself, or to enlarge his own stock of glory and happiness; for what Beauty or Perfection can be in this whole Creation which was not before contained in himself as the free Fountain of all? or what could he see out of himself that could add any thing to his own stature, which he found not already in himself? He made not the World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It was not for any need, or that he might gain some honour to himself from Men, Archangels or Angels, as the Tribute or Rent to be paid to him from his Creation, as Clemens Alexandrinus observes out of Strom. 5. Plato. Though I know not how it comes about that some bring in God as it were casting about how he might erect a new Monopoly of glory to himself, and so to serve this purpose made the World, that he might have a stock of glory here going in it. And I doubt we are wont sometimes to paint him forth too much in the likeness of corrupt and impotent men, that by a fond ambition please themselves and feed their lustful fancies with their own praises chanted out to them by their admirers, and another while as much sport themselves and applaud their own Greatness, to hear what hideous cries the Severity of their own Power can extort from those they have a mind to make miserable. We all speak much of the Glory of God, and entertain a common belief that that's the only End for which we were all made: and I wish we were all more inwardly moved with a true and lively sense of it. There can be nothing else that either God could propound to himself, or that we ought, if it be rightly understood. But we must not think that God, who is Infinite fullness, would seek for any thing without himself: he needs neither our Happiness nor our Misery to make himself more illustrious by; but being full in himself, it was his good pleasure to communicate of his own fullness: for, as * Lib. 4. in Timaeum. Proclus hath well observed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. How can he look without himself, being he is a pure Mind always encompassed with its own glorious brightness? But the good pleasure of his Will being filled with bounty, and the power of a most gracious Deity proceeding from it, liberally dispensed themselves, and distributed those gifts of grace that might make all created Being the more to resemble that archetypal Idea of themselves. Accordingly Timaeus Locrus represents the creator of the World in the same strain that Moses did, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, delighted as it were in himself to see that all things that he had made were good, and some things exceeding good. God himself being infinitely full, and having enough and to spare, is always overflowing; and Goodness and Love issue forth from him by way of redundancy. When he made the World, because there was nothing better than himself, he shadowed forth himself therein, and, as far as might be, was pleased to represent himself and manifest his own eternal glory and perfection in it. When he is said to seek his own glory, it is indeed nothing else but to ray and beam forth, as it were, his own lustre; as R. Jehuda in his Book Cofri hath glanced at it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gloria haec scintilla est lucis divinae, cedens in utilitatem populi ejus in terra ejus. God does then most glorify and exalt himself in the most triumphant way that may be ad extra or out of himself, if I may so phrase it, when he most of all communicates himself, and when he erects such Monuments of his own Majesty wherein his own Love and Goodness may live and reign. And we than most of all glorify him, when we partake most of him, when our serious endeavours of a true assimilation to him and conformity to his Image declare that we think nothing Better than He is, and are therefore most ambitious of being one with him by an universal Resignation of ourselves unto him. This is his Glory in its lowest Humiliation, while it beams forth out of himself; and our Happiness in its Exaltation, which Heaven never separates nor divides though Earth doth. His Honour is His Love and Goodness in paraphrase, spreading itself over all those that can or do receive it; and this he loves and cherishes wheresoever he finds it, as something of himself therein. Thus I should leave this particular, but that being gone so far in it, it may be worth the while to take notice of Three things wherein God most of all glories and takes the greatest complacency, in reference to Creatures, as they are laid down by Proclus l. 4. in Tim. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The First, and chiefest, is concurrent with his own internal vision of all things in that simple, expedite and simultaneous comprehension of all things intelligible, piercing through all their essences, and viewing them all in himself, he is delighted therein, as seeing how his own Glory can display and imitate itself in outward Matter. 2. The second is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the aptness and capacity of those things which he hath made to receive a further influence of good ready to stream forth from himself into them. 3. The last is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the sweet symmetry of his own forms with this capacity, and as it were the harmonious conspiration and symphony of them, when his own light pleasantly plays upon those well-tuned instruments which he hath fitted to run the descants of his own Goodness upon. And therefore it becomes us whom he hath endued with vital power of action, and in some sense a Selfmoving life, to stir up his good gifts within ourselves; and, if we would have him take pleasure in us, to prepare our own Souls more and more to receive of his Liberality, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that that stock which he is pleased to impart to us may not lie dead within us. And this is the Application which he makes of this Particular. CHAP. V. A second Deduction. 2. That all things are supported and governed by an Almighty wisdom and Goodness. An Answer to an Objection made against the Divine Providence from an unequal distribution of things here below. Such quarrelling with Providence ariseth from a Paedanticall and carnal notion of Good and Evil. IN the next place we may by way of further Deduction gather, That that Almighty wisdom and Goodness which first made all things, doth also perpetually conserve and govern them; deriving themselves through the whole fabric, and seating themselves in every Finite Essence, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as the same Philosopher expresseth it) lest straggling & falling off from the Deity, they should become altogether disorderly, relapsing and sliding back into their first Chaos. As in all Motion there must be some First Mover, from whence the beginning and perpetuation of all Motion is deduced: so in being's there must be some First Essence upon which all other must constantly depend. And therefore the Pythagorean philosophy was wont to look upon these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as they call this production of every thing that is not truly divine, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as being always in fieri. For as no Finite thing can subsist by its own strength, or take its place upon the stage of Space without the leave of an Almighty and Supreme power: so neither can it remain here without licence and assistance from it. The Deity indeed is the Centre of all finite Being, and Entity itself, which is Self-sufficient, must of necessity be the Foundation and Basis of every one of these weak Essences, which cannot bear up themselves by any central power of their own; as we may also be almost assured of from a sensible feeling of all the constant mutations and impotency which we find both in ourselves and all other things. And as God thus preserves all things, so he is continually ordering & disposing all things in the best way, and providing so as may be best for them. He did not make the World as a mere Exercise of his Almighty power, or to try his own strength, and then throw it away from himself without any more minding of it; for he is that Omnipresent Life that penetrates and runs through all things, containing and holding all fast together within himself; and therefore the ancient Philosophy was wont rather to say, that the World was in God, then that God was in the World. He did not look without himself to search for some solid foundation that might bear up this weighty building, but indeed reared it up within him, and spread his own Omnipotency under it and through it: and being centrally in every part of it, he governs it according to the prescript of his own unsearchable wisdom and Goodness, and orders all things for the best. And this is one principal Orthodox point the Stoics would have us to believe concerning Providence, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that all things are here done in this World by the appointment of the Best Mind. And now if any should quarrel with the unequal distribution of things here, as if rather some blind Fortune had bestowed her blessings carelessly till she had no more left, and thereby made so many starvelings, rather than some All-knowing Mind that deals forth its bounty in due proportions; I should send them to Plutarch and Plotinus to have their Reasons fully satisfied in this point, (for we here deal with the Principles of natural light) all these debates arising from nothing but Paedanticall and carnal notions of Good and Evil: as if it were so gallant a thing to be dealing with Crowns and sceptres, to be bravely arrayed, and wallow in that which is called the Wealth of this World. God indeed never took any such notice of Good men as to make them all Rulers, as the * Plotin. Enn. 3. l. 2. c. 9 last of those forecited Authors tells us; neither was it worth the while, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, neither is it fit for good men that partake of an higher life than the most Princely is, to trouble themselves about lording & ruling over other men; as if such a splendid kind of nothing as this is were of so much worth. It may be generally much better for us, while we are so apt to magnify & court any Mundane beauty and glory, as we are, that Providence should disorder and deface these things, that we might all be weaned from the love of them, then that their lovely looks should so bewitch and enchant our Souls as to draw them off from Better things. And I dare say that a sober mind that shall contemplate the state and temper of men's minds, and the confused frame of this outward world, will rather admire at the Infinite wisdom of a gracious Providence in permitting and ordering that Ataxy which is in it, than he would were it to be beheld in a more comely frame and order. CHAP. vi A third Deduction. 3. That all true Happiness consists in a participation of God arising out of the assimilation and conformity of our Souls to him; and, That the most real Misery ariseth out of the apostasy of Souls from God. No enjoyment of God without our being made like to Him. The Happiness and Misery of Man defined and stated, with the original and Foundation of both. WE proceed now to another Deduction or Inference, viz. That all True Happiness consists in a participation of God arising out of the assimilation and conformity of our Souls to him, and the most real Misery ariseth out of the apostasy of Souls from God. And so we are led to speak of the Rewards and Punishments of the Life to come, Praemium and Poena, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Jewish Writers are wont to express them: and it will not be any hard labour from what hath been said to find out the original and Nature of both of them; and though perhaps we cannot dive into the bottom of them, yet we may go about them, and tell how in a general way to define and distinguish them. Happiness is nothing else, as we usually describe it to ourselves, but the Enjoyment of some Chief good: and therefore the Deity is so boundlessly Happy, because it is every way one with its own Immense perfection; and every thing so much the more feelingly lives upon Happiness, by how much the more it comes to partake of God and to be made like to him: And therefore the Platonists well defined it to consist in idea Boni. And as it is impossible to enjoy Happiness without a fruition of God; so it is impossible to enjoy him without an assimilation and conformity of our Natures to him in a way of true goodness and Godlike perfection. It is a common Maxim of Socrates, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it is not lawful for any impure nature to touch pure Divinity. For we cannot enjoy God by any Externall conjunction with him: Divine fruition is not by a mere kind of Apposition or Contiguity of our Natures with the Divine, but it is an Internal Union, whereby a Divine Spirit informing our Souls, derives the strength of a Divine life through them; and as this is more strong and active, so is Happiness itself more energetical within us. It must be some Divine Efflux running quite through our Souls, awakening and exalting all the vital powers of them into an active Sympathy with some Absolute good, that renders us completely blessed. It is not to sit gazing upon a Deity by some thin speculations; but it is an inward feeling and sensation of this Mighty Goodness displaying itself within us, melting our fierce and furious natures, that would fain be something in contradiction to God, into an universal compliance with itself, and wrapping up our amorous Minds wholly into itself, whereby God comes to be all in all to us. And therefore so long as our Wills and Affections endeavour to fix upon any thing but God & true Goodness, we do but indeed anxiously endeavour to wring Happiness out of something that will yield no more than a flinty Rock to all our pressing and forcing of it. The more we endeavour to force out our Affections to stay and rest themselves upon any Finite thing, the more violently will they recoil back again upon us. It is only a true sense and relish of God that can tame and master that rage of our insatiable and restless desires which is still forcing us out of ourselves to seek some Perfect Good, that which from a latent sense of our own Souls we feel ourselves to want. The Foundation of Heaven and Hell is laid in men's own Souls, in an ardent and vehement appetite after Happiness, which can neither attain to it, nor miss finally of it and of all appearances of it, without a quick and piercing sense. Our Souls are not like so many lumps of dead and senseless Matter to a true living Happiness, they are not like these dull clods of Earth which sent not the good or ill savour of those Plants that grow upon them. Gain and Loss are very sensibly felt by greedy minds. The Soul of man was made with such a large capacity as it is, that so it might be better fitted to entertain a full and liberal Happiness, that the Divine Love and Goodness might more freely spread itself in it, and unite it to itself. And accordingly when it misseth of God, it must feel so much the more the fury and pangs of Misery, and find a severe Nemesis arising out of its guilty conscience, which like a fiery Scorpion will fasten its stings within it. And thus as Heaven, Love, Joy, Peace, Serenity, and all that which Happiness is, buds and blossoms out of holy and godlike spirits: so also Hell and Misery will perpetually spring out of impure Minds, distracted with Envy, Malice, Ambition, Self-will or any inordinate loves to any particular thing. This is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Plato speaks of, that fatal Law that is first made in Heaven's Consistory, That Purity and Holiness shall be happy, and all Vice and Sin miserable. Holiness of Mind will be more and more attracting God to itself, as all Vice will lapse and slide more and more from him. The more pure our Souls are and abstracted from all mundane things, the more sincerely will they endeavour the nearest union that may be with God, the more they will pant and breathe after him alone, leaving the chase of any other delight. There is such a noble and freeborn spirit in true Goodness seated in immortal natures, as will not be satisfied merely with Innocency, nor rest itself in this mixed Bodily state, though it could converse with Bodily things without sinking to a vicious love of them; but would always be returning to a more intimate union with that Being from whence it came, and which will be drawing it more and more to itself: and therefore it seems very reasonable to believe that if Adam had continued in a state of Innocency, he should have been raised by God to a greater fruition of him, and his nature should have been elevated to a more transcendent condition. And if there was any Covenant made with Adam in Paradise, I think we cannot understand it in any other sense but this: the Scripture speaks not of any other terms between God and Man. And this Law of life, which we have spoken of, is eternal and Immutable; nor does the Dispensation of Grace by Christ Jesus at all abrogate or disannul, but rather enforce, it: for so we find that the Law of Christ, that which he gave out to all his Disciples, was this Law of perfection that carries true Happiness along in the Sense of it, which, as the great Prince of Souls, he dispenseth by his eternal Spirit in a vital way unto the Minds of men. CHAP. VII. A Fourth Deduction. 4. The Fourth Deduction acquaints us with the true Notion of the Divine Justice, That the proper scope and design of it, is to preserve Righteousness, to promote and encourage true Goodness. That it does not primarily intent Punishment, but only takes it up as a mean to prevent Transgression. True Justice never supplants any that itself may appear more glorious in their ruins. How Divine Justice is most advanced. IN the fourth place, we may further collect How rightly to state the Notion of the Divine Justice, the scope whereof is nothing else but to assert and establish Eternal Law and Right, and to preserve the integrity thereof; it is no design of Vengeance, which though God takes on wicked men, yet he delights not in it. The Divine Justice first prescribes that which is most conformable to the Divine Nature, and mainly pursues the conservation of Righteousness. We would not think him a good Ruler that should give out Laws to ensnare his Subjects, with an even indifferency of Mind whether his Laws be kept, or Punishments suffered; but such a one who would make the best security for Right and Equity by wholesome Laws, and annexing Punishments as a mean to prevent transgression, and not to manifest Severity. The proper scope of Justice seems to be nothing else but the preserving and maintaining of that which is Just and Right: the scope of that Justice which is in any Righteous Law, is properly to provide for a righteous execution of that which is just and fit to be, without intending punishment; for to intent that properly and directly, might rather seem Cruelty then Justice: and therefore Justice takes not up Punishment, but only for a security of performance of Righteous Laws, viz. either for the amendment of the person transgressing, or a due example to others to keep them off from transgression. For I would here suppose a Good and Righteous man, who in some desolate place of the World should have the command of a 100 more, and himself be Supreme & under no command. He prescribes Laws to this company, makes it death for any one to take away another's life. But now one proves a murderer, kills one of his fellows; afterwards reputes hearty, and is like to prove useful among the rest of his fellows: they all are so hearty affected one to another, that there is no danger, upon sparing this Penitent's life, that any one of them should be encouraged to commit the like evil. The Case being thus stated, it will not seem difficult to conclude that the Justice of this Righteous and Good Commander would spare this poor Penitent: for his Justice would have preserved that life which is lost, and seeing there is nothing further that it can obtain in taking away this, it will save this which may be saved; for it affects not any blood; and when it destroys, it is out of necessity, to take away a destructive person, and to give example, which in the Case stated falls not out. Again, Justice is the Justice of Goodness, and so cannot delight to punish; it aims at nothing more than the maintaining and promoting the Laws of Goodness, and hath always some good end before it, and therefore would never punish except some further good were in view. True Justice never supplants any that itself might appear more glorious in their ruins; for this would be to make Justice love something better than Righteousness, and to advance and magnify itself in something which is not itself, but rather an aberration from itself: and therefore God himself so earnestly contends with the Jews about the Equity of his own ways, with frequent asseverations that his Justice is thirsty after no man's blood, but rather that Sinners would repent, turn from their evil ways, and live. And then Justice is most advanced, when the contents of it are fulfilled; and though it does not, and will not, acquit the guilty without Repentance, yet the design of it is to encourage Innocency and promote true Goodness. CHAP. VIII. The Fifth and last Deduction. 5. That seeing there is such an intercourse and Society as it were between God and Men, therefore there is also some Law between them, which is the Bond of all Communion. The Primitive rules of God's Oeconomy in this world, not the sole Results of an Absolute Will, but the sacred Decrees of Reason and Goodness, God could not design to make us sinful or Miserable. Of the Law of Nature embosom'd in Man's Soul, how it obliges man to love and obey God, and to express a Godlike spirit and life in this world. All Souls the offspring of God; but Holy Souls manifest themselves to be, and are more peculiarly, the Children of God. THE former Deduction leads me to another akin to it, which shall be my last, and it is that which Tully intimates in his De legibus, viz. That seeing there is such an intercourse and Society as it were between God and Men, therefore there is also some Law between them, which is the Bond of all Communion. God himself, from whom all Law takes its rise and emanation, is not Exlex and without all Law, nor, in a sober sense, above it. Neither are the Primitive rules of his Oeconomy in this world the sole Results of an Absolute will, but the Sacred Decrees of Reason and Goodness. I cannot think God to be so unbounded in his Legislative power, that he can make any thing Law, both for his own Dispensations and our Observance, that we may sometime imagine. We cannot say indeed that God was absolutely determined from some Law within himself to make us; but I think we may safely say, when he had once determined to make us, he could neither make us sinful, seeing he had no Idea nor shadow of Evil within himself, nor lap us those dreadful fates within our Natures, or set them over us, that might arcanâ inspiratione (as some are pleased to phrase it) secretly work our ruin, and silently carry us on, making use of our own natural infirmity, to eternal misery. Neither could he design to make his creatures miserable, that so he might show himself Just. These are rather the byways of cruel and Ambitious men, that seek their own advantage in the mischiefs of other men, and contrive their own Rise by their ruins: this is not Divine Justice, but the Cruelty of degenerated men. But as the Divinity could propound nothing to itself in the making of the World but the Communication of its own Love and Goodness; so it can never swerve from the same Scope and End in the dispensation of itself to it. Neither did God so boundlessly enlarge the appetite of Souls after some All-sufficient Good, that so they might be the more unspeakably tortured in the missing of it; but that they might more certainly return to the original of their being's. And such busie-working Essences as the Souls of men are, could neither be made as dull and senseless of true Happiness as Stocks and Stones are, neither could they contain the whole sum and perfection of it within themselves: therefore they must also be informed with such Principles as might conduct them back again to Him from whom they first came. God does not make Creatures for the mere sport of his Almighty arm, to raise and ruin and toss up and down at mere pleasure. No, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or good pleasure of that Will that made them is the same still, it changes not, though we may change, and make ourselves uncapable of partaking the blissful fruits and effects of it. And so we come to consider that Law embosom'd in the Souls of men which ties them again to their creator, and this is called The Law of Nature; which indeed is nothing else but a Paraphrase or Comment upon the Nature of God as it copies forth itself in the Soul of Man. Because God is the First Mind and the First Good, propagating an Imitation of himself in such immortal Natures as the Souls of Men are, therefore ought the Soul to renounce all mortal and mundane things, and preserve its Affections chaste and pure for God himself; to love him with a most universal and Unbounded Love; to trust in him and reverence him; to converse with him in a free & cheerful manner, as One in whom we live and move and have our being's, being perpetually encompassed by him, and never moving out of him; to resign all our ways and Wills up to him with an equal and indifferent mind, as knowing that he guides and governs all things in the Best way; to sink ourselves as low in Humility, as we are in Self-nothingness. And because all those scattered rays of Beauty and Loveliness which we behold spread up and down all the World over, are only the Emanations of that inexhausted Light which is above; therefore should we love them all in that, and climb up always by those sunbeams unto the eternal Father of Lights: we should look upon him and take from him the pattern of our lives, and always eyeing of him should 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. (as Hierocles speaks) polish and shape our Souls into the clearest resemblance of him; and in all our behaviour in this World (that Great Temple of his) deport ourselves decently and reverently, with that humility, meekness and modesty that becomes his house. We should endeavour more and more to be perfect, as he is; in all our dealing with men, doing good, showing mercy and compassion, advancing justice and righteousness, being always full of charity and good works; and look upon ourselves as having nothing to do here but to display & blazon the glory of our heavenly Father, and frame our hearts and lives according to that Pattern which we behold in the Mount of a holy Contemplation of him. Thus we should endeavour to preserve that Heavenly fire of the Divine Love and Goodness (which issuing forth from God centres itself within us, and is the Protoplastick virtue of our being's) always alive and burning in the Temple of our Souls, and to sacrifice ourselves back again to him. And when we fulfil this Royal Law arising out of the heart of Eternity, then shall we here appear to be the Children of God, when he thus lives in us, as our Saviour speaks Matth. 5. And so we shall close up this Particular with that High privilege which immortal Souls are invested with: they are all the offspring of God, for so S. Paul allows the Heathen Poet to call them: they are all royally descended, and have no Father but God himself, being originally form into his image and likeness; and when they express the purity and holiness of the Divine Life in being perfect as God is perfect, than they manifest themselves to be his Children, Matth. 5. And in Matth. 7. Christ encourageth men to seek and pray for the Spirit, (which is the best gift that God can give to men) because he is their Heavenly Father, much more bountiful and tender to all helpless Souls that seek to him, than any earthly parent, whose Nature is degenerated from that primitive goodness, can be to his children. But those Apostate Spirits that know not to return to the original of their being's, but implant themselves into some other stock, and seek to incorporate and unite themselves to another line by sin and wickedness, cut themselves off from this divine privilege, and lose their own birthright; they do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (if I may borrow that phrase) and lapse into another nature. All this was well expressed by Proclus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lib. 4. in Tinaeum. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All Souls are the Children of God, but all of them know not their God; but such as know him and live like to him, are called the Children of God. CHAP. IX. An APPENDIX concerning the Reason of Positive Laws. BUT here, as an Appendix to the two former Deductions, it may be of good use to inquire into the Reason of such Laws as we call Positive, which God hath in all times, as is commonly supposed, enjoined obedience to; which are not the eternal dictates and Decretals of the Divine Nature communicating itself to immortal Spirits, but rather deduce their original from the free will and pleasure of God. To solve this Difficulty, that of S. Paul may seem a fit Medium, who tells us, * Gal. 3. The Law was added because of transgression; though I doubt not but he means thereby the moral Law as well as any other. The true intent and scope of these Positive laws, (and it may be of such an external promulgation of the moral) seems to be nothing else but this, to secure the eternal Law of Righteousness from transgression. As the Jews say of their decreta sapientum, that they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an hedge to the Law; so we may say of these Divine Decretals, they were but cautionary and preventive of disobedience to that Higher Law: and therefore Saint Paul tells us why the moral Law was made such a Political business by an external promulgation, etc. 1 Tim. 1. 9 not so much because of righteous men, in whom the Law of Nature lives, who perform the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without any outward Law, but it was given for the lawless and disobedient, etc. And therefore I doubt not but we may safely conclude, that God gave not those Positive Laws merely pro imperio, if I may use that expression; it was not merely to manifest his Absolute Dominion & sovereignty, as some think, but for the good of those that were enjoined to obey; and this belief Moses endeavours almost throughout the whole Book of Deuteronomy to strengthen the Israelites in: and therefore God was so ready upon all occasions to dispense with these Laws, and requires the Jews to omit the observance of them, when they might seem to justle with any other Law of Moral duty or Humane necessity, as may be observed in many Instances in Scripture. But for a more distinct unfolding of this point, we may take notice of this difference in the notion of Good and Evil, as we are to converse with them. Some things are so absolutely, and somethings are so only relatively. That which is absolutely good, is every way Superior to us, and we ought always to be commanded by it, because we are made under it: But that which is relatively good to us, may sometime be commanded by us. Eternal Truth and Righteousness are in themselves perfectly & absolutely good, and the more we conform ourselves to them, the better we are. But those things that are only good relatively and in order to us, we may say of them, that they are so much the better, by how much the more they are conformed to us, I mean, by how much the more they are accommodated and fitted to our estate and condition, and may be fit means to help and promote us in our pursuit of some Higher good: and such indeed is the matter of all Positive Laws, and the symbolical or ritual part of Religion. And as we are made for the former, viz. what is absolutely good, to serve that; so are these latter made for us, as our Saviour hath taught us when he tells us that the Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath: and as sincere and real Christians grow up towards true perfection, the less need have they of Positive precepts or Externall helps. Yet I doubt it is nothing else but a wanton fastus and proud temper of spirit in our times that makes so many talk of being above Ordinances, who, if their own arrogance and presumption would give them leave to lay aside the flattering glass of their own Self-love, would find themselves to have most need of them. What I have observed concerning the Things absolutely good, I conceive to be included in that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mentioned Dan. 9 everlasting righteousness, which the Prophet there saith should be brought in and advanced by Messiah: this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the Righteousness which is of an eternal and immutable nature, as being a conformity with eternal and Unchangeable Truth: For there is a Righteousness which thus is not eternal, but Positive and at the pleasure of God that dictates it: and such was the Righteousness which Christ said it became him to fulfil when he was baptised; there Matth. 3. was no necessity that any such thing should become due. But the Foundation of this Everlasting righteousness is something unalterable. To speak more particularly, That the Highest good should be loved in the Highest degree; That dependant creatures, that borrow all they have from God, should never glory in themselves, or admire themselves, but ever admire and adore that unbounded Goodness which is the Source of their being's and all the Good they partake of; That we should always do that which is just and right, according to the measure we would others should do with us: these, and some other things which a rectified Reason will easily supply, are immutably true and righteous; so that it never was nor can be true, that they are unnecessary. And whoso hath his Heart moulded into a delight in such a Righteousness and the practice thereof, hath this Eternal righteousness brought into his Soul, which Righteousness is also true and real, not like that imaginary Externall righteousness of the Law which the Pharisees boasted in. CHAP. X. The Conclusion of this Treatise concerning the Existence and Nature of God, showing how our Knowledge of God comes to be so imperfect in this State, while we are here in this terrestrial Body. Two ways observed by Plotinus, whereby This Body does prejudice the Soul in her Operations. That the Better Philosophers and more Contemplative Jews did not deny the Existence of all kind of Body in the other state. What meant by Zoroaster's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. What kind of knowledge of God cannot be attained to in this life. What meant by Flesh and Blood, 1 Cor. 15. FOR the concluding of this Discourse, as a Mantissa to what hath been said, we shall a little consider how inconsistent a thing a Perfect knowledge of God is with this Mundane and corporeal state which we are in here. While we are in the Body, we are absent from the Lord, as S. Paul speaks, and that (I think) without a mystery: Such Bodies as ours are being fitted for an Animal state, and pieces of this whole Machina of Sensible Matter, are perpetually drawing down our Souls, when they would raise up themselves by Contemplatior of the Deity; and the caring more or less for the things of this Body, so exercises the Soul in this state, that it cannot attend upon God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without distraction. In the ancient metaphysics such a Body as this is we carry about us, is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the dark Den and Sepulchre in which Souls are imprisoned and entombed, with many other expressions of the like importance; and Proclus tells us that the Commoration of the Soul in such a Body as this, is, according to the common vote of Antiquity, nothing else but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a dwelling or pitching its Tabernacle in the Valley of Oblivion and Death. But * Enn. 4. l. 8. Plotinus, in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, seems not to be easily satisfied with allegorical descriptions, and therefore searching more strictly into this business, tells his own and their meaning in plainer terms, that This Body is an occasion of Evil to the Soul two ways; 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as it hinders its mental operations, presenting its Idola specûs continually to it: 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as it calls forth its advertency to its own Passions, which while it exerciseth itself about too earnestly, it falls into a sinful inordinacy. Yet did not the Platonists nor the more Contemplative Jews deny the Existence of all kind of Body in the other State, as if there should be nothing residing there but naked Souls totally devested of all corporeal Essence; for they held that the Soul should in the other World be united with a Body, not such a one as it did act in here, (which was not without disturbance) but such as should be most agreeable to the Soul, which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spiritual Vehicle of the Soul, and by Zoroaster it was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a kind of Umbra or Aereal Mantle in which the Soul wraps herself, which, he said, remained with her in the state of glory, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in the Jewish language it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indumentum quoddam interius, as Gaulmin hath observed in his De vita & morte Mosis. But to return; the Platonists have pointed out a threefold knowledge of God, 1. one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2. the second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 3. the last 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and this last they affirmed to be unattainable by us, it being that ineffable Light whereby the Divinity comprehends its own Essence penetrating all that Immensity of Being which itself is. The First may be attained to in this life; but the Second in its full perfection we cannot reach here in this life, because this knowledge ariseth out of a blissful Union with God himself, which therefore they are wont to call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Contact of intellectual Being, and sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, that I may phrase it in the Scripture words, a beholding of God face to face, which is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arcanum facierum the Jewish writers speak of, which we cannot attain to while we continue in this concrete and bodily state. And so when Moses desired to behold the face of God, that is, as the * Maimon. de fundam. legis, cap. 1. Jews understand it, that a distinct Idea of the Divine Essence might be imprinted upon his Mind, God told him, * Exod. 33. 20. No man can see me, and live; that is, no man in this corruptible state is capable of attaining to this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or visio facierum, as Maimonides expounds it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Understanding of the living man, who is compounded of Body and Soul, is utterly unable clearly to apprehend the Divine Essence, to see it as it is. And so S. Paul distinguisheth the knowledge of this life as taken in this complex sense, and of the life to come: that now we see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a glass, which is continually sullied and darkened, while we look into it, by the breathing of our Animal fancies, passions and imaginations upon it; and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 darkly: but we shall see then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 face to face; which is the translation of that Hebrew phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And in the like manner does a Greek Philosopher compare these two sorts of Knowledge which the Soul hath of God in this life and in that to come, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Soul will reckon all this knowledge of God which we have here by way of Science but like a fable or parable, when once it is in conjunction with the Father, feasting upon Truth itself, and beholding God in the pure rays of his own Divinity. I shall conclude all with that which S. Paul expressly tells us, 1 Cor. 15. 50. Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; where, by Flesh and Blood he seems to mean nothing else but Man in this complex and compounded state of Soul and Body, I mean corruptible, earthy Body: and it was a common Periphrasis of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 amongst the Jews, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: in the like sense is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Flesh & Blood, in those and other places in the New Testament used, where this phrase occurs, viz. Matth. 16. 17. Gal. 1. 16. Ephes. 6. 12. Heb. 2. 14. But in opposition to this gross earthy Body, the Apostle speaks of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a spiritual Body, v. 44. such as shall put on incorruption and immortality, v. 53. and consequently differing from that Body which here makes up this compounded animal Being: and accordingly our Saviour speaks of the children of the Resurrection, that they * Luk. 20. neither marry nor are given in marriage, nor can they die any more, but are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or, as it is in S. Matthew and Mark, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Angels of God; and so the Jewish writers are wont to use the same phrase to express the state of Glory by, viz. that then good men shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sicut Angeli ministerii. OF prophecy: OR, A DISCOURSE Treating of The Nature of prophecy. The Different degrees of the prophetical Spirit. The Difference of prophetical Dreams from all other Dreams recorded in Scripture. The Difference of the True prophetical Spirit from enthusiastical Imposture. What the meaning of those Actions is that are frequently in Scripture attributed to the Prophets, whether they were real or only Imaginary. The Schools of the Prophets. The Sons, or Disciples of the Prophets. The Dispositions antecedent and preparatory to prophesy. The Periods of Time when the prophetical Spirit ceased in the Jewish and Christian Churches. Rules for the better understanding of prophetical Writ. 2 Pet. 1. 21. For prophecy came not in old time by the will of man, but holy men of God spoke being moved by the Holy Ghost. Philo Jud. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. OF prophecy. CHAP. I. That prophecy is the way whereby Revealed Truth is dispensed and conveyed to us. Man's Mind capable of conversing and being acquainted as well with Revealed or Positive Truth, as with natural Truth. Truths of natural inscription may be excited in us and cleared to us by means of prophetical Influence. That the Scripture frequently accommodates itself to vulgar apprehension, and speaks of things in the greatest way of condescension. HAving spoken to those Principles of natural theology which have the most proper and necessary influence into Life and practice, and are most pregnant with moral goodness; we come now to consider Those pieces of Revealed Truth which tend most of all to foment and cherish true and real Piety. But before we fall pressly into any strict Enquiry concerning them, it may not be amiss to examine How and in what manner This kind of Truth, which depends solely upon the Free will of God, is manifested unto mankind; and so treat a little concerning prophecy, which indeed is the only way whereby This kind of Truth can be dispensed to us. For though our own Reason and Understanding carry all Natural Truth necessary for Practice in any sort, engraven upon themselves, and folded up in their own Essences more immediately, as being the first participations of the Divine mind considered in its own Eternal nature: yet Positive Truth can only be made known to us by a free influx of the Divine Mind upon our Minds and Understandings. And as it ariseth out of nothing else but the free pleasure of the Divinity, so without any natural determination it freely shines upon the Souls of men where and when it lifteth, hiding its light from them or displaying it forth upon them, as it pleaseth. Yet the souls of men are as capable of conversing with it, though it do not naturally arise out of the fecundity of their own Understandings, as they are with any Sensible and External Objects. And as our Sensations carry the notions of Material things to our Understandings which before were unacquainted with them; so there is some Analogical way whereby the knowledge of Divine Truth may also be revealed to us. For so we may call as well that Historical Truth of Corporeal and Material things, which we are informed of by our Senses, Truth of Revelation, as that Divine Truth which we now speak of: and therefore we may have as certain and infallible a way of being acquainted with the one, as with the other. And God having so contrived the nature of our Souls, that we may converse one with another, and inform one another of things we knew not before, would not make us so deaf to his Divine voice that breaks the rocks, and rends the mountains asunder; He would not make us so undisciplinable in Divine things, as that we should not be capable of receiving any Impressions from himself of those things which we were before unacquainted with. And this way of communicating Truth to the Souls of men is originally nothing else but Prophetical or Enthusiastical; and so we may take notice of the General nature of prophecy. Though I would not all this while be mistaken, as if I thought no Natural Truth might be by the means of Prophetical influence awakened within us, and cleared up to us, or that we could not lumine prophetico behold the Truths of natural inscription; for indeed one main end and scope of the Prophetical Spirit seems to be the quickening up of our Minds to a more lively converse with those Eternal Truths of Reason, which commonly lie buried in so much fleshly obscurity within us, that we discern them not. And therefore the Scripture treats not only of those Pieces of Truth which are the Results of God's free counsels, but also of those which are most akin and allied to our own Understandings, and that in the greatest way of condescension that may be, speaking to the weakest sort of men in the most vulgar sort of dialect: which it may not be amiss to take a little notice of. Divine Truth hath its Humiliation and Exinanition, as well as its Exaltation. Divine Truth becomes many times in Scripture incarnate, debasing itself to assume our rude conceptions, that so it might converse more freely with us, and infuse its own Divinity into us. God having been pleased herein to manifest himself not more jealous of his own Glory, than he is (as I may say) zealous of our good. Nos non habemus aures, sicut Deus habet linguam. If he should speak in the language of Eternity, who could understand him, or interpret his meaning? or if he should have declared his Truth to us only in a way of the purest abstraction that Humane Souls are capable of, how should then the more rude and illiterate sort of men have been able to apprehend it? Truth is content, when it comes into the world, to wear our mantles, to learn our language, to conform itself as it were to our dress and fashions: it affects not that State or Fastus which the disdainful Rhetorician sets out his style withal, Non Tarentinis aut Siculis haec scribimus; but it speaks with the most Idiotical sort of men in the most Idiotical way, and becomes all things to all men, as every son of Truth should do, for their good. Which was well observed in that old Cabbalistical axiom among the Jews, Lumen supernum nunquam descendit sine indumento. And therefore (it may be) the best way to understand the true sense and meaning of the Scripture is not rigidly to examine it upon Philosophical Interrogatories, or to bring it under the scrutiny of School-Definitions and Distinctions. It speaks not to us so much in the tongue of the learned Sophies of the world, as in the plainest and most vulgar dialect that may be. Which the Jews constantly observed and took notice of, and therefore it was one common Rule among them for a true understanding of the Scripture, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lex loquitur linguâ filorum hominum. Which Maimonides expounds thus, in More Nevoch. Par. 1. C. 26. Quicquid homines ab initio cogitationis suae intelligentiâ & imaginatione suâ possunt assequi, id in Scriptura attribuitur Creatori. And therefore we find almost all Corporeal properties attributed to God in Scripture, quia vulgus hominum ab initio cogitationis Entitatem non apprehendunt, nisi in rebus corporeis, as the same Author observes. But such of them as sound Imperfection in vulgar ears, as Eating and Drinking, & the like, these (saith he) the Scripture no where attributes to him. The reason of this plain and Idiotical style of Scripture it may be worth our farther taking notice of, as it is laid down by the forenamed Author C. 33. Haec causa est propter quam Lex loquitur linguâ filiorum hominum, etc. For this reason the Law speaks according to the language of the sons of men, because it is the most commodious and easy way of initiating and teaching Children, Women, and the Common people, who have not ability to apprehend things according to the very nature and essence of them. And in C. 34. Et si per Exempla & Similitudines non deduceremur, etc. And if we were not led to the knowledge of things by Examples and Similitudes, but were put to learn and understand all things in their Formal notions and Essential definitions, and were to believe nothing but upon preceding Demonstrations; then we may well think that (seeing this cannot be done but after long preparations) the greater part of men would be at the conclusion of their days, before they could know whether there be a God or no, etc. Hence is that axiom so frequent among the Jewish Doctors, Magna est virtus vel fortitudo Prophetarum, qui assimilant formam cum formante eam, i. e. Great is the power of the Prophets, who while they looked down upon these Sensible and Conspicable things, were able to furnish out the notion of Intelligible and Inconspicable being's thereby to the rude Senses of Illiterate people. The Scripture was not writ only for Sagacious and Abstracted minds, or Philosophical heads; for then how few are there that should have been taught the true Knowledge of God thereby? Vidi filios coenaculi, & erant pauci, was an ancient Jewish proverb. We are not always rigidly to adhere to the very Letter of the Text. There is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Scripture, as the Jewish interpreters observe. We must not think that it always gives us Formal Definitions of things, for it speaks commonly according to Vulgar apprehension: as when it tells of the Ends of the heaven, which now almost every Idiot knows hath no ends at all. So Psal. 19 Mat. 24. when it tells us Gen. 2. 7. that God breathed into man the breath of life, and man became a living soul; the expression is very Idiotical as may be, and seems to comply with that vulgar conceit, that the Soul of Man is nothing else but a kind of Vital breath or air: and yet the Immortality thereof is evidently insinuated in setting forth a double Original of the two parts of Man, his Body and his Soul; the one of which is brought in as arising up out of the Dust of the earth, the other as proceeding from the Breath of God himself. So we find very Vulgar expressions concerning God himself, besides those which attribute Sensation and Motion to him, as when he is set forth as riding upon the wings of the Wind, riding upon the Clouds, sitting in Heaven, and the like, which seem to determine his indifferent Omnipresence to some peculiar place: whereas indeed such passages as these are can be fetched from nothing else but those crass apprehensions which the generality of men have of God, as being most there, from whence the objects of dread and admiration most of all smite and insinuate themselves into their Senses, as they do from the Air, Clouds, Winds or Heaven. So the state of Hell and misery is set forth by such denominations as were most apt to strike a terror into the minds of men, and accordingly it is called Coetus Gigantum, the place where all those old Giants, whom divine vengeance pursued in the general Deluge, were assembled together, as it is well observed by a late Author of our own upon Proverbs 21. 16. The Mr. Mede in Diatrib. first part. man that wandreth out of the way of understanding, in coetu Gigantum commorabitur. And accordingly we find the state and condition of these expressed Job 26. 5. Gigantes gemunt sub aquis; & qui habitant cum iis. Nudus est infernus coram illo, & nullum est operimentum perditioni, as the Vulgar Latin renders it, The Giants groan under the waters, and they that dwell with them. Hell is naked before him, (that is, God,) and destruction hath no covering. In like manner our Saviour sets forth Hell as a great valley of fire like that of Hinnom, which was prepared with a great deal of skill, to torture and torment the Devils in. Again we find Heaven set forth sometimes as a place of continual banqueting, where, according to the Jewish customs, they should lie down in one another's bosoms at a perpetual Feast: Sometimes as a Paradise furnished with all kinds of delight and pleasure. Again, when the Scripture would insinuate God's seriousness and reality in any thing, it brings him in as ordering it a great while ago before the foundation of the world was laid, as if he more regarded that then the building of the world. I might instance in many more things of this nature, wherein the Philosophical or Physical nature and Literal verity of things cannot so reasonably be supposed to be set forth to us, as the Moral and Theological. But I shall leave this Argument, and now come more precisely to consider of the nature of prophecy, by which God flows in upon the Minds of men extrinfecally to their own proper operations, and converghs truth immediately from himself into them. CHAP. II. That the Prophetical Spirit did not always manifest itself with the same clearness and evidence. The Gradual difference of Divine illumination between Moses, the Prophets, and the Hagiographi. A general survey of the Nature of prophecy properly so called. Of the joint impressions and operations of the Understanding and fancy in prophecy. Of the four degrees of prophecy. The difference between a Vision and a Dream. BUT before we do this, we shall briefly premise something in general concerning that Gradual variety whereby these Divine Enthusiasms were discovered to the Prophets of old. The Prophetical Spirit did not always manifest itself eodem vigore luminis, with the same clearness and evidence, in the same exaltation of its light: But sometimes that light was more strong and vivid, sometimes more wan and obscure; which seems to be insinuated in that passage, Heb. 1. 1. God who in time past spoke unto the Fathers by the prophet's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. So we find an evident difference of Prophetical illumination asserted in Scripture between Moses and the rest of the Prophets, Deut. 34. 10. And there arose not a Prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face: which words have a manifest reference to that which God himself in a more public and open way declared concerning Moses, upon occasion of some arrogant speeches of Aaron and Miriam, who would equalise their own Degree of prophecy to that of Moses, Numb. 12. 5, 6, 7, 8. And the Lord came down in the pillar of the cloud, and stood in the door of the Tabernacle, and called Aaron and Miriam; and they both came forth: And he said, Hear my words; If there be a Prophet among you, I the Lord will make myself known unto him in a Vision, and will speak unto him in a Dream: My servant Moses is not so, who is faithful in all mine house; with him will I speak mouth to mouth, even apparently, and not in dark speeches, and the similitude of the Lord shall he behold. Wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak against my servant Moses? In which words that degree of Divine illumination whereby God made himself known to Moses seems to be set forth as something transcendent to the Prophetical illumination: and so the phrase of the New Testament is wont to distinguish between Moses and the Prophets, as if indeed Moses had been greater than any Prophet. But besides this Gradual difference between Moses and the Prophets, there is another difference very famous amongst the Jewish Writers between the Prophets and the Hagiographi, which Hagiographi were supposed by them to be much inferior to the Prophets. But what this difference between them was, we shall endeavour to show more fully hereafter. Having briefly premised this, and glanced at a Threefold Inspiration relating to Moses, the Prophets, and the Hagiographi; we shall first of all inquire into the Nature of that which is peculiarly amongst the Jews called Prophetical. And this is thus defined to us by Maimonides in Par. 2. c. 36. of his More Nevochim, Veritas & quidditas Prophetiae nihil aliud est quàm Influentia à Deo Optimo Maximo, mediante intellectu Agente, super facultatem Rationalem primò, deinde super facultatem Imaginatricem influens. i e. The true essence of prophecy is nothing else but an Influence from the deity upon the Rational first, and afterwards the Imaginative faculty, by the mediation of the Active intellect. Which Definition belongs indeed to prophesy as it is Technicallie so called, and distinguished by Maimonides both from that degree of Divine illumination which was above it, which the Masters constantly attribute to Moses, and from that other degree inferior to it, which they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Spiritus Sanctus, that Holy Spirit that moved in the Souls of the Hagiographi. But Rabbi Joseph Albo in Maam 3. c. 8. De fundamentis fidei, hath given us a more large description, so as to take in also the gradus Mosaicus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. Prophecy is an influence from God upon the Rational faculty, either by the Mediation of the fancy or otherwise: and this influence, whether by the ministry of an Angel or otherwise, makes a man to know such things as by his Natural abilities he could not attain to the knowledge of. Though here our Author seems too much to have straightened the latitude of Prophetical influence, whereby (as we intimated before) not only those pieces of Divine truth may be communicated to the Souls of men which are not contained within their own Ideas, but also those may be excited which have a necessary connexion with and dependence upon Reason. But the main thing that we shall observe in this description is, that faculty or Power of the Soul upon which these extraordinary impressions of Divine light or influence are made; which in all proper prophecy is both the Rational and Imaginative power. For in this Case they supposed the Imaginative power to be set forth as a Stage upon which certain Visa and Simulacra were represented to their Understandings, just indeed as they are to us in our common Dreams; only that the Understandings of the Prophets were always kept awake and strongly acted by God in the midst of these apparitions, to see the intelligible Mysteries in them, and so in these Types and Shadows, which were Symbols of some spiritual things, to behold the Antitypes themselves: which is the meaning of that old maxim of the Jews which we formerly cited out of Maimonides, Magna est virtus seu fortitudo Prophetarum qui assimilant formam cum formante eam. But in case the Imaginative faculty be not thus set forth as the Scene of all Prophetical illumination, but that the Impressions of things nakedly without any Schemes or Pictures be made immediately upon the Understanding itself, then is it reckoned to be the gradus Mosaicus, wherein God speaks as it were face to face; of which more hereafter. Accordingly R. Albo, in the Book before cited and 10th Chapter, hath distinguished prophecy into these four degrees. The first and lowest of all is, when the Imaginative power is most predominant, so that the impressions made upon it are too busy, & the Scene becomes too turbulent for the Rational faculty to discern the true Mystical and Anagogical sense of them clearly; and in this case the Enthusiasms spend themselves extremely in Parables, Similitudes and Allegories, in a dark and obscure manner, as is very manifest in Zachary, and many of Ezechiel his prophecies, as also those of Daniel: where though we have first the outward frame of things Dramatically set forth so potently in the Prophet's fancy, as that his Mind was not at the same time capable of the mystical meaning, yet that was afterward made known to him, but yet with much obscurity still attending it. This declining state of prophecy the Jews supposed then principally to have been, and this Divine illumination to have been then setting in the Horizon of the Jewish Church, when they were carried captive into Babylon. All which we may take a little more fully from our Author himself in his 3. Book and 17. Chapter, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. Every Prophet that is of a strong, fagacious and piercing Understanding, will apprehend the thing nakedly without any Similitude, whence it comes to pass that all his say prove distinct and clear, and free from all obscurity, having a literal truth in them: But a Prophet of an inferior rank or degree, his words are obscure, enwrapped in Riddles and Parables, and therefore have not a Literal but Allegorical truth contained in them. Thus he. And so afterwards, according to the general opinion of the Jewish Masters, he tells us that after the Captivity, in the twilight of prophecy, Ezekiel began to speak altogether in Riddles and Parables; and so he himself complains to God, * Chap. 20. 49. Ah Lord God, they say of me, Doth he not speak Parables? The second degree which our forementioned Author makes of prophecy is, when the strength of the Imaginative and Rational powers equally balance one another. The third is, when the Rational power is most predominant; in which case (as we heard before) the mind of the Prophet is able to strip those things that are represented to it in the glass of fancy of all their materiality and sensible nature, and apprehend them more distinctly in their own naked Essence. The last and Highest is the gradus Mosaicus, in which all Imagination ceaseth, & the Representation of Truth descends not so low as the Imaginative part, but is made in the highest stage of Reason and Understanding. But we shall hereafter speak more fully concerning the several degrees of Prophetical Inspiration, and discourse more particularly of the Ruach hakkodesh, the highest degree of prophecy or gradus Mosaicus, and Bath col or the lowest degree of prophecy. Seeing then that generally all prophecy or Prophetical Enthusiasm lies in the joint-impressions and operations of both these forementioned faculties, the Jews were wont to understand that place Numb. 12. 6, etc. as generally deciphering that State or Degree of prophecy by which God would discover himself to all those Prophets that ever should arise up amongst them, or ever had been, except Moses and the Messiah. And there are only these * In ist is duabus partibus, Somnio & Visione, continentur omnes Prophetiae gradus. Maimon. in More Nev. p. 2. c. 36. Two ways declared whereby God would reveal himself to every other Prophet, either in a Vision or a Dream; both which are perpetually attended with those Visa and Simulacra sensibilia as must needs be impressed upon Common sense or fancy, whereby the Prophets seemed to have all their Senses waking and exercising their several functions, though indeed all was but scenical or Dramatical. According to this Twofold way of Divine inspiration, the * Chap. 2. 28. Prophet Joel foretells the Nature of that Prophetical Spirit that should be poured out in the latter times; and in Jeremy 14. 14. we have the false prophets brought in as endeavouring apishly to imitate the true Prophets of God, in fortifying their fancies by the power of Divination, that they might talk of Dreams and Visions when they came among the people. Now for the Difference of these two, a Dream and a Vision, it seems rather to lie in Circumstantials then in any thing Essential; & therefore Maim. part. 2. More Nev. cap. 45. tells us that in a Dream a voice was frequently heard, which was not usual in a Vision. But the representation of Divine things by some Sensible images or some Narrative voice must needs be in both of them. But yet the Jews are wont to make a Vision superior to a Dream, as representing things more to the life, which indeed seizeth upon the Prophet while he is awake, but it no sooner surpriseth him but that all his external senses are bound; and so it often declines into a true Dream, as Maimon. in the place forenamed proves by the example of Abraham, Gen. 15. 12. where the Vision in which God had appeared to him (as it is related ver. 1.) passed into a Sleep. And when the Sun was going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abraham, and lo an horror of great darkness fell upon him. Which words seem to be nothing else but a description of that passage which he had by Sleep out of his Vision into a Dream. Now these Ecstatical impressions whereby the Imagination and Mind of the Prophet was thus ravished from itself, and was made subject wholly to some Agent intellect informing it and shining upon it, I suppose S. Paul had respect to 1 Cor. 13. Now we see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by a glass, in riddles or parables; for so he seems to compare the Highest illuminations which we have here, with that constant Irradiation of the Divinity upon the Souls of men in the life to come: and this glassing of Divine things by hieroglyphics and Emblems in the fancy which he speaks of, was the proper way of Prophetical inspiration. For the further clearing of which I shall take notice of one passage more out of a Jewish writer, that is, R. Bechai, concerning this present argument, which I find Com. in Num. 12. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Voluit Deus assimilare Prophetiam reliquorum Prophetarum homini speculum inspicienti, prout innuunt Rabbini nostri illo axiomate proverbiali, Nemo inspiciat speculum Sabbato: illud speculum est vitreum, in quo reflectitur homini sua ipsius forma & imago per vim reflexivam speculi, cum revera nihil ejusmodi in speculo realiter existat. Talis erat Prophetia reliquorum Prophetarum, eo quòd contuebantur sacras & puras imagines & lumina superna, ex medio splendoris & puritatis istorum luminum realium, visae sunt illis similitudines, visae sunt illis tales formae quales sunt formae humanae. By which he seems to refer to those images of the living Creatures represented in a Prophetical vision to Esay and EZekiel; but generally intimates thus much to us, That the light and splendour of Prophetical illumination was not so triumphant over the prophet's fancy, but that he viewed his own Image, and saw like a man, and understood things after the manner of men in all these Prophetical visions. CHAP. III. How the Prophetical Dreams did differ from all other kinds of Dreams recorded in Scripture. This further illustrated out of several passages of Philo Judaeus pertinent to this purpose. WE have now taken a General survey of the Nature of prophecy, which is always attended (as we have showed) with a Vision or a Dream, though indeed there is no Dream properly without a Vision. And here before we pass from hence, it will be necessary to take notice of a man Distinction the Hebrew Doctors are wont to make of Dreams, lest we mistake all those Dreams which we meet with in Scripture, & take them all for Prophetical, whereas many of them were not such. For though indeed they were all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent by God, yet many were sent as Monitions and Instructions, and had not the true force and vigour of Prophetical Dreams in them; and so they are wont commonly to distinguish between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. There are somnia vera▪ and somnia Prophetica: and these Maimonides in More Nev▪ Par. 2. Cap. 41. hath thus generally characterized, Quando dicitur, Deus venit ad N, in somnio noctis, id Prophetia minimè nuncupari potest, neque vir talis, Propheta, etc. When it is said in Holy writ, That God came to such a man in a Dream of the night, that cannot be called a prophecy, nor such a man a Prophet; for the meaning is no more than this, That some Admonition or Instruction was given by God to such a man, and that it was in a Dream. Of this sort He and the rest of the Hebrew Writers hold those Dreams to be which were sent to Pharaoh, Nabuchadnezzar, Abimelech and Laban; upon which two last our Author observes the great Caution of Onkelos the Proselyte (who was instructed in the Jewish learning by R. Eleazar and R. Joshua, the most famous Doctors of that age) that in his Preface to those Dreams of Laban and Abimelech he says, Et venit verbum à Domino: but doth not say (as when the Dreams were Prophetical) Et revelavit se Dominus. Besides, a main reason for which they deny those Dreams to be Prophetical is, for that they that were made partakers of them were unsanctified men; whereas it is a tradition amongst them, that the Spirit of prophecy was not communicated to any but good men. But indeed the main difference between these two sorts of Dreams seems to consist in this, That such as were not Prophetical were much weaker in their Energy upon the Imagination than the Other were, in so much that they wanted the strength and force of a Divine evidence, so as to give a plenary assurance to the Mind of him who was the subject of them, of their Divine original; as we see in those Dreams of Solomon, 1 Kings 3. v. 5; 15. and ch. 9 2. where it is said of him, when he awaked he said, Behold it was a Dream; as if he had not been effectually confirmed from the Energy of the Dream itself that it was a true Prophetical influx. But there is yet another difference they are wont to make between them, which is, That these somnia vera or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ordinarily contained in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, something that was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or void of reality: as in that Dream of Joseph concerning the Sun, the Moon, and the eleven Stars bowing down to him; whereas his Mother, which should there have been signified by the Moon, was dead and buried before, and so uncapable of performing that respect to him which the other at last did. Upon occasion of which Dream the Gemarist. Doctors in Berachoth c. 9 have framed this Axiom, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, As there is no corn without straw, so neither is there any mere Dream without something that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, void of reality, & insignificant. Accordingly Rab. Albo in Maam. 3. c. 9 hath framed this distinction between them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, There is no mere Dream without something in it that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but prophecy is a thing wholly and most exactly true. The general difference between Prophetical Dreams and those that are merely Nouthetical or monitory, and all else which we find recorded in Scripture, Philo Jud. in his Tract 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and elsewhere, hath at large laid down. The proper character of those that were Prophetical he clearly insinuates to be that Ecstatical rapture whereby in all Prophetical Dreams some more potent cause, acting upon the Mind and Imagination of the Prophets, snatched them from themselves, and so left more potent and evident impressions upon them. I shall the more largely set down his Notion, because it tends to the clearing of this business in hand, and is, I think, much obscured, if not totally corrupted by his translator Gelenius. His design is indeed to show that Moses taught these several ways whereby Dreams are conveyed from Heaven, that so his sublime and recondite doctrine might be the better hid up therein; and therefore sailing between Cabbalisme and Platonisme he gropes after an Allegorical and Mystical meaning in them all. His first sort of Divine Dreams he thus defines, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The first kind was when God himself did begin the motion in the fancy, and secretly whispered such things as are unknown indeed to us, but perfectly known to himself. And of this sort he makes Joseph's dreams, the sense whereof was unknown to Joseph himself at first, and then runs out into an Allegorical exposition of them in the Book entitled Joseph. The second kind is this, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. When our Rational faculty being moved together with the Soul of the World, and filled with a divinely-inspired fury, doth predict those things that are to come. In which words by his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he means the same thing with that which in a former Book about the same Argument he had called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Mind of the Universe, which mingling its influence with our Minds begets these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or previsions. And this is nothing else but that which others of his tribe call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Intellectus agens, which it seems he understood to be the same with Anima Mundi or Universal Soul, as it is described by the Pythagoreans and Platonists. Of this sort of Dreams he makes those of Jacob's Ladder and of Laban's Sheep. And these kinds of Dreams, viz. that wherein the Intellectus agens doth simply act upon our Minds as patients to it, and that wherein our Minds do cooperate with the Universal Soul, and so understand the meaning of the influx, he thus compares together; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. In which words it is to be observed that he calls the matter of the first sort of Dreams 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which Gelenius hath mistake whilst he translates it Dei oraculis certis convenientia. With his leave therefore I should thus interpret that whole passage, Quare Moses sacer Antistes indigitans illas phantasias quae oboriuntur secundùm primam speciem, eas perspicuè & admodum manifestè indicavit; (i. e. by adding an Explication of those aenigmata of Joseph's Sun, Moon, Stars and Sheaves, which he himself in his Dream understood not; which Explication is not made in the examples of the second sort) quip Deus subjecit illas phantasias per somnia quae similes sunt veris Prophetiis, (i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, perfectae Prophetiae, sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, somniis Propheticis, uti loqui amant Magistri.) Secundi verò generis somnia nec planè dilucidè nec valde obscurè indigitavit; qualia erant Somnia de Scala coelesti, etc. Now these Dreams of Joseph though they contained matter of a like nature to Prophetical inspiration, yet were they indeed not such, and therefore are accounted of by all the Jewish writers only as Somnia vera; and so our Author endeavours to prove very fitly to our purpose, though indeed upon a mistake which he took out of the Version of the * Though he was a Jew, yet was he trained up amongst the Greeks, and not well acquainted with the Hebrew language. Seventy, Gen. 37. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Joseph said, [ * Which word is not in the Hebrew. methought we were binding sheaves] That word [methought] is the language of one that is uncertain, dubious, and obscurely surmising; not of one that is firmly assured, and plainly sees things: indeed it very well befits those who are newly awaked out of a sound sleep, and have scarce ceased to dream, to say [methought;] not those who are fully awake, and behold all things clearly. But Jacob, who was more exercised in divine things, hath no such word as [methought] when he speaks of his Dream, but, says he, Behold, a ladder set upon the earth, and the top of it reached up to heaven, etc. After the same manner almost doth Maimonides in his More Nev. distinguish between Somnia vera & Prophetica, making jacob's Dreams (as all the Jewish writers do) to be Prophetical. The third kind of Dreams mentioned by Philo is thus laid down by him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. The third kind is, when in sleep the Soul being moved of itself, and agitating itself, is in a kind of rapturous rage, and in a divine fury doth foretell future things by a prophetic faculty. And then, which is more to our purpose, he thus sets forth the nature of those fancies which discover themselves in these kind of Dreams. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. The phantasms which belong to the third kind are more plainly declared by Moses then the former; for they containing a very profound and dark meaning, they required to the explaining of them a knowledge of the Art of interpreting Dreams: as those Dreams of Pharaoh and his Butler and Baker, and of Nabuchadnezzar, who were only amazed and dazzled with those strange Apparitions that were made to them, but not at all enlightened by them. These are of that kind which Plato sometimes speaks of, that cannot be understood without a Prophet; and therefore he would have some Prophet or Wise man always set over this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Thus we have seen these Three sorts of Dreams according to Philo, the First and Last whereof the Jewish Doctors conjoin together, and constantly prefer the Oneirocriticks of them to the Dreamers themselves: and therefore whereas they depress the notion of them considered in themselves below any Degree of prophecy, yet the Interpretation of them they attribute to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Holy Spirit; except there be an Interpretation of the Dream in the Dream itself, so as that the Mind of the Dreamer be fully satisfied both in the meaning and divinity thereof; for than it is truly Prophetical. And thus much for this Particular. CHAP. iu. A large Account of the Difference between the true Prophetical Spirit and Enthusiastical impostures. That the Pseudo-Prophetical Spirit is seated only in the Imaginative Powers and Faculties inferior to Reason. That Plato and other Wise men had a very low opinion of this Spirit, and of the Gift of Divination, and of Consulting the Oracles. That the True Prophetical Spirit seats itself as well in the Rational Powers as in the Sensitive, and that it never alienates the Mind, but informs and enlightens it. This further cleared by several Testimonies from Gentile and Christian Writers of old. An Account of those Fears and Consternations which often seized upon the Prophets. How the Prophets perceived when the Prophetical influx seized upon them. The different Evidence and Energy of the True and false Prophetical Spirit. FRom what we have formerly discoursed concerning the Stage of fancy and Imagination upon which those Visa presented themselves to the Mind of the Prophet, in which he beheld the real objects of Divine truth in which he was inspired by this means; it may be easily apprehended how easy a matter it might be for the Devils Prophets many times, by an apish imitation, to counterfeit the True Prophets of God, and how sometimes Melancholy and turgent fancies, fortified with a strong power of Divination, might unfold themselves in a semblance of true Enthusiasms. For indeed herein the Prophetical influx seems to agree with a mistaken Enthusiasm, that both of them make strong impressions upon the Imaginative powers, and require the Imaginative faculty to be vigorous and potent: and therefore Maimonides tells us that the gift of Divination, which consisted in a mighty force of Imagination, was always given to the Prophets, and that This and a Spirit of Fortitude were the main Bases of Prophecy; More Nev. part. 2. c. 38. Duas istas facultates, Fortitudinis scilicet & Divinationis, in Prophetis fortissimas & vehementissmas esse necesse est, etc. i. e. It is necessary that these two Faculties of Fortitude and Divination should be most strong and vehement in the Prophets: whereunto if at any time there was an accession of the influence of the Intellect, they were then beyond measure corroborated; in so much that (as it is well known) it hath come to this, that one man by a naked staff did prevail over a potent King, and most manfully delivered a whole Nation from bondage, viz. after it was said to him Exod. 3. 12. I will be with thee. And though there be different Degrees of these in men, yet none can be altogether without that Fortitude and magnanimity. So it was said to Jeremy Chap. 17. 18. Be not dismayed at their faces, etc. Behold I have made thee this day a defenced City; and so to Ezek. Ch. 2. 6. Be not afraid of them nor their words: and generally in all the Prophets we shall find a great Fortitude and Magnanimity of Spirit. But by the excellency of the gift of Divining they could on a sudden and in a moment foretell future things; in which faculty notwithstanding there was great diversity. Thus he. It will not be therefore any great Digression here, awhile to examine the Nature of this False light which pretends to prophesy, but is not; as being seated only in the Imaginative power, from whence the first occasion of this delusion ariseth, seeing that Power is also the Seat of all Prophetical vision. For this purpose it will not be amiss to premise that Threefold degree of Cognitive influence pointed out by Maimonides, part. 2. cap. 37. More Nev. The first is wholly Intellectual, descending only into the Rational faculty, by which that is extremely fortified and strengthened in the distinct apprehension of metaphysical Truths, from whence, as he tells us, ariseth the Sect of Philosophers, and Contemplative persons. The second is jointly into the Rational and Imaginative faculty together, and from thence springs the Sect of Prophets. The third into the Imaginative only, from whence proceeds the Sect of Politicians, Lawyers and lawgivers (whose Conceptions only run in a secular channel,) as also the Sect of Diviners, enchanters, Dreamers and Soothsayers. We shall copy out of him a Character of some of this Third sort, the rather because it so graphically delineates to us many Enthusiastical Impostors of our Age. His words are these, Hic verò monendus es, ex tertio genere esse quasdam, quibus Phantasiae, Somnia & Ecstases, quails in Prophetiae Visione esse solent, ita mirabiles obveniunt, ut planè sibi persuadeant se Prophetas esse, etc. i. e. But here I must advertise thee, that there are some of this Third sort who have sometimes such strange fancies, Dreams and Ecstasies, that they take themselves for Prophets, and much marvel that they have such fancies and Imaginations; conceiting at last that all Sciences and Faculties are without any pains or study infused into them. And hence it is that they fall into great confusions in many Theoretical matters of no small moment, and do so mix true notions with such as are merely seeming, and imaginary, as if Heaven and Earth were jumbled together. All which proceeds from the too-great force of the Imaginative faculty and the imbecility of the Rational, whence it is that nothing in it can pass forth into act. Thus he. This delusion then in his sense of those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which pretend to Revelations, ariseth from hence, that all this foreign force that is upon them serves only to vigorate & impregnate their fancies and Imaginations, but does not inform their Reasons, nor elevate them to a true understanding of things in their coherence and contexture; and therefore they can so easily embrace things absurd to all true and sober Reason: Whereas the Prophetical Spirit acting principally upon the Reason and Understanding of the Prophets, guided them consistently and intelligibly into the understanding of things. But this Pseudo-prophetical Spirit being not able to rise up above this low and dark Region of Sense or Matter, or to soar aloft into a clear Heaven of Vision, endeavoured always as much as might be to strengthen itself in the Imaginative part: and therefore the Wizzards and false prophets of old and later times have been wont always to heighten their fancies and Imaginations by all means possible; which R. Albo insinuates Maam. 3. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. There are some men whose Imaginative faculty is strong, either by Nature, or by some Artifice which they use to fortify this Imaginative faculty with; and for such purpose are the artifices which Witches and such as have familiar Spirits do use, by the help whereof the similitudes of things are more easily excited in the Imagination. Accordingly Wierus Lib. 3. Cap. 17. de Praestigiis Daemonum (who was a man (as some think) too well acquainted with these mysteries, though he himself seems to defy them) speaks to the same purpose concerning Witches, how that, so they may have more pregnant fancies, they anoint themselves, and diet themselves with some such food as they understand from the Devil is very fit for that purpose. And for further proof hereof he there quotes Baptista Porta, Lib. 2. and Cardan de subtle. Cap. 18. But we shall not over-curiously any further pry into these Arts. This kind of Divination resting merely in the Imaginative faculty seemed so exactly to imitate the Prophetical Energy in this part of it, that indeed it hath been by weaker minds mistaken for it, though the Wiser sort of the Heathens have happily found out the lameness and delusiveness of it. We have it excellently set forth by Plato in his Timaeus, where speaking of God's liberality in constituting of Man, he thus speaks of this Divination, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. i. e. As for our worse part, that it might in some sort partake of Truth, God hath seated in it the power of Divining: and it is a sufficient sign that God has indulged this faculty of Divining to the foolishness of men; for there is no sober man that is touched with this Power of Divination, unless in Sleep, when his Reason is bound, or when by Sickness or Enthusiasm he suffers some alienation of Mind. But it is then for the Wise and Sober to understand what is spoken or represented in this Fatidical passion. And so it seems Plato, who was no careless observer of these matters, could no no where find this Divining spirit in his time, except it were joined some way or other cum mentis alienatione; and therefore he looks upon it as that which is inferior to wisdom, and to be regulated by it: for so he further declares his mind to the same purpose, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, Wherefore it is a law that Prophets should be set as it were Judges over these enthusiastic Divinations, which Prophets some ignorantly and falsely call Diviners. For indeed these Prophets in his sense to whom he gives the preeminence, are none else but Wise and prudent men, who by reason of the sagacity of their Understandings were able to judge of those things which were uttered by this dull Spirit of Divination, which resided only in Faculties inferior to Reason. So in his Charmides, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. i. e. But, if you will, we will grant the Gift of Divination to be a knowledge of what is to come: but withal that it is fit that wisdom and sobriety should be Judge and Interpreter. But further, that his age was acquainted with no other Divinations then that which ariseth from a troubled fancy, and is conceived in a dark Melancholy imagination, he confirms to us in his Phaedrus, where he rightly gives us the true Etymon of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that it was called so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from rage and fury, and therefore says it was anciently called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. However he grants that it happened to many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by Divine allotment; yet it was most vulgarly incident to Sick and Melancholy men, who oftentimes by the power thereof were able to presage by what Medicines their own distempers might be best cured, as if it were nothing else but a discerning of that sympathising & symbolising complexion of their own Bodies with some other Bodies without them. And elsewhere he tells us that these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 never, or very rarely, understood the meaning and nature of their own Visa. And therefore indeed the Platonists generally seemed to reject or very much to slight all this kind of Revelation, and to acknowledge nothing transcendent to the naked Reason and Understanding of Man. So Maximus Tyrius in Dissert. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It's a bold assertion, yet I shall not doubt to say, that God's Oracles and Men's Understandings are of a near alliance. And so according to Porphyrius, lib. 2. §. 52. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Good man is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, one that needs not soothsaying, being familiarly and intimately acquainted with God himself. Likewise the Stoics will scarce allow their Wise man at any time to consult an Oracle, as we may learn from Arrian, l. 2. c. 7. and Epictetus, c. 39 and Simplicius his Comment thereupon: where that great Philosopher making a scrupulous search what those things were which it might be fit to consult the Oracle about, at last brings them into so narrow a compass, that a Wise man should never find occasion to honour the Oracle with his presence. A famous instance whereof we have in Lucan lib. 9 where Cato being advised to consult Jupiter Hammon his Oracle after Pompey's death, answers, Estnè Dei sedes nisi Terra & Pontus & Aer Et Coelum & Virtus? Superos quid quaerimus ultra? Jupiter est quodcunque vides, quocunque moveris. Sortilegis egeant dubii sempérque futuris Casibus ancipites; me non Oracula certum, Sed mors certa facit— But enough of this Particular; and I hope by this time I have sufficiently unfolded the true Seat of prophecy, and shown the right Stage thereof: as also how lame and delusive the Spirit of Divination was, which endeavoured to imitate it. Now from what hath been said ariseth one main Characteristical distinction between the Prophetical and Pseudo-prophetical spirit, viz. That the Prophetical spirit doth never alienate the Mind, (seeing it seats itself as well in the Rational powers as in the Sensitive,) but always maintains a consistency and clearness of Reason, strength and solidity of judgement, where it comes; it doth not ravish the Mind, but inform and enlighten it: But the Pseudo-prophetical spirit, if indeed without any kind of dissimulation it enters into any one, because it can rise no higher than the Middle region of Man, which is his fancy, it there dwells as in storms and tempests, and being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in itself, is also conjoined with alienations and abreptions of mind. For whensoever the Phantasms come to be disordered and to be presented tumultuously to the Soul, as it is either in a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fury, or in Melancholy, (both which kind's of alienation are commonly observed by Physicians) or else by the Energy of this Spirit of Divination, the Mind can pass no true judgement upon them; but its light and influence becomes eclipsed. But of this alienation we have already discoursed out of Plato and others. And thus the Pythian Prophetess is described by the Scholiast upon Aristophanes his Plutus, and by Lucan, lib. 5. as being filled with inward fury, while she was inspired by the Fatidical spirit, and uttering her Oracles in a strange disguise with many antic gestures, her hair torn, and foaming at her Mouth. As also Cassandra is brought in prophesying in the like manner by Lycophron. So the sibyl was noted by Heraclitus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as one speaking ridiculous and unseemly speeches with her furious mouth. And Ammianus Marcellinus in the beginning of his 21th book hath told us an old Observation concerning the Sibylls, Sibyllae crebro se dicunt ardere, torrente vi magnâ flammarum. This was cautelously observed by the Primitive Fathers, who hereby detected the Impostures of the Montanists that pretended much to prophesy, but indeed were acquainted with nothing more of it then Ecstasies or abreptions of mind: For that is it which they mean by Ecstasies. I shall first mention that of * Strom. 1. Clem. Alexandr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, The false prophets mingled Truth sometimes with falsehood: and indeed when they were in an ecstasy, they prophesied, as being servants to that grand Apostate the Devil. Eusebius mentions in Histor. Eccles. lib. 5. c. 17. a Discourse of Miltiades to this purpose, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tertullian, who was a great Friend to Montanus and his prophetical Sisters Maximilla and Priscilla, speaking of them endeavours to alleviate this business: and though he grants they were Ecstatical in their prophecies, that is, only transported by the power of a Spirit more potent than their own, as he would seem to imply; yet he denies that they used to fall into any rage or fury, which he says is the Character of every false Prophet; and so Montanus excused himself. But yet for all this, they could not avoid the lash of Jerome, who thought he saw through this ecstasy, and that indeed it was a true alienation, seeing they understood not what they spoke. Neque verò (ut Montanus cum insanis foeminis somniat) Prophetae in Ecstasi locuti sunt, ut nescirent quid loquerentur; & cùm alios erudirent, ipsi ignorarent quid dicerent, The Prophets did not (as Montanus together with some mad women dreams) speak in Ecstasies, nor did they speak they knew not what; nor were they, when they went about to instruct others, ignorant of what they said themselves. So he in his Preface to Esay. This also he otherwhere brands the Montanists withal; as in his Praoemium to Nahum, Non loquitur Propheta 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ut Montanus & Prisca Maximilláque delirant; sed quod prophetat, liber est intelligentis quae loquitur. And in his Preface to Habakuk,— Prophetae visio est, & adversum Montani dogma perversum intelligit quod videt, nec ut amens loquitur, nec in morem insanientium foeminarum dat sine ment sonum. I shall add but one Author more, and that is chrysostom, who hath very fully and excellently laid down this difference between the true and false Prophets, Hom. 29. on the first Epistle to the Corinthians. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It's the property of a Diviner to be ecstatical, to undergo some violence, to be tossed and hurried about like a mad man: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, But it's otherwise with a Prophet, whose understanding is awake, and his mind in a sober and orderly temper, and he knows every thing that he saith. But here we must not mistake the business, as if there were nothing but the most absolute Clearness and serenity of thoughts lodging in the Soul of the Prophet amidst all his Visions: And therefore we shall further take notice of that Observation of the Jews, which is vulgarly known by all acquainted with their Writings, which is concerning those Panic fears, Consternations and Affrightments and tremble, which frequently seized upon them together with the Prophetical influx. And indeed by how much stronger and more vehement those Impressions were which were made by those unwonted Visa which came in to act upon their Imaginative faculty, by so much the greater was this Perturbation and Trouble: and by how much the more the prophet's Imagination was exercised by the laboriousness of these Phantasms, the more were his natural strength and Spirits exhausted, as indeed it must needs be. Therefore Daniel being wearied with the toilsome work of his fancy about those Visions that were presented to him, Chap. 10. 8. etc. complains that there was no strength left in him; that his comeliness was turned into corruption, and he retained no strength; that when he heard the voice, he was in a deep sleep, and his face toward the ground; that his sorrows were turned upon him, and no breath was left in him. So Gen. 15. 12. when the Vision presented to Abraham passed into a Prophetical Dream, it is said, a deep sleep fell upon Abraham, and a horror of great darkness fell upon him. Upon which passage Maimonides, in the 2d Part, & 41. Ch. of his More Nevochim, thus discourseth; Quandoque autem Prophetia incipit in Visione Prophetica, & postea multiplicatur terror & passio illa vehemens, quae sequitur perfectionem operationum facultatis Imaginatricis, & tum demum venit Prophetia, sicuti contigit Abrahamo. In principio enim Prophetiae illius dicitur, (Gen. 15. 1.) Et fuit verbum Domini ad Abrahamum in Visione; et in fine ejusdem (verse. 12.) Et sopor irruit in Abrahamum, etc. And in like manner he speaks of those Fatigations that Daniel complains of, Est autem terror quidam Panicus qui occupat Prophetam inter vigilandum, sicut ex Daniele patet, quando ait, Et vidi Visionem magnam hanc, neque remansit in me ulla fortitudo, & vis mea mutata est in corruptionem, nec retinui fortitudinem ullam. Et fui lethargo oppressus super faciem meam; & facies mea ad terram. And thus this whole business is excellently deciphered unto us by R. Albo in his Third book and tenth chapter, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Behold, by reason of the strength of the Imaginative faculty and the precedency of the Influence upon that to the influence upon the Rational, the Influx doth not remain upon the Prophet without terror and Consternation; insomuch that his members shake and his joints are loosened, and he seems like one that is ready to give up the ghost by reason of his great astonishment: After all which perturbation the Prophetical influx settles itself upon the Rational faculty. From this Notion perhaps we may borrow some light for the clearing of Jeremy 23. 9 Mine heart within me is broken because of the prophets, all my bones shake: I am like a drunken man (and like a man whom Wine hath overcome) because of the Lord, and because of the words of his Holiness. The importance of which words is, That the Energy of Prophetical vision wrought thus potently upon his Animal part. Though I know R. Solomon seems to look at another meaning: But Abarbanel is here full for our present purpose, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, When Jeremy saw those false prophets eating and drinking and faring deliciously, he cried out and said, My heart is broken within me because of the Prophets; For while I behold their works, my heart is rend asunder with the extremity of my Sorrow, and because of the Prophetical influx residing upon me, my bones are all rotten, and I am like a drunken man that neither sees nor hears. And all this hath befell me because of the Lord, that is, because of the divine influx that seized upon me, and because of the words of his holiness, which have wrought such a conturbation within me, that all my senses are stupefied thereby. And thus I suppose is also that passage in Ezechiel 3. 14. to be expounded, where the Prophet describes the energy and dominion which the Prophetical spirit had over him, when in a Prophetical Vision he was carried by way of Imagination a tedious journey to those of the captivity that dwelled by the river Chebar. The Spirit of the Lord lifted me up, and took me away, and I went in bitterness, and in the heat (or hot chafing and anger) of my spirit; but the hand of the Lord was strong upon me. So Habak. 3. 2. O Lord, I have heard thy speech, and was afraid; that is, the Prophetical voice heard by him, and represented in his Imagination, was so strong that it struck a panic fear (as Maimon. expresseth it) into him. And it may be the same thing is meant Esay 21. 3. where the Prophet describes that inward conturbation and consternation that his Vision of Babylon's ruin was accompanied withal. Therefore are my loins filled with pain, pangs have taken hold upon me as the pangs of a woman that travaileth: I was bowed down at the hearing of it, I was dismayed at the seeing of it. Though I know there may be another meaning of that place not improper, viz. that the Prophet personates Babylon in the horror of that anguish that should come upon them, whereby he sets it forth the more to the Life, as Jonathan the Targumist and others would have it; though yet I cannot think this the most congruous meaning. But I have now done with this Particular, and I hope by this time have gained a fair advantage of solving one difficulty, which though it be not so much observed by our own as it is by the Jewish writers, yet it is worth our scanning, viz. How the Prophets perceived when the Prophetical inspiration first seized upon them. For (as we have before shown) there may be such Dreams and Visions which are merely delusive, and such as the false prophets were often partakers of; and besides the true Prophets might have often such Dreams as were merely vera somnia, True dreams, but not Prophetical. For the full Solution of this knot we have before shown how this Pseudo-prophetical Spirit only flutters below upon the more terrene parts of man's Soul, his Passions and fancy. The Prince of darkness comes not within the Sphere of Light and Reason to order affairs there, but that is left to the sole Oeconomy and sovereignty of the Father of Lights. There is a clear and bright heaven in man's Soul, in which Lucifer himself cannot subsist, but is tumbled down from thence as often as he assays to climb up into it. But to come more pressely to the business; The Hebrew Masters here tell us that in the beginning of Prophetical inspiration the prophet's use to have some Apparition or Image of a Man or Angel presenting itself to their Imagination. Sometimes it began with a Voice, and that either strong and vehement, or else soft and familiar. And so God is said first of all to appear to Samuel, 1 Sam. 3. 7. who is said not yet to have known the Lord, that is, as Maimon. in Part. 2. c. 44. of his More Nevochim expounds it, Ignoravit adhuc tunc temporis Deum hoc modo cum Prophet is loqui solere, & quod hoc mysterium nondum fuit ei revelatum. In the same manner R. Albo, Maam. 3. cap. 11. For otherwise we must not think that Samuel was then ignorant of the true God, but that he knew not the manner of that Voice by which the Prophetical spirit was wont to awaken the attention of the Prophets. And that this was the ancient opinion of the Jews R. Solomon tells us out of the Massecheth Tamid, where the Doctors thus gloss upon this place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. as yet he knew not the Lord, that is, he knew not the manner of the Prophetical voice. This is that soft and gentle voice whereby the Sense of the Prophet is sometimes attempted, but sometimes this Voice is more vehement. It will not be amiss to hear Maimonides his words, Part. 2. c. 44. of his More Nev. Nonnunquam fit ut Verbum illud quod Propheta audit in Visione Prophetiae, ei videatur fieri voce robustissimâ, etc. i. e. It sometims happens that the Word which the Prophet hears in a Prophetical Vision, seems to strike him with a more vehement noise; and accordingly some dream that they hear Thunder and Earthquake or some great Clashing; and sometimes again with an ordinary and familiar noise, as if it was close by him. We have a famous Instance of the last in that Voice whereby God appeared unto Adam after he had sinned, and of the former in Job and Elijah. That instance of Adam is set down Gen. 3. 8, 9 And they heard the voice of the Lord walking in the Garden in the cool of the day, and Adam hid himself from the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden: and the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? Where those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which we render the cool of the day, the Jews expound of a gentle vocal air, such an one as breathed in the daytime more pacately. For this appearance of God to him they suppose to be in a Prophetical Vision; and so Nachmanides comments upon those words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sense of this [〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the gale of the day] is, that ordinarily in the manifestation of the Shechina or divine presence, there comes a great and mighty wind to usher it in, according to what we read of Elijah, 1 Kings 19 11. And behold, the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rend the Mountains, and broke in pieces the Rocks before the Lord: and in psalm 18. and elsewhere, He flew upon the wings of the wind: Accordingly it is written concerning Job, c. 38. v. 1. that the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind. Wherefore by way of distinction it is said in this place, that they heard the voice of the Lord, that is, that the Divine majesty was revealed to them in the garden, as approaching to them, in the gale of the day. For the wind of the day blew according to the manner of the daytime in the garden; not as a great and strong wind in this Vision (as it was in other Prophetical approaches) lest they should fear and be dismayed. This mighty voice we also find recorded as rowzing up the attention of Ezechiel, chap. 9 1. He cried also in mine ears with a loud voice, saying, etc. So that all these Schemes are merely Prophetical, and import nothing else but the strong awakening and quickening of the prophet's mind into a lively sense of the Divine majesty appearing to him. And of these the Apocalypse is full, there being indeed no Prophetical writ, where the whole Dramatical series of things, as they were acted over in the Mind of the Prophet, are more graphicallie and to the Life set forth. So we have this Vox praecentrix to the whole Scene sometimes sounding like a Trumpet, Rev. 1. 10. I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day, and heard behind me a great voice as of a trumpet. And chap. 4. upon the beginning of a new Vision we find this Prologue, I looked, and behold a door was opened in heaven: and the first voice which I heard was as it were the sound of a Trumpet, talking with me, which said, Come up hither, etc. And when a new Act of opening the Seals gins, chap. 6. 1. he is excited by another voice sounding like Thunder. And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the Seals, and I heard as it were the noise of thunder, one of the four Beasts saying, Come and see. And chap. 8. ver. 5. voices and thunders and lightnings and an earthquake are the Prooemium to the Vision of the Seven Angels with seven trumpets. Lastly, to name no more, sometimes it is brought in sounding like the roaring of a Lion. So when he was to receive the little Book of prophecy chap. 10. 3. An Angel cried with a loud voice, as when a Lion roareth; and when he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices. Hence it is that we find the Prophets ordinarily prefacing to their Visions in this manner, The hand of the Lord was upon me; that is indeed some potent force rousing them up to a lively sense of the Divine majesty, or some heavenly ambassador speaking with them. And that the sense hereof might be the more Energetical, sometimes in a Prophetical Vision they are commanded to eat those prophetic rolls given them, which are described with the greatest contrariety of taste that may be, sweet as honey in their mouths, and in their bellies as bitter as gall, Rev. 10. 9 Ezek. 2. 8. Thus we have seen in part how those Impressions, by which the Prophets were made partakers of Divine inspiration, carried a strong evidence of their Original along with them, whereby they might be able to distinguish them both from any hallucination, as also from their own True dreams, which might be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent by God, but not prophetical: which yet I think is more universally unfolded Jeremy 23. where the difference between true Divine inspiration and such false Dreams and Visions as sometimes a lying Spirit breathed into the false prophets is on set purpose described to us from their different Evidence and Energy. The Pseudo-prophetical spirit being but * Ver. 28. chaff▪ as vain as vanity itself, subject to every wind: the matter itself indeed which was suggested in such tending to nourish immorality and profaneness; and besides for the manner of inspiration, it was more dilute and languid. Whereas true prophecy entered upon the Mind as a * Ver. 29. fire, and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces: and therefore the true Prophets might know themselves to have received command from heaven, when the false might, if they would have laid aside their own fond self-conceit, have known as easily that God sent them not. For so I think those words are spoken by way of conviction, and to provoke a self-condemnation, verse 32. Behold I am against those that prophesy false dreams, saith the Lord, and do tell them, and cause my people to err by their lies and by their lightness, yet I sent them not, neither commanded them. And this might be evident to them from the feeble nature of those Inspirations which they boasted of, as it is insinuated verse 28, 29. The prophet that hath a dream, etc. And thus Abarbanel expounds this place, whose sense I shall a little the more pursue, because he from hence undertakes to solve the difficulty of that Question which we are now upon, and thus speaks of it as a Question of very great moment. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Certainly it is one of the profoundest questions that are made concerning prophecy, and I have enquired after the opinion of the wise men of our Nation about it. What answer they gave to this Question which he anxiously enquired after, it seems he tells us not, but his own answer which he adheres to he found'st upon those words, verse 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, What is the chaff to the wheat? And upon this occasion he says that old Rule of the Jews was framed which we formerly spoke of, As there is no Wheat without chaff, so neither is there any Dream without something that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, void of reality and insignificant. Maimonides here in a general way resolves the business, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. All prophecy makes itself known to the Prophet that it is prophesy indeed. Which general solution Abarbanel having a little examined, thus collects the sense of it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. A Prophet when he is asleep may distinguish between a Prophetical Dream and that which is not such, by the vigour and liveliness of the perception whereby he apprehends the thing propounded, or else by the imbecility and weakness thereof. And therefore Maimon. hath said well, All prophecy makes itself known to the Prophet that it is prophesy indeed, that is, it makes itself known to the Prophet by the strength and vigour of the perception, so that his Mind is freed from all scruple whatsoever about it. And this he concludes to be the true meaning of Jer. 23. 29. Is not my word like a fire, saith the Lord, and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces? which he thus glosses upon, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Such a thing is the Prophetical Spirit, by reason of the strength of its impression and the forcibleness of its operation upon the heart of the Prophet; it is even like a thing that burns and tears him: and this happens to him either amidst the Dream itself, or afterwards when he is fully awaken and roused out of that Prophetical dream. But those Dreams which are not Prophetical, although they be True, are weak and languid things, easily blasted as it were with the East wind: And, as he further goes on by way of allusion, like those Dreams that the Prophet Esay speaks of, when a hungry man dreams he eats, but when he awakes, behold he is still hungry; and as when a thirsty man dreams he drinks, but when he is awake he is still thirsty. And thus also the Chaldee Paraphrast Jeremy 23. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Nun omnia verba mea sunt fortia sicut ignis, etc. But we have yet another evident demonstration of this Notion which may not be omitted, which is Jer. 20. 9 Then I said, I will not make mention of him, nor speak any more in his Name: But his word was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up within my bones, and I was weary with forbearing, and I could not stay. And verse 11. The Lord is with me as a mighty terrible one. With reference to which Paragraph, R. Solomon thus glosseth on the formerly-quoted Chap. 23. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The word of prophecy when it enters into the Mouth of the Prophet in its strength, it comes upon him like a fire that burneth, according to what is said [in Jer. 20. 9] And it was in my heart as a burning fire; [and in Ezek. 3. 14.] And the hand of the Lord was strong upon me. I have now done with the main Characteristical Nature of prophecy, and given those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it which most properly belong to True prophecy; though yet the other Two degrees of Divine influx (of which hereafter) may also have their share in them. CHAP. V. An Enquiry concerning the Immediate Efficient that represented the Prophetical Visions to the fancy of the Prophet. That these Representations were made in the Prophet's fancy by some Angel. This cleared by several passages out of the Jewish Monuments, and by Testimonies of Scripture. BEfore I conclude this present Discourse concerning prophecy properly so called, I think it may be useful to treat a little of Two things more that most commonly are to be considered in this Degree of Divine Inspiration, which we call prophesy. The First whereof is to inquire what that Intellectus 1. agens was, or, if you will, that Immediate Efficient that represented the Prophetical Visions to the fancy of the Prophet. Secondly, What the meaning of those Actions is that 2. are frequently attributed to the Prophets, whether they were Real, or only Imaginary and Scenical. I shall begin with the First, and inquire By whom these Representations were made in the Prophet's Imagination, or who ordered the Prophetical scene, and brought up all those Idolums that therein appeared upon the Stage. For though there be no question but that it was God himself by whom the whole Frame of prophecy was disposed and originally dispensed, seeing the scope thereof was to reveal his Mind and Will; yet the Immediate Efficient seems not to be God himself, as perhaps some may think, but indeed an Angel: And so the generality of all the Jewish Writers determine. Maimon. his sense is full for this purpose, both in his De Fundament is Legis and his More Nevochim. And perhaps he hath too universally determined that every Apparition of Angels imports presently some Prophetical dispensation: which hath made some of his countrymen by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fall too much off from him into a contrary assertion. His words are these, More Nev. Part. 2. c. 41. Scito quòd omnium eorum Prophetarum qui Prophetiam sibi factam esse dicunt, quidam eam Angelo alicui, quidam verò Deo Opt. Max▪ ascribant & attribuant, licèt per Angeli ministerium quoque ipsis obtigerit: de quo Sapientes nostri nos erudierunt quando aiunt, Et dixit Dominus ad eam (scilicet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, h. e. per manus Angeli) Gen. 25. 23. For so it seems the Masters expounded this place (where God reveals to Rebekah her future conception and progeny) of a prophetical apparition by some Angel; though yet all agree not in it. But it may be worth our while to hear out Maimon. who pleads the authority of all Jewish antiquity for this opinion that we have now laid down. Insuper, de quocunque scriptum occurrit, quòd Angelus cum eo locutus, aut quod aliquid ipsi à Deo revelatum sit, id nullo alio modo quàm in Somnio aut Visione Prophetica factum esse noveris, etc. Moreover, of whomsoever you read that an Angel spoke with him, or that something was revealed to him by God, you are to understand that it was performed no other way then by a Dream or a Prophetical Vision. Our Wise men have a discourse about the Word that came to the Prophets, according to what the Prophets themselves have declared (that is, concerning the several ways (as Buxtorf expounds it) by which the Prophets say the Word of God came to them.) Now this was (say they) four ways. The first is, when the Prophet declares he received the word from an Angel in a Dream or in a Vision. Secondly, when he only mentions the words of the Angel, without declaring that they came to him in a Dream or in a Vision; relying upon this known Fundamental, viz. That there is no prophecy revealed but by one of these two ways, whereof God makes mention, saying, I will make myself known in a Vision, and speak to him in a Dream. Thirdly, when he makes no mention of the Angel, but ascribes all to God, as if he alone had conveyed it; yet with this addition, that it came in a Vision or in a Dream. Fourthly, when the Prophet says absolutely, that God speak with him, or said unto him, do this, or, Speak this, making no mention at all either of Angel, or Vision, or Dream; and that because of this known Principle and Fundamental truth, That there is no prophecy but either in a Dream or Vision, or by the ministry of an Angel. Thus Maimonides, who, as we see, pretends this to be a known thing and generally agreed upon by all Jewish antiquity. But before we go on to any Confirmation of it, it will be requisite a little to see what Nachmanides, his great adversary in this business, allegeth against him, which I find in his Comment upon Genesis 18. which Chap. Maimonides makes to relate nothing else but a Prophetical apparition of three Angels to Abraham which promised a Son: they are said to eat and drink with him, and two of them to departed from him to Sodom, to be there entertained by Lot, whom they rescued from the violence of his neighbour-Citizens, and led him the next day out of the city, before they brought down fire and brimstone from heaven upon it. All which passages seem to make it evident that this Apparition of Angels was Real and Historical, and not merely Prophetical and imaginary. Wherefore Nachmanides having got this unhappy advantage of his adversary, pursues this mistake of his with another of his own as gross in an opposite way. His words are these, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that beholds an Angel, or hath any conference with one, is not a Prophet: For the business is not so as Maimonides hath determined it, namely, That every Prophet receives his prophecy by the ministry of an Angel, our Master Moses only excepted: for our Rabbins have told us concerning Daniel and his companions, that they were upon this account more excellent than he, because they were Prophets, and he none. And therefore his Book is not reckoned amongst the Prophets, because he had to do with the Angel Gabriel, although he both beheld him, and had conference with him when he was awake. Thus we see Nachman. as clearly expungeth all those out of his Catalogue of the Prophets to whom any Apparition of Angels was made, as Maimon. had put them in: and pretends for this the authority of the Talmudists; who for this cause exclude Daniel from the number of the Prophets, and, as he would have us believe, reckoned his Book among the Hagiographa, because of his converse with the Angel Gabriel: But all this is gratis dictum, and scarce bonâ fide; for it is manifest that all antiquity reckoned upon Zacharie as a Prophet, notwithstanding all his Visions are perpetually represented by Angels. But we shall a little examine that sentence of the Talmudists which Nachman. Found'st his Opinion upon, which I find set down Massecheth Megillah, cap. 1. in the Gemara, where the master's gloss on that Dan. 10. 7. And I Daniel alone saw the Vision: for the men that were with me saw not the Vision; but a great quaking fell upon them, so that they fled to hid themselves. Here they inquire who those Companions of Daniel were, and then pass their Verdict upon him and them. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, What are those men that were with Daniel? R. Jeremy said, They were Haggai, Zacharie and Malachi. They excelled Daniel, and he also excelled them. Herein they excelled him, because they were Prophets, and he none; and in this he excelled them, that he beheld a Vision, and they none. Thus those Masters; who indeed deny Daniel to be a Prophet, and accordingly his Book was by them reckoned among the Hagiographa, yet they here give no reason at all for it. But whereas Nachman, says that the Visions of Angels which Daniel conversed with were Real, and not imaginary or Prophetical, it is a manifest Elusion, and contrary to the express words of the Text, which relates these Apparitions to have been in his sleep, Chap. 10. verse 9 And when I heard the voice of his words, than was I in a deep sleep upon my face, and my face towards the ground. And Chap. 8. 18. Now as he was speaking with me, I was in a deep sleep. This sleep was upon the * Verse 15. Exit of his Vision: For so (as we have showed before) there was a frequent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from a Vision which begun upon the Prophets while they were awake into a Prophetical Dream. So Chap. 7. verse 1. In the first year of Belshazzar King of Babylon, Daniel had a Dream, and Visions of his head upon his bed; and in this Dream and night-Vision, as in the other before mentioned, a Man or Angel comes in to expound the matter, verse 15, 16. I Daniel was grieved in my Spirit in the midst of my body, and the Visions of my head troubled me. I came near to one of them that stood by, and asked him the truth of all this: so he told me, and made me know the interpretation of the things. But that the Talmudists do maintain True prophecy to have been communicated by Angels, we shall further confirm from one place which is in Gemara Beracoth cap. 9 where the Doctors are brought in comparing Two places of Scripture, which seem contradictory. One of them is Numb. 12. 6. In a Dream will I speak unto him; the other is Zech. 10. 2. They have told false dreams: which they solve thus. R. Rami said, It is written, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. I will speak to him in a dream, and again, They have told false dreams. Now there is no difficulty at all in this: For the first sort of Dreams came * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the hand of an Angel; and the other * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by an evil Genius. And this Opinion is generally followed by the rest of the Jewish writers, Commentators and others, who thus compound the difference between those two famous adversaries Nachman. and Maimon. by granting a twofold appearance of Angels, the one Real, and the other Imanarie. And so they say this Real vision of Angels is a Degree inferior to the Prophetical vision of them. As we are told by R. Jehudah in the Book Cosri; where having disputed, Maam. 3. what hallowed minds they ought to have who maintain commerce with the deity, he thus goes on, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, If a man be very pious, and be in those places where the Divine influence uses to manifest itself, the Angels will accompany him with their Real presence, and he shall see them face to face; yet in an inferior way to that Vision of Angels which accompanies the Prophetical degree. Under the Second temple, according as men were more endowed with wisdom, they beheld Apparitions and heard the Bath Col, which is a degree of sanctity, but yet inferior to the Prophetical. To conclude, R. Bechai makes it an Article of faith to believe the Existence of Angels for this reason, that Angels were the furnishers of the Prophetical scene, and therefore to deny them was to deny all prophecy; so he in Parasha Terumah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because (saith he) the Divine influx comes by the ministry of Angels, who order and dispose the word in the mouth of the Prophet according to the mind of God: And if 〈◊〉 were not so, there would be no prophecy; and if no prophecy, no Law. So Jos. Albo, we may remember, defined prophecy by the immediate orderers of it, the Angels. But it is best to consult the Scripture itself in this business, which declares all that way by which it descended from God to the sons of men. The first place which Maimon. in More Nev. Part. 2. cap. 42. brings for confirmation of this opinion is that of Genesis 18. v. ●. with the exposition of R. Chija, which he leaves as a great secret. But that which is more for his and our purpose, is Gen. 32. 24. where Jacob wrestled all night with the Angel; for so that man was, as Hosea tells us; and verse 1. The Angels of God met Jacob. Neither doth this Interpretation of that Lucta between the Angel and Jacob to have been only in a Prophetical Vision, at all prejudice the Historical truth of that Event of it, which was jacob's halting upon his thigh: For that is no very unusual thing at other times to have some Real passions in our bodies represented to us in our dreams then when they first begin. Another place is Jos. 5. 13. Joshua lifted up his eyes and looked, and behold a man stood over against him. Again, Judges 5. 23. Deborah attributes the command she had to curse Meroz, to an Angel. Curse ye Meroz, said the Angel of the Lord: which words Kimchi would have to be understood in a literal sense, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for Deborah was a Prophetess, and so spoke according to Prophetical inspiration; and so Rabbi Levi Ben Gersom also expounds it: Onkelos and Rasi, with less reason I think, make this Angel to be none else but Baruch. Though I am not ignorant that sometimes the Prophets themselves are called Angels of God, and thence Malachi the last of them had his Name; yet we have no such testimony concerning Baruch, that ever he was any Prophet, but only a Judge or Commander of the military forces. In the first Book of Kings chap. 19 ver. 11, 12. we have a large description of this imaginary appearance of Angels in the several modes of it; Behold the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rend the Mountains, and broke in pieces the Rocks before the Lord; but the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an earthquake, and after the earthquake a fire, etc. All which Appearances Jonathan the Targumist expounds by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Armies of Angels, which were attended with those terrible Phaenomena. And the still voice in which the Lord was, he renders answerably to the rest by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the voice of Angels praising God in a gentle kind of harmony. For though it be there said that the Lord was in the soft voice, yet that Paraphrast seems to understand it only of his ambassador: which in some other places of Scripture is very manifest; as in 2 Kings chap. 1. ver. 3, 15, 16. where verse 3. we find the Angel delivered to Elijah the Message to Ahaziah King of Israel, who sent to baalzebub the God of Ekron to inquire about his disease; But the Angel of the Lord said to Elijah the Tishbite, Arise, go up to meet the messengers of the King of Samaria, and say unto them, Is it not because there is not a God in Israel, that ye go to inquire of baalzebub. And verse the 16, we have all this message attributed to God himself by the Prophet, as if he had received the dictate immediately from God himself? And in Daniel, the Apocalypse, and Zacharie, we find all things perpetually represented and interpreted by Angels. And Abarbanel upon Zacharie 2. tells us that several Prophets had several Angels that delivered the heavenly embassy to them, for that every Prophet was not so well fitted to converse with any kind of Angel: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Every Prophet was not in a fit capacity of receiving Prophetical influence from any Angel indifferently; but according to the disposition of the Receiver the degree and quality of the Angel was accommodated. But I shall not further pursue this Argument. In the general, that the Prophetical scene was perpetually ordered by some Angel, I think it is evident from what hath been already said, which I might further confirm from Ezekiel, all whose prophecies about the Temple are expressly attributed to a man as the Actor of them, that is indeed an Angel; for so they used constantly to appear to the Prophets in an humane shape. And likewise Gen. 28. 18. in Jacob's Vision of a Ladder that reached up to heaven we find the Angels ascending and descending, to intimate that this Scala prophetica whereby Divine influence descended upon the Mind of the Prophet is always filled with Angels. From this place compared with Gen. 31. 11. Jacob's Vision of Laban's sheep presented to him by an Angel, Philo thus determines in his book 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, You see how the Scripture represents such Dreams as sent of God, not only those that proceed from the first Cause [God,] but such also as come by his Ministers, the Angels. But S. Jerome hath given us a more full and ample testimony in this matter, in his Comment on Gal. 3. 19 The Law was ordained by Angels in the hand of a Mediator. His words are these; Quod autem ait, Lex ordinata per Angelos, hoc vult intelligi, quòd in omni Veteri Testamento, ubi Angelus primùm visus refertur, & postea quasi Deus loquens inducitur, Angelus quidem verè ex ministris pluribus quicumque sit visus, sed in illo Mediator [Christus] loquatur qui dicat, Ego sum Deus Abraham, Deus Isaac, & Deus Jacob. Nec mirum si Deus loquatur in Angelis, cum etiam per Angelos qui in hominibus sunt loquatur Deus in Prophetis; dicente Zacharia, Et ait Angelus qui loquebatur in me, ac deinceps inferente, Haec dicit Dominus Omnipotens. We might further add to all this those Visions which we meet with in the New Testament, which, as a thing vulgarly known, were attributed to Angels. So Acts 27. 23. There stood by me the Angel of God this night, that is, in a Prophetical dream. And Acts 12. when the Angel of God did really appear to Peter, and bring him out of prison, he could scarce be persuaded of a long time but that all this was a Vision, this indeed being the common manner of all Prophetical Vision. And Acts 23. when the Pharisees would describe S. Paul as a Prophet that had received some Vision or Revelation from heaven, they phrase it by the speaking of an Angel or Spirit unto him, ver. 9 We find no evil in this man; but if an Angel or Spirit hath spoken to him, let us not fight against God. CHAP. vi The Second Enquiry, What the meaning of those Actions is that are frequently attributed to the Prophets, whether they were Real, or only Imaginary and Scenical. What Actions of the Prophets were only imaginary and performed upon the Stage of fancy. What we are to think of several Actions and res gestae recorded of Hosea, Jeremy and Ezekiel in their prophecies. THus we have done with our first Enquiry concerning the Contriver and Orderer of the Prophetical Stage: That which was acted upon it, no doubt, every one will grant to have been a Masking or imaginary business. But there are many times in the midst of Prophetical Narrations some things related to be done by the Prophets themselves upon the command of the prophetic Voice, which have been generally conceived to have been acted really, the grossest of all not excepted, as Hosea his taking a harlot for his Wife and begetting Children, etc. Which conceit Mr. Calvin hath in part happily undermined. But we shall not here doubt to conclude both of That and all other actions of the Prophets which they were enjoined upon the Stage of prophecy, that they were only Scenical & imaginary; except indeed they were such as of their own Nature must have an Historical meaning, in which an imaginary performance would not serve the turn. For this purpose it may be worth our while to take notice of what Maimonides hath well determined in this Case, More Nev. Part. 2. cap. 46. Scias ergo, quemadmodum in somnio accidit, etc. Know therefore, that as it is in a Dream, a man thinks that he hath been in this or that country, that he has married a Wife there, and continued there for some certain time, that by this Wife he has had a Son of such a name, of such a disposition, and the like; Know (saith he) that even just so it is with the Prophetical Parables as to what the Prophets see or do in a Prophetical Vision. For whatsoever those Parables inform us concerning any Action the Prophet doth, or concerning the space of time between one Action and another, or going from one place to another; all this is in a Prophetical Vision: neither are these Actions real to sense, although some particularities may be precisely reckoned up in the writings of the Prophets. For because it was well known that it was all done in a Prophetical Vision; it was not necessary in the rehearsing of every particularity to reiterate that it was in a Prophetical Vision; as it was also needless to inculcate that it was in a Dream. But now the Vulgar sort of men think that all such Actions, journeys, Questions and Answers were really and sensibly performed, and not in a Prophetical Vision. And therefore I have an intention to make plain this business, and shall bring such things as no man shall be able to doubt of; adding thereunto some Examples, by which you may be able to judge of the rest which I shall not for the present mention. Thus we see how Maimon. rejects it as a vulgar error to conceive that those Actions which are commonly attributed to the Prophets in the current of their prophecy, their travailing from place to place, their propounding questions and receiving answers, etc. were real things to sense; whereas they were only imaginary, represented merely to the fancy. But for a more distinct understanding of this business, we must remember what hath been often suggested, That the Prophetical scene or Stage upon which all apparitions were made to the Prophet, was his Imagination; and that there all those things which God would have revealed unto him were acted over Symbolicallie, as in a Masque, in which divers persons are brought in, amongst which the Prophet himself bears a part: And therefore he, according to the exigency of this Dramatical apparatus, must, as the other Actors, perform his part, sometimes by speaking and reciting things done, propounding questions, sometimes by acting that part which in the Drama he was appointed to act by some others; and so not only by Speaking, but by Gestures and Actions come in in his due place among the rest; as it is in our ordinary Dreams, to use Maimonides his expression of it. And therefore it is no wonder to hear of those things done which indeed have no Historical or Real verity; the scope of all being to represent something strongly to the prophet's Understanding, and sufficiently to inform it in the Substance of those things which he was to instruct that People in to whom he was sent. And so sometimes we have only the Intelligible matter of prophecies delivered to us nakedly without the imaginary Ceremonies or Solemnities. And as this Notion of those Actions of the Prophet that are interweaved with their prophecies is most genuine and agreeable to the general nature of prophecy, so we shall further clear and confirm it in some Particulars. We shall begin with that of Hosea his marrying of Gomer a common harlot, and taking to himself children of whoredoms, which he is said to do a first and second time, Chap. 1. and Chap. 3. Which kind of Action however it might be void of true Vice, yet it would not have been void of all Offence, for a Prophet to have thus unequally yoked himself (to use S. Paul's expression) with any such Infamous persons, though by way of lawful wedlock, if it had been done really. I know that this way of interpreting both This and other Prophetical actions displeaseth Abarbanel, who thinks the Literal sense & Historical verity of all aught to be entertained, except it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expressed to have been done in a Vision; and the general current of our Christian writers till Calvin's time have gone the same way. And to make the Literal interpretation here good, R. Solomon and our former Author both tell us, that the ancient Rabbins have determined those Prophetical narrations of Hosea to be understood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 literally. The place they refer to is Gem. Pesac. cap. 8. where yet I find no such thing positively concluded by the Talmudists. Indeed they there, after their fashion, expound the place by inserting a long dialogue between God and the Prophet about this matter, but so as that without R. Sol. or Abarbanel's gloss we could no more think their scope was to establish the Literal sense, than I think that the Prophet himself intended to insinuate the same to us. We shall therefore choose to follow Abenezra as a more genuine Commentator, who in this place and others of the like nature follows Maimonides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, making all those Transactions to have been only imaginary. For though it be not always positively laid down in these Narrations, that the Res gesta was in a Vision; yet the Nature and Scope of prophecy so requiring that things should thus be acted in Imagination, we should rather expect some Positive declaration to assure us that they were performed in the History, if indeed it were so. And therefore in these recitals of Prophetical Visions, we find many times things less coherent than can agree to a true History; as in the narrative of Abraham's Vision, Gen. 15. (for so the Rabbins in Pirke R. Eliezer expound that whole Chapter to be nothing else) we find v. 1. that God appeared to Abraham in a Vision, and v. 5. God brings him into the field as if it were after the shutting up of evening, and shows him the Stars of Heaven: and yet for all this ver. 12. it was yet daytime, and the Sun not gone down: And when the Sun was going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abraham; and verse 17. And it came to pass that when the Sun went down and it was dark, behold a smoking furnace, and a burning lamp that passed between those pieces. From whence it is manifest that Abraham's going out into the field before to take a view of the Stars of Heaven, and his ordering of those several living Creatures, ver. 9, 10. for a Sacrifice, was all performed in a Prophetical Vision, and upon the Stage of his Imagination: It being no strange thing to have incoherent junctures of time made in such a way. So Jeremy 13. we have there a very precise Narrative of Jeremiah's getting a linen girdle, and putting it upon his loins; and after a while he must needs take a long journey to Euphrates, to hid it there in a hole of the rock; and then returning, after many days makes another weary journey to the same place to take it out again after it was all corrupted: all which could manifestly be nothing else but merely imaginary; the scope thereof being to imprint this more deeply upon the Understanding of the Prophet, That the House of Judah and Israel, which was nearly knit and united to God, should be destroyed and ruined. The same Prophet Chap. 18. is brought in going to the house of a Potter, to take notice how he wrought a piece of work upon the wheel; and when the Vessel he intended was all marred, that then he made of his clay another Vessel. And Chap. 19 he is brought in as taking the Ancients of the people and the Ancients of the Priests along with him into the valley of the Son of Hinnom, with a Potter's earthen bottle under his arm, and there breaking it in pieces in the midst of them. In this last Chapter it's very observable how the Scheme of speech is altered, when the Prophet relates a Real History concerning himself, ver. 14. speaking of himself in the Third person, as if now he were to speak of some body else, and not of a Prophet or his Actions; for so we read ver. 14. Then came Jeremiah from Tophet, etc. The like change of the person we find Chap. 28. ver. 10. where a formal story is told of some things that passed between Jeremiah and Hananiah the false prophet, who in the presence of all the people broke Jeremiah's yoke from off his neck: For it seems to have been a wont thing for the Prophets by Bonds and Yokes to type out unto the people victory or captivity in war. Not unlike is that we read of Zedekiah the false prophet, 1 Kings 22. who made himself horns of iron, when he prophesied to Ahab his prosperity against the Syrians at Ramoth-Gilead, vulgarly to represent to him the success he should have against his Enemies. But in all this business the Mode of Jeremiah's language insinuates a Literal sense, by speaking altogether in the Third person, as if the relation concerned some body else, and not himself, and so must be of some real thing, and that which to Sense and Observation had its reality, and not only a reality in Apprehension or Imagination. So Chap. 32. we seem to have an insinuation of a real History in Jeremiah's purchase of a Field of Hanameel his uncle's Son, from the Mode of expression which is there observable. But other-times we meet with things graphically described with all the Circumstantial pomp of the business, when yet it could be nothing else but a Dramatical thing; as Chap. 35. where the Prophet goes and finds out the chief of the Rechabites particularly described, and brings them into such a particular chamber as is there set forth by all its bounds, and there sets pots and cups full of wine before them, and bids them drink wine. Just in the same mode with this we have another story told, Chap. 25. 15, and 17, etc. of his taking a wine-cup from God, and his carrying it up and down to all nations far and near, Jerusalem and the Cities of Judah, and the Kings and Princes thereof; to Pharaoh King of Egypt, and his Servants, Princes, People; to all the Arabians, and Kings of the Land of UZ; to the Kings of the Land of the Philistines, Edom, Moab, Ammon; the Kings of Tyre and Sidon and of the Isles beyond the Sea, Dedan, Tema, Buz; the Kings of Zimri, of the Medes and Persians, and all the Kings of the North: and all these he said he made to drink of this Cup. And in this fashion Chap. 27. he is sent up & down with Yokes, to put upon the necks of several Kings: all which can have no other sense then that which is merely imaginary, though we be not told that all this was acted only in a Vision, for the nature of the thing would not permit any real performance thereof. The like we must say of Ezekiel's res gestae, his eating a roll given him of God, Chap. 3. And Chap. 4. its especially remarkable how ceremoniously all things are related concerning his taking a Tile, and pourtraying the City of Jerusalem upon it, his laying siege to it; all which I suppose will be evident to have been merely Dramatical, if we carefully examine all things in it, notwithstanding that God tells him he should in all this be a Sign to the people. Which is not so to be understood, as if they were to observe in such real actions in a sensible way what their own Fates should be: for he is here commanded to lie continually before a Tile 390 days, which is full 13 Months, upon his left side, and after that 40 more upon his right, and to bake his bread that he should eat all this while with dung, etc. So Chap. 5. he is commanded to take a barber's razor, and to shave his head and beard, then to weigh his hair in a pair of Scales, and divide it into three parts; and after the days of his Siege should be fulfilled, spoken of before, then to burn a third part of it in the midst of the City, and to smite about the other third with a knife, and to scatter the other third to the wind. All which as it is most unlikely in itself ever to have been really done, so was it against the Law of the Priests to shave the corners of their heads and the corners of their beards, as Maimonides observes. But that Ezekiel himself was a Priest, is manifest from Chap. 1. ver. 3. Upon these passages of Ezekiel Maimonides hath thus soberly given his judgement, More Nev. Part. 2. c. 46. Absit ut Deus Prophetas suos stultis vel ebriis similes reddat, eósque stultorum aut furiosorum actiones facere jubeat: praeterquam quòd praeceptum illud ultimum Legi repugnasset, etc. Far be it from God to render his Prophets like to fools and drunken men, and to prescribe them the actions of fools and mad men: besides that this last injunction would have been inconsistent with the Law; for Ezekiel was a great Priest, and therefore obliged to the observation of those two Negative precepts, viz. of not shaving the corners of his head and corners of his beard: And therefore this was done only in a Prophetical Vision. The same sentence likewise he passeth upon that story of Esaiah, Chap. 20. 3. his walking naked and barefoot, wherein Esaiah was not otherwise a sign to Egypt and Aethiopia, or rather Arabia, where he dwelled not, and so could not more literally be a Type therein, then Ezekiel was here to the Jews. Again Chap. 12. we read of Ezekiel's removing his householdstuff in the night, as a Type of the captivity, and of his digging with his hands through the wall of his house, and of the people's coming to take notice of this strange action, with many other uncouth ceremonies of the whole business which carry no show of probability: and yet ver. 6. God declares upon this to him, I have set thee for a sign to the house of Israel; and ver. 9 Son of man, hath not the house of Israel, the rebellion's house, said unto thee, What dost thou? As if all this had been done really; which indeed seems to be nothing else but a Prophetical Scheme. Neither was the Prophet any real sign, but only Imaginary, as having the Type of all those Fates symbolically represented in his fancy which were to befall the Jews: which sense Kimchi, a genuine Commentator, follows, with the others mentioned. And it may be according to this same notion is that in Chap. 24. to be understood of the death of the Prophet's Wife, with the manner of those funeral solemnities and obsequies which he performed for her. But we shall proceed no farther in this Argument, which I hope is by this time sufficiently cleared, That we are not in any Prophetical narratives of this kind to understand any thing else but the History of the Visions themselves which appeared to them, except we be led by some farther argument of the reality of the thing in a way of sensible appearance to determine it to have been any sensible thing. CHAP. VII. Of that Degree of Divine inspiration properly called Ruach hakkodesh, i. e. The Holy Spirit. The Nature of it described out of Jewish Antiquities. Wherein this Spiritus Sanctus differed from prophecy strictly so called, and from the Spirit of Holiness in purified Souls. What Books of the Old Testament were ascribed by the Jews to Ruach hakkodesh. Of the Urim and Thummim. THus we have done with that part of Divine inspiration which was more Technically and properly by the Jews called prophesy. We shall now a little search into that which is Hagiographical, or, as they call it, The Dictate of the Holy Spirit; in which the Book of Psalms, Job, the works of Solomon and others are comprised. This we find very appositely thus defined by Maimonides, More Nev. Part. 2. c. 45. Cùm homo in se sentit rem vel facultatem quampiam exoriri, & super se quiescere, quae eum impellit ad loquendum, etc. When a man perceives some Power to arise within him, and rest upon him, which urgeth him to speak, so that he discourse concerning the Sciences or Arts, and utter Psalms or Hymns, or profitable and wholesome Rules of good living, or matters Political and Civil, or such as are Divine; and that whilst he is waking, and hath the ordinary vigour and use of his Senses; this is such a one of whom it's said, that He speaks by the Holy Spirit. In this Definition we may seem to have the strain of the Book of Psalms, Proverbs and Ecolesiastes fully deciphered to us. In like manner we find this Degree of Inspiration described by R. Albo, Maam. 3. c. 10. after he had set down the other Degrees superior to it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Now to explain to you what is that other door of Divine influx, through which none can enter by his own natural ability; it is when a man utters words of wisdom, or Song, or Divine praise, in pure and elegant language, besides his wont: so that every one that knows him admires him for this excellent knowledge and composure of words; but yet he himself knows not from whence this faculty came to him, but is as a child that learns a tongue, & knows not from whence he had this faculty. Now the excellence of this Degree of Divine inspiration is well known to all, for it is the same with that which is called The Holy Spirit. Or, if you please, we shall render these Definitions of our former Jewish Doctors in the words of Proclus, who hath very happily set forth the nature of this piece of Divine inspiration, according to their mind, in these words, lib. 5. in Plat. Tim. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, This degree or Enthusiastical character, shining so bright with the Intellectual influences, is pure and venerable, receiving its perfection from the Father of the Gods, being distinct from humane conceptions, and far transcending them, always conjoined with delightfulness and amazement, full of beauty and comeliness, concise, yet withal exceeding accurate. This kind therefore of Divine inspiration was always more pacate and serene than the other of prophecy, neither did it so much fatigate and act upon the Imagination. For though these Hagiographi or Holy writers ordinarily expressed themselves in Parables and Similitudes, which is the proper work of fancy; yet they seem only to have made use of such a dress of language to set off their own sense of Divine things, which in itself was more naked and simple, the more advantageously, as we see commonly in all other kind of Writings. And seeing there was no labour of the Imagination in this way of Revelation, therefore it was not communicated to them by any Dreams or Visions, but while they were waking, and their Senses were in their full vigour, their Minds calm; it breathing upon them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plotinus describes his pious Enthusiast, Enn. 6. l. 9 c. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For indeed this Enthusiastical Spirit seated itself principally in the Higher and Purer faculties of the Soul, which were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that I may allude to the ancient opinion of Empedo●les, who held there were two Suns, the one Archetypal, which was always in the inconspicable hemisphere of the World, but the beams thereof shining upon this World's Sun were reflected to us, and so further enlightened us. Now this kind of Inspiration as it always acted pious Souls into strains of Devotion, or moved them strongly to dictate matters of true piety and goodness, did manifest itself to be of a Divine nature; and as it came in abruptly upon the Minds of those holy men without courting their private thoughts, but transported them from that Temper of Mind they were in before, so that they perceived themselves captivated by the power of some Higher light than that which their own understanding commonly poured out upon them, they might know it to be more immediately from God. For indeed that seems to be the main thing wherein this Holy Spirit differed from that constant Spirit and frame of Holiness and Goodness dwelling in hallowed minds, that it was too quick, potent and transporting a thing, and was a kind of vital Form to that Light of divine Reason which they were perpetually possessed of. And therefore sometimes it runs out into a Foresight or Prediction of things to come, though it may be those Previsions were less understood by the Prophet himself; as (if it were needful) we might instance in some of David's prophecies, which seem to have been revealed to him not so much for himself (as the Apostle speaks) as for us. But it did not always spend itself in Strains of Devotion or Dictates of Virtue, Wisdom and Prudence; and therefore (if I may take leave here to express my conjecture) I should think the ancient Jews called this Degree Spiritus Sanctus, not because it flows from the Third Person in the Trinity (which I doubt they thought not of in this business) but because of the near affinity and alliance it hath with that Spirit of Holiness and true Goodness that always lodgeth in the breasts of Good men. And this seems to be insinuated in an old proverbial speech of the Jewish Masters, quoted by Maimonides in the forequoted place, Majestas Divina habitat super eum, & loquitur per Spiritum Sanctum. Though some think it might be so called as being the lowest Degree of Divine Inspiration: for sometimes the ancientest Monuments of Jewish learning call all prophecy by the name of Spiritus Sanctus. So in Pirke R. Eliezer c. 39 R. Phineas inquit, Requievit Spiritus Sanctus super Josephum ab ipsius juventute usque ad diem obitûs ejus, atque direxit eum in omnem sapientiam, etc. The Holy Spirit rested upon Joseph from his youth till the day of his death, and guided him into all wisdom, etc. Though it may be all that might be but an Hagiographical Spirit: For indeed the Jews are wont, as we showed before, to distinguish Joseph's dreams from Prophetical. But this Spiritus Sanctus in the same chap. (to put all out of doubt) is attributed to Esaiah and Ezekiel, which were known Prophets: and chap. 33. R. Phineas ait, Postquam omnes illi interfecti fuerant, viginti annis in Babel requievit Spiritus Sanctus super Ezekielem, & eduxit eum ex convalle Dora, & ostendit ei multa ossa, etc. And among those five things that the Jews always supposed the Second Temple to be inferior to the First in, one was the want of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spiritus Sanctus, or Spirit of prophecy. But we are here to consider this Spiritus Sanctus more strictly, and as we have formerly defined it out of Jewish antiquity. And here we shall first show what Books of the Old Testament were ascribed to this Degree by the Jews. The Old Testament was by the Jews divided into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Law, the Prophets, and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And this division is insinuated in Luke 24. 44. And Jesus said unto them, These are the words which I spoke unto you while I was yet with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were written concerning me in the Law of Moses, and in the Prophets, and in the Psalms: where by the Psalms may seem to be meant the Hagiographa; for the Writers of these Hagiographa might be termed Psalmodists for some Reasons which we shall touch upon hereafter in this Discourse. But to return; the Old Testament being anciently divided into these parts, it may not be amiss to consider the Order of these parts as it is laid down by the Talmudical Doctors in Gemara Bava Bathra, c. 1. towards the end, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Doctors have delivered unto us this Order of the Prophets, Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Isaiah and the Twelve Prophets, the First of which is Hosea, for so they understand those words in host 1. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Deus inprimis locutus est per Hoseam. The same Gemarists go on to lay down the Order of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus; Ruth, the Book of Psalms, Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Canticles, Lamentations, Daniel, Esther, Ezra, the Chronicles: And these the Jews did ascribe to the Ruach hakkodesh. But why Daniel should be reckoned amongst the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and not amongst 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Prophets, I can see no reason, seeing the strain of it wholly argues the nature of a Prophetical degree spending itself in Dreams and Visions, though those were joined with more obscurity (it being then the Crepusculum of the Prophetical day, which had long been upon the Horizon of the Jewish Church) then in the other Prophets. And therefore whatever the latter Jews here urge, for thus ranking up Daniel's books with the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, yet seeing they give us no Traditional reason which their Ancestors had for so doing, I should rather think it to have been first of all some fortuitous thing which gave an occasion to this after-mistake, as I think it is. But to pass on, besides those Books mentioned, there were some things else among the Jews usually attributed to this Spiritus Sanctus: And so Maimonides in the forementioned place tells us that Eldad & Medad, and all the High Priests who asked counsel by Urim and Thummim, spoke per Spiritum Sanctum, so that it was a Character Enthusiastical whereby they gave judicial answers, by looking upon the Stones of the High Priests breastplate, to those that came to inquire of God by them. And so R. Bechai in Parash 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speaks of one of the Degrees of the Holy Spirit which was superior to Bath Kol (i Filia Vocis) and inferior to prophesy. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. It will not be amiss by a short digression to show what this Urim and Thummim was: And we may take it out of our former Author R. Bechai, who for the substance agrees with the generality and best of the Jewish writers herein. It was, as he there tells us, done in this manner. The High Priest stood before the Ark, and he that came to inquire of the Urim and Thummim stood behind him, enquiring with a submiss voice, as if he had been at his private prayers, Shall I do so, or so? Then the High Priest looked upon the Letters which were engraven upon the Stones of the breastplate, and by the concurrence of an Enthusiastical Spirit of Divination of his own (if I may add thus much upon the former reasons to that which he there speaks) with some modes whereby those letters appeared, he shaped out his answer. But for those that were allowed to inquire at this Oracle, they were none else but either the King or the whole Congregation, as we are told in Massec. Sotah, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, None may inquire of it but the congregation of the people, or the King; by which it seems it was a Political oracle. But to return to our Argument in hand, viz. What pieces of Divine writ are ascribed to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Spiritus Sanctus; we must further know that the Jews were wont to reckon all those Psalms or Songs which we any any where meet with in the Old Testament among the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For though they were penned by the Prophets, yet because they were not the proper results of a Visum Propheticum, therefore they were not true prophecy: For they have a common Tradition, that the Prophets did not always prophesy eodem gradu, but sometime in a higher, sometime in a lower degree, as among others we are fully taught by Abarbinel in Es. 4. upon occasion of that Song of Esay, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The same Prophet prophesies sometime in the form of the supreme Prophetical Degree, and sometime in a lower Degree, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or by the Holy Spirit only. And thus having made his way, he tells us that common notion they had amongst them, that all Songs were dictated by this Spiritus Sanctus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every Song that is found in the Writings of the Prophets, it was such a thing as was ordered or dictated by the penmen themselves together with the superintendency of the Holy Spirit: forasmuch as they received them not in that higher way which is called prophecy, as all Visions were received, for all Visions were perfect prophecy. But the Author goes on further to declare his, and indeed the common opinion, concerning any such Song, that it was not the proper work of God himself, but the work of the Prophet's own Spirit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Yet we must suppose the Prophet's Spirit enabled by the conjunction of divine help with it, as he puts in the caution, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Spirit of God and his divine assistance did still cleave unto the Prophet, and was present with him. For, as he tells us, the Prophets, being so much accustomed to divine Visions as they were, might be able sometime per vigiliam, without any Prophetical Vision, to speak excellently by the Holy Ghost, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with very elegant language, and admirable similitudes. And this he there proves from hence, that these Songs are commonly attributed to the Prophet himself, and not to God, there being so much of the work of the Prophet's own Spirit in them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore the Scripture commonly attributes these Songs to the Prophets themselves, and not unto God; and accordingly speaks of the Song at the Red sea, * Exod. 15. Then Moses and the people of Israel sang this Song, that is, Moses and the children of Israel did compose and order it. So in the Song at Beer-Elim * Num. 21. 17. , Then sang Israel this Song. So in Moses his Song in the later end of Deuteronomy, which was to to be preserved as a Memorial, the Conclusion runs, * Deut. 32. 46. Set your hearts upon all those words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which I testify to you this day. So all those Psalms which are supposed to have been composed by David, are perpetually ascribed unto him, and the rest of them that were composed by others are in like manner ascribed unto them; whereas the prophetic strain is very different, always intitling God to it, and so is brought in with such kind of Prologues [The word of the Lord] or [The hand of the Lord] or the like. But enough of that: yet seeing we are fallen now upon the Original Author of these Divine Songs and Hymns, it will not be amiss to take a little notice of the frequency of this Degree of prophecy, which is by Songs and Hymns composed by an Enthusiastical Spirit, among the Jews. We find many of these Prophets besides David, who were Authors of sundry Psalms bound up together with his; for we must not think all are his: as after the 72 psalms we have eleven together which are ascribed to Asaph, the 88 to Heman, the 89 to Ethan, some to Jeduthun, and very many are incerti Authoris, as it seems, being anonymous. Thus Kimchi in his Preface to the Psalms, and the rest of the Hebrew Scholiasts, suppose divers Authors to have come in for their particular Songs in that Book. And these divine Enthusiasts were commonly wont to compose their Songs and Hymns at the sounding of some one Musical instrument or other, as we find it often suggested in the Psalms. So Plutarch, lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, describes the Dictate of the Oracle anciently, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, how that it was uttered in verse, in pomp of words, Similitudes and Metaphors, at the sound of a Pipe. Thus we have Asaph, Heman and Jeduthun set forth in this Prophetical preparation, 1 Chron. 25. 1. Moreover David and the Captain of the h●ast separated to the service of the Sons of Asaph, and of Heman, and of Jeduthun, who should prophesy with harps, etc. Thus R. Sal. expounds the place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, When they played upon their Musical instruments they prophesied, after the manner of Elisha, who said, Bring me a Minstrel, 2 Kings 3. And in the forementioned place ver. 3. upon those words [who prophesied with a harp] he thus glosseth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As they sounded upon the harp the Psalms of praise and the Hallelujahs, Jeduthun their Father prophesied. And this sense of this place I think is much more genuine than that which a late Author of our own would fasten upon it, viz. that this Prophesying was nothing but singing of Psalms. For it is manifest that these Prophets were not mere Singers, but Composers, and such as were truly called Prophets or Enthusiasts: So ver. 5. Heman is expressly called the King's Seer; the like in 2 Chron. 29. 30. & ch. 35. 15. of Asaph, Heman & Jeduthun, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, upon which our former Commentator glosseth thus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, unusquisque eorum erat Propheta. 'Tis true, the Poets are anciently called Vates, but that is no good argument why a Singer should be called a Prophet: for it is to be considered that a Poet was a Composer, and upon that account by the Ancients called Vates or a Prophet, and that because they generally thought all true Poets were transported. So Plato in his Phaedrus makes Three kinds of Fury, viz. Enthusiastical, Amatorious, and Poetical. But of this matter we shall speak more under the next head, which we are in a manner unawares fallen upon, which is to inquire in general into the qualification of all kind of Prophets. CHAP. VIII. Of the Dispositions antecedent and preparatory to prophesy. That the Qualifications which did fit a man for the Prophetical Spirit were such as these, viz. Inward Piety, True wisdom, a Pacate and Serene temper of Mind, and a due cheerfulness of Spirit; in opposition to Viciousness, Mental crazedness and inconsistency, unsubdued Passions, black Melancholy and dull Sadness. This illustrated by several Instances in Scripture. That music was greatly advantageous to the Prophets and Holy men of God, etc. What is meant by Saul's Evil Spirit. OUR next business is to discourse of those several Qualifications that were to render a man fit for the Spirit of prophecy: for we must not think that any man might suddenly be made a Prophet: This gift was not so fortuitously dispensed as to be communicated without any discrimination of persons. And this indeed all sorts of men have generally concluded upon; and therefore the old Heathens themselves, that only sought after a Spirit of Divination, were wont in a solemn manner to prepare and fit themselves for receiving the influx thereof, as R. Albo hath truly observed, Maam. 3. c. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The ancient Gentiles made themselves Images, and offered prayers and frankincense to the Stars, that by this means they might draw down a spiritual influence from some certain Stars upon their Image. For this influence slides down from the body of the Star upon the man himself, who is also corporeal, and by this means he foretells what shall come to pass. And thus, as he further observes, the Necromancers themselves were wont to use many solemn Rites and Ceremonies to call forth the Souls of any dead men into themselves, whereby they might be able to presage future things. But to come more closely to our present Argument. The Qualifications which the Jewish Doctors suppose necessarily antecedent to render any one habilem ad prophetandum are true Probity and Piety; and this was the constant sense and opinion of all of them universally, not excluding the vulgar themselves. Thus Abarbanel in praefat. in 12 Proph. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Pietas inducit Spiritum Sanctum. The like we find in Maimonid. More Nev. par. 2. cap. 32. who yet thinks this was not enough; and therefore he reckons up this as a vulgar error, which yet he says some of their Doctors were carried away withal, Quod Deus aliquem eligat & mittat, nullâ habitâ ratione an sit sapiens, etc. That God may choose of men whom he pleaseth, and send him, it matters not whether he be wise and learned, or unlearned and unskilful, old or young; only that this is required, that he be a virtuous, good and honest man: For hitherto there was never any that could say that God did cause the divine majesty to dwell in a vicious person, unless he had first reform himself. But Maimonid. himself rather prefers the opinion of the wise Sages and Philosophers of the Heathen then of these vulgar Masters, which required also some Perfection in the nature of him that should be set apart for prophecy, augmented with study and industry; Whence it cannot be that a man should go to bed no Prophet, and rise the next day a Prophet (as he there speaks) quemadmodum homo qui inopinatò aliquid invenit. And a little after he adds, Fatuos & hujus terrae filios quod attinet, non magis, nostro judicio, prophetare possunt, quàm Asinus aut Rana. These Perfections then which Maimonides requires as Preparaterie Dispositions to render a man a Prophet, are of Three sorts, viz. 1. Acquisite or Rational; 2. Natural or Animal; lastly, Moral. And according to the difference of these he distinguisheth the Degrees of prophecy, c. 36. Has autem Tres perfectiones etc. As to these Three Perfections which we have here comprised, viz. the Perfection of the Rational faculty acquired by study, the Perfection of the Imaginative faculty by birth, and the Perfection of Manners or virtuous Qualities by purifying and freeing the Heart and affections from all sensual pleasures, from all pride, and from all foolish and pestilent desire of glory; As to these, I say, It's evident that they are differently, and not in the same degree participated by men: And according to such different measures of participation the degrees of the Prophets are also to be distinguished. Thus Maimonides, who indeed in all this did but aim at this Technical notion of his, That all prophecy is the proper result of these Perfections, as a Form arising out of them all as out of its elements compounded together. For it is plain that he thought there was a kind of prognostic virtue in Souls themselves, which was in this manner to be excited; which was the opinion of some Philosophers, among which Plutarch lays down his sense in this manner, according to the minds of many others; * Lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Soul doth not then first of all attain a Prophetical energy when it leaves the Body as a cloud; but it now hath it already; only she is blind of this Eye, because of her concretion with this mortal body. This Philosopher's opinion Maimonides was more than prone to, however he would dissemble it, and therefore he speaks of an impotency to prophesy, supposing all those Three qualifications named before, as of the suspension of the act of some natural faculty. So Chap. 32. Meo judicio res hîc se habet sicut in Miraculis, etc. (i.) In my judgement (saith he) the matter here is just so as it is in Miracles, and bears proportion with them. For natural Reason requires, that he who by his nature is apt to prophesy, and is diligently taught and instructed, and of fit age, that such a one should prophesy; but he that notwithstanding cannot do so, is like to one that cannot move his hand, as Jeroboam, or one that cannot see, as those that could not see the Tents of the King of Syria (as it is in the Story of Elisha.) And again Chap. 36. he further beats upon this String, Si vir quidam ita comparatus fuerit, nullum dubium est, si facultas ejus Imaginatrix (quae in summo gradu perfecta est, & Influentiam ab Intellectu secundùm perfectionem suam speculativam accipit) laboraverit & in operatione fuerit, illum non nisi res divinas & admirandas apprehensurum, nihil praeter Deum & ejus Angelos visurum, nullius denique rei scientiam habiturum & curaturum, nisi earum quae verae sunt & quae ad communem hominum spectant utilitatem. This Opinion of Maimonides I find not any where entertained, but only by the Author of the Book Cozri. That which seems to have led him into this conceit was his mistaken sense (it may be) of some Passages in the story of the Kings that speak of the Schools of the Prophets, and the like, of which more hereafter. But I know no Reason sufficient to infer any such thing as the Prophetical Spirit from the highest improvement of Natural or Moral endowments. And I cannot but wonder how Maimonides could reconcile all this with the right Notion of prophecy, which must of necessity include a Divine inspiration, and therefore may freely be bestowed by God where and upon whom he pleaseth. Though indeed common Reason will teach us, that it is not likely that God would extraordinarily inspire any men, and send them thus specially authorized by himself to declare his mind authentically to them, and dictate what his Truth was, who were themselves vicious and of unhallowed lives; and so indeed the Apostle Peter 2 Epist. Chap. I. tells us plainly, They were holy men of God who spoke as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. Neither is it probable that those who were any way of crazed Minds, or who were inwardly of inconsistent tempers by reason of any perturbation, could be very fit for these Serene impressions. A troubled fancy could no more receive these Ideas of Divine Truth to be impressed upon it, and clearly reflect them to the Understanding, than a cracked glass or troubled water can reflect sincerely any image to be made upon them. And therefore the Hebrew Doctors universally agree in this Rule, That the Spirit of prophecy never rests upon any but a Holy and Wise man, one whose passions are allayed. So the Talmud Masses, Sanhedrin, as it is quoted by R. Albo, Maam. 3. c. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (i) The Spirit of prophecy never resides but upon a Man of wisdom and Fortitude, as also upon a rich and great man. The two last qualifications in this rule Maimonides in his Fundamenta legis hath left out, and indeed it is full enough without them. But those other two qualifications of Wisdom and Fortitude are constantly laid down by them in this argument. And so we find it ascribed to the Author of this Canon, who is said to be R. Jochanan, c. 4. Gem. Nedar. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (i) R. Jochanan says, God doth not make his Shechina to reside upon any but a rich and humble man, a man of fortitude, all which we learn from the example of Moses our Master. Where by Fortitude they mean nothing else but that Power whereby a good man subdues his Animal part; for so I suppose I may safely translate that solution of theirs which I have sometime met with, and I think in Pirke Avoth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Who is the man of fortitude? It is he that subdues his figmentum malum, by which they meant nothing else but the Sensual or Animal part: of which more in another Discourse. And thus they give us another Rule as it were paraphrastical upon the former, which I find Gem. Schab. c. 2. where glancing at that contempt which the Wise man in Ecclesiastes cast upon Mirth and Laughter, they distinguish of a twofold Mirth, the one Divine, the other Mundane, and then sum up many of these Mundane and Terrene affections which this Holy Spirit will not reside with, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Divine presence or Spiritus Sanctus doth not reside where there is grief and dull sadness, laughter and lightness of behaviour, impertinent talk or idle discourse; but with due and innocuous cheerfulness it loves to reside, according to that which is written concerning Elisha, Bring me now a Minstrel: and it came to pass when the Minstrel played, the hand of the Lord was upon him, 2 Kings 3. Where we see that temper of Mind principally required by them is a free cheerfulness, in opposition to all Griefs, Anger, or any other sad and Melancholy passions. So Gem. Pesac. c. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Every man when he is in passion, if he be a wise man, his wisdom is taken from him; if a Prophet, his prophecy. The first part of this Aphorism they there declare by the example of Moses, who they say prophesied not in the wilderness after the return of the Spies that brought an ill report of the land of Canaan, by reason of his Indignation against them: And the last part from the example of the Prophet Elisha, 2 Kings 3. 15. of which more hereafter. Thus in the Book Zohar, wherein most of the ancient Jewish Traditions are recorded, col. 408. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Behold, we plainly see that the divine presence doth not reside with Sadness, but with cheerfulness: If there be no cheerfulness, it will not abide there; as it is written concerning Elisha, who said, Give me now a minstrel. But from whence learn we that the Spirit of God will not reside with Heaviness? From the example of Jacob, for that all that while he grieved for Joseph, the Shechinah or the Holy Spirit did forsake him. For so they had also a common Tradition, that Jacob prophesied not that time while his grief for the loss of his son Joseph remained with him. So L. Tosiphta, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Spirit of prophecy dwells not with Sadness, but with cheerfulness. I will not here dispute the Punctualness of these Traditions concerning Moses and Jacob, though I doubt not but the main Scope of them is true, viz. that the Spirit of prophecy used not to reside with any black or Melancholy passions, but required a serene and pacate temper of Mind, it being itself of a mild and gentle nature; as it was well observed concerning the Holy Ghost in another notion by Tertullian in his de Spectaculis, Deus praecepit Spiritum Sanctum, utpote pro naturae suae bono tenerum & delicatum, tranquillitate & lenitate, & quiet & pace tractare; non furore, non bile, non irâ, non dolore inquietare. Now according to this notion I think we have gained some light for the further understanding of some Passages in Psalm 51. which the Chaldee Paraphrast and Hebrew Commentators also understand of the Spirit of prophecy which was taken from David in that time of his sorrow and grief of Mind, upon the reflection of his shameful miscarriage in the matter of Uriah; and this is called ver. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a free Spirit, or a Spirit of alacrity and liberty of mind, acting by generous and noble and free impulses upon it: and ver. 8. it is paraphrased by Joy and Gladness, as being that Temper of Mind which it most liberally moved upon and acted; as likewise ver. 12. a like Periphrasis is used of it, the joy of God's salvation; and ver. 10. David thus prayeth for the restauration of it to him, and the establishing him in the firm possession of it, Create in me a clean heart, O God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and renew a fixed Spirit within me. As if he had said, Thy Holy Spirit of prophecy dwells in no unhallowed Minds, hut with purity and holiness; and when these are violated, that presently departs; the holy and the impure Spirit cannot converse together: therefore cleanse my heart of all pollution, that this divine guest being restored to me, may find a constant habitation within me. And thus both Rasi and Abenezra gloss on this place, but especially R. Kimchi, who pursues this sense very largely: and so before them the Talmudists had expounded it, Gem. Joma. c. 2. where they thus descant upon those words, ver. 11. Take not thy Holy Spirit from me, and tell us how David was punished by leprosy and double Excommunication; one from this Spirit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which words I find most corruptly translated by Vorstius in his Comment upon Maimon. his Fundamenta legis. I should therefore thus render them in their native and genuine sense, Per sex menses erat David leprosus (viz. propter peccatum in negotio Uriae admissum,) & separabant se ab eo viri Synagogae magnae, atque ablata est ab eo Shechinah (i Spiritus Propheticus.) Primum constat ex Psalm. 119. ubi dicitur, Revertantur ad me timentes te, & scientes testimonia tua: alterum ex Psalm. 51. ubi dicitur, Fac revertatur ad me laetitia salutis tuae. But it's now time to look a little into that place which the Masters constantly refer to in this notion, viz. 1 Kings 3. where when the Kings of Israel and Judah and Edom in their distress for water, upon their warlike expedition against the King of Moab, came to Elisha to inquire of God by him, the Prophet Elisha (ver. 14.) seems to have been moved with indignation against the King of Israel, and so makes a very unwelcome address to him, Surely were it not that I regard the presence of Jehosaphat the King of Judah, I would not look toward thee, nor see thee: and then it follows ver. 15. But now bring me a minstrel: and it came to pass when the minstrel played, that the hand of the Lord came upon him. Which words are thus expounded by R. D. Kimchi, out of the rabbins, (with which R. S. Jarchi & R. L. Ben Gersom agree for the substance of his meaning) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Our Doctors tell us, that from that day wherein his Master Elijah was took up into heaven, the Spirit of prophecy remained not with him for a certain time; for, for this cause he was very sorrowful, and the divine Spirit doth not reside with heaviness. Others say that by reason of the indignation he conceived against the King of Israel, he was disquieted in his mind; and touching this they say, That whensoever a Prophet is disturbed through anger or passion, the Holy Spirit forsakes him. From whence learn we this? From the example of Elisha, who said, Give me a Minstrel. Thus we may by this time see the Reason why Musical instruments were so frequently used by the Prophets, especially the Hagiographi; which indeed seems to be nothing else but that their Minds might be thereby put into a more composed, liberal and cheerful temper, and so the better disposed and fitted for the transportation of the Prophetical Spirit. So we have heard before out of the 1 Chron. 25. how Asaph, Heman and Jeduthun composed their rapt and Divine Poems at the sound of the Quire-Musick of the Temple. Another famous place we find for this purpose 1 Sam. 10. which place (as well as the former) hath been (I think) much mistaken and misinterpreted by some of Singing; whereas certainly it cannot be meant of any thing less than Divine poetry, and a Composure of Hymns excited by a Divine Energy inwardly moving the Mind. In that place Samuel having anointed Saul King of Israel, to assure him that it was so ordained of God, he tells him of some Events that should occur to him a little after his departure from him; whereof this is one, that meeting with some Prophets, he himself should find the Impulses of a Prophetical Spirit also moving in him, ver. 5. These Prophets are thus described, After that, thou shalt come to the hill of God, etc. and it shall come to pass when thou art come thither to the City, that thou shalt meet a company of Prophets coming down from the high place, with a Psaltery, and a Tabret, and a Pipe, and an Harp before them; and they shall prophesy. And the Spirit of the Lord shall come upon thee, and thou shalt prophesy with them, and shalt be turned into another man. Where this music which they were accompanied with, was to vigorate and compose their Minds, as Kimchi comments upon the place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, And before them was a psaltery (or Lute) and a Tabret, and a Pipe, and an Harp: for as much as the holy Spirit dwells no where but with alacrity and cheerfulness: And they prophesied, that is, as Jonath the Targumist expounds it, they praised God: As if he had said, Their prophecies were Songs and Praises to God, uttered by the Holy Ghost. Thus he. Now as this Divine Spirit thus acted free and cheerful Souls, so the Evil Spirit actuated sad, Melancholy Minds, as we heard before, and as we may see in the Example of Saul. And indeed that Evil Spirit which is said to have possessed him, seems to be nothing else originally but Anguish and grief of Mind, however wrought upon by some tempting insinuations of an Evil Spirit. And this sometime instigated him to prophesy after the fashion of such Melancholy fury, 1 Sam. 18. 10. And it came to pass on the morrow, that the Evil Spirit from God came upon Saul, and he prophesied in the midst of the house; which Jonathan renders by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, insanivit in medio domûs, or, as Kimchi expounds the Paraphrast, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, locutus est verba stultitiae. So also R. Solom. upon the place expounds it to the same purpose. So that according to the strain of all the Jewish Scholiasts, by this Evil Spirit of Saul nothing else is here meant but a Melancholy kind of madness, which made him prophesy or speak distractedly and inconsistently. To these we may add R. L. B. Gersom, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He spoke in the midst of the house very confusedly, by reason of that Evil Spirit. Now as this Evil Spirit was indeed fundamentally, as I said, nothing else but a sour and Distracted Temper of Mind arising from the Terrene dregs of Melancholy, Grief and Malice, whereby Saul was at that time vexed; so the proper Cure of it was the Harmony and Melody of David's music, which was therefore made use of to compose his Mind, and to allay these turbulent passions. And that was the reason (as I hope by this time it appears) why this music was so frequently used, viz. to compose the Animal part, that all kind of Perturbations being dispelled, and a fine gentle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or tranquillity ushered in, the Soul might be the better disposed for the Divine breathe of the Prophetical Spirit, which enter not at random into any sort of Men. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Philo hath well expressed it upon this occasion; These Divine breathe enter only into those Minds that were fitly disposed for them by Moral and Acquisite qualifications. CHAP. IX. Of the Sons or Disciples of the Prophets. An Account of several Schools of Prophetical Education, as at Naioth in Rama, at Jerusalem, Bethel, Jericho, Gilgal, etc. Several passages in the Historical Books of Scripture pertinent to this Argument explained. AND therefore we find also frequently such Passages in Scripture as strongly insinuate to us that anciently many were trained so up in a way of School-discipline, that they might become Candidati Prophetiae, and were as Probationers to these Degrees which none but God himself conferred upon them. Yet while they heard others prophecy, there was sometime an afflatus upon them also, their Souls as it were sympathising (like Unisons in music) with the Souls of those which were touched by the Spirit. And this seems to be the meaning of that story 1 Sam. 19 where all Saul's messengers sent to Naioth in Rama to apprehend David (and at last he himself) are said to fall a prophesying. For it is probable that the prophecies there spoken of were Anthems divinely dictated, or Doxologies with such elegant strains of Devotion and fancy as might also excite and stir up the Spirits of the Auditors: As often we find that any admirable Discourses, in which there is a cheerful and free flowing forth of a rich fancy in an intelligible, and yet extraordinary, way, are apt to beget a symbolising quality of Mind in a stander-by. And this notion we now drive is clearly suggested by the Jewish writers, who tell us that this Naioth in Rama was indeed a School of Prophetical education, and so the Targum expounds the word Naioth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Domus doctrinae, i. e. Prophetiae. And R. Levi B. G. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Our Masters say That there was a School for the Prophets near the City of Ramah, to which the prophet's congregated: And to the like purpose R. Solomon. And it's further insinuated that Samuel was the Precedent of this School or college; as disciplining those young Scholars, and training them up to those preparatory qualifications which might more dispose them for prophecy; and also prophesying to them in sacred Hymns, or otherwise, whereby their Spirits might receive some Tincture of a like kind. For so we find it verse 20. And when they saw the company of the Prophets prophesying, and Samuel standing as appointed over them, the Spirit of God was upon the Messengers of Saul, and they also prophesied. Where the Chaldee Paraphrast translates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or prophesying, by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praising God with sacred Hymns and Hallelujahs, according to the common strain of the Prophetical degree which was called Spiritus Sanctus. And so R. Kimchi and R. Levi B. G. here ascribe it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Holy Spirit. Among these Prophets it's said Samuel stood as appointed over them, that is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He stood as a Teacher or Master over them, as the Chaldee Paraphrast reads it. But R. Levi B. G. strains a little higher, and perhaps too high, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He derived forth from himself, of his own Prophetical Spirit, by way of Emanation, upon them. Though this kind of language be very suitable to the Notions of those Masters who will needs persuade us that almost all the Prophets prophesied by virtue of some influence raying forth from the Spirit of some other Prophet into them: And Moses himself they make the Common conduit through whom all Prophetical influence was conveyed to the rest of the Prophets. A conceit, I think, a little too nice and subtle to be understood. But to return, Upon this Ground we have suggested, these Disciples of the Prophets are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Sons of the Prophets: and these are they which are meant 1 Sam. 10. 5. (the place we named before) in those words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Company of the Prophets, that is, as the Targum renders it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coetus Scribarum, a Company of Scribes, (for so these young Scholars were anciently called;) or if you please rather in Kimchi's language, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, A company of Scribes, that is, Scholars: For the Scholars of the Wise men were called Scribes: For they were the Scholars of the greater Prophets, and these Scholars were called the Sons of the Prophets. Now the greater Prophets which lived in that time from Eli to David were Samuel, Gad, Nathan, Asaph, Heman and Jeduthun. And thus we must understand the meaning of that Question ver. 12. Who is their Father? which gave occasion to that Proverbial speech afterwards used commonly amongst the Jews [Is Saul also amongst the Prophets?] used of one that was suddenly raised up to some dignity or perfection which by his education he was not fitted for. And therefore the Chaldee Paraphrast minding the Scope of the place renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is their Father, by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is their Master? which Kimchi approves, and accordingly expounds that Proverb in this manner, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, When any one was mounted from a low state to any dignity, they used to say, Is Saul also among the Prophets? But R. Solom. would rather keep the Literal sense of those words, Who is their Father? and therefore supposeth something more than we here contend for, viz. That prophecy was a kind of Hereditary thing. For so he speaks, Don't wonder for that he is called the Father of them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, For prophecy is an hereditary thing. But I think we may content ourselves with what our former Authors have told us, to which we may add the testimony of R. Levi B. Gersom, who tells us that these Prophets here spoken of were the Scholars of Samuel who trained them up to a degree of Prophetical perfection, and so is called their Father, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because that Samuel instructed them, and trained them up by his discipline to a degree of Prophetical perfection. Of these Disciples we find very frequent mention in Scripture; So 2 Kings 4. we read of the Sons or Disciples of the Prophets in Gilgal. And chap. 6. Elisha is there brought in as their Master, at whose command they were, and therefore they ask leave to enlarge their dwellings. And Elisha himself was trained up by Elijah, as his Disciple; and therefore in 2 Kings 3. it was thought a reason good enough to prove that he was a Prophet, for that he had been Elijah's Disciple, and poured water upon his hands, as all the Jewish Scholiasts observe. And 2 Kings 9 1. Elisha sends one of these his ministering Disciples to anoint Jehu to be King of Israel. And 1 Kings 20. 35. The young Prophet there sent to reprove Ahab for sparing benhadad King of Syria is called by the Chaldee Paraphrast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, One of the Sons, the Disciples of the Prophets. And hence it was that Amos urgeth the extraordinariness of his commission from God, Ch. 7. 14. I was no Prophet, nor was I a Prophets Son. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He was not prepared for prophecy, or trained up so as to be fitted for a Prophetical function by his discipleship, as Abarbanel glosseth upon the place. And therefore Divine inspiration found him out of the ordinary road of Prophets, among his herds of cattle, and in an extraordinary way moved him to go to Bethel, there to declare God's judgements against King and people, even in the King's chapel. To conclude, In the New Testament, when John Baptist and our Saviour called Disciples to attend upon them and to learn divine Oracles from them, it seems to have been no new thing, but that which was the common custom of the old Prophets. Now of these Prophets there were several Schools or colleges, as the Jews observe, in several Cities, according as occasion was to employ them. So we read of a college in Jerusalem 2 Kings 22. 14. where Huldah the Prophetess lived, which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Original, and by the Chaldee Paraphrast translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Domus Doctrinae; by Kimchi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a School. So 2 Kings ch. 2, & 4. we meet with divers places set down as those where the residence of those young Prophets was, as Bethel and Jericho and Gilgal, etc. So Kimchi observes upon the place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, As the Sons of the Prophets were in Bethel and Jericho, so were there also of them in several other places. And the main reason why they were thus dispersed in many of the Cities of Israel was this, that they might reprove the Israelites that were there: and their prophecy was wholly according to the exigency of those times; and therefore it was that their prophecy was not committed to writing. From hence some of the Jewish writers tell us of a certain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of prophecy, one continually like an Evening-star shining upon the conspicable Hemisphere, when another was set. Kimchi tells us of this Mystical gloss upon those words 1 Sam. 3. 3. Ere the Lamp of God went out, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, This is spoken Mystically concerning the light of prophecy, according to that saying amongst our doctor's [the Sun riseth and the Sun setteth,] that is, Ere God makes the Sun of one righteous man to set, he makes the Sun of another righteous man to rise. CHAP. X. Of Bath Kol, i. e. Filia Vocis: That it succeeded in the room of prophecy: That it was by the Jews counted the Lowest degree of Revelation. What places in the New Testament are to be understood of it. WE should come now briefly to speak of the Highest degree of Divine Inspiration or prophecy taken in a general sense, which was the Mosaical. But before we do that, it may not be amiss to take notice of the Lowest degree of Revelation among the Jews, which was inferior to all that which they call by the name of prophecy: and This was their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Bath Ko●, Filia vocis, which was nothing else but some Voice which was heard as descending from Heaven, directing them in any affair as occasion served: which kind of Revelation might be made to one (as Maimon. par. 2. c. 42. More Nevoch. tells us) that was no way prepared for prophecy. Of this Filia Vocis we have mention made in one of the Ancientest monuments of Jewish learning, which is Pirke R. Eliezer c. 44. and otherwhere very frequently among the Jewish writers, as that which was a frequent thing after the ceasing of prophecy among the Jews; of which more afterward. Josephus * Archaeol. lib. 13. c. 18. tells a story of Hircanus the highpriest, how he heard this Voice from Heaven, which told him of the victory which his Sons had got at Cyzicum against Antiochus the same day the battle was fought; and this (he says) while he was offering up incense in the Temple, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he was made partaker of a vocal converse with God, that is by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This R. Isaac Angarensis L. Cosri strongly urgeth against the Karraei or Scripturarii, (a sort of Jews that reject all Talmudical Traditions) that the grand Doctors of the Jews received such Traditions from the Lxxii Senators, who were guided either by a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or something answerable to it, in the truth of things, after all prophecy was ceased, Maam. 3. §. 41. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (i) There is a Tradition that the men of the great Sanhedrim were bound to be skilled in the knowledge of all Sciences, and therefore it is much more necessary that prophecy should not be taken from them, or that which should supply its room, viz. the Daughter of Voice, and the like. Thus he, according to the Genius of Talmudical learning, is pleased to expound the place Esay 2. where it is said, that a law shall go forth out of Zion, of the Consistorial Decrees of the Judges, Rulers and Priests of the Jews, and the great Senate of Lxxii Elders, whom he would needs persuade us to be guided infallibly by this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or in some other way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by some divine virtue, power or assistance always communicated to them, as supposed at least that such an Heroical Spirit as that Spirit of Fortitude which belonged to the Judges and Kings of Israel, and is called the Spirit of God, (as Maimonides in More Nev. tells us) had perpetually cleaved to them. But we shall here leave our Author to his Judaical superstition, and take notice of Two or Three places in the New Testament which seem to be understood perfectly of this Filia vocis, which the constant Tradition of the Jews assures us to have succeeded in the room of prophecy. The first is John 12. where this Heavenly voice was conveyed to our Saviour as if it had been the noise of Thunder, but was not well understood by all those that stood by, who therefore thought that either it thundered, or that it was a mighty voice of some Angel that spoke to him: ver. 28, 29. Then came there a voice from Heaven, saying, I have both glorified my name, and will glorify it again. The people therefore that stood by and heard it, said it thundered: others said that an Angel spoke to him. So Matt. 3. 17. after our saviour's baptism, upon his coming out of the water, the Evangelist tells us that the Heavens were opened, and that the Spirit of God descended upon him in the shape of a Dove, and lo, a voice from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. And last of all we meet with this kind of Voice upon our Saviour's Transfiguration, Matth. 17. 5, 6. which is there so described as coming out of a Cloud, as if it had been loud like the noise of Thunder, Behold a bright cloud overshadowed them, and behold a Voice out of the cloud, which said, This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased: which Voice it is said the three Disciples that were then with him in the Mount heard, as we are told in the following verse, and also 2 Pet. 1. 17, 18. From whence we are fully informed, that it was this Filia Vocis we speak of which came for the Apostles sakes that were with him, as a testimony of that glory and honour with which God magnified his Son; which Apostles were not yet raised up to the Degree of prophecy, but only made partakers of a Voice inferior to it. The words are these, He received from God the Father honour and glory, when there came such a voice to him from the excellent Glory, This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased. And this voice which came from Heaven we heard when we were with him in the holy mount. Now that this was that very 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we speak of, which was inferior to prophesy, we may sufficiently learn from the next verse, We have also a more sure word of prophecy: For indeed true prophecy was counted much more Authentical than this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as being a Divine Inspiration into the Mind of the Prophet; which this was not, but only a Voice that moved their exterior Senses; and by the mediation thereof informed their Minds. And thus we have done with this Argument. CHAP. XI. Of the Highest Degree of Divine Inspiration, viz. the Mosaical. Four Differences between the Divine Revelations made to Moses, and to the rest of the Prophets. How the Doctrine of men Prophetically inspired is to approve itself by Miracles, or by its Reasonableness. The Sympathy and Agreeableness between an Holy Mind and Divine Truth. WE now come briefly to inquire into the Highest degree of Divine Inspiration, which was the Mosaical, that by which the Law was given; and this we may best do by searching out the Characteristical differences of Moses' Inspiration from that which was Technically called prophecy. And these we shall take out of Maimon. his De Fund. Legis, c. 7. where they are fully described according to the general strain of all the Rabbinical Doctrine delivered upon this Argument. The first is, That Moses was made partaker of these 1. Divine Revelations per vigiliam, whereas God manifested himself to all the other Prophets in a Dream or Vision when their Senses were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, What is the difference between the prophecy of Moses and the prophecy of all other Prophets? All other Prophets did prophesy in a Dream or Vision: but Moses our Master when he was waking and standing, according to what is written (Num. 7. 89.) And when Moses was gone into the Tabernacle of the Congregation to speak with him, (i. e. God) than he heard the voice of one speaking unto him. By which place in Numb. it appears he had free recourse to this Heavenly Oracle at any time. And therefore the Talmudists have a Rule, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That Moses had never any prophecy in the nighttime, (i) in a Dream or Vision of the night, as the other Prophets had. The second difference is, That Moses prophesied 2. without the mediation of any Angelical power, by an influence derived immediately from God; whereas in all other prophecies (as we have showed heretofore) some Angel still appeared to the Prophet, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All Prophets did prophesy by the help or ministry of an Angel, and therefore they did see that which they saw in parables or under some dark representation; but Moses prophesied without the ministry of an Angel. This he proves from Numbers 12. 8. where God says of Moses, I will speak with him mouth to mouth; and so Exod. 33. 11. The Lord spoke unto Moses face to face. But we must not here so much adhere to that Exposition which Maimonides and the rest of his countrymen give us of this place, as to forget what we are told in the New Testament concerning the ministry of Angels which God used in giving the Law itself: And so S. Stephen discourseth of it, Acts 7. 53. and S. Paul to the Galatians ch. 3. tells us, the Law was given by the disposition of Angels in the hands of a Mediator, that is, Moses, the Mediator then between God and the people. And therefore I should rather think the meaning of those words [Face to face] to import the clearness and evidence of the Intellectual light wherein God appeared to Moses, which was greater than any of the Prophets were made partakers of. And therefore the old tradition goes of them, that they saw 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Speculo non lucido, whereas Moses saw in Speculo lucido, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Philo tells us (together with Maimonides) in his Book, Quis Rerum divin. haeres sit, that is, without any impressions or Images of things in his Imagination in an Hieroglyphical way, as was wont to be in all Dreams and Visions; but by characterizing all immediately upon his Understanding: though otherwise much of the Law was indeed almost little more for the main scope and aim of it but an Emblem or Allegory. But there may be yet a farther meaning of those words [Face to face,] and that is the friendly and amicable way whereby all divine Revelations were made to Moses; for so it is added in the Text, As a man speaketh unto his friend. And this is the third difference which Maimonides assigns, 3. viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All the other Prophets were afraid and troubled and fainted; but Moses was not so: for the Scripture saith, God spoke to him as a man speaks to his friend; that is to say, As a man is not afraid to hear the words of his friend, so was Moses able to understand the words of prophecy without any disturbance and astonishment of Mind. The fourth and last difference is the liberty of Moses' 4. Spirit to prophesy at all times, as we heard before out of Numb. 7. 89. He might have recourse at any time to the sacred Oracle (in the Tabernacle) which spoke from between the Cherubins: and so Maimonides lays down this difference, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, None of the Prophets did prophesy at what time they would, save Moses, who was clothed with the Holy Spirit when he would, and the Spirit of prophecy did abide upon him: neither had he need to predispose his Mind or prepare himself for it, for he was always disposed and in readiness as a ministering Angel; and therefore could he prophesy at what time he would, according to that which is spoken in Numb. 9 8. Tarry you here a little, and I will hear what the Lord will command concerning you. Thus Maimonides, who, I think, here somewhat hyperbolizeth, and scarce speaks consistently with the rest of the Hebrew Masters. For we may remember what we heard before concerning the Talmudical Tradition, that Moses' mind was indisposed for prophesy when he was transported with indignation against the Spies; though I think it is most probable that he had a greater liberty of prophesying then any other of the Prophets had. Now this clear distinct kind of Inspiration made immediately upon an Intellectual faculty in a familiar way, which we see was the gradus Mosaicus, was most fit and proper for Laws to be administered in: which was excellently took notice of by Plutarch in that Discourse of his, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, where he tells us the poetry that was usually interlaced with Riddles and Parables was taken away in his time, and a more familiar way of prophecy brought in; though he by a Gentile superstition applies that to his Pythia; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. God hath now taken away from his oracle's poetry, and the variety of dialect, and circumlocution, and obscurity; and hath so ordered them to speak to those that consult them, as the Laws do to the Cities under their subjection, and Kings to their people, and Masters to their Scholars, in the most intelligible and porswasive language. But by Plutarch's leave this character agrees neither to his Pythia, nor indeed to Moses himself (who put a veil upon his face in giving the Law itself to the people) but to our Saviour alone, the Dispenser of the true Law of God inwardly to the Souls of Men; and therein conversing with them, not so much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not so much Face to Face as Mind to Mind. We have now seen what is this gradus Propheticus Mosaicus, which indeed was necessary should be transcendent and extraordinary, because it was the Basis of all future prophecy among the Jews: For all the Prophets mainly aim at that to establish and confirm the Law of Moses, as to the practical observation of it; and therefore it was also so strongly manifested to the Israelites by Signs and Miracles done in the sight of all the people, and his familiarity and acquaintance with Heaven testified to them all, the divine voice being heard by them all at Mount Sinai; which dispensation amounted at least to as much as a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the very lowest of the people. All which Considerations put R. Phineas into such an admiration of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Statio montis Sinai, (as the Doctors are wont to call it) that he determines in Pirke Eliezer, That all this Generation that heard the voice of the Holy Blessed God, was worthy to be accounted as the ministering Angels. But what That Voice was which they heard, the later Jews are scarce well agreed: but Maimonides, according to the most received opinion, in More Nev. p. 2. c. 33. tells that they only heard those first words of the Law distinctly, viz. I am the Lord thy God, and, Thou shalt have none other gods, etc. and but only the sound of all the rest of the words in which the remainder of the Law was given: and this, as he says, was the great mystery of that Station, so much spoken of by the Ancients. And here by the way we may take notice, That that divine Inspiration which is conveyed to any one man, primarily benefits none but himself; and therefore many times, as Maimonides tells us, it rested in this private use, not profiting any else but those to whom it came. And the reason of this is manifest, for that an Inspiration abstractly considered can only satisfy the mind of him to whom it is made, of its own authority and Authenticalness (as we have showed before:) And therefore that one man may know that another hath that Doctrine revealed to him by a Prophetical spirit which he delivers, he must also either be inspired, and so be in gradu Prophetico in a true sense, or be confirmed in the belief of it by some Miracle, whereby it may appear that God hath committed his Truth to such an one, by giving him some signal power in altering the course of Nature; which indeed was the way by which the Prophets of old ordinarily confirmed their Doctrine, when they delivered any thing new to the people; which course our Saviour himself and his Disciples also took to confirm the Truth of the Gospel: Or else there must be so much Reasonableness in the thing itself, as that by Moral arguments it may be sufficient to beget a belief in the Minds of sober and good men. And I wish this last way of becoming acquainted with Divine Truth were better known amongst us: For when we have once attained to a true sanctified frame of Mind, we have then attained to the End of all prophecy, and see all divine Truth that tends to the salvation of our Souls in the Divine light, which always shines in the purity & Holiness of the New Creature, and so need no further Miracle to confirm us in it. And indeed that godlike glory and majesty which appears in the naked simplicity of true Goodness, will by its own Connateness and Sympathy with all saving Truth friendly entertain and embrace it. CHAP. XII. When the Prophetical Spirit ceased in the Jewish Church. The Cessation of prophecy noted as a famous Epocha by the Jews. The restoring of the Prophetical Spirit by Christ. Some passages to this purpose in the New Testament explained. When the Prophetical Spirit ceased in the Christian Church. That it did not continue long, proved by several Testimonies of the ancient Writers. THus we have now done with all those sorts of prophecy which we find any mention of: And as a Coronis to this Discourse we shall farther inquire a little what Period of time it was in which this Prophetical Spirit ceased both in the Jewish and Christian Church. In which business because the Scripture itself is in a manner silent, we must appeal to such Histories as are like to be most Authentical in this business. And first for the Period of time when it ceased in the Jewish, I find our Christian writers differing. Justin Martyr would needs persuade us that it was not till the Aera Christiana. This he inculcates often in his Dialogue with Trypho the Jew, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, There never ceased in your Nation either Prophet or Prince, till Jesus Christ was both born and had suffered. And so he often there tells us that John the Baptist was the last Prophet of the Jewish Church; which conceit he seems to have made so much of, as thinking to bring in our Saviour lumine Prophetico, with the greater evidence of Divine authority, as the promised Messiah into the world. But Clemens Alexandrinus hath much trulier, with the consent of all Jewish Antiquity, resolved us, that all prophesy determined in Malachy, in his Strom. lib. 1. where he numbers up all the Prophets of the Jews, Thirty five in all, and Malachy as the last. Though indeed the Talmudists reckon up Fifty five Prophets and Prophetesses together, Gem. Mass. Megil. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Rabbins say that there were 48 Prophets and 7 Prophetesses that did prophesy to the Iraelites: Which after they had reckoned almost up, they tell us that Malachy was the last of them, and that he was contemporary with Mordecai, Daniel, Haggai, Zacharie, and some others (whose prophecies are not extant) whom for their number sake they there reckon up, who all prophesied in the second year of Darius. But commonly they make only these Three, Haggai, Zacharie and Malachy, to be the last of the Prophets, and so call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; so Massec. Sotah ch. last, where the Misnical Doctors tell us, that from the time in which all the first Prophets expired, the Urim and Thummim ceased; and the Gemarists say that they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the First Prophets, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in opposition to Haggai, Zacharie and Malachy, which are the Last. And so Maimon. and Bartenor. tell us that the Prophetae priores were so called, because they prophesied in the times 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the first Temple, and the Posteriores, because they prophesied in the time of the second Temple: and when these later Prophets died, than all prophesy expired, and there was left, as they say, only a Bath Kol to succeed some time in the room of it. So we are told Gem. Sanhedrim c. 1. §. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Rabbins say, that from that time the later Prophets died, the Holy Spirit was taken away from Israel; nevertheless they enjoyed the Filia vocis: and this is repeated Massec. Joma c. 1. Now all that time which the Spirit of prophecy lasted among the Jews under the second Temple, their Chronologie makes to be but Forty years. So the Author of the Book Cosri, Maam. 3. §. 39 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (i) The continuance of prophecy under the time of the second Temple was almost forty years. And this R. Jehuda his Scholiast confirms out of an Historico-Cabbalistical Treatise of R. Abraham Ben Dior. and a little after he tells us, that after forty years their Sapientes were called Senators, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, after forty years were passed, all the wisemen were called The Men of the great Synagogue. And therefore the Author of that Book useth this Aera of the Cessation of prophecy; and so this is commonly noted as a famous Epocha among all their Chronologers, as the Book Juchasin, the Seder Olam Zuta, as R. David Gantz hath summed them all up in his chronological History put forth lately by Vorstius. The like may be observed from 1 Maccab. 9 27. and chap. 4. 46. and chap. 14. 41. This Cessation of prophecy determined as it were all that old Dispensation wherein God hath manifested himself to the Jews under the Law, that so that growing old and thus wearing away, they might expect that new Dispensation of the Messiah which had been promised so long before, and which should again restore this Prophetical Spirit more abundantly. And so this Interstitium of prophecy is insinuated by Joel 2. in those words concerning the later times; In those days shall your Sons and Daughters prophesy, etc. And so S. Peter Acts 2. makes use of the place to take off that admiration which the Jews were possessed withal to see so plentiful an effusion of the Prophetical Spirit again: And therefore this Spirit of prophecy is called the Testimony of Jesus in the Apocalypse, ch. 19 According to this notion we must understand that passage in John 7. 39 The Holy Ghost was not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified. To which that in Ephes. 4. He ascended up on high, and gave gifts unto men, plainly answers: As likewise the Answer which the Christians at Ephesus made to Paul, Acts 19 when he asked them whether they had received the Holy ghost, That they knew not whether there was a Holy ghost (that is) whether there were any Extraordinary Spirit, or Spirit of prophecy restored again to the Church or not, as hath been well observed of late by some learned men. But enough of this. We come now briefly to dispatch the second Enquiry, viz. What time the Spirit of prophecy, which was again restored by our Saviour, ceased in the Christian Church. It may be thought that S. John was the last of Christian Prophets, for that the Apocalypse is the latest dated of any Book which is received into the Canon of the New Testament. But I know no place of Scripture that intimates any such thing, as if the Spirit of prophecy was so soon to expire. And indeed if we may believe the Primitive Fathers, it did not; though it overlived S. John's time but a little. * Hist. Eccles. lib. 3. §. 37. Eusebius tells us of one Quadratus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who together with the daughters of Philip had the gift of prophecy. So the report was. This Quadratus, as he tells us, lived in Trajan's time, which was but at the beginning of the second Century. And a little after, speaking of good men in that age, he adds, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Many strange and admirable virtues of the Divine Spirit as yet shown forth themselves by them. And the same Author lib. 4. §. 18. tells us out of Justin Martyr, who lived in the middle of the second Century, and then writ his apology for the Christians, That the Gift of prophecy was still to be seen in the Church, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Vide Justin. Martyr. in Dial. cum Tryphone Judaeo, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. . Yet not long afterward there is little or no remembrance of the Prophetical spirit remaining in the Church. Hence the Montanists are by some of the Fathers proved to be no better than Dissemblers when they pretended to the Gift of prophecy, for that it was then ceased in the Church. And so Eusebius tells us lib. 5. §. 3. and withal that Montanus and his Complices only took advantage of that Virtue of working wonders which yet appeared (as was reported, though doubtfully) in some places, to make a semblance of the Spirit of prophecy; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But then especially did Montanus, Alcibiades and Theodotus raise up in many an opinion that they prophesied: And this belief was so much the more increased concerning their prophesying, for that as yet in several Churches were wrought many Miraculous and Stupendious effects of the Holy Spirit; though yet there was no perfect agreement in their opinion about this. To conclude this, (and to hasten to an End of this Discourse of Prophecy,) There is indeed in Antiquity more frequent mention of some * And that the Gift of working Miracles was ceased in his time, S. chrysostom doth more than once affirm, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, l. 4. de Sacerdotio, etc. The like is affirmed by S. Austin. Miracles wrought in the name of Christ; but less is said concerning the Prophetical Virtue, especially after the second Century. That it was rare, and to be seen but sometimes, and more obscurely in some few Christians only who had attained to a good degree of Self-purification, is intimated by that of Origen in his 7th Book against Celsus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. CHAP. XIII. Some Rules and Observations concerning Prophetical Writ in general. WE should now shut up all this Discourse about prophecy; only before we conclude, it may not be amiss to add a few Rules for the better understanding of Prophetical Writ in general. 1. The First, (which yet we shall rather put under debate,) is concerning the Style and Manner of languaging all pieces of prophecy; whether that was not peculiarly the work of the Prophet himself; whether it does not seem that the Prophetical Spirit dictated the Matter only or principally, yet did leave the words to the Prophet himself. It may be considered that God made not use of Idiots or Fools to reveal his Will by, but such whose Intellectuals were entire and perfect; and that he imprinted such a clear copy of his Truth upon them, as that it became their own Sense, being digested fully into their Understandings; so as they were able to deliver and represent it to others as truly as any can paint forth his own Thoughts. If the Matter and Substance of things be once lively in the Mind, verba non invita sequentur: And according as that Matter operates upon the Mind and fantasy, so will the Phrase and Language be in which it is expressed. And therefore I think to doubt whether the Prophets might not mistake in representing the Mind of God in their Prophetical Inspirations, except all their Words had been also dictated to them, is to question whether they could speak Sense as wise men, and tell their own Thoughts and Experiences truly or not. And indeed it seems most agreeable to the nature of all these Prophetical Visions and Dreams we have discoursed of, wherein the nature of the enthusiasm consisted in a Symbolical and Hieroglyphical shaping forth of Intelligible things in their Imaginations, and enlightening the Understanding of the Prophets to discern the scope and meaning of these Visa or Phantasmata; that those Words and Phrases in which they were audibly expressed to the Hearers afterwards or penned down, should be the Prophets own: For the Matter was not (as seems evident from what hath been said) represented always by Words, but by Things. Though I know that sometime in these Visions they had a Voice speaking to them; yet it is not likely that Voice should so dilate and comment so largely upon things, as it was fit the Prophet should do when he repeated the same things to vulgar ears. It may also further be considered That our Saviour and his Apostles generally quote Passages out of the Old Testament as they were translated by the Lxx, and that where the Lxx have not rendered them verbatim, but have much varied the manner of phrasing things from the Original; as hath been abundantly observed by Philologers: Which it is not likely they would have done, had the Original words been the very Dictate of the Spirit; for certainly that would seem not to need any such Paraphrastical variations, as being of themselves full and clear enough; besides herein they might seem to weaken the Authenticalness of the Divine Oracles. And indeed hath not the swerving from this Notion made some of late conceit (though erroneously) the Translation of the Lxx to be more Authentical than the Hebrew, which they would needs persuade us had been corrupted by the Jews, our Saviour declining the phraseology thereof? Besides, we find the Prophets speaking every one of them in his own Dialect; and such a variety of Style and phraseology appears in their Writings, as may argue them to have spoken according to their own proper Genius: which is observed by the Jews themselves (who are most zealously, as is well known, devoted to the very Letter of the Text) in all the Prophets except Moses, and that part of Moses only which contains the Decalogue. And hence we have that Rule Gem. Sanhedr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The same form doth not ascend upon two Prophets, neither do both of them prophesy in the same form. Which Rule Cocceius confesseth he knows not the meaning of: But Abarbanel, who better understood the Mind of his own Compatriots, in his Comment upon Jeremy ch. 49. gives us a full account of it, upon occasion of some Phrases in that prophecy concerning Edom, parallel to what we find in Obadiah. From this congruency of the Style in both he thus takes occasion to lay down our present Notion as the Sense of that former Theorem, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Prophets did not prophesy in the same manner as Moses did: For he prophesied from God immediately, from whom he received not only the prophecy, but also the very Words and Phrases; and accordingly as he heard them, so he wrote them in the Book of the Law, in the very same words which he heard from God: but as for the rest of the Prophets, they beheld in their Visions the things themselves which God made known to them, and both declared and expressed them in their own phraseology. Thus we see he ascribes the Phrase and Style every where to the Prophet himself, except only in the Law, which he supposeth to have been dictated totidem verbis: which is probable enough, if he means the Law strictly so taken, viz. for the Decalogue, as it is most likely he doth. And again a little after, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The things themselves they saw in prophecy, but they themselves did explain and interpret them in that Dialect which was most familiar to them. And this, as he there tells, was the reason why the same kind of phraseology occurred not among the Prophets, according to the sense of the Talmudists maxim we mentioned. The like the Jewish Scholiasts observe upon those false Prophets who did all uno ore bid Ahab ascend up to Ramoth-Gilead and prosper, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Unus idemque loquendi modus nunquam reperitur in duobus Prophetis: And therefore they made it an argument that these were false Prophets, because they did idem Canticum canere, for they all said, Go up and prosper. And thus the Heathenish Philosopher Plutarch, in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, thought likewise concerning his Oracle, telling us, That all enthusiasm is a mixture of two Motions, the one is impressed upon the Soul which is God's Organ, the other ariseth from it; and therefore he says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All Prophetical enthusiasm, like as also that which is Amatorious, doth make use of the subject faculty, and moves every Recipient according to its disposition and nature. And thence he thus excuseth the rough and unpolished language in which the Oracles were sometime delivered, most fitly to our purpose describing Prophetical Inspiration, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, For neither the voice, nor sound, nor phrase, nor metre is from God, but from Pythia herself; God only suppeditates the phantasms, and kindles a light in the Soul to signify future things: For all enthusiasm is after this manner. Hence was that old saying of Heraclitus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That the King whose Oracle is at Delphi, neither plainly expresses, nor conceals, but only obscurely intimates by signs. But to conclude this first Particular, I shall add by way of caution, We must not think that we can vary Scripture-expression so securely with retaining the true meaning, except we likewise had as real an understanding of the Sense itself as the Prophets had, over whom God also did so far superintend in their copying forth his Truth, as not to suffer them to swerve from his meaning. And so we have done with that Particular. 2. In the next place, for the better understanding all Prophetical writ, we must observe That there is sometimes a seeming inconsistence in things spoken of, if we shall come to examine them by the strict Logical rules of Method: we must not therefore in the matter of any Prophetical Vision look for a constant Methodical contexture of things carried on in a perpetual coherence. The Prophetical Spirit doth not tie itself to these Rules of Art, or thus knit up its Dictates Systematically, fitly framing one piece or member into a combination with the rest, as it were with the joints and sinews of Method: For this indeed would rather argue an humane and artificial contrivance than any Inspiration, which as it must beget a Transportation in the Mind, so it must spend itself in such Abrupt kind of Revelations as may argue indeed the Prophet to have been inspired. And therefore Tully lib. 2. de Divinat. judiciously excepts against the Authenticalness of those Verses of the Sibylls which he met with in his time, (and which were the same perhaps with those we now have) because of those acrostics and some other things which argued an elaborate artifice, and an affected diligence of the Writer, and so indeed non furentis erant, sed adhibentis diligentiam, as he speaks. Lumen Propheticum est lumen abruptum, as was well noted anciently by the Jews. And therefore the Masters of Jewish Tradition have laid down this maxim, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Non est prius & posterius in Lege, We must not seek for any Methodical concatenation of things in the Law, or indeed in any other part of Prophetical writ; it being a most usual thing with them many times 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to knit the Beginning and End of Time together. Nescit tarda molimina Spiritûs Sancti gratia, is true also of the Grace or Gift of prophecy. We find no curious Transitions, nor true dependence many times of one thing upon another; but things of very different natures, and that were cast into periods of time secluded one from another by vast intervals, all couched together in the same Vision; as I hath observed in many places, and therefore tells us, Non curae fuit Spiritui prophetali historiae ordinem sequi. And thus he takes notice in Daniel 11. 2. that whereas there were Thirteen Kings between Cyrus and Alexander the Great, the Prophet speaks of but Four, skipping over the rest, as if the other Nine had filled up no part of the interval. The like he observes upon Jeremy 21. 1. and otherwhere; as likewise sudden and abrupt Introductions of persons, Mutations of persons, (Exits and Intrats upon this Prophetical stage being made as it were in an invisible manner) and Transitions from the voice of one person to another. The Prophetical Spirit though it make no noise and tumult in its motions, yet it is most quick, spanning as it were from the Centre to the Circumference; it moves most swiftly, though most gently. And thus Philo's observation is true, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. There must be some kind of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all prophecy, as * In his Quis rerum Divinarum haeres sit. Philo tells us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, When divine light ariseth upon the Horizon of the Soul of Man, his own humane light sets: It must at least hid itself as a lesser light, as it were by an Occasus Heliacus, under the beams of the greater, and be wholly subject to the irradiations and influences of it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he goes on, Therefore the setting of a man's own Discursive faculty and the eclipsing thereof begets an Ecstasis and a divine kind of Mania. 3. The last Rule we shall observe is, That no piece of prophecy is to be understood of the state of the World to come or the Mundus animarum: For indeed it is altogether impossible to describe that, or to comprehend it in this life. And therefore all divine Revelation in Scripture must concern some state in this world. And so we must understand all those places that treat of a new Heaven and a new Earth, and such like. And so we must understand the new Jerusalem mentioned in the New Testament, in that Prophetical book of the Apocalypse, ch. 21. And thus the Jews were wont universally to understand them, according to that maxim we now speak of ascribed to R. Jochanan in Massec. Berac. c. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the Prophets prophesied to the days of the Messiah; but as for the world to come, Eye hath not seen it. So they constantly expound that passage in Esay 64. 4. Since the beginning of the world Men have not heard, nor perceived by the ear, neither hath the Eye seen, O God, besides thee, what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him. And according to this aphorism our Saviour seems to speak, when he says, All the Prophets and the Law prophesied until John, Mat. 11. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, i. e. They prophesied to or for that Dispensation which was to begin with John, who lived in the time of the twilight as it were between the Law and the Gospel. They prophesied of those things which should be accomplished within the period of Gospel-Dispensation which was ushered in by John. As for the state of Blessedness in Heaven, it is major Mente humanâ, much more is it major Phantasia. But of this in part heretofore. An Advertisement. THE Reader may remember That our Author in the beginning of his Treatise of the Immortality of the Soul, propounded these Three great Principles of Religion to be discoursed of; 1. The immortality of the Soul, 2. The Existence and Nature of God, 3. The Communication of God to Mankind through Christ And having spoken largely to the Two former Principles of Natural Theology, he thought it fit (as a Preparation to the Third, which imports the Revelation of the Gospel) to speak something concerning prophecy, the way whereby Revealed Truth is dispensed to us. Of this he intended to treat but a little (they are his words in the beginning of the Treatise of prophecy) and then pass on to the Third and Last part, viz. Those Principles of Revealed Truth which tend most of all to advance and cherish true and real Piety. But in his discoursing of prophecy so many considerable inquiries offered themselves to his thoughts, that by that time he had finished this Discourse (designed at first only as a Preface) his Office of being Dean and Catechist in the college did expire. Thus far had the Author proceeded in that year of his Office: and it was not long after that Bodily distempers and weaknesses began more violently to seize upon him, which the Summer following put a Period to his life here; (a life so every way beneficial to those who had the happiness to converse with him.) Sic multis ille bonis flebilis occidit. Thus he who designed to speak of God's Communication of Himself to Mankind through Christ, was taken up by God into a more inward and immediate participation of Himself in Blessedness. Had he lived and had health to have finished the remaining part of his designed Method, the Reader may easily conceive what a Valuable piece that Discourse would have been. Yet that he may not altogether want the author's labours upon such an Argument, I thought good in the next place to adjoine a Discourse of the like importance and nature, (delivered heretofore by the Author in some Chappel-Exercises) from which I shall not detain the Reader by any more of Preface. A DISCOURSE Treating Of LEGAL Righteousness, EVANGELICAL Righteousness, Or The Righteousness of FAITH; The Difference between the LAW and the GOSPEL, OLD and NEW COVENANT; JUSTIFICATION and DIVINE ACCEPTANCE; The conveyance of the EVANGELICAL Righteousness to us by FAITH. Except your Righteousness exceed the Righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. Matth. 5. 20. Having a form of Godliness, but denying the Power thereof. 2 Tim. 3. 5. For the Law made nothing perfect, but the bringing in of a better hope did. Heb. 7. 19 B. Macarius in Homil. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. A Discourse Of LEGAL Righteousness, and of The Righteousness of FAITH, etc. Rom. 9 31, 32. But Israel which followed after the Law of righteousness, hath not attained to the Law of righteousness: Wherefore? Because they sought it not by Faith, but as it were by the works of the Law. CHAP. I. The Introduction, showing What it is to have a right Knowledge of Divine Truth, and What it is that is either available or Prejudicial to the true Christian Knowledge and Life. THE Doctrine of Christian Religion propounded to us by our Saviour and his Apostles, is set forth with so much simplicity, and yet with so much repugnancy to that degenerate Genius and Spirit that rules in the hearts and lives of Men, that we may truly say of it, it is both the Easiest and the Hardest thing: it is a Revelation wrapped up in a Complication of mysteries, like that Book of the Apocalypse, which both unfolds and hides those great Arcana that it treats of; or as Plato sometimes chose so to explain the secrets of his Metaphysical or Theological Philosophy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that he that read might not be able to understand, except he were a Son of wisdom, and had been trained up in the knowledge of it. The Principles of True Religion are all in themselves plain and easy, delivered in the most familiar way, so that he that runs may read them; they are all so clear and perspicuous, that they need no Key of Analytical demonstration to unlock them: the Scripture being written doctis pariter & indoctis, and yet it is Wisdom in a mystery which the Princes of this world understand not; a sealed Book which the greatest Sophies may be most unacquainted with: it is like that Pillar of Fire and of a Cloud that parted between the Israelites and the Egyptians, giving a clear and comfortable light to all those that are under the manuduction and guidance thereof, but being full of darkness and obscurity to those that rebel against it. Divine Truth is not to be discerned so much in a man's Brain, as in his Heart. Divine wisdom is a Tree of life to them that find her, and it is only Life that can feelingly converse with Life. All the thin Speculations and subtlest Discourses of Philosophy cannot so well unfold or define any Sensible Object, nor tell any one so well what it is, as his own naked Sense will do. There is a Divine and Spiritual sense which only is able to converse internally with the life and soul of Divine Truth, as mixing and uniting itself with it; while vulgar Minds behold only the body and outside of it. Though in itself it be most intelligible, and such that man's Mind may most easily apprehend; yet there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as the Hebrew writers call that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) incrustamentum immunditiei upon all corrupt Minds, which hinders the lively taste and relish of it. This is that thick and palpable Darkness which cannot comprehend that divine Light that shines in the Minds and Understandings of all men, but makes them to deny that very Truth which they seem to entertain. The World through wisdom (as the Apostle speaks) knew not God. Those great Disputers of this world were too full of nice and empty Speculations to know him who is only to be discerned by a pacate, humble and selfdenying mind: their Curiosity served rather to dazzle their Eyes then to enlighten them; while they rather proudly braved themselves in their knowledge of the Deity, then humbly subjected their own Souls to a compliance with it; making the Divinity nothing else but as it were a flattering Glass that might reflect and set off to them the beauty of their own Wit and Parts the better: and while they seemed to converse with God himself, they rather amorously courted their own Image in him, and fell into love with their own Shape. Therefore the best acquaintance with Religion is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a knowledge taught by God: it is a Light that descends from Heaven which is only able to guide and conduct the souls of men to Heaven from whence it comes. The Jewish Doctors use to put it among the fundamental Articles of their Religion, That their Law was from heaven, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: I am sure we may much rather reckon it amongst the Principles of our Christian Religion in an higher way, That it is an Influx from God upon the Minds of good men. And this is the great design and plot of the Gospel, to open and unfold to us the true way of recourse to God; a Contrivance for the uniting the Souls of men to him, and the deriving a participation of God to men, to bring in Everlasting righteousness, and to establish the true Tabernacle of God in the Spirits of men, which was done in a Typical and Emblematical way under the Law. And herein consists the main preeminence which the Gospel hath above the Law, in that it so clearly unfolds the Way and Method of Uniting humane nature to Divinity; which the Apostle seems mainly to aim at in these words, But Israel which followed after the Law of righteousness, etc. CHAP. II. An Enquiry into that Jewish Notion of a Legal Righteousness, which is opposed by S. Paul. That their notion of it was such as this, viz. That the Law externally dispensed to them (though it were, as a Dead letter, merely without them) and conjoined with the power of their own freewill, was sufficient to procure them Acceptance with God, and to acquire Merit enough to purchase Eternal Life, Perfection and Happiness. That this their Notion had these two Grounds; First, An Opinion of their own selfsufficiency, and that their freewill was so absolute and perfect, as that they needed not that God should do any thing for them but only furnish them with some Law to exercise this Innate power about. That they asserted such a Freedom of Will as might be to them a Foundation of Merit. FOR the unfolding whereof, we shall endeavour to search out, First, What the Jewish Notion of a Legal righteousness was, which the Apostle here condemns. 1. Secondly, What that Evangelical righteousness, or Righteousness of Faith, is, which he endeavours to establish 2. in the room of it. For the First, That which the Apostle here blames the Jews for, seems to be indeed nothing else but an Epitome or Compendium of all that which he otherwhere disputes against them for: which is not merely and barely concerning the Formal notion of Justification, as some may think, viz. Whether the Formal notion of it respects only Faith, or Works in the Person justified, (though there may be a respect to that also) it is not merely a subtle School-controversie which he seems to handle; but it is of a greater latitude; It is indeed concerning the whole Way of Life and Happiness, and the proper scope of restoring Mankind to Perfection and Union with the Deity, which the Jews expected by virtue of that Systeme and Pandect of Laws which were delivered upon Mount Sinai, augmented and enlarged by the Gemara of their own Traditions. Which that we may the better understand, perhaps it may not be amiss a little to traverse the Writings of their most approved ancient Authors, that so finding out their constant received opinions concerning their Law and the Works thereof, we may the better and more fully understand what S. Paul and the other Apostles aim at in their disputes against them. The Jewish notion generally of the Law is this; That in that Model of life contained in that Body of Laws, distinguished ordinarily into Moral, Judicial & Ceremonial, was comprised the whole Method of raising Man to his perfection; and that they having only this Book of Laws without them, to converse with, needed nothing else to procure Eternal life, Perfection and Happiness: as if this had been the only means God had for the saving of Men and making them happy, to set before them in an External way a Volume of Laws, Statutes and Ordinances, and so to leave them to work out and purchase to themselves Eternal life in the observance of them. Now this General notion of theirs we shall unfold in 2 Particulars. First, as a Foundation of all the rest, They took up this as an Hypothesis or common Principle, That Mankind had such an absolute and perfect freewill, and such a sufficient power from within himself to determine himself to virtue and Goodness, as that he only needed some Law as the Matter or Object to exercise this Innate power about; and therefore needed not that God should do any thing more for him then merely to acquaint him with his Divine will and pleasure. And for this we have Maimonides speaking very fully and magisterially, That this was one of their Radices fidei or Articles of their Faith, and one main Foundation upon which the Law stood. His words are these in Halacah teshubah or Treatise of Repentance, Chap. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Power of freewill is given to every man to determine himself (if he will) to that which is good, and to be good; or to determine himself to that which is evil, and to be wicked, (if he will.) Both are in his power, according to what is written in the Law, Behold, Man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: that is to say, Behold this sort of Creature, Man, is alone (and there is not a Second like to Man) in this, viz. That Man from himself by his own proper knowledge and power knows good and evil, and does what pleaseth him in an uncontrollable way, so as none can hinder him as to the doing of either good or evil. And a little after he thus interprets those words in the Lamentations, of the repenting Church, ch. 3. 40. Let us search and try our ways, and turn unto the Lord, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Seeing that we who are endued with the power of freewill, have most wittingly and freely committed all our transgressions; it is meet and becoming that we should convert ourselves by repentance, and forsake all our iniquities, forasmuch as this also is in our power: This is the importance of those words, Let us search and try our ways, and turn unto the lord And this is a great Fundamental, the very Pillar of the Law and Precept, according to what is written Deuter. 30. See, I have set before thee this day life and death, good and evil. Thus we see Maimonides, who was well versed in the ancientest Jewish learning, and in high esteem among all the Jews, is pleased to reckon this as a main Principle and Foundation upon which that Law stood; as indeed it must needs be, if Life and Perfection might be acquired by virtue of those Legal precepts which had only an External administration, being set before their External Senses, and promulged to their ears as the Statute-laws of any other commonwealth use to be. Which was the very notion that they themselves had of these Laws. And therefore in Breshith Rabath (a very ancient Writing) the Jewish Doctors taking notice of that passage in the Canticles, Let him kiss m with the kisses of his mouth, they thus gloss upon it; At the time of the giving of the Law, the Congregation of Israel desired that Moses might speak to them, they being not able to hear the words of God himself: and while he spoke, they heard, and hearing forgot; and thereupon moved this debate among themselves, What is this Moses, a man of flesh and blood? and what is his law, that we so soon learn, and so soon forget it? O that God would kiss us with the kisses of his mouth! that is, in their sense, that God would teach them in a more vital and internal way. And then (as they go on) Moses makes this answer, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That this could not be then: But it should so come to pass in the time to come, in the days of the Messiah, when the Law should be written in their hearts, as it is said, Jer. 31. I will write it in their hearts. By this we may see how necessary it was for the Jews, that they might be consistent to their grand Principle of obtaining Life and Perfection by this dead letter and a thing merely without themselves, (as not being radicated in the vital powers of their own Souls) to establish such a power of freewill as might be able uncontrollably to entertain it, and so readily by its own Strength perform all the dictates of it. And that Maimonides was not the first of the Jewish writers who expound that passage Gen. 3. [Behold, man is become like one of us, to know good and evil] of freewill, may appear from the several Chaldee Paraphrasts upon it, which seem very much to intimate that Sense. Which by the way, (though I cannot allow all that which the Jews deduce from it) I think is not without something of Truth, viz. That that Liberty which is founded in Reason, and which Mankind only in this lower world hath above other Creatures, may be there also meant. But whatever it is, I am sure the Jewish Commentators upon that place generally follow the rigid sense of Maimonides. To this purpose R. Bechai, a man of no small learning both in the Talmudick and Cabalistical doctrine of the Jews, tells us, That upon Adam's first transgression, that grand Liberty of Indifferency equally to Good or Evil began first to discover itself; whereas before that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all Intellect and wholly Spiritual, (as that common Cabalistical Notion was) being from within only determined to that which was Good. But I shall at large relate his words, because of their pertinency and usefulness in the Matter now in hand. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, Adam before his sin, acted from a necessity of Nature, and all his actions were nothing else but the issues of pure and perfect Understanding. Even as the Angels of God, being nothing else but Intelligences, put forth nothing else but acts of intelligence; just so was Man before he sinned, and did eat of the Tree of knowledge of good and evil: But after this transgression, he had the power of Election and freewill, whereby he was able to will good or evil. And a little after glozing on those words Gen. 3. 7. [And the eyes of them both were opened] he addeth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, They derived the power of freewill from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil: And now they became endued with this power of determining themselves to Good or Evil; and this Property is divine, and in some respect a good Property. So that according to the mind of our Author, the First original & pedigree of freewill is to be derived not so much from the Aera of Creation, as from that after- Epocha of man's transgression or Eating of the forbidden fruit: so that the Indifferency of man's Will to Good or Evil, and a Power to determine himself freely to either, did then first of all unfold itself; whereas before he conversed like a pure Intelligence with its First cause, without any propension at all to Material things, being determined like a proper natural Agent solely to that which is good: and these Propensions arising upon the First transgression to Material things (which they supposed to be in men's power either so to correct and castigate as to prevent any sin in them, or else to pursue in a way of vice) are, if not the Form and Essence, yet at least the Original and Root of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which they speak so much of. But of this in another place. All this we have further confirmed out of Nachmanides, an Author sufficiently versed in all Matters concerning the Jewish Religion. His words are these in his Comment upon Deut. 30. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 From the time of the Creation Man had a power of freewill within him to do Good or Evil according to his own choice, as also through the whole time of the Law; that so he might be capable of Merit in freely choosing what is Good, and of Punishment in electing what is Evil. Wherein that he tells us that this freewill hath continued ever since the Creation, we must not understand rigidly the very moment of man's Creation, but that Epocha taken with some latitude, so that it may include the time of man's First transgression: for he after suggests thus much, That before the First Sin Adam's power to Good was a mere Natural power without any such Indifferency to Evil; and therefore he makes that State of Adam the Model and platform of future perfection which the most ancient Jewish Authors seem to expect in the time of their Messiah, which he expresseth in this manner, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He shall not covet nor desire (after a Sensitive manner,) but Man shall return in the times of the Messiah to that Primitive State he was in before the sin of the First man, who naturally did whatsoever was good, neither was there any thing and its contrary then in his choice. Upon which Ground he afterwards concludes, That in those times of the Messiah there shall neither be Merit nor Demerit, because there shall be no freewill, which is the alone Mother and Nurse of both of them: But in the mean while, That Good or Evil are to men (that I may phrase it in the language of the Stoic) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. none prejudicing or in the least degree hindering the exercise of this Liberty, neither from within nor from without, none either in Heaven or in Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And thus the same Nachmanides expounds that solemn Attestation, Deut. 30. 19 wherein Heaven and Earth are called to witness That that day Life and Death were set before them; as if God himself had now established such a Monarchical power in man which Heaven and Earth should be in league withal and faithful to. Hereupon R. Saadia Gaon (so called by way of Eminency) doubts not to tell us that the common sense of all the Jewish Doctors was, That this Liberty to good or evil was such an Absolute kind of authority established in a man's soul, that it was in a sort Independent upon God himself; this being, as he saith (in the book called Sepher emunah) the meaning of that old and vulgar maxim amongst the Jews, sometimes mentioned in the Talmud, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Omnia sunt in manu Coeli (i. Dei) excepto timore Dei. I am not ignorant there is another axiom of the Jews as common, which may seem partly to cross this and what hitherto hath been spoken, viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the meaning of which is this, That assistence is perpetually afforded to all endeavours both of Sanctity and Impiety. But Maimonides hath somewhere told us (and, as I remember, in his Sepher Hamedang) how they mince the matter, and mean nothing else by it but this, That when men endeavour after the performance of the Law, God in a way of providence furnisheth them with External matter and means, giving them peace and riches and other outward accommodations, whereby they might have advantage and opportunity to perform all that good which their own freewill determines them to: whereas Wicked men find the like help of External matter and means for promoting and accomplishing their wicked and ungodly designs. Thus we see how the Jews, that they might lay a Foundation of Merit, and build up the stately and magnificent fabric of their Happiness upon the sandy Foundation of a dead Letter without them, endeavour to strengthen it by as weak a Rampart of their own selfsufficiency and the Power of their own freewill able (as they vainly imagined) to perform all Righteousness, as being adequate and commensurate to the whole Law of God in its most Extensive and Comprehensive sense and meaning; rather looking upon the Fall of man as the Rise of that Giantlike freewill whereby they were enabled to bear up themselves against Heaven itself, as being a great accessary to their happiness (rather than prejudicial to it) through the access of that multitude of divine Laws which were given to them; as we shall see afterwards. And so they reckoned upon a more Triumphant and Illustrious kind of Happiness victoriously to be achieved by the Merit of their own works, than that beggarly kind of Happiness (as they seem to look upon it) which cometh like an Alms from Divine bounty. Accordingly they affirm That Happiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of Reward is far greater and much more magnificent than that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of Mercy. CHAP. III. The Second ground of the Jewish Notion of a Legal Righteousness, viz. That the Law delivered to them on Mount Sinai was a sufficient Dispensation from God, and all that needed to be done by him to bring them to Perfection and Happiness: and That the Scope of their Law was nothing but to afford them several ways and means of Merit. The Opinion of the Jewish Writers concerning Merit and the Reward due to the Works of the Law. Their distinguishing of men in order to Merit and Demerit into three sorts, viz. Perfectly righteous, Perfectly wicked, and a Middle sort betwixt these. The Mercenary and Low Spirit of the Jewish Religion. An account of what the cabalists held in this Point of Legal Righteousness. THE Second Ground of that Jewish Notion of a Legal Righteousness is this, That the Law delivered to them upon Mount Sinai was a sufficient Dispensation from God, and all that needed to be done by him for the advancing of them to a State of Perfection and Blessedness; and That the proper Scope and End of their Law was nothing but to afford them several ways and means of Merit. Which is expressly delivered in the * lib. Maccoth sect. ult. Mishnah, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. The meaning whereof is this, That therefore the precepts of the Law were so many in number, that so they might single out where they pleased, and in exercising themselves therein procure Eternal life; as Obadias' de Bartenora expounds it, That whosoever shall perform any one of the 613 Precepts of the Law (for so many they make in number) without any worldly respects, for love of the Precept, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, behold, this man shall merit thereby everlasting life. For indeed they supposed a Reward due to the performance of every Precept, which Reward they supposed to be increased according to the secret estimation which God himself hath of any Precept, as we find suggested in the Mishnah, in the Book Pirke avoth, in the words of the famous R. Jehuda, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Be careful to observe the lesser Precept as well as the greater, because thou knowest not the Reward that shall be given to the observation of the Precepts. Here we must take notice that this was a great debate among the Jews, which Precepts they were that had the greatest Reward due to the performance of them; in which controversy Maimonides in his Comment upon this place thus resolves us, That the measure of the Reward that was annexed to the Negative Precepts might be collected from the measure of the Punishments that were consequent upon the breach of them. But this knot could not be so well solved in reference to the Affirmative Precepts, because the Punishments annexed to the breach of them were more rarely defined in the Law: accordingly he expresseth himself to this sense, As for the Affirmative Precepts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it is not expressed what Reward is due to every one of them; and all for this end, that we may not know which Precept is most necessary to be observed, and which Precept is of less necessity and importance. And a little after he tells us that for this reason their Wise men said, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Qui operam dat praecepto, liber est à praecepto; which he expounds to this sense, That whosoever shall exercise himself about any one Precept, aught without haesitation or dispute to continue in the performance of it, as being in the mean while freed from minding any other. For if God had declared which Precepts himself had most valued and settled the greatest revenue of happiness upon, than other Precepts would have been less minded; and any one that should have busied himself in a Precept of a lower nature, would presently have left that, when opportunity should have been offered of performing a higher. And hence we have also another Talmudical Canon for the performing of Precepts, of the same nature with the former quoted by our foresaid Author, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It is not lawful to skip over Precepts, that is, as he expounds it, When a man is about to observe one Precept, he may not skip over and relinquish that, that so he might apply himself to the observation of another. And thus, as the performance of any Precept hath a certain Reward annexed to it; so the Measure of the Reward they suppose to be increased according to the Number of those Precepts which they observe, as it is defined by R. Tarphon in the foresaid Mishnah, c. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, If thou hast been much in the study of the Law, thou shalt be rewarded much: For faithful is thy Lord & Master, who will render to thee a Reward proportionable to thy Work. And a little before we have the same thing in the words of another of their Masters, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Qui multiplicat legem, multiplicat vitam. And lest they should not yet be liberal enough of God's cost, they are also pleased to distribute Rewards to any Israelite that shall abstain from the breach of a Precept; for so we find it in the Mishnah l. Kiddushin Whosoever keeps himself from the breach of a Precept, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, shall receive the Reward as if he had kept the Precept. But this which hath been said concerning the performance of any one Precept, must be understood with this Caution, That the performance of such a Precept be a continued thing, so as that it may compound and collect the performance of many good works into itself; otherwise the single performance of any one Precept is only available, according to the sense of the Talmudical Masters, to cast the scale, when a man's Good works and Evil works equally balance one another, as Maimonides telleth us in his Comment upon the forenamed Mishnah l. Kidd. cap. 1. Sect. 10. where the words of the Jewish Doctors are these, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He that observes any one Precept, it shall be well with him, and his days shall be prolonged, and he shall possess the Earth: But he that observes not any one Precept, it shall not be well with him, nor shall his days be prolonged, nor shall he inherit the Earth. Which words are thus expounded by Maimonides, He that observes any one Precept, etc. that is, so as that by the addition of this work to his other good works, his good works over-weigh his evil works, and his merits preponderate his demerits. For the better understanding whereof we must know, That the Jewish Doctors are wont to distinguish of Three sorts of Men, which are thus ranked by them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men perfectly righteous, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 men perfectly wicked, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a middle sort of men betwixt them. Those they are wont to call perfectly righteous, who had no transgression or demerits that might be counted fit to be put into the balance against their Merits; and those they called simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 righteous, whose Merits outweighed their demerits: Whereas on the other side the perfectly wicked in their sense were such as had no Merits at all; and those simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wicked, whose demerits made the weightiest scale: And the Middle sort were such as their good deeds and evil deeds equally balanced one another. Of this First sort of Men, viz. the perfectly righteous, they supposed there might be many; and such the Pharisees seem to have been in their own esteem, in our saviour's time. And according to this Notion our Saviour may seem to have shaped his answer to that Young man in the Gospel, who asked him, What shall I do to inherit eternal life? To which our Saviour answers, Keep the commandments: which our Saviour propounds to him in so great a latitude, as thereby to take him off from his self-conceit, and that he might be convinced upon reflection on himself, that he had fallen short of Eternal life, in failing of a due performance of the Divine law. But he insisting upon his own Merit in this respect, inquires of our Saviour whether there be yet any thing wanting to make him a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one perfectly righteous. To this our Saviour replies, * Matt. 19 21. If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, etc. The meaning of which Reply may, as I conceive, be this, to convince him of his imperfect Obedience to, and compliance with, the law of God, from his over-eager love of this world. But secondly, for the Medii, or those that were in the middle rank of men, the Jewish Doctors had divers Rules, as, 1. In case a man's Evil works and Good were equal, the addition of one either way might determine them to Eternal life or misery. 2. That in case a man's Evil works should preponderate and weigh down his Good, yet he may cast the scale by Repentance, if he will; or in the other world by chastisements and punishments he may make expiation for them. These & the like ways they have found out, lest any of their fraternity should miscarry. To all which we must take in this Caution which they are pleased to deliver to us, viz. That men's Works have their different weight; some Good works being so weighty that they may weigh in the balance against many Evil works, and vice versâ. All which we shall find largely set down by R. Albo, l. the fundament is fidei; and partly by R. Saadia: but especially by Maimonides in his Treatise of Repentance, chap. 3. who also tells us of other Expedients provided by their Law for the securing of Merit and Happiness, which I shall not here mention. And indeed in fine they have found out so many artifices to entail a Legal righteousness and Eternal happiness upon all the Israelites, that (if it be possible) none might be left out of Heaven: as may partly appear by that Question captiously proposed to our Saviour, Master, are there few that shall be saved? whereby they expected to ensnare him, they themselves holding a General Salvation of all the Jews by virtue of the Law, however their wickedness might abound. Which we find expressly set down by Maimonides in the forenamed place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, All wicked ones whose Evil deeds exceed their Good deeds, shall be judged according to the Measure of their Evil deeds so exceeding; and afterwards they shall have a portion in the World to come; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for that all Israelites have a portion in the World to come, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and this notwithstanding their Sins. Now that maxim of theirs, All Israelites have a portion in the world to come, is taken out of the Mishnah l. Sanhedr. c. 11. where it is put down as the most authentic opinion of the Jewish Doctors; only some Few there are there recited who are excepted from this happiness; otherwise their greatest Malefactors are not excepted from it: for so Obadias' de Bartenora unfoldeth their meaning, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, even such as are judged by the great Synedrium worthy of death for their wickedness, these have a portion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the world to come. I know here that the Notion of The World to come is differently represented by Nachmanides and Maimonides, and their followers. But whether Maimonides his sect or the other prevail in this point, it is not much material as to our present business, seeing both sides conclude that this Seculum futurum, or World to come, points out such a state of happiness, as should not revolve or slide back again into Misery. And by the way we may observe what a Lean and Spiritless Religion this of the Jews was, and how it was nothing else but a Souleless and Liveless form of External performances, which did little or nothing at all reach the Inward man, being nothing but a mere Bodily kind of drudgery and servility: and therefore our Saviour when he models out Religion to them Matth. 5. he points them out to Something fuller of inward life and spirit, and such a one as might make them Perfect, as their Father in heaven is Perfect. Such dull heavy-spirited Principles as this Talmudical doctrine we have quoted affordeth us, is very like began to possess the Chair in Antigonus his time, who therefore put in this Caution against part of it, That God was not to be served so much upon the account of Merit and for hope of Wages, as out of Love; though his Disciples Sadoc and Baithus, the founders of the sect of the Sadducees, straining that sober Principle too far, might more strengthen that Mercenary belief amongst the other Doctors which they had before entertained. But before I leave this Argument, it may not be amiss to examine also what the Cabbalistical Jew's thought concerning this matter in hand; which in sum is this, That the Law delivered upon Mount Sinai was a Device God had to knit and unite the Jews and the Shechinah or Divine presence together. Therefore they are pleased to style it in the Book Zohar (which is one of the ancientest monuments we have of the Jewish learning) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Treasures of life. And as if the living God could be united to the Souls of men by such a dead letter as this was, (as it is styled by the Apostle, 2 Cor. 3.) they are pleased to make this External administration the great Vinculum Dei & hominis. And to this purpose R. Simeon ben Jochai (the Compiler of the forequoted Book, which is a mystical Comment upon the Pentateuch) discourseth upon those words Deut. 30. 20. He is thy life, and the length of thy days, upon which he grounds this Observation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Shechinah or Divine Presence is not where established but by the Mediation of the Law: and a little after he thus magnifies the study of the Law, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Whosoever doth exercise himself in the Law, doth merit the possession of the upper inheritance which is in the holy kingdom above; and doth also merit the possession of an inheritance here below in this World. Where by the way we may take notice that the ancient Jews looked upon the Inheritances of the land of Canaan as being Typical and significative of an higher inheritance in the kingdom of heaven; both which they supposed to be the due rewards of men's works: and therefore they talk so much in the same place of Guardian Angels which are continually passing to and fro between Heaven and Earth, as the Heralds and Messengers of men's good works to God in Heaven. And further upon those words in Levit. 18. 5. Ye shall keep my statutes and judgements; which if a man do, he shall live in them, he tells us, That the portion of Israel is meritorious, because that the Holy Blessed One delighteth in them above all the Idolatrous Nations; and out of his favour and goodness to them gave them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the laws of Truth, and planted amongst them the Tree of life; and the Schechinah was with them. Now what doth all this signify? Thus much, That since the Israelites are signed with the Holy seal in their flesh, they are thereby acknowledged for the Sons of God: as on the contrary, They that are not sealed with this mark in their flesh, are not the Sons of God, but are the children of uncleanness: Wherefore it is not lawful to contract familiarity with them, or to teach them the Words of the Law. Which afterwards is urged further by another of their Masters, Whosoever instructeth any uncircumcised person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though but in the least precepts of the Law, doth the same as if he should destroy the World, and deny the name of the Holy Blessed One. All which plainly amounts to thus much (as we had before out of the Talmudists,) That the Law was given unto the Israelites for this purpose, To enrich them with good works, and to augment their Merits, & so to establish the foundations of Life & Blessedness amongst them; and to make it a Medium of the Union betwixt God and Men, as R. Eliezer in the same Book speaketh of the near Union between these Three, the Holy Blessed One, the Law, and Israel. There is one Passage more in our forenamed Author R. Simeon ben Jochai, at the end of Parashah Jethro, which (though it be more Mystical than the rest, yet) may be well worth our observing, as more fully hinting the Perfection of the Law, & setting that forth as an absolute and complete Medium of rendering a man Perfect; upon which R. Jos. Albo in his third Book de fundament is hath spent two or three Chapters. Thus therefore, as if the Law was the great Magazine and storehouse of Perfection, our foresaid Author there telleth us, That when the Israelites stood upon Mount Sinai, they saw God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, eye to eye, or face to face, and understood all Secrets of the Law, and all the arcana superna & inferna, etc. and then he adds, That the same day in which the Israelites stood upon Mount Sinai, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, all uncleanness passed away from them, and all their Bodies did shine in brightness like to the Angels of heaven when they put on their bright shining Robes to fit themselves for the Embassy upon which they are sent by God their Lord. And a little after, thus; And when their uncleanness passed away from them, the bodies of the Israelites became shining and clear without any defilement; and their Bodies did shine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the brightness of the Firmament. And then thus concludeth all, When the Israelites received the Law upon Mount Sinai, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the world was then perfumed with a most aromatic smell, and Heaven and Earth were established, and the Holy Blessed One was known above and below, and he ascended in his glory above all things. By all which Mystical and Allegorical Expressions our Author seems to aim at this main Scope, viz. To set forth the Law as that which of itself was sufficient, without any other Dispensation from God, for the perfecting of those to whom it was dispensed; and to make them Comprehensours of all Righteousness here and Glory hereafter: Which they are wont to set forth in that transcendent state of Perfection which the Israelites were in at the receiving of the Law; whence it hath been an ancient maxim amongst them, In station montis Sinai Israelitae erant sicut Angeli ministerii. And thus we have endeavoured to make good that which we first propounded, namely, to show That the grand Opinion of the Jews concerning the way to Life and Happiness was this, viz. That the Law of God externally dispensed, and only furnished out to them in Tables of Stone and a Parchment-roll, conjoined with the power of their own freewill, was sufficient both to procure them acceptance with God, and to acquire Merit enough to carry them with spread sails into the Harbour of Eternal rest and blessedness. So that by this time we may see that those Disputes which S. Paul and other Apostles maintain against the Jews touching the Law and Faith, were not merely about that one Question, Whether Justification formally and precisely respects Faith alone; but were of a much greater latitude. CHAP. iu. The Second Enquiry, Concerning the Evangelical Righteousness or the Righteousness of Faith, and the true difference between the Law and the Gospel, the Old and the New Covenant, as it is laid down by the Apostle Paul. A more General Answer to this enquiry, together with a General observation of the Apostle's main End in opposing Faith to the Works of the Law, viz. To beat down the Jewish proud conceit of Merit. A more particular and Distinct answer to the Enquiry, viz. That the Law or Old Covenant is considered only as an External administration, a dead thing in itself, a Dispensation consisting in an Outward and Written Law of Precepts: But the Gospel or New Covenant is an Internal thing, a Vital Form and Principle of Righteousness in the Souls of men, an Inward manifestation of Divine life, and a living Impression upon the Minds and Spirits of Men. This proved from several Testimonies of Scripture. HAving done with the First Enquiry, we now come to the Second, which was this, What the Evangelical Righteousness or the Righteousness of Faith is which the Apostle sets up against that of the Law, and in what Notion the Law is considered by the Apostle: Which in sum was this, viz. That the Law was the ministry of death, and in itself an External and Liveless thing, neither could it procure or beget that Divine life and spiritual Form of Godliness in the Souls of men, which God expects from all the heirs of Glory, nor that Glory which is only consequent upon a true Divine life. Whereas on the other side the Gospel is set forth as a mighty Efflux and Emanation of life and spirit freely issuing forth from an Omnipotent source of Grace and Love, as that true godlike vital influence whereby the Divinity derives itself into the Souls of men, enlivening and transforming them into its own likeness, and strongly imprinting upon them a Copy of its own Beauty and Goodness: Like the Spermatical virtue of the Heavens, which spreads itself freely upon this Lower world, and subtly insinuating itself into this benumbed feeble earthly Matter, begets life and motion in it. Briefly, It is that whereby God comes to dwell in us, and we in him. But that we may the more distinctly unfold the Difference between That Righteousness which is of the Law, & That which is of Faith, & so the better show how the Apostle undermines that fabric of Happiness which the Jews had built up for themselves; we shall observe First in general, That the main thing which the Apostle 1. endeavours to beat down was, that proud and arrogant conceit which they had of Merit, and to advance against it the notion of the Divine grace and bounty as the only Fountain of all Righteousness and Happiness. For indeed that which all those Jewish notions, which we have before taken notice of, aim principally at, was the advancing of the weakened Powers of Nature into such an height of Perfection as might render them capable of Meriting at God's hands: and that Perfection which they speak so much of (as is clear from what hath been said) was nothing else but a mere sublimation of their own Natural Powers and Principles, performed by the strength of their own Fancies. And therefore these Contractors with Heaven were so pleased to look upon Eternal life as a fair Purchase which they might make for themselves at their own charge; as if the spring and rise of all were in themselves: their eyes were so much dazzled with those foolish fires of Merit and Reward kindled in their own Fancies, that they could not see that light of Divine grace and bounty which shone about them. And this Fastus and swelling pride of theirs (if I mistake not) is that which S. Paul principally endeavours to chastise in advancing Faith so much as he doth in opposition to the works of the Law. For which purpose he spends the First and Second Chapters of this Epistle to the Romans in drawing up a charge of such a nature both against Gentiles and Jews, but principally against the Jews, who were the grand justiciaries, that might make them bethink themselves of imploring Mercy, and of laying aside all plea of Law and Justice; and so chap. 3. 27. he shuts up all with a severe check to such presumptuous arrogance, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; Where then is boasting? This seems then to be the main End which S. Paul every where aims at in opposing Faith to the works of the Law, namely to establish the Foundation of Righteousness and Happiness upon the Free mercy and grace of God: the glorifying and magnifying of which in the real manifestations of it he holds forth upon all occasions, as the design & plot of the Gospel-administration; seeing it is impossible for men by any Works which they can perform to satisfy God's Justice for those Sins which they have committed against him, or truly to comply with his Divine will, without his Divine assistance. So that the Method of reconciling men to God, and reducing of straying Souls back again to him, was to be attributed wholly to another Original then that which the Jews imagined. But Secondly, That Righteousness of Faith which the 2. Apostle sets up against the Law, and compares with it, is indeed in its own nature a Vital and Spiritual administration, wherein God converseth with Man; whereas the Law was merely an External or Dead thing in itself, not able to beget any true Divine life in the Souls of Men. All that Legal Righteousness which the Jews boasted so much of, was but from the Earth, earthly; consisting merely in External performances, & so falling extremely short of that Internal & godlike frame of Spirit which is necessary for a true conjunction and union of the Souls of Men with God, and making of them capable of true Blessedness. But that we may the more distinctly handle this Argument, we shall endeavour to unfold the true Difference between the Law and the Gospel, as it seems evidently to be laid down every where by S. Paul in his Epistles: and the Difference between them is clearly this, viz. That the Law was merely an External thing, consisting in such Precepts which had only an Outward administration; but the Gospel is an Internal thing, a Vital Form and Principle seating itself in the Minds and Spirits of Men. And this is the most proper and formal Difference between the Law and Gospel, that the one is considered only as an External administration, and the other as an Internal. And therefore the Apostle 2 Cor. 3. 6, 7. calls the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the ministration of the letter and of death, it being in itself but a dead letter; as all that which is without a man's Soul must needs be. But on the other side he calls the Gospel (because of the Intrinsecal and Vital administration thereof in living impressions upon the Souls of men) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Ministration of the Spirit, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Ministration of righteousness. By which he cannot mean the History of the Gospel, or those Credenda propounded to us to believe; for this would make the Gospel itself as much an External thing as the Law was, and according to the External administration as much a kill or dead letter as the Law was: and so we see that the preaching of Christ crucified was to the Jews a Stumbling-block, and to the Greeks Foolishness. But indeed he means a Vital efflux from God upon the Souls of men, whereby they are made partakers of Life and Strength from him: and therefore (ver. 7.) he thus Exegetically expounds his own meaning of that short description of the Law, namely, that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which, I think, may be fitly thus translated, it was a dead (or liveless) administration (for so sometimes by an Hebraisme the Genitive case in regimine is put for the Adjective) or else an administration of death exhibited in letters, and engraven in tables of Stone: and therefore he tells us (ver. 6.) what the Effect of it was in those words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The letter killeth, as indeed all External precepts which have not a proper vital radication in the Souls of men, whereby they are able to secure them from the transgression of them, must needs do. Now to this dead or kill letter he opposes (ver. 8.) a quickening Spirit, or the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the ministration of the Spirit, which afterwards (v. 9) he expounds by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the ministration of righteousness, that is, the Evangelical administration. So that the Gospel or Evangelical administration must be an Internal impression, a vivacious and Energetical Spirit and Principle of Righteousness in the Souls of men, whereby they are inwardly enabled to express a real conformity thereto. Upon this Ground the Apostle further pursues the Effects of both these from the 14. verse to the end. By all which the Apostle means to set forth to us How vast a Difference there is between the External manifestations of God in a Law of commandments, and those Internal appearances of God whereby he discovers the mighty power of his Goodness to the Souls of men. Though the History and outward Communication of the Gospel to us in scriptis, is to be always acknowledged as a special mercy & advantage, and certainly no less Privilege to Christians then it was to the Jews to be the * Rom. 3. 2. Depositaries of the Oracles of God: yet it is plain that the Apostle, where he compares the Law and the Gospel, and in other places, doth by the Gospel mean something which is more than a piece of Book-learning, or an Historical Narration of the free love of God in the several contrivances of it for the Redemption of mankind. For if this were all that is meant properly by the Gospel, I see no reason why it should not be counted as weak and impotent a thing, as dead a letter as the Law was, (as we intimated before;) and so there would be no such vast Difference between them as the Apostle asserts there is; the one being properly an External declaration of God's will, the other an Internal manifestation of Divine life upon men's Souls: and therefore Gal. 3. 21. he so distinguisheth between this double Dispensation of God, that this Evangelical dispensation is a vital and quickening thing, able to beget a Soul and Form of Divine goodness upon the Souls of men; which because the Law could not do, it was laid aside, as being insufficient to restore man to the favour of God, or to make him partaker of his righteousness. If there had been a Law which could have given life, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, verily Righteousness should have been by the Law; where by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he seems to mean the same thing which he meant by it when in his Epistle to the Corinthians he calls the Oeconomy of the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the ministration of righteousness, or as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is taken among the Jewish writers for acceptance with God, and that Internal form of Righteousness that qualifies the Soul for Eternal life: and so he takes it in a far more large and ample sense then that External righteousness of Justification is: and indeed it seems to express the Just state of those who are renewed by the Spirit of God, and made partakers of that Divine life which is emphatically called the Seed of God. For this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Righteousness, which he here speaks of, is the proper result of an enlivening and quickening Law, which is this New Law of the Gospel in opposition to that Old Law which was administered only in scriptis: and therefore this New Law is called in the Epistle to the Hebrews, chap. 8. 6. etc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the better Covenant, whereas the Old was faulty. In which place this is put down as the Formal difference between the Legal and Evangelical administration, or the Old and New Covenant, That the Old Covenant was only externally promulged and wrapped up as it were in Ink and Parchment, or, as best, engraven upon tables of Stone; whereas this New Covenant is set forth in living characters imprinted upon the Vital powers of men's Souls, as we have ver. 10, 11. This is the Covenant that I will make, etc. I will put my Laws into their Minds, and write them in their Hearts: and therefore the Old Covenant is v. 7. said not to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an unblamable or faultless thing, because it was not able to keep off transgressions, or hinder the violation of itself, no more than an Inscription upon some Pillar or Monument is able to inspire life into those that read it and converse with it: the Old Law or Covenant being in this respect no other than all other Civil Constitutions are, which receive their efficacy merely from the willing compliance of men's Minds with them, so that they must be enlivened by the Subject that receivs them, being dead things in themselves. But the Evangelical or New Law is such a thing as is an Efflux of life and power from God himself the Original thereof, & produceth life wheresoever it comes. And to this double Dispensation, viz. of Law and Gospel, doth S. Paul clearly refer 2 Cor. 3. 3. You are the Epistle of Christ, ministered by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God, not in tables of Stone: which last words are a plain Gloss upon that mundane kind of administering the Law in a mere External way, to which he opposeth the Gospel. And this Argument he further pursues in the 7 and 8 chapters of the Epistle to the Romans, in which last chap. v. 2. he styles the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Law of the spirit of life, which was able to destroy the power of Sin, and to introduce such a spiritual and heavenly frame of Soul into men, as whereby they might be enabled to express a cheerful compliance with the Law of God, and demonstrate a true heavenly conversation and godlike life in this world. We read in Jamblichus and others, of the many preparatory Experiments used by Pythagoras to try his Scholars whether they were fit to receive the more sublime and sacred pieces of his Philosophy; and that he was wont to communicate these only to Souls in a due degree purified and prepared for such doctrine, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and what did all this signify but only this, that he might by all these Methods work and mould the Minds of his Hearers into such a fit Temper, as that he might the better stamp the Seal of his more Divine Doctrine upon them, and that his Discourses to them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of things just and lovely and good, might be written 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly and really in the Soul, that I may use Plato's words in his Phaedrus, where he commends the Impressions of Truth which are made upon men's Souls above all outward Writings, which he therefore compares to dead pictures. By this we see what the wisest and best Philosophers thought of this Internal writing; But it peculiarly belongs to God to write the Laws of Goodness in the Tables of men's hearts. All the outward Teachings of men are but dead things in themselves. But God's imprinting his Mind and Will upon men's hearts is properly that which is called the Teaching of God, and then they become living Laws written in the living Tables of men's Hearts fitted to receive and retain Divine impressions. I shall only add that speech of a * Crollius chemist not impertinent in this place, Non tam discendo quàm patiendo divina perficitur Mens humana. And that we may come a little nearer to these words upon which all this present Discourse is built, this seems to be the Scope of his argument in this place, where this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law of righteousness may fairly be paralleled with that which before he called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the law of the spirit, and which he therefore calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the righteousness of faith, because it is received from God in a way of believing. For I cannot easily think that he should mean nothing else in this place but merely the Righteousness of Justification, as some would persuade us, but rather that his Sense is much more comprehensive, so as to include the state of Gospel-dispensation, which includes not only Pardon of sins, but an Inward spirit of Love, Power, and of a sound Mind, as he expresseth it 2 Tim. 1. 7. And this he thus opposeth to the Law, Rom. 10. 6, etc. But the Righteousness of Faith speaketh on this wise; Say not in thy heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? etc. or, Who shall descend into the deep? But what saith it? The Word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that is, the word of faith which we preach. In which words Cunaeus in his De Repub. Hebr. would have us to understand some Cabbala or Tradition amongst the Jews for this meaning of that place, Deut. 30. 12. from which these words are borrowed, which as they there stand, seem not to carry that Evangelical sense which here S. Paul expounds them into; though yet Cunaeus hath not given us any reason for this opinion of his. But indeed the Jewish writers generally, who were acquainted with the principles of the Cabbala, commenting upon that place do wholly refer it to the Times of the Messiah, making it parallel with that place of Jeremy which defines the New Covenant to be a writing of the Law of God in men's hearts. And thus that Life and Salvation that results from the Righteousness of Faith is all, as Faith itself is, deriving from God gratuitously dispensing himself to the Minds of men: Whereas if Life could have been by the Law, it's Original and Principal must have been resolved into men themselves who must have acted that dead matter without them, and have produced that Virtue and Energy in it, by their exercising themselves therein, which of itself it had not; as the Observance of any Law enables that Law itself to dispense that Reward which is due to the observance of it: and therefore the Righteousness of the Law was so defined, that he that did those things should live in them. And thus the New Testament every where seems to present to us this twofold Dispensation or Oeconomy, the one consisting in an External and written law of Precepts, the other in Inward life and power. Which S. Austin hath well pursued in his Book de Litera & Spiritu, from whom Aquinas (who endeavours to tread in his footsteps) seems to have taken first of all an occasion of moving that Question, Utrum Lex nova sit lex scripta, vel lex indita; and thus resolves it, That the New Law or Gospel is not properly lex scripta, as the Old was, but Lex indita: and that the Old Law is foris scripta, the other intus scripta, written in the tables of the Heart. Now from all this we may easily apprehend how much the Righteousness of the Gospel transcends that of the Law, in that it hath indeed a true command over the inward man which it acts and informs; whereas the Law by all its menaces and punishments could only compel men to an External observance of it in the outward man; as the Schoolmen have well observed, Lex vetus ligat manum, Lex nova ligat animum. And herein S. Paul every where magnifies this Dispensation of the free mercy & grace of God, as being the only sovereign remedy against all the inward radicated maladies of sin and corruption, as that Panacea or Balsamum vitae which is the universal restaurative of decayed & impotent Nature. So he tells us Rom. 6. Sin shall not have dominion, because we are not under the law, but under grace. And this is that which made him so much extol his acquaintance with Christ in the Dispensation of grace, and to despise all things as loss, Philip. 3. where among his other Jewish privileges having reckoned up his blamelesness in all points touching the Law, he undervalues them all, and counts all but loss 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus. In which place the Apostle doth not mean to disparage a real inward righteousness and the strict observance of the Law; but his meaning is to show how poor and worthless a thing all Outward observances of the Law are in comparison of a true Internal conformity to Christ in the renovation of the Mind and Soul according to his Image and likeness; as is manifest from v. 9, 10. etc. in which he thus delivers his own meaning of that knowledge of Christ which he so much extolled, very emphatically, That I may be found in him, not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith. Where by the way we may further take notice what this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the righteousness of faith and the righteousness of God (which we have already spoke much of) is according to his own true meaning, as he expounds himself, viz. a Christ-like Nature in a man's Soul, or Christ appearing in the Minds of men by the mighty power of his Divine Spirit, and thereby deriving a true participation of himself to them: so we have it v. 10. That I may know the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death. And thus Christ and Moses are opposed, as Christ is the Dispenser of Grace and Truth, of God's free and gratuitous bounty, of Life and Substance: whereas Moses was but the Minister of the Law, of Rites and Shadows. But it may perhaps be questioned whether the same Internal dispensation of God was not as well under the Law, as since our Saviour's coming, and so consequently that the Jews were equally partakers thereof; and so it could be no new thing to them. To all which I might reply, That this Dispensation of grace was then a more Mystical thing, and not so manifested to the world as it hath been since our saviour's coming. Secondly, This dispensation of Free grace was not that which properly belonged to the Nation of the Jews, but only a Type and shadow of it. For the fuller understanding of which and all that hath been spoken, we must know, That before our Saviour's coming the great Mysteries of Religion being wrapped up in hieroglyphics and Symbolical rites, (the unfolding of all which was reserved for him who is the great Interpreter of Heaven and Master of Truth) God was pleased to draw forth a Scheme or Copy of all that divine Oeconomy and Method of his commerce with mankind, and to make a draught of the whole artifice thereof in External matter: and therefore he singled out a Company and Society of men of the same common Extraction, marked out from all other sorts of men by a character of Genealogical Sanctity (for so Circumcision was) collected and united together by a common band of Brotherhood; and this he set up as an Emblem of a divine and holy seed or society of men which are all by way of Spiritual generation descended from himself. And hence it is that the Jews (the whole Jewish nation universally considered) who were but a mere Representative of this Spiritual fraternity & congregation, are called the Holy seed or the Holy people. Then afterwards amongst these he erects a Government & polity, & rules over them in the way & manner of a Political prince, as hath been long since well observed by Josephus, who therefore properly calls the Jewish government 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Theocracy, or the Government of God himself. And thus in a Scheme or Figure he shadows forth that Spiritual kingdom and government which he would establish amongst that Divine society of men, in reference to which we have so much mention made of the kingdom of heaven in the Gospel, which is not generally and solely meant of the State of glory, much less of any outward Church-rites, but mainly of that Idea and Exemplar of which the Jewish Theocracy was an imitation. Lastly, as a Political Prince God draws forth a Body of laws as the Political Constitutions and Rules of this Government which he had set up, choosing Mount Sinai for the Theatre whereon he would promulge those Laws by which all his Subjects should be governed. And so I doubt not but that Preface by which the Law is ushered in, Exod. 20. which speaks of God's mercy in delivering them from the Egyptian thraldom, may very well be allegorized and mystically expounded. And all this was to signify and set forth that Law which was to go forth from mount Zion, the promulgation whereof was to be in a Vital and Spiritual way among the Subjects of this Spiritual Kingdom. To all which we may add those Temporal inheritances which he distributed to the Jewish families, in imitation of that Eternal blessedness and those Immortal inheritances which he shares out amongst his Spiritual Sons and Subjects in Heaven. And this I the rather add, because here the Jews are much perplexed about untying this knot, namely, what the Reason should be that their Law speaks so sparingly of any Eternal reward, but runs out generally in promises of Mundane and Earthly blessings in the land of Canaan. But by this we may see the true Reason of that which the Apostle speaks concerning them, 2 Cor. 3. 14. Until this day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same vail in the reading of the Old Testament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remaineth untaken away. That veil which was on Moses his face was an Emblem of all this great Mystery: and this veil was upon the face of the Jews in their reading the Old Testament; they dwelling so much in a carnal converse with these Sacramental Symbols which were offered to them in the reading of the Law, that they could not see through them into the thing signified thereby, and so embraced Shadows in stead of Substance, and made account to build up Happiness and Heaven upon that Earthly Law to which properly the Land of Canaan was annexed: whereas indeed this Law should have been their Schoolmaster to have led them to Christ whose Law it prefigured; which that it might do the more effectually, God had annexed to the breach of any one part of it such severe Curses, that they might from thence perceive how much need they had of some further Dispensation. And therefore this state of theirs is set forth by a State of bondage or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For all External precepts carry perpetually an aspect of austerity and rigour to those Minds that are not informed by the internal sweetness of them. And this is it only which makes the Gospel or the New Law to be a Free, Noble and Generous thing, because it is seated in the Souls of men: and therefore Aquinas out of Austin hath well observed another difference between the Law and Gospel, Brevis differentia inter Legem & Evangelium est Timor & Amor. This I the rather observe, because the true meaning of that Spirit of Bondage which the Apostle speaks of is frequently mistaken. We might further (if need were) for a confirmation of this which we have spoken concerning the Typicalness of the whole Jewish Oeconomy appeal to the third and fourth chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians, which cannot well be understood without this Notion, where we have the Jewish Church, as a Type of the true Evangelical Church, brought in as a Child in its Minority in servitude under Tutors and governors, shut up under the Law till the time of that Emphatical revelation of the great mystery of God should come, till the Day should break, and all the shadows of the Night flee away. That I may return from this Digression to the Argument we before pursued, this briefly may be added, That under the Old Covenant and in the time of the Law there were amongst the Jews some that were Evangelized, that were re, non nomine Christiani; as under the Gospel there are many that do Judaize, are of as Legal and Servile Spirits as the Jews, children of the bondwoman, resting in mere External observances of Religion, in an outward seeming Purity, in a Form of Godliness, as did the Scribes and Pharisees of old. From what hath hitherto been discoursed, I hope the Difference between both Covenants clearly appears, and that the Gospel was not brought in only to hold forth a new Platform and Model of Religion; it was not brought in only to refine some Notions of Truth, that might formerly seem discoloured and disfigured by a multitude of Legal rites and ceremonies; it was not to cast our Opinions concerning the Way of Life and Happiness only into a New mould and shape in a Pedagogical kind of way: it is not so much a System and Body of saving Divinity, but the Spirit and vital Influx of it spreading itself over all the Powers of men's Souls, and quickening them into a Divine life: it is not so properly a Doctrine that is wrapped up in ink and paper, as it is Vitalis Scientia, a living impression made upon the Soul and Spirit. We may in a true sense be as Legal as ever the Jews were, if we converse with the Gospel as a thing only without us; and be as far short of the Righteousness of God as they were, if we make the Righteousness which is of Christ by Faith to serve us only as an Outward Covering, and endeavour not after an Internal transformation of our Minds and Souls into it. The Gospel does not so much consist in Verbis as in Virtute: Neither doth Evangelical dispensation therefore please God so much more than the Legal did, because, as a finer contrivance of his Infinite understanding, it more clearly discovers the Way of Salvation to the Minds of men; but chief because it is a more Powerful Efflux of his Divine goodness upon them, as being the true Seed of a happy Immortality continually thriving and growing on to perfection. I shall add further, The Gospel does not therefore hold forth such a transcendent privilege and advantage above what the Law did, only because it acquaints us that Christ our true High priest is ascended up into the Holy of holies, and there in stead of the blood of Bulls and Goats hath sprinkled the Ark and Mercy-seat above with his own blood: but also because it conveys that blood of sprinkling into our defiled Consciences, to purge them from dead works. Farr be it from me to disparage in the least the Merit of Christ's blood, his becoming obedient unto death, whereby we are justified. But I doubt sometimes some of our Dogmata and Notions about Justification may puff us up in far higher and goodlier conceits of ourselves then God hath of us; and that we profanely make the unspotted righteousness of Christ to serve only as a Covering to wrap up our foul deformities and filthy vices in; and when we have done, think our selus in as good credit and repute with God as we are with our selves, and that we are become Heaven's darlings as much as we are our own. I doubt not but the Merit and Obedience of our Saviour gain us favour with God, and potently move down the benign influences of Heaven upon us: But yet I think we may sometimes be too lavish and wanton in our imaginations, in fond conceiting a greater change in the Esteem which God hath of us than becomes us, & too little reckon upon the Real and Vital Emanations of his favour upon us. Therefore for the further clearing of what hath been already said, and laying a ground upon which the next part of our Discourse (viz. Concerning the conveyance of this godlike righteousness to us by Faith) is to proceed, We shall here speak something more to the business of Justification and Divine Acceptance, which we shall dispatch in two Particulars. CHAP. V. Two Propositions for the better understanding of the Doctrine of Justification and Divine Acceptance. 1. Prop. That the Divine judgement and estimation of every thing is according to the truth of the thing; and God's acceptance or disacceptance of things is suitable to his judgement. On what account S. James does attribute a kind of Justification to Good works. 2. Prop. Gods justifying of Sinners in pardoning their Sins carries in it a necessary reference to the sanctifying of their Natures. This abundantly proved from the Nature of the thing. OUR first Proposition is this, The Divine judgement 1. and estimation of every thing is according to the truth of the thing; and God's acceptance or disacceptance of things is suitable and proportionable to his judgement. Thus S. Peter plainly tells us Act. 10. God is no respecter of persons; But every one that worketh righteousness is accepted of him. And God himself posed Cain (who had entertained those unworthy and ungrounded suspicions of his partiality) with that Question, If thou dost well, shalt thou not be accepted? Wheresoever God finds any stamps and impressions of Goodness, he likes and approves them, knowing them well to be what they indeed are, nothing else but his own Image and Superscription. Wherever he sees his own Image shining in the Souls of men, and a conformity of life to that Eternal Idea of Goodness which is himself, he loves it and takes a complacency in it, as that which is from himself, and is a true Imitation of himself. And as his own unbounded Being & Goodness is the Primary and Original object of his Immense and Almighty Love: so also every thing that partakes of him, partakes proportionably of his Love; all Imitations of him and Participations of his Love and Goodness are perpetually adequate and commensurate the one to the other. By so much the more acceptable any one is to God, by how much the more he comes to resemble God. It was a common Notion in the old Pythagorean and Platonic Theology, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as Proclus phraseth it, That the Divinity transformed into Love, and enamoured with its own unlimited Perfections and spotless Beauty, delighted to copy forth and shadow out itself as it were in created being's, which are perpetually embraced in the warm bosom of the same Love, which they can never swerve nor apostatise from, till they also prove apostate to the estate of their Creation. And certainly it is true in our Christian divinity, that that Divine light and goodness which flows forth from God, the Original of all, upon the Souls of men, never goes solitary and destitute of Love, Complacency and Acceptation, which is always lodged together with it in the Divine Essence. And as the Divine Complacency thus dearly and tenderly entertains all those which bear a similitude of true Goodness upon them; so it always abandons from its embraces all Evil, which never doth nor can mix itself with it: The Holy Spirit can never suffer any unhallowed or defiled thing to enter into it or to unite itself with it. Therefore in a sober sense I hope I may truly say, There is no perfect or through-reconciliation wrought between God and the Souls of men, while any defiled and impure thing dwells within the Soul, which cannot truly close with God, nor God with that. The Divine Love according to those degrees by which it works upon the Souls of men in transforming them into its own likeness, by the same it renders them more acceptable to itself, mingleth itself with and uniteth itself to them: as the Spirit of any thing mixeth itself more or less with any Matter it acts upon, according as it works itself into it, and so makes a way and passage open for itself. Upon this account I suppose it may be that S. James attributes a kind of Justification to Good works, which unquestionably are things that God approves and accepts, and all those in whom he finds them, as seeing there a true conformity to his own Goodness and Holiness. Whereas on the other side he disparageth that barren, sluggish and drowsy Belief, that a lazy Lethargy in Religion began in his times to hug so dearly, in reference to acceptation with God. I suppose I may fairly thus gloss at his whole Discourse upon this Argument: God respects not a bold, confident and audacious Faith, that is big with nothing but its own Presumptions. It is not because our Brains swim with a strong Conceit of God's Eternal love to us, or because we grow big and swell into a mighty bulk with airy fancies and presumptions of our acceptance with God, that makes us ere the more acceptable to him: It is not all our strong Dreams of being in favour with Heaven that fills our hungry souls ere the more with it: It is not a pertinacious Imagination of our Names being enroled in the Book of life, or of the Debt-books of Heaven being crossed, or of Christ being ours, while we find him not living within us, or of the washing away of our sins in his blood, while the foul and filthy stains thereof are deeply sunk in our own Souls; it is not, I say, a pertinacious Imagination of any of these that can make us ere the better: And a mere Conceit or Opinion as it makes us never the better in reality within ourselves; so it cannot render us ere the more acceptable to God who judges of all things as they are. No, it must be a true Compliance with the Divine will, which must render us such as the Divinity may take pleasure in. In Christ Jesus neither Circumcision nor Uncircumcision availeth any thing (nor 1 Cor. 7. 19 any Fancy built upon any other External privilege) but the keeping of the Commandments of God. No, but If any man does the will of God, him will both the Father John 14. and the Son love; they will come in to him and make their abode with him. This is the Scope and Mark which a true Heavenborn Faith aims at; and when it hath attained this End, then is it indeed perfect and complete in its last accomplishment. And by how much the more ardency and intention Faith levels at this mark of inward goodness and divine activity, by so much the more perfect and sincere it is. This is that which God justifies, it being just and correspondent to his own good pleasure: and in whomsoever he finds this, both it and they are accepted of him. And so I come to the second Particular. God's justifying of Sinners in pardoning and remitting 2. their sins carries in it a necessary reference to the sanctifying of their Natures; without which Justification would rather be a glorious name then a real privilege to the Souls of men. While men continue in their wickedness, they do but vainly dream of a device to tie the hands of an Almighty Vengeance from seizing on them: No, their own Sins, like so many armed giants, would first or last set upon them, and rend them with inward torment. There needs no angry Cherub with a flaming Sword drawn out every way to keep their unhallowed hands off from the Tree of life: No, their own prodigious Lusts, like so many arrows in their sides, would chase them, their own Hellish natures would sink them low enough into eternal death, and chain them up fast enough in fetters of darkness among the filthy fiends of Hell. Sin will always be miserable; and the Sinner at last, when the empty bladders of all those hopes and expectations of an airy mundane Happiness, that did here bear him up in this life, shall be cut, will find it like a talon of Lead weighing him down into the bottomless gulf of Misery. If all were clear towards Heaven, we should find Sin raising up storms in our own Souls. We cannot carry Fire in our own bosoms, and yet not be burnt. Though we could suppose the greatest Serenity without us, if we could suppose ourselves ne'er so much to be at truce with Heaven, and all divine displeasure laid asleep; yet would our own Sins, if they continue unmortified, first or last make an Aetna or Vesuvius within us. Nay those sunbeams of Eternal Truth, that by us are detained in unrighteousness, would at last in those hellish vaults of vice and darkness that are within us kindle into an unquenchable fire. It would be of small benefit to us, That Christ hath triumphed over the principalities and powers of darkness without us, while Hell and Death, strongly immured in a Fort of our own Sins and Corruptions, should tyrannize within us: That his Blood should speak peace in heaven, if in the mean while our own Lusts were perpetually warring and fight in and against our own Souls: That he hath taken off our guilt and cancelled that hand-writing that was against us, which bond us over to Eternal condemnation; if for all this we continue fast sealed up in the Hellish dungeon of our own filthy Lusts. Indeed we could not expect any relief from Heaven out of that misery under which we lie, were not God's displeasure against us first pacified and our Sins remitted: But should the Divine Clemency stoop no lower to us then to a mere pardon of our sins and an abstract Justification, we should never rise out of that Misery under which we lie. This is the Signal and Transcendent benefit of our free Justification through the blood of Christ, that God's offence justly conceived against us for our sins (which would have been an eternal bar and restraint to the Efflux of his Grace upon us) being taken off, the Divine grace and bounty may freely flow forth upon us. The Fountain of the Divine grace and love is now unlocked and opened, which our Sins had shut up; and now the Streams of holiness and true goodness from thence freely flow forth into all gasping Souls that thirst after them. The warm Sun of the Divine love, whenever it breaks through and scatters the thick Cloud of our iniquities that had formerly separated between God & us, it immediately breaks forth upon us with healing in its wings; it exerciseth the mighty force of its own light and heat upon our dark and benumbed Souls, begetting in them a lively sense of God, and kindling into sparks of Divine goodness within us. This Love, when once it hath chased away the thick Mist of our Sins, it will be as strong as Death upon us, as potent as the Grave: many Waters will not quench it, nor the Floods drown it. If we shut not the windows of our Souls against it, it will at last enlighten all those Regions of darkness that are within us, and lead our Souls to the Light of Life, Blessedness and Immortality. God pardons men's Sins out of an Eternal design of destroying them; and whenever the sentence of death is taken off from a Sinner, it is at the same time denounced against his Sins. God does not bid us be warmed and be filled, and deny us those necessaries which our starving and hungry Souls call for. Christ having made peace through the blood of his cross, the Heavens shall be no more as Iron above us: but we shall receive freely the vital dew of them, the former and the later Rain in their season, those Influences from above, which Souls truly sensible of their own Misery and Imperfection uncessantly gasp after, that Righteousness of God which drops from above, from the unsealed Spring of Free goodness which makes glad the city of God. This is that Free Love and Grace which the Souls of Good men so much triumph in; This is that Justification which begets in them lively Hopes of an happy Immortality in the present Anticipations thereof which spring forth from it in this life. And all this is that which we have called sometimes the Righteousness of Christ, sometimes the Righteousness of God; and here, the Righteousness which is of Faith. In Heaven it is a not-imputing of sin; in the Souls of men it is a reconciliation of rebellious Natures to Truth and Goodness. In Heaven it is the lifting up the light of God's countenance upon us, which begets a gladsome entertainment in the Souls of men, holy and dear reflections and reciprocations of Love: Divine Love to us, as it were by a natural emanation, begetting a Reflex love in us towards God, which, like that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spoken of by the Ancients, live and thrive together. CHAP. vi How the Gospel-righteousness is conveyed to us by Faith, made to appear from these two Considerations. 1. The Gospel lays a strong foundation of a cheerful dependence upon the Grace and Love of God, & affiance in it. This confirmed by several Gospel-expressions containing plainly in them the most strong Motives and Encouragements to all ingenuous addresses to God, to all cheerful dependence on him, and confident expectation of all assistance from him. 2. A true Evangelical Faith is no lazy or languid thing, but an ardent breathing and thirsting after Divine grace and righteousness: it looks beyond a mere pardon of sin, and mainly pursues after an inward participation of the Divine nature. The mighty power of a living Faith in the Love and Goddness of God, discoursed of throughout the whole Chapter. WE come now to the last part of our Discourse, viz. To show the Way by which this godlike and Gospel-righteousness is conveyed to us; and that is by Faith. This is that powerful Attractive which by a strong and divine Sympathy draws down the virtue of Heaven into the Souls of men, which strongly and forcibly moves the Souls of good men into a conjunction with that Divine goodness by which it lives and grows: This is that Divine Impress that invincibly draws and sucks them in by degrees into the Divinity, and so unites them more and more to the Centre of Life and Love: It is something in the hearts of men which, feeling by an Occult and inward sensation the mighty insinuations of the Divine goodness, immediately complies with it, and with the greatest ardency that may be is perpetually rising up into conjunction with it; and being first begotten and enlivened by the warm Beams of that Goodness, it always breaths and gasps after it for its constant growth and nourishment. It is then fullest of life and vivacity, when it partakes most freely of it; and perpetually languisheth when it is in any measure deprived of that sweet and pure nourishment it derives from it. But that we may the more clearly unfold this business, How Gospel-righteousness comes to be communicated through Faith, we shall lay it forth in 2 Particulars. First, The Gospel lays a strong foundation of a cheerful 1. dependence upon the Grace and Love of God, and affianee in it. We have the greatest security and assurance that may be given us of God's readiness to relieve such forlorn and desolate Creatures as we are: That there are no such dreadful Fates in Heaven as are continually thirsting after the blood of sinners, insatiably greedy after their prey, never satisfied till they have devoured the Souls of men. Lest we should by such dreadful apprehensions be driven from God, we are told of the Blood of sprinkling that speaks better things for us; of a mighty Favourite soliciting our Cause with perpetual intercessions in the Court of heaven; of a new and living way to the Throne of grace and to the Holy of holies which our Saviour hath consecrated through his flesh: We are told of a great and mighty Saviour able to save to the utmost all that come to God by him: We hear of the most compassionate and tender Promises that may be from the Truth itself, that Whosoever comes to him he will in no wise cast out; that They that believe on him, out of them should flow streams of living water: We hear of the most gracious invitations that Heaven can make to all weary and heavy-laden sinners to come to Christ, that they may find rest: The great Secrets of Heaven and the Arcana of Divine counsels are revealed, whereby we are acquainted that Glory to God in the highest, Peace on earth, Good will towards men, are sweetly joined together in heaven's harmony, and happily combined together in the composure of its Ditties: That the Glory of the Deity and Salvation of men are not allayed by their union one with another, but both exalted together in the most transcendent way, that Divine love and bounty are the supreme rulers in Heaven and Earth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, There is no such thing as sour despite and Envy lodged in the bosom of that ever-blessed Being above, whose name is LOVE, and all whose Dispensations to the Sons of men are but the dispreading and distended radiations of his Love, as freely flowing forth from it through the whole orb and sphere of its creation as the bright light from the Sun in the firmament, of whose benign influences we are then only deprived when we hid and withdraw ourselves from them. We are taught that the mild and gentle breathe of the Divine Spirit are moving up and down in the World to produce life, and to revive and quicken the Souls of men into a feeling sense of a blessed Immortality. This is that mighty Spirit that will, if we comply with it, teach us all things, even the hidden things of God; mortify all the lusts of rebellious Flesh, and seal us up to the day of redemption. We are taught that with all holy boldness we may in all places lift up holy hands to God, without wrath or doubting, without any sour thoughts of God, or fretful jealousies, or harsh surmises. We can never distrust enough in ourselves, nor ever trust too much in God. This is the great Plerophory, and that full Confidence which the Gospel every where seems to promote: and should I run through all the Arguments and Solicitations that are there laid down, to provoke us to an entertainment hereof, I should then run quite through it from one end to another: it containing almost nothing else in the whole Complex and Body of it but strong and forcible Motives to all Ingenuous addresses to God, and the most effectual Encouragement that may be to all cheerful dependence on him, and confident expectation of all assistance from him to carry on our poor endeavours to the atchieument of Blessedness, and that in the most plain and simple way that may be, sine fraud & fuco, without any double mind or mental reservation; Heaven is not acquainted so feelingly with our wicked arts and devices. But it is very strange that where God writes Life so plainly in fair Capital letters, we are so often apt to read Death; that when he tells us over and over, that Hell & destruction arise from ourselves, that they are the workmanship of our own hands, we will needs understand their pedigree to be from Heaven, and that they were conceived in the Womb of Life and Blessedness. No, but the Gospel tells us we are not come to Mounts of burning, nor unto blackness and darkness and tempest, etc. Hebr. 12. v. 18. Certainly a lively Faith in this Love of God, and a sober converse with his Goodness by a cordial entertainment and through persuasion of it, would warm and chafe our benumbed Minds, and thaw our Hearts frozen with Self-love; it would make us melt and dissolve out of all Self-consistencie, and by a free and noble sympathy with the Divine love to yield up ourselves to it, and dilate and spread ourselves more fully in it. This would banish away all atheism and ireful slavish Superstition; it would cast down every high thought and proud imagination that swells within us and exalts itself against this sovereign Deity; it would free us from all those poor, sorry, pinching and particular Loves that here enthral the Souls of men to Vanity and Baseness; it would lead us into the true liberty of the sons of God, filling our Hearts once enlarged with the sense of it with a more generous and universal love, as unlimited and unbounded as true Goodness itself is. Thus Moses-like conversing with God in the Mount, and there beholding his glory shining thus out upon us in the face of Christ, we should be deriving a Copy of that Eternal beauty upon our own Souls, and our thirsty and hungry spirits would be perpetually sucking in a true participation and image of his glory. A true divine Love would wing our Souls, and make them take their flight swiftly towards Heaven and Immortality. Can we once be throughly possessed and mastered with a full confidence of the Divine love, and God's readiness to assist such feeble, languishing creatures as we are, in our assays after Heaven and Blessedness, we should then, finding ourselves borne up by an Eternal and Almighty strength, dare to adventure courageously and confidently upon the highest designs of Happiness, to assail the kingdom of heaven with a holy gallantry and violence, to pursue a course of well-doing without weariness; knowing that our labour shall not be in vain in the Lord, and that we shall receive our Reward, if we faint not: We should work out our salvation in the most industrious manner, trusting in God as one ready to instill strength and power into all the vital faculties of our Souls: We should press towards the mark, for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus, that we may apprehend that for which also we are apprehended of Christ Jesus. If we suffer not ourselves to be robbed of this Confidence and Hope in God as ready to accomplish the desires of those that seek after him, we may then walk on strongly in the way to Heaven and not be weary; we may run and not faint. And the more the Souls of men grow in this blissful persuasion, the more they shall mount up like Eagles into a clear Heaven, finding themselves rising higher and higher above all those filthy mists, those clouds and tempests of a slavish Fear, Despair, Fretfulness against God, pale Jealousies, wrathful and embittered Thoughts of him, or any struggle or contests to get from within the verge of his Power and Omnisciency, which would mantle up their Souls in black and horrid Night. I mean not all this while by this holy Boldness and Confidence and Presence of Mind in a Believer's converse with the deity, that high pitch of Assurance that wafts the Souls of good men over the Stygian lake of Death, and brings them to the borders of life; that here puts them into an actual possession of Bliss, and reestates and reestablishes them in Paradise: No, That more general acquaintance which we may have with God's Philanthropy and Bounty, ready to relieve with the bowels of his tender compassions all those starving Souls that call upon him, (for surely he will never do less for fainting and drooping Souls than he doth for the young Ravens that cry unto him;) that converse which we are provoked by the Gospel to maintain with God's unconfined love, if we understand it aright, will awaken us out of our drowsy Lethargy, and make us ask of him the way to Zion with our faces thitherward: This will be digging up fresh fountains for us while we go through the valley of Baca, whereby refreshing our weary Souls we shall go on from strength to strength until we see the face of our loving, and ever-to-be-loved, God in Zion. And so I come to the next Particular wherein we shall further unfold how this Godlike righteousness, we have spoken of, is conveyed to us by Faith: and that is this, A true Gospel-faith is no lazy or languid thing, but a 2. strong ardent breathing for and thirsting after divine Grace and Righteousness: it doth not only pursue an ambitious project of raising the Soul immaturely to the condition of a darling Favourite with Heaven, while it is unripe for it, by procuring a mere empty Pardon of sin; it desires not only to stand upon clear terms with Heaven by procuring the crossing of all the Debt-books of our sins there; but it rather pursues after an Internal participation of the Divine nature. We often hear of a Saving Faith; and that, where it is, is not content to wait for Salvation till the world to come; it is not patiented of being an Expectant in a Probationership for it until this Earthly body resigns up all its worldly interest, that so the Soul might then come into its room: No, but it is here perpetually gasping after it, and effecting of it in a way of serious Mortification and Self-denial: it enlarges and dilates itself as much as may be according to the vast dimensions of the Divine love, that it may comprehend the height and depth, the length and breadth thereof, and fill the Soul, where it is seated, with all the fullness of God: it breeds a strong and unsatiable appetite where it comes after true Goodness. Were I to describe it, I should do it not otherwise then in the language of the Apostle; It is that whereby we live in Christ, and whereby he lives in us; or, in the dialect of our Saviour himself, Something so powerfully sucking in the precious influences of the Divine Spirit, that the Soul where it is, is continually flowing with living waters issuing out of itself. A John 7. 38. truely-believing Soul by an ingenuous affiance in God and an eager thirst after him is always sucking from the full breasts of the Divine love; thence it will not part, for there, and there only, is its life and nourishment; it starves and faints away with grief and hunger, whensoever it is pulled away from thence; it is perpetually hanging upon the arms of Immortal Goodness, for there it finds its great strength lies; and as much as may be arms itself with the mighty Power of God, by which it goes forth like a giant refreshed with wine to run that race of Grace & Holiness that leads to the true Elysium of Glory, and that heavenly Canaan which is above. And whensoever it finds itself enfeebled in its difficult Conflict with those fierce and furious Corruptions, those tall sons of Anak, which arising from our terrene and sensual affections do here encounter it in the Wilderness of this world; then turning itself to God, and putting itself under the conduct of the Angel of his presence, it finds itself presently out of weakness to become strong, enabled from above to put to flight those mighty armies of the aliens. True Faith, (if you would know its rise and pedigree) it is begotten of the Divine bounty and fullness manifesting itself to the Spirits of men, and it is conceived and brought forth by a deep and humble sense of Self-indigency and Poverty. Faith arises out of Self-examination, seating and placing itself in view of the Divine plenitude and all-sufficiency; and thus (that I may borrow those words of S. Paul) we received the sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves but in him. The more this Sensual, Brutish and Self-Central life thrives and prospers, the more divine Faith languisheth; and the more that decays, and all Self-feeling, Self-love, and selfsufficiency pine away, the more is true Faith fed and nourished, it grows more vigorous: and as Carnal life wastes and consumes, so the more does Faith suck in a true divine and spiritual life from the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who hath life in himself, and freely bestows it to all those that hearty seek for it. When the Divinity united itself to Humane nature in the person of our Saviour, he then gave mankind a pledge and earnest of what he would further do therein, in assuring of it into as near a conjunction as might be with Himself, and in dispensing and communicating himself to Man in a way as far correspondent and agreeable as might be to that first Copy. And therefore we are told of Christ being form in us, and the Spirit of Christ dwelling in us; of our being made conformable to him, of having fellowship with him, of being as he was in this world, of living in him and his living in us, of dying, and rising again, and ascending with him into Heaven, and the like: because indeed the same Spirit that dwelled in him, derives itself in its mighty Virtue and Energy through all believing Souls, shaping them more and more into a just resemblance and conformity to him as the first Copy & Pattern: Whence it is that we have so many ways of unfolding the Union between Christ and all Believers set forth in the Gospel. And all this is done for us by degrees through the efficacy of the Eternal spirit, when by a true Faith we deny ourselves and our own Wills, submit our seves in a deep sense of our own folly and weakness to his wisdom and Power, comply with his Will, and by a holy affiance in him subordinate ourselves to his pleasure: for these are the Vital acts of a Gospel-Faith. And according to this which hath been said I suppose we may fairly gloss upon S. Paul's Discourses which so much prefer Faith above Works. We must not think in a giantlike pride to scale the walls of Heaven by our own Works, and by force thereof to take the strong Fort of Blessedness, and wrest the Crown of Glory out of God's hands whether he will or no. We must not think to commence a suit in Heaven for Happiness upon such a poor and weak plea as our own External compliance with the Old Law is. We must not think to deal with God in the Method of Commutative Justice, and to challenge Eternal life as the just Reward of our great Merits, and the hire due to us for our labour and toil we have took in God's Vineyard. No, God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble: it must be an humble and selfdenying address of a Soul dissolved into a deep and piercing sense of its own Nothingness and unprofitableness, that can be capable of the Divine bounty: he fills the hungry with good things, but the rich he sends empty away. They are the hungry and thirsty Souls, always gasping after the living springs of Divine grace, as the parched ground in the desert doth for the dew of Heaven, ready to drink them in by a constant dependence upon God; Souls that by a living, watchful and diligent Faith spreading forth themselves in all obsequious reverence and love of him, wait upon him as the Eyes of an handmaid wait on the hand of her Mistress: These are they that he delights to satiate with his goodness. Those that being mastered by a strong sense of their own indigency, their pinching and pressing poverty, and his All-sufficient fullness, trust in him as an Almighty Saviour, and in the most ardent manner pursue after that Perfection which his grace is leading them to; those that cannot satisfy themselves in a bare performance of some External acts of righteousness, or an External observance of a Law without them, but with the most greedy and fervent ambition pursue after such an acquaintance with his Divine Spirit as may breathe an inward life through all the powers of their Souls, and beget in them a vital form and soul of Divine goodness; These are the spiritual seed of faithful Abraham, the sons of the freewoman and heirs of the promises, to whom all are made Yea and Amen in Christ Jesus; These are they which shall abide in the house for ever, when the sons of the bondwoman, those that are only Arabian proselytes, shall be cast out. CHAP. VII. An Appendix to the foregoing Discourse; How the whole business and Undertaking of Christ is eminently available both to give full relief and ease to our Minds and Hearts, and also to encourage us to Godliness or a godlike righteousness, briefly represented in sundry Particulars. FOR the further illustration of some things especially in the latter part of this Discourse, it may not be amiss in some Particulars (which might easily be enlarged) to show How the Undertaking of Christ (that Great Object of Faith) is greatly advantageous and available to the giving full relief and ease to our Minds and Hearts, and also to the encouraging us to Godliness, or a true godlike righteousness. In the General therefore we may consider, That full and evident assurance is given hereby to the world, That God doth indeed seek the saving of that which is lost; and men are no longer to make any doubt or scruple of it. Now what can we imagine more available to carry on a design of Godliness, and to rouse dull and languid Souls to an effectual minding of their own Salvation, then to have this News sounding in their Ears by men that (at the first promulgation thereof) durst tell them roundly in the Name of God, that God required them every where to repent, for that his kingdom of grace was now apparent; and that he was not only willing, but it was his gracious design to save & recover lost Sinners who had forsaken his Goodness? Particularly, That the whole business of Christ is very advantageous for this purpose, and highly accommodate thereto, may appear thus: We are fully assured that God hath this forementioned 1. design upon lost men, because here is one (viz. Christ) that partakes every way of Humane Nature, whom the Divinity magnifies itself in, and carries through this world in Humane infirmities and Sufferings to Eternal glory: a clear manifestation to the World that God had not cast off Humane Nature, but had a real mind to exalt and dignify it again. The way into the Holy of holies or to Eternal happiness 2. is laid as open as may be by Christ, in his Doctrine, Life, and Death: in all which we may see with open face what Humane Nature may attain to, and how it may by Humility, Self-denial and divine Love, a Christ-like life, rise up above all visible heavens into a state of Immortal glory and bliss. Here is a manifestation of Love given, enough to thaw all the iciness of men's hearts which Self-love had 3. quite frozen up: For here is One who in Humane Nature most hearty every where denying himself, is ready to do any thing for the good of Mankind, and at last gives up his life for the same pupose; and that according to the good will and pleasure of that Eternal love which so loved the World, that he gave this beloved and his only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him, should not perish, but have everlasting life. Whereas every Penitent Sinner carries a sense of gild upon his own Conscience, is apt to shrink with 4. cold i'll fears of offended Majesty, and to dread the thoughts of violated Justice: He is assured that Christ hath laid down his life, and thereby made propitiation & atonement for sin; That He hath laid down his life for the Redemption of him; and so in Christ we have Redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins. Thus may the Hearts of all Penitents, troubled at first with sense of their own guilt, be quieted, and fully established in a living Faith and Hope in an Eternal goodness; seeing how their Sins are remitted through the blood of Jesus that came to die for them and save them, and through his blood they may have free access unto God. Seeing Sin and gild are apt continually to beget a 5. jealousy of God's Majesty and Greatness, from whom the Sinner finds himself at a vast distance, he is made acquainted with a Mediator through whom he may address himself to God without this jealousy or doubting; for that this Mediator likewise is one of Humane Nature, that is highly beloved and accepted of God, he having so highly pleased God by performing his Will in all things. Certainly it is very decorous and much for the Ease of a Penitent's mind, (as it makes also for the disparagement of Sin) that our Addresses to God should be through a Mediator. The Platonists wisely observed that between the Pure Divinity and Impure Sinners as there is no Union, so no Communion: it is very agreeable every way and upon all accounts, that they who in themselves are altogether unworthy and under demerit, should come to God by a Mediator. Thus the Scripture every where seems to represent and hold forth Christ in the forenamed Particulars, (without descending into Niceties and subtleties, such as the schoolmen and others from them have troubled the World with) in a very full and ample manner, that so the Minds of true Believers (that are willing to comply with the Purpose of God for their own Eternal peace) might in all Cases find something in Christ for their relief, and make use of him as much as may be to encourage and help on Godliness: for by this whole Undertaking of Christ manifested in the Gospel God would have to be understood Full relief of Mind and Ease of Conscience, as also all Encouragement to Godliness, and Disparagement of Sin. And indeed the whole business of Christ is the greatest Blow to Sin that may be; For the World is taught hereby, that there is no Sinning upon cheap and easy terms: men may see that God will not return so easily into favour with Sinners; but he will have his Righteousness acknowledged, and likewise their own Demerit. And this acknowledgement he is once indeed pleased to accept of in the person of our Saviour: yet if men will not now turn to him, and accept his favour, they must know that there is no other Sacrifice for Sin. By these Particulars we have briefly touched upon (to name no more) it may appear, That when we look into the Gospel, we are taught to believe that Christ hath done, according to the good pleasure of God, every thing for us that may truly relieve our Minds, and encourage us to Godliness, a godlike Righteousness far exceeding the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees. A Discovery of The SHORTNESS and VANITY Of A pharisaic Righteousness: OR, An Account of the False Grounds upon which Men are apt vainly to conceit themselves to be Righteous. Luke 16. 15. And he said unto the Pharisees, Ye are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your Hearts: for that which is highly esteemed amongst men, is abomination in the sight of God. Epiphanius in Haeres. 59 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Renatus Des Cartes in Epistol. ad Princ. Elizabetham. Nulli facilius ad magnam Pietatis famam perveniunt, quàm Superstitiosi vel Hypocritae. THE SHORTNESS and VANITY OF A pharisaic Righteousness, Discovered in a Discourse upon MATTHEW 19 20, 21. The young man saith unto him, All these things have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet? Jesus saith unto him, If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give it to the Poor, and thou shalt have treasure in Heaven: and come and follow me. CHAP. I. A General account of men's Mistakes about Religion. Men are no no where more lazy and sluggish, and more apt to delude themselves, then in matters of Religion. The Religion of most men is but an Image and Resemblance of their own fancies. The Method propounded for discoursing upon those words in S. Matthew. 1. To discover some of the Mistakes and False Notions about Religion. 2. To discover the Reason of these Mistakes. A brief Explication of the Words. AS there is no kind of Excellency more generally pretended to then Religion, so there is none less known, or wherein men are more apt to delude themselves. Every one is ready to lay claim, and to plead a Right in it; (like the Bat in the Jewish fable, that pretended the Light was hers, and complained of the unjust detainment thereof from her;) but few there are that understand the true worth and pretiousness of it. There are some Common Notions and a Natural instinct of Devotion seated in the Minds of men, which are ever and anon roving after Religion; and as they casually and fortuitously start up any Models and Ideas of it, they are presently prone to believe themselves to have found out this only Pearl of price: the Religion of most men being indeed nothing else but such a Strain and Scheme of Thoughts and Actions, as their Natural propensions, swayed by nothing else but an Inbred belief of a Deity, accidentaily run into; nothing else but an Image and Resemblance of their own fancies which are ever busy in painting out themselves; which is the reason why there are as many Shapes and Features of Religion painted forth in the Minds of men, as there are various Shapes of Faces and fancies. Thus men are wont to fashion and limne out their Religion to themselves in a strange and uncouth manner, as the Imaginations of men in their Dreams are wont to represent monstrous and hideous shapes of things that not where else appear but there. And though some may seem to themselves to have ascended up above this Low region, this Vulgar state of Religion; yet I doubt they may still be wrapped up in Clouds and darkness, they may still be but in a Middle region, like wand'ring Meteors that have not yet shaked off that gross and earthly Nature which will at last force them again downwards. There may be some who may arrive at that Book-skill and learning in Divine Mysteries, that with a pharisaic pride looking down upon the rude and vulgar sort of men, may say, * John 7. This people that knows not the Law are cursed; who themselves yet converse only with an airy Ghost and shadow of Religion: though the Light of divine truth may seem to shine upon them, yet by reason of their dark and opacous hearts, it shines not into them: They may, like this dark and dull Earth, be superficially guilded, and warmed too, with its beams, and yet the impressions thereof do not pierce quite through them. There may be many fair Semblances of Religion where the Substance and Power of it is not. We shall here endeavour to discover some of them which may seem most specious, and with which the weak Understandings of men (which are no no where more lazy and sluggish then in matters of Religion) are most apt to be deluded; and then discover the Reason of these Mistakes. For which purpose we have made choice of these Words, wherein we find a young Pharisee beginning to swell with a vain conceit of his good estate towards God, looking upon himself as being already upon the Borders of Perfection, having from his youth up kept on a constant course in the way of God's commandments; he could not now be many miles from the land of Canaan, if he were not already passed over Jordan; he thought himself to be already in a state of Perfection, or at least within sight of it: and therefore making account he was as lovely in our saviour's eyes as he was in his own, asks him, What lack I yet? For the understanding of which we must know the Jews were wont to distinguish Righteous men into two sorts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to which this Quère of his seems to refer, as if he had said, Having kept all God's commandments, sure my Good deeds cannot only overbalance my Evil, no, but they rather fill both the scales of the Divine balance; I have no Evil deeds to weigh against them: what therefore can I want of the end and scope of the Divine Law, which is to make men perfect, seeing I have guided my whole life from my youth up by the Precepts of it? To which our Saviour replies; If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow me. Which words I can neither think to be spoken as Consilium perfectionis in the Papal sense, nor yet only as a particular and special Precept; but rather by way of Conviction: So that the full sense and importance of our saviour's speech seems to be this, viz. A mere Conformity of the Outward man to the Law of God is not sufficient to bring a man to Eternal life; but the Inward man also must deeply receive in the stamp and impression of the Divine Law, so as to be made like to God. True Perfection is not consistent with any Terrene loves or Worldly affections: This Mundane life and spirit which acts so strongly and impetuously in this lower world, must be crucified: The Soul must be wholly dissolved from this Earthy body which it is so deeply immersed in, while it endeavours to enlarge its sorry Tabernacle upon this material Globe, and by a holy abstraction from all things that pinion it to Mortality, withdraw itself and retire into a Divine solitude. If thou therefore wert in a state of Perfection, thou wouldst be able at the first call from God to resign up all Interest here below, to quit all claim, and to dispose of thyself and all worldly enjoyments according to his pleasure without any reluctancy; and come and follow me. And this I think was the true Scope of our saviour's answer; which proved a real Demonstration, as it appears in the sequel of the Story, that this confident Pharisee had not yet attained to those mortified affections which are requisite in all the Candidates of true Blessedness; but only cheated his own Soul with a bare External appearance of Religion, which was not truly seated in his Heart: and I doubt not but many are ready upon as slight Grounds, and with as much confidence, to take up his Quere, What lack I yet? We shall therefore in the first place, according to what we promised, inquire into some of those false Pretences which men are apt to make to Happiness, and show in four Particulars how Religion is mistaken. CHAP. II. An Account of men's Mistakes about Religion in 4 Particulars. 1. A Partial obedience to some Particular Precepts. The False Spirit of Religion spends itself in some Particulars, is confined, is overswayed by some prevailing Lust. Men of this spirit may by some Book-skill, and a zeal about the Externals of Religion, lose the sense of their own Guiltiness, and of their deficiencies in the Essentials of Godliness, and fancy themselves nearly related to God. Where the true Spirit of Religion is it informs and actuates the whole man, it will not be confined, but will be absolute within us, and not suffer any corrupt Interest to grow by it. THE First is, A Partial obedience to some Particular 1. Precepts of God's law. That arrogant Pharisee that could lift up a bold face to heaven, and thank God he was no Extortioner, nor unjust, nor guilty of any Publican-sins, found it easy to persuade himself that God justified him as much as he did himself. It was a vulgar Rule given by the Jewish Doctors, which I fear too many live by, That men should single out some one commandment out of God's law, and therein especially exercise themselves, that so they might make God their friend by that, lest in others they should too much displease him. Thus men are content 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to pay God their Decimae, and Septimae of their lives too, if need be, so that they may without fear of sacrilege, or purloining, as they suppose, from him, enjoy all the rest to themselves: But they are not willing to consecrate their whole lives to him, they are afraid lest Religion should encroach too much upon them, and too busily invade their own rights and liberties, as their their selfish Spirit calls them. There are such that it may be think themselves willing that God should have his due, so be it he will also let them enjoy their own without any let or molestation; but they are very jealous lest he should encroach too much upon them, and are careful to maintain a Meum and Tuum with Heaven itself, and to set bounds to God's prerogative over them, lest it should swell too much, and grow too mighty for them to maintain their own privileges under it. They would fain understand themselves to be freeborn under the dominion of God himself, and therefore ought not to be compelled to yield obedience to any such laws of his as their own private seditious Lusts and Passions will not suffer them to give their consent unto. There be such who persuade themselves they are well-affected to God, and willing to obey his commandments, but yet think they must not be uncivil to the World; nor so base and cowardly as not to maintain their own credit and reputation, with a due revenge upon those that seem to impair it; or so much forget themselves, as not to comply with the guise and fashion of this world so far as it may make for their own emolument or preferment. Such as these, that are no fast friends to Religion, can easily find some Postern-dore to slip out by into this World: and while they either do some constant homage to Heaven in the exercise and performance of some Duties of Religion, or abstain from such Vices as the common opinions of men brand with infamy, or can fancy themselves to be marked out with some of those Characters which they have learned from Books or Pulpit-discourses to be the Notes of God's Children and justified persons; they grow big with Self-conceit, and can easily find out some handsome piece of Sophistry and cunning Topick to delude themselves by, in indulging some beloved Lust or other: They can sometimes beat down the price of other men's religion, to enhance the value of their own; or it may be by a burning and fiery zeal against the Opinions and deportments of others that are not of their own Sect, they may lose the sense of all their own guiltiness. The Disciples themselves had almost forgotten the mild and gentle Spirit of Religion, in an overhasty heat calling for Fire down from heaven upon those whom they deemed their Master's enemies. Sometimes a Partial spirit in Religion, that spends itself only in some Particulars, mistakes the fair complexions of Good nature for the true face of virtue; and a good Bodily temperament will serve it, as a flattering glass, to bestow beauty upon a deformed and misshapen Mind, that it may seem virtuous. But it is not a true Spirit of Religion, whatsoever those wanton wits may call it, that is thus Particular and confined. No, that is of a subtle and working nature, it will be searching through the whole man, and leave nothing uninformed by itself: as it is with the Soul that runs through all the portions of Matter and every member of the Body. Sin and Grace cannot lodge together, they cannot divide and share out between them two several Dominions in one Soul. What is commonly said of Truth in general, we may say more especially of true Goodness, magna est, & praevalebit: it will lodge in the Souls of men, like that mighty, though gentle, Heat which is entertained in the Heart, that always dispenseth warm blood and Spirits to all the members in the Body: it will not suffer any other Interest to grow by it: it will be so absolute as to swallow up all our carnal freedom, and crush down all our fleshly liberty: as Moses his Serpent did eat up all the Serpents of the Egyptian Magicians, so will it devour all that viperous brood of iniquity, which our Magical Self-will by her witchcraft and enchantments begets within us: like a strong and vehement Flame within us, it will not only sing the hair, or scorch and blister the skin, but it will go on to consume this whole Body of death: it is compared by our Saviour to Leaven that will ferment the whole mass in which it is wrapped up: it will enter into us like the Refiner's fire, and the Fuller's soap: like the Angel of God's presence that he promised to send along with the Israelites in their journey to Canaan, it will not pardon our iniquities, nor indulge any darling lust whatsoever: it will narrowly pry into all our actions, and be spying out all those back-ways and doors whereby Sin and Vice may enter. That Religion that runs out only in Particularities, and is overswayed by the prevailing power of any Lust, is but only a dead carcase, and not indeed that true living Religion which comes from Heaven, and which will not suffer itself to be confined; that will not indent with us, or article upon our terms and conditions, but Samson like will break all those bonds which our fleshly and harlot-like wills would tie it with, and become every way absolute within us. And so I pass to the Second thing wherein men are apt to delude themselves in taking an Estimate of their own Religion, viz. CHAP. III. The Second Mistake about Religion, viz. A mere compliance of the Outward man with the Law of God. True Religion seats itself in the Centre of men's Souls, and first brings the Inward man into Obedience to the Law of God: the Superficial Religion intermeddles chief with the Circumference and Outside of men; or rests in an outward abstaining from some Sins. Of Speculative and the most close and Spiritual wickedness within. How apt men are to sink all Religion into Opinions and External Forms. A Mere compliance of the Outward man with the Law 2. of God. There is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Philosophy hath acknowledged as well as our Christian Divinity: and when Religion seats itself in the Centre of men's Souls, it acts there most strongly upon the Vital powers of it, and first brings the Inward man into a true and cheerful obedience to the law of God, before all the seditious and rebellious motives of the External or Animal man be quite subdued. But a Superficial Religion many times intermeddles only with the Circumference and Outside of men, it only lodges in the suburbs and storms the outworks, but enters not the main Fort of men's Souls, which is strongly defended by inward Pride, Self-will, particular and mundane Loves, fretting and self-consuming Envy, Popularity and vainglory, and such other Mental vices, that when they are beaten out of the visible behaviours and conversations of men by Divine threats or promises (which may be too potent to be controlled) retreat and secure themselves here as in a strong Castle. There may be many who dare not pursue Revenge, and yet are not willing to forgive injuries; who dare not murder their enemy, that yet cannot love him; who dare not seek for preferment by Bribery, who yet are not mortified to these and many other mundane and base-born affections: they are not willing that the Divine prerogative should extend itself beyond the Outward man, and that Religion should be too busy with their Inward thoughts and passions: if they may not by proud boasting set off their own sorry commodities upon the public stage, and there read out their own panegyrics; yet they will inwardly applaud themselves, and commit wanton dalliance with their own Parts and Perfections; and not feeling the mighty power of any Higher good, they will endeavour to preserve an unhallowed Autaesthesie and feeling sense of themselves; and by a sullen melancholy stoicism, when Religion would deprive and bereave them of the sinful glory and pleasures of this Outward world, they then retire and shrink themselves up into a Centre of their own, they collect and contract themselves into themselves. Thus when this low life of men's Souls is chased out of the External vices and vanities of this World by the chastisements of their own Consciences, or many times by bodily oppressions, it presently retires into itself, and by a Self-feeling gins more to grasp and dearly embrace itself. When these External loves begin to be starved and cooled, yet men may then fall into love with and courting of themselves by Arrogancy, selfconfidence and dependence, Self-applause and gratulations, Admiration of their own perfections; and so feed that dying life of theirs with this Speculative wantonness, that it may as strongly express itself within them, as before it did without themselves. Men may by inward braving of themselves sacrilegiously steal God's glory from him, and erect a Self-supremacy within, exerting itself in Self-will and particular loves, and so become Corrivals with God for the Crown of Blessedness and selfsufficiency, as I doubt many of the Stoics endeavoured with a giantlike ambition to do. But alas, I doubt we generally arrive not to this pitch of Religion, to deny the world, and all the pomp and glory of this largely-extended train of Vanity; but we easily content ourselves with some External forms of Religion. We are too apt to look at a garish dress and attire of Religion, or to be enamoured rather with some more specious and seemingly-spiritual Forms, then with the true Spirit & Power of Godliness & Religion itself. We are more taken commonly with the several new fashions that the luxuriant Fancies of men are apt to contrive for it, then with the real power and simplicity thereof: and while we think ourselves to be growing in our knowledge, and moving on towards a state of Perfection, we do but turn up and down from one kind of Form to another; we are as apt still to draw it down into as low, worldly and mundane Rites and Ordinances, as ever it was before our Saviour made that glorious Reformation therein, which took away these Material crutches made up of carnal Observances which Earthly minds lean so much upon, and are fain to underprop their Religion with, which else would tumble down and fall to nothing: except we can cast it into such a certain Set of duties and System of Opinions, that we may see it altogether from one end to another, we are afraid lest it should become too abstruse a thing and vanish away from us. I would not be misunderstood to speak against those Duties & Ordinances which are necessary means appointed by God to promote us in the ways of Piety: But I fear we are too apt to sink all our Religion into these, and so to embody it, that we may as it were touch and feel it, because we are so little acquainted with the high and spiritual nature of it, which is too subtle for gross and carnal minds to converse with. I fear our vulgar sort of Christians are wont so to look upon such kind of Models of Divinity and Religious performances, which were intended to help our dull minds to a more lively sense of God and true Goodness, as those things that claim the whole of their Religion: and therefore are too apt to think themselves absolved from it, except at some solemn times of more especial addresses to God; and that this wedding garment of holy Thoughts and divine Affections is not for every days wearing, but only then to be put on when we come to the Marriage-feast and Festivals of Heaven; as if Religion were fast locked and bound up in some sacred Solemnities, and so incarcerated and incorporated into some divine Mysteries, as the superstitious Heathen of old thought, that it might not stir abroad and wander too far out of these hallowed Cloisters, and grow too busy with us in our Secular employments. We have learned to distinguish too subtly I doubt in our lives and conversations inter sacrum & profanum, our Religious approaches to God and our Worldly affairs. I know our conversation and demeanour in this world is not, nor can well be, all of a piece, and there will be several degrees of Sanctity in the lives of the best men, as there were once in the land of Canaan; but yet I think a Good man should always find himself upon Holy ground, and never departed so far into the affairs of this life, as to be without either the call or compass of Religion; he should always think wheresoever he is, etiam ibi Dii sunt, that God and the blessed Angels are there, with whom he should converse in a way of purity. We must not think that Religion serves to paint our Faces, to reform our Looks, or only to inform our Heads, or instruct and tune our Tongues; no, nor only to tie our Hands, and make our Outward man more demure, and bring our Bodies and bodily actions into a better decorum: But its main business is to purge and reform our Hearts and all the Elicit actions and motions thereof. And so I come to a Third particular wherein we are apt to misjudge ourselves in matters of Religion. CHAP. iu. The Third Mistake about Religion, viz. A constrained and forced Obedience to God's Commandments. The Religion of many (some of whom would seem most abhorrent from Superstition) is nothing else but Superstition properly so called. False Religionists, having no inward sense of the Divine Goodness, cannot truly love God: Yet their sour and dreadful apprehensions of God compel them to serve him. A slavish spirit in Religion may be very prodigal in such kind of serving God as doth not pinch their Corruptions; but in the great and weightier matters of Religion, in such things as prejudice their beloved Lusts, it is very needy and sparing. This servile Spirit has low and mean thoughts of God, but an high opinion of its Outward services, as conceiting that by such cheap things God is gratified and becomes indebted to it. The different Effects of Love and Slavish fear in the truly, and in the falsely, Religious. ANother Particular wherein men mistake Religion, is A constrained and forced obedience to God's Commandments. 3. That which many men (amongst whom some would seem to be most abhorrent from Superstition) call their Religion, is indeed nothing else but a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * See the Tract of Superstition. , that I may use the word in its ancient and proper sense, as it imports such an apprehension of God as renders him grievous to men; and so destroys all free and cheerful converse with him, and begets in stead thereof a forced and dry devotion, void of inward Life and Love. Those Servile spirits which are not acquainted with God and his goodness, may be so haunted by the frightful thoughts of a Deity, as to scare and terrify them into some worship and observance of him. They are apt to look upon him as one clothed with austerity, or, as the Epicurean Poet hath too truly painted out their thoughts, as a savus Dominus, that is, in the language of the unprofitable servant in the Gospel, an hard Master; and therefore they think something must be done to please him, and to mitigate his severity towards them: and though they cannot truly love him, having no inward sense of his Loveliness, yet they cannot but serve him so far as these rigorous apprehensions lie upon them; though notwithstanding such as these are very apt to persuade themselves that they may pacify him and purchase his favour with some cheap services, as if Heaven itself could become guilty of Bribery, and an Immutable Justice be flattered into Partiality and Respect of persons. Because they are not acquainted with God, and know him not as he is in himself, therefore they are ready to paint him forth to themselves in their own shape: and because they themselves are full of Peevishness and Self-will, arbitrarily imposing and prescribing to others without sufficient evidence of Reason, and are easily enticed by Flatteries; they are apt to represent the Divinity also to themselves in the same form, and think they view the true portraiture and draught of their own Genius in it; and therefore that they might please this angry Deity of their own making, they care not sometimes to be lavish in such a kind of Service of him as doth not much pinch their own corruptions; nay and it may be too, will seem to part with them sometimes, and give them a weeping farewell, if God and their own awakened Consciences seem to frown upon them; though all their Obedience arise from nothing else but the Compulsions and necessities which their own sour and dreadful apprehensions of God lay upon them: and therefore in those things which more nearly touch their own beloved Lusts, they will be as scant and sparing as may be; here they will be as strict with God as may be, that he may have no more than his due, as they think, like that Unprofitable servant in the Gospel, that, because his Master was an austere man, reaping where he had not sown, and gathering where he had not scattered, was content and willing he should have his own again, but would not suffer him to have any more. This Servile spirit in Religion is always illiberal and needy in the Magnalia Legis, the great and weightier matters of Religion, and here weighs out Obedience by drams and scruples: it never finds itself more shriveled and shrunk up, then when it is to converse with God; like those creatures that are generated of slime and mud, the more the Summer-sun shines upon them, and the nearer it comes to them, the more is all their vital strength dried up and spent away: their dreadful thoughts of God, like a cold Eastern wind, blasts all their blossoming affections, and nips them in the bud: these exhaust their native vigour, and make them weak and sluggish in all their motions toward God. Their Religion is rather a Prison or a piece of Penance to them, than any voluntary and free compliance of their Souls with the Divine will: and yet because they bear the burden and heat of the day, they think, when the evening comes, they ought to be more liberally rewarded; such slavish spirits being ever apt inwardly to conceit that Heaven receives some emolument or other by their hard labours, and so becomes indebted to them, because they see no true gain and comfort accrueing from them to their own Souls; and so because they do God's work and not their own, they think they may reasonably expect a fair compensation, as having been profitable to him. And this I doubt was the first and vulgar foundation of Merit: though now the world is ashamed to own it. But alas, such an ungodlike Religion as this can never be owned by God: the bondwoman and her son must be cast out. The Spirit of true Religion is of a more free, noble, ingenuous and generous nature, arising out of the warm beams of the Divine love which first hatched it and brought it forth, and therefore is it afterwards perpetually bathing itself in that sweetest love that first begot it, and is always refreshed and nourished by it. This Love casteth out fear, fear which hath torment in it, and is therefore more apt to chase away Souls once wounded with it from God, rather than to allure them to God. Such fear of God always carries in it a secret Antipathy against him, as being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plutarch speaks, one that is so troublesome that there is no quiet or peaceable living with him. Whereas Love by a strong Sympathy draws the Souls of men, when it hath once laid hold upon them by its powerful insinuation, into the nearest conjunction that may be with the Divinity; it thaws all those frozen affections which a Slavish fear had congealed and locked up, and makes the Soul most cheerful, free, and nobly resolved in all its motions after God. It was well observed of old by Pythagoras, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, we are never so well as when we approach to God; when in a way of Religion we make our addresses to God, then are our Souls most cheerful. True Religion and an Inward acquaintance with God discovers nothing in him but pure and sincere Goodness, nothing that might breed the least distaste or disaffection, or carry in it any semblance of displeasingness; and therefore the Souls of good men are never pinching and sparing in their affections: then the Torrent is most full and swells highest, when it empties itself into this unbounded Ocean of the Divine Being. This makes all the commandments of God light and easy and far from being grievous. There needs no * Quis legem det amantibus? Major Lex Amor est sibi. Boetius l. 3. de Consol. Philos. Law to compel a Mind acted by the true spirit of divine love to serve God or to comply with his Will. It is the choice of such a Soul to endeavour to conform itself to him, and draw from him as much as may be an Imitation of that Goodness and Perfection which it finds in him. Such a Christian does not therefore obey his Commands only because it is God's Will he should do so, but because he sees the Law of God to be truly perfect, as David speaks: his nature being reconciled to God finds it all holy, just and good, as S. Paul speaks, and such a thing as his Soul loves, sweeter than the honey or the honeycomb; and he makes it his meat and drink to do the Will of God, as our Lord and Saviour did. And so I pass to the Fourth and last Particular wherein Religion is sometimes mistaken. CHAP. V. The Fourth and last Mistake about Religion, When a mere Mechanical and Artificial Religion is taken for that which is a true Impression of Heaven upon the Souls of men, and which moves like a new Nature. How Religion is by some made a piece of Art, and how there may be specious and plausible Imitations of the Internals of Religion as well as of the Externals. The Method and Power of Fancy in contriving such Artificial imitations. How apt men are in these to deceive both themselves and others. The Difference between those that are governed in their Religion by Fancy, and those that are actuated by the Divine Spirit and in whom Religion is a Living Form. That True Religion is no Art, but a new Nature. Religion discovers itself best in a Serene and clear Temper of Mind, in deep Humility, Meekness, Self-denial, Universal love of God and all true Goodness. THE Fourth and last Particular wherein men mis-judge 4. themselves, is, When a mere Mechanical and Artificial Religion is taken for that which is a true Impression of Heaven upon the Souls of men, and which moves like an Inward nature. True Religion will not stoop to Rules of Art, nor be confined within the narrow compass thereof: No, where it is, we may cry out with the Greek Philosopher, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath there kindled as it were his own Life which will move and act only according to the Laws of Heaven. But there are some Mechanical Christians that can frame and fashion out Religion so cunningly in their own Souls by that Book-skill they have got of it, that it may many times deceive themselves, as if it were a true living thing. We often hear that mere Pretenders to Religion may go as far in all the External acts of it as those that are best acquainted with it: I doubt not also but many times there may be Artificial imitations drawn of that which only lives in the Souls of good Men, by the powerful and wily magic of exalted Fancies; as we read of some Artificers that have made such Images of living creatures, wherein they have not only drawn forth the outward shape, but seem almost to have copied out the life too in them. Men may make an Imitation as well of those things which we call the Internals of Religion, as of the Externals. There may be a Semblance of inward Joy in God, of Love to him and his Precepts, of dependence upon him, and a filial Reverence of him; which by the contrivance and power of fancy may be represented in a Masque upon the Stage of the Animal part of a man's Soul. Those Christians that fetch all their Religion from pious Books and Discourses, hearing of such and such Signs of Grace and Evidences of Salvation, and being taught to believe they must get those, that so they may go to Heaven; may presently begin to set themselves on work, and in an Apish imitation cause their Animal Powers and Passions to represent all these; and fancy being well acquainted with all those several Affections in the Soul that at any time express themselves towards Outward things, may, by the power it hath over the Passions, call them all forth in the same Mode and fashion, & then conjoin with them some Thoughts of God and Divine things, which may serve thus put together for a handsome Artifice of Religion wherein these mechanics may much applaud themselves. I doubt not but there may be such who to gain credit with themselves, and that glorious name of being the Children of God (though they know nothing more of it but that it is a Title that sounds well) would use their best skill to appear such to themselves, so qualified and moulded as they are told they must be. And as many times Credit and Reputation among men may make them pair off the Ruggedness of their Outward man, and polish that; so to gain their own good opinion, and a reputation with their own Consciences which look more inwardly, they may also endeavour to make their Inward man look at some times more smooth and comely: and it is no hard matter for such Chamaeleon-like Christians to turn even their insides into whatsoever hue and colour shall best please them, and then Narcissus-like to fall in love with themselves: a strong and nimble fancy having such command over the Animal spirits, that it can send them forth in full troops which way soever it pleaseth, and by their aid call forth and raise any kind of Passion it listeth, and when it listeth allay it again, as the Poets say Aeolus can do with the Winds. As they say of the force of Imagination, that Vis Imaginativa signat foetum; so Imagination may stamp any Idea that it finds within itself upon the Passions, and turn them as it pleases to what Seal it will set upon them, and mould them into any likeness; and a man looking down and taking a view of the Plot as it is acted upon the Stage of the Animal powers, may like and approve it as a true Platform of Religion. Thus may they easily deceive themselves, and think their Religion to be some Mighty thing within them, that runs quite through them and makes all these transformations within them; whereas the Rise and Motion of it may be all in the Animal and Sensitive powers of the Soul; and a wise observer of it may see whence it comes and whither it goes: it being indeed a thing which is from the earth, earthy, and not like that true Spirit of Regeneration which comes from Heaven, and begets a Divine life in the Souls of good men, and is not under the command of any such Charms as these are, neither will it move according to those Laws, and Times, and Measures that we please to set to it: but we shall find it manifesting its mighty supremacy over the Highest powers of our Souls. Whereas we may truly say of all mechanics in Religion, and our Mimical Christians, that they are not so much actuated and informed by their Religion, as they inform that; the power of their own Imagination deriving that Force to it which bears it up and guides all its motions and operations. And therefore they themselves having the power over it, can new mould it as themselves, please, according to any new Pattern which shall like them better than the former: they can furnish this domestic Scene of theirs with any kind of matter which the history of other men's religion may afford them; and if need be, act over all the Experiences of that sect of men to which they most addict themselves so to the life, that they may seem to themselves as well experienced Christians as any others; and so, it may be, soar so aloft in Self-conceit, as if they had already made their nests amongst the stars, and had viewed their own mansion in Heaven. What was observed by the Stoic concerning the vulgar sort of men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, may as truly be said of this sort of Christians, their life is nothing else but a strong Energy of Fancy and Opinion. But besides, lest their Religion might too grossly discover itself to be nothing else but a piece of Art, there may be sometimes such Extraordinary motions stirred up within them which may prevent all their own Thoughts, that they may seem to be a true operation of the Divine life; when yet all this is nothing else but the Energy of their own Self-love touched with some Fleshly apprehensions of Divine things, and excited by them. There are such things in our Christian Religion that, when a Carnal and unhallowed mind takes the Chair and gets the expounding of them, may seem very delicious to the fleshly appetites of men: Some doctrines and notions of freegrace and Justification; the magnificent Titles of Sons of God and Heirs of Heaven; ever-flowing streams of Joy and Pleasure that blessed Souls shall swim in to all eternity; a glorious Paradise in the world to come, always springing up with well-sented and fragrant Beauties; a New Jerusalem paved with Gold and bespangled with Stars, comprehending in its vast circuit such numberless varieties, that a busy curiosity may spend itself about to all eternity. I doubt not but that sometimes the most fleshly & earthly men, that fly their ambition to the pomp of this world, may be so ravished with the conceits of such things as these, that they may seem to be made partakers of the powers of the world to come; I doubt not but that they may be as much exalted with them, as the Souls of crazed and distracted persons seem to be sometimes, when their Fancies play with those quick and nimble Spirits which a distempered frame of Body and unnatural heat in their Heads beget within them. Thus may these blazing Comets rise up above the Moon, and climb higher than the Sun; which yet, because they have no solid consistency of their own, and are of a base and earthly allay, will soon vanish and fall down again, being only born up by an External force. They may seem to themselves to have attained higher than those noble Christians that are gently moved by the natural force of true Goodness; they may seem to be pleniores Deo then those that are really informed and actuated by the Divine Spirit, and do move on steadily and constantly in the way towards Heaven; as the Seed that was sown in the thorny ground, grew up and lengthened out its blade faster than that which was sown in the good and fruitful soil. And as the Motions of our Sense, Fancy and Passions, while our Souls are in this mortal condition sunk down deeply into the Body, are many times more vigorous and make stronger impressions upon us then those of the Higher powers of the Soul, which are more subtle and remote from these mixed and Animal perceptions; that Devotion which is there seated may seem to have more Energy and life in it then that which gently and with a more delicate kind of touch spreads itself upon the Understanding, and from thence mildly derives itself through our Wills & Affections. But howsoever the Former may be more boisterous for a time, yet This is of a more consistent, spermatical and thriving nature: For that proceeding indeed from nothing else but a Sensual and Fleshly apprehension of God and true Happiness, is but of a flitting and fading nature; and as the Sensible powers and faculties grow more languid, or the Sun of Divine light shines more brightly upon us, these earthly devotions like our Culinary fires will abate their heat and fervour. But a true Celestial warmth will never be extinguished, because it is of an Immortal nature; and being once seated vitally in the Souls of men, it will regulate and order all the motions of it in a due manner, as the natural Heat radicated in the Hearts of living creatures hath the dominion and Oeconomy of the whole Body under it, and sends forth warm blood and Spirits and Vital nourishment to every part and member of it. True Religion is no piece of artifice; it is no boiling up of our Imaginative powers nor the glowing heats of Passion; though these are too often mistaken for it, when in our juggle in Religion we cast a mist before our own eyes: But it is a new Nature informing the Souls of men; it is a godlike frame of Spirit, discovering itself most of all in Serene and Clear minds, in deep Humility, Meekness, Self-denial, Universal love of God and all true Goodness, without Partiality and without hypocrisy; whereby we are taught to know God, and knowing him to love him, and conform ourselves as much as may be to all that Perfection which shines forth in him. THUS far the First part of this Discourse, which was designed (according to the Method propounded) to give a particular account of men's Mistakes about Religion. The other part was intended to discover the reason of these Mistakes. But whether the Author did finish that Part, it appears not by any Papers of his which yet came to my hands. If he did, and the Papers should be in others hands (for the Author was communicative) if they (or any other Papers of the Authors) be sent to Mr William Morden, Bookseller in Cambridge, the like care shall be taken for the publishing of them as hath been for this Collection. THE EXCELLENCY and NOBLENESS OF TRUE RELIGION, 1. In its Rise and Original. 2. In its Nature and Essence. 3. In its Properties and Operations. 4 In its Progress. 5. In its Term and End. Psalm 16. 3. To the Saints that are in the earth, and to the excellent, in whom is all my delight. Greg. Nazianzenus in Orat. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Divinae imaginis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Idem in Orat. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hieronymus ad Celantiam Ep. 14. Nescit Religio nostra personas accipere, nec conditiones hominum sed animos inspicit singulorum; Servum & Nobilem de moribus pronunciat. Sola apud Deum Libertas est non servire peccatis: Summa apud Deum est Nobilitas clarum esse virtutibus. THE EXCELLENCY and NOBLENESS OF TRUE RELIGION. Proverbs 15. 24. The Way of life is above to the wise, that he may departed from hell beneath. The Introduction. IN this whole Book of the Proverbs we find Solomon, one of the Eldest Sons of Wisdom, always standing up and calling her blessed: his Heart was both enlarged and filled with the pure influences of her beams, and therefore was perpetually adoring that Sun which gave him light. Wisdom is justified of all her Children; though the brats of darkness and children of folly see no beauty nor comeliness in her, that they should desire her, as they said of Christ, Esay 53. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; That Mind which is not touched with an inward sense of Divine Wisdom, cannot estimate the true Worth of it. But when Wisdom once displays its own excellencies and glories in a purified Soul, it is entertained there with the greatest love and delight, and receives its own image reflected back to itself in sweetest returns of Love and Praise. We have a clear manifestation of this sacred Sympathy in Solomon, whom we may not unfitly call Sapientiae Organum, an Instrument which Wisdom herself had tuned to play her divine Lessons upon: his words were * Eccles. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, every where full of Divine sweetness matched with strength and beauty, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or, as himself phraseth it, like apples of gold in pictures of Silver. The Proverbs 25. mind of a Proverb is to utter Wisdom in a Mystery, as the Apostle sometime speaks, and to wrap up Divine Truth in a kind of enigmatical way, though in vulgar expressions. Which method of delivering Divine doctrine (not to mention the Writings of the ancient Philosophers) we find frequently pursued in the Holy Scripture, thereby both opening and hiding at once the Truth which is offered to us. A Proverb or Parable being once unfolded, by reason of its affinity with the fancy, the more sweetly insinuates itself into that, and is from thence with the greater advantage transmitted to the Understanding. In this state we are not able to behold Truth in its own Native beauty and lustre; but while we are veiled with mortality, Truth must veil itself too, that it may the more freely converse with us. S. Austin hath well assigned the reason why we are so much delighted with Metaphors, Allegories, etc. because they are so much proportioned to our Senses, with which our Reason hath contracted an intimacy and familiarity. And therefore God to accommodate his Truth to our weak capacities, does as it were embody it in Earthly expressions; according to that ancient Maxim of the cabalists, Lumen Supernum nunquam descendit fine indumento; agreeable to which is that of Dionysius Areop. not seldom quoted by the schoolmen, Impossibile est nobis aliter lucere radium Divinum, nisi varietate sacrorum velaminum circumvelatum. His words in the Greek are these, * In lib. de Caelest. Hicrar. cap. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Thus much by way of Preface or Introduction to these words, being one of Solomon's excellent Proverbs, viz. The way of life is above to the wise. Without any mincing or mangling of the Words, or running out into any Critical curiosities about them, I shall from these Words take occasion to set forth The Nobleness and Generous Spirit of True Religion, which I suppose to be meant here by [The way of life.] The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here rendered [above] may signify that which is divine and heavenly, high and excellent, as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 does in the New Testament, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Phil. 3. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Col. 3. 2. S. Austin supposeth the things of Religion to be meant by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, superna, for this reason, quòd merito excellentiae longè superant res terrenas. And in this sense I shall consider it, my purpose being from hence to discourse of the Excellent and Noble spirit of true Religion (whether it be taken in abstracto, as it is in itself; or in concreto, as it becomes an inward Form and Soul to the Minds and Spirits of Good men;) and this in opposition to that low and base-born spirit of Irreligion, which is perpetually sinking from God, till it couches to the very Centre of misery, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the lowermost Hell. In discoursing upon this Argument, I shall observe this Method; viz. I shall consider the Excellency and Nobleness of True Religion 1. In its Rise and Original. 2. In its Nature and Essence. 3. In its Properties and Operations. 4. In its Progress. 5. In its Term and End. CHAP. I. 1. The Nobleness of Religion in regard of its Original and Fountain: it comes from Heaven and moves towards Heaven again. God the First Excellency and Primitive Perfection. All Perfections and Excellencies in any kind are to be measured by their approach to, and Participation of, the First Perfection. Religion the greatest Participation of God: none capable of this Divine Communication but the Highest of created being's: and consequently Religion is the greatest Excellency. A twofold Fountain in God whence Religion flows, viz. 1. His Nature. 2. His Will. Of Truth Natural and Revealed. Of an Outward and Inward Revelation of God's Will. WE begin with the First, viz. True Religion is a 1. Noble thing in its Rise and Original, and in regard of its Descent. True Religion derives its pedigree from Heaven, is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it comes from Heaven, and constantly moves toward Heaven again: it's a Beam from God, as every good and perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness nor shadow of turning, as S. James speaks. God is the First Truth and Primitive Goodness: True Religion is a vigorous Efflux and Emanation of Both upon the Spirits of men, and therefore is called * 2 Peter 1. a participation of the divine Nature. Indeed God hath copied out himself in all created Being, having no other Pattern to frame any thing by but his own Essence; so that all created Being is umbratilis similitudo entis increati, and is, by some stamp or other of God upon it, at least remotely allied to him: But True Religion is such a Communication of the Divinity, as none but the Highest of created being's are capable of. On the other side Sin and Wickedness is of the basest and lowest Original, as being nothing else but a perfect degeneration from God and those Eternal Rules of Goodness which are derived from him. Religion is an heavenborn thing, the Seed of God in the Spirits of men, whereby they are form to a similitude & likeness of himself. A true Christian is every way of a most noble Extraction, of an heavenly and divine pedigree, being born 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from above, as it is expressed Joh. 3. The line of all earthly Nobility, if it were followed to the beginning, would lead to Adam, where all the lines of descent meet in One; and the Root of all Extractions would be found planted in nothing else but * Genesis 2. Adamah, red Earth: But a Christian derives his line from Christ, who is the Only-begotten Son of God, the shining forth of his glory, and the Character of his person, as he is styled Heb. 1. We may truly say of Christ and Christians, as Zebah and Zalmunna said of Gideon's brethren, As he is, so are they (according to their Judges 8. capacity,) each one resembling the children of a king. Titles of Worldly honour in heaven's heraldry are but only Tituli nominales; but Titles of Divine dignity signify some Real thing, some Real and Divine Communications to the Spirits and Minds of men. All Perfections and Excellencies in any kind are to be measured by their approach to that Primitive Perfection of all, God himself; and therefore Participation of the Divine nature cannot but entitle a Christian to the highest degree of dignity: Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the Sons of God, 1 Jo. 3. 1. Thus much for a more general discovery of the Nobleness of Religion as to its Fountain and Original; We may further and more particularly take notice of this in reference to that Twofold fountain in God, from whence all true Religion flows and issues forth, viz. 1. His Immutable Nature. 2. His Will. 1. The Immutable Nature of God. From thence arise all those Eternal Rules of Truth and Goodness which are the Foundation of all Religion, and which God at the first Creation folded up in the Soul of man. These we may call the Truths of Natural inscription; understanding hereby either those Fundamental principles of Truth which Reason by a naked intuition may behold in God, or those necessary Corollaries and Deductions that may be drawn from thence. I cannot think it so proper to say, That God ought infinitely to be loved because he commands it, as because he is indeed an Infinite and Unchangeable Goodness. God hath stamped a Copy of his own Archetypal Loveliness upon the Soul, that man by reflecting into himself might behold there the glory of God, intra se videre Deum, see within his Soul all those Ideas of Truth which concern the Nature and Essence of God, by reason of its own resemblance of God; and so beget within himself the most free and generous motions of Love to God. Reason in man being Lumen de Lumine, a Light flowing from the Fountain and Father of Lights, and being, as Tully phraseth it, participata similitudo Rationis aternae (as the Law of Nature, the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Law written in man's Heart, is participatio Legis aternae in Rationali creatura) it was to enable Man to work out of himself all those Notions of God which are the true groundwork of Love and Obedience to God, and conformity to him: and in modling the inward man into the greatest conformity to the Nature of God was the Perfection and Efficacy of the Religion of Nature. But since man's fall from God, the inward virtue and vigour of Reason is much abated, the Soul having suffered a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plato speaks, a defluvium pennarum: those Principles of Divine truth which were first engraven upon man's Heart with the finger of God are now, as the Characters of some ancient Monuments, less clear and legible then at first. And therefore besides the Truth of Natural inscription 2. God hath provided the Truth of Divine Revelation, which issues forth from his own free Will, and clearly discovers the way of our return to God, from whom we are fallen. And this Truth, with the Effects and Productions of it in the Minds of men, the Scripture is wont to set forth under the name of Grace, as proceeding merely from the free bounty and overflowings of the Divine Love. Of this Revealed Will is that of the Apostle to be understood, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1 Cor. 2. 11. None hath known the things of God; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, None, neither Angel nor Man, could know the Mind of God, could unlock the Breast of God, or search out the Counsels of his Will. But God out of the infinite riches of his Compassions toward mankind is pleased to unbosom his Secrets, and most clearly to manifest the way Hebrews 9 2 Timothy 1. into the Holiest of all, and bring to light life and immortality, and in these last ages to send his Son, who lay in his bosom from all Eternity, to teach us his Will and declare his Mind to us. When we look unto the Earth, then behold darkness and dimness of anguish, that I may use those words of the Prophet Esay: But when we look towards Heaven, then behold light breaking forth upon us, like the eyelids of the Morning, and spreading its wings over the Horizon of mankind sitting in darkness and the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace. But besides this Outward revelation of God's will to men, there is also an Inward impression of it on their Minds and Spirits, which is in a more special manner attributed to God. We cannot see divine things but in a divine light: God only, who is the true light, and in whom there is no darkness at all, can so shine out of himself upon our glassy Understandings, as to beget in them a picture of himself, his own Will and Pleasure, and turn the Soul (as the phrase is in Job 38.) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like wax or clay to the Seal of his own light and love. He that made our Souls in his own image and likeness, can easily find a way into them. The Word that God speaks having found a way into the Soul, imprints itself there as with the point of a diamond, and becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that I may borrow Plato's expression. Men may teach the Grammar and rhetoric, but God teaches the Divinity. Thus it is God alone that acquaints the Soul with the Truths of Revelation: and he also it is that does strengthen and raise the Soul to better apprehensions even of Natural Truth: God being that in the Intellectual world which the Sun is in the Sensible, (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) as some of the ancient father's love to speak, and the ancient Philosophers too, who meant God by their Intellectus Agens, whose proper work they supposed to be not so much to enlighten the Object, as the Faculty. CHAP. II. 2. The Nobleness of Religion in respect of its Nature, briefly discovered in some Particulars. How a man actuated by Religion 1. lives above the world; 2. converses with himself, and knows how to love, value and reverence himself, in the best sense; 3. lives above himself, not being content to enjoy himself, except he may enjoy God too, and himself in God. How he denies himself for God. To deny a man's self, is not to deny Right Reason, for that were to deny God, in stead of denying himself for God. Self-love the only Principle that acts wicked men. The happy privileges of a Soul united to God. WE have done with the first Head, and come now 2. to discourse with the like brevity on another (our purpose being to insist most upon the third Particular, viz. The Nobleness of Religion in its Properties, after we have handled the Second) which is The Excellency and Nobleness of Religion in regard of its Nature, whether it be taken in abstracto or in concreto; which we shall treat of promiscuously, without any rigid tying of ourselves to exact Rules of Art: and so we shall glance at it in these following Notions, rising as it were step by step. 1. A Good man, that is actuated by Religion, lives above the World and all Mundane delights and excellencies. The Soul is a more vigorous and puissant thing, when it is once restored to the possession of its own Being, then to be bounded within the narrow Sphere of Mortality, or to be straightened within the narrow prison of Sensual and Corporeal delights; but it will break forth with the greatest vehemency, and ascend upwards towards Immortality: and when it converses more intimately with Religion, it can scarce look back upon its own converses (though in a lawful way) with Earthly things, without a being touched with an holy Shame fac'dness & a modest Blushing; and, as Porphyry speaks of Plotinus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it seems to be ashamed that it should be in the Body. It is only True Religion that teaches and enables men to die to this world and to all Earthly things, and to rise above that vaporous Sphere of Sensual and Earthly pleasures, which darken the Mind and hinder it from enjoying the brightness of Divine light; the proper motion of Religion is still upwards to its first Original. Whereas on the contrary the Souls of wicked men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plato somewhere speaks, being moistened with the Exudations of their Sensual parts become heavy and sink down into Earthly things, and couch as near as may be to the Centre. Wicked men bury their Souls in their Bodies: all their projects and designs are bounded within the compass of this Earth which they tread upon. The Fleshly mind never minds any thing but Flesh, and never rises above the Outward Matter, but always creeps up and down like Shadows upon the Surface of the Earth: and if it gins at any time to make any faint assays upwards, it presently finds itself laden with a weight of Sensuality which draws it down again. It was the Opinion of the academics that the Souls of wicked men after their death could not of a long season departed from the Graves and Sepulchers where their Mates were buried; but there wandered up and down in a desolate manner, as not being able to leave those Bodies which they were so much wedded to in this life. 2. A Good man, one that is actuated by Religion, lives in converse with his own Reason; he lives at the height of his own Being. This a great Philosopher makes the Property of a Good man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. He knows how to converse with himself, and truly to love and value himself: he measures not himself, like the Epicure, by his inferior and Earthly part, but by an Immortal Essence and that of him which is from above; and so does 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, climb up to the height of that Immortal principle which is within him. The Stoics thought not man a fit Auditor of their ethics, till he were dispossessed of that Opinion, That Man was nothing but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as professing to teach men how to live only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as they speak. Perhaps their Divinity was in some things too rigid; but I am sure a Good man acts the best of this their doctrine in the best sense, and knows better how to reverence himself, without any Self-flattery or admiration, than ever any Stoic did. He principally looks upon himself * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Simplic. in Epict. as being what he is rather by his Soul then by his Body: he values himself by his Soul, that Being which hath the greatest affinity with God; and so does not seek himself in the fading Vanities of this life, nor in those poor and low delights of his Senses, as wicked men do; but as the Philosopher doth well express it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when the Soul thus retires into itself, and views its own worth and Excellency, it presently finds a chaste and Virgin-love stirred up within itself towards itself, and is from within the more excited and obliged 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Simplicius speaks, to mind the preserving of its own dignity and glory. To conclude this Particular, A Good man endeavours to walk by Eternal and Unchangeable Rules of Reason; Reason in a Good man sits in the Throne, & governs all the Powers of his Soul in a sweet harmony and agreement with itself: whereas Wicked men live only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, being led up and down by the foolish fires of their own Sensual apprehensions. In wicked men there is a Democracy of wild Lusts and Passions, which violently hurry the Soul up and down with restless motions. All Sin and Wickedness is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Sedition stirred up in the Soul by the Sensitive Powers against Reason. It was one of the great Evils that Solomon saw under the Sun, Servants on horseback, Eccles. 10. and Princes going as servants upon the ground. We may find the Moral of it in every wicked man, whose Souls are only as Servants to wait upon their Senses. In all such men the whole Course of Nature is turned upside down, and the Cardinal points of Motion in this little world are changed to contrary positions: But the Motions of a Good man are Methodical, Regular and Concentrical to Reason. It's a fond imagination that Religion should extinguish Reason; whenas Religion makes it more illustrious and vigorous; and they that live most in the exercise of Religion, shall find their Reason most enlarged. I might add, that Reason in relation to the capacitating of Man for converse with God was thought by some to be the Formal Difference of Man. Plutarch after a large debate whether Brutes had not Reason in them as well as Man, concludes it negatively upon this ground, Because they had no knowledge and sense of the Deity, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. In Tully's account this Capableness of Religion seemed to be nothing different from Rationality, and therefore he doubts not to give this for the most proper Characterism of Reason, That it is Vinculum Dei & Hominis. And so with them (not to name others of the same apprehensions) animal Rationale & animal capax Religionis seemed to be of the like importance; Reason as enabling and fitting Man to converse with God by knowing him and loving him, being a character most unquestionably differencing Man from Brute creatures. 3. A Good man, one that is informed by True Religion, lives above himself, and is raised to an intimate Converse with the Divinity. He moves in a larger Sphere than his own Being, and cannot be content to enjoy himself, except he may enjoy God too, and himself in God. This we shall consider two ways. 1. In the Self-denial of Good men; they are content and ready to deny themselves for God. I mean not that they should deny their own Reason, as some would have it; for that were to deny a Beam of Divine light, and so to deny God, in stead of denying ourselves for him. It is better resolved by some Philosophers in this point, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to follow Reason is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to follow God; and again, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But by Self-denial I mean, the Soul's quitting all its own interest in itself, and an entire Resignation of itself to him as to all points of service and duty: and thus the Soul loves itself in God, and lives in the possession not so much of its own Being as of the Divinity; desiring only to be great in God, to glory in his Light, and spread itself in his fullness; to be filled always by him, and to empty itself again into him; to receive all from him, and to expend all for him; and so to live not as its own, but as God's. The highest ambition of a Good man is to serve the Will of God: he takes no pleasure in himself nor in any thing within himself further than he sees a stamp of God upon it. Whereas wicked men are imprisoned within the narrow circumference of their own being's, and perpetually frozen into a cold Self-love which binds up all the Innate vigour of their Souls, that it cannot break forth or express itself in any noble way. The Soul in which Religion rules, says as S. Paul did, I live; and yet not I, but Christ liveth in me. On the contrary, a Wicked man swells in his own thoughts, and pleaseth himself more or less with the imagination of a selfsufficiency. The Stoics, seeing they could not raise themselves up to God, endeavour to bring down God to their own Model, imagining the Deity to be nothing else but some greater kind of Animal, and a Wise man to be almost one of his * Sapiens cum Diis ex pari vivit, Deorum socius, non supplex, Sen. in Ep. 52, & 31. Peers. And this is more or less the Genius of Wicked men, they will be something in themselves, they wrap up themselves in their own Being, move up and down in a Sphere of Self-love, live a professed Independency upon God, and maintain a Meum & Tuum between God and themselves. It's the Character only of a Good man to be able to deny and disown himself, and to make a full surrender of himself unto God; forgetting himself, and minding nothing but the Will of his Creator; triumphing in nothing more than in his own Nothingness, and in the Allness of the Divinity. But indeed this his being Nothing is the only way to be all things; this his having nothing the truest way of possessing all things. 2. As a Good man lives above himself in a way of Self-denial, so he lives also above himself as he lives in the Enjoyment of God: and this is the very Soul and Essence of True Religion, to unite the Soul in the nearest intimacy and conjunction with God, who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plotinus speaks. Then indeed the Soul lives most nobly, when it feels itself to live and move and have its Being in God; which though the Law of Nature makes the Common condition of all created Being, yet it is only True Religion that can give us a more feeling and comfortable sense of it. God is not present to Wicked men, when his Almighty Essence supports them and maintains them in Being; * Plotin. in En. 6. l. 9 c 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but he is present to him that can touch him, hath an inward feeling knowledge of God and is intimately united to him; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but to him that cannot thus touch him he is not present. Religion is Life and Spirit, which flowing out from God who is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that hath life in himself, returns to him again as into its own Original, carrying the Souls of Good men up with it. The Spirit of Religion is always ascending upwards, and spreading itself through the whole Essence of the Soul, loosens it from a Self-confinement and narrowness, and so renders it more capacious of Divine Enjoyment. God envies not his people any good, but being infinitely bountiful is pleased to impart himself to them in this life, so far as they are capable of his Communications: they stay not for all their happiness till they come to heaven. Religion always carries its reward along with it, and when it acts most vigorously upon the Mind and Spirit of man, it than most of all fills it with an inward sense of Divine sweetness. To conclude, To walk with God is in Scripture made the Character of a Good man, and it's the highest perfection and privilege of Created Nature to converse with the Divinity. Whereas on the contrary Wicked men converse with nothing but their Lusts and the Vanities of this fading life, which here flatter them for a while with unhallowed delights and a mere Shadow of Contentment; and when these are gone, they find both Substance and Shadow too to be lost Eternally. But true Goodness brings in a constant revenue of solid and substantial Satisfaction to the Spirit of a good man, delighting always to sit by those Eternal Springs that feed and maintain it: the Spirit of a Good man (as it is well expressed by the Philosopher) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, & is always drinking in Fountain-Goodness, and fills itself more and more, till it be filled with all the fullness of God. CHAP. III. 3. The Nobleness of Religion in regard of its Properties, etc. of which this is one, 1. Religion enlarges all the Faculties of the Soul, and begets a true Ingenuity, Liberty and Amplitude, the most Free and Generous Spirit in the Minds of Good men. The nearer any Being comes to God, the more large & free; the further it slides from God, the more straightened. Sin is the sinking of man's Soul from God into sensual Selfishness. An account when the most Generous freedom of the Soul is to be taken in its just proportions. How Mechanical and Formal Christians make an Art of Religion, set it such Bounds as may not exceed the scant Measure of their Principles; and then fit their own Notions as so many Examples to it. A Good man finds not his Religion without him, but as a living Principle within him. God's Immutable and Eternal Goodness the Unchangeable Rule of his Will. Peevish, self-willed and Imperious men shape out such Notions of God as are agreeable to this Pattern of themselves. The Truly Religious have better apprehensions of God. HAving discoursed the Nobleness of Religion in its Original and Nature; we come now to consider the Excellency of Religion in its Properties, its proper Effects and vital Operations. In treating of this Third Particular we shall, (as formerly we have done) without tying ourselves precisely to any strict Rules of Art and Method, confound the Notions of Religion in abstracto and in concreto together, handling them promiscuously. As Religion is a noble thing, 1. in respect of its Original, 2. in respect of its Nature; so also 3. in respect of its Properties and Effects. The First property and Effect of True Religion 1. whereby it expresseth its own Nobleness is this, That it widens and enlarges all the Faculties of the Soul, and begets a true Ingenuity, Liberty and Amplitude, the most free and Generous Spirit, in the Minds of Good men. Those in whom Religion rules are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, there is a true Generous Spirit within them, which shows the Nobleness of their Extraction. The Jews have a good maxim to this purpose, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pirke Avoth cap. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, None truly Noble, but he that applies himself to Religion and a faithful observance of the Divine Law. Tully could see so much in his Natural Philosophy as made him say, Scientia Naturae ampliat animum, & ad divina attollit: But this is most true of Religion, that in an higher sense it does work the Soul into a true & divine amplitude. There is a living Soul of Religion in Good men which, spreading itself through all their Faculties, spirits all the Wheels of motion, and enables them to dilate and extend themselves more fully upon God and all Divine things, without being pinched or streightened within themselves. Whereas wicked men are of most narrow and confined Spirits, they are so contracted by the pinching particularities of Earthly and created things, so imprisoned in a dark dungeon of Sensuality and Selfishness, so straightened through their Carnal designs and Ends, that they cannot stretch themselves nor look beyond the Horizon of Time and Sense. The nearer any Being comes to God, who is that Infinite fullness that fills all in all, the more vast and large and unbounded it is; as the further it slides from him, the more it is straightened & confined; as Plato hath long since concluded concerning the condition of Sensual men, that they live 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, like a shellfish, and can never move up and down but in their own prison, which they ever carry about with them. Were I to define Sin, I would call it The sinking of a man's Soul from God into a Sensual Selfishness. All the Freedom that wicked men have, is but (like that of banished men) to wander up and down in the wilderness of this world from one den and cave to another. The more high and Noble any Being is, so much the deeper radication have all its Innate virtues and Properties within it, and are by so much the more Universal in their issues and actings upon other things: and such an inward living principle of virtue and activity further heightened and united and informed with Light and Truth, we may call Liberty. Of this truly-noble and divine Liberty Religion is the Mother and Nurse, leading the Soul to God, and so impregnating that inward vital principle of activity and vigour that is embosom'd in it, that it is able without any inward disturbance and resistance from any controlling Lusts to exercise itself, and act with the greatest complacency in the most full and ample manner upon that First, Universal and Unbounded Essence which is God himself. The most generous Freedom can never be took in its full and just dimensions and proportion, but then when all the Powers of the Soul exercise and spend themselves in the most large and ample manner upon the Infinite and Essential Goodness, as upon their own most proper Object. If we should ask a Good man, when he finds himself best at ease, when he finds himself most free; his answer would be, When he is under the most powerful constraints of divine Love. There are a sort of Mechanical Christians in the world, that not finding Religion acting like a living form within them, satisfy themselves only to make an Art of it, and rather inform and actuate it, then are informed by it; and setting it such bounds and limits as may not exceed the short and scant measures of their own home born Principles, than they endeavour to fit the Notions of their own Minds as so many Examples to it: and it being a Circle of their own making, they can either ampliateor contract it accordingly as they can force their own Minds and Dispositions to agree and suit with it. But true Religion indeed is no Art, but an inward Nature that contains all the laws and measures of its motion within itself. A Good man finds not his Religion without him, but as a living Principle within him; and all his Faculties are still endeavouring to unite themselves more and more in the nearest intimacy with it as with their proper Perfection. There is that amiableness in Religion, that strong Sympathy between the Soul and it, that it needs carry no Testimonials or Commendations along with it. If it could be supposed that God should plant a Religion in the Soul that had no affinity or alliance with it, it would grow there but as a strange slip. But God when he gives his Laws to men, does not by virtue of his Absolute dominion dictate any thing at random, and in such an arbitrarious way as some imagine; but he measures all by his own Eternal Goodness. Had God himself been any thing else then the First and Greatest Good of man, then to have loved him with the full strength of all our Faculties should not have been the First and Greatest Commandment, as our Saviour tells us it is. Some are apt to look upon God as some Peevish and self-willed thing, because themselves are such: and seeing that their own Absolute and naked Wills are for the most part the Rules of all their actions and the impositions which they lay upon others; they think that Heaven's Monarchy is such an arbitrary thing too, as being governed by nothing else but by an Almighty Absolute Will. But the Soul that is acquainted most intimately with the Divine Will, would more certainly resolve us, That God's Unchangeable Goodness (which makes the Divinity an Uniform thing and to settle together upon its own Centre, as I may speak with reverence) is also the Unchangeable Rule of his Will; neither can he any more swerve from it, than he can swerve from himself. Nor does he charge any Duty upon man without consulting first of all with his Goodness: which being the Original and adequate Object of a Good man's Will and affections, it must needs be that all the issues and effluxes of it be entertained with an answerable complacency & cheerfulness. This is the hinge upon which all true Religion turns, the proper Centre about which it moves; which taking a fast & sure hold of an innate and correspondent Principle in the Soul of man, raiseth it up above the confines of Mortality, and in the day of its mighty power makes it become a free-will-Offering unto God. CHAP. iu. The Second Property discovering the Nobleness of Relion, viz. That it restores man to a just power and dominion over himself, enables him to overcome his Self-will and Passions. Of Self-will, and the many Evils that flow from it. That Religion does nowhere discover its power and prowess so much, as in subduing this dangerous and potent Enemy. The Highest and Noblest Victories are those over our Self-will and Passions. Of Self-denial, and the having power over our Wills; the Happiness and the Privileges of such a State. How that Magnanimity and Puissance which Religion begets in Holy Souls differs from and excels that Gallantry and Puissance which the great Nimrods' of this world boast of. THE Second Property or Effect of Religion, whereby 2. it discovers its own Nobleness (and it is somewhat akin to the former Particular, and will help further to illustrate and enforce it) is this, That it restores a Good man to a just power and dominion over himself and his own Will, enables him to overcome himself, his own Self-will and Passions, and to command himself & all his Powers for God. 'Tis only Religion that restores that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Stoical Philosophy so impotently pretended to; it is this only that enthrones man's deposed Reason, and establisheth within him a just Empire over all those blind Powers and Passions which so impetuously rend a man from the possession and enjoiment of himself. Those turbulent and unruly, uncertain and unconstant Motions of Passion and Self-will that dwell in degenerate Minds, divide them perpetually from themselves, and are always moulding several factions and tumultuous combinations within them against the dominion of Reason. And the only way to unite man firmly to himself is by uniting him to God, and establishing in him a firm amity and agreement with the First and Primitive Being. There is nothing in the World so boisterous as a man's own Self-will, which is never guided by any fixed or steady Rules, but is perpetually hurried to and fro by a blind and furious impetus of Pride and Passions issuing from within itself. This is the true source and Spring of all that Envy, Malice, Bitterness of Spirit, malecontentedness and Impatiency, of all those black and dark Passions, those inordinate desires and lusts, that reign in the hearts and lives of wicked men. A man's own Self-will throws him out of all true enjoyment of his own Being: therefore it was our saviour's counsel to his disciples, In patience possess your Souls. We may say of that Self-will which is lodged in the heart of a wicked man, as the Jews speak of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 figmentum malum so often mentioned in their Writings, that it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Prince of death and darkness which is at continual enmity with Heaven, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the filthiness and poison of the Serpent. This is the Seed of the Evil Spirit which is perpetually at enmity with the Seed of God and the heavenborn Nature: It's design and scope is with a giantlike pride to climb up into the Throne of the Almighty, and to establish an unbounded Tyranny in contradiction to the Will of God, which is nothing else but the Issue and Efflux of his Eternal and Unbounded Goodness. This is the very Heart of the old Adam that is within men. This is the Hellish Spirit of Self-will: it would solely prescribe laws to all things; it would fain be the source and fountain of all affairs and events; it would judge all things at its own Tribunal. They in whose Spirits this Principle rules, would have their own Fancies and Opinions, their perverse and boisterous Wills to be the just Square and Measure of all Good and Evil; these are the Plumb-lines they apply to all things to find out their Rectitude or Obliquity. He that will not submit himself to nor comply with the Eternal and Uncreated Will, but in stead of it endeavours to set up his own will, makes himself the most real Idol in the world, and exalts himself against all that is called God and aught to be worshipped. To worship a graven Image, or to make cakes & burn incense to the Queen of heaven, is not a worse Idolatry than it is for a man to set up Self-will, to devote himself to the serving of it, and to give up himself to a compliance with his own will as contrary to the Divine and Eternal Will. When God made the World, he did not make it merely for the exercise of his Almighty power, and then throw it out of his hands, and leave it alone to subsist by itself as a thing that had no further relation to him: But he derived himself through the whole Creation, so gathering and knitting up all the several pieces of it again; that as the first production and the continued Subsistence of all things is from himself, so the ultimate resolution and tendency of all things might be to him. Now that which first endeavoured a Divorce between God and his Creation, and to make a Conquest of it, was that Diabolical Arrogancy and Self-will that crept up and wound itself serpentlike into apostate Minds and Spirits. This is the true strain of that Hellish nature, to live independently of God, and to derive the Principles from another Beginning, and carry on the line of all motions and operations to another End, than God himself, by whom and to whom and for whom all things subsist. From what hath been said concerning this powerful and dangerous Enemy that wars against our Souls and against the Divine Will, may the Excellency and Noble Spirit of True Religion appear, in that it tames the impetuousness and turbulence of this Self-will. Then indeed does Religion perform the highest and bravest conquests, then does it display the greatness of its strength and the excellency of its power, when it overcomes this great Arimanius, that hath so firmly seated himself in the very Centre of the Soul. * Pirke Avoth cap. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Who is the man of Courage and Valour? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it is he that subdues his Concupiscence, his own Will; it is a Jewish maxim attributed to Ben Zoma, and a most undoubted truth. This was the grand Lesson that our great Lord & Master came to teach us, viz. To deny our own wills; neither was there any thing that he endeavoured more to promote by his own Example, as he tells us of himself, * John 6. 38. I came down from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me; and again, Lo, I Psalm 40. Hebrews 10. come (in the volume of the Book it is written of me) to do thy will, O God, yea thy Law is within my heart: and in his greatest agonies, with a clear and cheerful submission to the Divine will, he often repeats it, Not my will, Luke 22. Mark 14. 36. but thy will be done: and so he hath taught us to pray and so to live. This indeed is the true life and spirit of Religion, this is Religion in its Meridian altitude, its just dimensions. A true Christian that hath power over his own Will, may live nobly and happily, and enjoy a perpetually-clear heaven within the Serenity of his own Mind. When the Sea of this World is most rough and tempestuous about him, then can he ride safely at Anchor within the haven, by a sweet compliance of his will with God's Will. He can look about him, and with an even and indifferent Mind behold the World either to smile or frown upon him; neither will he abate of the least of his Contentment, for all the ill and unkind usage he meets withal in this life. He that hath got the Mastery over his own Will, feels no violence from without, finds no contests within; and like a strong man, keeping his house, he preserves all his Goods in safety: and when God calls for him out of this state of Mortality, he finds in himself a power to lay down his own life; neither is it so much taken from him, as quietly and freely surrendered up by him. This is the highest piece of prowess, the noblest achievement, by which a man becomes Lord over himself, and the Master of his own Thoughts, Motions and Purposes. This is the Royal prerogative, the high dignity conferred upon Good men by our Lord and Saviour, whereby they overcoming this both His and their Enemy, their Self-will and Passions, are enabled to sit down with him in his Throne, as he overcoming in another way, is set down with his Father in his Throne; as the phrase is Revelat. 3. Religion begets the most Heroic, Free and Generous motions in the Minds of Good men. There is no where so much of a truly Magnanimous and raised Spirit as in those who are best acquainted with the power of Religion. Other men are Slaves and Captives to one Vanity or other: but the truly Religious is above them all, and able to command himself and all his Powers for God. That bravery and gallantness which seems to be in the great Nimrods' of this world is nothing else but the swelling of their own unbounded pride and vainglory. It hath been observed of the greatest monarches of the world, that in the midst of their Triumphs they themselves have been led Captives to one Vice or another. All the Gallantry and Puissance which the Bravest Spirits of the world boast of, is but a poor confined thing, and extends itself only to some Particular Cases and Circumstances: But the Valour and Puissance of a Soul impregnated by Religion hath in a sort an Universal Extent, as S. Paul speaks of himself, I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me; it is not determined to this or that Particular Object or Time or Place, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things whatsoever belong to a Creature fall under the level thereof. Religion is by S. Paul described to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Spirit of power in opposition to the Spirit of fear, 2 Tim. 1. as all Sin is by Simplicius well described to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impotency & weakness. Sin by its deadly infusions into the Soul of man wastes and eats out the innate vigour of the Soul, and casts it into such a deep Lethargy, as that it is not able to recover itself: But Religion, like that Balsamum vitae, being once conveyed into the Soul, awakens and enlivens it, and makes it renew its strength like an Eagle, and mount strongly upwards towards Heaven; and so uniting the Soul to God, the Centre of life and strength, it renders it undaunted and invincible. Who can tell the inward life and vigour that the Soul may be filled with, when once it is in conjunction with an Almighty Essence? There is a latent and hidden virtue in the Soul of man which then gins to discover itself when the Divine Spirit spreads forth its influences upon it. Every thing the more Spiritual it is, and the higher and nobler it is in its Being, the more active and vigorous it is; as the more any thing falls and sinks into Matter, the more dull and sluggish & unwieldy it is. The Platonists were wont to call all things that participated most of Matter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now nothing doth more purify, more sublimate and exalt the Soul than Religion, when the Soul suffers God to sit within it as a refiner and purifier of Silver, and when it abides the day of his coming; for he is like a refiner's fire and like fullers soap, Mal. 3. Thus the Soul being purified and spirituallized, and changed more and more into the glorious Image of God, is able to do all things, out of weakness is made strong, gives proof of its Divine vigour and activity, and shows itself to be a Noble and Puissant Spirit, such as God did at first create it. CHAP. V. The Third Property or Effect discovering the Nobleness of Religion, viz. That it directs and enables a man to propound to himself the Best End, viz. The Glory of God, and his own becoming like unto God. Low and Particular Ends and Interests both debase and straighten a man's Spirit: The Universal, Highest and Last End both ennobles and enlarges it. A man is such as the End is he aims at. The great power the End hath to mould and fashion man into its likeness. Religion obliges a man (not to seek himself, nor to drive a trade for himself; but) to seek the Glory of God, to live wholly to him; and guides him steadily and uniformly to the One Chief Good and Last End. Men are prone to flatter themselves with a pretended aiming at the Glory of God. A more full and distinct explication of what is meant by a man's directing all his actions to the Glory of God. What it is truly and really to glorify God. God's seeking his Glory in respect of us is the flowing forth of his Goodness upon us: Our seeking the Glory of God is our endeavouring to partake more of God, and to resemble him (as much as we can) in true Holiness and every Divine virtue. That we are not nicely to distinguish between the Glory of God and our own Salvation. That Salvation is nothing else for the main but a true Participation of the Divine Nature. To love God above ourselves, is not to love him above the Salvation of our Souls; but above our particular being's and above our sinful affections, etc. The Difference between Things that are Good relatively, and those that are Good absolutely and Essentially: That in our conformity to these God is most glorified, and we are made most Happy. THE Third Property or Effect whereby Religion discovers its own Excellency, is this, That it directs 3. and enables a man to propound to himself the Best End and Scope of life, viz. The Glory of God the Highest Being, and his own assimilation or becoming like unto God. That Christian in whom Religion rules powerfully, is not so low in his ambitions as to pursue any of the things of this world as his Ultimate End: his Soul is too big for earthly designs and interests; but understanding himself to come from God, he is continually returning to him again. It is not worth the while for the Mind of Man to pursue any Perfection lower than its own, or to aim at any End more ignoble than itself is. There is nothing that more streightens and confines the freeborn Soul than the particularity, indigency and penury of that End which it pursues: when it complies most of all with this lower world, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as is well observed by an excellent Philosopher, the true Nobleness and freedom of it is then most disputable, and the Title it holds to true Liberty becomes most litigious. It never more slides and degenerates from itself, then when it becomes enthralled to some Particular interest: as on the other side it never acts more freely or fully, then when it extends itself upon the most Universal End. Every thing is so much the more Noble, quò longiores habet fines, as was well observed by Tully. As low Ends debase a man's spirit, supplant & rob it of its birthright; so the Highest and Last End raises and ennobles it, and enlarges it into a more Universal and comprehensive Capacity of enjoying that one Unbounded Goodness which is God himself: it makes it spread and dilate itself in the Infinite Sphere of the Divine Being and Blessedness, it makes it live in the fullness of Him that fills all in all. Every thing is most properly such as the End is which is aimed at: the Mind of man is always shaping itself into a conformity as much as may be to that which is his End; and the nearer it draws to it in the achievement thereof, the greater likeness it bears to it. There is a plastic Virtue, a Secret Energy issuing forth from that which the Mind propounds to itself as its End, to mould and fashion it according to its own Model. The Soul is always stamped with the same Characters that are engraven upon the End it aims at; and while it converses with it, and sets itself before it, it is turned as Wax to the Seal, to use that phrase in Job. Man's Soul conceives all its Thoughts and Imaginations before his End, as Laban's Ewes did Genesis 30. their young before the Rods in the watering troughs. He that pursues any worldly interest or earthly thing as his End, becomes himself also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Earthly: & the more the Soul directs itself to God, the more it becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 godlike, deriving a print of that glory and beauty upon itself which it converseth with, as it is excellently set forth by the Apostle, But we all with 2 Corinth. 3. open face, beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image, from glory to glory. That Spirit of Ambition and Popularity that so violently transports the Minds of men into a pursuit of vainglory, makes them as vain as that Popular air they live upon: the Spirit of this world that draws forth a man's designs after worldly interests, makes him as unstable, unconstant, tumultuous and perplexed a thing as the world is. On the contrary, the Spirit of true Religion steering and directing the Mind and Life to God, makes it an Uniform, Stable and quiet thing, as God himself is: it is only true Goodness in the Soul of man guiding it steadily and uniformly towards God, directing it and all its actions to the one Last End and Chief Good, that can give it a true consistency and composedness within itself. All selfseeking and Self-love do but imprison the Soul, and confine it to its own home: the Mind of a Good man is too Noble, too Big for such a Particular life; he hath learned to despise his own Being in comparison of that Uncreated Beauty and Goodness which is so infinitely transcendent to himself or any created thing; he reckons upon his choice and best affections and designs as too choice and precious a treasure to be spent upon such a poor sorry thing as himself, or upon any thing else but God himself. This was the life of Christ, and is in some degree the life of every one that partakes of the Spirit of Christ. Such Christians seek not their own glory, but the glory of him that sent them into this world: they know they were brought forth into this world, not to set up or drive a trade for themselves, but to serve the will & pleasure of him that made them, & to finish that work he hath appointed them. It were not worth the while to have been born or to live, had it been only for such a penurious End as ourselves are: it is most godlike and best suits with the Spirit of Religion, for a Christian to live wholly to God, to live the life of God, having his own life hid with Christ in God; and thus in a sober sense he becomes Deified. This indeed is such a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deification as is not transacted merely upon the Stage of Fancy by Arrogance and Presumption, but in the highest Powers of the Soul by a living and quickening Spirit of true Religion there uniting God and the Soul together in the Unity of Affections, Will and End. I should now pass from this to another Particular; but because many are apt to misapprehend the Notion of God's glory, and flatter themselves with their pretended and imaginary aiming at the Glory of God, I think it may be of good use, a little further and more distinctly to unfold the design that a Religious mind drives on in directing itself and all its actions to God. We are therefore to consider, that this doth not consist in some Transient thoughts of God and his Glory as the End we propound to ourselves in any undertake: a man does not direct all his actions to the Glory of God by forming a Conception in his Mind, or stirring up a strong Imagination upon any Action, That that must be for the Glory of God: it is not the thinking of God's glory that is glorifying of him. As all other parts of Religion may be apishly acted over by Fancy and Imagination, so also may the Internal parts of Religion many times be acted over with much seeming grace by our Fancy and Passions; these often love to be drawing the pictures of Religion, and use their best arts to render them more beautiful and pleasing. But though true Practical Religion derives its force and beauty through all the Lower Powers of a man's Soul, yet it hath not its rise nor throne there: as Religion consists not in a Form of Words which signify nothing, so neither doth it consist in a Set of Fancies or Internal apprehensions. Our * Joh. 15. 8. Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit. Saviour hath best taught what it is to live to God's glory, or to glorify God, viz. to be fruitful in all holiness, and to live so as that our lives may shine with his grace spreading itself through our whole man. We rather glorify God by entertaining the Impressions of his Glory upon us, then by communicating any kind of Glory to him. Then does a Good man become the Tabernacle of God wherein the Divine Shechinah does rest, and which the Divine glory fills, when the frame of his Mind and Life is wholly according to that Idea and * As it is said of the Material Tabernacle, Exodus 25. Pattern which he receives from the Mount. We best glorify him when we grow most like to him: and we then act most for his glory, when a true Spirit of Sanctity, Justice, Meekness, etc. runs through all our actions; when we so live in the World as becomes those that converse with the great Mind and Wisdom of the whole World, with that Almighty Spirit that made, supports and governs all things, with that Being from whence all good flows, and in which there is no Spot, slain or Shadow of Evil; and so being captivated and overcome by the sense of the Divine loveliness and goodness, endeavour to be like him, and conform ourselves as much as may be to him. When God seeks his own Glory, he does not so much endeavour any thing without himself. He did not bring this stately fabric of the Universe into Being, that he might for such a Monument of his mighty Power and Beneficence gain some panegyrics or Applause from a little of that fading breath which he had made. Neither was that gracious contrivance of restoring lapsed men to himself a Plot to get himself some Eternal Hallelujahs, as if he had so ardently thirsted after the lays of glorified spirits, or desired a choir of Souls to sing forth his praises. Neither was it to let the World see how Magnificent he was. No, it is his own Internal Glory that he most loves, and the Communication thereof which he seeks: as Plato sometimes speaks of the Divine love, it arises not out of Indigency, as created love does, but out of fullness and Redundancy; it is an overflowing fountain, and that love which descends upon created Being is a free Efflux from the Almighty Source of love: and it is well pleasing to him that those Creatures which he hath made should partake of it. Though God cannot seek his own Glory so as if he might acquire any addition to himself, yet he may seek it so as to communicate it out of himself. It was a good maxim of Plato, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is better stated by * S. James, God giveth to all men Chap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 5. liberally, and upbraideth not. And by that Glory of his which he loves to impart to his Creatures, I understand those stamps and impressions of Wisdom, Justice, Patience, Mercy, Love, Peace, Joy, and other Divine gifts which he bestows freely upon the Minds of men. And thus God triumphs in his own Glory, and takes pleasure in the Communication of it. As God's seeking his own Glory in respect of us, is most properly the flowing forth of his Goodness upon us: so our seeking the Glory of God is most properly our endeavouring a Participation of his Goodness, and an earnest uncessant pursuing after Divine perfection. When God becomes so great in our eyes, and all created things so little, that we reckon upon nothing as worthy of our aims or ambitions but a serious Participation of the Divine Nature, and the Exercise of divine virtues, Love, Joy, Peace, Long-suffering, Kindness, Goodness, and the like; When the Soul beholding the Infinite beauty and loveliness of the Divinity, and then looking down and beholding all created Perfection mantled over with darkness, is ravished into love and admiration of that never-setting brightness, and endeavours after the greatest resemblance of God in Justice, Love and Goodness; When conversing with him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by a secret feeling of the virtue, sweetness and power of his Goodness, we endeavour to assimilate ourselves to him: Then we may be said to glorify him indeed. God seeks no glory but his own; and we have none of our own to give him. God in all things seeks himself and his own glory, as finding nothing Better than himself; and when we love him above all things, and endeavour to be most like him, we declare plainly that we count nothing Better than He is. I doubt we are too nice Logicians sometimes in distinguishing between the Glory of God and our own Salvation. We cannot in a true sense seek our own Salvation more than the Glory of God, which triumphs most and discovers itself most effectually in the Salvation of Souls; for indeed this Salvation is nothing else but a true Participation of the Divine Nature. Heaven is not a thing without us, nor is Happiness any thing distinct from a true Conjunction of the Mind with God in a secret feeling of his Goodness and reciprocation of affection to him, wherein the Divine Glory most unfolds itself. And there is nothing that a Soul touched with any serious sense of God can more earnestly thirst after or seek with more strength of affection then This. Then shall we be happy, when God comes to be all in all in us. To love God above ourselves is not indeed so properly to love him above the salvation of our Souls, as if these were distinct things; but it is to love him above all our own sinful affections, & above our particular being's, and to conform ourselves to him. And as that which is * See the Discourse Of the Existence and Nature of God. Chap. 9 Good relatively, and in order to us, is so much the Better, by how much the more it is commensurate and conformed to us: So on the other side, that which is good absolutely and essentially, requires that our Minds and Affections should, as far as may be, be commensurate and conformed to it: and herein is God most glorified, and we made Happy. As we cannot truly love the First and Highest Good while we serve a design upon it, and subordinate it to ourselves: so neither is our own Salvation consistent with any such sordid, pinching and particular love. We cannot be completely blessed, till the Idea Boni, or the Ipsum Bonum, which is God, exercise its sovereignty over all the Faculties of our Souls, rendering them as like to itself as may consist with their proper Capacity. [See more of this in the Discourse Of the Existence and Nature of God, Chap. 4. and more largely in that Latin Discourse, shortly to be printed, Pietati studere ex intuitu mercedis non est illicitum.] CHAP. vi The Fourth Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it begets the greatest Serenity and Composedness of Mind, and brings the truest Contentment, the purest and most satisfying Joy and Pleasure to every holy Soul. God, as being that Uniform Chief Good, and the One Last End, does attract and fix the Soul. Wicked men distracted through a Multiplicity of Objects and Ends. How the restless appetite of our Wills after some Supreme Good leads to the knowledge (as of a Deity, so) of the Unity of a Deity. How the Joys and Delights of Good men differ from and far excel those of the Wicked. The Constancy and Tranquillity of the Spirits of Good men in reference to External troubles. All Perturbations of the Mind arise from an Inward rather than an Outward Cause. The Stoics Method for attaining 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and true rest examined, and the Insufficiency of it discovered. A further Illustration of what has been said concerning the peaceful and Happy State of Good men, from the contrary State of the Wicked. THe Fourth Property & Effect of True Religion wherein 4. it expresseth its own Nobleness is this, That it begets the greatest Serenity, Constancy and Composedness of Mind, and brings the truest Contentment, the most satisfying Joy and Pleasure, the purest and most divine Sweetness and Pleasure to the Spirits of Good men. Every Good man, in whom Religion rules, is at peace and unity with himself, is as a City compacted together. Grace doth more and more reduce all the Faculties of the Soul into a perfect Subjection and Subordination to itself. The Union and Conjunction of the Soul with God, that Primitive Unity, is that which is the alone Original and Fountain of all Peace, and the Centre of Rest: as the further any Being slides from God, the more it breaks into discords within itself, as not having any Centre within itself which might collect and unite all the Faculties thereof to itself, and so knit them up together in a sweet confederacy amongst themselves. God only is such an Almighty Goodness as can attract all the Powers in man's Soul to itself, as being an Object transcendently adequate to the largest capacities of any created Being, and so unite man perfectly to himself in the true enjoyment of one Uniform and Simple Good. It must be one Last End and Supreme Good that can fix Man's Mind, which otherwise will be tossed up and down in perpetual uncertainties, and become as many several things as those poor Particularities are which it meets with. A wicked man's life is so distracted by a Multiplicity of Ends and Objects, that it never is nor can be consistent to itself, nor continue in any composed, settled frame: it is the most intricate, irregular and confused thing in the world, no one part of it agreeing with another, because the whole is not firmly knit together by the power of some One Last End running through all. Whereas the life of a Good man is under the sweet command of one Supreme Goodness and Last End. This alone is that living Form and Soul, which running through all the Powers of the Mind and Actions of Life, collects all together into one fair and beautiful System, making all that Variety conspire into perfect Unity; whereas else all would fall asunder like the Members of a dead Body when once the Soul is gone, every little particle flitting each from other. It was a good Maxim of Pythagoras quoted by Clemens Alexandrinus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Oportet etiam hominem unum fieri. A divided Mind and a Multiform Life speaks the greatest disparagement that may be: it is only the intermediation of One Last End that can reconcile a man perfectly to himself and his own happiness. This is the best temper and composedness of the Soul, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plotinus speaks, when by a Conjunction with One Chief Good and Last End it is drawn up into an Unity and Consent with itself; when all the Faculties of the Soul with their several issues and motions, though never so many in themselves, like so many lines meet together in one and the same Centre. It is not one and the same Goodness that always acts the Faculties of a Wicked man; but as many several images and pictures of Goodness as a quick and working Fancy can represent to him; which so divide his affections, that he is no One thing within himself, but tossed hither and thither by the most independent Principles & Imaginations that may be. But a Good man hath singled out the Supreme Goodness, which by an Omnipotent sweetness draws all his affections after it, and so makes them all with the greatest complacency conspire together in the pursuit and embraces of it. Were there not some Infinite and Self-sufficient Goodness, and that perfectly One, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as Simplicius doth phrase it) Man would be a most miserably-distracted creature. As the restless appetite within Man after some Infinite and sovereign Good (without the enjoyment of which it could never be satisfied) does commend unto us the Notion of a Deity: so the perpetnal distractions and divisions that would arise in the Soul upon a Plurality of Deities, may seem no less to evince the Unity of that Deity. Were not this Chief Good perfectly One, were there any other equal to it; man's Soul would hang in aequilibrio, equally poised, equally desiring the enjoyment of both, but moving to neither; like a piece of Iron between two lodestones of equal virtue. But when Religion enters into the Soul, it charms all its restless rage and violent appetite, by discovering to it the Universal Fountain-fulness of One Supreme Almighty Goodness; and leading it out of itself into a conjunction therewith, it lulls it into the most undisturbed rest and quietness in the lap of Divine enjoyment; where it meets with full contentment, and rests adequately satisfied in the fruition of the Infinite, Uniform and Essential Goodness and Loveliness, the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as a noble Philosopher doth well express it. The Peace which a Religious Soul is possessed of is such a Peace as passeth all understanding: the Joy that it meets with in the ways of Holiness is unspeakable and full of Glory. The Delights and Sweetnesses that accompany a Religious life are of a purer and more excellent Nature than the Pleasures of Worldly men. The Spirit of a Good man is a more pure and refined thing then to delight itself in the thick mire of Earthly and Sensual pleasures, which Carnal men roll and tumble themselves in with so much greediness: Non admittit ad volatum Accipitrem suum in terra pulverulenta, as the Arabic Proverb hath it. It speaks the degeneration of any Soul whatsoever, that it should desire to incorporate itself with any of the gross, dreggy, sensual delights here below. But a Soul purified Religion from all Earthly dregs, delights to mingle itself only with things that are most Divine and Spiritual. There is nothing that can beget any pleasure or sweetness but in some harmonical Faculty which hath some kindred and acquaintance with it. As it is in the Senses, so in every other Faculty there is such a Natural kind of Science as whereby it can single out its own proper Object from every thing else, and is better able to define it to itself then the exactest Artist in the world can; and when once it hath found it out, it presently feels itself so perfectly fitted and matched by it, that it dissolves into secret joy and pleasure in the entertainment of it. True Delight and Joy is begotten by the conjunction of some discerning Faculty with its proper Object. The proper Object. for a Mind and Spirit are Divine and Immaterial things, with which it hath the greatest affinity, and therefore triumphs most in its converse with them; as it is well observed by * In Praefat. ad l. 1. Nat. quaest Seneca, Hoc habet argumentum divinitatis suae, quòd illum divina delectant; nec ut alienis interest, sed ut suis: and when it converseth most with these high and noble Objects, it behaves itself most gracefully and lives most becoming itself; and it lives also most deliciously, nor can it any where else be better provided for, or indeed far so well. A Good man disdains to be beholding to the Wit or Art or Industry of any Creature to find him out and bring him in a constant revenue and maintenance for his Joy and Pleasure: the language of his Heart is that of the Psalmist, Lord, lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon me. Religion always carries a sufficient Provision of Joy and Sweetness along with it to maintain itself withal: All the ways of Wisdom are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. Religion is no sullen stoicism or oppressing melancholy, it is no enthralling tyranny exercised over those noble and vivacious affections of Love and Delight, as those men that were never acquainted with the life of it may imagine; but it is full of a vigorous and masculine delight and joy, & such as advanceth and ennobles the Soul, and does not weaken or dispirit the life and power of it, as Sensual and Earthly joys do, when the Soul, unacquainted with Religion, is enforced to give entertainment to these gross & earthly things, for the want of enjoyment of some better Good. The Spirit of a Good man may justly behave itself with a noble disdain to all Terrene pleasures, because it knows where to mend its fare; it is the same Almighty and Eternal Goodness which is the Happiness of God and of all Good men. The truly-religious Soul affects nothing primarily and fundamentally but God himself; his contentment even in the midst of his Worldly employments is in the Sun of the Divine favour that shines upon him: this is as the Manna that lies upon the top of all outward blessings which his Spirit gathers up and feeds upon with delight. Religion consists not in a toilsome drudgery about some Bodily exercises and External performances; nor is it only the spending of ourselves in such attendances upon God and services to him as are only accommodated to this life, (though every employment for God is both amiable and honourable:) But there is something of our Religion that interests us in a present possession of that joy which is unspeakable and glorious; which leads us into the Porch of heaven, and to the confines of Eternity. It sometimes carries up the Soul into a mount of Transfiguration, or to the top of Pisgah, where it may take a prospect of the promised land; and gives it a Map or Scheme of its future inheritance: it gives it sometimes some anticipations of Blessedness, some foretastes of those joys, those rivers of pleasure which run at God's right hand for evermore. I might further add as a Mantissa to this present Argument, the Tranquillity and Composedness of a Good man's spirit in reference to all External molestations. Religion having made a through-pacification of the Soul within itself, renders it impregnable to all outward assaults: So that it is at rest and lives securely in the midst of all those boisterous Storms and Tempests that make such violent impressions upon the spirits of wicked men. Here the Stoics have stated the case aright, That all Perturbations of the Mind arise not properly from an Outward but an Inward cause: it is not any outward Evil but an inward imagination bred in the womb of the Soul itself, that molests and grieves it. The more that the Soul is restored to itself, and lives at the height of its own Being, the more easily may it disdain and despise any design or combination against it by the most blustering Giants in the world. A Christian that enjoys himself in God, will not be beholding to the world's fair and gentle usage for the composedness of his mind; No, he enjoys that Peace and Tranquillity within himself which no creature can bestow upon him, or take from him. But the Stoics were not so happy in their notions about the way to true Rest and Composedness of Spirit. It is not (by their leave) the Souls collecting and gathering up itself within the Circumference of its own Essence, nor is it a rigid restraining and keeping in its own issues and motions within the confines of its own natural endowments, which is able to confer upon it that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Composedness of mind which they so much idolise as the supreme and only bliss of man, and render it free from all kind of perturbations: (For by what we find in Seneca and others, it appears, that the Stoics seeking an Autarchy within themselves, and being loath to be beholden to God for their Happiness, but that each of them might be as God, self-sufficient and happy in the enjoyment of himself, endeavoured by their sour doctrine and a rigid discipline over their Souls, their severities against Passions and all those restless motions in the Soul after some Higher Good, to attain a complete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a full contentment within themselves.) But herein they mistof the true method of finding Rest to themselves, it being the Union of the Soul with God, that Uniform, Simple and unbounded Good, which is the sole Original of all true inward Peace. Neither were it an Happiness worth the having, for a Mind, like an hermit sequestered from all things else, by a recession into itself, to spend an Eternity in self-converse and the enjoyment of such a Diminutive superficial Nothing as itself is and must necessarily be to itself. It is only peculiar to God to be happy in himself alone; and God who has been more liberal in his provisions for man, hath created in man such a spring of restless motion, that with the greatest impatiency forceth him out of himself, and violently tosseth him to and fro, till he come to fix himself upon some solid and Self-subsistent Goodness. Can a man find himself withdrawn from all terrene and Material things, and perfectly retired into himself; were the whole World so quiet and calm about him, as not to offer to make the least attempt upon the composedness and constancy of his Mind; might he be so well entertained at his own home, as to find no frowns, no sour looks from his own Conscience; might he have that security from Heaven, that God would not disquiet his fancied Tranquillity by embittering his thoughts with any dreadful apprehensions; yet he should find something within him that would not let him be at rest, but would rend him from himself, & toss him from his own foundation & consistency. There is an insatiable appetite in the Soul of man, like a greedy Lion hunting after his prey, that would render him impatient of his own pinching penury, & could never satisfy itself with such a thin and spare diet as he finds at home. There are Two principal faculties in the Soul which, like the two daughters of the horseleech, are always crying, Give, Give: these are those hungry Vultures which, if they cannot find their prey abroad, return and gnaw the Soul itself: where the carcase is, there will the Eagles be gathered together. By this we may see how unavailable to the attaining of true Rest and Peace that conceit of the Stoics was, who supposed the only way and method hereto was this, To confine the Soul thus Monastically to its own home. We read in the Gospel of such a Question of our Saviour's, What went you out into the wilderness to see? we may invert it, What do you return within, to see? A Soul confined within the private and narrow cell of its own particular Being? Such a Soul deprives itself of all that Almighty and Essential Glory and Goodness which shines round about it, which spreads itself through the whole universe; I say it deprives itself of all this, for the enjoying of such a poor petty and diminutive thing as itself is, which yet it can never enjoy truly in such a retiredness. We have seen the peaceful and Happy state of the truly-religious: But it is otherwise with wicked and irreligious men. There is no peace to the wicked; but they are like the troubled Sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt; as it is expressed by the Prophet Esay. The mind of a wicked man is like the Sea Chap. 57 when it roars and rages through the striving of several contrary winds upon it. Furious lusts and wild passions within, as they war against Heaven and the more noble and divine part of the Soul, so they war amongst themselves, maintaining perpetual contests, & contending which shall be the greatest: Scelera dissident. These indeed are the Cadmus-brood rising out of the Serpent's teeth, ready armed one against another: whence it is that the Soul of a wicked man becomes a very unhabitable and incommodious place to itself, full of disquietness and trouble through the many contests and civil commotious maintained within it. The minds of wicked men are like those disconsolate and desolate spirits which our Saviour speaks of Matth. 12. which being cast out of their habitation, wander up and down through dry and desert places, seeking rest but finding none. The Soul that finds not some solid and self-sufficient Good to centre itself upon, is a boisterous and restless thing: and being without God, it wanders up and down the world, destitute, afflicted, tormented with vehement hunger and thirst after some satisfying Good: and as any one shall bring it tidings, Lo here, or Lo there is Good, it presently goes out towards it, and with a swift and speedy flight hastens after it. The sense of an inward indigency doth stimulate and enforce it to seek its contentment without itself, and so it wanders up and down from one creature to another; and thus becomes distracted by a multiplicity of Objects. And while it cannot find some One and only object upon which, as being perfectly adequate to its capacities, it may wholly bestow itself; while it is tossed with restless and vehement motions of Desire and Love through a world of painted beauties, false glozing Excellencies; courting all, but matching nowhere; violently hurried every whither, but finding nowhere objectum par amori; while it converseth only with these pinching Particularities here below, and is not yet acquainted with the Universal Goodness; it is certainly far from true Rest and Satisfaction, from a fixed, composed temper of spirit: but being distracted by multiplicity of Objects and Ends, there can never be any firm and stable peace or friendship at home amongst all its Powers and Faculties: nor can there be a firm amity and friendship abroad betwixt wicked men themselves, as Aristotle in his ethics does conclude, because all Vice is so Multiform and inconsistent a thing, and so there can be no true concatenation of Affections and Ends between them. Whereas in all Good men virtue and Goodness is one Form and Soul to them all, that unites them together, and there is the One, Simple and Uniform Good, that guides and governs them all. They are not as a Ship tossed in the tumultuous Ocean of this world without any Compass at all to steer by; but they direct their course by the certain guidance of the One Last End, as the true Pole-starr of all their motion. But while the Soul lies benighted in a thick Ignorance (as it is with wicked men,) and beholds not some Stable and Eternal Good to move toward; though it may, by the strength of that Principle of Activeness within itself, spend itself perpetually with swift and giddy motions; yet it will be always contesting with secret disturbances, and cannot act but with many reluctancies, as not finding an object equal to the force and strength of its vast affections to act upon. By what hath been said may appear the vast difference between the ways of Sin and of holiness. Inward distractions and disturbances, tribulation and anguish upon every Soul that doth evil: But to every man that worketh good, glory, honour and peace, inward composedness and tranquillity of spirit, pure and divine joys far excelling all sensual pleasures; in a word, true Contentment of spirit and full satisfaction in God, whom the pious Soul loves above all things, and longs still after a nearer enjoyment of him. I shall conclude this Particular with what Plotinus concludes his Book, That the life of holy and divine men is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a life not touched with these vanishing delights of Time, but a flight of the Soul alone to God alone. CHAP. VII. The Fifth Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it advanceth the Soul to an holy boldness and humble familiarity with God, and to a comfortable confidence concerning the Love of God toward it, and its own Salvation. Fearfulness, Consternation of Mind and frightful passions are consequent upon Sin and gild. These together with the most dismal deportments of Trembling and Amazement are agreeable to the nature of the Devil, who delights to be served in this manner by his worshippers. Love, Joy and Hope are most agreeable to the nature of God, and most pleasing to him. The Right apprehensions of God are such as are apt to beget Love to God, Delight and Confidence in him. A true Christian is more for a solid and well-grounded Peace then for high raptures and feelings of joy. How a Christian should endeavour the Assurance of his Salvation. That he should not importunately expect or desire some Extraordinary manifestations of God to him, but rather look after the manifestation of the life of God within him, the foundation or beginning of Heaven and Salvation in his own Soul. That Self-resignation, and the subduing of our own Wills, are greatly available to obtain Assurance. The vanity and absurdity of that Opinion, viz. That in a perfect resignation of our Wills to God's will, a man should be content with his own Damnation and to be the subject of Eternal wrath in Hell, if it should so please God. THe Fifth Property or Effect whereby True Religion 5. discovers its own Nobleness and Excellency is this, That it advanceth the Soul to an holy boldness and humble familiarity with God, as also to a well-grounded Hope and comfortable Confidence concerning the Love of God toward it, and its own Salvation. The truly religious Soul maintains an humble and sweet familiarity with God; and with great alacrity of spirit, without any Consternation and Servility of spirit, is enabled to look upon the Glory and Majesty of the most High: But Sin and Wickedness is pregnant with fearfulness and horror. That Trembling and Consternation of Mind which possesses wicked men, is nothing else but a brat of darkness, an Empusa begotten in corrupt and irreligious Hearts. While men walk in darkness, and are of the night, (as the Apostle speaks,) than it is only that they are vexed with those ugly and ghastly Mormos that terrify and torment them. But when once the Day breaks, and true Religion opens herself upon the Soul like the eyelids of the Morning, than all those shadows and frightful Apparitions flee away. As all Light and Love and Joy descend from above from the Father of lights: so all Darkness and Fearfulness & Despair are from below; they arise from corrupt and earthly minds, & are like those gross vapours arising from this Earthly globe, that not being able to get up towards heaven, spread themselves about the circumference of that Body where they were first begotten, infesting it with darkness and generating into Thunder and Lightning, Clouds and Tempests. But the higher a Christian ascends 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 above this dark dungeon of the Body, the more that Religion prevails within him, the more than shall he find himself as it were in a clear heaven, in a Region that is calm and serene; and the more will those black and dark affections of Fear and Despair vanish away, and those clear and bright affections of Love and Joy and Hope break forth in their strength and lustre. The Devil, who is the Prince of darkness and the great Tyrant, delights to be served with ghastly affections and the most dismal deportments of trembling and astonishment; as having nothing at all of amiableness or excellency in him to commend himself to his worshippers. Slavery and servility (that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Longinus truly calls it) is the badge and livery of the Devil's religion: hence those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Heathens performed with much trembling and horror. But The words for false Gods and Idols, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, import Trouble and terror & frightful passions in their worshippers. God, who is the supreme Goodness and essential both Love and Loveliness, takes most pleasure in those sweet and delightful affections of the Soul, viz. Love, Joy and Hope, which are most correspondent to his own nature. The ancient superstition of the Heathens was always very nice and curious in honouring every one of their Gods with Sacrifices and Rites most agreeable to their natures: I am sure there is no Incense, no offering we can present God with, is so sweet, so acceptable to him as our Love and Delight and Confidence in him; and when he comes into the Souls of men, he makes these his Throne, his place of rest, as finding the greatest agreeableness therein to his own Essence. A Good man that finds himself made partaker of the Divine nature, and transformed into the image of God, infinitely takes pleasure in God, as being altogether Lovely, according to that in Cant. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Totus ipse est desideria; and his Meditation of God is sweet unto him, Ps. 104. S. John that lay in the bosom of Christ who came from the bosom of the Father, and perfectly understood his Eternal Essence, hath given us the fullest description that he could make of him, when he tells us that God is Love, and he that dwells in God, dwells in love; and reposing himself in the bosom of an Almighty Goodness, where he finds nothing but Love and Loveliness, he now displays all the strength and beauty of those his choiest and most precious affections of Love and Joy and Confidence; his Soul is now at ease, and rests in peace, neither is there any thing to make afraid: He is got beyond all those powers of darkness which give such continual alarms in this lower world, and are always troubling the Earth: He is got above all fears and despairs; he is in a bright clear region, above Clouds and Tempests, infra se despicit nubes. There is no frightful terribleness in the supreme Majesty. That men apprehend God at any time in such a dismayed manner, it must not at all be made an argument of his nature, but of our sinfulness and weakness. The Sun in the heavens always was and will be a Globe of Light and brightness, howsoever a purblind Eye is rather dazzled then enlightened by it. There is an Inward sense in man's Soul, which, were it once awakened and excited with an inward taste and relish of the Divinity, could better define God to him then all the world else. It is the sincere Christian that so tastes and sees how good and sweet the Lord is, as none else does: The God of hope fills him with all joy and peace in believing, so that he abounds in hope, as the Apostle speaks Rom. 15. He quietly reposes himself in God; his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord; he is more for a solid peace and settled calm of spirit, then for high Raptures and feelings of Joy or Extraordinary Manifestations of God to him: he does not passionately desire nor importunately expect such things; he rather looks after the Manifestations of the Goodness and Power of God within him, in subduing all in his Soul that is unlike and contrary to God, and forming him into his image and likeness. Though I think it worthy of a Christian to endeavour the Assurance of his own Salvation; yet perhaps it might be the safest way to moderate his curiosity of prying into God's Book of life, and to stay a while until he sees himself within the confines of Salvation itself. Should a man hear a Voice from Heaven or see a Vision from the Almighty, to testify unto him the Love of God towards him; yet methinks it were more desirable to find a Revelation of all from within, arising up from the bottom and Centre of a man's own Soul, in the real and Internal impressions of a Godlike nature upon his own spirit; and thus to find the Foundation and Beginning of Heaven and Happiness within himself: it were more desirable to see the crucifying of our own Will, the mortifying of the mere Animal life, and to see a Divine life rising up in the room of it, as a sure Pledge and Inchoation of Immortality and Happiness, the very Essence of which consists in a perfect conformity and cheerful compliance of all the Powers of our Souls with the Will of God. The best way of gaining a well-grounded assurance of the Divine love is this, for a man to overcome himself and his own Will: To him that overcomes shall be given Revel. 2. that white stone, and in it the new name written, which no man knoweth but he that receives it. He that beholds the Sun of righteousness arising upon the Horizon of his Soul with healing in its wings, and chase away all that misty darkness of his own Self-will and Passions; such a one desires not now the Starr-light to know whether it be Day or not, nor cares he to pry into Heaven's secrets and to search into the hidden rolls of Eternity, there to see the whole plot of his Salvation; for he views it transacted upon the inward stage of his own Soul, and reflecting upon himself he may behold a Heaven opened from within, and a Throne set up in his Soul, and an Almighty Saviour sitting upon it, and reigning within him: he now finds the kingdom of Heaven within him, and sees that it is not a thing merely reserved for him without him, being already made partaker of the sweetness and efficacy of it. What the Jews say of the Spirit of prophecy, may not unfitly be applied to the Holy Ghost, the true Comforter dwelling in the minds of good men as a sure Earnest of their Eternal inheritance, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Spirit resides not but upon a man of Fortitude, one that gives proof of this Fortitude in subduing his own Self-will and his Affections. We read of Elisha, that he was fain to call for a Musical instrument and one to play before him, to allay the heat of his Passions, before he could converse with the Prophetical Spirit. The Hely Spirit is too pure and gentle a thing to dwell in a Mind muddied and disturbed by those impure dregs, those thick fogs and mists that arise from our Self-will and Passions; our prevailing over these is the best way to cherish the Holy Spirit, by which we may be sealed unto the day of redemption. To conclude this Particular: It is a venturous and rugged guess and conceit which some men have, That in a perfect resignation of our Wills to the Divine will a man should be content with his own Damnation, and to be the Subject of Eternal Wrath in Hell, if it should so please God. Which is as impossible as it is for him that infinitely thirsts after a true Participation of the Divine Nature, and most earnestly endeavours a most inward Union with God in Spirit, by a denial of himself and his own will, to swell up in Self-love, Pride and Arrogancy against God; the one whereof is the most substantial Heaven, the other the most real Hell: whereas indeed by conquering ourselves we are translated from Death to Life, and the kingdom of God and Heaven is already come into us. CHAP. VIII. The Sixth Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it Spiritualizes Material things, and carries up the Souls of Good men from Sensible and Earthly things to things Intellectual and Divine. There are lesser and fuller representations of God in the Creatures. To converse with God in the Creation, and to pass out of the Sensible World into the Intellectual, is most effectually taught by Religion. Wicked men converse not with God as shining out in the Creatures; they converse with them in a Sensual and Unspiritual manner. Religion does spiritualise the Creation to Good men: it teaches them to look at any Perfections or Excellencies in themselves and others, not so much as Theirs or That others, but as so many Beams flowing from One and the Same Fountain of Light; to love them all in God, and God in all; the Universal Goodness in a Particular Being. A Good man enjoys and delights in whatsoever Good he sees otherwhere, as if it were his own: he does not fond love and esteem either himself or others. The Divine temper and strain of the ancient Philosophy. THE Sixth Property or Effect wherein Religion discovers 6. its own Excellency is this, That it Spiritualizes Material things, and so carries up the Souls of Good men from Earthly things to things Divine, from this Sensible World to the Intellectual. God made the Universe and all the Creatures contained therein as so many Glasses wherein he might reflect his own Glory: He hath copied forth himself in the Creation; and in this Outward World we may read the lovely characters of the Divine Goodness, Power and Wisdom. In some Creatures there are darker representations of God, there are the Prints and Footsteps of God; but in others there are clearer and fuller representations of the Divinity, the Face and Image of God; according to that known saying of the Schoolmen, Remotiores Similitudines Creaturae ad Deum dicuntur Vestigium; propinquiores verò Imago. But how to find God here and feelingly to converse with him, and being affected with the sense of the Divine Glory shining out upon the Creation, how to pass out of the Sensible World into the Intellectual, is not so effectually taught by that Philosophy which professed it most, as by true Religion: that which knits and unites God and the Soul together, can best teach it how to ascend and descend upon those golden links that unite as it were the World to God. That Divine wisdom that contrived and beautified this glorious Structure, can best explain her own Art, and carry up the Soul back again in these reflected Beams to him who is the Fountain of them. Though Good men all of them, are not acquainted with all those Philosophical notions touching the relation between Created and the Uncreated Being; yet may they easily find every Creature pointing out to that Being whose image and superscription it bears, and climb up from those darker resemblances of the Divine wisdom and Goodness shining out in different degrees upon several Creatures, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the ancients speak, till they sweetly repose themselves in the bosom of the Divinity: and while they are thus conversing with this lower World, and are viewing the invisible things of God in the things that are made, in this visible and outward Creation, they find God many times secretly flowing into their Souls, and leading them silently out of the Court of the Temple into the Holy Place. But it is otherwise with Wicked men; they dwell perpetually upon the dark side of the Creatures, and converse with these things only in a gross, sensual, earthly and unspiritual manner; they are so encompassed with the thick and foggy mist of their own Corruptions, that they cannot see God there where he is most visible: the Light shineth in darkness, but darkness comprehends it not: their Souls are so deeply sunk into that House of Clay which they carry about with them, that were there nothing of Body or bulky Matter before them, they could find nothing to exercise themselves about. But Religion, where it is in truth and in power, renews the very Spirit of our Minds, and doth in a manner spiritualise this outward Creation to us, and doth in a more excellent way perform that which the peripatetics are wont to affirm of their Intellectus agens, in purging Bodily and Material things from the feculency and dregs of Matter, and separating them from those circumstantiating and streightning conditions of Time and Place, and the like; and teaches the Soul to look at those Perfections which it finds here below, not so much as the Perfections of This or That Body, as they adorn This or That particular Being, but as they are so many Rays issuing forth from that First and Essential Perfection, in which they all meet and embrace one another in the most close friendship. Every Particular Good is a Blossom of the First Goodness; every created Excellency is a Beam descending from the Father of lights: and should we separate all these Particularities from God, all affection spent upon them would be unchaste, and their embraces adulterous. We should love all things in God, and God in all things, because he is All in all, the Beginning and Original of Being, the perfect Idea of their Goodness, and the End of their Motion. It is nothing but a thick mist of Pride and Self-love that hinders men's eyes from beholding that Sun which both enlightens them and all things else: But when true Religion gins once to dawn upon men's Souls, and with its shining light chases away their black Night of Ignorance; then they behold themselves and all things else enlightened (though in a different way) by one and the same Sun, and all the Powers of their Souls fall down before God and ascribe all glory to him. Now it is that a Good man is no more solicitous whether This or That good thing be Mine, or whether My perfections exceed the measure of This or That particular Creature; for whatsoever Good he beholds any where, he enjoys and delights in it as much as if it were his own, and whatever he beholds in himself, he looks not upon it as his Property but as a Common good; for all these Beams come from one and the same Fountain and Ocean of light in whom he loves them all with an Universal love: when his affections run along the stream of any created excellencies, whether his own or any ones else, yet they stay not here, but run on till they fall into the Ocean; they do not settle into a fond love and admiration either of himself or any others Excellencies, but he owns them as so many Pure Effluxes and Emanations from God, and in a Particular Being loves the Universal Goodness. Si sciretur à me Veritas, sciretur etiam me illud non esse, aut illud non esse meum, nec à me. Thus may a Good man walk up and down the World as in a Garden of Spices, and suck a Divine Sweetness out of every flower. There is a Twofold meaning in every Creature, as the Jews speak of their Law, a Literal, and a Mystical, and the one is but the ground of the other: and as they say of divers pieces of their Law, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so a Good man says of every thing that his Senses offer to him, it speaks to his lower part, but it points out something above to his Mind and Spirit. It is the drowsy and muddy spirit of Superstition which, being lulled asleep in the lap of worldly delights, is fain to set some Idol at its elbow, something that may jog it and put it in mind of God. Whereas true Religion never finds itself out of the Infinite Sphere of the Divinity, and wherever it finds Beauty, Harmony, Goodness, Love, Ingenuity, wisdom, Holiness, Justice, and the like, it is ready to say, Here, and There is God: wheresoever any such Perfections shine out, an holy Mind climbs up by these sunbeams, and raises up itself too God. And seeing God hath never thrown the World from himself, but runs through all created Essence, containing the Archetypal Ideas of all things in himself, and from thence deriving and imparting several prints of Beauty and Excellency all the world over; a Soul that is truly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 godlike, a Mind that is enlightened from the same Fountain, and hath its inward Senses affected with the sweet relishes of Divine Goodness, cannot but every where behold itself in the midst of that Glorious Unbounded Being who is indivisibly every where. A Good man finds every place he treads upon Holy ground; to him the World is God's Temple; he is ready to say with Jacob, Gen. 28. How dreadful is this place! this is none other but the House of God. To conclude, It was a degenerous and unworthy Spirit in that Philosophy which first separated and made such distances between Metaphysical Truths & the Truths of Nature; whereas the First and most ancient wisdom amongst the Heathens was indeed a Philosophical Divinity, or a Divine Philosophy; which continued for divers ages, but as men grew worse, their queasy stomaches began to loathe it: which made the truly-wise Socrates complain of the Sophisters of that Age which began now to corrupt and debase it; whereas heretofore the Spirit of Philosophy was more generous and divine, and did more purify and ennoble the Souls of men, commending Intellectual things to them, and taking them off from settling upon Sensible and Material things here below, and still exciting them to endeavour after the nearest resemblance of God the Supreme Goodness and Loveliness, and an intimate Conjunction with him; which, according to the strain of that Philosophy, was the true Happiness of Immortal Souls. CHAP. IX. The Seventh and last Property or Effect discovering the Excellency of Religion, viz. That it raiseth the Minds of Good men to a due observance of and attendance upon Divine Providence, and enables them to serve the Will of God, and to acquiesce in it. For a man to serve Providence and the Will of God entirely, to work with God, and to bring himself and all his actions into a Compliance with God's Will, his Ends and Designs, is an argument of the truest Nobleness of Spirit; it is the most excellent and divine life; and it is most for man's advantage. How the Consideration of Divine Providence is the way to inward quietness and establishment of Spirit. How wicked men carry themselves unbecomingly through their impatience and fretfulness under the disposals of Providence. The beauty and harmony of the various Methods of Providence. THE Seventh and last Property or Effect wherein True Religion expresseth its own Nobleness and 7. Excellency, is this, That it raiseth the Minds of Good men to a due observance of and attendance upon Divine Providence, and enables them to serve the Will of God, and to acquiesce in it. Wheresoever God hath a Tongue to speak, there they have ears to hear; and being attentive to God in the soft and still motions of Providence, they are ready to obey his call, and to say with Esay, Behold, here am I, send me. They endeavour to Esay 6. copy forth that Lesson which Christ hath set Christians, seriously considering how that they came into this world by God's appointment, not to do their own Wills but the Will of him that sent them. As this Consideration quiets the Spirit of a Good man who is no idle Spectator of Providence, and keeps him in a calm and sober temper in the midst of all Storms and Tempests; so it makes him most freely to engage himself in the service of Providence, without any inward reluctancy or disturbance. He cannot be content that Providence should serve itself of him as it doth even of those things that understand it least; but it is his holy ambition to serve it. 'Tis nothing else but Hellish pride and Self-love that makes men serve themselves, and so set up themselves as Idols against God: But it is indeed an argument of true Nobleness of Spirit for a man to view himself (not in the narrow Point of his own Being, but) in the unbounded Essence of the First Cause, so as to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and to live only as an Instrument in the hands of God who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will. Optarem id me esse Deo quod est mihi manus mea, was the expression of an holy Soul. To a Good man to serve the Will of God, it is in the truest and best sense to serve himself, who knows himself to be nothing without or in opposition to God; Quò minùs quid sibi arrogat homo, eò evadit nobilior, clarior, divinior. This is the most divine life that can be, for a man to act in the world upon Eternal designs, and to be so wholly devoted to the Will of God, as to serve it most faithfully and entirely. This indeed bestows a kind of Immortality upon these flitting and Transient acts of ours, which in themselves are but the offspring of a moment. A Pillar or Verse is a poor sorry Monument of any Exploit, which yet may well enough become the highest of the world's bravery. But Good men, while they work with God and endeavour to bring themselves and all their actions to a unity with God, his Ends and Designs, enrol themselves in Eternity. This is the proper Character of holy Souls; Their Wills are so fully resolved into the Divine Will, that they in all things subscribe to it without any murmur or debates: they rest well satisfied with, and take complacency in, any passages of Divine dispensation, * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Epictet. cap. 38. being ordered and disposed by a Mind and wisdom above according to the highest rules of Goodness. The best way for a man rightly to enjoy himself, is to maintain an universal, ready and cheerful compliance with the Divine and Uncreated Will in all things; as knowing that nothing can issue and flow forth from the fountain of Goodness but that which is good: and therefore a Good man is never offended with any piece of Divine dispensation, nor hath he any reluctancy against that Will that dictates and determines all things by an Eternal rule of Goodness; as knowing, That there is an unbounded and Almighty Love, that without any disdain or envy freely communicates itself to every thing he made; that feeds even the young Ravens that call upon him; that makes his Sun to shine, and his Rain to fall, both upon the just and unjust; that always enfolds those in his everlasting arms who are made partakers of his own Image, perpetually nourishing and cherishing them with the fresh and vital influences of his Grace; as knowing also, That there is an allseeing Eye, an unbounded Mind and Understanding, that derives itself through the whole Universe, and sitting in all the wheels of motion, guides them all and powerfully governs the most excentrical motions of Creatures, and carries them all most harmoniously in their several orbs to one Last End. Who then shall give Law to God? Where is the wise? where is the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? Where is he that would climb up into that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the great Consistory in heaven, and sitting in consultation with the Almighty, instruct the Infinite and Incomprehensible wisdom? Shall vain man be wiser than his maker? This is the hellish temper of wicked men, they examine and judge of all things by the line and measure of their own Self-will, their own Opinions and designs; and measuring all things by a crooked rule, they think nothing to be strait; and therefore they fall out with God, and with restless impatience fret and vex themselves: and this fretfulness and impatiency in wicked men argues a breach in the just and due constitution of their Minds and Spirits. But a Good man, whose Soul is restored to that frame and constitution it should be in, has better apprehensions of the ways and works of God, and is better affected under the various disposals of Providence. Indeed to a superficial observer of Divine Providence many things there are that seem to be nothing else but Digressions from the main End of all, and to come to pass by a fortuitous concourse of Circumstances; that come in so abruptly and without any concatenation or dependence one upon another, as if they were without any Mind or Understanding to guide them. But a wise man that looks from the Beginning to the End of things, beholds them all in their due place and method acting that part which the Supreme Mind and wisdom that governs all things hath appointed them, and to carry on one and the same Eternal design, while they move according to their own proper inclinations and measures, and aim at their own particular Ends. It were not worth the while to live in a world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 devoid of God and Providence, as it was well observed by the Stolck: And to be subservient unto Providence is the holy ambition and great endeavour of a Good man, who is so perfectly overpowered with the love of the Universal and Infinite Goodness, that he would not serve any Particular Good whatsoever, no not himself, so as to set up in the world and trade for himself, as the men of this world do who are lovers of their own selves, and lovers of pleasures more than lovers 2 Tim. 3. of God. CHAP. X. 4. The Excellency of Religion in regard of its Progress, as it is perpetually carrying on the Soul towards Perfection. Every Nature hath its proper Centre which it hastens to. Sin and Wickedness is within the attractive power of Hell, and hastens thither: Grace and Holiness is within the Central force of Heaven, and moves thither. 'Tis not the Speculation of Heaven as a thing to come that satisfyes the desires of Religious Souls, but the real Possession of it even in this life. Men are apt to seek after Assurance of Heaven as a thing to come, rather than after Heaven itself and the inward possession of it here. How the Assurance of Heaven rises from the growth of holiness and the powerful progress of Religion in our Souls. That we are not hastily to believe that we are Christ's, or that Christ is in us. That the Works which Christ does in holy Souls testify of him, and best evidence Christ's spiritual appearance in them. WE have considered the Excellency of True Religion 1. in regard of its Descent and Original; 2. in regard of its Nature; 3. in regard of its Properties and Effects. We proceed now to a Fourth Particular, and shall show That Religion is a generous and noble thing in regard of its progress; it is perpetually carrying on that Mind 4. in which it is once seated toward Perfection. Though the First appearance of it upon the Souls of good men may be but as the Wings of the Morning spreading themselves upon the Mountains, yet it is still rising higher and higher upon them, chase away all the filthy mists and vapours of Sin and Wickedness before it, till it arrives to its Meridian altitude. There is the Prov. 4. 18. The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day. strength and force of the Divinity in it; and though when it first enters into the Minds of men, it may seem to be sown in weakness, yet it will raise itself in power. As Christ was in his Bodily appearance, he was still increasing in wisdom and knowledge and favour with God and man, until he was perfected in glory: so is he also in his Spiritual appearance in the Souls of men; and accordingly the New Testament does more than once distinguish of Christ in his several ages, and degrees of growth in the Souls of all true Christians. Good men are always walking on from strength to strength, till at last they see God in Zion. Religion though it hath its infancy, yet it hath no old age: while it is in its Minority, it is always in motu; but when it comes to its Maturity and full age, it will always be in quiet, it is then always the same, and its years fail not, but it shall endure for ever. Holy and religious Souls being once touched with an inward sense of Divine Beauty and Goodness, by a strong impress upon them are moved swiftly after God, and (as the Apostle expresses himself) forgetting those things which Phil. 3. are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, they press toward the Mark, for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus; that so they may attain to the resurrection of the dead. Where a Spirit of Religion is, there is the Central force of Heaven itself quickening and enlivening those that are informed by it in their motions toward Heaven. As on the other side all unhallowed and defiled minds are within the attractive power of Hell, & are continually hastening their course thither, being strongly pressed down by the weight of their Wickedness. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Plutarch hath well observed, Every nature in this world hath some proper Centre which it is always hastening to. Sin and Wickedness does not hover a little over the bottomeless pit of Hell, and only flutter about it; but it's continually sinking lower and lower into it. Neither does true Grace make some feeble assays toward Heaven, but by a mighty Energy within itself it's always soaring up higher and higher into heaven. A good Christian does not only court his Happiness, and cast now and then a smile upon it, or satisfy himself merely to be contracted to it, but with the greatest ardours of Love and Desire he pursues the solemnity of the just nuptials, that he may be wedded to it and made one with it. It is not an airy speculation of Heaven as a thing (though never so undoubtedly) to come, that can satisfy his hungry desires, but the real * So we read Joh. 6. 54. hath eternal life; & 1 Ep. Jo. ch. 5. 11, 13. possession of it even in this life. Such an Happiness would be less in the esteem of Good men, that were only good to be enjoyed at the end of this life when all other enjoyments fail him. I wish there be not among some such a light and poor esteem of Heaven, as makes them more to seek after Assurance of Heaven only in the Idea of it as a thing to come, then after Heaven itself; which indeed we can never well be assured of, until we find it rising up within ourselves and glorifying our own Souls. When true Assurance comes, Heaven itself will appear upon the Horizon of our Souls, like a morning light chase away all our dark and gloomy doubtings before it. We shall not need then to light up our Candles to seek for it in corners; no, it will display its own lustre and brightness so before us, that we may see it in its own light, and ourselves the true possessors of it. We may be too nice and vain in seeking for signs and tokens of Christ's Spiritual appearances in the Souls of men, as well as the Scribes and Pharisees were in seeking for them at his First appearance in the World. When he comes into us, let us expect till the works that he shall do within us may testify of him; and be not over-credulous, till we find that he doth those works there which none other could do. As for a true well-grounded Assurance, say not so much, Who shall ascend up into heaven, to fetch it down from thence? or who shall descend into the deep, to fetch it up from beneath? for in the Growth of true internal Goodness and in the Progress of true Religion it will freely unfold itself within us. Stay till the grain of mustardseed itself breaks forth from among the clods that buried it, till through the descent of the heavenly dew it sprouts up and discovers itself openly. This holy Assurance is indeed the budding and blossoming of Felicity in our own Souls; it is the inward sense and feeling of the true life, spirit, sweetness and beauty of Grace powerfully expressing its own Energy within us. Briefly, True Religion in the progress of it transforms those Minds in which it reigns from glory to glory: it goes on and prospers in bringing all enemies in subjection under their feet, in reconciling the Minds of men fully to God; and it instates them in a firm possession of the Supreme Good. This is the Seed of God within holy Souls, which is always warring against the Seed of the Serpent, till it prevail over it through the Divine strength and influence. Though Hell may open her mouth wide and without measure, yet a true Christian in whom the seed of God remaineth, is in a good and safe condition; he finds himself born up by an Almighty arm, and carried upwards as upon eagle's wings; and the Evil one hath no power over him, or, as S. John expresseth it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Evil one toucheth him not, 1 Ep. chap. 5. v. 18. CHAP. XI. 5. The Excellency of Religion in regard of its Term & End, viz. Perfect blessedness. How unable we are in this state to comprehend and describe the Full and Perfect state of Happiness and Glory to come. The more Godlike a Christian is, the better may he understand that State. Holiness and Happiness not two distinct things, but two several Notions of one and the same thing. Heaven cannot so well be defined by any thing without us, as by something within us. The great nearness and affinity between Sin and Hell. The Conclusion of this Treatise, containing a Serious Exhortation to a diligent minding of Religion, with a Discovery of the Vanity of those pretences which keep men off from minding Religion. WE come now to the Fifth and Last Particular, viz. The Excellency of Religion in the term and End of it, which is nothing else but Blessedness itself 5. in its full maturity. Which yet I may not here undertake to explain, for it is altogether 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, nor can it descend so low as to accommodate itself to any humane style. Accordingly S. John tells us, it does not yet appear what we shall be; and yet that he may give us some glimpse of it, he points us out to God, and tells us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. Indeed the best way to get a discovery of it, is to endeavour as much as may be to be Godlike, to live in a feeling converse with God and in a powerful exercise and expression of all Godlike dispositions: So shall our inner man be best enabled to know the breadth and length, the depth and height of that Love and Goodness which yet passeth all knowledge. There is a State of Perfection in the life to come so far transcendent to any in this life, as that we are not able from hence to take the just proportions of it, or to form a full and comprehensive notion of it. We are unable to comprehend the vastness and fullness of that Happiness which the most purified Souls may be raised to, or to apprehend how far the mighty power and strength of the Divinity deriving itself into created Being, may communicate a more Transcendent life and blessedness to it. We know not what latent pours our Souls may here contain within themselves, which then may begin to open and dilate themselves to let in the full streams of the Divine Goodness when they come nearly and intimately to converse with it; or how Blessedness may act upon those Faculties of our Minds which we now have. We know not what illapses and irradiations there may be from God upon Souls in Glory, that may raise them into a state of Perfection surpassing all our imaginations. As for Corporeal Happiness, there cannot be any thing further added to the Pleasure of our Bodies or Animal part, than a restoring it from disturbing Passion and Pain to its just and natural constitution; and therefore some Philosophers have well disputed against the opinion of the Epicureans that make Happiness to consist in Bodily pleasure, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when the molestation is gone, and the just constitution of Nature recovered, Pleasure ceaseth. But the highest Pleasure of Minds and Spirits does not only consist in the relieving of them from any antecedent pains or grief, or in a relaxation from some former molesting Passion: neither is their Happiness a mere Stoical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Happiness of the Deity is not a mere Negative thing, rendering it free from all disturbance or molestation, so that it may eternally rest quiet within itself; it does not so much consist in quiet, as in Actu & vigore. A Mind and Spirit is too full of activity and energy, is too quick and potent a thing to enjoy a full and complete Happiness in a mere Cessation; this were to make Happiness an heavy Spiritless thing. The Philosopher hath well observed, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, there is infinite power and strength in Divine joy, pleasure and happiness commensurate to that Almighty Being and Goodness which is the Eternal source of it. As Created being's, that are capable of conversing with God, stand nearer to God or further off from him, and as they partake more or less of his likeness; so they partake more or less of that Happiness which flows forth from him, and God communicates himself in different degrees to them. There may be as many degrees of Sanctity and Perfection, as there are of States and Conditions of Creatures: and that is properly Sanctity which guides and orders all the Faculties and Actions of any Creature in a way suitable and correspondent to that rank and state which God hath placed it in: and while it doth so, it admits no sin or defilement to itself, though yet it may be elevated and advanced higher; and accordingly true Positive Sanctity comes to be advanced higher and higher, as any Creature comes more to partake of the life of God, and to be brought into a nearer conjunction with God: and so the Sanctity and Happiness of Innocency itself might have been perfected. Thus we see how True Religion carries up the Souls of Good men above the black regions of Hell and Death. This indeed is the great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Souls; it is Religion itself, or a real participation of God and his Holiness, which is their true restitution and advancement. All that Happiness which Good men shall be made partakers of, as it cannot be born up upon any other foundation then true Goodness and a Godlike nature within them; so neither is it distinct from it. Sin and Hell are so twined and twisted up together, that if the power of Sin be once dissolved, the bonds of Death and Hell will also fall asunder. Sin and Hell are of the same kind, of the same lineage and descent: as on the other side True Holiness or Religion and True Happiness are but two several Notions of one thing, rather than distinct in themselves. Religion delivers us from Hell by instating us in a possession of True Life and bliss. Hell is rather a Nature then a Place: and Heaven cannot be so truly defined by any thing without us, as by something that is within us. Thus have we done with those Particulars wherein we considered the Excellency and Nobleness of Religion, which is here expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The way of life, and elsewhere is styled by Solomon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A tree of life: true Religion being an inward Principle of life, of a Divine life, the best life, that which is Life most properly so called: accordingly in the Holy Scripture a life of Religion is styled Life, as a life of Sin and Wickedness is styled Death. In the ancient Academical Philosophy it was much disputed whether that Corporeal and Animal life, which was always drawing down the Soul into Terrene and Material things, was not more properly to be styled Death then Life. What sense hereof the Pythagoreans had may appear by this practice of theirs, They were wont to set up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Empty coffins in the places of those that had forsaken their School and degenerated from their Philosophy and good Precepts, as being Apostates from life itself, and dead to virtue and a good life, which is the true life, & therefore fit only to be reckoned among the dead. For a Conclusion of this Discourse; The Use which we shall make of all shall be this, To awaken and exhort every one to a serious minding of Religion: as Solomon doth earnestly exhort every one to seek after true wisdom, which is the same with Religion and Holiness, as Sin is with Folly; Prov. 4. 5. Get wisdom, get understanding; and v. 7. Get wisdom, and with all thy getting get understanding. Wisdom is the principal thing. This is the sum of all, the Conclusion of the whole matter, Fear God, and keep his commandments; for this is the whole (duty, business and concernment) of man. Let us not trifle away our time and opportunities which God hath given us, wherein we may lay hold upon Life and Immortality, in doing nothing, or else pursuing Hell and Death. Let us awake out of our vain dreams; wisdom calls upon us, and offers us the hidden treasures of Life and Blessedness: Let us not perpetually deliver over ourselves to laziness and slumbering. Say not, There is a lion in the way; say not, Though Religion be good, yet it is unattainable: No, but let us intent all our Powers in a serious resolved pursuance of it, and depend upon the assistance of Heaven which never fails those that soberly seek for it. It is indeed the Levity of men's spirits, their heedlesseness and regardlesseness of their own lives, that betrays them to Sin and Death. It is the general practice of men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, extempore vivere, as the satirist speaks; they ordinarily ponderate and deliberate upon every thing more than how it becomes them to live, they so live as if their Bodies had swallowed up their Souls: their lives are but a kind of Lottery: the Principles by which they are guided are nothing else but a confused multitude of Fancies rudely jumbled together. Such is the life of most men, it is but a mere Casual thing acted over at peradventure, without any fair and calm debates held either with Religion, or with Reason which in itself, as it is not distorted and depraved by corrupt men, is a true Friend to Religion, and directs men to God and to things good and just, pure, lovely and praiseworthy; and the directions of this Inward guide we are not to neglect. Unreasonableness or the smothering and extinguishing the Candle of the Lord within us is no piece of Religion, nor advantageous to it: That certainly will not raise men up to God, which sinks them below men. There had never been such an Apostasy from Religion, nor had such a Mystery of iniquity (full of deceiveableness and imposture) been revealed and wrought so powerfully in the Souls of some men, had there not first come an Apostasy from sober Reason, had there not first been a falling away and departure from Natural Truth. It is to be feared our nice speculations about a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Theology have tended more to exercise men's Wits then to reform their lives, and that they have too much descended into their practice, and have tended rather to take men off from minding Religion, then to quicken them up to a diligent seeking after it. Though the Powers of Nature may now be weakened, and though we cannot produce a living form of Religion in our own Souls; yet we are not surely resolved so into a sluggish Passiveness, as that we cannot, or were not in any kind or manner of way to seek after it. Certainly a man may as well read the Scriptures as study a piece of Aristotle, or of Natural Philosophy or mathematics. He that can observe any thing comely and commendable, or unworthy and base, in another man, may also reflect upon himself, and see how face answers to face, as Solomon speaks Proverbs 27. 19 If men would seriously commune with their hearts, their own Consciences would tell them plainly, that they might avoid and omit more evil than they do, and that they might do more good than they do: and that they do not put forth that power which God hath given them, nor faithfully use those Talents nor improve the advantages and means afforded them. I fear the ground of most men's Misery will prove to be a Second fall, and a Lapse upon a Lapse. I doubt God will not allow that Proverb, The Fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge, as not in respect of Temporal misery, much less will he allow it in respect of Eternal. It will not be so much because our First parents incurred God's displeasure, as because we have neglected what might have been done by us afterwards in order to the seeking of God, his face and favour, while he might be found. Up then and be doing; and the Lord will be with us. He will not leave us nor forsake us, if we seriously set ourselves about the work. Let us endeavour to acquaint ourselves with our own lives, and the true Rules of life, with this which Solomon here calls the Way of Life: let us inform our Minds as much as may be in the Excellency and Loveliness of Practical Religion; that beholding it in its own beauty and amiableness, we may the more sincerely close with it. As there would need nothing else to deter and affright men from Sin but its own ugliness and deformity, were it presented to a naked view and seen as it is: so nothing would more effectually commend Religion to the Minds of men, than the displaying and unfolding the Excellencies of its Nature, than the true Native beauty and inward lustre of Religion itself: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither the Evening nor the morningstar could so sensibly commend themselves to our bodily Eyes, and delight them with their shining beauties, as True Religion, which is an undefiled Beam of the uncreated light, would to a mind capable of conversing with it. Religion, which is the true wisdom, is (as * Chap. 7. the Author of the Book of wisdom speaks of Wisdom,) a pure influence flowing from the glory of the Almighty, the brightness of the Everlasting light, the unspotted mirror of the power of God, and the image of his Goodness: She is more beautiful than the Sun, & above all the order of Stars; being compared with the light, she is found before it. Religion is no such austere, sour & rigid thing, as to affright men away from it: No, but those that are acquainted with the power of it, find it to be altogether sweet and amiable. An holy Soul sees so much of the glory of Religion in the lively impressions which it bears upon itself, as both woos and wins it. We may truly say concerning Religion to such Souls as S. Paul spoke to the Corinthians, Needs it any Epistles of Commendation to you? Needs it any thing to court 2 Cor. 3. your affections? Ye are indeed its Epistle, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God. Religion is not like the Prophet's roll, sweet as honey when it was in his mouth, but as bitter as gall in his belly. Religion is no sullen stoicism, no sour Pharisaisme; it does not consist in a few Melancholy passions, in some dejected looks or depressions of Mind: but it consists in Freedom, Love, Peace, Life and Power; the more it comes to be digested into our lives, the more sweet and lovely we shall find it to be. Those spots and wrinkles which corrupt Minds think they see in the face of Religion, are indeed nowhere else but in their own deformed and misshapen apprehensions. It is no wonder when a defiled Fancy comes to be the Glass, if you have an unlovely reflection. Let us therefore labour to purge our own Souls from all worldly pollutions; let us breath after the aid and assistance of the Divine Spirit, that it may irradiate and enlighten our Minds, that we may be able to see Divine things in a Divine light: let us endeavour to live more in a real practice of those Rules of Religious and Holy living commended to us by our ever-Blessed Lord and Saviour: So shall we know Religion better, and knowing it love it, and loving it be still more and more ambitiously pursuing after it, till we come to a full attainment of it, and therein of our own Perfection and Everlasting Bliss. A CHRISTIANS Conflicts and Conquests. OR, A DISCOURSE Concerning The Devil's active Enmity and continual Hostility against Man. The Warfare of a Christian life. The Certainty of Success and Victory in this Spiritual Warfare. The Evil and Horridness of Magical Arts and Rites, Diabolical Contracts, etc. Siracides Cap. 2. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. * Cap. 33. in Edit. Vulg. Lat. etc. Cap. 36. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Cyprianus De Zelo & Livore. Ex●ubandum est, Fratres dilectissimi, atque omnibus viribus elaborandum, ut ●●i●nico saevienti, & jacula sua in omnes corporis parts, quibus percuti & vulnerari possumus, dirigenti, sollicitâ & plenâ vigilantiâ repugnemus— Quamobrem contra omnes Diaboli vel fallaces insidias vel apertas minas stare debet instructus animus & armatus, tam paratus semper ad repugnandum quam est ad impugnandum semper paratus inimicus. A CHRISTIANS Conflicts and Conquests Represented in a Discourse upon James 4. 7. Resist the Devil, and he will flee from you. CHAP. I. The Introduction, Summarily treating of the perpetual Enmity between God, the Principle of Good, & the Principle of Evil, the Devil: as also between Whatsoever is from God & That which is from the Devil. That Wicked men by destroying what there is from God within them, and divesting themselves of all that which hath any alliance to God or true Goodness, and transforming themselves into the Diabolical image, fit themselves for correspondence and converse with the Devil. The Fears and Horrors which infest both the Apostate Spirits and Wicked men. The weakness of the Devil's kingdom; Christ's success against it. IT Hath been an ancient Tradition received by the Gentile Philosophers, That there are Two main Principles that spend and spread their influence through the whole Universe: The one they called The Principle of Good, the other they called The Principle of Evil: and that these Two maintain a continual contest and enmity the one with the other. The Principle of Goodness, which is nothing else but God himself, who derived himself in clear and lovely stamps and impressions of Beauty and Goodness through the whole Creation, endeavours still to assimilate and unite it to himself. And on the other side The Principle of Evil, the Prince of darkness, having once stained the Original beauty and glory of the Divine workmanship, is continually striving to mould and shape it more and more into his own likeness. And as there is such a perpetual and active Enmity between God and the Evil Spirit: so whatsoever is from God is perpetually opposing and warring against that which arises from the Devil. The Divine Goodness hath put enmity between whatsoever is born of him or flows forth from itself, and the Seed of the Serpent. As at the beginning he divided between the Night and the Day, between Light and Darkness, so that they can never intermingle or comply one with another, or be reconciled one to the other: so neither can those Beams of Divine light and love which descend from God upon the Souls of men be ever reconciled to those foul and filthy Mists of Sin and Darkness which ascend out of the bottomless pit of Hell and Death. That Spirit is not from God, who is the Father of lights and in whom there is no darkness, as the Apostle speaks, which endeavours to compound with Hell, and to accommodate between God and the Devil. God himself hath set the bounds to darkness and the shadow of death. Divine Truth and Goodness cannot contract themselves with any thing that is from Hell, or espouse themselves to any Brat of darkness: as it was set forth in the Emblem under the Old Law, where none of the Holy seed might marry with the people of any strange God. Though that Rule, Touch not, taste not, handle not, be abolished in the Symbolical rites, yet it hath an immutable Mystery in it not subject to the laws or changes of Time. He that will entertain any correspondence with the Devil, or receive upon his Soul his Image or the number of his name, must first divest and strip himself of all that which hath any alliance to God or true Goodness within him: He must transform his Mind into the true likeness and similitude of those foul Fiends of darkness, and abandon all relation to the Highest and Supremest Good. And yet though some men endeavour to do this, and to smother all those Impressions of Light and Reason which God hath folded up in every man's Being, and destroy all that which is from God within them, that so they may reconcile themselves to Sin and Hell; yet can they never make any just peace with them: There is no peace to the wicked, but they are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt. Those Evil spirits are always turbulent and restless; and though they maintain continually a War with God and his kingdom, yet are they always making disquietings and disturbances in their own kingdom; and the more they contest with God and are deprived of him, the more full are they of horror and tumultuous commotions within. Nothing can stand firm and sure, nothing can have any true and quiet establishment, that hath not the Everlasting arms of true Goodness under it to support it. And as those that deliver over themselves most to the Devil's pleasure, and devote themselves to his service, cannot do it without a secret inward Antipathy against him or dreadful thoughts of him: so neither can those impure spirits stand before the Divine glory; but being filled with trembling and horror continually endeavour to hid themselves from it, and flee away before it as the Darkness flies away before the Light. And according as God hath in any Places in any Ages of the world made any manifestations of himself to men, so have those Evil spirits been vanquished, and forced to quit their former Territories; as is especially very observable in the ceasing of all the Grecian Oracles soon after the Gospel was promulged in those parts, when those desolate spirits with horrid and dismal groans resigned up their habitations, as Plutarch hath recorded of them. Our Saviour hath found by good experience, how weak a thing the Devil's kingdom is, when he spoiled all the Principalities and Powers of darkness, and made a show of them openly, triumphing over them in (or, by) it, that is, his cross, as the Apostle speaks: and if we will resolutely follow the Captain of our salvation, and fight under his banner, as good soldiers of Jesus Christ, we have full security given us for the same success; Resist the Devil, and he will flee from you. CHAP. II. The First observable, That the Devil is continually busy with us. The Devil considered under a double notion. 1. As an Apostate Spirit which fell from God. The great danger of the Devil's activity, not only when he presents himself in some corporeal shape, but when he is unseen and appears not. The weakness and folly of those who are afraid of him only when he appears embodied. That the Good Spirit of God is active for the Good of Souls. How regardless men are of the gentle motions of the Divine Spirit; and how unwatchful and secure under the Suggestions of the Evil Spirit. How we may discover the Devil in his Stratagems, and under his several disguises and appearances. IN these words [Resist the Devil, and he will flee from you] we shall take notice First of what is evidently 1. implied, viz. That the Devil is continually busy with us. This may be considered under a double notion. 1. By the Devil we are to understand that Apostate Spirit which fell from God, and is always designing to hale down others from God also. The old Dragon (mentioned in the Revelation) with his tail drew down the third part of the Stars of heaven and cast them to the Earth. As true Goodness is not content to be happy alone; so neither can Sin and Wickedness be content to be miserable alone. The Evil Spirit told God himself what his employment was, viz. To go to Job 1. 7. and fro in the earth, and to walk up and down in it: he is always walking up and down through dry places (where no Divine influences fall to water it) as our Saviour speaks, seeking rest, though always restless. The Philosophy of the ancients hath observed That every man that comes into this world hath a good and an evil Genius attending upon him. It were perhaps a vain curiosity to inquire whether the number of Evil spirits exceed the number of Men: but this is too too certain, that we never want the secret and latent attendance of them. The Devil is not only a word or a name made to affright and scare timorous men with; neither are we then only in danger of him, when he presents himself to us in some Corporeal form: it is nothing else but a superstitious weakness to be afraid of him only then when he appears embodied, and to neglect that unseen and insensible influence which his continual converse with us as an unbodyed spirit may have upon us. Those Evil spirits are not yet cast out of the world into outer darkness, though it be prepared for them: the bottomless pit hath not yet shut its mouth upon them. They fell from God not so much by a Local descent, as by a Mental apostasy and dissimilitude to God: and they are now in libera custodia, having all this habitable world for their Rendezvous, and are styled by the Apostle Spiritual wickednesses in high places. Wheresoever there are any in a disposition to sin against Ephes. 6. God, wheresoever there are any capable of a Temptation or Diabolical impression, here and there are they. A man needs not dig into the chambers of death, or search among the shadows of darkness to find them; he needs not go down into hell to seek them, or use any Magical charms to raise them up from thence: No, those wicked and impure spirits are always wand'ring up and down amongst us, seeking whom they may devour. As there is a Good Spirit conversant in the world, inviting and alluring men to virtue and Goodness; so there is an Evil spirit, perpetually tempting and inticeing men to Sin and Vice. unclothed and unbodyed natures may converse with us by secret illapses, while we are not ware of them. I doubt not but there are many more Divine impressions made upon the Minds of men, both Good and Bad, from the Good Spirit of God, then are ordinarily observed; there are many soft and silent impulses, gentle motions, like our Saviour's putting in his hand by the hole of the door, as it is in the Canticles, soliciting and exciting men to Religion and ch 5. Holiness; which they many times regard not, and take little notice of. There are such secret messages often brought from Heaven to the Souls of men by an unknown and unseen hand, as the Psalmist speaks; Once, yea twice have I heard it, that power belongeth unto God. And as there are such divine irradiations sliding into the Souls of men from God: so there are no question many & frequent suggestions to the Fancies and Imaginations of men arising from the Evil Spirit; and a watchful observer of his own heart and life shall often hear the voice of wisdom & the voice of Folly speaking to him: he that hath his eyes opened, may see both the visions of God falling upon him, and discern the false and foolish fires of Satan that would draw away his mind from God. This is our unhappiness, that the Devil is so near us and we see him not; he is conversant with us, and yet we are not ware of him. Those are the most desperate designs & likeliest to take effect, that are carried on by an unseen and unappearing enemy: and if we will provide ourselves against the Devil, who never misseth any opportunity that lies in his way to tempt us, nor is ever failing in any plot, we must then have our Senses exercised to discern both good and evil; we must get our Minds awakened with clear and evident Principles of Light; we must get our judgements and Consciences well informed with sober and practical Truth, such as tends to make us most like to God, and to reconcile our natures more perfectly to Divine goodness. Then shall we know and discover that Apostate Spirit in all his Stratagems whereby he seeks to bereave us of our happiness: we shall know him as well when he cloaths himself like an Angel of light, as when he appears in his own nakedness and deformity. It is observed by some, That God never suffered the Devil to assume any humane shape, but with some Character whereby his Body might be distinguished from the true Body of a man: and surely the Devil cannot so exactly counterfeit an Angel of light, but that by a discerning mind he may be distinguished from him; as they say a Beggar can never act a Prince so cunningly, but that his behaviour sometime sliding into the course way and principles of his Education, will betray the meanness of his pedigree to one of a true noble extraction. A bare Imitation will always fall short of the Copy from whence it is taken; and though Sin and error may take up the mantle of Truth and cloth themselves with it, yet he that is inwardly acquainted with Truth, and an ingenuous lover and pursuer of it, will be able to find out the Imposture, he will be able to see through the vail into the naked deformity of them. CHAP. III. 2. Of the activity of the Devil considered as a Spirit of Apostasy and as a Degenerate nature in men. That the Devil is not only the name of one Particular thing, but a Nature. The Difference between the Devil and Wicked men is rather the Difference of a Name then of Natures. The kingdom and Tyranny of the Devil and Hell is chief within, in the Qualities and Dispositions of men's Minds. Men are apt to quarrel with the Devil in the name and notion, and defy him with their Tongues, while they entertain him in their Hearts, and comply with all that which the Devil is. The vanity of their pretended Love to God, and Hatred of the Devil. That there is nothing Better than God himself, for which we should love him; and to love him for his own Beauty and Excellency is the best way of loving him. That there is nothing worse than Sin itself, for which we should hate it; and to hate it for its own deformity is the truest way of hating it. How Hell and Misery arises from within men. Why Wicked men are so insensible of their Misery in this life. 2. WHen we say, The Devil is continually busy with us, I mean not only some Apostate spirit as one particular Being, but that spirit of Apostasy which is lodged in all men's natures; and this may seem particularly to be aimed at in this place, if we observe the context: as the Scripture speaks of Christ not only as a Particular person, but as a Divine Principle in holy Souls. Indeed the Devil is not only the name of one particular thing, but a nature: He is not so much one particular Being designed to torment Wicked men in the world to come, as a hellish and diabolical nature seated in the minds of men. He is not only one Apostate Spirit fallen down from heaven out of the lap of Blessedness; but also a Spirit of Apostasy, a degenerate and depraved nature. Can the Devil change his foul and impure nature, he would neither be a Devil nor miserable: and so long as any man carries about him a sinful and corrupt nature, he can neither be in perfect favour with God, nor blessed. Wickedness is the Form and Entelech of all the wicked spirits: it is the difference of a name rather than any proper difference of natures that is between the Devil and Wicked men. Wheresoever we see Malice, Revenge, Pride, Envy, Hatred, Self-will and Self-love, we may say Here, and There is that Evil spirit. This indeed is that Venenum Serpentis, the poison and sting too of that Diabolical nature. As the Kingdom of Heaven is not so much without men as within, as our Saviour tells us: so the Tyranny of the Devil and Hell is not so much in some External things, as in the Qualities and Dispositions of men's Minds. And as the enjoying of God and conversing with him consists not so much in a change of place, as in the participation of the Divine nature, and in our assimilation unto God: so our conversing with the Devil is not so much by a mutual local presence, as by an imitation of a wicked and sinful nature derived upon men's own Souls. Therefore the Jews were wont to style that Original pravity that is lodged in men's spirits. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Angel of death and fiend of darkness. Those filthy Lusts and Corruptions which men foment and entertain in their Minds, they are the noisome Vapours that ascend out of the bottomless pit; they are the thick Mists and fogs of Hellish darkness arising in their Souls, as a Preface and Introduction of Hell and Death within. Where we find Uncleanness, Intemperance, Covetousness, or any such impure or unhallowed behaviour, we may say, Here Satan's throne is. This sinful and corrupt nature being the true issue of Hell itself, is continually dragging down men's Souls thither. All Sin and Wickedness in man's Spirit hath the Central force and Energy of Hell in it, and is perpetually pressing down towards it as towards its own place. There needs no Fatal necessity or Astral impulses to tumble wicked men down forcibly into Hell: No, for Sin itself, hastened by the mighty weight of its own nature, carries them down thither with the most swift and headlong motion. As they say of true Holiness and Christianity, Christi sacrina pennas habet, Christ's burden, which is nothing else but true Godliness, is a winged thing, and bravely bears itself upwards upon its own wings soaring aloft towards God: so we may say of all Impiety, Diaboli sarcina pondus habet; the Devilish nature is always within the Central attractions of Hell, and its own weight instigates and accelerates its motion thither. He that allows himself in any sin, or useth an unnatural dalliance with any vice, does nothing else in reality then entertain an incubus Damon; he prostitutes a wanton Soul, and forceth it to commit lewdness with the Devil himself. Sin is nothing better than a Brat of darkness and deformity; it hath no other extraction or pedigree than may be derived from those unclean spirits that are nestled in Hell. All men in reality converse either with God or with the Devil, and walk in the Confines either of Heaven or of Hell: They have their fellowship either with the Father and the Son, as S. John speaks; or else with the Apostate and evil Angels. I know these Expressions will seem to some very harsh and unwelcome: But I would beseech them to consider what they will call that spirit of Malice and Envy, that spirit of Pride, Ambition, vainglory, Covetousness, Injustice, Uncleanness, etc. that commonly reigns so much, and acts so violently in the Minds and Lives of men. Let us speak the truth, and call things by their own Names; let us not flatter ourselves, or paint our filthy sores: so much as there is of Sin in any man, so much there is of the old man, so much there is of the Diabolical nature. Why do we defy the Devil so much with our Tongues, while we entertain him in our Hearts? But indeed men do but quarrel with him in the name and notion of him, while yet their Hearts can readily comply with all that which the Devil is: that Antipathy which is ordinarily expressed against him, like those natural Antipathies which the Philosophers speak of, being nothing else but Occult qualities, or Natural instincts, which as they arise not from any principle of Reason or Understanding, so neither are they guided or governed by it. As men's Love to God is ordinarily nothing else but the mere tendency of their Natures to something that hath the notion or name of God put upon it, without any clear or distinct apprehensions of him; so their Hatred of the Devil is commonly nothing else but an inward displicency of nature against something entitled by the Devil's name. Or else at best, Corrupt minds do nothing else but fashion out a God and a Devil, a Heaven and a Hell, to themselves, by the power of their own Fancies: and so they are to them nothing else but their own Creatures, sustained and supported by the force of their own Imaginations which first raised them. And as they commonly make a God like to themselves, such a one as they can best comply with and love; so they make a Devil most unlike to themselves, which may be any thing but what they themselves are, that so they may most freely spend their Anger and Hatred upon him: just as they say of some of the Ethiopians, who use to paint the Devil white, because they themselves are black. This is a strange merry kind of Madness, whereby men sportingly bereave themselves of the Supremest Good, and insure themselves as much as may be to Hell and Misery: They may thus cheat themselves for awhile, but the Eternal foundation of the Divine Being is immutable and unchangeable. God is but One, and his Name One, as the * Zech. 14. Prophet speaks, (howsoever the several Fancies of men may shape him out diversely;) and where we find Wisdom, Justice, Loveliness, Goodness, Love and Glory, in their highest elevations and most unbounded dimensions, That is He: and where we find any true participations of these, there is a true Communication of God; and a defection from these is the Essence of Sin and the Foundation of Hell. Now if this be rightly considered, I hope there will an Argument strong enough appear from the Thing itself, to enforce S. James his Exhortation, Resist the Devil: endeavour to mortify and crucify the Old man with all the corrupt lusts and affections of the Flesh. We never so truly hate Sin, as when we hate it for its own Ugliness and deformity: as we never love God so truly, as when we love him for his own beauty and excellency. If we calculate aright, as we shall find nothing Better than God himself, for which we should love him; so neither shall we find any thing Worse than Sin itself, for which we should hate it. Our assimilation to God and conformity to him, instates us in a firm possession of true Happiness, which is nothing else but God himself, who is all Being and Blessedness; and our dissimilitude to God and Apostasy from him, involves us in our own misery, and sets us at the greatest enmity to what our unsatiable desires most of all crave for, which is the enjoyment of True and Satisfying Good. Sins are those fiery Snakes which will eternally lash and torment all damned spirits. Every man's Hell arises from the bottom of his own Soul; as those stinking Mists and tempestuous Exhalations that infest the Earth, have their first original from the Earth itself. Those streams of fire and brimstone ordained for the torment of all damned spirits, are rather the exsudations of their own filthy and corrupt nature then any external thing. Hell is not so much induced, as educed out of men's filthy Lusts and Passions. I will not here dispute what external appendices there may be of Heaven or Hell; but methinks I no no where find a more Graphical description of the true Properties and Operations of them, though under other names, then in those Characters of the Flesh and Spirit, in Galat. 5. ver. 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. Eternal death is begotten and brought forth out of the womb of lust, and is little else but Sin consummated and in its full growth, as S. James intimates chap. 1. Would wicked men dwell a little more at home, and descend into the bottom of their own Hearts, they should soon find Hell opening her mouth wide upon them, and those secret fires of inward fury and displeasure breaking out upon them, which might fully inform them of the estate of true Misery, as being a short anticipation of it. But in this life wicked men for the most part elude their own Misery for a time, and seek to avoid the dreadful sentence of their own Consciences, by a tergiversation and flying from themselves into a converse with other things, Ut nemo in sese tentat descendere; else they would soon find their own home too hot for them. But while men's Minds are perpetually rambling all the world over in a pursuit of worldly designs, they are unacquainted with the affairs of their own Souls; and know not how deeply a Self-converse and reflection upon their own prodigious deformities would pierce their Souls with anguish: how vastly would they swell with Fury, Rage, horror, Consternation and whatsoever is contrary to that ineffable Light and Love and Peace which is in Heaven, in natures fully reconciled and united to true Goodness? As true Goodness cannot borrow Beauty from any external thing to recommend itself to the Minds and Affections of Good men, seeing itself is the very Idea and true life of all Beauty and Perfection, the source of Bliss and Peace to all that partake of her: so neither can Sin and Wickedness to an enlightened Soul appear more Ugly, loathsome and hateful, in any other shape then its own. CHAP. iu. The Second Observable, viz. The Warfare of a Christian life. True Religion consists not in a mere passive capacity and sluggish kind of doing nothing, nor in a melancholy sitting still or slothful waiting, etc. but it consists in inward life and power, vigour and activity. A discovery of the dulness and erroneousness of that Hypothesis, viz. That Good men are wholly Passive, and unable at any time to move without some External impetus, some impression and impulse from without upon them: or, That all Motions in Religion are from an External Principle. Of the Quality and Nature of the true Spiritual Warfare, and of the Manner and Method of it. That it is transacted upon the inner Stage of men's Souls, and managed without Noise or pompous Observation; and without any hindrance or prejudice to the most peaceful, sedate and composed temper of a religious Soul. This further illustrated from the consideration of the false and pretended Zeal for God and his kingdom against the Devil; which though it be impetuous, and makes a great noise and a fair show in the world, is yet both impotent and ineffectual. FRom these words, Resist the Devil, we may take notice of the Warfare of a Christian life, of that Active 2. life and valour which Good men express in this world. A true Christian spirit is masculine and generous; it is no such poor, sluggish, pusillanimous thing as some men fancy it to be, but active and noble. We fight not, saith the Apostle, against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, and spiritual wickednesses in high places. True Religion does not consist in a mere Passive capacity, in a sluggish kind of doing nothing, that so God himself might do all; but it consists in life & power within: therefore it is called by the Apostle, The spirit of power, of love, & of a sound mind; it's called the law of the spirit 2 Tim. 1. Rom. 8. of life, strongly enabling Good men against the law of Sin and Death. True wisdom, as the Wise man hath well styled it, is the unspotted mirror of the power of God, and a pure influence flowing from the glory of the Almighty; neither can any defiled thing enter into it: it goes in and out in the strength of God himself; and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly. Every thing as it partakes more of God, and comes nearer to him, so it becomes more active and lively, as making the nearer approaches to the Fountain of life and virtue. A Good man doth not only then move, when there is some powerful impression and impulse upon him; but he hath a Spring of perpetual motion within. When God restores men to a new and divine life, he doth not make them like so many dead Instruments, stringing and fitting them, which yet are able to yield no sound of themselves; but he puts a living Harmony within them. That is but a Mechanical religion which moves no longer than some External weights and Impulses are upon it, whether those be (I think I may safely say) from some Worldly thing or from God himself, while he acts upon men from without them, and not from within them. It is not a Melancholy kind of sitting still, and slothful waiting, that speaks men enlivened by the Spirit and power of God. It is not Religion to stifle and smother those Active powers and principles which are within us, or to dry up the Fountain of inward life and virtue. How say some amongst us, That there is no resurrection from the dead? no spirit or life within; but all our motions in Religion are merely from some assisting Form without? Good men do not walk up and down the world merely like Ghosts and Shadows, or like dead Bodies assumed by some Spirit, which are taken up and laid down again by him at his pleasure: But they are indeed living men, by a real participation from him who is indeed a quickening Spirit. Were our Religion so much a Thing without us as some men would seem to fancy it, were we so dead and liveless as that we could never move but from an External impetus; as our Religion could never indeed be called Ours, so neither could we ever have the inward sense of that Bliss and Peace which goes along with it; but must be like so many heavy logs or dull pieces of Earth in Heaven and Happiness. That is a very earthly and flat Spirit in Religion which sinks like the lees to the bottom; or rather it is like that Terra damnata which the chemists speak of, having no vigour, life or activity left in it, is truly dead to God, and is reprobate to any thing of Heaven. We know the Pedigree of those Exhalations that arise no higher than a mere external force from the Sun's heat weigheth them up, to be but base and earthly; and therefore having no natural warmth or energy within themselves imparted to them, they sink down again to the Earth from whence they came. The Spirit which is from Heaven is always, out of an inbred Nobleness which bears it up, carried upwards again towards Heaven from whence it came, powerfully resisting all things that would deprive it of God or hinder it from returning to its Original: it is always moving upwards in an even and steady way towards God from whence it came, leaving the dark Regions of Hell and Death under it: it resists Hell and Darkness by assimilating and conforming itself to God; it resists Darkness in the armour of light; it resists Death and destruction by the power of Divine love. It must be something of Heaven in the Minds of men, which must resist the Devil and Hell. We do not always resist the Devil then when we bid defiance to him, or when we declaim most zealously against him; neither does our Resisting and Opposing of Sin and Wickedness consist in the violence of some Feminine passions which may sometimes be raised by the power of Fancy in the Minds of men against it: But it consists rather in a mature and sedate resolution against it in our own Souls, arising from a clear judgement of the foul and hateful nature of Sin itself, and him who is the Patron of it; in a constant and serious endeavour of settling the government of our own Souls, and establishing the principality of Grace and Peace within ourselves. There is a pompous and popular kind of tumult in the world, which sometimes goes for Zeal to God and his kingdom against the Devil; whenas men's own Pride and Passions disguise themselves under the notions of a Religious fervency. Some men think themselves the greatest Champions for God and his Cause, when they can take the greatest liberty to quarrel with every thing abroad, and without themselves, which is not shaped according to the mould of their own Opinions, their own Self-will, Humour and Interest: Whereas indeed this Spiritual warfare is not so much maintained against a foreign enemy, as against those domestic rebellions that are within: neither is it then carried on most successfully, when men make the greatest noise and most of all raise the dust. That impetuous violence and tempestuousness with which men are acted in pretensions of Religion arises ordinarily, I doubt, from unquiet and disturbed Minds within: whereas it is indeed the inward conflicts and commotions, sin and vice, and not a holy zeal for God, which discompose the Minds of men. Sin, where it is entertained, will indeed breed disturbance, and break the peace of a man's own spirit; but a true resisting and opposing of it is the restoring of the Soul to its just Consistency, freedom and Serenity again. As God's kingdom is set up, so the Devil's kingdom may be pulled down, without the noise of axes and hammers. We may then attain to the greatest achievements against the gates of Hell and Death, when we most of all possess our own Souls in patience, & collect our Minds into the most peaceful, composed and united temper. The motions of true Practical Religion are most like that of the Heavens, which though most swift, is yet most silent. As Grace and true Religion is no lazy or sluggish thing, but in perpetual motion; so all the motions of it are soft and gentle: While it acts most powerfully within, it also acts most peacefully. The kingdom of heaven comes not with observation, that men may say, Lo here, or Lo there; it is not with the devouring fire coming after it, or a whirlwind going before it. This fight and contest with Sin and Satan is not to be known by the rattling of the Chariots, or the sound of an alarm: it is indeed alone transacted upon the inner stage of men's souls and spirits; and is rather a pacifying and quieting of all those riots and tumults raised there by Sin and Satan; it is rather a reconciling the minds of men to Truth, Justice and Holiness; it is a captivating and subjecting all our Powers and Faculties to God and true Goodness, through the effectual working of a divine Love and Humility: and this resistance is always attended with Victory, and Triumph warts upon this Fight; which is the Third and last Observation we shall make upon these Words. CHAP. V. The Third Observable, viz. The Certainty of Success and victory to all those that resist the Devil. This grounded upon 1. The Weakness of the Devil and Sin considered in themselves. 2. God's powerful assisting all faithful Christians in this warfare. The Devil may allure and tempt, but cannot prevail, except men consent and yield to his suggestions. The Devil's strength lies in men's treachery and falseness to their own Souls. Sin is strong, because men oppose it weakly. The error of the Manichees about a Principium mali defended by men in their lives and practices. Of God's readiness to assist Christians in their spiritual Consticts, his Compassionate regards and the more special respects of his Providence towards them in such occasions. The Conclusion, discovering the Evil and Horridness of magic, Diabolical Contracts, etc. THe Certainty of success to all those that resist the Devil; 3. Resist the Devil, and he will flee from you. He cannot stand, when opposed in the strength of God, he will fall down as swift as lightning; he cannot bear the glory of God shining in the Souls of men. Here it is no more but Stand, and Conquer; Resist, and Vanquish. For First of all, The Devil and Sin in themselves 1. considered are but weak and impotent; they cannot prevail over that Soul which yields not to them: the Evil spirit then only prevails over us, when we ourselves consent to his suggestions; all his strength lies in our treachery and falseness to our own Souls. Though those wicked spirits be perpetually so near us, yet they cannot bow or bend our Wills: there is a place of defence in the Souls of men into which they cannot enter: they may stand at a distance, allure and entice them; but they cannot prevail over them, except they wilfully and shamefully deliver over their strength into the enemy's hand. It is indeed nothing else but Hell itself in the Souls of men that gives the Devil such free entertainment there: the Wills of men stamped with a diabolical form, and bearing the Devil's image and inscription upon them, declare his right over them. Men are therefore so much captivated by him because they voluntarily take his yoke upon them. Can we, or would we, resist Sin and Satan, they could not hurt us. Every thing is weak and impotent according to the distance it stands from God who is the only Fountain of life and power: and therefore it was well resolved by the Philosopher, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Sin in itself is a weak and impotent thing, and proceeds from weakness; it consists not properly in any native power and strength which it hath within itself, but in an impotency, and privation of all true Being and Perfection; and therefore wheresoever any thing of God appears, it will destroy it. He that is born of God, shall overcome the World, the Devil and Sin; for the seed of God remaineth in him. Let us endeavour to get our Minds enlightened with Divine Truth, clear and Practical Truth, let us earnestly endeavour after a true participation of the divine nature; and then shall we find Hell and Death to slay always before us. Let us not impute the fruits of our own sluggishness to the power of the Evil spirit without, or to God's neglecting of us: Say not, Who shall stand against those mighty Giants? No; arm thyself with the mind of Christ, a fixed resolution to serve the will and pleasure of the Almighty; and then fear not what Sin and Hell can do against thee. Open thy windows, thou Sluggard, and let in the beams of Divine light that are there waiting upon thee till thou awake out of thy Slothfulness; then shalt thou find the shadows of the night dispelled and scattered, and the warm beams of Light and Love enfolding of thee, which the higher they arise upon the Horizon of thy Soul, the more fully they will display their native strength and beauty upon thee, transforming thee more & more from darkness to light, from the similitude of Satan into a participation of the Divine image. The Devil is not to be kept off from us by setting any Spell about us, or driven away from us by any Magical charms. We need not go and beat the air to drive away those Evil spirits from about us, as Herodotus reports the Caunians once to have beaten out the strange Gods from amongst them: but let us turn within ourselves, and beat down that Pride and Passion, those Holds of Satan there, which are therefore strong, because we oppose them weakly. Sin is nothing else but a degeneration from true Goodness, conceived by a dark and cloudy Understanding, and brought forth by a corrupt Will; it hath no consistency in itself, or foundation of its own to support it. What the Jews have observed of error is true of all Sin, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Mendacium non habet pedes, it hath no feet, no Basis of its own to subsist and rest itself upon. Let us withdraw our Will and Affections from it, and it will soon fall into nothing. It was the fond error of the Manichees, That there was some solid Principium mali, which having an Eternal existence of its own, had also a mighty and uncontrollable power from within itself, whereby it could forcibly enter and penetrate into the Souls of men; and seating itself there, by some hidden influences irresistablie incline and enforce them to evil: which error I wish were as well confuted by the lives and practices of men, as it hath been by the Writings both of Fathers and Philosophers. But it's too apparent that men maintain that Lie by a compliance with the Diabolical powers: We ourselves uphold that kingdom of darkness, which else would tumble down and slide into that nothing from whence it came. All Truth and Goodness are of an Eternal nature, they are One, and Unchangeable, subsisting upon the strength of Omnipotency: But all Sin and Vice is our own creature; we only give life to them which indeed are our death, and would soon whither and fade away did we subtract our concurrence from them. Secondly, We have a further Ground for our expectation 2. of Victory in all contests with Sin and Satan, from the powerful assistance of God himself, who is never wanting to those that seek after him, and never fails those that engage in his quarrels. While we strive against Sin, we may safely expect that the Divinity itself will strive with us, and derive that strength and power into us that shall at last make us more than Conquerors. God hath not forsaken the earth: but as his. Almightyessence runs through all things, sustaining and upholding the frame of the whole Universe; so more especially does it bear up in its Almighty arms those things that are more nearly related to himself, always cherishing them with his own Goodness. Wheresoever God beholds any breathe after himself, he gives life to them, as those which are his own breath in them. As he who projects wickedness, shall be sure to find Satan standing at his right hand ready to assist him in it: so he that pursues after God and Holiness, shall find God nearer to him than he is to himself, in the free and liberal communications of himself to him. He that goes out in God's battles, fight under our Saviour's banner, may look upwards, and opening his eyes may see the mountains full of horses and chariots of fire round about him. God hath not so much delight in the death and destruction of men, as to see them struggling and contending for life, and himself stand by as a looker on. No, but with the most tender and fatherly compassions his bowels yern over them, and his Almighty arm is stretched forth for them; and in his strength they shall prevail: they shall be born up, as upon eagle's wings; they shall walk in the might of his strength who is able to save, and not faint. Where there is any serious and sober Resolution against Sin, any real motion towards God, there is the blessing of Heaven in it; he that planted it, will also water it, and make it to bud and blossom and bring forth fruit. Wherefore to shut up this Discourse by way of Application, Let us make use of this as a further Argument to enforce the Apostles Exhortation upon ourselves, Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might, and, as the Psalmist speaks of his Enemies, so let us say of our spiritual Enemies, They compass me about, they compass me in on every side; but in the name of the Lord I will destroy them. Let us set ourselves with all our might to mortify the old man, & to crucify all the affections of the Flesh: Let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily besets us, and run with patience the race that is set before us; Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith, who is set down at the right hand of the throne of God, as a great and mighty conqueror, who will declare the perfection of his own power in our weakness, if we lay hold of his strength. Though we are not able to change our own natures, or to rise above the source of our animal and Selfish being's, by our own power; yet let us endeavour to subdue all those External vices of Luxury and wantonness, of Injustice, Revenge and the like; let us withdraw the fuel of Pride, Malice, vainglory and whatsoever else holds us in captivity to Hell, and with confidence apply ourselves to him who is an Almighty Saviour; and when he joins his Almighty strength with us, we need not fear any thing: He shall tread down Satan under our feet, and we shall one day tread upon the Lion and Adder, the young Lion and the Dragon shall we trample under our feet: we shall break the Serpent's head, though he may bruise our heel. Though God may suffer him so far to serve his own rage and the hellish malice of such as are in league with him, as to pull down with violence our earthly Tabernacles; yet while we so suffer by him, we are conquerors over him. I should now conclude all, and leave you with this General application, but that the present Occasion hath drawn it down for me to a particular case. Did we not live in a world of professed wickedness, wherein so many men's Sins go in open view before them to judgement, it might be thought needless to persuade men to resist the Devil, when he appears in his own colours to make merchandise of them, and comes in a formal way to bargain with them for their Souls; that which humane nature (however enthralled to Sin and Satan in a more mysterious way) abhors, and none admit but those who are quite degenerated from humane kind. That which I shall further add, shall be by way of Caution only to suggest two things which are the forerunners to such Diabolical contracts, and put temptations into the hands of the Tempter. 1. Those Hellish passions of Malice, Envy and Revenge, which are the black Form and Image of the Devil himself; these when they are once ripened, fit men for the most Formal converse with the Devil that may be: That nature cannot easily abhor him, which is so perfectly conformed to him. 2ly. The use of any Arts, Rites or Ceremonies not understood, of which we can give no Rational or Divine account; this indeed is nothing else but a kind of magic which the Devil himself owns, and gives life to, though he may not be corporeally present, or require presently any further Covenant from the users of them. The Devil no question is present to all his own Rites and Ceremonies, though men discern him not; and may upon the use of them secretly produce those Effects which may gain credit to them. Among these Rites we may reckon Insignificant forms of words, with their several modes and manner of pronunciation, Astrelogical arts, and whatsoever else pretends to any strange Effects which we cannot with good reason either ascribe to God or Nature. As God will only be conversed withal in a way of Light and Understanding; so the Devil loves to be conversed with in a way of Darkness and Obscurity. The End. A SERMON PREACHED AT THE FUNERAL OF Mr JOHN SMITH late Fellow of Queen's College in Cambridge, who departed this life Aug. 7. 1652. And lies interred in the chapel of the same College. WITH A SHORT ACCOUNT of his Life and Death. BY SIMON PATRICK, than Fellow of Queen's College. Prov. 10. 7. The memory of the Just is blessed. 2 KINGS, 2. 12. And Elisha saw it, and he cried, My Father, My Father, the Chariot of Israel, and the Horsemen thereof. WHen I saw the blessed Spirit of our Brother, shall I say? or, our Father, making haste out of that Body which lies before us, these words which I have now read came into my Mind: And methought I saw the good Genius of this place, which inspired us with so much sense of Learning and Goodness, taking its flight and leaving this lower world: At whom my Soul catched, as I fancied Elisha to have done at Elijah, and I cried out, O my Father, My Father, etc. Desirous I was (me-thought) that his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might have been a little while deferred; that I might have stayed the wheels of that Triumphant chariot wherein he seemed to be carried; that we might have kept him a little longer in this world, till by his holy breathe into our Souls, and the Grace of God, we had been all made meet to have some share in that inheritance of the Saints in light: and so he might have gone to Heaven with his Train, taking all his Friends along with him as Attendants to that Glory and Honour wherewith I make no doubt he is crowned. It grieved me in my thoughts that there should be so many Orphans left without a Father, a Society left naked without one of her best Guardians and Chieftains, her very Chariot and Horsemen; unto whose instruction and brave conduct not a few of us will acknowledge that they own much of their skill and abilities. For I do not fear to say, as Antoninus doth of the Best man, that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Priest or Minister of God's who was very subservient to him in his great work. If he was not a Prophet like Elijah, yet I am sure he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as Gr. Nazianzen I think speaks of S. Basil) an Interpreter of the Spirit, and very well acquainted with his mind; a man sent down from heaven for our good, and is now gone thither from whence he came, leaving us behind him here, a company of poor Fatherless children, the Sons of this Prophet, weeping and crying out, O my Father, my Father, the Chariot of Israel, and the Horsemen thereof. Which sad note would have been most fitly sung just at the Ascension of his holy Soul: yet give me leave to descant a while upon it, now that we are come to inter his Body, which was the dark Shadow where that admirable and illustrious Learning, wisdom and Godliness, walked up and down and shone through upon the world. You will easily see at the first glance that Something will here offer itself to be said of Elijah, and Something of Elisha: Of Elijah, in that he is called Father, the Chariot and Horsemen of Israel; of Elisha, in that he applies this relation to himself, saying, My Father, My Father. Concerning Elijah we may observe First, His Superiority, Eminency, and Dignity. Secondly, His singular Care which he took of others. Thirdly, His great Usefulness, or the Benefit which his Country enjoyed by him. Concerning Elisha we may observe the Expression of Three things likewise; First, Of his great Affection and Love. Secondly, Of the Sense he felt of his loss. Thirdly, Of that Honour which he gave him, or that Respect and Regard which he had unto him. I shall speak a little of all these, and then parallel our Case as well as I can to Both. 1. Observe Elijah's Eminency, Superiority, Dignity and Worth; which is both signified in the word Father, and also in the other Expressions, the Chariot, and Horsemen of Israel. The Talmudists say of the word Abba, which is near of kin as can be to this in the Text, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Buxtorf. Lex. Talmud. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Abba is a word of honour and glory, even as Rabbi: whence the Latin abbess, and our English Abbot, have been derived to denote the greatest person in a Society. And therefore whom he here calls Father, is called verse 3 and 5. Master or Lord, knowst thou not that Jehovah will take 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy Lord, or Master, from thee today? Elijah was the Head in the Body of the Prophets, the Dux gregis, a main leading man among the rest. And this was by reason of his wisdom, Experience and gray-headed Understanding, expressed in the word Father. He was a Sage and grave person, such an Head as was full of Prudence, Skill & Advice, wherein were moulded many sober and wise Resolutions, many weighty and mature Determinations, profound and deep Notions, holy and pious Counsels for the teaching of rawer and greener heads. He was one that did imitate God the Father of all, and in some sort represent him here below, being an Oracle among men. And such Instruments God hath always in the world, Men of greater height and stature than others, whom he sets up as torches on an hill to give light to all the Regions round about; Men of public and universal influence, like the Sun itself which illuminates all and is not sparing of its beams; Men whose Souls come into the world (as the Chaldee Oracle speaks) — 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, clothed with a great deal of Mind, more impregnated than others with Divine notions, and having more teeming Wombs to enrich the world with the fruit of them: Men of wide and capacious Souls that can grasp much; and of enlarged, open Hearts, to give forth that freely unto men which the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Fatherly Mind (as the same Oracle calls God) hath given unto them; that so in some sort they may become Fathers in the world in subordination to God. The Sun of Righteousness Jesus Christ is described with seven stars in his right hand, Revelat. 1. which were the Angels of the Churches; Men (its like) who were adorned and beautified with more than ordinary brightness of Mind and Understanding, and did sparkle with more than common heat of Love and Piety, and did shine as Lights in the world in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation. Elijah was such an one; and so was the other Elias, John the Baptist, a burning and a shining light; and so also John 5. 35. shall we find our Father that is deceased to have been. 2. Take notice of the Care which Elijah took of Elisha, and that first as a Master of his Scholar, and secondly as a Father of his Son, or if you will have both in one, as a Fatherly Master. Elisha calls him by this name of Father, because he was his Scholar; and they used commonly to give this title to their Masters or Teachers: whence Pirke Avoth among the Jews, Capitula Patrum, is a Book that contains the wise say & Apophthegms of their Doctors. And so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the New Testament, that which is received by Tradition 1 Peter 1. 18. from their Fathers, signifies nothing else but what their Doctors and learned men in the Law delivered to them; and therefore they are sometimes called the Traditions of the Elders. Jubal is called the Father of such as handle the Harp, Gen. 4. 21. which signifies the same with that which is said of his Brother, verse 22. He was an instructor of artificers in brass and Iron. And hence Solomon saith so often, My Son, hear the instruction of a Father. So that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my Father, my Father, in the Text is nothing else but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my Master, my Master. Elijah taught and instructed him out of the Law, but with such a care and Fatherly affection, that Elisha was truly his Son as well as his Scholar, one whom he loved and tendered, whom he wrapped as a child in his Mantle when he was following the plough, whom he begot into another shape and made another man, in whose heart he sowed the seeds of true righteousness and godliness, that he might do more good in the world. For what God doth by Men, that they many times are said to do. Hence the Apostles call Christians their little children, and dear children, whom they had travailed in birth withal, till Christ was form in them. They lay in Gal. 4. the Apostles wombs, & they brought them forth Christians, and so were truly their Spiritual Fathers. And we may still see such noble Souls which God continues amongst men, whose mouths (as Prov. 10. 11, 20, 21. Solomon says) are as a well of life, whose lips feed many, and whose tongues are as choice Silver: Men that are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 common Fathers, and will embrace every body as a Son, so they be but willing to be taught; that have the whole World for their School, and are instilling wholesome notions and rectified apprehensions into men's Minds, and implanting the Truth which is after Godliness in their Tit. 1. 1. hearts: Men that in all meekness, tenderness and Fatherly affection reprove those that oppose themselves; that endeavour to bring them into their wombs, that (if it be possible) they may beget the life of God and of his Son Christ in their Souls: Men who cherish and foster the least gasping, panting life that is in any Soul; who endeavour to free this life from any obstructions that dull and oppress it: and so in every sense prove themselves to be the true Fathers of the Church, Common Fathers (as before I expressed it) neither bound up in themselves, nor addicted to any particular Sect, but minding the good of all: Who think that they were not born for themselves, nor to be linked to this or that Body or party of men; but are to be perfect as their heavenly Father is perfect, who doth good to all, even to the evil and unthankful. A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or natural affection there is in them, which makes them think that every man's child is their own; and if they could hatch any heavenly life in them, they would willingly cover them under their wings. Such a person was S. Paul, who went through fire and water, had a pilgrimage through this world upon nothing but briers and thorns, out of his great love that he bore to men: The care of all the Churches lay 2 Cor. 11. 28, 29. upon him; and no man could be weak, but he was weak also; no man was offended, but he burned, it put him in a kind of fever: and all this was easy to him, because he had the bowels of a Father. Such another was S. John, who hath every where in his mouth, My little children. A good old Father he was who breathed forth nothing but Love to man. And it need be no offence, if I add there was a Socrates in Athens; who had so much of this kind of Spirit in him, that he styled himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Servant of love, and professed that he knew nothing but how to love. He would often acknowledge himself to be an Ignoramus in all those things whereinto their wise men used to inquire, and that he could say nothing in those Controversies that were agitated about the Gods and such like, (as Max. Tyrius expressly tells us) but he durst not deny himself to have skill in that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the Art of love, wherein he was continually busied and employed; instructing of their Youth, amending of their Manners and making them truly virtuous; which thing the ungrateful wretches of the City called corrupting of their children. And truly it is very often the Lot of these Fathers, which I am speaking of, who nourish up Youth in true piety and virtue, to be esteemed by many the corrupters of the fountain, pests rather than Patres of the places where they live. But they far no worse than Elijah did, who was accounted the Troubler of Israel, though he was the Chariot and Horsemen thereof; a man so useful, that they could not tell how to want him, though they knew not how to value him. And that is the third thing to which I am to proceed: Only let me entreat you that you would think within yourselves in my passage, Such an one was the party deceased. 3. We have here observable the Usefulness of Elijah; he was not only a Father, but the Chariot and Horsemen of Israel, the Security and Safeguard of the place where he was. He calls him by this name in an allusion to the Chariot wherein he was fetched to heaven, and would express by this form of speech the good service he did for Israel. He was in stead of an Army to them; like David, worth ten thousand of the people. He ● Sam. 18. 3. alone was able to fight with all their enemies, and by his force to break all their Legions in pieces. And indeed all Good men, especially men of extraordinary wisdom and Godliness (such as I have been speaking of) are the Guard and Defence of the towns where they reside, yea of the Country whereof they are Members. They are the Tutelar Angels of a Nation, men that can do more by their prayers and tears, their virtuous and holy actions, than an host of men, wherein none is of less valour than Samson or the famed Hercules and Achilles. How had it been with Israel, had it not been for Moses, the meekest man on earth, and yet terrible as an army with banners? And in what a case had Samaria often been, if it had not been for this Elisha the son of Elijah, who was encompassed about with Chariots and horses of fire to fight at his command? What if I say of such men in the Platonists phrase, That they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Keepers of the world, that preserve it from being made like to Sodom and Gomorrah? And if there had been but Ten of these holy Champions there, they had shielded their heads from the arrows of the Almighty, and kept the showers of fire and brimstone from raining upon them Good men are the lifeguard of the World, next to God and good Angels they are the Walls and Bulwarks of a nation; for by their strength they have power with God, as it is said of Host 12. 3. Jacob. And so the Chaldee Paraphrast reads these words of my Text, Thou wast better to Israel by thy prayers then Chariot and Horsemen. They are the Glory of the world, and without them it would be but a rude rabble, a Beast with many heads and no brains, a mere Chaos and Confusion. And it is by reason of them that it doth not run into such disorder as a company of Children would do without their Father, or as a multitude of mad soldiers without their skilful Leader and Commander. And so I have briefly set before you what Elijah was, what those who are Eminent for Godliness are, what every good man ought in some measure to be, and what you shall shortly hear our deceased Father was in an high degree: Men of worth and great renown, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (in a good sense) men of Name, men that may be taken notice of in the world, that shine by their wisdom, Justice and Goodness, that cheer the world by their Love and Fatherly care of all, that hearty endeavour to do good, and would not for a world see men perish if they can help it; in a word, men that are as the Soul of the world, without whom it would be a stinking and unsufferable place. 2. Now let us look a while upon Elisha, and see what he thought of such a man. And 1. We meet with his great Affections expressed in the very Form of the Words, My Father, my Father. Methinks I feel within myself with what pure, dear and ardent love he spoke these words; what a glowing fire there was in his breast when he thought of his spiritual Father. He burned in love to him, as if some spark had fallen from Elijah's fiery Chariot into his Heart: He was all in a desire, as if the Angels that fetched his Father, had lent him a waft of their wings, whereby he strove to fly with him to Heaven. There is not a child that can cry more after the breasts that give it suck and the arms of her that carried it in her womb, than he calls and cries after his Father, O my Father, my Father! where shall I find my Father? what will become of me without my Father? A tender love and kindness there is to be in our Hearts to all men of what nature or nation soever; no man ought to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a lover of himself, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a lover of mankind: Yet a more singular cleaving of Souls there should be to those that are good; but the most unspeakable and greatest adhaesion and union to those by whom we have profited in wisdom and Godliness, and whose lips have dropped the words of life into our Minds. For, as Solomon Prov. 20. 15. hath it, There is Gold, and a multitude of rubies; but the lips of knowledge are a precious Jewel. We should stand affected to them as the Galatians to Gal. 4. 15. S. Paul, who would have pulled out their very eyes, and given them unto him. They ought to be to us oculis chariores, (as the ordinary phrase is) dearer then our eyes: by which speech God expresses his extraordinary love to his people Israel, saying that he kept them as the apple of his eye. And indeed it can scarce be otherwise but that there should be an unknown love between such persons, there being such a secret fascination in frequent converse and familiarity, as entices a man's Soul and Heart out of himself. Those Precepts which we imbibe from another's mouth, naturally call forth a strong affection to flow from us to him; and he who inflames our Souls with love to God, will certainly enkindle a subordinate love within us to himself. The words of wisdom smite an ingenuous Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as with a dart (if I may use Greg. Thaumaturgus his expression concerning Origen's Discourses) and cannot but wound it both with a love to Wisdom & him that shoots those piercing arrows into its Heart. They bind a tractable Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as it werein indissoluble necessities, so that it cannot but love those words & kiss the mouth also from whence they flow unto it A teachable Mind will hang about a wise man's neck, and thereby they come to cleave and cling as fast together as the Soul of Jonathan did unto the Soul of David. So the aforesaid Gregory speaks of himself and Origen, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. This David (meaning Origen) hath entangled and bound up my Soul in such necessary fetters of Love, he hath so tied and even knit me to him, that if I would be disengaged, I cannot quit myself. No, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, though we depart out of this world, our love cannot die; for I love him even as my own Soul; and so my affection must remain for ever. The words of the wise (saith Solomon) are as goads, and as nails fastened by the Masters of the Assemblies, Eccles. 12. 11. If a Master fix his Doctrine in his scholar's mind, he nails himself likewise with the same stroke quasi trabali clavo, by a pin as strong as a beam, to his scholar's heart: They mingle Souls as they do Notions, and mutually pass into each other. 2. We have here likewise the Sense which Elisha had of his great loss. For these Words are Expressions of Sorrow and Lamentation, as appears by the words following, And he took hold of his own clothes, and rend them in pieces: and also from chap. 13. 14. where we find Joash weeping over this Elisha, and saying these very words of my Text, O my Father, my Father, the chariot of Israel, and the Horsemen thereof. And methinks I see Elisha himself here bedewing his cheeks with tears, and hear these words sobbed and sighed out of his Heart, having lost his dear Father, one that took such special care of him whilst he was in the world. Methinks I see his Heart rend as well as his Garments, and there I see Elijah graven in letters as great as was his Love. How could he look on himself and not lament to think that he had lost his Head? how could he behold Israel unguarded, and not throw off his own clothes as a token of his Sorrow? It is said of Jehoiakim Jer. 22. 18. That they shall not lament for him, saying, Ah my Brother, or ah my Sister; they shall not lament for him, saying, Ah Lord, or ah his Glory: which both shows that this is a Form of speech to denote sorrow; and that it is an Honour wicked men shall want, that none shall bemoan their Departure. But the Just shall be had in everlasting remembrance, they shall die desired; and those who can value them, will not let them pass away in silence and with dry eyes. No Tears are spent so well as for the want of God and a good Friend, or a Good man, especially such a one as i before described. And indeed who can think of his gracious lips, his profitable and delightful converse, his cordial love, without a sigh and a tear, without saying, Ah my Father, Ah his Glory? No man will be sooner missed then such an one as he: Ten thousand others may steal out of the world, and no body scarce mind or inquire after them; but let Elijah go away, and you shall have fifty men go three days to seek him, that if it be possible they may enjoy his company a while longer. We find that Jesus himself wept for his friend Lazarus Joh. 11. 35. at which the Jews said, Behold how he loved him. Two Souls joined together in cordial love cannot part without a groan, especially a Son and his Father, a Scholar and his Master. The Child cannot hold itself from crying when it wants the Breast that used to feed it; nor can a Soul thirsty of knowledge but be pained, when the Fountain is stopped that used to quench it. There are not so many of these men in the world but their loss will be as soon felt as the want of a stake in a rotten hedge, or of a Buttress against a bowing wall. He who knows one to have been a Light in the world and a Lamp unto him, will surely be melancholy and sad, when he sees that Light go out and himself left in the dark, without that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, those cheerful and beloved beams which used to shine upon him, to illuminate and warm his Soul with a true knowledge and love of all real goodness. 3. We may further take notice of the Honourable thoughts he had of Elijah, of the Reverence, Worship and Respect which he gave unto him. For so we may look upon these Words as an Expression of the high Esteem he had of him, and Regard he bore to him, even after he was gone from this Earth, and could do no more kindnesses for him. Elisha, who had been a minister to him when he was below, and used to pour water upon his hands, could not but have very reverend thoughts toward him now that the Angels came to wait upon him, and in Flames of fire to carry him up above. He could not but honour him as his Elder and Father, as his Leader and Commander, as the General of the Sons of the Prophets, as the very Host and Army of Israel. And indeed the Souls of those men that are as full of God as the name of Elijah is (which includes Two, if not Three, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Divine names in it) cannot but draw our eyes toward them; but then they so dazzle us with their lustre and brightness, they strike us into such amazement at their Perfections, that the weakness of man's nature hath been apt to give no less than Divine veneration to such persons. It had not been lawful I know to have worshipped Elijah, though he had been an Angel; but yet methinks I see Elisha bowing down with some respect to the very Mantle which fell from his Master, and taking it up as a precious relic of so holy a man. And I could very well pass some Civility upon the Gown in which this Holy man departed used for to walk, out of the great honour which I bear to him. There was so much of Divinity enshrined in this Excellent man's Soul, that it made every thing about him to have a kind of Sacredness in it, and will make his name to be always as a sweet odour unto us. Though we may not extol it with Divine praises, yet let it never be mentioned by us without the addition of the Hebrew manner of speech 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His memory is blessed, or of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That most Blessed man. AND so I am fallen unawares in my Meditations upon the Application of what hath been said to Him that is deceased and to our own selves. Some perhaps will be angry that I should go about to compare him with Elijah, the Man of God; but I have an Apology ready at hand: They will give me leave I hope to do the same that Greg. Nyssen doth, who in his Oration at the Funeral of his brother Basil, compares him not only with Elias, but with John the Baptist, the second Elias, and with S. Paul himself, saying that one should not err if he should affirm that there was in him and in S. Paul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one and the same measure of divine love. Suffer me then to use some of his words concerning him of whom we are now to speak. None will require of humane nature to imitate Elijah in his shutting and opening of heaven, in his fasting so many days, and going up to God in a fiery chariot; but in other things we will be bold to compare him with that great man, in his zealous faith, in his Cordial love to God, in his earnest desire and thirst 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as he speaks) after that which truly is, in an exact and exquisite life, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in a Conversation so studied that it was in all things consonant with itself, in most unaffected gravity, wonderful simplicity, and a countenance proportionable to the vigour and strength of his Soul, or, in his own words, he had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a look that was not one key below his intent and eager and sprightly Mind. If you look upon his care of those things that were hoped for, and neglect of these things that are seen, on his equal love to poor and rich; in these & such like things He imitated the Wonders of Elijah. But if any man will needs urge us to strain a little higher, and compare something in him to his fasting forty days; then what say you to an every-days temperance? And if there must be something answerable to his going up to Heaven in a fiery Chariot; then look upon the other way of ascending thither, which is the best, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by an high transcendent conversation in this world, whereby he made a Chariot of his virtues that he might ascend up unto God. But that I may proceed in this Argument according to our former Method, 1. Let us first look upon him in his Eminency, Dignity and Worth. A very glorious Star he was, & shone brighter in our eyes then any that he ever looked upon when he took his view of the heavenly Bodies: and now he shines as the brightness of the Firmament, and as the Stars for ever and ever, being wise and having turned many (I believe) unto Righteousness. I shall speak nothing of his Earthly parentage save only this, That herein he was like to John the Baptist, the last Elias, in that he was born after his Parents had been long childless and were grown aged. Some have observed that such have proved very famous; for they seem to be sent on purpose by God into the world to do good, and to be scarce begotten by their Parents. Such are something like Isaac, who had a great blessing in him, and seem to be intended by God for some great service and work in the world. But let us look only at his Heavenly descent, and see how he was allied to God himself; for, as the Poet says of Aeneas, — Contingit sanguine Coelum. I may say of him as Nazianzen says of his Sister, His Country was Heaven, his Town or City was the Jerusalem which is above, his fellow-Citizens were the Saints, his Nobility was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the retaining of the Divine impressions and stamps upon his Soul, and being like to God the Archetype and First pattern of all Goodness. And indeed the preserving of the Heavenly Symbols that are in our Souls, and especially the purging and scouring of them from the corruption of Nature, he often spoke of; and his endeavour was that the Divine image might be fairly reflected in him, and that it might shine brightly in the face of others. If I should speak much of the Vastness of his Learning (a thing not to be passed by,) it would seem to say that I knew all he was; which I am not so arrogant as to assume unto myself: This I will say, That he could do what he would. He had such a huge, wide capacity of Soul, such a sharp and piercing Understanding, such a deep reaching Mind, that he set himself about nothing but he soon grasped it and made himself a full possessor of it. And if we consider his great Industry and indefatigable pains, his Herculean labours day and night from his * First April 5. 1636. coming to the University till the time of his long sickness, joined with his large Parts, & his frequent Meditation, Contemplation and Abstraction of his Mind from Sensible things; it must needs be concluded that he was a Comprehensour of more than I can say or think of; & if I could, it would be too tedious to give you an account of all. There is a Discourse which Charidemus (in Dion chrysostom) makes to his Friends a little Orat. 30. before his death, How that this world is God's house, wherein a gallant sumptuous Feast is prepared, and all men are his Guests: and how that there are two waiters at the Table which fill out the wine to them that call for it; the one a Man, the other a Woman; the one call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Mind, from whose hand all Wise men drink, the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Intemperance, who fills the cups of the lovers of this world. In this House our beloved Friend deceased stayed between four and five and thirty years, and I am sure drank most large draughts from the hand of the former; for he was a Man, he was a Mind, he had nothing of that Woman in him, and never in the least was known to sipp of her cups. He was a most laborious searcher after Wisdom, and never gave his Flesh the leisure to please itself in those entertainments: and therefore we may be confident with that Charidemus, that God hath taken him to be his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, his Friend and Companion, to drink of the rivers of his pleasure. In a word, he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In vita Porphyrii. as Eunapius speaks of Longinus, A living Library, better than that which he hath given to our College, and a walking Study, that carried his Learning about with him. I never got so much good among all my Books by a whole days plodding in a Study, as by an hours discourse I have got with him. For he was not a Library locked up, nor a Book clasped, but stood open for any to converse withal that had a mind to learn. Yea he was a Fountain running over, labouring to do good to those who perhaps had no mind to receive it. None more free and communicative than he was to such as desired to discourse with him; nor would he grudge to be taken off from his studies upon such an occasion. It may be truly said of him, That a man might always come Better from him; and his mouth could drop Sentences as easily as an ordinary man's could speak Sense. And he was no less happy in expressing his Mind, then in conceiving; wherein he seems to have excelled the famous Philosopher Plotin, of whom Porphyry tells us, that he was something careless of his words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but was wholly taken up into his Mind. He of whom we now speak had such a copia verborum, a plenty of words, and those so full, pregnant and significant, joined with such an active fancy, as is very rarely to be found in the company of such a deep Understanding and judgement as dwelled in him. I have done with his Learning, when I have told you, That as he looked upon Honours, Riches, and the eagerly-pursued things of this world, as Vanities; so did he look upon this also as a piece, though a more excellent piece, of Vanity (as he was wont to phrase it) if compared with the higher and more divine accomplishments of the Soul. For he did not care to value himself by any of those things which were of a perishing nature, which should fail and cease and vanish away, but only by those things which were more solid and substantial, of a Divine and Immortal nature, which he might carry out of the world with him; to which my Discourse shall not be long before it descend. He was of very singular Wisdom and great Prudence, of admirable skill and readiness in the managery of affairs, which I make an account is an Imitation of that Providence of God that governs the World. His Learning was so concocted, that it lay not as an Idle notion in his Head, but made him fit for any employment. He was very full and clear in all his Resolutions at any debates, a most wise counsellor in any difficulties and straits, dextrous in untying any knot, of great judgement in satisfying any scruple or doubt even in matters of Religion. He was one that soon saw into the depth of any business that was before him, and looked it quite through; that would presently turn it over and over in his Mind and see it on all sides; and he understood things so well at the First sight, that he did not often need any second thoughts, but usually stood to the present resolution and determination of his Mind. And add to this his known Integrity, Uprightness and Faithfulness; his strong and lively, his waking and truly-tender Conscience, which joined with the former things I spoke of made him more than a Man, — 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as men now go. He was (as one of the Ancients speaks) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an Exemplar of true Christian Philosophy and virtue, and as it were the spiritual Rule, Line and Square thereof: of so poized and even a life, that by his Wisdom and Conscience (were it not that every man should know for himself) one might live almost at a venture, walking blindfold through the world, and not miscarry. He had incorporated, shall I say, or insouled all Principles of Justice and Righteousness, and made them one with himself. So that I may say of him in Antoninus his phrase, he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, dipped into Justice as it were Lib. 3. over head and ears; he had not a slight superficial tincture, but was died and coloured quite through with it; so that wheresoever he had a Soul, there was Justice and Righteousness. They who knew him, very well know the truth of all this. And I am persuaded he did as hearty and cordially, as eagerly and earnestly do what appeared to be Just and Right, without any Self-respect or particular reflections, as any man living. Methinks I see how earnest he would be in a good matter which appeared to be Reasonable and Just, as though Justice herself had been in him, looking out at his Eyes, and speaking at his Mouth. It was a virtue indeed that he had a great affection unto, and which he was very zealous to maintain; in whose quarrel he was in danger to be angry, and sometimes to break forth into a short passion. But he was always very urgent upon us that by the Grace of God and the help of the mighty Spirit of Jesus Christ working in us, we would endeavour to purge out the corruption of our Natures, and to crucify the Flesh with all the affections and lusts thereof: yea to subdue as much as it is possible even the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in our Souls, those first motions that are without our consent, and to labour after Purity of heart, that so we might see God. For his endeavour was not only to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, out of the pollutions of the world through lust, but, as Plotin speaks, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to come to the true likeness of God and his Son, or, in the Apostles language, to be partaker of the Divine nature. And here now what words shall I use? What shall I say of his Love? None that knew him well, but might see in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as Nazianzen I think speaks) Love bubbling and springing up in his Soul, and flowing out to all; and that Love unfeigned, without guile, hypocrisy or dissimulation. I cannot tell you how his Soul was universalized, how tenderly he embraced all God's creatures in his arms, more especially Men, and principally those in whom he beheld the Image of his heavenly Father. There one might have seen running 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and he would ever have emptied his Soul into theirs. Let any that were throughly acquainted with him say if I lie. And truly my Happiness is that I have such a subject to exercise my young and weak Oratory upon, as will admit of little Hyperbole. His Patience was no less admirable than his Love, under a linger and tedious disease, wherein he never murmured nor complained, but rested quietly satisfied in the Infinite Unbounded Goodness and Tenderness of his Father, and the Commiserations of Jesus Christ our merciful High Priest who can be touched with a feeling of our infirmities. He still resolved with Job, Though he kill me, yet will I trust in him. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Nazianzen in an Epistle to Philagrius, O bravely done most noble Soul, who canst play the Philosopher, the Christian, in thy sickness and sufferings; who canst not only talk but do, not only do but suffer! And he told me in his sickness that he hoped he had learned that for which God sent it, and that he thought God kept him so long in such a case, under such burdens and pressures, that Patience might have its perfect work in him. His sickness undoubtedly was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as Nazianzen speaks) a learned disease and full of true Philosophy, which taught him more of real Christianity, and made his Soul of a more strong, able, athletic habit and temper. For, as S. James saith, if Patience have its perfect work, then is a Soul perfect and entire, wanting nothing. And Chap. 1. 4. really in his Sickness he shown what Christianity and True Religion is able to do; what Might, Power and Virtue there is in it to bear up a Soul under the greatest loads; and that he could through Christ strengthening him do all that which he so admirably discoursed of in his life. But for his Humility, it was that which was most apparent and conspicuous. You might have beheld in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as the same Father speaks) true humility in a most eminent degree, and the more eminent, considering how much there was within him which would have swelled and puffed up another. But from his first admission into the university (as I am informed by those that knew him) he sought not great things for himself, but was contented in the condition wherein he was. He made not haste to rise and climb, as youths are apt to do (which we in these late times too much experience, wherein Youths scarce fledged have soared to the highest preferments) but proceeded leisurely by orderly steps not to what he could get, but to what he was fit to undertake. He stayed God's time of advancement, with all industry and pains following his studies; as if he rather desired to deserve honour, then to be honoured. He shook off all Idleness and Sloth, the bane of youth, and so had the Blessing of God upon his endeavours, who gave him great encouragement from divers persons of worth, and at last brought him unto this place. And I challenge any one that is impartial to say, if since he came hither, they ever beheld in him any Pride, vainglory, Boasting, Self-conceit, Desire of honour and being famous in the world. No, there is not the man living that had the eyes ever to discern any thing of this swollen nature: but on the contrary it was easy to take notice of most profound Humility and Lowliness of mind, which made him a true Disciple of Jesus Christ, who took upon him the form of a servant, and made himself of no reputation. And I dare say our dear friend was as true, as humble a servant (without any compliment) to the good of Mankind, as any person that this day lives. This was his design in his studies, and if it had pleased the Lord of life to have prolonged his days, it would have been more of his work: For he was resolved (as he once told me) very much to lay aside other studies, and to travel in the salvation of men's Souls, after whose good he most ardently thirsted. Shall I add 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as the Apostle speaks) above, or unto all these, his Faith; I say, his true, Ephesians 6. lively and working Faith, his simple, plainhearted, naked Faith in Christ? It is likely that it did not busy itself about many fine Notions, subtleties and Curiosities, or believing whole Volumes; but be sure it was that which was firmly set and fixed in the Mercy and Goodness of God through Christ; that also which brought down Christ into his Soul; which drawed down Heaven into his Heart; which sucked in life and strength continually from our Saviour; which made him hearty, serious and constant in all those forenamed Christian virtues. His Faith was not without a Soul; but what Isidore saith of Faith and Works, held true of him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, His Faith was animated, quickened Lib. 4. Ep. 65. and actuated by these. It made him godlike, and he lived by Faith in the Son of God; by it he came to be truly partaker of the Righteousness of Christ, and had it wrought and form in his very Soul. For this indeed was the End of his life, the main design which he carried on, that he might become like to God. So that if one should have asked him that Question in Antoninus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; what is thy art and Lib. 11. profession, thy business and employment? He would not have answered, To be a great Philosopher, Mathematician, Historian or Hebrician, (all which he was in great eminency) To be a Physician, Lawyer, General Linguist; which Names and many more his General skill deserved: But he would have answered, as he doth there, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, my Art is to be Good; To be a true Divine is my care and business, or, in the Christian phrase, To be holy as God is holy, to be perfect as my heavenly Father is perfect. All that remember the serious behaviour and weighty expressions he used in his Prayers, cannot but call to mind how much his Heart was set upon the attainment of this true Goodness. I have transgressed too much my bounds, now it is so late; and trespassed perhaps too much upon your patience: Yet I hope I should not weary you, if I should discourse upon his Ingenuity, his courtesy, his Gentleness and Sweetness, with many other things of the like nature. And let me say thus much, that he was far from that Spirit of devouting zeal that now too much rages. He would rather have been consumed in the service of men, then have called for fire down from heaven, as Elijah did, to consume them. And therefore though Elijah excelled him in this, that he ascended up to Heaven in a fiery chariot; yet herein I may say he was above the spirit of Elijah, that he called for no fire to descend from heaven upon men, but the fire of Divine love that might burn up all their Hatreds, Roughness and Cruelty to each other. But as for Benignity of Mind and Christian kindness, every body that knew him will remember that he ever had their names in his mouth, and I assure them they were no less in his heart and life; as knowing that without these Truth itself is in a faction, and Christ is drawn into a party. And this Graciousness of Spirit was the more remarkable in him, because he was of a temper naturally Hot and choleric, as the greatest Minds most commonly are. He was wiser than to let any Anger rest in his bosom; much less did he suffer it to burn and boil till it was turned into gall and bitterness; and least of all would he endure that any Passion should lodge in him, till it was become a cankered Malice and black Hatred, which men in these days can scarce hid, but let it appear in their countenance and in their carriage towards others. If he was at any time moved unto Anger, it was but a sudden flushing in his face, and it did as soon vanish as arise; and it used to arise upon no such occasions as I now speak of. No, whensoever he looked upon the fierce and consuming Fires that were in men's Souls, it made him sad, not angry; and it was his constant endeavour to inspire men's Souls with more benign and kindly heats, that they might warm but not scorch their Brethren. And from this Spirit, together with the rest of Christian Graces that were in him, there did result a great Serenity, Quiet and Tranquillity in his Soul, which dwelled so much above, that it was not shaken with any of those Tempests and Storms which use to unsettle more low and abject Minds. He lived in a continued sweet enjoyment of God, and so was not disquieted with scruples or doubts of his Salvation. There was always discernible in him a cheerful sense of God's goodness, which ceased not in the time of sickness. But we most longed for to see the motions of his Soul, when he drew near to the Centre of his rest. He that had such a constant feeling of God within him, we might conclude would have the most strong and powerful sense when he came nearer to a close conjunction with him. But God was pleased to deny this to us, and by a lethargic distemper which seized on his Spirits, he passed the six last days of his life (if I may call it a life) in a kind of Sleep, and without taking much notice of any thing he slept in the Lord. And now have I not described a Person of Worth and Eminency? Have we not reason to be so sad, as you see our Faces tell you that we are? But alas! half of that is not told you which your Eyes might have seen, had you been acquainted with him. I want thoughts and Words to make a lively portraiture of him: my young Experience hath not yet seen to the height or the depth of these things which I have here given you a rude draught of; and so my conceits and Expressions must needs fall far below that excellent degree of beauty wherein they dwelled in him. Let it suffice therefore to say (that I may keep to the word in the Text) That he was truly a Father, that he wanted Ages only to make him Reverend; and that if he had lived many Generations ago, & left us the children of his Mind to posterity, he might by this time have been numbered among the Fathers of the Church. I have almost prevented myself already in the Two latter Particulars, His singular Care, and his great Usefulness; both which must needs be concluded from the former: His Care I say of others as a Tutor, his usefulness as a Fellow of this now mournful Society. Let me speak a word or two of either. 2. All his Pupils (who are now truly Pupilli, Fatherless children) began to know in his sickness what it was to have and to want a loving Father, a faithful Tutor; and now they will know it more fully. He was one that did so constantly mind their good, that instilled such excellent pious Notions into their Minds, & gave such light in everything a man could desire to know; that I could have been content, though in this gown, to have been his Pupil. His Life taught them continual lessons of Justice, Temperance, Prudence, Fortitude and Masculine virtue; and above all he taught them true dependence upon God, and reference of themselves and all their Studies unto him; with true Faith in, and Imitation of, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ: for which end he often expounded to them out of the Holy Scriptures. And for Humane learning, the many good Scholars that came from under his hand do witness how dextrous he was at the training up of Youth in all good Literature. Porphyry tells us of Plotin, that he was such a careful person, that sundry Noble men and women with divers others, when they died, committed both their sons and daughters to his Tuition, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as unto some Tutelar Angel, or a sacred and divine Guardian. Truly those that come hither, are in a manner without Father and Mother; but they could not be committed to a more loving Tutor, a more holy and faithful Guardian, that would bring them up in all true Learning and Piety. If any think that he was too severe, let me tell them that they are such as find fault with the Lion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because he looks not like an Ape, but with a stern, royal and Kingly countenance. He both looked and spoke like a man that had drunk into his Soul such solid, high and generous Principles, as few men are acquainted with, which made him very zealous not only for Righteousness, Integrity and Holiness, but for a Decorum in all things. He had a great regard for all those things which are mentioned by the Apostle, Philip. 4. 8. for whatsoever things were true, honest, (or rather, comely and grave, seemly and venerable, as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signify) for all that was just, pure, lovely, of good fame and report; if there was any praise, or any virtue, he was most earnest and forward in its behalf. 3. And now what his Usefulness was, and the Benefit we received by him, all that bear any share in the government of this Society will be made to know by the want of him. There is not one but will cry out with Elisha, O the Chariot of this place, and the horsemen thereof: which words seem to express what a necessary man Elias was, and to be just like that of Horace to * Lib. 2. Od. 17. Maecenas when sick, which we may use concerning him that is now dead, Grande decus, columénque rerum, Our great glory, the pillar upon whose shoulders the weight of business of late lay; O & praesidium & dulce decus meum, (as he saith in another place) O thou who wast both my safeguard and my ornament! who wast a Society by thyself, a College in brief, what a loss have we sustained by thy departure? That must not be resolved by me, nor by any one single person of us, but we must all lay our heads together to tell our loss. To which of us was not he dear? who is there that was not engaged to him? who can think himself as wise as he was when we had him? And this our high and dear Esteem of him when he was with us, leads me to speak of that Honour and Reverence which we all express to his Name, that Affection which is in our Hearts to his Memory, the sense that is in us of our great and unspeakable loss; in Answer to those three foregoing Considerations about Elisha. But here I must be very brief, and put all together. There is none that knew his Worth, but honour his very dust. And for my part I honour him so much, that I wish we might do as the Virgins of Israel did for Jephtah's daughter, come once a year hither and lament his death; and so at once we might express all these Three, our Respect, Affection and Sense of our loss. His name is most worthy to be had in a more especial remembrance, and highly deserves to be ranked among our Benefactors, he having endowed our Library with all the Books that he had, and we wanted; and I have reason to believe that if he had not been so suddenly surprised by those forgetful lethargic fits, he intended to bestow more upon us then his Books, which yet were both many and choice ones, being above six hundred for number, and many of them large and costly; and for the matter of them, many Hebrew Books, (besides some Arabic) many mathematic Books, many Books of History both Ancient and Modern, as also of Philosophy and Philology both Sacred and Profane. And whensoever we commemorate his Love unto us, let it be with some Encomium: let us mourn quòd talem amiserimus, that we are deprived of such a person; but let us rejoice and give thanks to God quòd talem habuerimus, that we ever had such an one who hath done us so much good: they are the words of S. Hierom to Nepotian, with a little alteration. But let me tell you in conclusion of all, that herein would be shown our greatest Love and Affection which we bore to him, this would be the greatest Honour of him, if we would but express his life in ours; that others might say when they behold us, There walks at least a shadow of Mr. Smith. And O that I might beg with Elisha a double portion among those that I desire should share in the gifts and graces of this Elijah: This is the highest of my ambition, that many might but possess the riches that lodged in this one. They disgrace their Master who have not skill in that which they say he professed; but they who tread in his steps and excel in his Art, shine back again upon him from whom first they received their light. Let me seriously therefore exhort every one of us to imitate this Master in Israel: Imitate him in his Industry, if not in his Learning; shake off all laziness and sloth; do not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 embody and enervate your Souls by Idleness and base neglect; do not emasculate them and turn them into flesh by drowsiness or vain pleasures. Imitate his Temperance, his Patience, his Fortitude, his Candour and Ingenuity, his Holiness and Righteousness, his Faith and Love, his Charity and Humility, his Self-denial and true Self-resignation to the will of God: in a word, all those Christian virtues which lived in him, let them live in us for ever. Let us die to the world, as he did, before we die: let us separate our Souls from our Bodies and all bodily things, before the time of our departure and separation come. Let us take an especial heed lest we do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as most men do, lest we suffer this lower and earthly world; lest we be drawn forcibly into its embraces, and so held from rising aloft: but let us turn up our Minds continually to Heaven, and earnestly desire pati Deum, to suffer God; to be mightily and strongly attracted by him from all Earthy and Sensible delights to an admiration and love of his Everlasting Beauty and Goodness. Let us labour to be so well acquainted with Him, and all things of the Higher world, and so much disengaged in our Affections from this and all that is in it, that when we come to go out of this world, we may never look back and say, O what goodly things do I leave! what a brave world am I snatched from! would I might but live a little longer there! Let us get our Hearts so crucified to the world, that it may be an easy thing to us to shake hands with, and bid a farewell to, our Friends (the dearest things we have) our Lands, Houses, Goods and whatsoever is valuable in our eyes. Let us use the world as though we used it not: let us die daily, as our dear Friend did; and so it was easy to him to die at last. die did I say? shall I use that word, or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he is flown away, (as Nazianzen speaks) his Soul hath got lose, and now feels her wings; or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath changed his habitation, he is gone into the other world, as Abraam went out of Ur into Canaan; or as the same Father says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he hath taken his journey into another country a little before his Body? He hath left his Body behind him awhile to take a sleep in the dust, & when it awakes at the Resurrection, it shall follow also to the same place. Then shall it be made a Spiritual body, then shall it have wings given to it also and be lovingly married again to the Soul, never any more to suffer any separation. And at that time we shall all meet with our dear Father and Friend again, who now are here remaining crying out, O my Father, my father, etc. Then shall all tears be wiped away from our eyes, and there shall be no more death, neither Rev. 21. 4. sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: Then we shall not need such a Light as he was; for there is no night there, and they need no candle, neither light of the Sun; for Rev. 22. 5. the Lord God giveth them light, and they shall reign for ever and ever. Amen. Errata. PAg. 53. lin. 27. for being's read Being p. 57 l. ult. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. p. 155. l. 6. for lap us r. lap up. p. 245. l. 13. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. p. 304. l. 24. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 340. l. 5. for Self-examination r. Self-exinanition. l. 22. for assuring r. assuming. p. 428. l. 32. r. Holy. Books printed for, and sold by, W. Morden Bookseller in Cambridg. ORigenes contra Celsum; Ejusdem Philocalia, cum Annotat. Gulielmi Spenceri, 4ᵒ. Scheyneri Fundamenta Optic. 4ᵒ. Officium Concionatorium, 4ᵒ. Medi opuscula. Epicteti Enchiridion, cnm Cebetis Tabula. Accesserunt Arriani Comment. item Porphyrius de Abstinentia, & de Vita Pythagorae, Ejusdem item Sentent. & de Antro Nympharum, Vita deinde & Scripta Porphyrii à L. Holstenio, 8ᵒ. Gassendi Astronomia; Cui accessere Galilaei Galilaei Nuncius Sidereus & Johannis Kepleri Dioptrice, 8ᵒ. Sebast. Castellio. Dialogi 4 de Praedestinatione. Electione. Libero Arbitrio. Fide & Justificatione. Angelini Gazaei Pia Hilaria. Accessit Tomus alter cum Indice Philologico, 12. Moor's Antidote against Atheism. Enthusiasmus Triumphatus, or a Discourse of the Nature, Causes, kind's and Cures of Enthusiasm. His threefold Cabbal, Literal, Philosophical, Mystical or Divinely Moral. Immortality of the Soul, 8ᵒ. Billingsly's Idea of arithmetic, 8ᵒ. 2 Sermons of Mr. Clerk, Fellow of Peter-house.