summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--76101-0.txt15923
-rw-r--r--76101-h/76101-h.htm21428
-rw-r--r--76101-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 1265033 bytes
-rw-r--r--76101-h/images/fig4-1.jpgbin0 -> 254786 bytes
-rw-r--r--76101-h/images/fig5.jpgbin0 -> 218659 bytes
-rw-r--r--76101-h/images/fig6.jpgbin0 -> 237143 bytes
-rw-r--r--76101-h/images/fig7.jpgbin0 -> 253904 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
10 files changed, 37368 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/76101-0.txt b/76101-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c178a26
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,15923 @@
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76101 ***
+
+
+ The Sacred Theory of the Earth
+
+
+
+
+ THE SACRED THEORY OF THE EARTH.
+
+ Containing an ACCOUNT of the
+ Original _of the_ Earth,
+
+ And of all the
+
+ GENERAL CHANGES
+
+ Which it hath already undergone, or is to
+ undergo, till the CONSUMMATION
+ of all Things.
+
+
+ The TWO LAST BOOKS,
+
+ _Concerning the Burning of the WORLD,
+ AND
+ Concerning the New Heavens, and New Earth._
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+ _LONDON_:
+
+ Printed for J. HOOKE, at the _Flower-de-luce_, over-against
+ St. _Dunstan’s Church_, in _Fleetstreet_, 1726.
+
+
+
+
+ TO THE
+ QUEEN’S
+ Most EXCELLENT
+ MAJESTY.
+
+
+_MADAM_,
+
+Having had the Honour to present the first Part of this Theory to your
+ROYAL UNCLE, I presume to offer the Second to Your Majesty. This Part of
+the Subject, I hope, will be no less acceptable, for certainly ’tis of
+no less Importance. They both indeed agree in this, that there is a
+WORLD made and destroy’d in either Treatise. But we are more concern’d
+in what is to come, than what is past. And as the former Books
+represented to us the Rise and Fall of the first World; so these give an
+Account of the present Frame of Nature labouring under the last Flames,
+and of the Resurrection of it in the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_;
+which, according to the Divine Promises, we are to expect.
+
+Cities that are burnt, are commonly rebuilt more beautiful and regular
+than they were before. And when this World is demolish’d by the last
+Fire, He that undertakes to rear it up again, will supply the Defects,
+if there were any, of the former Fabrick. This Theory supposes the
+present Earth to be little better than an Heap of Ruins; where yet there
+is Room enough for Sea and Land, for Islands and Continents, for several
+Countries and Dominions: But when these are all melted down, and refin’d
+in the general Fire, they will be cast into a better Mould, and the Form
+and Qualities of the Earth will become _Paradisaical_.
+
+But, I fear, it may be thought no very proper Address, to shew Your
+Majesty a World laid in Ashes, where You have so great an Interest Your
+Self, and such fair Dominions; and then, to recompense the Loss, by
+giving a Reversion in a future Earth. But if that future Earth be a
+second _Paradise_, to be enjoyed for a Thousand Years; with Peace,
+Innocency, and constant Health; An Inheritance there will be, an happy
+Exchange for the best Crown in this World.
+
+I confess, I could never persuade myself that the Kingdom of Christ, and
+of his Saints, which the Scripture speaks of so frequently, was designed
+to be upon this present Earth. But however, upon all Suppositions, they
+that have done some Good in this Life, will be Sharers in the Happiness
+of that State. To humble the Oppressors, and rescue the Oppressed, is a
+Work of Generosity and Charity, that cannot want its Reward; Yet, MADAM,
+they are the greatest Benefactors to Mankind, that dispose the World to
+become Virtuous; and by their Example, Influence, and Authority,
+retrieve that TRUTH and JUSTICE, that have been lost, amongst Men, for
+many Ages. The School-Divines, tell us, those that act or suffer great
+Things for the Publick Good, are distinguish’d in Heaven, by a Circle of
+Gold about their Heads. One would not willingly vouch for that: But one
+may safely for what the Prophet says, which is far greater: Namely, that
+They shall shine like Stars in the Firmament, _that turn many to
+Righteousness_. Which is not to be understood, so much, of the
+Conversion of single Souls, as of the turning of Nations and People; the
+turning of the World to Righteousness. They that lead on that great and
+happy Work, shall be distinguish’d in Glory from the rest of Mankind.
+
+We are sensible, MADAM, from Your Great Example, that Piety and Vertue
+seated upon a Throne, draw many to Imitation, whom ill Principles, or
+the Course of the World, might have led another Way. These are the best,
+as well as easiest Victories, that are gain’d without Contest. And as
+Princes are the Vicegerents of God upon Earth, so when their Majesty is
+in Conjunction with Goodness, it hath a double Character of Divinity
+upon it: And we owe them a double Tribute of Fear and Love. Which, with
+constant Prayers for Your MAJESTY’s present and future Happiness, shall
+be always Dutifully paid, by
+
+ _Your MAJESTY’s
+ Most Humble and
+ Most Obedient Subject_,
+
+ T. BURNET.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE TO THE READER.
+
+
+I have not much to say to the Reader in this Preface to the Third Part
+of the Theory; seeing it treats upon a Subject own’d by all, and out of
+Dispute: _The Conflagration of the World_. The Question will be only
+about the Bounds and Limits of the Conflagration, the Causes and the
+Manner of it. These I have fixed, according to the truest Measures I
+could take from Scripture, and from Nature. I differ, I believe, from
+the common Sentiment in this, that, in following St. _Peter_’s
+Philosophy, I suppose, that the burning of the Earth, will be a true
+Liquefaction or Dissolution of it, as to the exterior Region. And that
+this lays a Foundation for _new Heavens_ and a _new Earth_; which seems
+to me as plain a Doctrine in Christian Religion, as the Conflagration
+itself.
+
+I have endeavour’d to propose an intelligible Way, whereby the Earth may
+be consum’d by Fire. But if any one can propose another, more probable,
+and more consistent, I will be the first Man that shall give him Thanks
+for this Discovery. He that loves Truth for its own sake, is willing to
+receive it from any Hand; as he that truly loves his Country, is glad of
+a Victory over the Enemy, whether himself, or any other, has the Glory
+of it. I need not repeat here, what I have already said upon several
+Occasions, that ’tis the Substance of this Theory, whether in this Part,
+or in other Parts, that I mainly regard and depend upon: Being willing
+to suppose, that many single Explications and Particularities may be
+rectified, upon farther Thoughts, and clearer Light. I know our best
+Writings, in this Life, are but _Essays_, which we leave to Posterity to
+review and correct.
+
+As to the Style, I always endeavour to express myself in a plain and
+perspicuous manner; that the Reader may not lose Time, nor wait too
+long, to know my Meaning. To give an Attendant quick Dispatch, is a
+Civility, whether you do his Business or no. I would not willingly give
+any one the Trouble of reading a Period twice over, to know the Sense of
+it; lest, when he comes to know it, he should not think it a Recompence
+for his Pains. Whereas, on the contrary, if you are easy to your Reader,
+he will certainly make you an Allowance for it, in his Censure.
+
+You must not think it strange however, that the Author sometimes, in
+meditating upon this Subject, is warm in his Thoughts and Expressions.
+For to see a World perishing in Flames, Rocks melting, the Earth
+trembling, and an Host of Angels in the Clouds, one must be very much a
+Stoick, to be a cold and unconcerned Spectator of all this. And when we
+are mov’d ourselves, our Words will have a Tincture of those Passions
+which we feel. Besides, in moral Reflections which are design’d for Use,
+there must be some Heat, as well as dry Reason, to inspire this cold
+Clod of Clay, this dull Body of Earth, which we carry about with us; and
+you must soften and pierce that Crust, before you can come at the Soul.
+But especially when Things future are to be represented, you cannot use
+too strong Colours, if you would give them Life, and make them appear
+present to the Mind. Farewel.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS.
+
+The THIRD BOOK.
+
+CHAP. I.
+
+_The Introduction; with the Contents and Order of this Treatise_ ... 1
+
+CHAP. II.
+
+_The true State of the Question is propos’d. ’Tis the general Doctrine
+of the Antients, That the present World, or the present Frame of Nature,
+is mutable and perishable; to which the sacred Books agree: And natural
+Reason can alledge nothing against it_ ... 7
+
+CHAP. III.
+
+_That the World will be destroyed by Fire, is the Doctrine of the
+Antients; especially of the Stoicks. That the same Doctrine is more
+antient than the Greeks, and deriv’d from the Barbarick Philosophy; and
+that probably from Noah, the Father of all traditionary Learning. The
+same Doctrine expresly authorized by Revelation, and inrolled into the
+Sacred Canon_ ... 19
+
+CHAP. IV.
+
+_Concerning the time of the Conflagration, and the End of the World.
+What the Astronomers say upon this Subject, and upon what they ground
+their Calculations. The true Notion of the Great Year, or of the
+Platonick Year, stated and explain’d_ ... 35
+
+CHAP. V.
+
+_Concerning Prophecies that determine the End of the World; Of what
+Order soever, Prophane or Sacred, Jewish or Christian. That no certain
+Judgment can be made from any of them, at what Distance we are from the
+Conflagration_ ... 45
+
+CHAP. VI.
+
+_Concerning the Causes of the Conflagration. The Difficulty of
+conceiving how this Earth can be set on Fire. With a general Answer to
+that Difficulty. Two suppos’d Causes of the Conflagration, by the Sun’s
+drawing nearer to the Earth, or the Earth’s throwing out the central
+Fire, examin’d and rejected_ ... 60
+
+CHAP. VII.
+
+_The true Bounds of the last Fire, and how far it is Fatal. The natural
+Causes and Materials of it, cast into three Ranks. First, Such as are
+exterior and visible upon Earth, where the Volcano’s of this Earth, and
+their Effects, are consider’d. Secondly, Such Materials as are within
+the Earth. Thirdly, Such as are in the Air_ ... 73
+
+CHAP. VIII.
+
+_Some new Dispositions towards the Conflagration, as to the Matter,
+Form, and Situation of the Earth. Concerning miraculous Causes, and how
+far the Ministry of Angels may be engaged in this Work_ ... 92
+
+CHAP. IX.
+
+_How the Sea will be diminish’d and consum’d. How the Rocks and
+Mountains will be thrown down and melted, and the whole exterior Frame
+of the Earth dissolv’d into a Deluge of Fire_ ... 104
+
+CHAP. X.
+
+_Concerning the Beginning and Progress of the Conflagration, what Part
+of the Earth will first be burnt. The Manner of the future Destruction
+of Rome, according to the Prophetical Indications. The last State and
+Consummation of the general Fire_ ... 117
+
+CHAP. XI.
+
+_An Account of these extraordinary Phænomena and Wonders in Nature,
+that, according to Scripture, will precede the Coming of Christ, and the
+Conflagration of the World_ ... 130
+
+CHAP. XII.
+
+_An imperfect Description of the Coming of our Saviour, and of the World
+on Fire_ ... 143
+
+_The Conclusion_ ... 160
+
+
+The FOURTH BOOK.
+
+CHAP. I.
+
+_The Introduction; that the World will not be annihilated in the last
+Fire. That we are to expect, according to Scripture, and the Christian
+Doctrine, new Heavens and a new Earth, when these are dissolved or burnt
+up_ ... 184
+
+CHAP. II.
+
+_The Birth of the new Heavens and the new Earth, from the second Chaos,
+or the Remains of the old World. The Form, Order, and Qualities of the
+new Earth, according to Reason and Scripture_ ... 191
+
+CHAP. III.
+
+_Concerning the Inhabitants of the new Earth. That natural Reason cannot
+determine this Point. That, according to Scripture, the Sons of the
+first Resurrection, or the Heirs of the Millennium, are to be the
+Inhabitants of the new Earth: The Testimony of the Philosophers, and of
+the Christian Fathers, for the Renovation of the World. The first
+Proposition laid down_ ... 201
+
+CHAP. IV.
+
+_The Proof of a Millennium, or of a blessed Age to come, from Scripture.
+A View of the Apocalypse, and of the Prophecies of Daniel, in reference
+to this Kingdom of Christ, and of his Saints_ ... 213
+
+CHAP. V.
+
+_A View of other Places of Scripture, concerning the Millennium, or
+future Kingdom of Christ. In what Sense all the Prophets have born
+Testimony concerning it_ ... 229
+
+CHAP. VI.
+
+_The Sense and Testimony of the Primitive Church, concerning the
+Millennium, or future Kingdom of Christ; from the Times of the Apostles,
+to the Nicene Council. The second Proposition laid down, when, by what
+Means, and for what Reasons, that Doctrine was afterwards neglected or
+discountenanc’d_ ... 246
+
+CHAP. VII.
+
+_The true State of the Millennium, according to Characters taken from
+Scripture. Some Mistakes concerning it rectified_ ... 260
+
+CHAP. VIII.
+
+_The third Proposition laid down, concerning the Time and Place of the
+Millennium. Several Arguments us’d to prove, that it cannot be till
+after the Conflagration; and that the new Heavens and new Earth, are the
+true Seat of the blessed Millennium_ ... 269
+
+CHAP. IX.
+
+_The chief Employment of the Millennium DEVOTION and CONTEMPLATION_ ...
+287
+
+CHAP. X.
+
+_Objections against the Millennium answer’d. With some Conjectures
+concerning the State of Things after the Millennium: And what will be
+the final Consummation of this World_ ... 305
+
+
+
+
+ THE THEORY OF THE EARTH.
+
+
+ BOOK III.
+ Concerning the CONFLAGRATION.
+
+
+ CHAP. I.
+ The INTRODUCTION:
+ _With the Contents and Order of this Work._
+
+
+Seeing Providence hath planted in all Men a natural Desire and Curiosity
+of knowing Things to come; and such Things especially, as concern our
+particular Happiness, or the general Fate of Mankind; This Treatise may,
+in both respects, hope for a favourable Reception amongst inquisitive
+Persons; seeing the Design of it is, to give an Account of the greatest
+Revolutions of Nature that are expected in future Ages: and in the first
+Place, of the _Conflagration of the World_. In which universal Calamity,
+when all Nature suffers, every Man’s particular Concern must needs be
+involved.
+
+We see with what Eagerness Men pry into the Stars, to see if they can
+read there the Death of a King, or the Fall of an Empire: ’Tis not the
+fate of any single Prince or Potentate, that we calculate, but of all
+Mankind: Nor of this or that particular Kingdom or Empire, but of the
+whole Earth. Our Enquiries must reach to that great Period of Nature,
+when all Things are to be dissolv’d; both Human Affairs, and the Stage
+whereon they are acted; when the Heavens and the Earth will pass away,
+and the Elements melt with fervent Heat. We desire, if possible, to know
+what will be the Face of that Day, that great and terrible Day! when the
+Regions of the Air will be nothing but mingled Flame and Smoke, and the
+habitable Earth turn’d into a Sea of molten Fire.
+
+But we must not leave the World in this Disorder and Confusion, without
+examining what will be the Issue and Consequences of it. Whether this
+will be the End of all Things, and Nature, by a sad Fate, lie eternally
+dissolv’d and desolate in this manner? or, Whether we may hope for a
+Restoration: _New Heavens_ and a _New Earth_, which the Holy Writings
+make mention of, more pure and perfect than the former? As if this was
+but as a _Refiner’s Fire_, to purge out the Dross and coarser Parts, and
+then cast the Mass again into a new and better Mould. These Things, with
+God’s Assistance, shall be matter of our present Enquiry: These make the
+general Subject of this Treatise, and of the remaining Parts of this
+_Theory_ of the Earth. Which now, you see, begins to be a kind of
+Prophecy or Prognostication of Things to come, as it hath been hitherto
+an History of Things past; of such States and Changes as Nature hath
+already undergone. And if that Account which we have given of the Origin
+of the Earth, its first and Paradisaical Form, and the Dissolution of it
+at the universal Deluge, appear fair and reasonable; the second
+Dissolution by Fire, and the Renovation of it out of a second Chaos, I
+hope, will be deduc’d from as clear Grounds and Suppositions. And
+Scripture it self will be a more visible Guide to us in these following
+Parts of the Theory, than it was in the former. In the mean Time, I take
+occasion to declare here again, as I have done heretofore, That neither
+this, nor any other great Revolutions of Nature, are brought to pass, by
+Causes purely natural, without the Conduct of a particular Providence.
+And ’tis the sacred Books of Scripture that are the Records of this
+Providence, both as to Times past, and Times to come; as to all the
+signal Changes, either of the natural World, or of Mankind, and the
+different Oeconomies of Religion. In which respects, these Books, tho’
+they did not contain a moral Law, would, notwithstanding, be, as the
+most mystical, so also the most valuable Books in the World.
+
+This Treatise, you see, will consist of Two Parts: The former whereof is
+to give an Account of the _Conflagration_; and the latter, of the _New
+Heavens_, and _New Earth_ following upon it; together with the State of
+Mankind in those new Habitations. As to the Conflagration, we _first_
+enquire, What the Antients thought concerning the present Frame of this
+World: Whether it was to perish or no: Whether to be destroyed, or to
+stand eternally in this Posture. Then, in what Manner they thought it
+would be destroy’d: By what Force or Violence: Whether by Fire or other
+ways. And with these Opinions of the Antients we will compare the
+Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles, to discover and confirm the Truth
+of them. In the _second Place_, We will examine, What Calculations or
+Conjectures have been made concerning the Time of this great
+Catastrophe, or of the End of this World: Whether that Period be
+definable or no; and whether by natural Arguments, or by Prophecies.
+_Thirdly_, We will consider the Signs of the approaching Conflagration:
+Whether such as will be in Nature, or in the State of human Affairs; but
+especially such as are taken notice of, and recorded, in Scripture.
+_Fourthly_, Which is the principal Point, and yet that wherein the
+Antients have been most silent, _What Causes_ there are in Nature, what
+Preparations, for this Conflagration: Where are the Seeds of this
+universal Fire, or Fuel sufficient for the Nourishing of it? _Lastly_,
+In what Order, and by what Degrees, the Conflagration will proceed: In
+what Manner the Frame of the Earth will be dissolv’d; and what will be
+the dreadful Countenance of a _burning World_.
+
+These Heads are set down more fully in the Arguments of each Chapter;
+and seem to be sufficient for the Explication of this whole Matter:
+Taking in some additional Discourses, which, in pursuing these Heads,
+enter of their own accord, and make the Work more even and intire. In
+the Second Part, we restore the World that we had destroy’d: Build New
+Heavens and a New Earth, _wherein Righteousness shall dwell_. Establish
+that new Order of Things, which is so often celebrated by the Prophets:
+A Kingdom of Peace and of Justice, where the Enemy of Mankind shall be
+bound, and the Prince of Peace shall rule. A Paradise without a Serpent,
+and a Tree of Knowledge, not to wound, but to heal the Nations: Where
+will be neither _Curse_, nor _Pain_, nor _Death_, nor _Disease_: Where
+all Things are new, all Things are more perfect, both the World it self,
+and its Inhabitants: Where the First-born from the Dead, have the
+First-fruits of Glory.
+
+We dote upon this present World, and the Enjoyments of it: And ’tis not
+without Pain, and Fear, and Reluctancy, that we are torn from them; as
+if our Hopes lay all within the Compass of this Life. Yet, I know not by
+what good Fate, my Thoughts have been always fix’d upon Things to come,
+more than upon Things present. These I know, by certain Experience, to
+be but Trifles; and if there be nothing more considerable to come, the
+whole Being of Man is no better than a Trifle. But there is Room enough
+before us in that we call _Eternity_, for great and noble Scenes; and
+the Mind of Man feels itself lessen’d and straiten’d in this low and
+narrow State; wishes and waits to see something greater. And if it could
+discern another World a coming, on this side Eternal Life: a beginning
+Glory, the best that Earth can bear, it would be a kind of Immortality
+to enjoy that Prospect before-hand. To see, when this Theatre is
+dissolv’d, where we shall act next, and what Parts; what Saints and
+Heroes, if I may so say, will appear upon that Stage; and with what
+Lustre and Excellency: How easy would it be, under a View of these
+Futurities, to despise the little Pomps and Honours, and the Momentary
+Pleasures of a mortal Life? But I proceed to our Subject.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. II
+ _The true State of the Question is propos’d._
+
+
+ _’Tis the general Doctrine of the Antients, that the present World,
+ or the present Frame of Nature, is mutable and perishable: To which
+ the Sacred Books agree; and natural Reason can alledge nothing
+ against it._
+
+
+When we speak of the End or Destruction of the World, whether by Fire or
+otherwise, ’tis not to be imagin’d that we understand this of the _Great
+Universe_; Sun, Moon, and Stars, and the highest Heavens; as if these
+were to perish or be destroy’d some few Years hence, whether by Fire or
+any other Way. This Question is only to be understood of the _sublunary
+World_, of this Earth and its Furniture; which had its Original about
+Six thousand Years ago, according to the History of _Moses_; and hath
+once already been destroyed, when the Exterior Region of it broke, and
+the Abyss, issuing forth, as out of a Womb, overflow’d all the habitable
+Earth, _Gen. vii. 17._ _Job xxxviii. 8._ The next Deluge is that of
+Fire; which will have the same Bounds, and overflow the Surface of the
+Earth, much what in the same Manner. But the Cœlestial Regions, where
+the Stars and Angels inhabit, are not concerned in this Fate: Those are
+not made of combustible Matter; nor, if they were, could our Flames
+reach them. Possibly those Bodies may have Changes and Revolutions
+peculiar to themselves, but in Ways unknown to us, and after long and
+unknown Periods of Time. Therefore, when we speak of the Conflagration
+of the World, these have no Concern in the Question; nor any other Part
+of the Universe, than the Earth and its Dependances. As will evidently
+appear when we come to explain the Manner and Causes of the
+Conflagration.
+
+And as this Conflagration can extend no farther than to the Earth and
+its Elements, so neither can it destroy the Matter of the Earth; but
+only the Form and Fashion of it, as it is an habitable World. Neither
+Fire, nor any natural Agent, can destroy Matter, that is, reduce it to
+nothing: It may alter the Modes and Qualities of it, but the Substance
+will always remain. And accordingly the Apostle, when he speaks of the
+Mutability of this World, says only, _The Figure_ or Fashion of _this
+World passes away_, _1 Cor. vii. 31._ This Structure of the Earth and
+Disposition of the Elements; and all the _Works_ of the Earth, as St.
+_Peter_ says, _2 Epist. iii._ all its natural Productions, and all the
+Works of Art or human Industry; these will perish, be melted or torn in
+Pieces by the Fire; but without an Annihilation of the Matter, any more
+than in the former Deluge. And this will be farther prov’d and
+illustrated in the Beginning of the following Books.
+
+The Question being thus stated, we are next to consider the Sense of
+Antiquity upon these two Points: First, Whether this sublunary World is
+mutable and perishable: Secondly, By the Force and Action of what
+Causes, and in what Manner, it will perish; whether by Fire, or
+otherwise. _Aristotle_ is very irregular in his Sentiments about the
+State of the World; he allows it neither Beginning nor Ending, Rise nor
+Fall; but wou’d have it eternal and immutable. And this he understands,
+not only of the great Universe, but of this sublunary World, this Earth
+which we inhabit; wherein he will not admit there ever have been, or
+ever will be, either general Deluges or Conflagrations. And, as if he
+was ambitious to be thought singular in his Opinion about the Eternity
+of the World, he says, _All_ the _Antients_ before him, gave some
+Beginning or Origin to the World; but were not, indeed, so unanimous as
+to its future Fate: Some believing it immutable, or, as the Philosophers
+call it, incorruptible; others, That it had its fatal Times and Periods,
+as lesser Bodies have; and a Term of Age prefix’d to it by Providence.
+
+But before we examine this Point any farther, it will be necessary to
+reflect upon that which we noted before, an Ambiguity in the Use of the
+Word _World_, which gives frequent Occasion of Mistakes in reading the
+Ancients: When that which they speak of the _great Universe_, we apply
+to the _sublunary World_: Or, on the contrary, what they speak of this
+Earth, we extend to the whole Universe. And if some of them, besides
+_Aristotle_, made the World incorruptible, they might mean that of the
+_great Universe_, which they thought would never be dissolv’d or perish
+as to its Mass and Bulk: But single Parts and Points of it (and our
+Earth is no more) may be variously transform’d, and made habitable and
+unhabitable, according to certain Periods of Time, without any Prejudice
+to their Philosophy. So _Plato_, for Instance, thinks this World will
+have no Dissolution: For, being a Work so beautiful and noble, the
+Goodness of God, he says, will always preserve it. It is most reasonable
+to understand this of the great Universe; For, in our Earth, _Plato_
+himself admits such Dissolutions as are made by general Deluges and
+Conflagrations; and we contend for no other. So likewise in other
+Authors, if they speak of the Immortality of the World, you must observe
+what World they apply it to; and whether to the Matter or the Form of
+it: And if you remember that our Discourse proceeds only upon the
+sublunary World, and the Dissolution of its Form, you will find little
+in Antiquity contrary to this Doctrine. I always except _Aristotle_ (who
+allow’d of no Providence in this inferior World) and some _Pythagoreans_
+falsly so call’d, being either fictitious Authors, or Apostates from the
+Doctrine of their Master. These being excepted, upon a View of the rest,
+you will find very few Dissenters from this general Doctrine.
+
+_Plato_’s Argument against the Dissolution of the World, from the
+Goodness and Wisdom of God, would not be altogether unreasonable, tho’
+apply’d to this Earth, if it was so to be dissolv’d, as never to be
+restor’d again. But we expect _New Heavens_ and a _New Earth_, upon the
+Dissolution of these; better in all Respects, more commodious, and more
+beautiful. And the several Perfections of the Divine Nature, Wisdom,
+Power, Goodness, Justice, Sanctity, cannot be so well display’d and
+exemplify’d in any one single State of Nature, as in a Succession of
+States, fitted to receive one another according to the Dispositions of
+the moral World, and the Order of Divine Providence. Wherefore,
+_Plato_’s Argument from the Divine Attributes, all Things consider’d,
+doth rather prove a Succession of Worlds, than that one single World
+should remain the same throughout all Ages, without Change or Variation.
+Next to the _Platonists_, the _Stoicks_ were most considerable in
+Matters relating to Morality and Providence: And their Opinion, in this
+Case, is well known; they being look’d upon by the Moderns, as the
+principal Authors of the Doctrine of the _Conflagration_. Nor is it less
+known that the School of _Democritus_ and _Epicurus_, made all their
+Worlds subject to Dissolution; and by a new Concourse of Atoms restor’d
+them again. Lastly, The _Ionick_ philosophers, who had _Thales_ for
+their Master, and were the first Naturalists amongst the _Greeks_,
+taught the same Doctrine. We have, indeed, but an imperfect Account left
+us of this Sect, and ’tis great Pity; for as it was one of the most
+antient, so it seems to have been one of the most considerable amongst
+the _Greeks_ for Natural Philosophy. In those Remains which _Diogenes
+Laertius_ hath preserv’d, of _Anaxagoras_, _Anaximenes_, _Archelaus_,
+&c. all great Men in their Time; we find that they treated much of the
+Origin of the World, and had many extraordinary Notions about it, which
+come lame and defective to us. The Doctrine of their Founder, _Thales_,
+which made all Things to consist of Water, seems to have a great
+Resemblance to the Doctrine of _Moses_ and St. _Peter_ about the
+Constitution of the first Heavens and Earth, _Gen. i._ _2 Pet. ii. 5._
+But there is little in _Laertius_, what their Opinion was about the
+Dissolution of the World; other Authors inform us more of that.
+_Stobæus_, _Ecl. Phys. l. 1. c. 24_, joins them with _Leucippus_ and the
+_Epicureans_: _Simplicius_ with _Heraclitus_, and the _Stoicks_, in this
+Doctrine about the Corruptibility of the World. So that all the Schools
+of the _Greek_ Philosophers, as we noted before, were unanimous in this
+Point, excepting the _Peripateticks_; whose Master, _Aristotle_, had
+neither Modesty enough to follow the Doctrine of his Predecessors, nor
+Wit enough to invent any Thing better.
+
+Besides these Sects of Philosophers, there were Theologers amongst the
+_Greeks_, more Antient than these Sects, and more Mystical. _Aristotle_
+often distinguisheth the _Naturalists_, and the _Theologues_, Οἱ
+φυσικοὶ, οἱ θεόλογοι. Such were _Orpheus_ and his Followers, who had
+more of the antient Oriental Learning, than the succeeding Philosophers.
+But they writ their Philosophy, or Theology rather, Mythologically and
+Poetically, in Parables and Allegories, that needed an Interpretation.
+All these Theologers supposed the Earth to rise from a Chaos; and as
+they said that _Love_ was the Principle at first, that united the loose
+and severed Elements, and formed them into an habitable World; so they
+supposed that if _Strife_ or _Contention_ prevail’d, that would again
+dissolve and disunite them, and reduce Things into a Chaos; such as the
+Earth will be in, upon the Conflagration. And it farther appears, that
+both these Orders of the Learned in _Greece_, suppos’d this present
+Frame of Nature might perish, by their Doctrine of _Periodical
+Revolutions_, or of the Renovation of the World after certain Periods of
+Time; which was a Doctrine common amongst the Learned _Greeks_, and
+received by them from the ancient Barbarick Nations: As will appear more
+at large in the following Book, _Ch. 3._ In the mean Time we may
+observe, that _Origen_ in answering _Celsus_, _Lib. 9._ about the Point
+of the Resurrection, tells him, That Doctrine ought not to appear so
+strange or ridiculous to him, seeing their own Authors did believe and
+teach the _Renovation of the World_, after certain Ages or Periods. And
+the Truth is, this Renovation of the World, rightly stated, is the same
+Thing with the _First Resurrection_ of the Christians. And as to the
+second and general Resurrection, when the Righteous shall have Cœlestial
+Bodies; ’tis well known, that the _Platonists_ and _Pythagoreans_
+cloathed the Soul with a Cœlestial Body, or, in their Language, an
+Æthereal Vehicle, as her last Beatitude or Glorification. So that
+_Origen_ might very justly tell his Adversary, he had no Reason to
+ridicule the Christian Doctrine of the Resurrection, seeing their own
+Authors had the main Strokes of it in their Traditionary Learning.
+
+I will only add one Remark more, before we leave this Subject, to
+prevent a Mistake in the Word _Immortal_ or _Immortality_, when applied
+to the World. As I told you before, the Equivocation that was in that
+Term _World_, it being us’d sometimes for the whole Universe, sometimes
+for this inferior Part of it where we live; so likewise we must observe,
+that when this inferior World is said to be _Immortal_, by the
+Philosophers, as sometimes it is, that commonly is not meant of any
+single State of Nature, or any single World, but of a Succession of
+Worlds, consequent one upon another. As a Family may be said Immortal,
+not in any single Person, but in a Succession of Heirs. So as, many
+Times, when the Ancients mention the Immortality of the World, they do
+not thereby exclude the Dissolution or Renovation of it; but suppose a
+Vicissitude, or Series of Worlds succeeding one another. This
+Observation is not mine, but was long since made by _Simplicius_,
+_Stobæus_, and others, who tell us in what Sense some of those
+Philosophers who allowed the World to be perishable, did yet affirm it
+to be immortal: Namely, by successive Renovations.
+
+Thus much is sufficient to shew the Sense and Judgment of Antiquity, as
+to the Changeableness or Perpetuity of the World. But ancient Learning
+is like ancient Medals, more esteem’d for their Rarity, than their real
+Use; unless the Authority of a Prince make them currant: So neither will
+these Testimonies be of any great Effect, unless they be made good and
+valuable by the Authority of Scripture. We must therefore add the
+Testimonies of the Prophets and Apostles, to these of the _Greeks_ and
+_Barbarians_, that the Evidence may be full and undeniable. That the
+Heavens and the Earth will perish, or be chang’d into another Form, is,
+sometimes, plainly express’d, sometimes suppos’d and alluded to in
+Scripture. The Prophet _David_’s Testimony is express, both for the
+Beginning and Ending of the World: In _Psal. cii. ver. 25, 26, 27_. _Of
+old hast thou laid the Foundation of the Earth, and the Heavens are the
+Work of thy Hands. They shall perish, but thou shalt endure: Yea, all of
+them shall wax old like a Garment; as a Vesture shalt thou change them,
+and they shall be changed. But thou art the same, and thy Years shall
+have no End._ The Prophet _Isaiah_’s Testimony is no less express, to
+the same Purpose, _ch. li. 6._ _Lift up your Eyes to the Heavens, and
+look upon the Earth beneath: For the Heavens shall vanish away like
+Smoke, and the Earth shall wax old like a Garment, and they that dwell
+therein shall die in like Manner._ These Texts are plain and explicit;
+and in Allusion to this Day of the Lord, and this Destruction of the
+World, the same Prophet often useth Phrases that relate to it: As the
+_Concussion of the Heavens and the Earth, Isa. xiii. 13._ The _shaking
+of the Foundations of the World, ch. xxiv. 18, 19._ The _Dissolution of
+the Host of Heaven, ch. xxxiv. 4._ And our Sacred Writers have
+Expressions of the like Force, and relating to the same Effect: As the
+_Hills melting like Wax, at the Presence of the Lord, Psal. xcvii. 5._
+Shattering _once more_ all the Parts of the Creation, _Hagg. ii. 6._
+_Overturning the Mountains, and making the Pillars of the Earth to
+tremble, Job ix. 5, 6._ If you reflect upon the Explication given of the
+Deluge, in the first Part of this Theory, and attend to the Manner of
+the Conflagration, as it will be explain’d in the Sequel of this
+Discourse, you will see the Justness and Fitness of these Expressions:
+That they are not Poetical Hyperboles, or random Expressions of great
+and terrible Things in general, but a true Account of what hath been, or
+will be, at that great Day of the Lord. ’Tis true, the Prophets
+sometimes use such like Expressions figuratively, for Commotion in
+States and Kingdoms, but that is only by way of Metaphor and
+Accommodation; the true Basis they stand upon, is, That Ruin, Overthrow,
+and Dissolution of the Natural World, which was once at the Deluge, and
+will be again, after another Manner, at the general Conflagration.
+
+As to the New Testament, our Saviour says, _Heaven and Earth shall pass
+away, but his Words shall not pass away, Mat. xxiv. 35._ St. _Paul_
+says, the _Scheme of this World_; the Fashion, Form, and Composition of
+it, _passeth away, 1 Cor. vii. 31._ And when mention is made of _New
+Heavens_ and a _New Earth_, which both the Prophet _Isaiah_, _Isa. lxv.
+17. & lxvi. 22._ and the Apostles St. _Peter_ and St. _John_, _Rev. xxi.
+1._ _2 Pet._ _iii. 13._ mention, ’tis plainly imply’d, that the Old ones
+will be dissolv’d. The same Thing is also imply’d, when our Saviour
+speaks of a _Renascency_, or _Regeneration_, _Mat. xix. 28._ and St.
+_Peter_, of a _Restitution_ of all Things, _Acts iii. 21._ For what is
+now, must be abolish’d, before any former Order of Things can be
+restor’d or reduced. In a Word, If there was nothing in Scripture
+concerning this Subject, but that Discourse of St. _Peter_’s, in his
+Second Epistle, and Third Chapter, concerning the triple Order and
+Successions of the Heavens and the Earth, past, present, and to come;
+that alone would be a Conviction, and Demonstration to me, that this
+present World will be dissolv’d.
+
+You will say, it may be, in the last Place, we want still the Testimony
+of Natural Reason and Philosophy, to make the Evidence complete. I
+answer, ’tis enough if they be silent, and have nothing to say to the
+contrary. Here are Witnesses, Human and Divine, and if none appear
+against them, we have no reason to refuse their Testimony, or to
+distrust it. Philosophy will very readily yield to this Doctrine, that
+all material Compositions are dissolvable; and she will not wonder to
+see that die, which she had seen born: I mean this terrestrial World.
+She stood upon the Chaos, and saw it roll itself, with Difficulty, and
+after many Strugglings, into the form of an habitable Earth: And that
+Form she saw broken down again at the Deluge; and can as little hope or
+expect, now, as then, that it should be everlasting and immutable. There
+would be nothing great or considerable in this inferior World, if there
+were not such Revolutions of Nature. The Seasons of the Year, and the
+fresh Productions of the Spring, are pretty in their Way; but when the
+(_Annus Magnus_) _Great Year_ comes about, with a new Order of all
+Things, in the Heavens, and on the Earth; and a new Dress of Nature
+throughout all her Regions, far more goodly and beautiful than the
+fairest Spring; this gives a new Life to the Creation, and shews the
+Greatness of its Author. Besides, these fatal Catastrophes are always a
+Punishment to degenerate Mankind, that are overwhelm’d in the Ruins of
+these perishing Worlds. And to make Nature herself execute the Divine
+Vengeance against rebellious Creatures, argues both the Power and Wisdom
+of that Providence that governs all Things here below. These Things
+Reason and Philosophy approve of; but if you further require, that they
+should shew a _Necessity_ of this future Destruction of the World, from
+_natural Causes_, with the Time, and all other Circumstances of this
+Effect; your Demands are unreasonable, seeing these Things do not depend
+solely upon Nature. But if you will content yourself to know what
+Dispositions there are in Nature towards such a Change; how it may
+begin, proceed, and be consummate, under the Conduct of Providence, be
+pleased to read the following Discourse, for your further Satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. III.
+
+
+ _That the World will be destroy’d by Fire, is the Doctrine of the
+ Ancients, especially of the Stoicks. That the same Doctrine is more
+ ancient than the Greeks, and deriv’d from the Barbarick Philosophy;
+ and That probably from Noah, the Father of all Traditionary
+ Learning. The same Doctrine expressly authorized by Revelation, and
+ inroll’d into the Sacred Canon._
+
+
+That the present World, or the present Frame of Nature, will be
+destroy’d, we have already shewn. In what Manner this Destruction will
+be, by what Force, or what kind of Fate, must be our next Enquiry. The
+Philosophers have always spoken of _Fire_ and _Water_, those Two unruly
+Elements, as the only Causes that can destroy the World, and work our
+Ruin; and accordingly, they say, all the great and fatal Revolutions of
+Nature, either past, or to come, depend upon the Violence of these Two;
+when they get the Mastery, and overwhelm all the rest, and the whole
+Earth, in a Deluge, or Conflagration. But, as they make these Two the
+destroying Elements, so they also make them the purifying Elements. And,
+accordingly in their Lustrations, or their Rites and Ceremonies for
+purging Sin; Fire and Water were chiefly made use of, both amongst the
+_Romans_, _Greeks_, and _Barbarians_. And when these Elements over-run
+the World, it is not, they say, for a final Destruction of it, but to
+purge Mankind, and Nature from their Impurities. As for Purgation by
+Fire and Water, the Stile of our Sacred Writings does very much
+accommodate itself to that Sense; and the Holy Ghost, who is the great
+Purifier of Souls, is compared in his Operation upon us, and in our
+Regeneration, to Fire or Water. And as for the external World, S.
+_Peter_, _1 Ep. iii. 21._ makes the Flood to have been a kind of
+_Baptizing_ or Renovation of the World. And S. _Paul_, _1 Cor. iii. 13._
+and the Prophet _Malachi_, _c. iii. 2, 3._ makes the last Fire, to be a
+purging and refining Fire. But to return to the Ancients.
+
+The _Stoicks_ especially, of all other Sects amongst the _Greeks_, have
+preserved the Doctrine of the Conflagration; and made it a considerable
+Part of their Philosophy, and almost a Character of their Order. This is
+a Thing so well known, that I need not use any Citations to prove it.
+But they cannot pretend to have been the first Authors of it neither.
+For, besides that amongst the _Greeks_ themselves, _Heraclitus_ and
+_Empedocles_, more ancient than _Zeno_, the Master of the _Stoicks_,
+taught this Doctrine; ’tis plainly a Branch of the Barbarick Philosophy,
+and taken from thence by the _Greeks_. For it is well known, that the
+most ancient and mystick Learning amongst the _Greeks_, was not
+originally their own, but borrowed of the more Eastern Nations, by
+_Orpheus_, _Pythagoras_, _Plato_, and many more, who travell’d thither,
+and traded with the Priests for Knowledge and Philosophy; and when they
+got a competent Stock, returned home, and set up a School, or a Sect, to
+instruct their Countrymen. But before we pass to the Eastern Nations,
+let us, if you please, compare the _Roman_ Philosophy upon this Subject,
+with that of the _Greeks_.
+
+The _Romans_ were a great People, that made a Shew of Learning, but had
+little, in reality, more than Words and Rhetorick. Their Curiosity or
+Emulation in Philosophical Studies was so little, that it did not make
+different Sects and Schools amongst them, as amongst the _Greeks_. I
+remember no Philosophers they had, but such as _Tully_, _Seneca_, and
+some of their Poets. And of these _Lucretius_, _Lucan_, and _Ovid_, have
+spoken openly of the Conflagration. _Ovid_’s Verses are well known,
+
+ _Esse quoque in fatis reminiscitur, affore tempus,
+ Quo mare, quo tellus, correptaque regia Cœli
+ Ardeat, & mundi moles operosa laboret._
+
+ _A Time decreed by Fate, at length will come,
+ When Heavens, and Earth, and Seas, shall have their Doom;
+ A fiery Doom: And Nature’s mighty Frame,
+ Shall break, and be dissolv’d into a Flame._
+
+We see _Tully_’s Sense upon this Matter, in _Scipio_’s _Dream_. When the
+old Man speaks to his Nephew _Africanus_, and shews him from the Clouds,
+this Spot of Earth, where we live; he tells him, tho’ our Actions should
+be great, and Fortune favour them with Success, yet there wou’d be no
+Room for any lasting Glory in this World; for the World itself, is
+transient and fugitive. And a Deluge, or a Conflagration, which
+necessarily happen after certain Periods of Time, will sweep away all
+Records of human Actions. As for _Seneca_, he being a profess’d
+_Stoick_, we need not doubt of his Opinion in this Point. We may add
+here, if you please, the _Sybelline Verses_, which were kept, with great
+Religion, in the Capitol at _Rome_, and consulted with much Ceremony
+upon solemn Occasions. These _Sybils_, were the Prophetesses of the
+_Gentiles_; and tho’ their Writings now have many spurious Additions,
+yet none doubt but that the Conflagration of the World, was one of their
+original Prophecies.
+
+Let us now proceed to the Eastern Nations. As the _Romans_ received the
+small Skill they had in the Sciences, from the _Greeks_; so the
+_Greeks_, receiv’d their chief Mystick Learning from the _Barbarians_:
+That is, from the _Ægyptians_, _Persians_, _Phœnicians_, and other
+Eastern Nations; for ’tis not only the Western, or Northern People, that
+they called _Barbarians_, but indeed, all Nations besides themselves.
+For that is commonly the Vanity of great Empires, to uncivilize, in a
+Manner, all the rest of the World; and to account all those People
+_barbarous_, that are not subject to their Dominion. These however, whom
+they called so, were the most ancient People, and had the first Learning
+that was ever heard of after the Flood. And amongst these, the
+_Ægyptians_ were as famous as any; whose Sentiments in this particular
+of the Conflagration, are well known. For _Plato_, who liv’d amongst
+them several Years, tells us in his _Timæus_, that it was the Doctrine
+of their Priests, that the fatal Catastrophes of the World, were by
+_Fire_ and _Water_. In like manner, the _Persians_ made their beloved
+God, _Fire_, at length to consume all Things that are capable of being
+consum’d: For that is said to have been the Doctrine of _Hydaspes_, one
+of their great _Magi_, or Wise Men. As to the _Phœnicians_, I suspect
+very much, that the _Stoicks_ had their Philosophy from them (_Just.
+Mar. Apol. 2._) and amongst other Things the Conflagration. We shall
+take Notice of that hereafter.
+
+But to comprehend the _Arabians_ also, and _Indians_, give me leave to
+reflect a little upon the Story of the _Phœnix_. A Story well known, and
+related by some ancient Authors, and is in short this: The _Phœnix_,
+they say, is a Bird in _Arabia_, _India_, and those Eastern Parts,
+single in her Kind, never more than one at a Time, and very long-lived;
+appearing only at the Expiration of the _Great Year_, as they call it:
+And when she makes herself a Nest of Spices, which being set on fire by
+the Sun, or some other secret Power, she hovers upon it, and consumes
+herself in the Flames. But, which is most wonderful, out of these Ashes
+riseth a second _Phœnix_, so that it is not so much a Death, as a
+Renovation. I do not doubt but the Story is a Fable, as to any such kind
+of Bird, single in her Species, living, and dying, and reviving in that
+Manner: But ’tis an Apologue, or a Fable with an Interpretation, and was
+intended as an _Emblem_ of the World; which, after a long Age, will be
+consum’d in the last Fire: And from its Ashes or Remains, will arise
+another World, or a new-form’d Heavens and Earth. This, I think, is the
+true Mystery of the _Phœnix_, under which Symbol the Eastern Nations
+preserv’d the Doctrine of the Conflagration, and Renovation of the
+World. They tell somewhat a like Story of the Eagle, soaring aloft so
+near the Sun, that by his Warmth and enlivening Rays, she renews her
+Age, and becomes young again. To this the _Psalmist_ is thought to
+allude, Psal. ciii. 5. _Thy Youth shall be renewed like the Eagles_:
+Which the _Chaldee_ Paraphrast renders, _In mundo venturo renovabis,
+sicut Aquilæ, juventutem tuam_. These Things to me seem plainly to be
+Symbolical, representing that World to come, which the Paraphrast
+mentions, and the firing of this. And this is after the Manner of the
+Eastern Wisdom; which always lov’d to go fine, cloath’d in Figures and
+Fancies.
+
+And not only the Eastern _Barbarians_, but the Northern and Western
+also, had this Doctrine of the Conflagration amongst them. The
+_Scythians_, in their Dispute with the _Ægyptians_ about Antiquity,
+argue upon both Suppositions, of Fire or Water, destroying the last
+World, or beginning This. And in the West, the _Celts_, the most ancient
+People there, had the same Tradition; for the _Druids_, who were their
+Priests and Philosophers, derived not from the _Greeks_, but of the old
+Race of Wise Men, that had their Learning traditionally, and, as it
+were, hereditary from the first Ages: These, as _Strabo_ tells us, _lib.
+4._ gave the World a kind of Immortality, by repeated Renovations; and
+the Principle that destroy’d it, according to them, was always Fire or
+Water. I had forgot to mention in this List, the _Chaldeans_, whose
+Opinion we have from _Berosus_, in _Seneca_, _Nat. Quæst. 3._ _c. 29_.
+They did not only teach the Conflagration, but also fix’d it to a
+certain Period of Time, when there should happen a great Conjunction of
+the Planets in _Cancer_. Lastly, we may add, to close the Account, the
+modern _Indian_ Philosophers, the Reliques of the old _Bragmans_: These,
+as _Maffeus_ tells us, _lib._ 16. _Hist. Ind._ declare, That the World
+will be renewed after an universal Conflagration.
+
+You see of what Extent and Universality throughout all Nations, this
+Doctrine of the Conflagration hath been. Let us now consider, what
+Defects or Excesses there are, in these ancient Opinions, concerning
+this Fate of the World, and how they may be rectified: That we may admit
+them no further into our Belief, than they are warranted by Reason, or
+by the Authority of the Christian Religion. The first Fault they seem to
+have committed about this Point, is this, That they made these
+Revolutions and Renovations of Nature, indefinite or endless: As if
+there would be such a Succession of Deluges and Conflagrations to all
+Eternity. This the _Stoicks_ seem plainly to have asserted, as appears
+from _Numenius_, _Philo_, _Simplicius_, and others. S. _Jerome_, _Ep.
+60._ imputes this Opinion also to _Origen_; but he does not always hit
+the true Sense of that Father, or is not fair and just in the
+Representation of it. Whosoever held this Opinion, ’tis a manifest
+Error, and may be easily rectified by the Christian Revelation; which
+teaches us plainly, that there is a final Period and Consummation of all
+Things that belong to this Sublunary or Terrestrial World; When the
+_Kingdom shall be delivered up to the Father_; and Time shall be no
+more.
+
+Another Error they committed in this Doctrine, is, the Identity, or
+Sameness, if I may so say, of the World’s succeeding one another. They
+are made, indeed, of the same Lump of Matter, but they supposed them to
+return also in the same Form. And, which is worse, that there would be
+the same Face of human Affairs; the same Persons and the same Actions
+over again; so as the second World would be but a bare Repetition of the
+former, without any Variety or Diversity. Such a Revolution is commonly
+call’d the _Platonick Year_: A Period when all Things return to the same
+Posture they had been some Thousand of Years before; as a Play acted
+over again, upon the same Stage, and to the same Auditory: This is a
+groundless and injudicious Supposition. For, whether we consider the
+Nature of Things, the Earth, after a Dissolution by Fire, or by Water,
+could not return into the same Form and Fashion it had before; Or
+whether we consider Providence, it would no way suit with the Divine
+Wisdom and Justice, to bring upon the Stage again, those very Scenes,
+and that very Course of human Affairs, which it had so lately condemn’d
+and destroy’d. We may be assur’d therefore, that, upon the Dissolution
+of a World, a new Order of Things, both as to Nature and Providence,
+always appears. And what that new Order will be, in both respects, after
+the _Conflagration_, I hope we shall, in the following Book, give a
+satisfactory Account.
+
+These are the Opinions, true or false, of the Ancients; and chiefly of
+the _Stoicks_, concerning the Mystery of the Conflagration. It will not
+be improper to enquire, in the last Place, how the _Stoicks_ came by
+this Doctrine: Whether it was their Discovery and Invention, or from
+whom they learned it. That it was not their own Invention, we have given
+sufficient ground to believe, by shewing the Antiquity of it beyond the
+Times of the _Stoicks_. Besides, what a Man invents himself, he can give
+the Reasons and Causes of it, as Things upon which he founded his
+Invention: But the _Stoicks_ do not this, but, according to the ancient
+traditional Way, deliver the Conclusion without Proof or Premises. We
+named _Heraclitus_ and _Empedocles_, amongst the _Greeks_, to have
+taught this Doctrine before the _Stoicks_; And, according to _Plutarch_
+(_de Defec. Orac._) _Hesiod_ and _Orpheus_, Authors of the highest
+Antiquity, sung of this last Fire in their Philosophick Poetry. But I
+suspect the _Stoicks_ had this Doctrine from the _Phœnicians_; for if we
+inquire into the Original of that Sect, we shall find that their Founder
+_Zeno_, was a Barbarian, or Semi-barbarian, deriv’d from the
+_Phœnicians_, as _Laertius_ and _Cicero_ give an Account of him. And the
+_Phœnicians_ had a great Share in the Oriental Knowledge, as we see by
+_Sanchoniathion’s_ Remains in _Eusebius_. And by their mystical Books
+which _Suidas_ mentions, from whence _Pherecydes_, _Pythagoras_’s
+Master, had his Learning. We may therefore, reasonably presume, that it
+might be from his Countrymen, the _Phœnicians_, that _Zeno_ had the
+Doctrine of the _Conflagration_. Not that he brought it first into
+_Greece_, but strongly reviv’d it, and made it almost peculiar to his
+Sect.
+
+So much for the _Stoicks_ in particular, and the _Greeks_ in general. We
+have also, you see, trac’d these Opinions higher, to the first Barbarick
+Philosophers; who were the first Race of Philosophers after the Flood.
+But _Josephus_ tells a formal Story, of Pillars set up by _Seth_, before
+the Flood; implying the Foreknowledge of this fiery Destruction of the
+World, even from the Beginning of it. His Words, _lib. 1. c. 3._ are to
+this Effect, give what Credit to them you think fit: _Seth and his
+Fellow Students, having found out the Knowledge of the Cœlestial Bodies,
+and the Order and Disposition of the Universe; and having also receiv’d
+from Adam, a Prophecy, that the World should have a double Destruction,
+one by Water, another by Fire: To preserve and transmit their Knowledge,
+in either Case, to Posterity, they raised two Pillars, one of Brick,
+another of Stone, and ingrav’d upon them their Philosophy and
+Inventions. And one of these Pillars_, the Author says (Κατα τον
+Συριαδα) _was standing in_ Syria, _even to his Time_. I do not press the
+Belief of this Story; there being nothing, that I know of, in Antiquity,
+Sacred or Prophane, that gives a joint Testimony with it. And those that
+set up these Pillars, do not seem to me, to have understood the Nature
+of the _Deluge_ or _Conflagration_; if they thought a Pillar, either of
+Brick or Stone, would be secure, in those great Dissolutions of the
+Earth. But we have pursued this Doctrine high enough, without the Help
+of these ante-diluvian Antiquities: Namely, to the earliest People, and
+the first Appearances of Wisdom after the Flood. So that, I think, we
+may justly look upon it as the Doctrine of _Noah_, and of his immediate
+Posterity. And, as that is the highest Source of Learning to the present
+World; so we should endeavour to carry our Philosophical Traditions to
+that Original: For I cannot persuade myself, but that they had amongst
+them, even in those early Days, the main Strokes, or Conclusions of the
+best Philosophy: Or, if I may so say, a Form of sound Doctrine
+concerning Nature and Providence. Of which Matter, if you will allow me
+a short Digression, I will speak my Thoughts in a few Words.
+
+In those first Ages of the World, after the Flood, when _Noah_ and his
+Children peopled the Earth again, as he gave them Precepts of Morality
+and Piety, for the Conduct of their Manners; which are usually call’d
+_Præcepta Noachidarum_, the _Precepts_ of _Noah_, frequently mention’d
+both by the _Jews_ and _Christians_: So also he deliver’d to them, at
+least, if we judge aright, certain Maxims, or Conclusions about
+Providence, the State of Nature, and the Fate of the World: And these,
+in Proportion, may be call’d _Dogmata Noachidarum_, the _Doctrines_ of
+_Noah_, and _his Children_. Which made a System of Philosophy, or secret
+Knowledge amongst them, delivered by Tradition from Father to Son; but
+especially preserv’d amongst their Priests and Sacred Persons, or such
+others as were addicted to Contemplation. This I take to be more ancient
+than _Moses_ himself, or the _Jewish_ Nation. But it would lead me too
+far out of my Way, to set down, in this Place, the Reasons of my
+Judgment. Let it be sufficient to have pointed only at this
+Fountain-head of Knowledge, and so return to our Argument.
+
+We have heard, as it were, a Cry of Fire, throughout all Antiquity, and
+throughout all the People of the Earth. But those Alarums are sometimes
+false, or make a greater Noise than the Thing deserves. For my Part, I
+never trust Antiquity barely upon its own Account, but always require a
+second Witness, either from Nature, or from Scripture: What the Voice of
+Nature is, we shall hear all along in the following Treatise. Let us
+then examine at present, what Testimony the Prophets and Apostles give
+to this ancient Doctrine of the Conflagration of the World. The Prophets
+see the World a Fire at a Distance, and more imperfectly, as a
+Brightness in the Heavens, rather than a burning Flame: But S. _Peter_
+describes it, as if he had been standing by, and seen the Heavens and
+Earth in a red Fire; heard the cracking Flames, and the tumbling
+Mountains, 2 _Pet._ iii. 10. In the Day of the Lord, _The Heavens shall
+pass away with a great Noise, and the Elements shall melt with fervent
+Heat: The Earth also, and the Works that are therein, shall be burnt
+up_. Then, after a pious Ejaculation, he adds, _Ver._ 12. _Looking for,
+and hastening the coming of the Day of God, wherein the Heavens being on
+Fire, shall be dissolv’d; and the Elements shall melt with fervent
+Heat._ This is as lively as a Man could express it, if he had the
+dreadful Spectacle before his Eyes. S. _Peter_ had before taught the
+same Doctrine (_ver._ 5, 6, 7.) but in a more Philosophick Way;
+describing the double Fate of the World, by Water and Fire, with
+relation to the Nature and Constitution of either World, past or
+present. _The Heavens and the Earth were of old, consisting of Water,
+and by Water: Whereby, the World that then was, being overflowed with
+Water, perished. But the Heavens and the Earth which are now, by the
+same Word are kept in Store, reserved unto Fire, against the Day of
+Judgment, and Perdition of Ungodly, or Atheistical Men._ This Testimony
+of S. _Peter_ being full, direct, and explicit, will give Light and
+Strength to several other Passages of Scripture, where the same Thing is
+exprest obscurely, or by Allusion. As when S. _Paul_ says, _The Fire
+shall try every Man’s Work in that Day_, 1 Cor. iii. 12, 13. And our
+Saviour says, _The Tares shall be burnt in the Fire, at the End of the
+World_, Matth. xiii. 40, 41, 42. Accordingly it is said, both by the
+Apostles and Prophets, that _God_ will come to Judgment _in Fire_. St.
+_Paul_ to the _Thessalonians_, 2 _Thess._ ii. 7, 8. promiseth the
+persecuted Righteous Rest and Ease, _When the Lord shall be revealed
+from Heaven, with his mighty Angels, in flaming Fire; taking Vengeance
+on them that know not God_, &c. And so to the _Hebrews_, St. _Paul_
+says, _ch._ x. 27. that for wilful Apostates, there remaineth no more
+Sacrifice for Sin, _but a certain fearful looking for of Judgment, and
+fiery Indignation, which shall devour the Adversaries_, or Enemies of
+God. And in _ch._ xii. _ver._ 26, 27, 28, 29. he alludes to the same
+Thing, when, after he had spoken of _shaking the Heavens_, and the
+_Earth_ once more, he exhorteth, as St. _Peter_ does upon the same
+Occasion, to _Reverence and godly Fear; for our God is a consuming
+Fire_.
+
+In like manner the Prophets, when they speak of destroying the Wicked,
+and the Enemies of God and Christ, at the End of the World, represent it
+as a Destruction _by Fire_. Psal. xi. 6. _Upon the Wicked the Lord shall
+rain Coals, Fire, and Brimstone, and a burning Tempest: This shall be
+the Portion of their Cup._ And Psal. l. 3. _Our God shall come, and will
+not be slow: A Fire shall devour before him_, and it _shall be very
+tempestuous round about him_. And in the Beginning of those two
+triumphal Psalms, the lxviiith, and xcviith, we see plain Allusions to
+this coming of the Lord in Fire. The other Prophets speak in the same
+Style, of a fiery Indignation against the Wicked, in the Day of the
+Lord: As in _Isaiah_ lxvi. 15. _For behold the Lord will come with Fire,
+and with his Chariots like a Whirlwind, to render his Anger with Fury,
+and his Rebuke with Flames of Fire_ (and _ch._ xxxiv. 8, 9, 10) And in
+_Daniel_, _c._ vii. 9, 10. The Ancient of Days is placed upon his Seat
+of Judgment, covered in Flames. _I beheld till the Thrones were set, and
+the Ancient of Days did sit, whose Garment was white as Snow, and the
+Hair of his Head like the pure Wool: His Throne was like the fiery
+Flame, his Wheels as burning Fire. A fiery Stream issued and came forth
+from before him: thousand thousands ministred unto him, and ten thousand
+times ten thousand stood before him: The Judgment was set, and the Books
+were opened._ The Prophet _Malachi_, c. iv. 1. describes the Day of the
+Lord to the same Effect, and in like Colours; _Behold the Day cometh,
+that shall burn as an Oven: and all the Proud, yea, and all that do
+wickedly, shall be as Stubble; and the Day that cometh shall burn them
+up, saith the Lord of Hosts, that it shall leave them neither Root nor
+Branch._ And that Nature herself, and the Earth shall suffer in that
+Fire, the Prophet _Zephany_ tells us, _c._ iii. 8. _All the Earth shall
+be devoured with the Fire of my Jealousy._ Lastly, this Consumption of
+the Earth by Fire, even to the Foundations of it, is exprest livelily by
+_Moses_ in his Song, _Deut._ xxxii. 22. _A Fire is kindled in my Anger,
+and shall burn unto the lowest Hell: and shall consume the Earth with
+her Increase, and set on Fire the Foundations of the Mountains._
+
+If we reflect upon these Witnesses; and especially the first and last,
+_Moses_ and Saint _Peter_; at what a great Distance of Time they writ
+their Prophecies, and yet how well they agree, we must needs conclude
+they were acted by the same Spirit; and a Spirit that saw thorough all
+the Ages of the World, from the Beginning to the End. These Sacred
+Writers were so remote in Time from one another, that they could not
+confer together, nor conspire either in a false Testimony, or to make
+the same Prediction. But being under one common Influence and
+Inspiration, which is always consistent with itself, they have dictated
+the same Things, tho’ at two thousand Years Distance sometimes from one
+another. This, besides many other Considerations, makes their Authority
+incontestable. And upon the whole Account, you see, that the Doctrine of
+the future _Conflagration of the World_, having run thro’ all Ages and
+Nations, is, by the joint Consent of the Prophets and Apostles, adopted
+into the Christian Faith.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. IV.
+
+
+ _Concerning the Time of the Conflagration, and the End of the World.
+ What the Astronomers say upon this Subject, and upon what they
+ ground their Calculations: The true Notion of the Great Year, or of
+ the Platonick Year, stated and explained._
+
+
+Having, in this first Section, laid a sure Foundation, as to the Subject
+of our Discourse; the Truth and Certainty of the _Conflagration_ whereof
+we are to treat; we will now proceed to enquire after the _Time_,
+_Causes_, and _Manner_ of it. We are naturally more inquisitive after
+the End of the World, and the Time of that fatal Revolution, than after
+the Causes of it: For these, we know, are irresistible, whensoever they
+come, and therefore we are only solicitous that they should not overtake
+us, or our near Posterity. The _Romans_ thought they had the Fates of
+their Empire in the Books of the Sibyls, which were kept by the
+Magistrates as a Sacred Treasure. We have also our Prophetical Books,
+more sacred and more infallible than theirs, which contain the Fate of
+all the Kingdoms of the Earth, and of that glorious Kingdom that is to
+succeed. And of all Futurities, there is none can be of such Importance
+to be enquired after, as this last Scene and Close of all human Affairs.
+
+If I thought it possible to determine the Time of the _Conflagration_
+from the bare Intuition of natural Causes, I would not treat of it in
+this Place, but reserve it to the last; after we had brought into View
+all those Causes, weigh’d their Force, and examin’d how and when they
+would concur to produce this great Effect. But I am satisfied, that the
+Excitation and Concourse of those Causes does not depend upon Nature
+only; and tho’ the Causes may be sufficient, when all united, yet the
+Union of them at such a Time, and in such a Manner, I look upon as the
+Effect of a particular Providence; and therefore no Fore-sight of ours,
+or Inspection into Nature, can discover to us the Time of this
+Conjuncture. This Method, therefore, of Prediction from natural Causes
+being laid aside as impracticable, all other Methods may be treated of
+in this Place, as being independent upon any Thing that is to follow in
+the Treatise; and it will be an Ease to the Argument to discharge it of
+this Part, and clear the Way by Degrees to the principal Point, which
+is, The _Causes_ and _Manner_ of the Conflagration.
+
+Some have thought it a Kind of Impiety in a Christian, to enquire after
+the End of the World; because of that Check which our Saviour gave his
+Disciples, when, after his Resurrection, enquiring of him about the Time
+of his Kingdom, he answer’d, _It is not for you to know the Times or the
+Seasons, which the Father hath put in his own Power, Acts i. 7._ And
+before his Death, when he was discoursing of the Consummation of all
+Things, He told them expresly, that though there should be such and such
+previous Signs as he had mention’d, yet, _Of that Day and Hour knoweth
+no Man; no, not the Angels that are in Heaven, but my Father only, Matt.
+xxiv. 36._ Be it so, that the Disciples deserv’d a Reprimand, for
+desiring to know, by a particular Revelation from our Saviour, the State
+of future Times; when many other Things were more necessary for their
+Instruction, and for their Ministry. Be it also admitted, that the
+Angels, at that Distance of Time, could not see thorow all Events to the
+End of the World; it does not at all follow from thence, that they do
+not know it now; when, in the Course of 1600 Years, many Things are come
+to pass, that may be Marks and Directions to them to make a Judgment of
+what remains, and of the last Period of all Things. However, there will
+be no Danger in our Enquiries about this Matter, seeing they are not so
+much to discover the Certainty, as the Uncertainty of that Period, as to
+human Knowledge. Let us therefore consider what Methods have been used,
+by those that have been curious and busy to measure the Duration of the
+World.
+
+The _Stoicks_ tell us, _When_ the Sun and the Stars have drunk up the
+Sea, then the Earth shall be burnt. A very fair Prophecy! But, how long
+will they be a drinking? For unless we can determine that, we cannot
+determine when this Combustion will begin. Many of the Antients thought
+that the Stars were nourish’d by the Vapours of the Ocean and of the
+moist Earth, (_Cicer. de Nat. D. lib. 2._) and when that Nourishment was
+spent, being of a fiery Nature, they would prey upon the Body of the
+Earth it self, and consume that, after they had consum’d the Water. This
+is old-fashion’d Philosophy, and now, that the Nature of those Bodies is
+better known, will scarce pass for current. ’Tis true, we must expect
+some Dispositions towards the Combustion of the World, from a great
+Drought and Desiccation of the Earth: But this helps us nothing on our
+Way; for the Question still returns, _When_ will this immoderate Drought
+or Dryness happen? and that’s as ill to resolve as the former.
+Therefore, as I said before, I have no Hopes of deciding the Question by
+Physiology or Natural Causes; let us then look up from the Earth to the
+Heavens, to the Astronomers and the Prophets: These think they can
+define the Age and Duration of the World; the one by their Art, and the
+other by Inspiration.
+
+We begin with the Astronomers; whose Calculations are founded either
+upon the Aspects and Configurations of the Planets, or upon the
+Revolutions of the fixed Stars: or, lastly, upon that which they call
+_Annus Magnus_, or the _Great Year_, whatsoever that Notion proves to be
+when it is rightly interpreted. As to the Planets, _Berosus_ tells us,
+the _Chaldeans_ suppose Deluges to proceed from a great Conjunction of
+the Planets in _Capricorn_, (_Sen. Nat. qu. l. 3. c. 29._) And from a
+like Conjunction in the opposite Sign of _Cancer_, the Conflagration
+will ensue. So that if we compute by the Astronomical Tables how long it
+will be to such a Conjunction, we find at the same Time how long it will
+be to the _Conflagration_. This Doctrine of the _Chaldeans_ some
+Christian Authors have owned, and followed the same Principles and
+Method.
+
+If these Authors would deal fairly with Mankind, they should shew us
+some Connexion betwixt these Causes and the Effects which they make
+consequent upon them. For ’tis an unreasonable Thing to require a Man’s
+Assent to a Proposition, where he sees no Dependance or Connexion of
+Terms; unless it come by Revelation, or from an infallible Authority. If
+you say, the Conflagration will be at the first great Conjunction of the
+Planets in _Cancer_, and I say it will be at the next Eclipse of the
+Moon, if you shew no more Reason for your Assertion than I for mine, and
+neither of us pretend to Revelation or Infallibility, we may justly
+expect to be equally credited. Pray what Reason can you give why the
+Planets, when they meet, should plot together to set on Fire their
+Fellow-Planet, the Earth, who never did them any Harm? But now there is
+a plausible Reason for my Opinion; for the Moon, when eclips’d, may
+think herself affronted by the Earth interposing rudely betwixt her and
+the Sun, and leaving her to grope her Way in the Dark: She therefore may
+justly take her Revenge as she can. But you’ll say, ’tis not in the
+Power of the Moon to set the Earth on Fire, if she had Malice enough to
+do it. No, nor say I, is it in the Power of the other Planets that are
+far more distant from the Earth than the Moon, and as stark dull Lumps
+of Earth as she is. The plain Truth is, the Planets are so many Earths;
+and our Earth is as much a Planet as the brightest of them. ’Tis carried
+about the Sun with the same common Stream, and shines with as much
+Lustre to them, as they do to us: Neither can they do any more Harm to
+it, than it can do to them. ’Tis now well known, that the Planets are
+dark opake Bodies, generally made up of Earth and Water, as our Globe
+is; and have no Force or Action, but that of reverberating the Light
+which the Sun casts upon them. This blind superstitious Fear or
+Reverence for the Stars, had its Original from the antient Idolaters:
+They thought them Gods, and that they had Domination over human Affairs.
+We do not indeed worship them, as they did; but some Men retain still
+the same Opinion of their Vertues, of their Rule and Influence upon us
+and our Affairs, which was the Ground of their Worship. ’Tis full Time
+now to sweep away these Cobwebs of Superstition, these Relicks of
+Paganism. I do not see how we are any more concern’d in the Postures of
+the Planets, than in the Postures of the Clouds; and you may as well
+build an Art of Prediction and Divination, upon the one, as the other.
+They must not know much of the Philosophy of the Heavens, or little
+consider it, that think the Fate, either of single Persons, or of the
+whole Earth, can depend upon the Aspects, or figur’d Dances of those
+Bodies.
+
+But you’ll say, it may be, Tho’ no Reason can be given for such Effects,
+yet Experience does attest the Truth of them. In the first Place, I
+answer, no Experience can be produced for this Effect we are speaking
+of, the Conflagration of the World. Secondly, Experience fallaciously
+recorded, or wholly in favour of one side, is no Proof. If a publick
+Register was kept of all Astrological Predictions, and of all the Events
+that followed upon them, right or wrong, agreeing or disagreeing, I
+could willingly refer the Cause to the Determination of such a Register,
+and such Experience: But that which they call Experience, is so stated,
+that if one Prediction of ten hits right, or near right, it shall make
+more Noise, and be more taken Notice of, than all the Nine that are
+false. Just as in a Lottery, where many Blanks are drawn for one Prize,
+yet these make all the Noise, and those are forgotten. If any one be so
+lucky as to draw a good Lot, then the Trumpet sounds, and his Name is
+register’d, and he tells his good Fortune to every Body he meets;
+whereas those that lose, go silently away with empty Pockets, and are
+asham’d to tell their Losses. Such a Thing is the Register of
+Astrological Experiences; they record what makes for their Credit, but
+drop all blank Instances, that would discover the Vanity or Cheat of
+their Art.
+
+So much for the Planets. They have also a pretended Calculation of the
+End of the World, from the fix’d Stars and the Firmament. Which, in
+short, is this: They suppose these Bodies, besides the Hurry of their
+Diurnal Motion from East to West, quite round the Earth in 24 Hours, to
+have another retrograde Motion from West to East, which is more slow and
+leisurely: And when they have finished the Circle of this
+Retrogradation, and come up again to the same Place from whence they
+started at the Beginning of the World, then this Course of Nature will
+be at an End; and either the Heavens will cease from all Motion, or a
+new Set of Motions will be put a-foot, and the World begin again. This
+is a Bundle of Fictions tied up in a pretty Knot. In the first Place,
+there is no such Thing as a solid Firmament, in which the Stars are
+fix’d, as Nails in a Board. The Heavens are as fluid as our Air, and the
+higher we go, the more thin and subtle is the ethereal Matter. Then, the
+fix’d Stars are not all in one Surface, as they seem to us, not at an
+equal Distance from the Earth, but are placed in several Orbs higher and
+higher; there being infinite Room in the great Deep of the Heavens,
+every Way, for innumerable Stars and Spheres behind one another, to fill
+and beautify the immense Spaces of the Universe. Lastly, the fix’d Stars
+have no Motion common to them all, nor any Motion singly, unless upon
+their own Centres; and therefore, never leaving their Stations, they can
+never return to any common Station, which they would suppose them to
+have had at the Beginning of the World. So as this Period they speak of,
+whereby they would measure the Duration of the World, is merely
+imaginary, and hath no Foundation in the true Nature or Motion of the
+cœlestial Bodies.
+
+But in the third Place, they speak of an ANNUS MAGNUS, a _Great Year_: A
+Revolution so call’d, whatsoever it is, that is of the same Extent with
+the Length of the World. This Notion, I confess, is more antient and
+universal, and therefore I am the more apt to believe that it is not
+altogether groundless. But the Difficulty is, to find out the Notion of
+this _Great Year_, what is to be understood by it, and then of what
+Length it is. They all agree that it is a Time of some grand
+Instauration of all Things, or a Restitution of the Heavens and the
+Earth to their former State; that is, to the State and Posture they had
+at the Beginning of the World; such therefore as will restore the Golden
+Age, and that happy State of Nature wherein Things were at first. If so,
+if these be the Marks and Properties of this Revolution, which is called
+the _Great Year_, we need not go so far to find the true Notion and
+Interpretation of it. Those that have read the _first Part_ of this
+_Theory_, may remember, that in the _2d Book, Chap. 3._ we gave an
+Account what the Posture of the Earth was at the Beginning of the World,
+and what were the Consequences of that Posture, _a perpetual Spring_ and
+Equinox throughout all the Earth: And if the Earth was restor’d again to
+that Posture and Situation, all that is imputed to the _Great Year_,
+would immediately follow upon it, without ever disturbing or moving the
+fix’d Stars, Firmament, or Planets; and yet at the same Time all these
+three would return, or be restored to the same Posture they had at the
+Beginning of the World; so as the whole Character of the _Great Year_
+would be truly fulfill’d, tho’ not in that Way which they imagin’d; but
+in another, more compendious, and of easier Conception. My Meaning is
+this, If the Axis of the Earth was rectified and set parallel with the
+Axis of the Ecliptick, upon which the Planets, Firmament, and fix’d
+Stars are suppos’d to move, all Things would be as they were at first; a
+general Harmony and Conformity of all the Motions of the Universe would
+presently appear, such as they say, was in the Golden Age, before any
+Disorder came into the Natural or Moral World.
+
+As this is an easy, so I do not doubt, but it is a true Account of that
+which was originally call’d the _Great Year_, or the Great Instauration;
+which Nature will bring to pass in this simple Method, by rectifying the
+Axis of the Earth, without those operose Revolutions, which some
+Astronomers have fancied. But however, this Account being admitted, how
+will it help us to define what the Age and Duration of the World will
+be? ’Tis true, many have undertaken to tell us the Length of this _Great
+Year_, and consequently of the World; but, besides that their Accounts
+are very different, and generally of an extravagant Length, if we had
+the true Account, it would not assure us when the World would end;
+because we do not know when it did begin, or what Progress we have
+already made in the Line of Time. For I am satisfied, the Chronology of
+the World, whether Sacred or Profane, is lost; till Providence shall
+please to retrieve it by some new Discovery. As to profane Chronology,
+or that of the _Heathens_, the _Greeks_, and the _Romans_ knew nothing
+above the _Olympiads_; which fell short many Ages of the Deluge, much
+more of the Beginning of the World. And the Eastern barbarous Nations,
+as they disagreed amongst themselves, so generally they run the Origin
+of the World to such a prodigious Height, as is neither agreeable to
+Faith, nor Reason. As to sacred Chronology, ’tis well known, that the
+Difference there is betwixt the _Greek_, _Hebrew_, and _Samaritan_
+Copies of the Bible, make the Age of the World altogether undetermin’d:
+And there is no Way yet found out, how we may certainly discover which
+of the three Copies is most Authentick; and consequently, what the Age
+of the World is, upon a true Computation. Seeing therefore we have no
+Assurance how long the World hath stood already, neither could we be
+assur’d how long it hath to stand, tho’ by this _Annus Magnus_, or any
+other Way, the total Sum, or whole Term of its Duration was truly known;
+I am sorry to see the little Success we have had in our first Search
+after the End of the World, from Astronomical Calculations. But ’tis an
+useful Piece of Knowledge to know the Bounds of our Knowledge; that so
+we may not spend our Time and Thoughts about Things that lie out of our
+Reach. I have little or no Hopes of resolving this Point by the Light of
+Nature, and therefore it only remains now to enquire, whether Providence
+hath made it known by any Sort of Prophecy or Revelation. Which shall be
+the Subject of the following Chapter.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. V.
+
+
+ _Concerning Prophecies that determine the End of the World: Of what
+ Order soever, Profane or Sacred; Jewish or Christian. That no
+ certain Judgment can be made from any of them, at what Distance we
+ are now from the Conflagration._
+
+
+The Bounds of human Knowledge are so narrow, and the Desire of knowing
+so vast and illimited, that it often puts Mankind upon irregular Methods
+of inlarging their Knowledge. This hath made them find out Arts of
+Commerce with evil Spirits, to be instructed by them in such Events as
+they could not of themselves discover. We meddle not with those
+Mysteries of Iniquity: But what hath appear’d under the Notion of divine
+Prophecy, relating to the Chronology of the World: Giving either the
+whole Extent of it, or certain Marks of its Expiration; These we purpose
+to examine in this Place: How far any Thing may, or may not, be
+concluded from them, as to the Resolution of our Problem, _How long the
+World will last_.
+
+Amongst the Heathens, I do not remember any Prophecies of this Nature,
+except the _Sibylline Oracles_, as they are usually called. The antient
+Eastern Philosophers have left us no Account that I can call to mind,
+about the Time of this Fatality. They say, when the _Phœnix_ returns, we
+must expect the Conflagration to follow; but the Age of the _Phœnix_
+they make as various and uncertain, as they do the Computation of their
+_Great Year_, _Symbolum_ ἀποξαταστάσεως πολυχρονίου, _Phœnix. Hor. Apol.
+l. 2. c. 57._ which two Things are indeed, one and the same in Effect.
+Some of them, I confess, mention 6000 Years for the whole Age of the
+World: Which being the famous Prophecy of the _Jews_, we shall speak to
+it largely hereafter; and reduce to that Head, what broken Traditions
+remain amongst the Heathens of the same thing. As to the _Sibylline
+Oracles_, which were so much in Reputation amongst the _Greeks_ and
+_Romans_, they have been tamper’d with so much, and chang’d so often,
+that they are become now of little Authority. They seem to have divided
+the Duration of the World into ten Ages, and the last of these they make
+a Golden Age, a State of Peace, Righteousness, and Perfection: But
+seeing they have not determin’d, in any definite Numbers, what the
+Length of every Age will be, nor given us the Sum of all, we cannot draw
+any Conclusion from this Account, as to the Point in question before us:
+But must proceed to the _Jewish_ and _Christian_ Oracles.
+
+The _Jews_ have a remarkable Prophecy, which expresseth both the Whole,
+and the Parts of the World’s Duration. The World, they say, will stand
+Six thousand Years: _Two thousand before the Law, Two thousand under the
+Law, and Two thousand under the Messiah_. This Prophecy they derive from
+_Elias_; but there were two of the Name, _Elias_ the _Thesbite_, and
+_Elias_ the _Rabbin_, or _Cabbalist_; and ’tis suppos’d to belong
+immediately to the latter of these. Yet this does not hinder, in my
+Opinion, but that it might come originally from the former _Elias_, and
+was preserv’d in the School of this _Elias_ the _Rabbin_, and first made
+publick by him. Or he added, it may be, that Division of the Time into
+three Parts, and so got a Title to the whole. I cannot easily imagine,
+that a Doctor that lived Two hundred Years, or thereabouts, before
+Christ, when Prophecy had ceas’d for some Ages amongst the _Jews_,
+should take upon him to dictate a Prophecy about the Duration of the
+World, unless he had been supported by some antecedent Cabbalistical
+Tradition: Which being kept more secret before, he took the Liberty to
+make Publick, and so was reputed the Author of the Prophecy: As many
+Philosophers amongst the _Greeks_, were the reputed Authors of such
+Doctrines as were much more antient than themselves: But they were the
+Publishers of them in their Country, or the Revivers of them after a
+long Silence; and so, by forgetful Posterity, got the Honour of the
+first Invention.
+
+You will think, it may be, the Time is too long, and the Distance too
+great, betwixt _Elias_ the _Thesbite_, and this _Elias_ the _Rabbin_,
+for a Tradition to subsist all the while, or be preserv’d with any
+competent Integrity. But it appears from St. _Jude_’s Epistle, that the
+_Prophecies of Enoch_, (who liv’d before the Flood) relating to the Day
+of Judgment and the End of the World, were extant in his Time, either in
+Writing or by Tradition: And the Distance between _Enoch_ and St. _Jude_
+was vastly greater than betwixt the two _Elias_’s. Nor was any fitter to
+be inspir’d with that Knowledge, or to tell the first News of that fatal
+Period, than the old Prophet _Elias_, who is to come again and bring the
+Alarum of the approaching Conflagration. But however this Conjecture may
+prove as to the original Author of this Prophecy, the Prophecy itself
+concerning the _Sexmillennial_ Duration of the World, is very much
+insisted upon by the Christian Fathers. Which yet I believe is not so
+much for the bare Authority of the Tradition, as because they thought it
+was founded in the History of the _six Days Creation_, and the _Sabbath_
+succeeding: As also in some other typical Precepts and Usages in the Law
+of _Moses_. But before we speak of that, give me Leave to name some of
+those Fathers to you, that were of this Judgment, and supposed the great
+Sabbatism would succeed after the World had stood Six thousand Years. Of
+this Opinion was St. _Barnabas_ in his Catholick Epistle, _ch._ xv.
+Where he argues, that the Creation will be ended in Six thousand Years,
+as it was finish’d in six Days: Every Day according to the sacred and
+mystical Account, being a Thousand Years. Of the same Judgment is St.
+_Irenæus_, both as to the Conclusion, and the Reason of it, _l. 5. c.
+28, 29, 30_. He saith, the History of the Creation in six Days, _is a
+Narration as to what it past, and a Prophecy of what is to come_. As the
+Work was said to be consummated in 6 Days, and the Sabbath to be the
+Seventh: So the Consummation of all Things will be in 6000 Years, and
+then the great Sabbatism to come on in the blessed Reign of Christ.
+_Hippolytus_ Martyr, Disciple of _Irenæus_, is of the same Judgment, as
+you may see in _Photius_, _c. 202._ _Lactantius_ in his _Divine
+Institutions_, _l. 7. c. 14._ gives the very same Account of the State
+and Condition of the World, and the same Proofs for it, and so does St.
+_Cyprian_, in his _Exhortation to Martyrdom, c. 18_. St. _Jerome_ more
+than once declares himself of the same Opinion; and St. _Austin_, _C. D.
+l. 20. c. 7._ tho’ he wavers, and was doubtful as to the _Millennium_,
+or Reign of Christ upon Earth, yet he receives this Computation without
+Hesitancy, and upon the foremention’d Grounds. So _Johannes Damascenus
+de Fide Orthodoxâ_, takes seven Millennaries for the intire Space of the
+World, from the Creation, to the general Resurrection, the Sabbatism
+being included. And that this was a receiv’d and approv’d Opinion in
+early Times, we may collect from the Author of the _Questions and
+Answers, ad Orthodoxos_, in _Justin Martyr_. Who, giving an Answer to
+that Enquiry about the six thousand Years Term of the World, says, _We
+may conjecture from many Places of Scripture, that those are in the
+right, that say, six thousand Years is the Time prefix’d, for the
+Duration of this present Frame of the World_. These Authors I have
+examin’d my self: But there are many others brought in Confirmation of
+this Opinion: As St. _Hilary_, _Anastasius Sinaita_, Sanctus
+_Gaudentius_, _Q. Julius Hilarion_, _Junilius Africanus_, _Isidorus
+Hispalensis_, _Cassiodorus_, _Gregorius Magnus_, and others, which I
+leave to be examin’d by those that have Curiosity and Leisure to do it.
+
+In the mean time, it must be confess’d, that many of these Fathers were
+under a Mistake, in one respect, in that they generally thought the
+World was near an End in their Time. An Error, which we need not take
+Pains to confute now; seeing we, who live twelve hundred or fourteen
+hundred Years after them, find the World still in being, and likely to
+continue so for some considerable Time. But it is easy to discern whence
+their Mistake proceeded: Not from this Prophecy alone, but because they
+reckon’d this Prophecy according to the Chronology of the _Septuagint_:
+Which setting back the Beginning of the World many Ages beyond the
+_Hebrew_, these six thousand Years were very near expir’d in the Time of
+those Fathers; and that made them conclude, that the World was very near
+an End. We will make no Reflections, in this Place, upon that Chronology
+of the _Septuagint_, lest it should too much interrupt the Thread of our
+Discourse. But it is necessary to shew how the Fathers grounded this
+Computation of six thousand Years, upon Scripture. ’Twas chiefly, as we
+suggested before, upon the _Hexameron_, or the Creation finish’d in _six
+Days_, and the _Sabbath_ ensuing. The Sabbath, they said, was a Type of
+the Sabbatism, that was to follow at the End of the World, according to
+St. _Paul_, _ch. v._ to the _Hebrews_; and then by Analogy and
+Consequence, the six Days preceding the Sabbath, must note the Space and
+Duration of the World. If therefore they could discover how much a Day
+is reckon’d for, in this mystical Computation, the Sum of the six Days
+would be easily found out. And they think, that, according to the
+Psalmist (_Psal. xc. 4._) and St. _Peter_, (_2 Epist. iii. 8._) _a Day_
+may be estimated _a thousand Years_, and consequently six Days must be
+counted six thousand Years, for the Duration of the World. This is their
+Interpretation, and their Inference: But it must be acknowledged, that
+there is an essential Weakness in all typical and allegorical
+Argumentations, in comparison of literal. And this being allow’d in
+Diminution of the Proof, we may be bold to say, that nothing yet
+appears, either in Nature, or Scripture, or human Affairs, repugnant to
+this Supposition of six thousand Years: Which hath Antiquity and the
+Authority of the Fathers, on its Side.
+
+We proceed now to the Christian Prophecies concerning the End of the
+World. I do not mention those in _Daniel_, because I am not satisfied
+that any there (excepting that of the fifth Kingdom itself) extend so
+far. But in the _Apocalypse_ of St. _John_, which is the last Revelation
+we are to expect, there are several Prophecies that reach to the
+Consummation of this World, and the first Resurrection. The _seven
+Seals_, the _seven Trumpets_, the _seven Vials_, do all terminate upon
+that great Period. But they are rather Historical Prophecies than
+Chronological; they tell us, in their Language, the Events, but do not
+measure or express the Time wherein they come to pass. Others there are
+that may be call’d Chronological, as the _treading under Foot the Holy
+City, Forty and two months, Apoc. xi. 2._ The _Witnesses_ opposing
+Antichrist _One thousand Two hundred and sixty Days, Apoc. xi. 3._ The
+Flight of the _Woman into the Wilderness_, for the same Number of Days,
+or for a _Time, Times, and half a Time, Apoc. xii. 6 & 14._ And lastly,
+The War of the Beasts against the Saints, _Forty-two Months, Apoc. xiii.
+5._ These all, you see, express a Time for their Completion; and all the
+same Time, if I be not mistaken: But they do not reach to the End of the
+World. Or if some of them did reach so far, yet because we do not
+certainly know where to fix their Beginning, we must still be at a Loss,
+when, or in what Year they will expire. As for Instance, if the Reign of
+the Beast, or the Preaching of the Witnesses be 1260 Years, as is
+reasonably suppos’d; yet if we do not know certainly when this Reign, or
+this Preaching begun, neither can we tell when it will end. And the
+_Epocha_’s, or Beginnings of these Prophecies are so differently
+calculated, and are Things of so long Debate, as to make the Discussion
+of them altogether improper for this Place. Yet it must be confest, that
+the best Conjectures that can be made concerning the approaching End of
+the World, must be taken from a judicious Examination of these Points:
+And accordingly as we gather up the Prophecies of the _Apocalypse_, in a
+successive Completion, we see how by degrees we draw nearer and nearer
+to the Conclusion of all. But till some of these enlightening Prophecies
+be accomplish’d, we are as a Man that awakes in the Night, all is dark
+about him, and he knows not how far the Night is spent; but if he watch
+till the Light appears, the first Glimpses of that will resolve his
+Doubts. We must have a little Patience, and, I think, but a little;
+still eyeing those Prophecies of the _Resurrection_ of the _Witnesses_,
+and the _Depression_ of _Antichrist_: ’Till by their Accomplishment, the
+Day dawn, and the Clouds begin to change their Colour. Then we shall be
+able to make a near Guess, when the Sun of Righteousness will arise.
+
+So much for Prophecies. There are also _Signs_, which are look’d upon as
+Forerunners of the Coming of our Saviour; and, therefore, may give us
+some Direction how to judge of the Distance or Approach of that great
+Day. Thus many of the Fathers thought the _coming of Antichrist_ would
+be a Sign to give the World Notice of its approaching End. But we may
+easily see, by what hath been noted before, what it was that led the
+Fathers into that Mistake. They thought their six thousand Years were
+near an End, as they truly were, according to that Chronology they
+followed: and therefore they concluded the Reign of Antichrist must be
+very short, whensoever he came, and that he could not come long before
+the End of the World. But we are very well assur’d, from the Revelation
+of Saint _John_, that the Reign of Antichrist is not to be so short and
+transient; and from the Prospect and History of _Christendom_, that he
+hath been already upon his Throne many hundreds of Years. Therefore this
+Sign wholly falls to the Ground; unless you will take it from the Fall
+of Antichrist, rather than from his first Entrance. Others expect the
+_coming_ of _Elias_, to give Warning of that Day, and prepare the Way of
+the Lord. I am very willing to admit that _Elias_ will come, according
+to the Sense of the Prophet _Malachi_, _Chap. iv. 5, 6._ but he will not
+come _with Observation_, no more than he did in the Person of _John_ the
+Baptist; He will not bear the Name of _Elias_, nor tell us he is the Man
+that went to Heaven in a fiery Chariot, and is now come down again to
+give us Warning of the last Fire. But some divine Person may appear
+before the second coming of our Saviour, as there did before his first
+coming, and by giving a new Light and Life to the Christian Doctrine,
+may dissipate the Mists of Error, and abolish all those little
+Controversies amongst good Men, and the Divisions and Animosities that
+spring from them: Enlarging their Spirits by greater Discoveries, and
+uniting them all in the Bonds of Love and Charity, and in the common
+Study of Truth and Perfection. Such an _Elias_ the Prophet seems to
+point at; and may he come, and be the great Peace-maker and Preparer of
+the Ways of the Lord! But at present, we cannot from this Sign make any
+Judgment when the World will end.
+
+Another Sign preceding the End of the World, is, _The Conversion of the
+Jews_; and this is a wonderful Sign indeed. St. _Paul_ seems expresly to
+affirm it, _Rom. xi. 25, 26._ But it is differently understood, either
+of their Conversion only, or of their Restoration to their own Country,
+Liberties and Dominion. The Prophets bear hard upon this Sense
+sometimes, as you may see in _Isaiah_, _Ezekiel_, _Hosea_, _Amos_. And
+to the same purpose the antient Promise of _Moses_ is interpreted,
+_Deut. xxx._ Yet this seems to be a thing very unconceivable: Unless we
+suppose the ten Tribes to be still in some hidden Corner of the World,
+from whence they may be conducted again to their own Country, as once
+out of _Ægypt_, by a miraculous Providence, and establish’d there:
+Which, being known, will give the Alarm to all the other _Jews_, in the
+World, and make an universal Confluence to their old Home. Then our
+Saviour, by an extraordinary Appearance to them, as once to St. _Paul_,
+_John xix. 37._ and by Prophets, _Apoc. i. 7._ _Mat. xxiii. 39._ rais’d
+up amongst them for that purpose, may convince them that he is the true
+_Messiah_, and convert them to the Christian Faith; which will be no
+more strange, than was the first Conversion of the _Gentile_ World. But
+if we be content with a Conversion of the _Jews_, without their
+Restoration; and of those two Tribes only, which are now dispersed
+throughout the Christian World, and other known Parts of the Earth: That
+these should be converted to the Christian Faith, and incorporated into
+the Christian Commonwealth, losing their National Character and
+Distinction: If this, I say, will satisfy the Prophecies, it is not a
+Thing very difficult to be conceived. For when the World is reduc’d to a
+better and purer State of Christianity, and that Idolatry, in a great
+measure remov’d, which gave the greatest Scandal to the _Jews_, they
+will begin to have better Thoughts of our Religion, and be dispos’d to a
+more ingenuous and unprejudic’d Examination of their Prophecies
+concerning the _Messiah_: God raising up Men amongst them of divine and
+enlarged Spirits, Lovers of Truth more than of any particular Sect or
+Opinion; with Light to discern it, and Courage to profess it. Lastly, It
+will be a cogent Argument upon them, to see the Age of the World so far
+spent, and no Appearance yet, of their long expected _Messiah_. So far
+spent, I say, that there is no Room left, upon any Computation
+whatsoever, for the Oeconomy of a _Messiah_ yet to come. This will make
+them reflect more carefully and impartially upon him whom the Christians
+propose, _Jesus of Nazareth_, whom their Fathers Crucified at
+_Jerusalem_: Upon the Miracles he wrought in his Life, and after his
+Death; and upon the wonderful Propagation of his Doctrine throughout the
+World, after his Ascension. And lastly, upon the Desolation of
+_Jerusalem_, upon their own scattered and forlorn Condition, foretold by
+that Prophet, as a Judgment of God upon an ungrateful and wicked People.
+
+This I have said to state the Case of the Conversion of the _Jews_,
+which will be a Sign of the approaching Reign of Christ. But, alas! what
+Appearance is there of this Conversion in our Days? or what Judgment can
+we make from a Sign that is not come to pass? ’Tis ineffectual as to us,
+but may be of Use to Posterity. Yet even to them it will not determine,
+at what Distance they are from the End of the World, but be a Mark only
+that they are not far from it. There will be Signs also, in those last
+Days, in the Heavens, and in the Earth, and in the Sea, Forerunners of
+the _Conflagration_; as the Obscuration of the Sun and Moon,
+Earthquakes, Roarings of the troubled Sea, and such like Disorders in
+the natural World, ’tis true; but these are the very Pangs of Death, and
+the Strugglings of Nature just before her Dissolution, and it will be
+too late then to be aware of our Ruin when it is at the Door. Yet these
+being Signs or Prodigies taken Notice of by Scripture, we intend, God
+willing, after we have explained the Causes and Manner of the
+_Conflagration_, to give an Account also whence these unnatural
+Commotions will proceed, that are the Beginnings or immediate
+Introductions to the last Fire.
+
+Thus we have gone through the Prophecies and Signs that concern the last
+Day and the last Fate of the World. And how little have we learned from
+them as to the Time of that great Revolution? Prophecies rise sometimes
+with an even gradual Light, as the Day riseth upon the Horizon: and
+sometimes break out suddenly like a Fire, and we are not aware of their
+Approach ’till we see them accomplish’d. Those that concern the End of
+the World, are of this latter Sort, to unobserving Men; but even to the
+most observing, there will still be a Latitude; we must not expect to
+calculate the coming of our Saviour, like an Eclipse, to Minutes and
+half Minutes. There are _Times and Seasons which the Father hath put in
+his own Power_. If it was design’d to keep these Things secret, we must
+not think to out-wit Providence, and from the Prophecies that are given
+us, pick out a Discovery that was not intended we should ever make. It
+is determin’d in the Councils of Heaven just how far we shall know these
+Events beforehand, and with what Degree of Certainty: And with this we
+must be content, whatsoever it is. The _Apocalypse_ of St. _John_ is the
+last Prophetical Declaration of the Will of God, and contains the Fate
+of the Christian Religion to the End of the World, its Purity,
+Degeneracy, and Reviviscency. The Head of this Degeneracy is call’d _The
+Beast, the false Prophet, the Whore of Babylon_, in Prophetical Terms:
+And in an Ecclesiastical Term is commonly call’d _Antichrist_. Those
+that bear Testimony against this Degeneracy, are call’d the _Witnesses_:
+Who, after they have been a long Time in a mean and persecuted
+Condition, are to have their Resurrection and Ascension; that is, be
+advanc’d to Power and Authority. And this Resurrection of the
+_Witnesses_, and Depression of _Antichrist_, is that which will make the
+great Turn of the World to Righteousness, and the great Crisis, whereby
+we may judge of its drawing to an End. ’Tis true, there are other Marks,
+as the passing away of the _second Woe_, _Apoc. c. ix._ which is
+commonly thought to be the _Ottoman_ Empire; and the Effusion of the
+_Vials_, _Apoc. c. xvi._ The first of these will be indeed a very
+conspicuous Mark, if it follow upon the Resurrection of the Witnesses,
+as by the Prophecy it seems to do, _ch. xi. 14._ But as to the Vials,
+tho’ they do plainly reach in a Series to the End of the World, I am not
+satisfied with any Exposition I have yet met with, concerning their
+precise Time or Contents.
+
+In a Word, though the Sum and general Contents of a Prophecy be very
+intelligible, yet the Application of it to Time and Persons may be very
+lubricous. There must be Obscurity in a Prophecy, as well as Shadow in a
+Picture. All its Lines must not stand in a full Light. For if Prophecies
+were open and barefac’d as to all their Parts and Circumstances, they
+would check and obstruct the Course of human Affairs; and hinder, if it
+was possible, their own Accomplishment. Modesty and Sobriety are in all
+Things commendable, but in nothing more than in the Explication of these
+sacred Mysteries; and we have seen so many miscarry by a too close and
+particular Application of them, that we ought to dread the Rock about
+which we see so many Shipwrecks. He that does not err above a Century,
+in calculating the last Period of Time, from what Evidence we have at
+present, hath, in my Opinion, cast up his Accounts very well. But the
+Scenes will change fast towards the Evening of this long Day, and when
+the Sun is near setting, they will more easily compute how far he hath
+to run.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. VI.
+ _Concerning the Causes of the Conflagration._
+
+
+ _The Difficulty of conceiving how this Earth can be set on Fire.
+ With a general Answer to that Difficulty. Two suppos’d Causes of the
+ Conflagration, by the Sun’s drawing nearer to the Earth, or the
+ Earth’s throwing out the central Fire, examin’d and rejected._
+
+
+We have now made our Way clear to the principal Point, _The Causes of
+the Conflagration_: How the Heavens and the Earth will be set on Fire,
+what Materials are prepared, or what Train of Causes, for that purpose.
+The Antients, who have kept us Company pretty well thus far, here quite
+desert us: they deal more in Conclusions than Causes, as is usual in all
+Traditional Learning. And the _Stoicks_ themselves, who inculcate so
+much the Doctrine of the Conflagration, and make the Strength of it
+such, as to dissolve the Earth into a fiery Chaos, are yet very short
+and superficial in their Explications, how this shall come to pass. The
+latent Seeds of Fire, they say, shall every where be let loose, and that
+Element will prevail over all the rest, and transform every Thing into
+its own Nature. But these are general Things, that give little
+Satisfaction to inquisitive Persons. Neither do the modern Authors, that
+treat of the same Subject, relieve us in this Particular: They are
+willing to suppose the Conflagration a superficial Effect, that so they
+may excuse themselves the Trouble of enquiring after Causes. ’Tis no
+doubt, in a Sort supernatural; and so the Deluge was: Yet _Moses_ sets
+down the Causes of the Deluge, the Rains from above, and the Disruption
+of the Abyss. So there must be Treasures of Fire provided against that
+Day, by whose Eruption this second Deluge will be brought upon the
+Earth.
+
+To state the Case fairly, we must first represent the Difficulty of
+setting the Earth on Fire; tye the Knot, before we loose it; that so we
+may the better judge whether the Causes that shall be brought into View,
+may be sufficient to overcome so great Opposition. The Difficulty, no
+doubt, will be chiefly from the great Quantity of Water that is about
+our Globe; whereby Nature seems to have made Provision against any
+Invasion by Fire, and secur’d us from that Enemy more than any other. We
+see half of the Surface of the Earth cover’d with the Seas, whose
+Channel is of a vast Depth and Capacity: Besides innumerable Rivers,
+great and small, that water the Face of the dry Land, and drench it with
+perpetual Moisture. Then within the Bowels of the Earth, there are
+Store-Houses of subterraneous Waters; which are as a Reserve, in case
+the Ocean and the Rivers should be overcome. Neither is Water our only
+Security, for the hard Rocks, and stony Mountains, which no Fire can
+bide upon, are set in long Ranges upon the Continents and Islands; and
+must needs give a Stop to the Progress of that furious Enemy, in case he
+should attack us. Lastly, the Earth itself is not combustible in all its
+Parts. ’Tis not every Soil that is fit Fewel for the Fire. Clay, and
+Mire, and such like Soils, will rather choak and stifle it, than help it
+on its Way. By these Means one would think the Body of the Earth
+secur’d; and though there may be partial Fires, or Inundations of Fire,
+here and there, in particular Regions, yet there cannot be an universal
+Fire throughout the Earth. At least, one would hope for a safe Retreat
+towards the Poles, where there is nothing but Snow, and Ice, and bitter
+Cold. These Regions sure are in no Danger to be burnt, whatsoever
+becomes of the other Climates of the Earth.
+
+This being the State and Condition of the present Earth, one would not
+imagine by these Preparations, ’twas ever intended that it should perish
+by an universal Fire. But such is often the Method of Providence, that
+the exterior Face of Things looks one Way, and the Design lies another;
+’till at length, touching a Spring, as it were, at a certain Time, all
+those Affairs change Posture and Aspect, and shew us which way
+Providence inclines. We must therefore suppose, before the Conflagration
+begins, there will be Dispositions and Preparatives suitable to so great
+a Work: and all Antiquity, sacred and prophane, does so far concur with
+us, as to admit and suppose that a great Drought will precede, and an
+extraordinary Heat and Dryness of the Air, to usher in this fiery Doom.
+And these being Things which often happen in a Course of Nature, we
+cannot disallow such easy Preparations, when Providence intends so great
+a Consequence. The Heavens will be shut up, and the Clouds yield no
+Rain; and by this, with an immoderate Heat in the Air, the Springs of
+Water will become dry, the Earth chapp’d and parch’d, and the Woods and
+Trees made ready Fewel for the Fire. We have Instances, in History, that
+there have been Droughts and Heats of this Nature, to that Degree, that
+the Woods and Forests have taken Fire, and the outward Turf and Surface
+of the Earth, without any other Cause than the Dryness of the Season,
+and the Vehemency of the Sun. And, which is more considerable, the
+Springs and Fountains being dry’d up, the greater Rivers have been
+sensibly lessen’d, and the lesser quite empty’d, and exhal’d. These
+Things, which happen frequently, in particular Countries and Climates,
+may, at an appointed Time, by the Disposition of Providence, be more
+universal throughout the Earth; and have the same Effects every where,
+that we see by Experience they have had in certain Places: And by this
+Means, we may conceive it as feasible to set the whole Earth on Fire in
+some little Space of Time, as to burn up this, or that Country after a
+great Drought. But I mean this, with Exception still to the main Body of
+the Sea; which will indeed receive a greater Diminution from these
+Causes, than we easily imagine; but the final Consumption of it will
+depend upon other Reasons, whereof we must give an Account in the
+following Chapters.
+
+As to the Mountains and Rocks, their lofty Heads will sink when the
+Earthquakes begin to roar, at the Beginning of the Conflagration; as we
+shall see hereafter. And as to the Earth itself, ’tis true there are
+several Sorts of Earth that are not proper Fuel for Fire; but those
+Soils that are not so immediately, as clayey Soils, and such like, may,
+by the Strength of Fire, be converted into Brick, or Stone, or earthen
+Metal, and so melted down and vitrified. For, in Conclusion, there is no
+terrestrial Body that does not finally yield to the Force of Fire, and
+may either be converted into Flame, incorporated Fire, or into a Liquor
+more ardent than either of them. Lastly, As to the Polar Regions, which
+you think will be a safe Retreat and inaccessible to the Fire; ’tis
+true, unless Providence hath laid subterraneous Treasures of Fire there
+unknown to us, those Parts of the Earth will be the last consum’d. But
+it is to be observ’d, that the Cold of those Regions proceeds from the
+Length of their Winter, and their Distance from the Sun when he is
+beyond the Æquator; and both these Causes will be removed at the
+Conflagration. For we suppose the Earth will then return to its
+primitive Situation, which we have explain’d in the second Book of this
+_Theory_, _chap. iii._ and will have the Sun always in its Æquator;
+whereby the several Climates of the Earth will have a perpetual Equinox,
+and those under the Poles a perpetual Day: And therefore all the Excess
+of Cold, and all the Consequences of it, will soon be abated. However,
+the Earth will not be burnt in one Day, and those Parts of the Earth
+being uninhabited, there is no Inconvenience that they should be more
+slowly consum’d than the rest.
+
+This is a general Answer to the Difficulty propos’d about the
+Possibility of the Conflagration; and being general only, the Parts of
+it must be more fully explain’d and confirm’d in the Sequel of this
+Discourse. We should now proceed directly to the Causes of the
+Conflagration, and shew in what manner they do this great Execution upon
+Nature: But to be just and impartial in this Enquiry, we ought first to
+separate the spurious and pretended Causes from those that are real and
+genuine; to make no false Musters, nor any shew of being stronger than
+we are; and if we can do our Work with less Force, it will be more to
+our Credit; as a Victory is more honourable that is gain’d with fewer
+Men.
+
+There are two grand capital Causes which some Authors make use of, as
+the chief Agents in this Work, the _Sun_, and the _Central Fire_. These
+two great Incendiaries, they say, will be let loose upon us at the
+Conflagration; the one drawing nearer to the Earth, and the other
+breaking out of its Bowels into these upper Regions. These are potent
+Causes indeed, more than enough to destroy this Earth, if it was a
+thousand Times bigger than it is. But for that very Reason, I suspect
+they are not the true Causes; for God and Nature do not use to employ
+unnecessary Means to bring about their Designs. Disproportion and
+Over-sufficiency is one sort of false Measures, and ’tis a Sign we do
+not thoroughly understand our Work, when we put more Strength to it than
+the Thing requires. Men are forward to call in extraordinary Powers, to
+rid their Hands of a troublesome Argument, and so make a short Dispatch
+to save themselves the Pains of further Enquiries; but as such Methods
+as these commonly have no Proof, so they give little Satisfaction to an
+Inquisitive Mind. This Supposition of burning the Earth, by the Sun
+drawing nearer and nearer to it, seems to be made in Imitation of the
+Story of _Phaeton_, who driving the Chariot of the Sun with an unsteady
+Hand, came so near the Earth, that he set it on Fire. But however, we
+will not reject any Pretensions without a fair Trial: Let us examine
+therefore what Grounds they can have for either of these Suppositions,
+of the Approximation of the Sun to the Earth, or the Eruption of the
+Central Fire.
+
+As to the Sun, I desire first to be satisfied in present Matter of Fact:
+Whether by any Instrument or Observation it hath or can be discover’d,
+that the Sun is nearer to the Earth now, than he was in former Ages? Or,
+If by any Reasoning or comparing Calculations, such a Conclusion can be
+made? If not, this is but an imaginary Cause, and as easily deny’d as
+propos’d. Astronomers do very little agree in their Opinions about the
+Distance of the Sun: _Ptolemy_, _Albategnius_, _Copernicus_, _Tycho_,
+_Kepler_, and others more modern, differ all in their Calculations; but
+not in such a Manner or Proportion, as should make us believe that the
+Sun comes nearer to the Earth, but rather goes further from it. For the
+more modern of them make the Distance greater than the more ancient do.
+_Kepler_ says, the Distance of the Sun from the Earth lies betwixt 700
+and 2000 Semidiameters of the Earth: But _Ricciolus_ makes it betwixt
+700 and 7000: And _Gottefred Wendelme_ hath taken 14656 Semidiameters,
+for a middle Proportion of the Sun’s Distance; to which _Kepler_ himself
+came very near in his later Years. So that you see how groundless our
+Fears are from the Approaches of an Enemy, that rather flies from us, if
+he change Postures at all. And we have more Reason to believe the Report
+of the modern Astronomers, than of the antient, in this Matter; both
+because the Nature of the Heavens and of the celestial Bodies is now
+better known, and also because they have found out better Instruments
+and better Methods to make their Observations.
+
+If the Sun and Earth were come nearer to one another, either the Circle
+of the Sun’s diurnal Arch would be less, and so the Day shorter; or the
+Orbit of the Earth’s annual Course would be less, and so the Year
+shorter: Neither of which we have any Experience of. And those that
+suppose us in the Centre of the World, need not be afraid ’till they see
+_Mercury_ and _Venus_ in a Combustion, for they lie betwixt us and
+Danger; and the Sun cannot come so readily at us with his fiery Darts,
+as at them who stand in his Way. Lastly, this languishing Death, by the
+gradual Approaches of the Sun, and that irreparable Ruin of the Earth,
+which at last must follow from it, do neither of them agree with that
+Idea of the _Conflagration_, which the Scripture hath given us; for it
+is to come suddenly and unexpectedly, and take us off like a Violent
+Fever, not as a lingring Consumption. And the Earth is also to be
+destroyed by Fire, as not to take away all Hopes of a Resurrection, or
+Renovation: For we are assur’d by Scripture, that there will be new
+Heavens and a new Earth after these are burnt up. But if the Sun should
+come so near us, as to make the _Heavens pass away with a Noise, and
+melt the Elements with fervent Heat_, and destroy the Form, and all the
+Works of the Earth, what Hopes or Possibility would there be of a
+Renovation, while the Sun continu’d in this Posture? He would more and
+more consume and prey upon the Carcass of the Earth, and convert it at
+length either into an Heap of Ashes, or a Lump of vitrified Metal.
+
+So much for the Sun. As to the _Central Fire_, I am very well satisfied
+it is no imaginary Thing: All Antiquity hath preserv’d some sacred
+Monument of it: The _Vestal_ Fire of the _Romans_, which was so
+religiously attended: The _Prytoneia_ of the _Greeks_ were to the same
+purpose, and dedicated to _Vesta_: And the _Pyretheia_ of the
+_Persians_, where Fire was kept continually by the _Magi_. These all, in
+my Opinion, had the same Origin, and the same Signification. And tho’ I
+do not know any particular Observation, that does directly prove or
+demonstrate that there is such a Mass of Fire in the middle of the
+Earth; yet the best Accounts we have of the Generation of a Planet do
+suppose it; and ’tis agreeable to the whole Oeconomy of Nature: As a
+Fire in the Heart, which gives Life to her Motions and Productions. But,
+however, the Question is not at present, about the Existence of this
+Fire, but the Eruption of it, and the Effect of that Eruption; which
+cannot be, in my Judgment, such a _Conflagration_ as describ’d in
+Scripture.
+
+This Central Fire must be enclos’d in a Shell of great Strength and
+Firmness; for being of itself the lightest, and most active of all
+Bodies, it would not be detained in the lowest Prison without a strong
+Guard upon it. ’Tis true, we can make no certain Judgment of what
+Thickness this Shell is; but if we suppose this Fire to have a twentieth
+Part of the Semidiameter of the Earth, on either side the Centre, for
+its Sphere, which seems to be a fair Allowance; there would still remain
+nineteen Parts for our Safeguard and Security: And these nineteen Parts
+of the Semidiameter of the Earth will make 3268 Miles, for a
+Partition-Wall betwixt us and this Central Fire. Who would be afraid of
+an Enemy lock’d up in so strong a Prison? But you’ll say, it may be,
+tho’ the Central Fire, at the Beginning of the World, might have no more
+Room or Space than what is mention’d; yet being of that Activity that it
+is, and corrosive Nature, it may, in the Space of some thousands of
+Years, have eaten deep into the Sides of its Prison; and so come nearer
+to the Surface of the Earth by some hundreds or thousands of Miles, than
+it was at first. This would be a material Exception, if it could be made
+out. But what Phænomenon is there in Nature that proves this? How does
+it appear by an Observation, that the Central Fire gains Ground upon us?
+Or is increased in Quantity, or come nearer to the Surface of the Earth?
+I know nothing that can be offer’d in Proof of this: and if there be no
+Appearance of a Change, nor any sensible Effect of it, ’tis an Argument
+there is none, or none considerable. If the Quantity of that Fire was
+considerably increas’d, it must needs, besides other Effects, have made
+the Body of the Earth considerably lighter. The Earth having, by this
+Conversion of its own Substance into Fire, lost so much of its heaviest
+Matter, and got so much of the lightest and most active Element instead
+of it: and in both these respects, its Gravity would be manifestly
+lessen’d. Which if it really was in any considerable Degree, it would
+discover it self by some Change, either as to the Motion of the Earth,
+or as to its Place or Station in the Heavens. But there being no
+external Change observable, in this or any other respect, ’tis
+reasonable to presume that there is no considerable inward Change, or no
+great Consumption of its inward Parts and Substance; and consequently no
+great Increase of the central Fire.
+
+But if we should admit both an Increase and Eruption of this Fire, it
+would not have that Effect which is pretended. It might cause some
+Confusion and Disorder in those Parts of the Earth where it broke out,
+but it would not make an universal Conflagration, such as is represented
+to us in Scripture. Let us suppose the Earth to be open, or burst in any
+Place; under the Pole, for Instance, or under the _Æquator_; and let it
+gape as low as the Central Fire: At this Chasm or Rupture we suppose the
+Fire would gush out; and what then would be the Consequence of this when
+it came to the Surface of the Earth? It would either be dissipated and
+lost in the Air, or fly still higher towards the Heavens in a Mass of
+Flame. But what Execution in the mean time would it do upon the Body of
+the Earth? ’Tis but like a Flash of Lightning, or a Flame issuing out of
+a Pit, that dies presently. Besides, this Central Fire is of that
+Subtilty and Tenuity, that it is not able to inflame gross Bodies: no
+more than those Meteors we call _Lambent Fires_, inflame the Bodies to
+which they stick. Lastly, in explaining the Manner of the Conflagration,
+we must have regard principally to Scripture; for the Explications given
+there are more to the purpose, than all that the Philosophers have said
+upon that Subject. Now, as we noted before, ’tis manifest in Scripture,
+that after the _Conflagration_, there will be a _Restauration_, _new
+Heavens_, and a _new Earth_. ’Tis the express Doctrine of St. _Peter_,
+besides other Prophets: We must therefore suppose the Earth reduc’d to
+such a Chaos by this last Fire, as will lay the Foundation of a new
+World, _2 Pet. iii. 12, 13._ Which can never be, if the inward Frame of
+it be broke, the Central Fire exhausted, and the exterior Region suck’d
+into those central Vacuities. This must needs make it lose its former
+Poise and Libration, and it will thereupon be thrown into some other
+Part of the Universe, as the useless Shell of a broken Granado, or as a
+dead Carcass, and unprofitable Matter.
+
+These Reasons may be sufficient why we should not depend upon those
+pretended Causes of the _Conflagration_, the Sun’s Advance towards the
+Earth, or such a Rupture of the Earth as will let out the Central Fire.
+These Causes, I hope, will appear superfluous, when we shall have given
+an Account of the _Conflagration_ without them. But young Philosophers,
+like young Soldiers, think they are never sufficiently armed; and often
+take more Weapons, than they can make use of, when they come to fight.
+Not that we altogether reject the Influence of the Sun, or of the
+Central Fire; especially the latter: For in that great Estuation of
+Nature, the Body of the Earth will be much open’d and relaxated; and
+when the Pores are enlarg’d, the Steams of that Fire will sweat out more
+plentifully into all its Parts; but still without any Rupture in the
+Vessels, or in the Skin. And whereas these Authors suppose the very
+Veins to burst, and the vital Blood to gush out, as at open Flood-Gates,
+we only allow a more copious Perspiration, and think that sufficient for
+all Purposes in this Case.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. VII.
+
+
+ _The true Bounds of the last Fire, and how far it is fatal. The
+ natural Causes and Materials of it, cast into three Ranks: First,
+ Such as are exterior and visible upon the Earth; where the Vulcano’s
+ of the Earth, and their Effects, are consider’d. Secondly, Such
+ Materials as are within the Earth. Thirdly, Such as are in the Air._
+
+
+As we have, in the preceding Chapter, laid aside those Causes of the
+Conflagration which we thought too great and cumbersome; so now we must,
+in like manner, examine the Effect, and reduce that to its just Measures
+and Proportions, that there may be nothing left superfluous on either
+side; then, by comparing the real Powers with the Work they are to do,
+both being stated within their due Bounds, we may the better judge how
+they are proportion’d to one another.
+
+We noted before, that the Conflagration had nothing to do with the
+Stars, and superior Heavens, but was wholly confin’d to this sublunary
+World. And this Deluge of Fire will have much what the same Bounds, that
+the Deluge of Water had formerly. This is according to St. _Peter_’s
+Doctrine, for he makes the same Parts of the Universe to be the Subject
+of both: Namely, the inferior Heavens and the Earth, _2 Pet. iii. 5, 6._
+_The Heavens and the Earth which were then, perish’d in a Deluge of
+Water_: ver. 7. _But the Heavens and the Earth that are now, are
+reserv’d to Fire._ The present Heavens and Earth are substituted in the
+Place of those that perish’d at the Deluge, and these are to be over-run
+and destroy’d by Fire, as those were by Water. So that the Apostle takes
+the same Regions, and the same Space and Compass for the one, as for the
+other, and makes their Fate different according to their different
+Constitution, and the different Order of Providence. This is the Sense
+St. _Austin_ gives us of the Apostle’s Words, and these are the Bounds
+he sets to the last Fire; whereof a modern Commentator is so well
+assur’d, that he says, _Estius in loc. They neither understand Divinity,
+nor Philosophy, that would make the Conflagration reach above the
+elementary Heavens_.
+
+Let these be then its Limits upwards, the Clouds, Air, and Atmosphere of
+the Earth. But the Question seems more doubtful, _How_ far it will
+extend downwards, into the Bowels of the Earth? I answer still, to the
+same Depth that the Waters of the Deluge reach’d: To the lowest Abysses,
+and the deepest Caverns within the Ground. And seeing no Caverns are
+deeper or lower, at least according to our Theory, than the Bottom of
+the great Ocean, to that Depth, I suppose, the Rage of this Fire will
+penetrate, and devour all before it. And therefore we must not imagine,
+that only the outward Turf and habitable Surface of the Earth will be
+put into a Flame and laid waste: the whole exterior Region of the Earth,
+to the Depth of the deepest Part of the Sea, will suffer in this Fire;
+and suffer to that Degree, as to be melted down, and the Frame of it
+dissolv’d. For we are not to conceive that the Earth will be only
+scorcht or charkt in the last Fire, there will be a Sort of Liquefaction
+and Dissolution; _Rev. xv. 2._ _2 Pet. iii. 10._ _Psal. xcvii. 5._ it
+will become a _molten Sea mingled with Fire_, according to the
+Expression of Scripture. And this Dissolution may reasonably be suppos’d
+to reach as low as the Earth hath any Hollownesses, or can give vent to
+Smoak and Flame.
+
+Wherefore, taking these for the Bounds and Limits of the last great
+Fire, the next Thing to be enquired into, are the _Natural Causes_ of
+it: How this strange Fate will seize upon the sublunary World, and with
+an irresistible Fury subdue all Things to it self. But when I say
+_Natural Causes_, I would not be so understood, as if I thought the
+Conflagration was a pure _Natural Fatality_, as the _Stoicks_ seem to
+do. No, ’tis a _mix’d Fatality_; the Causes indeed are Natural, but the
+Administration of them is from an higher Hand. Fire is the Instrument,
+or the executive Power, and hath no more Force given it than what it
+hath naturally; but the Concurrence of these Causes, or of these fiery
+Powers, at such a Time, and in such a Manner, and the Conduct of them to
+carry on and complete the whole Work without Cessation or Interruption,
+that I look upon as more than what material Nature could effect of
+itself, or than could be brought to pass by such a Government of Matter,
+as is the bare Result of its own Laws and Determinations. When a Ship
+falls gently before the Wind, the Mariners may stand idle; but to guide
+her in a Storm, all Hands must be at Work. There are Rules and Measures
+to be observ’d, even in these Tumults and Desolations of Nature, in
+destroying a World, as well as in making one, and, therefore, in both it
+is reasonable to suppose a more than ordinary Providence to superintend
+the Work. Let us not, therefore, be too positive or presumptuous in our
+Conjectures about these Things; for if there be an invisible Hand,
+Divine or Angelical, that touches the Springs and Wheels; it will not be
+easy for us to determine, with Certainty, the Order of their Motions.
+However, ’tis our Duty to search into the Ways and Works of God, as far
+as we can: And we may, without Offence, look into the Magazines of
+Nature; see what Provisions are made, and what Preparations for this
+great Day; and in what Method ’tis most likely the Design will be
+executed.
+
+But before we proceed to mark out Materials for this Fire, give me leave
+to observe one Condition or Property in the Form of this present Earth,
+that makes it capable of Inflammation. ’Tis the Manner of its
+Construction, in an hollow cavernous Form: By reason whereof, containing
+much Air in its Cavities, and having many Inlets and Outlets, ’tis in
+most Places capable of Ventilation, pervious and passable to the Winds,
+and consequently to the Fire. Those that have read the former Part of
+this Theory, _Book 1. ch. 6, 7._ know how the Earth came into this
+hollow and broken Form; from what Causes and at what Time; namely, at
+the universal Deluge; when there was a Disruption of the exterior Earth
+that fell into the Abyss, and so, for a Time was overflow’d with Water.
+These Ruins, recover’d from the Water, we inhabit, and these Ruins, only
+will be burnt up; for being not only unequal in their Surface, but also
+hollow, loose, and incompact within, as Ruins use to be, they are made
+thereby capable of a second Fate, by Inflammation. _Thereby_, I say,
+they are made combustible; for if the exterior Regions of this Earth
+were as close and compact in all their Parts, as we have Reason to
+believe the interior Regions of it to be, the Fire could have little
+Power over it, nor ever reduce it to such a State as is requir’d in a
+compleat Conflagration, such as ours is to be.
+
+This being admitted, that the exterior Region of the Earth stands
+hollow, as a well set Fire, to receive Air freely into its Parts, and
+hath Issues for Smoke and Flame: It remains to enquire, what Fuel or
+Materials Nature hath fitted to kindle this Pile, and to continue it on
+Fire ’till it be consum’d; or, in plain Words, what are the _natural
+Causes and Preparatives for a Conflagration_. The first and most obvious
+Preparations that we see in Nature for this Effect, are the _burning
+Mountains_, or Volcano’s of the Earth. These are lesser Essays or
+Preludes to the general Fire: set on purpose by Providence to keep us
+awake, and to mind us continually, and forewarn us of what we are to
+expect at last. The Earth, you see, is already kindled, blow but the
+Coal, and propagate the Fire, and the Work will go on, _Isa._ xxx. 33.
+_Tophet is prepared of old_; and when the Day of Doom is come, and the
+Date of the World expir’d, _the Breath of the Lord_ shall make it burn.
+
+But besides these burning Mountains, there are Lakes of Pitch and
+Brimstone, and oily Liquors dispers’d in several Parts of the Earth.
+These are to enrage the Fire as it goes, and to fortify it against any
+Resistance or Opposition. Then all the vegetable Productions upon the
+Surface of the Earth, as Trees, Shrubs, Grass, Corn, and such like;
+every thing that grows out of the Ground, is Fewel for the Fire; and
+tho’ they are now accommodated to our Use and Service, they will then
+turn all against us; and with a mighty Blaze, and rapid Course, make a
+Devastation of the outward Furniture of the Earth, whether natural or
+artificial. But these Things deserve some further Consideration,
+especially that strange Phænomenon of the _Volcano_’s or _burning
+Mountains_, which we will now consider more particularly.
+
+There is nothing certainly more terrible in all Nature than fiery
+Mountains to those that live within the View or Noise of them; but it is
+not easy for us, who never see them, nor heard them, to represent them
+to ourselves with such just and lively Imaginations as shall excite in
+us the same Passions, and the same Horror as they would excite, if
+present to our Senses. The Time of their Eruption, and of their Raging,
+is, of all others, the most dreadful; but, many times, before their
+Eruption, the Symptoms of an approaching Fit are very frightful to the
+People. The Mountain begins to roar and bellow in its hollow Caverns;
+cries out, as it were, in Pain to be deliver’d of some Burthen too heavy
+to be born, and too big to be easily discharged. The Earth shakes and
+trembles, in Apprehension of the Pangs and Convulsions that are coming
+upon her; and the Sun often hides his Head, or appears with a
+discolour’d Face, pale, or dusky, or bloody, as if all Nature was to
+suffer in this Agony. After these Forerunners or Symptoms of an
+Eruption, the wide Jaws of the Mountain open: And first, Clouds of Smoke
+issue out, then Flames of Fire, and after that a Mixture of all Sorts of
+burning Matter; red hot Stones, Lumps of Metal, half-dissolv’d Minerals,
+with Coals and fiery Ashes. These fall in thick Showers round about the
+Mountain, and in all adjacent Parts; and not only so, but are carried,
+partly by the Force of the Expulsion, and partly by the Winds when they
+are aloft in the Air, into far distant Countries. As from _Italy_ to
+_Constantinople_, and cross the _Mediterranean_ Sea into _Africk_; as
+the best Historians, _Procopius_, _Ammianus Marcellinus_, and _Dion
+Cassius_, have attested.
+
+These Vulcano’s are planted in several Regions of the Earth, and in both
+Continents, this of ours, and the other of _America_. For by Report of
+those that have view’d that new-found World, there are many Mountains in
+it that belch out Smoke and Fire; some constantly, and others by Fits,
+and Intervals. In our Continent, Providence hath variously dispers’d
+them, without any Rule known to us; but they are generally in Islands,
+or near the Sea. In the _Asiatick_ Oriental Islands they are in great
+Abundance, and Historians tell us of a Mountain in the Island _Java_,
+that in the Year 1586, at one Eruption, kill’d ten thousand People in
+the neighbouring Cities and Country: But we do not know so well the
+History of those remote Vulcano’s, as of such as are in _Europe_ and
+nearer Home. In _Iseland_, tho’ it lie within the polar Circle, and is
+scarce habitable by reason of the Extremity of Cold, and abundance of
+Ice and Snow, yet there are three burning Mountains in that Island;
+whereof the chief and most remarkable is _Hecla_. This hath its Head
+always cover’d with Snow, and its Belly always fill’d with Fire; and
+these are both so strong in their kind, and equally powerful, that they
+cannot destroy one another. It is said to cast out, when it rages,
+besides Earth, Stones, and Ashes, a Sort of flaming Water; as if all
+Contrarieties were to meet in this Mountain, to make it the more perfect
+Resemblance of Hell, as the credulous Inhabitants fancy it to be.
+
+But there are no Vulcano’s, in my Opinion, that deserve our Observation
+so much, as those that are in and about the _Mediterranean Sea_; There
+is a Knot of them, called the _Vulcanian Islands_, from their fiery
+Eruptions, as if they were the Forges of _Vulcan_; as _Strombolo_,
+_Lapara_, and others, which are not so remarkable now, as they have been
+formerly. However, without dispute, there are none in the Christian
+World to be compared with _Ætna_ and _Vesuvius_; one in the Island of
+_Sicily_, and the other in _Campania_, overlooking the Port and City of
+_Naples_. These two, from all Memory of Man, and the most antient
+Records of History, have been fam’d for the Treasures of subterraneous
+Fires, which are not yet exhausted, nor diminsh’d, so far as is
+perceivable; for they rage still, upon Occasion, with as much Fierceness
+and Violence, as they ever did in former Ages; as if they had a
+continual Supply to answer their Expences, and were to stand till the
+last Fire, as a Type and Prefiguration of it, throughout all
+Generations.
+
+Let us therefore take these two Volcano’s as a Pattern for the rest;
+seeing they are well known, and stand in the Heart of the Christian
+World, where, ’tis likely, the last Fire will make its first Assault.
+_Ætna_, of the two, is more spoken of by the Antients, both Poets and
+Historians; and we should scarce give Credit to their Relations
+concerning it, if some later Eruptions did not equal, or exceed the Fame
+of all that have been reported from former Ages: That it heated the
+Waters of the Sea, and cover’d them over with Ashes; crack’d, or
+dissolv’d the neighbouring Rocks; darken’d the Sun and the Air; and cast
+out, not only mighty Streams of Flame, but a Flood of melted Ore, and
+other Materials: These Things we can now believe, having had Experience
+of greater, or and Account of them from such, as have been Eye-Witnesses
+of these Fires, or of the fresh Ruins and sad Effects of them.
+
+There are two Things especially, in these Eruptions of _Ætna_, that are
+most prodigious in themselves, and most remarkable for our Purpose: The
+Rivers of fiery Matter that break out of its Bowels, or are spew’d out
+of its Mouth; and the vast burning Stones which it flings into the Air,
+at a strange Height and Distance. As to these fiery Rivers, or Torrents,
+and the Matter whereof they are compounded, we have a full Account of
+them by _Alphonsus Borellus_, a learned Mathematician at _Pisa_; who,
+after the last great Eruption on the Year 1669, went into _Sicily_,
+while the Fact was fresh, to view and survey what _Ætna_ had done or
+suffer’d; and he says, the Quantity of Matter thrown out of the Mountain
+at that Time, upon Survey, amounted to ninety three Millions, eight
+Hundred thirty eight Thousand, seven Hundred and fifty cubical Paces. So
+that if it had been extended in Length upon the Surface of the Earth, it
+would reach further than ninety three Millions of Paces; which is more
+than four times the Circumference of the whole Earth, taking a thousand
+Paces to a Mile. This is strange to our Imagination, and almost
+incredible, that one Mountain should throw out so much fiery Matter,
+besides all the Ashes that were disperst through the Air, far and near,
+and could be brought to no Account.
+
+’Tis true, all this Matter was not actually inflam’d or liquid Fire; but
+the rest, that was Sand, Stone, and Gravel, might have run into Glass,
+or some melted Liquor like to it, if it had not been thrown out before
+the Heat fully reach’d it: However, sixty Million Paces of this Matter,
+as the same Author computes, were liquid Fire, or came out of the Mouth
+of the Pit in that Form; this made a River of Fire, sometimes two Miles
+broad, according to his Computation; but, according to the Observation
+of others who also viewed it, the Torrent of Fire was six or seven Miles
+broad, and sometimes ten or fifteen Fathoms deep; and forc’d its Way
+into the Sea near a Mile, preserving it self alive in the midst of the
+Waters.
+
+This is beyond all the infernal Lakes and Rivers _Acheron_, _Phlegeton_,
+_Cocytus_; all that the Poets have talk’d of: Their greatest Fictions
+about Hell have not come up to the Reality of one of our burning
+Mountains upon Earth. Imagine then, all our _Volcano_’s raging at once
+in this manner——But I will not pursue that Supposition yet: Give me
+leave only to add here, what I mentioned in the second Place, the vast
+_Burning Stones_ which this Mountain, in the time of its Rage and
+Æstuation, threw into the Air with an incredible Force. This same Author
+tells us of a Stone fifteen Foot long, that was flung out of the Mouth
+of the Pit, to a Mile’s Distance; and when it fell, it came from such an
+Height, and with such a Violence, that it buried it self in the Ground
+eight Foot deep. What Trifles are our Mortar-Pieces and Bombs, when
+compared with these Engines of Nature? When she flings, out of the wide
+Throat of a _Volcano_, a broken Rock, and twirls it in the Air like a
+little Bullet; then lets it fall, to do Execution here below, as
+Providence shall point and direct it! It would be hard to give an
+Account, how so great an Impulse can be given to a Body so ponderous:
+But there’s no disputing against Matter of Fact; and as the Thoughts of
+God are not like our Thoughts, so neither are his Works like our Works.
+
+Thus much for _Ætna_. Let us now give an Instance in _Vesuvius_, another
+burning Mountain upon the Coast of the _Mediterranean_, which hath as
+frequent Eruptions, and some as terrible as those of _Ætna_. _Lib. 66.
+Dion. Cassius_ (one of the best Writers of the _Roman_ History) hath
+given us an Account of one that happened in the Time of _Titus
+Vespasian_; and tho’ he hath not set down Particulars, as the former
+Author did, of the Quantity of fiery Matter thrown out at that Time: yet
+supposing that proportionable to its Fierceness in other Respects, this
+seems to me as dreadful an Eruption as any we read of; and was
+accompanied with such Prodigies and Commotions in the Heavens and the
+Earth, as made it look like the Beginning of the last Conflagration. As
+a Prelude to this Tragedy, he says, there were strange Sights in the
+Air, and after that followed an extraordinary Drought: _Then the Earth
+begun to tremble and quake; and the Concussions were so great, that the
+Ground seem’d to rise and boil up in some Places, and in others the Tops
+of the Mountains sunk in, or tumbled down: At the same Time were great
+Noises and Sounds heard; some were subterraneous, like Thunder within
+the Earth; others above Ground, like Groans or Bellowings. The Sea
+roared, the Heavens ratled with a fearful Noise, and then came a sudden
+and mighty Crack, as if the Frame of Nature had broke, or all the
+Mountains of the Earth had fallen down at once. At length Vesuvius
+burst, and threw out of its Womb, first, huge Stones, then a vast
+Quantity of Fire and Smoke, so as the Air was all darkned, and the Sun
+was hid, as if he had been under a great Eclipse. The Day was turn’d
+into Night, and Light into Darkness; and the frighted People thought the
+Giants were making War against Heaven, and fansied they saw the Shapes
+and Images of Giants in the Smoke, and heard the Sound of their
+Trumpets: Others thought, the World was returning to its first Chaos, or
+going to be all consumed with Fire. In this general Confusion and
+Consternation, they knew not where to be safe; some run out of the
+Fields into the Houses, others out of the Houses into the Fields; those
+that were at Sea hastened to Land, and those that were at Land
+endeavoured to get to Sea; still thinking every Place safer than that
+where they were. Besides grosser Lumps of Matter, there was thrown out
+of the Mountain such a prodigious Quantity of Ashes, as cover’d the Land
+and Sea, and filled the Air, so as besides other Damages, the Birds,
+Beasts and Fishes, with Men, Women, and Children were destroy’d, within
+such a Compass; and two entire Cities, Herculanium and Pompeios, were
+overwhelm’d with a Shower of Ashes, as the People were sitting in the
+Theatre. Nay, these Ashes were carried, by the Winds, over the
+Mediterranean into Africk, and into Ægypt and Syria. And at Rome they
+choak’d the Air on a sudden, so as to hide the Face of the Sun;
+Whereupon the People not knowing the Cause, as not having yet got the
+News from Campania, of the Eruption of Vesuvius, could not imagine what
+the Reason should be; but thought the Heavens and the Earth were coming
+together, the Sun coming down, and the Earth going to take its Place
+above._ Thus far the Historian.
+
+You see what Disorders in Nature, and what an Alarum, the Eruption of
+one fiery Mountain is capable to make. These Things, no doubt, would
+have made strong Impressions upon us, if we had been Eye-Witnesses of
+them; but I know, Representations made from dead History, and at a
+Distance, though the Testimony be never so credible, have a much less
+Effect upon us, than what we see ourselves, and what our Senses
+immediately inform us of. I have only given you an Account of two
+_Volcano’s_, and of a single Eruption in either of them: These Mountains
+are not very far distant from one another; let us suppose two such
+Eruptions, as I have mentioned, to happen at the same Time, and both
+these Mountains to be raging at once in this Manner; by that Violence
+you have seen in each of them singly, you will easily imagine what
+Terror and Desolation they would carry round about, by a Conjunction of
+their Fury, and all their Effects, in the Air, and on the Earth. Then,
+if to these two you should join two more, the Sphere of their Activity
+would still be enlarged, and the Scenes become more dreadful. But to
+compleat the Supposition, let us imagine all the Volcano’s of the whole
+Earth to be prepar’d, and set to a certain Time; which Time being come,
+and a Signal given by Providence, all these Mines begin to play at once;
+I mean, all these fiery Mountains burst out, and discharge themselves in
+Flames of Fire, tear up the Roots of the Earth, throw hot burning
+Stones, send out Streams of flowing Metals and Minerals, and all other
+Sorts of ardent Matter, which Nature hath lodg’d in those Treasuries: If
+all these Engines, I say, were to play at once, the Heavens and the
+Earth would seem to be in a Flame, and the World in an universal
+Combustion. But we may reasonably presume, that against that great Day
+of Vengeance and Execution, not only all these will be employ’d, but
+also new Volcano’s will be opened, and new Mountains in every Region
+will break out into Smoke and Flame; just as at the Deluge, the Abyss
+broke out from the Womb of the Earth, and from those hidden Stores sent
+an immense Quantity of Water, which, it may be the Inhabitants of that
+World never thought of before: So we must expect new Eruptions, and also
+new sulphureous Lakes, and Fountains of Oyl, to boyl out of the Ground:
+and these, all united with that Fewel that naturally grows upon the
+Surface of the Earth, will be sufficient to give the first Onset, and to
+lay waste all the habitable World, and the Furniture of it.
+
+But we suppose the Conflagration will go lower, pierce under Ground, and
+dissolve the Substance of the Earth to some considerable Depth:
+Therefore, besides these outward and visible Preparations, we must
+consider all the hidden invisible Materials within the Veins of the
+Earth; Such are all Minerals, or mineral Juices and Concretions that are
+igniferous, or capable of Inflammation; and these cannot easily be
+reckoned up, or estimated; some of the most common are Sulphur, and all
+sulphureous Bodies, and Earths impregnated with Sulphur, Bitumen, and
+bituminous Concretions; inflammable Salts, Coal and other Fossils that
+are ardent; with innumerable Mixtures and Compositions of these Kinds,
+which, being open’d by Heat, are unctuous and inflammable, or by
+Attrition discover the latent Seeds of Fire. But besides consistent
+Bodies, there is also much volatile Fire within the Earth, in Fumes,
+Steams, and Exudations, which will all contribute to this Effect. From
+these Stores under Ground, all Plants and Vegetables are fed and
+supplied, as to their oily and sulphureous Parts, and all hot Waters in
+Baths or Fountains, must have their Original from some of these, some
+Mixture or Participation of them; and as to the _British_ Soil, there is
+so much Coal incorporated with it, that when the Earth shall burn, we
+have Reason to apprehend no small Danger from that subterraneous Enemy.
+
+These Dispositions, and this Fewel we find, in and upon the Earth,
+towards the last Fire. The third Sort of Provision is in the Air; all
+fiery Meteors and Exhalations engender’d and form’d in those Regions
+above, and discharg’d upon the Earth in several Ways. I believe there
+were no fiery Meteors in the antedeluvian Heavens; which therefore Saint
+_Peter_ says, _were constituted of Water_, had nothing in them but what
+was watery; but he says _the Heavens that are now_, have Treasures of
+Fire, or are reserv’d for Fire, as Things laid up in a Store-House for
+that Purpose. We have Thunder and Lightning, and fiery Tempests, and
+there is nothing more vehement, impetuous, and irresistible, where their
+Force is directed. It seems to me very remarkable, that the Holy Writers
+describe the _Coming of the Lord_, and the Destruction of the Wicked, in
+the Nature of a Tempest, or a Storm of Fire, _Psalm xi. 6._ _Upon the
+Wicked the Lord shall rain Coals, Fire and Brimstone, and a burning
+Tempest; this shall be the Portion of their Cup_. And in the lofty Song
+of _David_, _Psal. xviii._ (which, in my Judgment, respects both the
+past Deluge and the future Conflagration) ’tis said, _Ver. 13, 14, 15_.
+_The Lord also thundered in the Heavens, and the Highest gave his Voice,
+Hail-stones and Coals of Fire. Yea, he sent forth his Arrows and
+scattered them, and he shot out Lightnings and discomfited them. Then
+the Channels of Waters were seen, and the Foundations of the World were
+discover’d; at thy Rebuke, O Lord, at the Blast of the Breath of thy
+Nostrils_. And a like fiery Coming is described in the _97th Psalm_, as
+also by _Isaiah_, _Isa. lxvi. 15._ _Daniel_, _Dan. vii. 9, 10._ and St.
+_Paul_, _2 Thess. i. 8._ And lastly, in the _Apocalypse_, when the World
+draws to a Conclusion, as in the seventh Trumpet (_Chap. xi. 19._) and
+the seventh Vial (_Chap. xvi. 18._) we have still mention made of this
+fiery Tempest of Lightnings and Thunderings.
+
+We may therefore reasonably suppose, that, before the Conflagration, the
+Air will be surcharg’d every where (by a precedent Drought) with hot and
+fiery Exhalations: And as against the Deluge those Regions were
+burthen’d with Water and moist Vapours, which were pour’d upon the
+Earth, not in gentle Showers, but like Rivers and Cataracts from Heaven;
+so they will now be filled with hot Fumes and sulphureous Clouds, which
+will sometimes flow in Streams and fiery Impressions through the Air,
+sometimes make Thunder and Lightnings, and sometimes fall down upon the
+Earth in Floods of Fire. In general, there is a great Analogy to be
+observed betwixt the two Deluges of Water and of Fire, not only as to
+the Bounds of them, which were noted before; but as to the general
+Causes and Sources upon which they depend, from above and from below. At
+the Flood, the Windows of Heaven were open’d above, and the Abyss was
+open’d below; and the Waters of these two join’d together to overflow
+the World: In like manner, at the Conflagration, God will rain down Fire
+from Heaven, as he did once upon _Sodom_; and at the same time the
+subterraneous Store-houses of Fire will be broken open; which answers to
+the Disruption of the Abyss: And these two meeting and mingling
+together, will involve all the Heaven and Earth in Flames.
+
+This is a short Account of the ordinary Stores of Nature, and the
+ordinary Preparations for a general Fire; and, in Contemplation of
+these, _Pliny_ the Naturalist said boldly, _It was one of the greatest
+Wonders of the World, that the World was not every Day set on Fire_. We
+will conclude this Chapter with his Words, in the second Book of his
+_Natural Hist._ ch. 106, 107. Having given an Account of some fiery
+Mountains and other Parts of the Earth that are the Seats and Sources of
+Fire, he makes this Reflection: _Seeing this Element is so fruitful,
+that it brings forth it self, and multiplies and encreases from the
+least Sparks; what art we to expect from so many Fires already kindled
+on the Earth? How does Nature feed and satisfy so devouring an Element,
+and such a great Voracity throughout all the World, without Loss or
+Diminution of herself? Add to these Fires we have mentioned, the Stars
+and the great Sun; then all the Fires made for human Uses; Fire in
+Stones, in Wood, in the Clouds, and in Thunder; IT EXCEEDS ALL MIRACLES,
+IN MY OPINION, THAT ONE DAY SHOULD PASS WITHOUT SETTING THE WORLD ALL ON
+FIRE._
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. VIII.
+
+
+ _Some new Dispositions towards the Conflagration, as to the Matter,
+ Form, and Situation of the Earth. Concerning miraculous Causes, and
+ how far the Ministry of Angels may be engaged in this Work._
+
+
+We have given an Account, in the preceding Chapter, of the ordinary
+Preparations of Nature for a general Fire; we now are to give an Account
+of the extraordinary, or of any new Dispositions, which, towards the End
+of the World, may be super-added to the ordinary State of Nature. I do
+not, by these, mean Things openly miraculous and supernatural; but such
+a Change wrought in Nature, as shall still have the Face of natural
+Causes, and yet have a greater Tendency to the Conflagration. As, for
+Example, suppose a great Drought, as we noted before, to precede this
+Fate, or a general Heat and Dryness of the Air, and of the Earth;
+because this happens sometimes in a Course of Nature, it will not be
+look’d upon as prodigious. ’Tis true, some of the Antients speak of a
+Drought of forty Years, that will be a Fore-runner of the Conflagration;
+so that there will not be a watery Cloud, nor Rainbow seen in the
+Heavens, for so long a Time. And this they impute to _Elias_, who at his
+Coming, will stop the Rain, and shut up the Heavens to make way for the
+last Fire. But these are excessive and ill-grounded Suppositions; for
+half forty Years Drought will bring an universal Sterility upon the
+Earth, and thereupon an universal Famine, with innumerable Diseases; so
+that all Mankind would be destroyed, before the Conflagration could
+overtake them.
+
+But we will readily admit an extraordinary Drought and Desiccation of
+all Bodies to usher in this great Fatality. And therefore, whatsoever we
+read in natural History, concerning former Droughts, of their drying up
+Fountains and Rivers, parching the Earth, and making the outward Turf
+take Fire in several Places; filling the Air with fiery Impressions,
+making the Woods and Forests ready Fewel, and sometimes to kindle by the
+Heat of the Sun, or a Flash of Lightning: These and what other Effects
+have come to pass in former Droughts, may come to pass again; and that
+in an higher Measure, and so as to be of more general Extent. And we
+must also allow, that by this means, a great degree of Inflammability,
+or Easiness to be set on Fire, will be super-induc’d, both into the Body
+of the Earth, and of all Things that grow upon it. The Heat of the Sun
+will pierce deeper into its Bowels, when it gapes to receive his Beams,
+and by Chinks and widened Pores makes way for their Passage to its very
+Heart. And, on the other Hand, it is not improbable, but that upon this
+general Relaxation, and Incalescency of the Body of the Earth, the
+_Central Fire_ may have a freer Efflux, and diffuse itself in greater
+abundance every Way; so as to affect even these exterior Regions of the
+Earth, so far as to make them still more catching, and more combustible.
+
+From this external and internal Heat acting upon the Body of the Earth,
+all Minerals, that have the Seeds of Fire in them, will be open’d, and
+exhale their Effluviums more copiously. As Spices, when warm’d are more
+odoriferous, and fill the Air with their Perfumes; so the Particles of
+Fire that are shut up in several Bodies, will easily fly abroad, when,
+by a further degree of Relaxation, you shake off their Chains, and open
+the Prison Doors. We cannot doubt, but there are many Sorts of Minerals,
+and many Sorts of Fire-stones, and of Trees and Vegetables of this
+Nature, which will sweat out their oily and sulphureous Atoms, when by a
+general Heat and Dryness their Parts are loosen’d and agitated.
+
+We have no Experience that will reach so far, as to give us a full
+Account what the State of Nature will be at that Time; I mean, after
+this Drought, towards the End of the World; but we may help our
+Imagination, by comparing it with other Seasons and Temperaments of the
+Air. As therefore in the Spring the Earth is fragrant, and the Fields
+and Gardens are fill’d with the sweet Breathings of Herbs and Flowers;
+especially after a gentle Rain; when their Bodies are softened, and the
+Warmth of the Sun makes them evaporate more freely: So a greater degree
+of Heat acting upon all the Bodies of the Earth, like a stronger Fire in
+the Alembick, will extract another sort of Parts or Particles, more
+deeply incorporated, and more difficult to be disintangled; I mean oily
+Parts, and such undiscover’d Parcels of Fire, as lie fix’d and
+imprison’d in hard Bodies: These, I imagine, will be in a great measure
+set afloat, or drawn out into the Air, which will abound with hot and
+dry Exhalations, more than with Vapours and Moisture in a wet Season;
+and by this Means, all Elements and elementary Bodies will stand ready,
+and in a proximate Disposition to be inflamed.
+
+Thus much concerning the last Drought, and the general Effects of it. In
+the next Place, we must consider the Earthquakes that will precede the
+Conflagration, and the Consequences of them. I noted before, that the
+cavernous and broken Construction of the present Earth, was that which
+made it obnoxious to be destroy’d by Fire; as its former Construction
+over the Abyss, made it obnoxious to be destroy’d with Water. This
+Hollowness of the Earth is most sensible in mountainous and hilly
+Countries, which therefore I look upon as most subject to burning; but
+the plain Countries may also be made hollow and hilly by Earthquakes,
+when the Vapours, not finding an easy Vent, raise the Ground, and make a
+forcible Eruption, as at the springing of a Mine. And tho’ plain
+Countries are not so subject to Earthquakes as mountainous, because they
+have not so many Cavities, and subterraneous Vaults, to lodge the
+Vapours in; yet every Region hath more or less of them: And after this
+Drought, the Vacuities of the Earth being every where enlarg’d, the
+Quantity of Exhalations much increas’d, and the Motion of them more
+strong and violent, they will have their Effects in many Places where
+they never had any before. Yet I do not suppose that this will raise new
+Ridges of Mountains, like the _Alps_, or _Pyreneans_, in those Countries
+that are now plain, but that they will break and loosen the Ground, make
+greater Inequalities in the Surface, and greater Cavities within, than
+what are at present in those Places: and by this means the Fire will
+creep under them, and find a Passage thorough them, with more Ease than
+if they were compact, and every where continu’d and unbroken.
+
+But you will say, it may be, How does it appear that there will be more
+frequent Earthquakes towards the End of the World? If this precedent
+Drought be admitted, ’tis plain that fiery Exhalation will abound every
+where within the Earth, and will have a greater Agitation than ordinary;
+and these being the Causes of Earthquakes, when they are rarified and
+inflamed, ’tis reasonable to suppose, that in such a State of Nature,
+they will more frequently happen, than at other Times. Besides,
+Earthquakes are taken Notice of in Scripture, as Signs and Fore-runners
+of the last Day, as they usually are of all great Changes and
+Calamities. The Destruction of _Jerusalem_ was a Type of the Destruction
+of the World, and the Evangelists always mention Earthquakes amongst the
+ominous Prodigies that were to attend it. But these Earthquakes we are
+speaking of at present are but the Beginnings of Sorrow, and not to be
+compar’d with those that will follow afterwards, when Nature is
+convuls’d in her last Agony, just as the Flames are seizing on her. Of
+which we shall have Occasion to speak hereafter.
+
+These Changes will happen as to the _Matter_ and _Form_ of the Earth,
+before it is attack’d by the last Fire: There will be also another
+Change as to the _Situation_ of it; for that will be rectified, and the
+Earth restor’d to the Posture it had at first, namely, of a right
+Aspect, and Conversion to the Sun. But because I cannot determine at
+what Time this Restitution will be, whether at the Beginning, Middle, or
+End of the Conflagration, I will not presume to lay any Stress upon it.
+_Plato_ seems to have imputed the Conflagration to this only; which is
+so far true, that the Revolution, call’d _the Great Year_, is this very
+Revolution, or the Return of the Earth, and the Heavens to their first
+Posture. But tho’ this may be contemporary with the last Fire, or some
+way concomitant; yet it does not follow that it is the Cause of it, much
+less the only Cause. It may be an Occasion of making the Fire reach more
+easily towards the Poles, when by this Change of Situation their long
+Nights, and long Winters shall be taken away.
+
+The new Dispositions in our Earth which we expect before that great Day,
+may be look’d upon as extraordinary, but not as miraculous, because they
+may proceed from natural Causes. But now in the last Place, we are to
+consider _miraculous Causes_: What Influence they may have, or what Part
+they may bear, in this great Revolution of Nature. By _miraculous
+Causes_ we understand either God’s immediate Omnipotency, or the
+Ministry of Angels; and what may be perform’d by the latter, is very
+improperly and undecently thrown upon the former. ’Tis a great Step to
+Omnipotency: and ’tis hard to define what Miracles, on this side
+Creation, require an infinite Power. We are sure that the Angels are
+Ministring Spirits, and ten thousand times ten thousand stand about the
+Throne of the Almighty, to receive his Commands and execute his
+Judgments. That perfect Knowledge they have of the Powers of Nature, and
+of conducting those Powers to the best Advantage, by adjusting Causes in
+a fit Subordination one to another, makes them capable of performing,
+not only things far above our Force, but even above our Imagination:
+Besides, they have a radical inherent Power, belonging to the Excellency
+of their Nature, of determining the Motions of Matter, within a far
+greater Sphere than human Souls can pretend to. We can only command our
+Spirits, and determine their Motions within the Compass of our own
+Bodies; but their Activity and Empire is of far greater Extent, and the
+outward World is much more subject to their Dominion than to ours. From
+these Considerations it is reasonable to conclude, that the generality
+of Miracles may be, and are perform’d by Angels; it being less decorous
+to employ a sovereign Power, where a subaltern is sufficient; and when
+we hastily cast Things upon God, for quick Dispatch, we consult our own
+Ease more than the Honour of our Maker.
+
+I take it for granted here, that what is done by an angelical Hand, is
+truly providential, and of divine Administration; and also justly bears
+the Character of a Miracle. Whatsoever may be done by pure material
+Causes, or human Strength, we account natural; and whatsoever is above
+these, we call supernatural and miraculous. Now what is supernatural and
+miraculous, is either the Effect of an angelical Power, or of a
+sovereign and infinite Power; and we ought not to confound these two, no
+more than natural and supernatural; for there is a greater Difference
+betwixt the highest angelical Power and Omnipotency, than betwixt an
+human Power, and angelical. Therefore, as the first Rule concerning
+Miracles is this, that we must not fly to Miracles, where Man and Nature
+are sufficient; so the second Rule is this, that we must not fly to a
+sovereign infinite Power, where an angelical is sufficient. And the
+Reason in both Rules is the same, namely, because it argues a Defect of
+Wisdom in all Oeconomies to employ more and greater Means than are
+sufficient.
+
+Now to make Application of this to our present Purpose, I think it
+reasonable, and also sufficient, to admit the Ministry of Angels in the
+future Conflagration of the World. If Nature will not lay violent Hands
+upon her self, or is not sufficient to work her own Destruction, let us
+allow _Destroying Angels_ to interest themselves in the Work, as the
+Executioners of the Divine Justice and Vengeance upon a degenerate
+World. We have Examples of this so frequently in sacred History, how the
+Angels have executed God’s Judgments upon a Nation or a People, that it
+cannot seem new or strange, that in this last Judgment, which by all the
+Prophets is represented as the _Great Day of the Lord_, the Day of his
+Wrath, and of his Fury, the same Angels should bear their Parts, and
+conclude the last Scene of that Tragedy which they had acted in all
+along. We read of the _Destroying Angel in Ægypt_, _Gen._ xii. 23. of
+Angels that presided at the Destruction of _Sodom_, _Gen. xix. 13._
+which was a Type of the future Destruction of the World, (_Jude vii._)
+_2. Thess. i. 7, 8._ and of Angels that will accompany our Saviour when
+he comes in Flames of Fire; not, we suppose, to be Spectators only, but
+Actors and Superintendants in this great Catastrophe.
+
+This Ministry of Angels may be either in ordering and conducting such
+natural Causes as we have already given an Account of, or in adding new
+ones, if Occasion be; I mean, increasing the Quantity of Fire, or of
+fiery Materials, in and about the Earth; so as that Element shall be
+more abundant and more predominant, and overbear all Opposition that
+either Water, or any other Body, can make against it. It is not material
+whether of these two Suppositions we follow, provided we allow that the
+Conflagration is a Work of Providence, and not a pure natural Fatality.
+If it be necessary that there should be an Augmentation made of fiery
+Matter, ’tis not hard to conceive how that may be done, either from the
+Heavens, or from the Earth, _Isa. xxx. 26._ The Prophets sometimes speak
+of multiplying or strengthening the Light of the Sun, and it may as
+easily be conceiv’d of his Heat as of his Light; as if the Vial that was
+to be pour’d upon it, _Rev. xxvi. 8._ and _gave it a Power to scorch Men
+with Fire_, had something of a natural Sense as well as moral. But there
+is another Stream of ethereal Matter that flows from the Heavens, and
+recruits the _Central Fire_ with continual Supplies; this may be
+encreas’d and strengthened, and its Effects convey’d throughout the
+whole Body of the Earth.
+
+But if an Augmentation is to be made of terrestrial Fire, or of such
+terrestrial Principles as contain it most, as Sulphur, Oyl, and such
+like, I am apt to believe, these will encrease of their own accord, upon
+a general Drought and Desiccation of the Earth. For I am far from the
+Opinion of some Chymists, that think these Principles immutable, and
+incapable of Diminution or Augmentation. I willingly admit that all such
+Particles may be broken and disfigur’d, and thereby lose their proper
+and specifick Virtue, and new ones may be generated to supply the Places
+of the former: Which Supplies, or new Productions being made in a less,
+or greater Measure, according to the general Dispositions of Nature;
+when Nature is heightened into a kind of Fever and Ebullition of all her
+Juices and Humours, as she will be at that Time, we must expect, that
+more Parts than ordinary, should be made inflammable, and those that are
+inflam’d should become more violent. Under these Circumstances, when all
+Causes lean that Way, a little Help from a superior Power will have a
+great Effect, and make a great Change in the State of the World. And as
+to the Power of Angels, I am of Opinion, that it is very great as to the
+Changes and Modifications of natural Bodies; that they can dissolve a
+Marble as easily as we can crumble Earth and Moulds, or fix any Liquor
+in a Moment, into a Substance as hard as Crystal: That they can either
+make Flames more vehement and irresistible to all Sorts of Bodies; or as
+harmless as lambent Fires, and as soft as Oyl. We see an Instance of
+this last, in _Nebuchadnezzar’s_ fiery Furnace, _Daniel iii. 28._ where
+the three Children walk’d unconcern’d in the midst of the Flames, under
+the Charge and Protection of an Angel: And the same Angel, if he had
+pleas’d, could have made the same Furnace seven times hotter than the
+Wrath of the Tyrant had made it.
+
+We will therefore leave it to their Ministry to manage this great
+Furnace, when the Heavens and the Earth are on Fire: To conserve,
+increase, direct, or temper the Flames, according to Instructions given
+them, as they are to be _tutelary_ or _destroying_. Neither let any Body
+think it a Diminution of Providence, to put Things into the Hands of
+Angels; ’tis the true Rule and Method of it: For to imploy an Almighty
+Power where it is not necessary, is to debase it, and give it a Task fit
+for lower Beings. Some think it Devotion and Piety to have recourse
+immediately to the Arm of God to salve all things; this may be done
+sometimes with a good Intention, but commonly with little Judgment. God
+is as jealous of the Glory of his Wisdom, as of his Power; and Wisdom
+consists in the Conduct and Subordination of several Causes, to bring
+our Purposes to Effect; but what is dispatched by an immediate supreme
+Power, leaves no room for the Exercise of Wisdom. To conclude this
+Point, which I have touch’d upon more than once; We must not be partial
+to any of God’s Attributes, and Providence being a Complexion of many,
+Power, Wisdom, Justice, and Goodness, when we give due Place and Honour
+to all these, then we must honour DIVINE PROVIDENCE.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. IX.
+
+
+ _How the Sea will be diminish’d and consum’d. How the Rocks and
+ Mountains will be thrown down and melted, and the whole exterior
+ Frame of the Earth dissolv’d into a Deluge of Fire._
+
+
+We have now taken a View of the Causes of the Conflagration, both
+ordinary and extraordinary: It remains to consider the Manner of it; how
+these Causes will operate, and bring to pass an Effect so great and so
+prodigious. We took Notice before, that the grand Obstruction would be
+from the Sea, and from the Mountains; we must therefore take these to
+Task in the first Place: and if we can remove them out of our Way, or
+overcome what Resistance and Opposition they are capable to make, the
+rest of the Work will not be uneasy to us.
+
+The Ocean indeed is a vast Body of Waters; and we must use all our Art
+and Skill to dry it up, or consume it in a good measure, before we can
+pass our Design. I remember the Advice a Philosopher gave _Amasis_ King
+of _Ægypt_, when he had a Command sent him from the King of _Æthiopia_,
+_that he should drink up the Sea_. _Amasis_ being very anxious and
+solicitous what Answer he should make to this strange Command, the
+Philosopher _Bias_ advis’d him to make this round Answer to the King,
+_That he was ready to perform his Command, and to drink up the Sea,
+provided he would stop the Rivers from flowing into his Cup while he was
+drinking_. This Answer baffled the King, for he could not stop the
+Rivers; but this we must do, or we shall never be able to drink up the
+Sea, or burn up the Earth.
+
+Neither will this be so impossible as it seems at first Sight, if we
+reflect upon those Preparations we have made towards it, by a general
+Drought all over the Earth. This, we suppose, will precede the
+Conflagration, and by drying up the Fountains and Rivers which daily
+feed the Sea, will by degrees starve that Monster, or reduce it to such
+a degree of Weakness, that it shall not be able to make any great
+Resistance. More than half an Ocean of Water flows into the Sea every
+Day, from the Rivers of the Earth, if you take them altogether. This I
+speak upon a moderate Computation. _Aristotle_ says, the Rivers carry
+more Water into the Sea in the Space of a Year, than would equal in Bulk
+the whole Globe of the Earth. Nay some have ventur’d to affirm this of
+one single River, the _Volga_, that runs into the _Caspian_ Sea. ’Tis a
+great River indeed, and hath seventy Mouths; and so it had need have, to
+disgorge a Mass of Water equal to the Body of the Earth, in a Year’s
+Time. But we need not take such high Measures; there are at least an
+hundred great Rivers that flow into the Sea from several Parts of the
+Earth, Islands and Continents, besides several thousands of lesser ones;
+let us suppose these, all together, to pour as much Water into the
+Sea-Channel every Day, as is equal to half the Ocean: And we shall be
+easily convinc’d of the Reasonableness of this Supposition, if we do but
+examine the daily Expence of one River, and by that make an Estimate of
+the rest. This we find calculated to our Hands in the River _Po_, in
+_Italy_; a River of much what the same Bigness with our _Thames_, and
+disburthens it self into the Gulpp of _Venice_. _Baptista Riccioli_ hath
+computed how much Water this River discharges in an Hour, _viz._
+18000000 cubical Paces of Water, and consequently 432000000 in a Day;
+which is scarce credible to those that do not distinctly compute it.
+Suppose then an hundred Rivers as great as this, or greater, to fall
+into the Sea from the Land; besides thousands of lesser, that pay their
+Tribute at the same Time into the great Receipt of the Ocean: These all
+taken together, are capable to renew the Sea twice every four and twenty
+Hours. Which Suppositions being admitted, if by a great and lasting
+Drought these Rivers were dried up, or the Fountains from whence they
+flow, what would then become of that vast Ocean, that before was so
+formidable to us?
+
+’Tis likely, you will say, these great Rivers cannot be dried up, tho’
+the little ones may; and therefore we must not suppose such an universal
+Stop of Waters, or that they will all fail, by any Drought whatsoever.
+But great Rivers being made up of little ones, if these fail, those must
+be diminished, if not quit drain’d and exhausted. It may be, all
+Fountains and Springs do not proceed from the same Causes, or the same
+Original; and some are much more copious than others: For such
+Differences, we will allow what is due; but still the Dryness of the Air
+and of the Earth continuing, and all the Sources and Supplies of
+Moisture, both from above and from below, being lessen’d, or wholly
+discontinued, a general Decay of all Fountains and Rivers must
+necessarily follow, and consequently of the Sea, and of its Fulness,
+that depends upon them; and that’s enough for our present Purpose.
+
+The first Step towards the Consumption of the Ocean, will be the
+Diminution or Suspension of the Rivers that run into it; the next will
+be an Evacuation by subterraneous Passages; and the last, by Eruptions
+of Fires in the very Channel of it, and in the midst of the Waters. As
+for subterraneous Evacuations, we cannot doubt but that the Sea hath
+Outlets at the Bottom of it, whereby it discharges that vast Quantity of
+Water that flows into it every Day; and that could not be discharg’d so
+fast as it comes from the wide Mouths of the Rivers, by Percolation, or
+Straining through the Sands. Seas also communicate with one another by
+these internal Passages; as is manifest from those particular Seas that
+have no external Outlet, or Issue, though they receive into them many
+great Rivers, and sometimes the Influx of other Seas. So the _Caspian_
+Sea receives not only _Volga_, which we mentioned before, but several
+other Rivers, and yet hath no visible Issue for its Waters. The
+_Mediterranean_ Sea, besides all the Rivers it receives, hath a Current
+flowing into it, at either End, from other Seas; from the _Atlantick_
+Ocean at the Streights of _Gibraltar_, and from the _Black Sea_ above
+_Constantinople_; and yet there is no Passage above Ground, or visible
+Derivation of the _Mediterranean_ Waters out of their Channel; which
+seeing they do not overfill, nor overflow the Banks, ’tis certain they
+must have some secret Conveyances into the Bowels of the Earth, or
+subterraneous Communication with other Seas. Lastly, from the Whirlpools
+of the Sea, that suck in Bodies that come within their Reach, it seems
+plainly to appear, by that Attraction and Absorption, that there is a
+Descent of Waters in those Places.
+
+Wherefore when the Current of the Rivers into the Sea is stopp’d, or in
+a great Measure diminished; the Sea continuing to empty it self by these
+subterraneous Passages, and having little or none of those Supplies that
+it used to have from the Land, it must needs be sensibly lessen’d and
+both contract its Channel into a narrower Compass, and also have less
+Depth in the Waters that remain. And in the last Place, we must expect
+fiery Eruptions in several Parts of the Sea Channel, which will help to
+suck up, or evaporate the remaining Waters. In the present State of
+Nature there have been several Instances of such Eruptions of Fire from
+the Bottom of the Sea; and in that last State of Nature, when all Things
+are in a Tendency to Inflammation, and when Earthquakes and Eruptions
+will be more frequent every where, we must expect them also more
+frequently by Sea, as well as by Land. ’Tis true, neither Earthquakes
+nor Eruptions can happen in the middle of the great Ocean, or in the
+deepest Abyss, because there are no Cavities, or Mines below it, for the
+Vapours and Exhalations to lodge in: But it is not so much of the
+Sea-Chanel that is so deep; and in other Parts, especially in Streights,
+and near Islands, such Eruptions, like Sea-Vulcano’s, have frequently
+happened, and new Islands have been made by such fiery Matter thrown up
+from the Bottom of the Sea. Thus, they say, those Islands in the
+_Mediterranean_, call’d the _Vulcanian Islands_, had their Original,
+being Matter cast up from the Bottom of the Sea, by the Force of Fire,
+as new Mountains sometimes are raised upon the Earth. Another Island in
+the _Archipelago_ had the same Original; whereof _Strabo_ gives an
+Account, _Lib. 1._ _The Flames, he says, sprung up through the Waters
+four Days together, so as the whole Sea was hot and burning; and they
+rais’d by degrees, as with Engines, a Mass of Earth, which made a new
+Island, twelve Furlongs in Compass._ And in the same _Archipelago_,
+Flames and Smoke have several times, (particularly in the Year 1650)
+risen out of the Sea, and fill’d the Air with sulphureous Scents and
+Vapours. In like manner in the Island of St. _Michael_, one of the
+_Tercera’s_, there have been, of later Years, such Eructations of Fire
+and Flames, so strong and violent, that, at the Depth of a hundred and
+sixty Fathoms, they forc’d their Way through the midst of the Waters,
+from the Bottom of the Sea into the open Air, as has been related by
+those that were Eyewitnesses.
+
+In these three Ways, I conceive, the great Force of the Sea will be
+broken, and the mighty Ocean reduced to a standing Pool of putrid
+Waters, without Vent, and without Recruits. But there will still remain,
+in the midst of the Channel, a great Mass of troubled Liquors, like
+Dregs in the Bottom of the Vessel; which will not be drunk up, ’till the
+Earth be all on Fire, and Torrents of melted and sulphureous Matter flow
+from the Land, and mingle with this dead Sea. But let us now leave the
+Sea in this humble Posture, and go on to attack the Rocks and Mountains,
+which stand next in our Way.
+
+See how scornfully they look down upon us, and bid Defiance to all the
+Elements; they have born the Thunder and Lightning of Heaven, and all
+the Artillery of the Skies, for innumerable Ages; and do not fear the
+crackling of Thorns and of Shrubs that burn at their Feet: Let the Towns
+and Cities of the Earth, say they, be laid in Ashes; let the Woods and
+Forests blaze away, and the fat Soil of the Earth fry in its own Grease;
+these Things will not affect us; we can stand naked in the midst of a
+Sea of Fire, with our Roots as deep as the Foundations of the Earth, and
+our Heads above the Clouds of the Air. Thus they proudly defy Nature;
+and it must be confess’d, that these, being, as it were, the Bones of
+the Earth, when the Body is burning, will be the last consum’d; and I am
+apt to think, if they could keep in the same Posture they stand in now,
+and preserve themselves from falling, the Fire could never get an entire
+Power over them. But Mountains are generally hollow, and that makes them
+subject to a double Casualty; first, of Earthquakes; secondly, of having
+their Roots eaten away by Water or by Fire; but by Fire especially in
+this Case; For we suppose there will be innumerable subterraneous Fires
+smothering under Ground, before the general Fire breaks out; and these
+by corroding the Bowels of the Earth, will make it more hollow, and more
+ruinous; and when the Earth is so far dissolv’d, that the Cavities
+within the Mountains are fill’d with Lakes of Fire, then the Mountains
+will sink, and fall into those boiling Cauldrons, which in Time will
+dissolve them, though they were as hard as Adamant.
+
+There is another Engine that will tear the Earth with great Violence,
+and rend in pieces whatsoever is above or about those Parts of it; and
+that is the Element of Water, so gentle in it self when undisturb’d: But
+’tis found by Experience, that when Water falls into liquid Metals, it
+flies about with an incredible Impetuosity, and breaks or bears down
+every Thing that would stop its Motion and Expansion. This Force I take
+to come from the sudden and strong Rarefaction of its Parts, which make
+a kind of Explosion, when it is sudden and vehement; and this is one of
+the greatest Forces we know in Nature: Accordingly I am apt to think,
+that the marvellous Force of Vulcano’s, when they throw out Lumps of
+Rocks, great Fragments of the Earth, and other heavy Bodies, to such a
+vast Height and Distance, that it is done by this way of Explosion: And
+that Explosion made by the sudden Rarefaction of Sea Waters, that fall
+into Pans or Receptacles of molten Ore and ardent Liquors, within the
+Cavities of the Mountain; and thereupon follow the Noises, Roarings, and
+Eruptions of those Places. ’Tis observ’d, that Vulcano’s are in
+Mountains, and generally, if not always, near the Sea; and when its
+Waters, by subterraneous Passages, are driven under the Mountain, either
+by a particular Wind, or by a great Agitation of the Waves, they meet
+there with Metals and fiery Minerals, dissolv’d; and are immediately,
+according to our Supposition, rarified, and, by way of Explosion, fly
+out at the Mouth or Funnel of the Mountain, bearing before them
+whatsoever stands in their Way. Whether this be a true Account, or no,
+of the present Vulcano’s and their Eruptions, ’tis manifest, that such
+Cases as we have mention’d, will happen in the Conflagration of the
+Earth, and that such Eruptions or Disruptions of the Earth will follow
+thereupon: and that these will contribute very much to the sinking of
+Mountains, the splitting of Rocks, and the bringing of all strong Holds
+of Nature under the Power of the general Fire.
+
+To conclude this Point: The Mountains will all be brought low, in that
+State of Nature either by Earthquakes, or subterraneous Fires; _Every
+Valley shall be exalted, and every Mountain and Hill shall be made low_,
+_Isa. xl. 4._ Which will be literally true at the second coming of our
+Saviour, as it was figuratively apply’d to his first coming, _Luke iii.
+5._ Now, being once levell’d with the rest of the Earth, the Question
+will only be, how they shall be dissolv’d? But there is no terrestrial
+Body indissolvable to Fire, if it have a due Strength and Continuance;
+and this last Fire will have both, in the highest degrees; so that it
+cannot but be capable of dissolving all elementary Compositions, how
+hard or solid soever they be.
+
+’Tis true, these Mountains and Rocks, as I said before, will have the
+Privilege to be the last destroy’d. These, with the deep Parts of the
+Sea, and the polar Regions of the Earth, will undergo a slower Fate, and
+be consum’d more leisurely. The Action of the last Fire may be
+distinguish’d into two Times, or two Assaults; the first Assault will
+carry off all Mankind, and all the Works of the Earth that are easily
+combustible; and this will be done with a quick and sudden Motion. But
+the second Assault, being employ’d about the Consumption of such Bodies,
+or such Materials, as are not so easily subjected to Fire, will be of
+long Continuance, and the Work of some Years. And ’tis fit it should be
+so; that this flaming World may be view’d and consider’d by the
+neighbouring Worlds about it, as a dreadful Spectacle, and Monument of
+God’s Wrath against disloyal, and disobedient Creatures. That by this
+Example, now before their Eyes, they may think of their own Fate, and
+what may befal them, as well as another Planet of the same Elements and
+Composition.
+
+Thus much for the Rocks and Mountains; which, you see, according to our
+Hypothesis, will be levell’d, and the whole Face of the Earth reduc’d to
+Plainness and Equality; nay, which is more, melted and dissolv’d into a
+Sea of liquid Fire. And because this may seem a Paradox, being more than
+is usually supposed, or taken notice of, in the Doctrine of the
+Conflagration, it will not be improper, in this Place, to give an
+Account, wherein our Idea of the Conflagration, and its Effects, differs
+from the common Opinion, and the usual Representation of it. ’Tis
+commonly supposed, that the Conflagration of the World is like the
+burning of a City, where the Walls and Materials of the Houses are not
+melted down, but scorch’d, inflam’d, demolish’d, and made uninhabitable:
+So they think in the burning of the World, such Bodies, or such Parts of
+Nature, as are fit Fewel for the Fire, will be inflam’d, and, it may be,
+consum’d, or reduc’d to Smoke and Ashes; but other Bodies, that are not
+capable of Inflammation, will only be scorch’d and defac’d, the Beauty
+and Furniture of the Earth spoil’d, and by that means, say they, it will
+be laid waste and become uninhabitable. This seems to me a very short
+and imperfect Idea of the Conflagration; neither agreeable to Scripture,
+nor to the Deductions that may be made from Scripture. We therefore
+suppose that this is but half the Work; this destroying of the outward
+Garniture of the Earth, is but the first Onset, and that the
+Conflagration will end in a Dissolution and Liquefaction of the Elements
+and all the exterior Region of the Earth; so as to become a true Deluge
+of Fire, or a Sea of Fire overspreading the whole Globe of the Earth.
+This State of the Conflagration, I think, may be plainly prov’d; partly
+by the Expressions of Scripture concerning it, and partly from the
+_Renovation_ of the Earth that is to follow upon it. Saint _Peter_, who
+is our chief Guide in the Doctrine of the Conflagration, says, _2 Pet.
+iii. 10, 11._ _The Elements will be melted with fervent Heat_; besides
+burning up the Works of the Earth. Then adds, _Seeing all these Things
+shall be dissolv’d_, &c. These Terms of _Liquefaction_ and _Dissolution_
+cannot, without Violence, be restrained to simple Devastation, and
+superficial Scorching. Such Expressions carry the Work a great deal
+further, even to that full Sense which we propose. Besides, the Prophets
+often speak of the melting of the Earth, or of the Hills and Mountains,
+at the Presence of the Lord, in the Day of his Wrath, _Isa. xxxiv. 3, 4.
+& xliv. 1, 2._ _Nah. i. 5._ _Psal. xcvii. 5._ And Saint _John_ (_Apoc.
+xv. 2._) tells us of a _Sea of Glass, mingled with Fire_; where the
+Saints stood, singing the Song of _Moses_, and triumphing over their
+Enemies, the Spiritual _Pharaoh_ and his Host, that were swallowed up in
+it. The _Sea of Glass_, must be a Sea of _molten_ Glass; it must be
+fluid, not solid, if a Sea; neither can a solid Substance be said to be
+_mingled with Fire_, as this was. And to this answers the _Lake of Fire
+and Brimstone_, which the Beast and false Prophet were thrown into
+alive, _Apoc. xix. 20._ These all refer to the End of the World, and the
+last Fire, and also plainly imply, or express rather, that State of
+Liquefaction which we suppose and assert.
+
+Furthermore, the _Renovation_ of the World, or the _New Heaven_ and _New
+Earth_, which St. _Peter_, out of the Prophets, tells us shall spring
+out of these that are burnt and dissolved, do suppose this Earth reduc’d
+into a fluid Chaos, that it may lay a Foundation for a second World. If
+you take such a Skeleton of an Earth, as your scorching Fire would leave
+behind it; where the Flesh is torn from the Bones, and the Rocks and
+Mountains stand naked, and staring upon you; the Sea, half empty, gaping
+at the Sun, and the Cities all in Ruins, and in Rubbish; how would you
+raise a new World from this? And a World fit to be an _Habitation for
+the Righteous_? For so St. _Peter_ makes that to be, which is to succeed
+after the Conflagration, _2 Pet. iii. 13._ And a World also _without a
+Sea_? So St. _John_ describes the new Earth he saw, _Apoc. xxi. 1._ As
+these Characters do not agree to the present Earth, so neither would
+they agree to _your_ future one; for if that dead Lump could revive and
+become habitable again, it would however retain all the Imperfections of
+the former Earth, besides some Scars, and Deformities of its own.
+Wherefore, if you would cast the Earth into a new, and better Mould, you
+must first melt it down; and the last Fire, being as a _Refiner_’s Fire,
+will make an Improvement in it, both as to Matter and Form. To conclude,
+it must be reduc’d into a fluid Mass, in the Nature of a Chaos, as it
+was at first; but this last will be a fiery Chaos, as that was watery;
+and from this State it will emerge again into a Paradisaical World. But
+this being the Subject of the following Book, we will discourse no more
+of it in this Place.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. X.
+
+
+ _Concerning the Beginning and Progress of the Conflagration, what
+ Part of the Earth will first be burnt. The Manner of the future
+ Destruction of Rome, according to prophetical Indications. The last
+ State and Consummation of the general Fire._
+
+
+Having remov’d the chief Obstructions to our Design, and shew’d a Method
+for weakning the Strength of Nature, by draining the Trench, and beating
+down those Bulwarks, wherein she seems to place her greatest Confidence:
+We must now go to Work; making Choice of the weakest Part of Nature for
+our first Attack, where the Fire may be the easiest admitted, and the
+best maintain’d, and preserv’d.
+
+And for our better Direction, it will be of Use to consider what we
+noted before, _viz._ That the Conflagration is not a pure _natural
+Fatality_, but a _mix’d Fatality_; or a divine Judgment supported by
+natural Causes. And if we can find some Part of the Earth, or of the
+Christian World, that hath more of these natural Dispositions to
+Inflammation than the rest; and is also represented by Scripture as a
+more peculiar Object of God’s Judgments at the coming of our Saviour, we
+may justly pitch upon that Part of the World, as first to be destroy’d:
+Nature and Providence conspiring to make that the first Sacrifice to
+this fiery Vengeance.
+
+Now as to natural Dispositions, in any Country or Region of the Earth,
+to be set on Fire, they seem to be chiefly these two; Sulphureousness of
+the Soil, and, an hollow mountainous Construction of the Ground. Where
+these two Dispositions meet in the same Tract or Territory, (the one as
+to the Quality of the Matter, and the other as to the Form) it stands
+like a Pile of fit Materials, ready set to have the Fire put to it. And
+as to divine Indications where this general Fire will begin, the
+Scripture points to the Seat of Antichrist, wheresoever that is, for the
+Beginning of it. The Scripture, I say, points at this two Ways: First,
+In telling us that our Saviour at his coming _in Flames of Fire shall
+consume the wicked One, the Man of Sin, the Son of Perdition, with the
+Spirit of his Mouth, and shall destroy him with the Brightness of his
+Presence, 2 Thess. i. 7. chap. ii. 8._ Secondly, under the Name of
+_Mystical Babylon_; which is allowed by all to be the Seat of
+Antichrist, and by Scripture always condemn’d to the Fire. This we find
+in plain Words asserted by Saint _John_, in the xviiith _Chapter_ of his
+_Revelations_ (_Verses 8, 19._) and in the xixth (_Verse 3_) under the
+Name of the _Great Whore_; which is the same City, and the same Seat,
+according to the Interpretation of Scripture it self, (_Ch. xvii,
+xviii._) And the Prophet _Daniel_, when he had set the _Antient of Days_
+upon his fiery Throne, says, _The Body of the Beast was given to the
+burning Flame, Dan. vii. 9, 10, 11._ Which I take to be the same Thing
+with what St. _John_ says afterwards, (_Apoc. xix. 20._) _The Beast and
+the false Prophet, were cast alive into a Lake of Fire, burning with
+Brimstone._ By these Places of Scripture it seems manifest, that
+Antichrist, and the Seat of Antichrist will be consum’d with Fire, at
+the coming of our Saviour. And ’tis very reasonable and decorous, that
+the grand Traytor and Head of the Apostacy, should be made the first
+Example of the divine Vengeance.
+
+Thus much being allow’d from Scripture, let us now return to Nature
+again; to seek out that Part of the Christian World, that from its own
+Constitution is most subject to burning; by the Sulphureousness of its
+Soil, and its fiery Mountains and Caverns. This we shall easily find to
+be the _Roman Territory_, or the Country of _Italy_: Which, by all
+Accounts, antient and modern, is a Store-house of Fire; as if it was
+condemn’d to that Fate by God and Nature, and to be an Incendiary, as it
+were, to the rest of the World. And seeing _Mystical Babylon_, the Seat
+of Antichrist, is the same _Rome_, and its Territory, as it is
+understood by most Interpreters of former, and latter Ages; you see both
+our Lines meet in this Point; and, that there is Fairness, on both
+Hands, to conclude, that at the glorious Appearance of our Saviour, the
+Conflagration will begin at the City of _Rome_, and the _Roman_
+Territory.
+
+Nature hath sav’d us the Pains of kindling a Fire in those Parts of the
+Earth; for, since the Memory of Man, there have always been
+subterraneous Fires in _Italy_. And the _Romans_ did not preserve their
+_Vestal_ Fire with more Constancy, than Nature hath done her fiery
+Mountains in some Part or other of that Territory. Let us then suppose,
+when the fatal Time draws near, all these burning Mountains to be fill’d
+and replenish’d with fit Materials for such a Design; and when our
+Saviour appears in the Clouds, with an Host of Angels, that they all
+begin to play, as Fireworks, at the triumphal Entry of a Prince. Let
+_Vesuvius_, _Ætna_, _Strongyle_, and all the _Vulcanian_ Islands, break
+out into Flames; and by the Earthquakes, which then will rage, let us
+suppose new Eruptions, or new Mountains open’d in the _Apennines_, and
+near to _Rome_; and to vomit out Fire in the same Manner as the old
+_Vulcano_’s. Then let the sulphureous Ground take Fire; and seeing the
+Soil of that Country, in several Places, is so full of Brimstone, that
+the Steams and Smoke of it visibly rise out of the Earth; we may
+reasonably suppose, that it will burn openly, and be inflam’d, at that
+Time. Lastly, the Lightenings of the Air, and the flaming Streams of the
+melting Skies, will mingle and join with these Burnings of the Earth;
+and these three Causes meeting together, as they cannot but make a
+dreadful Scene, so they will easily destroy and consume whatsoever lies
+within the Compass of their Fury.
+
+Thus you may suppose the Beginning of the general Fire: And it will be
+carried on by like Causes, though in lesser Degrees, in other Parts of
+the Earth: But as to _Rome_, there is still, in my Opinion, a more
+dreadful Fate that will attend it; namely, to absorp’d, or swallow’d up,
+in a Lake of Fire and Brimstone, after the Manner of _Sodom_ and
+_Gomorrah_. This, in my Judgment, will be the Fate and final Conclusion
+of _Mystical Babylon_, to sink as a great Mill-stone into the Sea, and
+never to appear more. Hear what the Prophet says, _A mighty Angel took
+up a Stone, like a great Mill stone, and cast it into the Sea, saying,
+Thus with Violence shall that great City Babylon be thrown down, and
+shall be found no more at all, Apoc. xviii. 21._ Simply to be burnt,
+does not at all answer to this Description of its perishing, by _sinking
+like a Mill-stone into the Sea, and never appearing more_, nor of _not
+having its Place ever more found_; that is, leaving no Remains or Marks
+of it. A City that is only burnt, cannot be said to _fall like a
+Mill-stone into the Sea_; or, that it can _never more be found_; for
+after the Burning of a City, the Ruins stand, and its Place is well
+known: Wherefore, in both Respects, besides this exterior Burning, there
+must be an Absorption of this _Mystical Babylon_, the Seat of the Beast,
+and thereupon a total Disappearance of it. This also agrees with the
+Suddenness of the Judgment, which is a repeated Character of it, _Chap.
+xviii. 8, 10, 17, 19._ Now what kind of Absorption this will be, into
+what, and in what Manner, we may learn from what Saint _John_ says
+afterwards, _Chap. xix. 20._ _The Beast and the false Prophet were cast
+alive into a Lake of Fire and Brimstone._ You must not imagine, that
+they were bound Hand and Foot, and so thrown headlong into this Lake;
+but they were swallow’d up alive, they and theirs, as _Corah_ and his
+Company; or, to use a plainer Example, after the manner of _Sodom_ and
+_Gomorrah_, which perish’d by Fire, and at the same Time sunk into the
+_Dead Sea_, or a Lake of Brimstone.
+
+This was a lively Type of the Fate of _Rome_, or _Mystical Babylon: _And
+’tis fit it should resemble _Sodom_, as well in its Punishment, as in
+its Crimes. Neither is it a hard Thing to conceive how such an
+Absorption may come to pass, that being a Thing so usual in Earthquakes,
+and Earthquakes being so frequent in that Region. And lastly, That this
+should be, after the Manner of _Sodom_, turn’d into a Lake of Fire, will
+not be at all strange, if we consider, that there will be many
+subterraneous Lakes of Fire at that Time, when the Bowels of the Earth
+begin to melt, and the Mountains spew out Streams of liquid Fire. The
+Ground therefore being hollow and rotten in those Parts, when it comes
+to be shaken with a mighty Earthquake, the Foundations will sink, and
+the whole Frame fall into an Abyss of Fire below, as a Mill-stone into
+the Sea. And this will give Occasion to that Cry, _Babylon the great is
+fallen, is fallen_, and shall never more be found.
+
+This seems to be a probable Account, according to Scripture and Reason,
+of the Beginning of the general Fire, and of the particular Fate of
+_Rome_. But it may be propos’d here, as an Objection against this
+Hypothesis, that the _Mediterranean_ Sea, lying all along the Coast of
+_Italy_, must needs be a sufficient Guard to that Country against the
+Invasion of Fire, or at least must needs extinguish it, before it can do
+much Mischief there, or propagate itself into other Countries. I thought
+we had in a good measure prevented this Objection before, by shewing how
+the Ocean would be diminished before the Conflagration, and especially
+the Arms and _Sinus_’s of the Ocean; and of these none would be more
+subject to this Diminution, than the _Mediterranean_; for, receiving its
+Supplies from the _Ocean_ and the _Black Sea_, if these came to sink in
+their Channels they would not rise so high, as to be capable to flow
+into the _Mediterranean_ at either End; and these Supplies being cut
+off, it would soon empty itself so far, partly by Evaporation; and
+partly by subterraneous Passages, as to shrink from all its Shores, and
+become only a standing Pool of Water in the Middle of the Channel: Nay,
+’tis possible, by Floods of Fire descending from the many Vulcano’s upon
+its Shores, it might itself be converted into a Lake of Fire, and rather
+help than obstruct the Progress of the Conflagration.
+
+It may indeed be made a Question, Whether this fiery Vengeance upon the
+Seat of Antichrist will not precede the general Conflagration, at some
+Distance of Time, as a Fore-runner and Fore-warner to the World, that
+the rest of the People may have Space to repent; and particularly the
+_Jews_, being Spectators of this Tragedy, and of the miraculous
+Appearance of our Saviour, may see the Hand of God in it, and be
+convinc’d of the Truth and divine Authority of the Christian Religion: I
+say, this Supposition would leave Room for these and some other
+Prophetick Scenes, which we know not well where to place; but seeing
+_The Day of the Lord_ is represented in Scripture, as one entire Thing,
+without Interruption or Discontinuation, and that it is to begin with
+the Destruction of Antichrist, we have Warrant enough to pursue the rest
+of the Conflagration from this Beginning and Introduction.
+
+Let us then suppose the same Preparations made in the other Parts of the
+Earth to continue the Fire; for the Conflagration of the World being a
+Work of Providence, we may be sure such Measures are taken, as will
+effectually carry it on, when once begun. The Body of the Earth will be
+loosen’d and broken by Earthquakes, the more solid Parts impregnated
+with Sulphur, and the Cavities fill’d with unctuous Fumes and
+Exhalations, so as the whole Mass will be but as one great Funeral-Pile,
+ready built, and wanting nothing but the Hand of a destroying Angel to
+give it Fire. I will not take upon me to determine which Way this
+devouring Enemy would steer his Course from _Italy_, or in what Order he
+will advance and enter the several Regions of our Continent; that would
+be an Undertaking as uncertain as useless: But we cannot doubt of his
+Success, which Way soever he goes; unless where the Channel of the Ocean
+may chance to stop him: But as to that, we allow, that different
+Continents may have different Fires: not propagated from one to another,
+but of distinct Sources and Originals; and so likewise in remote
+Islands; and therefore no long Passage, or Trajection, will be requir’d
+from Shore to Shore: And even the Ocean it self will, at length, be as
+fiery as any Part of the Land; but that, with its Rocks, like Death,
+will be the last Thing subdued.
+
+As to the animate World, the Fire will over-run it with a swift and
+rapid Course, and all living Creatures will be suffocated, or consumed,
+at the first Assault; and at the same Time all the Beauty of the Fields,
+and the External Decorations of Nature will be defac’d: Then the Cities
+and the Towns, and all the Works of Man’s Hands, will burn like Stubble
+before the Wind. These will soon be dispatched; but the great Burthen of
+the Work still remains; which is, that _Liquefaction_ we mention’d
+before, or a _melting Fire_, much more strong and vehement than these
+transient Blazes, which do but sweep the Surface of the Earth: This
+Liquefaction, I say, we prov’d before out of Scripture, as the last
+State of the fiery Deluge, _Chap. IX._ And ’tis this which, at length
+will make the Sea itself a _Lake of Fire and Brimstone_; when, instead
+of Rivers of Waters which used to flow into it from the Land, there come
+Streams and Rivulets of sulphureous Liquors, and purulent melted Matter,
+which following the Tract of their natural Gravity, will fall into this
+great Drain of this Earth; upon which Mixture, the remaining Parts of
+sweet Water will soon evaporate, and the Salt mingling with the Sulphur,
+will make a Dead Sea, an _Asphaltites_, a Lake of _Sodom_, a Cup of the
+Dregs of the Wine of the Fierceness of God’s Wrath.
+
+We noted before two remarkable Effects of the _burning Mountains_, which
+would contribute to the Conflagration of the World, and gave Instances
+of both in former Eruptions of _Ætna_ and _Vesuvius_; one was, of those
+Balls, or Lumps of Fire, which they throw about in the Time of their
+Rage; and the other, of those Torrents of liquid Fire, which rowl down
+their Sides to the next Seas or Valleys. In the first Respect, these
+Mountains are as so many Batteries, planted, by Providence, in several
+Parts of the Earth, to fling those fiery Bombs into such Places, or such
+Cities, as are marked out for Destruction; and, in the second Respect,
+they are to dry up the Waters, and the Rivers, and the Sea it self, when
+they fall into its Channel, _Annal. Sic. dec. 1. l. 2. c. 4._ _T.
+Fazellas_, a _Sicilian_, who writ the History of that Island, tells us
+of such a River of Fire (upon an Eruption of _Ætna_) near twenty eight
+Miles long, reaching from the Mountain to Port _Longina_; and might have
+been much longer, if it had not been stopt by the Sea. Many such as
+these, and far greater, we ought in Reason to imagine, when all the
+Earth begins to melt, and to ripen towards a Dissolution: It will then
+be full of these sulphureous Juices, as Grapes with Wine; and these will
+be squeez’d out of the Earth into the Sea, as out of a Wine-press into
+the Receiver, to fill up that Cup, as we said before, _with the Wine of
+the Fierceness of God’s Wrath_.
+
+If we may be allowed to bring prophetical Passages of Scripture to a
+natural Sense, as doubtless some of those must that respect the End of
+the World; these Phrases which we have now suggested, of the _Wine-press
+of the Wrath of God, Apoc. xiv. 10, 19._ _Ch. xvi. 19._ _Ch. xix. 15._
+_Drinking the Fierceness of his Wine, poured, without Mixture, into the
+Cup of his Indignation_; with Expressions of the like Nature, that occur
+sometimes in the old Prophets, but especially in the _Apocalypse_:
+These, I say, might receive a full and emphatical Explication from this
+State of Things which now lies before us. I would not exclude any other
+Explication of less Force, as that of alluding to the _bitter Cup_, or
+_mixt Potion_, that us’d to be given to Malefactors: But that, methinks,
+is a low Sense, when applied to these Places in the _Apocalypse_. That
+these Phrases signify God’s remarkable Judgments, all allow; and here
+they plainly relate to the End of the World, to the last Plagues, and
+the last of the last Plagues, _Chap. xvi. 19._ Besides, the Angel that
+presided over this Judgment, is said to be an Angel that _had Power over
+Fire_; and those who are to drink this Potion are said to be _tormented
+with Fire and Brimstone, Chap. xiv. 10._ This presiding Angel seems to
+be our Saviour himself (_Chap. xix. 15._) who, when he comes to execute
+Divine Vengeance upon the Earth, gives his Orders in these Words,
+_Gather the Clusters of the Vine of the Earth, for her Grapes are fully
+ripe, Ch. xiv. 18, 19._ And thereupon the destroying Angel _thrust in
+his Sickle into the Earth, and gather’d the Vine of the Earth, and cast
+it into the great Wine-press of the Wrath of God_. And this made a
+Potion _compounded of several Ingredients, but not diluted with Water_;
+Τὸ κεκερασμένου ἀκράτου, (Ch. xiv. 10.) and was indeed a Potion of Fire
+and Brimstone, and all burning Materials mixt together. The Similitudes
+of Scripture are seldom nice and exact, but rather bold, noble and
+great; and according to the Circumstances which we have observed, this
+_Vineyard_ seems to be the _Earth_, and this _Vintage_ the End of the
+World; the pressing of the _Grapes_ into the Cup or Vessel that receives
+them, the Distillation of burning Liquors from all Parts of the Earth
+into the Trough of the Sea; and that Lake of red Fire, the Blood of
+those Grapes so flowing into it.
+
+’Tis true, this Judgment of the Vintage and Wine-press, and the Effects
+of it, seem to aim more especially at some particular Region of the
+Earth, _Chap. xiv. 20._ And I am not against that, provided the
+Substance of the Explication be still retained, and the universal Sea of
+Fire be that which follows in the next Chapter, under the Name of a _Sea
+of Glass, mingled with Fire_, _Ch. xvi. 2._ This, I think, expresses the
+highest and complete State of the Conflagration; when the Mountains are
+fled away, and not only so, but the exterior Region of the Earth quite
+dissolv’d, like Wax before the Sun: The Channel of the Sea fill’d with a
+Mass of fluid Fire, and the same Fire overflowing all the Globe, and
+covering the whole Earth, as the Deluge, or the first Abyss. Then will
+the triumphal Songs and Hallelujahs be sung for the Victories of the
+Lamb over all his Enemies, and over Nature it self, _Apoc. xv. 3, 4._
+_Great and marvellous are thy Works, Lord God Almighty: Just and true
+are thy Ways, thou King of Saints. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and
+glorify thy Name? for thou only art holy: for all Nations shall come and
+worship before thee; for thy Judgments are made manifest._
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. XI.
+
+
+ _An Account of those extraordinary Phœnomena and Wonders in Nature,
+ that, according to Scripture, will precede the coming of Christ, and
+ the Conflagration of the World._
+
+
+If we reflect upon the History of burning Mountains, we cannot but
+observe, that, before their Eruptions, there are usually some Changes in
+the Earth, or in the Air, in the Sea, or in the Sun it self, as Signs
+and Forerunners of the ensuing Storm. We may then easily conclude that
+when the last great Storm is a coming, and all the Vulcano’s of the
+Earth ready to burst, and the Frame of the World to be dissolv’d, there
+will be previous Signs, in the Heavens, and on the Earth, to introduce
+this tragical Fate: Nature cannot come to that Extremity, without some
+Symptoms of her Illness, nor die silently without Pangs or Complaint.
+But we are naturally heavy of Belief, as to Futurities, and can scarce
+fancy any other Scenes, or other State of Nature, than what is present,
+and continually before our Eyes: We will therefore, to cure our
+Unbelief, take Scripture for our Guide, and keep within the Limits of
+its Predictions.
+
+The Scripture plainly tells us of Signs, of Prodigies, that will precede
+the Coming of our Saviour, and the End of the World: both in the
+Heavens, and on the Earth. The Sun, Moon, and Stars, will be disturb’d
+in their Motion, or Aspect; the Earth and the Sea will roar and tremble,
+and the Mountains fall at his Presence. These things both the Prophets
+and Evangelists have told us; but what we do not understand, we are slow
+to believe; and therefore those that cannot apprehend how such Changes
+should come to pass in the natural World, chuse rather to allegorize all
+these Expressions of Scripture, and to make them signify no more than
+political Changes of Governments, and Empires, and the great Confusions
+that will be amongst the People and Princes of the Earth, towards the
+End of the World. So that _darkening of the Sun_, _shaking of the
+Earth_, and such like Phrases of Scripture, according to these
+Interpreters, are to be understood only in a moral Sense.
+
+And they think they have a Warrant for this Interpretation, from the
+prophetick Style of the Old Testament, where the Destruction of Cities,
+and Empires, and great Princes, is often describ’d by such Figures,
+taken from the natural World. So much is true indeed as to the Phrase of
+the old Prophets in some Places; but I take the true Reason and Design
+of that, to be a typical Adumbration of what was intended should
+literally come to pass in the great and universal Destruction of the
+World; whereof these partial Destructions were only Shadows and
+Prefigurations. But to determine this Case, let us take the known and
+approved Rule for interpreting Scripture, _Not to recede from the
+literal Sense without Necessity_, or where the Nature of the Subject
+will admit of a literal Interpretation. Now, as to those Cases in the
+_Old Testament_, History and Matter of Fact do shew, that they did not
+come to pass literally, therefore must not be so understood; but as for
+those that concern the End of the World, as they cannot be determin’d in
+that way, seeing they are yet _future_; so neither is there any natural
+Repugnancy or Improbability that they should come literally to pass: On
+the contrary, from the Intuition of that State of Nature, one would
+rather conclude the Probability or Necessity of them; that there may,
+and must be such Disorders in the external World, before the general
+Dissolution. Besides, if we admit Prodigies in any Case, or providential
+Indications of God’s Judgments to come there can be no Case suppos’d,
+wherein it will be more reasonable or proper to admit them, than when
+they are to be the Messengers of an universal Vengeance and Destruction.
+
+Let us therefore consider what Signs Scripture hath taken notice of, as
+destin’d to appear at that Time, to publish, as it were, and proclaim
+the approaching End of the World; and how far they will admit of a
+natural Explication, according to those Grounds we have already given,
+in explaining the Causes and Manner of the Conflagration. These Signs
+are chiefly Earthquakes, and extraordinary Commotions of the Seas. Then
+the Darkness or bloody Colour of the Sun and Moon; the shaking of the
+Powers of Heaven, the Fulgurations of the Air, and the falling of Stars.
+As to Earthquakes, we have upon several Occasions shewn, that these will
+necessarily be multiplied towards the End of the World; when, by an
+Excess of Drought and Heat, Exhalations will more abound within the
+Earth; and, from the same Causes, their Inflammation also will be more
+frequent, than in the ordinary State of Nature. And as all Bodies, when
+dried, become more porous and full of Vacuities; so the Body of the
+Earth will be at that Time: And the Mines or Cavities wherein the Fumes
+and Exhalations lodge, will accordingly be of greater Extent, open into
+one another, and continued thro’ long Tracts and Regions; by which
+means, when an Earthquake comes, as the Shock will be more strong and
+violent, so it may reach to a vast Compass of Ground, and whole Islands
+or Continents be shaken at once, when these Trains have taken Fire. The
+Effects also of such Concussions, will not only affect Mankind, but all
+the Elements, and the Inhabitants of them.
+
+I do not wonder that frequent and great Earthquakes should be made a
+Sign of an approaching Conflagration; and the highest Expressions of the
+Prophets concerning the _Day of the Lord_, may be understood in a
+literal Sense, if they be finally referr’d to the general Destruction of
+the World, and not terminated solely upon those particular Countries or
+People, to whom they are at first directed. Hear what _Ezekiel_ says
+upon this Subject, _Chap. xxxviii. 19, 20, 22._ _For in my Jealousy and
+in the Fire of my Wrath have I spoken; surely in that Day there shall be
+a great shaking in the Land of Israel: So that the Fishes of the Sea,
+and the Fowls of the Heaven, and the Beasts of the Field, and all
+creeping Things that creep upon the Earth; and all the Men that are upon
+the Face of the Earth, shall shake at my Presence; and the Mountains
+shall be thrown down, and the steep Places shall fall, and every Wall
+shall fall to the Ground.——And I will rain an overflowing Rain, and
+great Hail-stones, Fire and Brimstone._ The Prophet _Isaias_, (_Chap.
+xxiv. 18, 19, 20._) describes these Judgments in Terms as high, and
+relating to the natural World; _The Windows from on high are open, and
+the Foundations of the Earth do shake. The Earth is utterly broken down,
+the Earth is clean dissolved, the Earth is moved exceedingly. The Earth
+shall reel to and fro like a Drunkard, and shall be removed like a
+Cottage, and the Transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it, and it
+shall fall, and not rise again._
+
+To restrain all these things to _Judea_, as their adequate and final
+Object, is to force both the Words and the Sense. Here are manifest
+Allusions and Footsteps of the Destruction of the World, and the
+Dissolution of the Earth; partly as it was in the Deluge, and partly as
+it will be in its last Ruin, torn, broken, and shatter’d. But most Men
+have fallen into that Error, to fancy both the Destructions of the World
+by Water and Fire, quiet, noiseless Things; executed without any Ruins
+or Ruptures in Nature: That the Deluge was but a great Pool of still
+Waters made by the Rains, and Inundation of the Sea; and the
+Conflagration will be only a superficial Scorching of the Earth, with a
+running Fire. These are false Ideas, and unsuitable to Scripture: For as
+the Deluge is there represented a Disruption of the Abyss, and
+consequently of the then habitable Earth; so the future Combustion of
+it, according to the Representations of Scripture, is to be usher’d in
+and accompanied with all sorts of violent Impressions upon Nature; and
+the chief Instrument of these Violences will be Earthquakes. These will
+tear the Body of the Earth, and shake its Foundations; rend the Rocks,
+and pull down the tall Mountains; sometimes overturn, and sometimes
+swallow up Towns and Cities; disturb and disorder the Elements, and make
+a general Confusion in Nature.
+
+Next to Earthquakes, we may consider the _Roarings of a troubled Sea_.
+This is another Sign of a dying World. St. _Luke_, (_Chap. xxi. 25, 26,
+27._) hath set down a great many of them together: Let us hear his
+Words: _And there shall be Signs in the Sun, and in the Moon, and in the
+Stars; and upon the Earth Distress of Nations, with Perplexity; the Sea
+and the Waves roaring. Mens Hearts failing them for fear, and for
+looking after those things which are coming on the Earth; for the Powers
+of Heaven shall be shaken. And then shall they see the Son of Man coming
+in a Cloud, with Power and great Glory, &c._ As some would allegorize
+these Signs, which we noted before; so others would confine them to the
+Destruction of _Jerusalem_. But ’tis plain, by this _coming of the Son
+of Man in the Clouds_, and the _Redemption of the Faithful_, (Verse 28.)
+and at the same Time the _Sound of the last Trumpet_, (Matt. xxiv. 31)
+which all relate to the End of the World, that something further is
+intended than the Destruction of _Jerusalem_. And though there were
+Prodigies at the Destruction of that City and State, yet not of this
+Force, nor with these Circumstances. ’Tis true, those partial
+Destructions and Calamities, as we observ’d before, of _Babylon_,
+_Jerusalem_, and the _Roman_ Empire, being Types of an universal and
+final Destruction of all God’s Enemies, have, in the Pictures of them,
+some of the same Strokes, to shew they are all from the same Hand,
+decreed by the same Wisdom, foretold by the same Spirit; and the same
+Power and Providence that have already wrought the one, will also work
+the other, in due Time, the former being still Pledges, as well as
+Prefigurations, of the latter.
+
+Let us then proceed in our Explication of this Sign, _the Roaring of the
+Sea, and the Waves_, applying it to the End of the World. I do not look
+upon this ominous Noise of the Sea, as the Effect of a Tempest, for then
+it would not strike such a Terror into the Inhabitants of the Earth, nor
+make them apprehensive of some great Evil coming upon the World, as this
+will do; what proceeds from visible Causes, and such as may happen in a
+common Course of Nature, does not so much amaze us, nor affright us:
+Therefore ’tis more likely these Disturbances of the Sea proceed from
+below, partly by Sympathy and Revulsions from the Land; by Earthquakes
+there, and exhausting the subterraneous Cavities of Waters, which will
+draw again from the Seas what Supplies they can; and partly by
+Earthquakes in the very Sea it self, with Exhalations and fiery
+Eruptions from the Bottom of it: Things indeed that happen at other
+Times, more or less; but at this Conjuncture, all Causes conspiring,
+they will break out with more Violence, and put the whole Body of the
+Waters into a tumultuary Motion. I do not see any Occasion, at this
+Time, for high Winds; neither can I think a superficial Agitation of the
+Waves would answer this Phænomenon; but ’tis rather from Contorsions in
+the Bowels of the Ocean, which make it roar, as it were, for Pain. Some
+Causes impelling the Waters one Way, and some another, make intestine
+Strugglings, and contrary Motions; from whence proceed unusual Noises,
+and such a troubled State of the Waters, as does not only make the Sea
+innavigable, but also strikes Terror into all the maritime Inhabitants,
+that live within the View or Sound of it.
+
+So much for the Earth and Sea. The Face of the Heavens also will be
+changed in divers Respects; the Sun and the Moon darken’d, or of a
+bloody or pale Countenance; the celestial Powers shaken, and the Stars
+unsettled in their Orbs. As to the Sun and Moon, their Obscuration or
+Change of Colour is no more than what happens commonly before the
+Eruption of a fiery Mountain. _Dion Cassius_, you see, hath taken notice
+of it in that Eruption of _Ætna_ which he describes; and others upon the
+like Occasions in _Vesuvius_. And ’tis a Thing of easy Explication; for,
+according as the Atmosphere is more or less clear or turbid, the
+Luminaries are more or less conspicuous; and, according to the Nature of
+those Fumes, or Exhalations that swim in the Air, the Face of the Sun is
+discolour’d sometimes one Way, sometimes another. You see, in an
+ordinary Experiment, when we look upon one another through the Fumes of
+Sulphur, we appear pale like so many Ghosts; and in some foggy Days, the
+Sun hangs in the Firmament as a Lump of Blood: And both the Sun and
+Moon, at their Rising, when their Light comes to us through the thick
+Vapours of the Earth, are red and fiery. These are not Changes wrought
+in the Substance of the Luminaries, but in the Modifications of their
+Light, as it flows to us: For Colours are but Light in a Sort of
+Disguise; as it passes through Mediums of different Qualities, it takes
+different Forms, but the Matter is still the same, and returns to its
+Simplicity, when it comes again into a pure Air.
+
+Now the Air may be changed and corrupted to a great Degree, tho’ there
+appear no visible Change to our Eye. This is manifest from infectious
+Airs, and the Changes of the Air before Storms and Rains, which we feel
+commonly sooner than we see, and some other Creatures perceive much
+sooner than we do. ’Tis no Wonder then, if, before this mighty Storm,
+the Dispositions of the Air be quite alter’d; especially if we consider,
+what we have so often noted before, that there will be a great Abundance
+of Fumes and Exhalations, thro’ the whole Atmosphere of the Earth,
+before the last Fire breaks out, whereby the Light of the Sun may be
+tinctur’d in several Ways: And lastly, it may be so order’d
+providentially that the Body of the Sun may contract at that Time some
+Spots, or _Maculæ_, far greater than usual, and by that means be really
+darkened, not to us only, but to all the neighbouring Planets: And this
+will have a proportionable Effect upon the Moon too, for the Diminution
+of her Light: So that upon all Suppositions, these Phænomena are very
+intelligible, if not necessary Forerunners of the Conflagration.
+
+The next Sign given us, is, that the _Powers of Heaven will be shaken_.
+By the _Heavens_ in this Place is either understood the Planetary
+Heavens, or that of the _fix’d Stars_; but this latter being vastly
+distant from the Earth, cannot be really affected by the Conflagration;
+nor the Powers of it, that is, its Motion, or the Bodies contained in
+it, any ways shaken or disorder’d. But, in Appearance, these celestial
+Bodies may seem to be shaken, and their Motions disorder’d; as in a
+Tempest by Night, when the Ship is toss’d with contrary and uncertain
+Motions, the Heavens seem to fluctuate over our Heads, and the Stars to
+reel to and fro, when the Motion is only in our own Vessel: So possibly
+the uncertain Motions of the Atmosphere, and sometimes of the Earth it
+self, may so vary the Sight and Aspect of this starry Canopy, that it
+may seem to shake and tremble.
+
+But if we understand this of the _planetary Heavens_, they may really be
+shaken; Providence either ordering some great Changes in the other
+Planets, previously to the Conflagration of our Planet; as, ’tis
+probable, there was a great Change in _Venus_ at the Time of our
+_Deluge_: Or the great Shakings and Concussions of our Globe at that
+Time, affecting some of the neighbouring Orbs, or at least that of the
+Moon, may cause Anomalies and Irregularities in their Motions. But the
+Sense that I should pitch upon chiefly for explaining this Phrase of
+_Shaking the Powers of Heaven_, comprehends, in a good measure, both
+these Heavens of the fix’d Stars and of the Planets: ’Tis that Change of
+Situation in the Axis of the Earth, which we have formerly mention’d,
+whereby the Stars will seem to change their Places, and the whole
+Universe to take another Posture. This is sufficiently known to those
+that know the different Consequences of a strait or oblique Posture of
+the Earth. And as the Heavens and the Earth were, in this Sense, once
+shaken, before, namely, at the Deluge, when they lost their first
+Situation; so now they will be shaken again, and thereby return to the
+Posture they had before that first Concussion. And this I take to be the
+true literal Sense of the Prophet _Haggai_, repeated by St. _Paul_,
+(_Ch. ii. 6._, and _Heb. xii. 26._) _Yet once more I shake not the Earth
+only, but also Heaven._
+
+The last Sign we shall take Notice of, is that of _falling Stars_. _And
+the Stars shall fall from Heaven_, says our Saviour, _Matt. xxiv. 29._
+We are sure, from the Nature of the Thing, that this cannot be
+understood either of fix’d Stars, or Planets; for if either of these
+should tumble from the Skies, and reach the Earth, they would break it
+all in Pieces or swallow it up, as the Sea does a sinking Ship; and at
+the same Time would put all the inferior Universe into Confusion. It is
+necessary therefore, by these Stars, to understand either fiery Meteors
+falling from the Middle Region of the Air, or Comets and Blazing Stars.
+No doubt, there will be all sorts of fiery Meteors at that Time; and,
+amongst others, those that are call’d _falling Stars_; which, tho’ they
+are not considerable singly, yet if they were multiplied in great
+Numbers, _falling_ (as the Prophet says, _Isa. xxxiv. 4._) _as Leafs
+from the Vine, or Figs from the Fig-tree_, they would make an
+astonishing Sight. But, I think, this Expression does chiefly refer to
+Comets, which are dead Stars, and may truly be said to fall from Heaven,
+when they leave their Seats above, and those æthereal Regions wherein
+they were fix’d, and sink into this lower World; where they wander about
+with a Blaze in their Tail, or a Flame about their Head, as if they came
+on purpose to be the Messengers of some fiery Vengeance. If Numbers of
+these blazing Stars should fall into our Heaven together, they would
+make a dreadful and formidable Appearance; and, I am apt to think, that
+Providence hath so contriv’d the Periods of their Motion, that there
+will be an unusual Concourse of them at that Time, within the View of
+the Earth, to be a Prelude to this last and most tragical Scene of the
+sublunary World.
+
+I do not know any more in Scripture relating to the last Fire, that,
+upon the Grounds laid down in this Discourse, may not receive a
+satisfactory Explication. It reaches beyond the Signs before-mention’d
+to the highest Expressions of Scripture: as, _Lakes of Fire and
+Brimstone_, _a molten Sea mingled with Fire_, _the Liquefaction of
+Mountains_, and of the Earth it self. We need not now look upon these
+Things as hyperbolical, and poetical Strains, but as barefac’d
+Prophesies, and Things that will literally come to pass as they are
+predicted. One thing more will be expected in a just Hypothesis, or
+Theory of the Conflagration; namely, that it should answer, not only all
+the Conditions and Characters belonging to the last Fire, but should
+also make Way, and lay the Foundation of another World to succeed this,
+or of _new Heavens_ and a _new Earth_: For St. _Peter_ hath taught this
+Doctrine of the _Renovation_ of the World, as positively and expresly as
+that of its _Conflagration_; and therefore they that so explain the
+Destruction of the present World, as to leave it afterwards in an
+eternal Rubbish, without any Hopes of Restoration, do not answer the
+Christian Doctrine concerning it. But as to our Hypothesis, we are
+willing to stand this farther Trial, and be accountable for the
+Consequences of the Conflagration, as well as the Antecedents and Manner
+of it. And we have accordingly, in the following Book, from the Ashes of
+this, raised a New Earth, which we leave to the Enjoyment of the
+Readers. In the mean time, to close our Discourse, we will bid farewell
+to the present World, in a short Review of its last Flames.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. XII.
+
+
+ _An imperfect Description of the Coming of our Saviour; and of the
+ World on Fire._
+
+
+Certainly there is nothing in the whole Course of Nature, or of Human
+Affairs, so great and so extraordinary, as the two last Scenes of them,
+THE COMING OF OUR SAVIOUR, and the BURNING OF THE WORLD. If we could
+draw in our Minds the Pictures of these, in true and lively Colours, we
+should scarce be able to attend to any thing else, or ever divert our
+Imagination from these two Objects: For what can more affect us, than
+the greatest Glory that ever was visible upon Earth, and at the same
+Time the greatest Terror; a God descending at the Head of an Army of
+Angels, and a burning World under his Feet?
+
+These Things are truly above Expression; and not only so, but so
+different and remote from our ordinary Thoughts and Conceptions, that he
+that comes nearest to a true Description of them, shall be look’d upon
+as the most extravagant. ’Tis our Unhappiness to be so much used to
+little trifling Things in this Life, that when any Thing great is
+represented to us, it appears fantastical, an Idea made by some
+contemplative or melancholy Person: I will not venture therefrom,
+without premising Grounds out of Scripture, to say any thing concerning
+this glorious Appearance. As to the Burning of the World, I think we
+have already laid a Foundation sufficient to support the highest
+Description that can be made of it; but the Coming of our Saviour being
+wholly out of the way of natural Causes, it is reasonable we should take
+all Directions we can from Scripture, that we may give a more fitting
+and just Account of that sacred Pomp.
+
+I need not mention those Places of Scripture that prove the second
+Coming of our Saviour in general, or his Return again to the Earth at
+the End of the World, (_Matt. xxiv. 30, 31._ _Acts i. 11._ and _iii. 20,
+21._ _Apoc. i. 7._ _Heb. ix. 28._) No Christian can doubt of this, ’tis
+so often repeated in those sacred Writings; but the Manner and
+Circumstances of this Coming, or of this Appearance, are the Things we
+now enquire into. And, in the first Place, we may observe, that the
+Scripture tells us, our Saviour will come in _flaming_ Fire, and with an
+_Host of mighty Angels_; so says St. _Paul_ to the _Thessalonians_, _The
+Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven with mighty Angels, in flaming
+Fire, taking Vengeance on them that know not God, and obey not the
+Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ_. In the second Place, our Saviour says
+himself, (_Mat. xvi. 27._) _The Son of Man shall come in the Glory of
+his Father, with his Angels._ From which two Places we may learn; First,
+that the Appearance of our Saviour will be with Flames of Fire.
+Secondly, with an Host of Angels. Thirdly, in the Glory of his Father:
+By which Glory of the Father, I think, is understood that Throne of
+Glory represented by _Daniel_ for the _Antient of Days_. For our Saviour
+speaks here to the _Jews_, and probably in a Way intelligible to them;
+and the Glory of the Father, which they were most likely to understand,
+would be either the Glory wherein God appeared at Mount _Sinai_, upon
+the giving of the Law, whereof the Apostle speaks largely to the
+_Hebrews_; or that which _Daniel_ represents Him in at the Day of
+Judgment, (_Chap. xii. 18, 19, 20, 21._) And this latter being more
+proper to the Subject of our Saviour’s Discourse, ’tis more likely this
+Expression refers to it. Give me leave therefore to set down that
+Description of the Glory of the Father upon his Throne, from the Prophet
+_Daniel_, ch. vii. 9. _And I beheld ’till the Thrones were set,—and the
+Antient of Days did sit, whose Garment was white as Snow, and the Hair
+of his Head like the pure Wooll: His Throne was like the fiery Flame,
+and his Wheels as burning Fire. A fiery Stream issued and came forth
+from before him, thousand thousands ministred unto him, and ten thousand
+times ten thousand stood before Him_. With this Throne of the Glory of
+the Father, let us, if you please, compare the Throne of the Son of God,
+as it was seen by St. _John_ in the _Apocalypse, Chap. iv. 2, &c. And
+immediately I was in the Spirit: and behold a Throne was set in Heaven,
+and one sat on the Throne. And he that sat, was to look upon like a
+Jasper, and a Sardine Stone: And there was a Rainbow round about the
+Throne, in Appearance like unto an Emerald. And out of the Throne
+proceeded Lightnings, and Thunderings, and Voices, &c. and before the
+Throne was a Sea of Glass like unto Crystal._
+
+In these Representations you have some Beams of the Glory of the Father,
+and of the Son; which may be partly a Direction to us, in conceiving the
+Lustre of our Saviour’s Appearance. Let us further observe, if you
+please, how external Nature will be affected at the Sight of God, or of
+this approaching Glory. The Scripture often takes Notice of this, and in
+Terms very high and eloquent. The _Psalmist_ seems to have lov’d that
+Subject above others; to set out the Greatness of the Day of the Lord,
+and the Consternation of all Nature, at that Time. He throws about his
+Thunder and Lightning, makes the Hills to melt like Wax, at the Presence
+of the Lord, and the very Foundations of the Earth to tremble, as you
+may see in the xviiith _Psalm_, and the xcviith, and the civth, and
+several others which are too long to be here inserted. So the Prophet
+_Habakkuk_, in his prophetick Prayer, _Chap. iii._ hath many
+Ejaculations to the like Purpose. And the Prophet _Nahum says, The
+Mountains quake at him, and the Hills melt, and the Earth is burnt at
+his Presence: yea, the World, and all that dwell therein._
+
+But more particularly, as to the Face of Nature, just before the coming
+of our Saviour, that may be best collected from the Signs of his coming,
+mention’d in the precedent Chapter. Those all meeting together, help to
+prepare and make ready a Theatre, fit for an angry God to come down
+upon. The Countenance of the Heavens will be dark and gloomy; and a Veil
+drawn over the Face of the Sun. The Earth in a Disposition every where
+to break into open Flames. The Tops of the Mountains smoaking; the
+Rivers dry, Earthquakes in several Places; the Sea sunk and retir’d into
+its deepest Channel, and roaring, as against some mighty Storm. These
+Things will make the Day dead and melancholy; but the Night-Scenes will
+have more of Horror in them, when the _blazing Stars_ appear, like so
+many Furies, with their lighted Torches, threatning to set all on Fire.
+For I do not doubt but the Comets will bear a Part in this Tragedy, and
+have something extraordinary in them, at that Time; either as to Number,
+or Bigness, or Nearness to the Earth. Besides, the Air will be full of
+flaming Meteors, of unusual Forms and Magnitudes; Balls of Fire rowling
+in the Sky, and pointed Lightnings darted against the Earth; mix’d with
+Claps of Thunder, and unusual Noises from the Clouds. The Moon and the
+Stars will be confus’d and irregular, both in their Light and Motions;
+as if the whole Frame of the Heavens was out of Order, and all the Laws
+of Nature were broken or expir’d.
+
+When all Things are in this languishing or dying Posture, and the
+Inhabitants of the Earth under the Fears of their last End; the Heavens
+will open on a sudden, and the Glory of God will appear. A Glory
+surpassing the Sun in its greatest Radiancy; which, tho’ we cannot
+describe, we may suppose it will bear some Resemblance, or Proportion,
+with those Representations that are made in Scripture, of _God upon his
+Throne_. This Wonder in the Heavens, whatsoever its Form may be, will
+presently attract the Eyes of all the Christian World. Nothing can more
+affect them than an Object so unusual, and so illustrious; and, that
+(probably) brings along with it their last Destiny, and will put a
+Period to all human Affairs.
+
+Some of the Antients have thought, that this coming of our Saviour would
+be in the dead of the Night, and his first glorious Appearance in the
+midst of Darkness, _2 Pet. iii. 10._ God is often describ’d in Scripture
+as Light, or Fire, with Darkness round about him. _He bowed the Heavens,
+and came down; and Darkness was under his Feet. He made Darkness his
+secret Place, Psal. xviii. 9, 11, 12. His Pavilion round about him were
+dark Waters, and thick Clouds of the Skies. At the Brightness that was
+before him, the thick Clouds passed, Psal. xcvii._ And when God appeared
+upon Mount _Sinai_, the _Mountain burnt with Fire unto the midst of
+Heaven, with Darkness, Clouds and thick Darkness, Deut. iv. 11._ Or, as
+the Apostle expresses it, with _Blackness_, and _Darkness_, and
+_Tempest, Heb. xii. 18._ Light is never more glorious than when
+surrounded with Darkness; and, it may be, the Sun, at that Time, will be
+so obscure, as to make little Distinction of Day and Night. But however,
+this Divine Light over-bears, and distinguishes itself from common
+Light, tho’ it be at Mid-day. ’Twas about Noon that the Light shin’d
+from Heaven, and surrounded St. _Paul_, _Acts xxii. 6._ And ’twas in the
+Day-time that St. _Stephen_ saw the _Heavens opened; Acts vii. 55, 56.
+Saw the Glory of God, and Jesus standing at the Right Hand of God_. This
+Light, which flows from a more vital Source, be it Day or Night, will
+always be predominant.
+
+That Appearance of God upon Mount _Sinai_, which we mention’d, if we
+reflect upon it, will help us a little to form an Idea of this last
+Appearance. When God had declar’d, that he would come down in the Sight
+of the People, the Text says, _There were Thunders and Lightnings, and a
+thick Cloud upon the Mount, and the Voice of the Trumpet exceeding loud;
+so that all the People that was in the Camp trembled. And Mount Sinai
+was altogether on a Smoke, because the Lord descended upon it in Fire.
+And the Smoke thereof ascended as the Smoke of a Furnace, and the whole
+Mount quaked greatly._ If we look upon this Mount as an Epitome of the
+Earth, this Appearance gives us an imperfect Resemblance of that which
+is to come. Here are the several Parts, or main Strokes of it; first,
+the Heavens and the Earth in Smoke and Fire; then the Appearance of a
+Divine Glory, and the Sound of a Trumpet in the Presence of Angels. But
+as the second Coming of our Saviour, is a Triumph over his Enemies, and
+an Entrance into his Kingdom, and is acted upon the Theatre of the whole
+Earth; so we are to suppose, in proportion, all the Parts and
+Circumstances of it, more great and magnificent.
+
+When, therefore, this mighty God returns again to that Earth, where he
+had once been ill treated, not Mount _Sinai_ only, but all the Mountains
+of the Earth, and all the Inhabitants of the World, will tremble at his
+Presence. At the the opening of the Heavens, the Brightness of his
+Person will scatter the dark Clouds, and shoot Streams of Light
+throughout all the Air. But that first Appearance, being far from the
+Earth, will seem to be only a great Mass of Light, without any distinct
+Form; till, by nearer Approaches, this bright Body shews it self to be
+an Army of Angels, with this King of Kings for their Leader. Then you
+may imagine how guilty Mankind will tremble and be astonished; and while
+they are gazing at this heavenly Host, the Voice of the _Archangel is
+heard_, the shrill Sound of the Trumpet reaches their Ears, and this
+gives the general Alarum to all the World: _For he cometh, for he
+cometh, they cry, to judge the Earth_. The crucify’d God is return’d in
+Glory, to take Vengeance upon his Enemies: Not only upon those that
+pierced his sacred Body, with Nails, and with a Spear, as _Jerusalem_;
+but those that also pierce him every Day by their Profaneness, and hard
+Speeches, concerning his Person, and his Religion. Now they see that
+God, whom they have mock’d, or blasphem’d, laugh’d at his Meanness, or
+at his vain Threats; they see Him, and are confounded with Shame and
+Fear; and in the Bitterness of their Anguish and Despair, call for the
+Mountains to fall upon them, _Isa. ii. 29._ _Fly into the Clefts of the
+Rocks, and into the Caves of the Earth, for fear of the Lord, Rev. vi.
+16, 17. and the Glory of His Majesty, when he ariseth to shake terribly
+the Earth_.
+
+As it is not possible for us to express, or conceive the Dread, and
+Majesty of this Appearance; so neither can we, on the other Hand,
+express the Passions and Consternation of the People that behold it.
+These Things exceed the Measures of Human Affairs, and of Human
+Thoughts; we have neither Words, nor Comparisons, to make them known by.
+The greatest Pomp and Magnificence of the Emperors of the _East_, in
+their Armies, in their Triumphs, in their Inaugurations, is but like the
+Sport and Entertainment of Children, if compar’d with this Solemnity.
+When God condescends to an external Glory, with a visible Train and
+Equipage; when, from all the Provinces of his vast and boundless Empire,
+he summons his Nobles, as I may so say, the several Orders of Angels,
+and Archangels, to attend his Person; tho’ we cannot tell the Form or
+Manner of this Appearance, we know there is nothing in our Experience,
+or in the whole History of this World, that can be a just Representation
+of the least Part of it. No Armies so numerous as the Host of Heaven;
+and in the midst of those bright Legions, in a flaming Chariot, will sit
+the Son of Man, when he comes to be glorified in his Saints, and triumph
+over his Enemies: And instead of the wild Noises of the Rabble, which
+makes a great Part of our Worldly State, this blessed Company will
+breathe their _Hallelujahs_ into the open Air, and repeated Acclamations
+of _Salvation to God, which sits upon the Throne, and to the Lamb, Apoc.
+vii. 10. Now is come Salvation and Strength, and the Kingdom of our God,
+and the Power of his Christ, ch. xii. 10._
+
+But I leave the rest to our silent Devotion and Admiration. Only give me
+leave, whilst this Object is before our Eyes, to make a short Reflection
+upon the wonderful History of our Saviour; and the different States
+which that sacred Person, within the Compass of our Knowledge, hath
+undergone. We now see him coming in the Clouds, in Glory and Triumph,
+surrounded with innumerable Angels: This is the same Person, who, so
+many Hundred Years ago, enter’d _Jerusalem_, with another sort of
+Equipage, mounted upon an Ass’s Colt, while the little People, and the
+Multitude cry’d, _Hosanna to the Son of David_. Nay, this is the same
+Person, that, at his first Coming into this World, was laid in a Manger,
+instead of a Cradle; a naked Babe dropt in a Crib at _Bethlehem_ (_Luke
+ii. 12._) his poor Mother not having wherewithal to get her a better
+Lodging, when she was to be delivered of this sacred Burthen. This
+helpless Infant, that often wanted a little Milk to refresh it, and
+support its Weakness; that hath often cry’d for the Breast with Hunger
+and Tears, now appears to be the Lord of Heaven and Earth. If this
+Divine Person had fallen from the Clouds in a Mortal Body, cloath’d with
+Flesh and Blood, and spent his Life here amongst Sinners, that alone had
+been an infinite Condescension: But, as if it had not been enough to
+take upon him human Nature, he was content, for many Months, to live the
+Life of an Animal, or of a Plant, in the dark Cell of a Woman’s Womb.
+_This is the Lord’s Doing, it is marvellous in our Eyes!_
+
+Neither is this all that is wonderful in the Story of our Saviour. If
+the Manner of his Death, be compar’d with his present Glory, we shall
+think either the one or the other incredible. Look up first into the
+Heavens; see how they bow under him, and receive a new Light from the
+Glory of his Presence; then look down upon the Earth, and see a naked
+Body, hanging upon a cursed Tree in _Golgotha_, crucified between two
+Thieves, wounded, spit upon, mock’d, abus’d. Is it possible to believe,
+that one, and the same Person can act or suffer such different Parts?
+That he that is now Lord and Master of all Nature, not only of Death and
+Hell, and the Powers of Darkness, but of all Principalities in heavenly
+Places, is the same Infant _Jesus_, the same crucified _Jesus_, of whose
+Life and Death the Christian Records give us an Account? The History of
+this Person is the Wonder of this World; and not of this World only, but
+of the Angels above, that _desire to look into it_ (1 Pet. i. 11, 12.)
+
+Let us now return to our Subject. We left the Earth in a languishing
+Condition, ready to be made a Burnt Offering, to appease the Wrath of
+its offended Lord. When _Sodom_ was to be destroy’d (_Gen._ xviii.)
+_Abraham_ interceded with God, that he would spare it for the Righteous
+Sake; and _David_ (2 _Sam._ xxiv. 17.) interceded to save his guiltless
+People, from God’s Judgments, and the destroying Angel: But here is no
+Intercessor for Mankind in this last Extremity; none to interpose, where
+the Mediator of our Peace, is the Party offended. Shall then, _the
+Righteous perish with the Wicked? Shall not the Judge of all the Earth
+do right?_ Or, if the Righteous be translated and deliver’d from this
+Fire, what shall become of innocent Children and Infants? Must these all
+be given up to the merciless Flames, as a Sacrifice to _Moloch_? And
+their tender Flesh, like burnt Incense, send up Fumes to feed the
+Nostrils of Evil Spirits? Can the God of _Israel_ smell a sweet Savour
+from such Sacrifices? The greater half of Mankind is made up of Infants
+and Children; and if the Wicked be destroy’d; _yet these Lambs, what
+have they done?_ Are there no Bowels of Compassion for such an harmless
+Multitude? But we leave them to their Guardian Angels, and to that
+Providence which watches over all Things (_Mat._ xviii. 10.)
+
+It only remains, therefore, to let fall that Fire from Heaven, which is
+to consume this Holocaust. Imagine all Nature now standing in a silent
+Expectation to receive its last Doom; the tutelary and destroying Angels
+to have their Instructions; every Thing to be ready for the fatal Hour;
+and then, after a little Silence, all the Host of Heaven to raise their
+Voice, and sing aloud, _LET GOD ARISE, let his Enemies be scattered: As
+Smoke is driven away, so drive them away; as Wax melteth before the
+Fire, so LET the Wicked perish at the Presence of God._ And upon this,
+as upon a Signal given, all the sublunary World breaks into Flames, and
+all the Treasuries or Fire are open’d in Heaven, and in Earth.
+
+Thus the Conflagration begins. If one should now go about to represent
+_the World on Fire_, with all the Confusions that necessarily must be in
+Nature, and in Mankind upon that Occasion, it would seem to most Men a
+Romantick Scene: Yet we are sure there must be such a Scene; _The
+Heavens will pass away with a Noise, and the Elements will melt with
+fervent Heat, and all the Works of the Earth will be burnt up_: And
+these Things cannot come to pass without the greatest Disorders
+imaginable, both in the Minds of Men, and in external Nature, and the
+saddest Spectacles that Eye can behold. We think it a great Matter to
+see a single Person burnt alive; here are Millions shrieking in the
+Flames at once. ’Tis frightful to us to look upon a great City in
+Flames, and to see the Distractions and Misery of the People; here is an
+universal Fire through all the Cities of the Earth, and an universal
+Massacre of their Inhabitants. Whatsoever the Prophets foretold of the
+Desolations of _Judea_, _Jerusalem_, or _Babylon_ (_Isa. xxiv._ _Jer.
+li._ _Lament._) in the highest Strains, is more than literally
+accomplish’d in this last and general Calamity; and those only that are
+Spectators of it, can make its History.
+
+The Disorders in Nature, and the inanimate World, will be no less, nor
+less strange and unaccountable, than those in Mankind. Every Element,
+and every Region, so far as the Bounds of this Fire extend, will be in a
+Tumult and a Fury, and the whole habitable World running into Confusion.
+A World is sooner destroyed than made; and Nature relapses hastily into
+that Chaos-State, out of which she came by slow and leisurely Motions:
+As an Army advances into the Field by just and regular Marches; but when
+it is broken and routed, it flies with Precipitation, and one cannot
+describe its Posture. Fire is a barbarous Enemy, it gives no Mercy;
+there is nothing but Fury, and Rage, and Ruin, and Destruction,
+wheresoever it prevails. A Storm, or _Hurricano_, tho’ it be but the
+Force of Air, makes a strange Havock where it comes; but devouring
+Flames, or Exhalations set on Fire, have still a far greater Violence,
+and carry more Terror along with them. Thunder and Earthquakes are the
+Sons of Fire; and we know nothing in all Nature more impetuous, or more
+irresistibly destructive than these two. And accordingly in this last
+War of the Elements, we may be sure, they will bear their Parts, and do
+great Execution in the several Regions of the World. Earthquakes and
+subterraneous Eruptions will tear the Body and Bowels of the Earth; and
+Thunders and convulsive Motions of the Air rend the Skies. The Waters of
+the Sea will boil and struggle with Streams of Sulphur that run into
+them; which will make them fume, and smoke, and roar, beyond all Storms
+and Tempests; and these Noises of the Sea will be answer’d again from
+the Land, by falling Rocks and Mountains. This is a small Part of the
+Disorders of that Day.
+
+But ’tis not possible, from any Station, to have a full Prospect of this
+last Scene of the Earth; for ’tis a Mixture of Fire and Darkness. This
+new Temple is fill’d with Smoke, while it is consecrating, and none can
+enter into it. But I am apt to think, if we could look down upon this
+burning World from above the Clouds, and have a full View of it, in all
+its Parts, we should think it a lively Representation of _Hell_ it self.
+For Fire and Darkness are the two chief Things by which that State, or
+that Place, uses to be described; and they are both here mingled
+together, with all other Ingredients that make that _Tophet_ that is
+prepared of old, (_Isa. xxx._) Here are Lakes of Fire and Brimstone;
+Rivers of melted glowing Matter; ten thousand _Vulcano’s_ vomiting
+Flames all at once; thick Darkness, and Pillars of Smoke twisted about
+with Wreaths of Flame, like fiery Snakes; Mountains of Earth thrown up
+into the Air, and the Heavens dropping down in Lumps of Fire. These
+Things will all be literally true, concerning that Day, and that State
+of the Earth. And if we suppose _Beelzebub_, and his apostate Crew, in
+the midst of this fiery Furnace (and I know not where they can be else;)
+it will be hard to find any Part of the Universe, or any State of
+Things, that answers to so many of the Properties and Characters of
+_Hell_, as this which is now before us.
+
+But if we suppose the Storm over, and that the Fire hath got an entire
+Victory over all other Bodies, and subdued every Thing to itself; the
+Conflagration will end in a Deluge of Fire, or in a Sea of Fire,
+covering the whole Globe of the Earth: For, when the exterior Region of
+the Earth is melted into a Fluor, like molten Glass, or running Metal,
+it will, according to the Nature of other Fluids, fill all Vacuities and
+Depressions, and fall into a regular Surface, at an equal Distance every
+where, from its Center. This Sea of Fire, like the first Abyss, will
+cover the Face of the whole Earth, make a kind of second Chaos, and
+leave a Capacity for another World to rise from it. But that is not our
+present Business. Let us only, if you please, to take Leave of this
+Subject, reflect, upon this Occasion, on the Vanity and transient Glory
+of all this habitable World; how, by the Force of one Element breaking
+loose upon the rest, all the Varieties of Nature, all the Works of Art,
+all the Labours of Men, are reduc’d to nothing; all that we admir’d and
+ador’d before, as great and magnificent, is obliterated or vanish’d; and
+another Form and Face of Things, plain, simple, and every where the
+same, overspreads the whole Earth. Where are now the great Empires of
+the World, and their great Imperial Cities? Their Pillars, Trophies, and
+Monuments of Glory? Shew me where they stood, read the Inscription, tell
+me the Victor’s Name. What Remains, what Impressions, what Difference or
+Distinction do you see in this Mass of Fire? _Rome_ itself, _eternal
+Rome_, the great City, the Empress of the World, whole Domination and
+Superstition, _antient_ and _modern_, make a great Part of the History
+of this Earth; what is become of her now? She laid her Foundations deep,
+and her Palaces were strong and sumptuous: _She glorified herself, and
+liv’d deliciously; and said in her Heart, I sit a Queen, and shall see
+no Sorrow_. But her Hour is come, she is wip’d away from the Face of the
+Earth, and buried in perpetual Oblivion. But ’tis not Cities only, and
+Works of Mens Hands, but the everlasting Hills, the Mountains and Rocks
+of the Earth, are melted as Wax before the Sun; and _their Place is no
+where found_. Here stood the _Alps_, a prodigious Range of Stone, the
+Load of the Earth, that covered many Countries, and reach’d their Arms
+from the _Ocean_ to the _Black Sea_; this huge Mass of Stone is soften’d
+and dissolv’d, as a tender Cloud, into Rain. Here stood the _African_
+Mountains, and _Atlas_ with his Top above the Clouds. There was frozen
+_Caucasus_, and _Taurus_, and _Imaus_, and the Mountains of _Asia_. And
+yonder, towards the North, stood the _Riphæan_ Hills, cloath’d in Ice
+and Snow. All these are vanish’d, dropt away as the Snow upon their
+Heads, and swallow’d up in a red Sea of Fire, (_Revel. xv. 3._) _Great
+and marvellous are thy Works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy
+Ways, thou King of Saints._ Hallelujah.
+
+
+
+
+ _The CONCLUSION._
+
+
+If the Conflagration of the World be a Reality, as, both by Scripture
+and Antiquity we are assur’d it is; if we be fully persuaded and
+convinc’d of this; ’Tis a Thing of that Nature, that we cannot keep it
+long in our Thoughts, without making some moral Reflections upon it.
+’Tis both great in itself, and of universal Concern to all Mankind. Who
+can look upon such an Object, _a World in Flames_, without thinking with
+himself, Whether shall I be in the midst of these Flames, or no? What is
+my Security that I shall not fall under this fiery Vengeance, which is
+the Wrath of an angry God? St. _Peter_, when he had delivered the
+Doctrine of the Conflagration, makes this pious Reflection upon it: _2
+Ep. iii. 11._ _Seeing then, that all these Things shall be dissolved,
+what manner of Persons ought you to be, in all holy Conversation and
+Godliness?_ The Strength of his Argument depends chiefly upon what he
+had said before in _ver. 7._ where he told us, that the _present Heavens
+and Earth were reserved unto Fire against the Day of Judgment, and the
+Perdition of irreligious Men_. We must avoid the Crime then, if we would
+escape the Punishment. But this Expression of _irreligious_ or _ungodly
+Men_, is still very general. St. _Paul_, when he speaks of this fiery
+Indignation, and the Persons it is to fall upon, is more distinct in
+their Characters. He seems to mark out for this Destruction, three Sorts
+of Men chiefly; _The Atheists, Infidels, and the Tribe of Antichrist_:
+These are his Words, _2 Thess. i. 7, 8._ _When the Lord Jesus shall be
+revealed from Heaven, with his mighty Angels, in flaming Fire, taking
+Vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the Gospel of our
+Lord Jesus Christ._ Then as for Antichrist and his Adherents, he says in
+the 2d Chapter, and viiith Verse, _The Lord shall consume that wicked
+One, with the Spirit of his Mouth, and shall destroy him with the
+Brightness of his Coming_, or of his Presence. These, you see, all refer
+to the same Time with St. _Peter_: Namely, to the Coming of our Saviour,
+at the Conflagration; and three Sorts of Persons are characteriz’d as
+his Enemies, and set out for Destruction at that Time. _First_, Those
+that know not God; that is, that acknowledge not God, that will not own
+the Deity. _Secondly_, Those that hearken not to the Gospel; that is,
+that reject the Gospel, and Christian Religion, when they are preach’d
+and made known to them: For you must not think, that it is the poor
+barbarous and ignorant Heathens, that scarce ever heard of God, or the
+Gospel, that are threatned with this fiery Vengeance; no, ’tis the
+Heathens that live amongst Christians; those that are Infidels, as to
+the Existence of God, or the Truth of Christian Religion, tho they have
+had a full Manifestation of both: These are properly the Adversaries of
+God and Christ. And such Adversaries, St. _Paul_ says in another Place,
+_A fearful Judgment, and fiery Indignation shall devour_: (_Heb. x.
+27._) Which still refers to the same Time, and the same Persons we are
+speaking of. Then as to the third Sort of Men, Antichrist, and his
+Followers; besides, this Text of St. _Paul_ to the _Thessalonians_, ’tis
+plain to me in the _Apocalypse_, that _Mystical Babylon_ is to be
+consum’d by Fire; and the _Beast_ and _False Prophet_, to be thrown into
+the _Lake that burns with Fire and Brimstone_. Which Lake is no where to
+be found till the Conflagration.
+
+You see then, for whom _Tophet_ is prepar’d of Old; for Atheists,
+Infidels, and Antichristian Persecutors: And they will have for their
+Companions, the Devil and his Angels, the Heads of the Apostasy. These
+are all in open Rebellion against God and Christ, and at Defiance, as it
+were, with Heaven; excepting Antichrist, who is rather in a secret
+Conspiracy, than an open Rebellion: For, under a pretended Commission
+from Jesus Christ, he persecutes his Servants, dishonours his Person,
+corrupts his Laws and his Government, and makes War against his Saints.
+And this is a greater Affront and Provocation, if possible, than a
+barefac’d Opposition would be.
+
+There are other Men, besides these, that are unacceptable to God, all
+Sorts of Sinners and wicked Persons; but they are not so properly the
+Enemies of God, as these we have mentioned. An intemperate Man is an
+Enemy to himself; and an unjust Man is an Enemy to his Neighbour; but
+those that deny God, or Christ, or persecute their Servants, are
+directly, and immediately Enemies to God: And, therefore, when the Lord
+comes in Flames of Fire, to triumph over his Enemies, to take Vengeance
+upon all that are Rebels or Conspirators against Him, and his Christ;
+these Monsters of Men will be the first, and most exemplary Objects of
+the Divine Wrath and Indignation.
+
+To undertake to speak to these three Orders of Men, and convince them of
+their Error, and the Danger of it, would be too much for the Conclusion
+of a short Treatise. And as for the third Sort, the Subjects of
+Antichrist, none but the Learned amongst them are allow’d to be
+inquisitive, or to read such Things as condemn their Church, or the
+Governors of it; therefore, I do not not expect that this _English_
+Translation should fall into many of their Hands. But those of them,
+that are pleas’d to look into the _Latin_, will find, in the Conclusion
+of it, a full and fair Warning to come out of _Babylon_; which is there
+proved to be the Church of _Rome_. Then as to those that are
+Atheistically inclin’d, which I am willing to believe are not many; I
+desire them to consider, how mean a Thing it is, to have Hopes only in
+this Life; and how uneasy a Thing, to have nothing but Fears, as to the
+Future. Those, sure, must be little, narrow Souls, that can make
+themselves a Portion, and a Sufficiency, out of what they enjoy here;
+that think of no more; that desire no more: For, what is this Life, but
+a Circulation of little, mean Actions? We lie down and rise again; dress
+and undress; feed and wax hungry; work, or play, and are weary; and then
+we lie down again, and the Circle returns. We spend the Day in Trifles,
+and when the Night comes, we throw our selves into the Bed of Folly,
+among Dreams, and broken Thoughts, and wild Imaginations. Our Reason
+lies asleep by us; and we are, for the Time, as arrant Brutes, as those
+that sleep in the Stalls, or in the Field. Are not the Capacities of Man
+higher than these? And ought not his Ambition and Expectations to be
+greater? Let us be Adventurers for another World; ’tis, at least, a fair
+and noble Chance; and there is nothing in this, worth our Thoughts, or
+our Passions. If we should be disappointed, we are still no worse than
+the rest of our Fellow-Mortals; and if we succeed in our Expectations,
+we are eternally happy.
+
+For my Part, I cannot be persuaded, that any Man, of atheistical
+Inclinations, can have a great and generous Soul; for there is nothing
+great in the World, if you take God out of it: Therefore, such a Person
+can have no great Thought, can have no great Aims, or Expectations, or
+Designs: For all must lie within the Compass of this Life, and of this
+dull Body. Neither can he have any great Instincts or noble Passions;
+for if he had, they would naturally excite in him greater Ideas, inspire
+him with higher Notions, and open the Scenes of the intellectual World.
+Lastly, he cannot have any great Sense of Order, Wisdom, Goodness,
+Providence, or any of the divine Perfections: And these are the greatest
+Things that can enter into the Thoughts of Man, and that do most enlarge
+and ennoble his Mind. And therefore I say again, that he that is
+naturally inclined to Atheism, being also naturally destitute of all
+these, must have a little and narrow Soul.
+
+But you’ll say, it may be, this is to expostulate, rather than to prove:
+or to upbraid us with our Make and Temper, rather than to convince us of
+an Error in Speculation. ’Tis an Error, it may be, in Practice, or in
+Point of Prudence; but we seek Truth, whether it make for us, or against
+us: Convince us therefore by just Reasoning and direct Arguments, that
+there is a God, and then we’ll endeavour to correct these Defects in our
+natural Complexion. You say well, and therefore I have endeavour’d to do
+this before, in another Part of this Theory, in the _Second Book_, _ch.
+II._ concerning the _Author of Nature_: Where you may see, that the
+Powers of Nature, or of the material World, cannot answer all the
+Phænomena of the Universe, which are there represented. This you may
+consult at Leisure: But in the mean Time, ’tis a good Persuasive why we
+should not easily give our selves up to such Inclinations or Opinions,
+as have neither Generosity nor Prudence on their Side. And it cannot be
+amiss, that these Persons should often take into their Thoughts this
+last Scene of Things, the _Conflagration_ of the World: Seeing if there
+be a God, they will certainly be found in the Number of his Enemies, and
+of those that will have their Portion in the Lake that burns with Fire
+and Brimstone.
+
+The third Sort of Persons that we are to speak to, are the Incredulous,
+or such as do not believe the Truth of _Christian Religion_, though they
+believe there is a God. There are commonly Men of Wit and Pleasure, that
+have not Patience enough to consider, cooly and in due Order, the
+Grounds upon which it appears that Christian Religion is from Heaven,
+and of divine Authority. They ought, in the first Place, to examine
+_Matter of Fact_, and the History of our Saviour: That there was such a
+Person, in the Reigns of _Augustus_ and _Tiberius_, that wrought such
+and such Miracles in _Judea_; taught such a Doctrine; was crucified at
+_Jerusalem_; rose from the Dead the third Day, and visibly ascended into
+Heaven. If these Matters of Fact be denied, then the Controversy turns
+only to an historical Question, _Whether_ the Evangelical History be a
+fabulous, or true History? which it would not be proper to examine in
+this Place. But if Matter of Fact recorded there, and in the Acts of the
+Apostles, and the first Ages of Christianity, be acknowledged, as I
+suppose it is, then the Question that remains is this, _Whether_ such
+Matter of Fact does not sufficiently prove the divine Authority of Jesus
+Christ and of his Doctrine? We suppose it possible, for a Person to have
+such Testimonials of divine Authority, as may be sufficient to convince
+Mankind, or the more reasonable Part of Mankind; and if that be
+possible, what, pray, is wanting in the Testimonies of Jesus Christ? The
+Prophecies of the old Testament bear Witness to him: His Birth was a
+Miracle, and his Life a Train of Miracles; not wrought out of Levity and
+vain Ostentation, but for useful and charitable Purposes: His Doctrine
+and Morality not only blameless, but noble; designed to remove out of
+the World the imperfect Religion of the _Jews_, and the false Religion
+of the _Gentiles_; all Idolatry and Superstition, and thereby improve
+Mankind, under a better and more perfect Dispensation. He gave an
+Example of a spotless Innocency in all his Conversation, free from Vice
+or any Evil; and liv’d in a Neglect of all the Pomp or Pleasures of this
+Life, referring his Happiness wholly to another World. He prophesied
+concerning his own Death, and his Resurrection; and concerning the
+Destruction of _Jerusalem_; which all came to pass in a signal Manner:
+He also prophesied of the Success of his Gospel; which, after his Death,
+immediately took Root, and spread itself every Way throughout the World,
+maugre all Opposition or Persecution from _Jews_ or _Heathens_. It was
+not supported by any temporal Power for above three hundred Years: nor
+were any Arts used, or Measures taken, according to human Prudence, for
+the Conservation of it. But, to omit other Things, that grand Article of
+his rising from the Dead, ascending visibly into Heaven, and pouring
+down the miraculous Gifts of the Holy Ghost, (according as he had
+promis’d) upon his Apostles and their Followers; this alone is to me a
+Demonstration of his divine Authority. To conquer Death, to mount, like
+an Eagle, into the Skies, and to inspire his Followers with inimitable
+Gifts and Faculties, are Things, without Controversy, beyond all human
+Power; and may and ought to be esteem’d sure Credentials of a Person
+sent from Heaven.
+
+From these Matters of Fact we have all possible Assurance, that Jesus
+Christ was no Impostor or deluded Person; (one of which two Characters
+all Unbelievers must fix upon him) but commission’d by Heaven to
+introduce a new Religion; to reform the World, to remove _Judaism_ and
+Idolatry; the beloved Son of God, the great Prophet of the later Ages,
+the true Messiah that was to come.
+
+It may be, you will confess, that these are great Arguments, that the
+Author of our Religion was a divine Person, and had supernatural Powers:
+But withal, that there are so many Difficulties in Christian Religion,
+and so many Things unintelligible, that a rational Man knows not how to
+believe it, though he be inclined to admire the Person of Jesus Christ.
+I answer, if they be such Difficulties as are made only by the Schools
+and disputacious Doctors, you are not to trouble your self about them,
+for they are of no Authority: But if they be in the very Words of
+Scripture, then ’tis either in Things practical, or in Things merely
+speculative. As to the Rules of Practice in Christian Religion, I do not
+know any Thing in Scripture obscure or unintelligible; and as to
+Speculations, great Discretion and Moderation is to be used in the
+Conduct of them. If these Matters of Fact, which we have alledged, prove
+the Divinity of the Revelation, keep close to the Words of that
+Revelation, asserting no more than it asserts, and you cannot err: But
+if you will expatiate, and determine Modes, and Forms, and Consequences,
+you may easily be puzled by your own Forwardness. For besides some
+Things that are in their own Nature infinite and incomprehensible, there
+are many other Things in Christian Religion, that are incompleatly
+revealed; the full Knowledge whereof, it has pleased God to reserve to
+another Life, and to give us only a summary Account of them at present.
+We have so much Deference for any Government, as not to expect that all
+their Counsels and Secrets should be made known to us, nor to censure
+every Action, whose Reasons we do not fully comprehend; much more in the
+providential Administration of a World, we must be content to know so
+much of the Counsels of Heaven and of supernatural Truths, as God has
+thought fit to reveal to us. And if these Truths be no otherwise than in
+a general Manner, summarily and incompletely revealed in this Life, as
+commonly they are, we must not therefore throw off the Government, or
+reject the whole Dispensation; of whose divine Authority we have
+otherways full Proof, and satisfactory Evidence: For this would be, to
+lose the Substance in catching at a Shadow.
+
+But Men that live continually in the Noise of the World, amidst
+Business, and Pleasures, their Time is commonly shar’d betwixt those
+two, so that little or nothing is left for Meditation; at least, not
+enough for such Meditations as require Length, Justness, and Order. They
+should retire from the Crowd for one Month or two, to study the Truth of
+Christian Religion, if they have any Doubt of it. They retire sometimes
+to cure a Gout, or other Disease, and diet themselves according to Rule;
+but they will not be at that Pains, to cure a Disease of the Mind, which
+is of far greater, and more fatal Consequence. If they perish by their
+own Negligence or Obstinacy, the Physician is not to blame. Burning is
+the last Remedy in some Distempers; and they would do well to remember,
+that the World will flame about their Heads one of these Days; and
+whether they be amongst the Living, or amongst the Dead, at that Time,
+the Apostle makes them a Part of the Fewel, which that fiery Vengeance
+will prey upon. Our Saviour hath been true to his Word hitherto; whether
+in his Promises, or in his Threatnings. He promis’d the Apostles to send
+down the Holy Ghost upon them after his Ascension, and that was fully
+accomplish’d: He foretold, and threaten’d the Destruction of
+_Jerusalem_; and that came to pass accordingly, soon after he had left
+the World: And he hath told us also, that he will come again in _the
+Clouds of Heaven, Matt. xxiv. 30. with Power and great Glory_; and,
+_xxv. 32._ _&c._ and that will be to judge the World. _When the Son of
+Man shall come in his Glory, and all the holy Angels with him, then
+shall he sit upon the Throne of his Glory: and before him shall be
+gathered all Nations_; and he will separate the Good from the Bad; and
+to the Wicked and Unbelievers he will say, _Ver. 41._ _Depart from me,
+ye Cursed, into everlasting Fire, prepared for the Devil and his
+Angels._ This is the same Coming, and the same Fire, with that which we
+mention’d before out of St. _Paul_, _2 Thess. i. 7, 8, 9_; as you will
+plainly see, if you compare Saint _Matthew_’s Words with Saint _Paul’s_,
+which are these, _When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven,
+with his mighty Angels, in flaming Fire, taking Vengeance on them that
+know not God, and that hearken not to the Gospel of our Lord Jesus
+Christ: Who shall be punish’d with everlasting Destruction, from, or by,
+the Presence of the Lord, and the Glory of his Power_. This, methinks,
+should be an awakening Thought, that there is such a Threatning upon
+Record (by one who never yet failed in his Word) against those that do
+not believe his Testimony. Those that reject him now as a Dupe, or an
+Impostor, run a Hazard of seeing him hereafter coming in the Clouds to
+be their Judge. And it will be too late then to correct their Error,
+when the bright Armies of Angels fill the Air, and the Earth begins to
+melt at the Presence of the Lord.
+
+Thus much concerning those three Ranks of Men, whom the Apostle Saint
+_Paul_ seems to point at principally, and condemn to the Flames. But, as
+I said before, the rest of Sinners, and vicious Persons, amongst the
+Professors of Christianity, though they are not so directly the Enemies
+of God, as these are; yet being Transgressors of his Law, they must
+expect to be brought to Justice. In every well-govern’d State, not only
+Traitors and Rebels that offend more immediately against the Person of
+the Prince; but all others, that notoriously violate the Laws, are
+brought to condign Punishment, according to the Nature and Degree of
+their Crime: So in this Case, _The Fire shall try every Man’s Work, of
+what Sort it is_. ’Tis therefore the Concern of every Man, to reflect
+often upon that Day, and to consider what his Fate and Sentence is
+likely to be, at that last Trial. The _Jews_ have a Tradition, that
+_Elias_ sits in Heaven, and keeps a Register of all Mens Actions, good
+or bad. He hath his Under-Secretaries for the several Nations of the
+World, that take Minutes of all that passes; and so hath the History of
+every Man’s Life before him, ready to be produc’d at the Day of
+Judgment. I will not vouch for the literal Truth of this, but it is true
+in Effect: Every Man’s Fate shall be determined that Day, according to
+the History of his Life; according to the Works done in the Flesh,
+whether good or bad. And, therefore, it ought to have as much Influence
+upon us, as if every single Action was formally register’d in Heaven.
+
+If Men would learn to contemn this World, it would cure a great many
+Vices at once. And, methinks, St. _Peter_’s Argument, from the
+approaching Dissolution of all Things, should put us out of Conceit with
+such perishing Vanities. Lust and Ambition are the two reigning Vices of
+great Men; and those little Fires might be soon extinguished, if they
+would frequently and seriously meditate on this last and universal Fire,
+which will put an End to all Passions, and all Contentions. As to
+Ambition, the Heathens themselves made use of this Argument, to abate
+and repress the vain Affectation of Glory and Greatness in this World. I
+told you before, the Lesson that was given to _Scipio Africanus_, by his
+Uncle’s Ghost, upon this Subject: And upon a like Occasion and
+Consideration, _Cæsar_ hath a Lesson given him by _Lucan_, after the
+Battle of _Pharsalia_; where _Pompey_ lost the Day, and _Rome_ its
+Liberty. The Poet says, _Cæsar_ took Pleasure in looking upon the dead
+Bodies, and would not suffer them to be buried, or, which was their
+Manner of burying, to be burnt: Whereupon he speaks to him in these
+Words.
+
+ _Hos, CÆSAR, populos si nunc non usserit Ignis,
+ Uret cum Terris, uret com gurgite Ponti.
+ Communis mundo superest rogus, Ossibus astra
+ Misturus. Quocunque Tuam Fortuna vocabit,
+ Hæ quoque eunt Animæ; non altius ibis in auras,
+ Non meliore loco Stygia sub nocte jacebis.
+ Libera fortuna Mors est: Capit omnia Tellus
+ Quæ genuit; Cœlo tegitur qui non habet urnam._
+
+ CÆSAR,
+ _If now these Bodies want their Pile and Urn,
+ At last, with the whole Globe, they’re sure to burn.
+ The World expects one general Fire: And Thou
+ Must go, where these poor Souls are wand’ring now.
+ Thou’lt reach no higher, in the ethereal Plain,
+ Nor ’mongst the Shades a better Place obtain.
+ Death levels all: And he that has not Room
+ To make a Grave, Heaven’s Vault shall be his Tomb._
+
+These are mortifying Thoughts to ambitious Spirits. And surely our own
+Mortality, and the Mortality of the World itself, may be enough to
+convince all considering Men, that _Vanity of Vanities, all is Vanity
+under the Sun_; any otherwise than as they relate to a better Life.
+
+_FINIS._
+
+
+
+
+ THE THEORY OF THE EARTH.
+
+ Containing an Account of the Original of the Earth,
+
+ And of all the
+
+ GENERAL CHANGES
+
+ Which it hath already undergone, or is to
+ undergo, till the CONSUMMATION
+ of all Things.
+
+ The FOURTH BOOK,
+
+ _Concerning the New Heavens, and New Earth,
+ AND
+ Concerning the Consummation of all Things._
+
+ _LONDON_:
+ Printed for J. HOOKE, in _Fleet-Street_.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE TO THE READER.
+
+
+You see it is still my Lot to travel into new Worlds, having never found
+any great Satisfaction in this: As an active People leaves their
+Habitations in a barren Soil, to try if they can make their Fortune
+better elsewhere. I first look’d backwards, and waded through the
+Deluge, into the primæval World, to see how they lived there, and how
+Nature stood in that original Constitution. Now I am going forwards, to
+view the new Heavens and new Earth, that will be after the
+Conflagration. But, gentle Reader, let me not take you any farther, if
+you be weary; I do not love a querulous Companion: Unless your Genius
+therefore press you forwards, chuse rather to rest here, and be content
+with that Part of the Theory which you have seen already. Is it not fair
+to have followed Nature so far, as to have seen her twice in her Ruins?
+Why should we still pursue her, even after Death and Dissolution, into
+dark and remote Futurities? To whom therefore such Disquisitions seem
+needless, or over-curious, let them rest here; and leave the Remainder
+of this Work, which is a kind of PROPHECY concerning the STATE of things
+after the Conflagration, to those that are of a Disposition suited to
+such Studies and Enquiries.
+
+Not that any part of this Theory requires much Learning, Art, or
+Science, to be Master of it; but a Love and Thirst after Truth, Freedom
+of Judgment, and a Resignation of our Understandings to clear Evidence.
+Let it carry us which way it will, an honest English Reader, that looks
+only at the Sense as it lies before him, and neither considers nor cares
+whether it be new or old, so it be true, may be a more competent Judge
+than a great Scholar full of his own Notions, and puffed up with the
+Opinion of his mighty Knowledge; for such Men think they cannot in
+Honour own any thing to be true, which they did not know before. To be
+taught any new Knowledge, is to confess their former Ignorance; and that
+lessens them in their own Opinion, and, as they think, in the Opinion of
+the World, which are both uneasy Reflections to them. Neither must we
+depend upon Age only for Soundness of Judgment: Men in discovering and
+owning Truth seldom change their Opinions after threescore, especially
+if they be leading Opinions: It is then too late, we think, to begin the
+World again, and as we grow old, the Heart contracts, and cannot open
+wide enough to take in a great Thought.
+
+The Spheres of Mens Understandings are as different, as Prospects upon
+the Earth: Some stand upon a Rock or a Mountain, and see far round
+about; others are in an Hollow, or in a Cave, and have no Prospect at
+all. Some Men consider nothing but what is present to their Senses;
+others extend their Thoughts both to what is past, and what is future:
+And yet the fairest Prospect in this Life is not to be compar’d to the
+least we shall have in another. Our dearest Day here is misty and hazy;
+we see not far, and what we do see, is in a bad Light: But when we have
+got better Bodies in the first Resurrection, whereof we are going to
+treat; better Senses and a better Understanding, a clearer Light and an
+higher Station, our Horizon will be enlarged every Way, both as to the
+natural World, and as to the intellectual.
+
+Two of the greatest Speculations that we are capable of in this Life,
+are, in my Opinion, The REVOLUTION OF WORLDS, and the REVOLUTION OF
+SOULS; one for the material World, and the other for the intellectual.
+Toward the former of these, our Theory is an Essay; and in this our
+Planet, (which I hope to conduct into a fixed Star, before I have done
+with it) we give an Instance of what may be in other Planets. ’Tis true,
+we took our Rise no higher than the Chaos, because that was a known
+Principle, and we were not willing to amuse the Reader with too many
+strange Stories; as that, I am sure would have been thought one, TO HAVE
+brought this Earth from a fixed Star, and then carried it up again into
+the same Sphere; which yet, I believe, is the true Circle of natural
+Providence.
+
+As to the Revolution of Souls, the Footsteps of that Speculation are
+more obscure than of the former; for though we are assur’d by Scripture,
+that all good Souls will at length have cœlestial Bodies; yet, that this
+is a returning to a primitive State, or to what they had at their first
+Creation, that Scripture has not acquainted us with: It tells us indeed,
+that Angels fell from their primitive cœlestial Glory; and consequently
+we might be capable of a Lapse as well as they, if we had been in that
+high Condition with them; but that we ever were there, is not declared
+to us by any Revelation. Reason and Morality would indeed suggest to us,
+that an innocent Soul, fresh and pure from the Hands of its Maker, could
+not be immediately cast into Prison, before it had, by any Act of its
+own Will, or any Use of its own Understanding, committed either Error or
+Sin. I call this Body a Prison, both because it is a Confinement and
+Restraint upon our best Faculties and Capacities, and is also the Seat
+of Diseases and Loathsomness; and, as Prisons use to do, commonly tends
+more to debauch Mens Natures, than to improve them.
+
+But though we cannot certainly tell under what Circumstances human Souls
+were plac’d at first, yet all Antiquity agrees, Oriental and Occidental,
+concerning their Præ-existence in general, in Respect of these mortal
+Bodies: And our Saviour never reproaches or corrects the Jews, when they
+speak upon that Supposition, Luke ix. 18, 19. John ix. 2. Besides, it
+seems to me beyond all Controversy, that the Soul of the Messiah did
+exist before the Incarnation, and voluntarily descended from Heaven to
+take upon it a mortal Body. And though it does not appear that all human
+Souls were at first placed in Glory, yet, from the Example of our
+Saviour, we see something greater in them; namely, a Capacity to be
+united to the Godhead, John iii. 13. and vi. 38. and 62. and xvii. 5.
+And what is possible to one, is possible to more. But these Thoughts are
+too high for us, while we find our selves united to nothing but diseased
+Bodies and Houses of Clay.
+
+The greatest Fault we can commit, in such speculations, is to be over
+positive and dogmatical: To be inquisitive into the Ways of Providence
+and the Works of God, is so far from being a Fault that it is our
+greatest Perfection: We cultivate the highest Principles and best
+Inclinations of our Nature, while we are thus employ’d; and ’tis
+Littleness or Secularity of Spirit, that is the greatest Enemy to
+Contemplation. Those that would have a true Contempt of this World, must
+suffer the Soul to be sometimes upon the Wing, and, to raise herself
+above the Sight of this little dark Point, which we now inhabit. Give
+her a large and free Prospect of the Immensity of Gods Works, and of his
+inexhausted Wisdom and Goodness, if you would make her great and good;
+as the warm Philosopher says,
+
+ Give me a Soul so great, so high,
+ Let her Dimensions stretch the Sky;
+ That comprehends within a Thought,
+ The whole Extent, ’twixt God and Nought;
+ And from the World’s first Birth and Date,
+ Its Life and Death can calculate,
+ With all th’ Adventures that shall pass,
+ To ev’ry Atom of the Mass.
+
+ But let her be as GOOD as GREAT,
+ Her highest Throne a Mercy-Seat;
+ Soft and dissolving like a Cloud,
+ Losing herself in doing Good;
+ A Cloud that leaves its Place Above,
+ Rather than dry and useless move,
+ Falls in a Shower upon the Earth,
+ And gives ten thousand Seeds a Birth;
+ Hangs on the Flow’rs, and infant Plants,
+ Sucks not their Sweets, but feeds their Wants:
+ So let this mighty Mind diffuse,
+ All that’s her own to others Use;
+ And, free from private Ends, retain
+ Nothing of SELF, but a bare Name.
+
+
+
+
+ BOOK IV.
+ _Concerning the New Heavens and New Earth, AND Concerning the
+ Consummation of all Things._
+
+
+ CHAP. I.
+
+
+ _The Introduction; That the World will not be annihilated in the
+ last Fire: That we are to expect, according to Scripture and the
+ Christian Doctrine, new Heavens and a new Earth, when these are
+ dissolv’d or burnt up._
+
+
+We are now so far advanc’d in the Theory of the Earth, as to have seen
+the End of two Worlds; one destroy’d by Water, and another by Fire. It
+remains only to consider, whether we be yet come to the final Period of
+Nature; the last Scene of all Things, and consequently the utmost Bound
+of our Enquires: Or, whether Providence, which is inexhausted in Wisdom
+and Goodness, will raise up, from this dead Mass, new Heavens and a new
+Earth; another habitable World, better and more perfect than that which
+was destroyed: That, as the first World began with a Paradise, and a
+State of Innocency; so the last may be a kind of Renovation of that
+happy State, whose Inhabitants shall not die, but be translated to a
+blessed Immortality.
+
+I know ’tis the Opinion of some, that this World will be annihilated, or
+reduc’d to nothing, at the Conflagration, and that would put an End to
+all farther Enquiries. But whence do they learn this? From Scripture or
+Reason, or their own Imagination? What Instance or Example can they give
+us of this they call _Annihilation_? Or what Place of Scripture can they
+produce, that says, the World, in the last Fire, shall be reduc’d to
+nothing? If they have neither Instance nor Proof of what they affirm,
+’tis an empty Imagination of their own, neither agreeable to Philosophy,
+nor Divinity: Fire does not consume any Substance; it changes the Form
+and Qualities of it, but the Matter remains. And if the Design had been
+_Annihilation_, the employing of Fire would have been of no Use or
+Effect: For Smoke and Ashes are at as great a Distance from _Nothing_,
+as the Bodies themselves out of which they are made. But these Authors
+seem to have but a small Tincture of Philosophy, and therefore it will
+be more proper to confute their Opinion from the Words of Scripture,
+which hath left us sufficient Evidence, that another World will succeed
+after the Conflagration of that we now inhabit.
+
+The Prophets, both of the Old and New Testament, have left us their
+Predictions concerning _new Heavens and a new Earth_. So says the
+Prophet _Isaiah_, ch. lxv. 17. _Behold I create new Heavens and a new
+Earth, and the former shall not be remembered, or come into Mind_; as
+not worthy our Thoughts, in comparison of those that will arise when
+these pass away. So the Prophet St. _John_ in his _Apocalypse_, when he
+was come to the End of this World, says, _And I saw a new Heaven and a
+new Earth: For the first Heaven and the first Earth were passed away,
+and there was no more Sea, Apoc. xxi. 1._ Where he does not only give us
+an Account of a new Heaven and a new Earth in general; but also gives a
+distinctive Character of the _new Earth_, that it shall have _no Sea_.
+And in the _5th Verse_, he that sate upon the Throne says, _Behold I
+make all_ Things _new_: which, consider’d with the Antecedents and
+Consequents, cannot be otherwise understood than of a new World.
+
+But some Men make Evasions here, as to the Words of the Prophets, and
+say, they are to be understood in a figurative and allegorical Sense;
+and to be apply’d to the Times of the Gospel, either at first or towards
+the latter End of the World; so as this _new Heaven and new Earth_,
+signify only a great Change in the moral World. But how can that be,
+seeing St. _John_ places them after the End of the World? And the
+Prophet _Isaiah_ connects such Things with his new Heavens and new
+Earth, as are not compatible to the present State of Nature, _ch. lxv._
+However, to avoid all Shuffling and Tergiversation in this Point, let us
+appeal to St. _Peter_, who uses a plain literal Style, and discourses
+downright concerning the natural World. In his _2d Epist._ and _3d
+Chap._ when he had foretold and explain’d the future Conflagration, he
+adds, But we expect _new Heavens and a new Earth, according to his
+Promises_. These Promises were made by the Prophets; and this gives us
+full Authority to interpret their _new Heavens and new Earth_ to be
+after the _Conflagration_. St. _Peter_, when he had describ’d the
+Dissolution of the World in the last Fire, in full and emphatical Terms,
+as _the passing away the Heavens with a Noise; the melting of the
+Elements, and burning up all the Works of the Earth_; he subjoins,
+_Nevertheless_ (notwithstanding this total Dissolution of the present
+World) _we, according to his Promises, look for new Heavens and a new
+Earth, wherein dwelleth Righteousness_. As if the Apostle should have
+said, Notwithstanding this strange and violent Dissolution of the
+present Heavens and Earth, which I have describ’d to you, we do not at
+all distrust God’s Promises, concerning new Heavens and a new Earth,
+that are to succeed these, and to be the Seat of the Righteous.
+
+Here’s no room for Allegories, or allegorical Expositions, unless you
+will make the Conflagration of the World an Allegory: For, as Heavens
+and Earth were destroyed, so Heavens and Earth are restored; and if, in
+the first Place, you understand the natural material World, you must
+also understand it in the second Place; they are both Allegories, or
+neither. But to make the Conflagration an Allegory, is not only to
+contradict St. _Peter_, but all Antiquity, sacred or prophane. And I
+desire no more Assurance, that we shall have new Heavens and a new
+Earth, in a literal Sense, than we have that the present Heavens and
+Earth shall be destroyed in a literal Sense, and by material Fire: Let
+it therefore rest upon that Issue, as to the first Evidence and Argument
+from Scripture.
+
+Some will fancy, it may be, that we shall have new Heavens and Earth,
+and yet that these shall be annihilated: They would have these first
+reduc’d to nothing, and then others created, spick and span new, out of
+nothing. But why so, pray, what’s the Humour of that? Lest Omnipotency
+should want Employment, you would have it to do, and undo, and do again;
+as if new-made Matter, like new Cloaths, or new Furniture, had a better
+Gloss, and was more credible. Matter never wears; as fine Gold, melt it
+down never so often, it loses nothing of its Quantity: The Substance of
+the World is the same, burnt or unburnt, and is of the same Value and
+Virtue, new or old; and we must not multiply the Actions of Omnipotency
+without Necessity. God does not make, or unmake things, to try
+Experiments: He knows beforehand the utmost Capacities of every thing,
+and does no vain or superfluous Work. Such Imaginations as these,
+proceed only from want of true Philosophy, or the true Knowledge of the
+Nature of God and of his Works, which should always be carefully
+attended to in such Speculations as concern the natural World. But to
+proceed in our Subject.
+
+If they suppose Part of the World to be annihilated, and to continue so,
+they philosophize still worse and worse: How high shall the Annihilation
+reach? Shall the Sun, Moon, and Stars be reduc’d to nothing? But what
+have they done, that they should undergo so hard a Fate? Must they be
+turn’d out of Being for our Faults? The whole material Universe will not
+be annihilated at this Bout, for we are to have Bodies after the
+Resurrection, and to live in Heaven. How much of the Universe then will
+you leave standing? or how shall it subsist with this great _Vacuum_ in
+the Heart of it? This Shell of a World is but the Fiction of an empty
+Brain; for God and Nature, in their Works, never admit of such gaping
+Vacuities and Emptinesses.
+
+If we consult Scripture again, we shall find that that makes mention of
+a _Restitution_ and _Reviviscency_ of all Things, at the End of the
+World, or at the Coming of our Saviour. St. _Peter_, whose Doctrine we
+have hitherto follow’d, in his Sermon to the _Jews_, after our Saviour’s
+Ascension, tells them, that he will come again, and that there will be
+then a _Restitution of all Things_, such as was promised by the
+Prophets. _The Heavens_, says he, _must receive him until the Time of
+Restitution of all Things; which God hath spoken by the Mouth of his
+holy Prophets, since the World began, Acts iii. 21._ If we compare this
+Passage of Saint _Peter’s_, with that which we alledged before, out of
+his Second Epistle, it can scarce be doubted but that he refers to the
+same Promises in both Places; and what he there calls a _new Heaven_,
+and a _new Earth_, he calls here a _Restitution of all Things_: For the
+Heavens and the Earth comprehend all, and both these are but different
+Phrases for the Renovation of the World. This gives us also Light how to
+understand what our Saviour calls the _Regeneration_ or _Reviviscency_,
+when he shall sit upon his Throne of Glory, and will reward his
+Followers an hundred-fold, for all their Losses in this World, besides
+everlasting Life, as the Crown of all, _Mat. xix. 28, 29._ I know, in
+our _English_ Translation, we separate _the Regeneration_ from _sitting
+upon his Throne_, but without any Warrant from the Original. And seeing
+our Saviour speaks here of bodily Goods, and seems to distinguish them
+from _everlasting Life_, which is to be the final Reward of his
+Followers; this _Regeneration_ seems to belong to his Second Coming,
+when the World shall be renew’d or regenerated, and the Righteous shall
+possess the Earth.
+
+Other Places of Scripture that foretel the Fate of this material World,
+represent it always as a _Change_, not as an _Annihilation_. St. _Paul_
+says, _The Figure of this World passeth away, 1 Cor. vii. 31._ The Form,
+Fashion, and Disposition of its Parts, but the Substance still remains:
+As a Body that is melted down and dissolv’d, the Form perishes, but the
+Matter is not destroyed. And the Psalmist says, the Heavens and the
+Earth shall be _chang’d_, _Psal. cii. 26._ which answers to this
+Transformation we speak of. The same Apostle, in the eighth Chapter to
+the _Romans_, ver. 21, 22, 23, 24. shews also, that this _Change_ shall
+be, and shall be for the better, and calls it a _Deliverance of the
+Creation from Vanity and Corruption_, and a Participation of the
+_glorious Liberty of the Children of God_; being a sort of _Redemption_,
+as they have a _Redemption of their Bodies_.
+
+But seeing the _Renovation_ of the World is a Doctrine generally
+receiv’d, both by antient and modern Authors, as we shall have Occasion
+to shew hereafter, we need add no more, in this Place, for Confirmation
+of it. Some Men are willing to throw all Things into a State of
+_Nothing_ at the Conflagration, and bury them there, that they may not
+be oblig’d to give an Account of that State of things that is to succeed
+it. Those who think themselves bound in Honour to know every thing in
+Theology that is knowable, and find it uneasy to answer such Questions
+and Speculations as would arise upon their admitting a new World, think
+it more advisable to stifle it in the Birth, and so to bound all
+Knowledge at the Conflagration. But surely so far as Reason or Scripture
+lead us, we may and ought to follow, otherwise we should be ungrateful
+to Providence, that sent us those Guides, provided we be always duly
+sensible of our own Weakness: And, according to the Difficulty of the
+Subject, and the Measure of Light that falls upon it, proceed with that
+Modesty and Ingenuity, that becomes such fallible Enquirers after Truth,
+as we are. And this Rule I desire to prescribe to my self, as in all
+other Writings, so especially in this; where, though I look upon the
+principal Conclusions as fully prov’d, there are several Particulars,
+that are rather propos’d to Examination, than positively asserted.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. II.
+
+
+ _The Birth of the new Heavens and the new Earth, from the second
+ Chaos, or the Remains of the old World: The Form, Order, and
+ Qualities of the new Earth, according to Reason and Scripture._
+
+
+Having prov’d from Scripture, that we are to expect _new Heavens_, and a
+_new Earth_, after the Conflagration; it would be some Pleasure and
+Satisfaction to see how this new Frame will arise, and what Foundation
+there is in Nature for the Accomplishment of these Promises. For, though
+the Divine Power be not bound to all the Laws of Nature, but may
+dispense with them when there is a Necessity; yet it is an Ease to us in
+our Belief, when we see them both conspire in the same Effect. And in
+order to this, we must consider in what Posture we left the demolish’d
+World, what Hopes there are of a Restauration. And we are not to be
+discourag’d, because we see Things at present wrapt up in a confus’d
+Mass; for, according to the Methods of Nature and Providence, in that
+dark Womb usually are the Seeds and Rudiments of an Embryo-World.
+
+Neither is there, possibly, so great a Confusion, in this Mass, as we
+imagine: The Heart, an interior Body of the Earth, is still entire; and
+that Part of it that is consum’d by the Fire, will be divided, of its
+own accord, into two Regions. What is dissolv’d and melted, being the
+heaviest, will descend as low as it can, and cover and inclose the
+Kernel of the Earth round about, as a molten Sea or Abyss; according as
+it is explain’d and set down in the precedent Book. But what is more
+light and volatile, will float in the Air; as Fumes, Smoke, Exhalations,
+Vapours of Water, and whatsoever terrestrial Parts can be elevated and
+supported by the Strength of Fire. These, all mingled together, of
+different Sizes, Figures, and Motions, will constitute an opake Cloud,
+or thick Region of Darkness round the Earth; so as the Globe of the
+Earth, with its Atmosphere, after the Conflagration is finished, will
+stand much-what in the Form represented in this Scheme.
+
+[Illustration: The regions of the Earth, a series of concentric Circles,
+with A. A. denoting the Lower Region.]
+
+Now as to the lower of these two Regions, the Region of melted Matter,
+A. A. we shall have little Occasion to take Notice of it; seeing it will
+contribute nothing to the Formation of the new World. But the upper
+Region, or all above that Orb of Fire, is the true Draught of a Chaos;
+or a Mixture and Confusion of all the Elements, without Order or
+Distinction. Here are Particles of Earth, and of Air, and of Water, all
+promiscuously jumbled together by the Force and Agitation of the Fire.
+But when that Force ceases, and every one is left to its own
+Inclination, they will, according to their different degrees of Gravity,
+separate and sort themselves after this manner: First, the heaviest and
+grossest Parts of the Earth will subside, then the watery Parts will
+follow; then a lighter sort of Earth, which will stop, and rest upon the
+Surface of the Water, and compose there a thin Film or Membrane. This
+Membrane or tender Orb is the first Rudiment, or Foundation of a new
+habitable Earth: For, according as terrestrial Parts fall upon it, from
+all the Regions and Heights of the Atmosphere, or of the Chaos, this Orb
+will grow more firm, strong, and immoveable, able to support it self and
+Inhabitants too. And having in it all the Principles of a fruitful Soil,
+whether for the Production of Plants, or of Animals, it will want no
+Property or Character of an habitable Earth. And particularly, will
+become such an Earth, and of such a Form, as the first paradisaical
+Earth was, which hath been fully describ’d, in the first and second
+Books of this Theory.
+
+There is no occasion of examining more accurately the Formation of this
+second Earth, seeing it is so much the same with that of the first;
+which, is set down fully and distinctly, in the fifth Chapter of the
+first Book of this Theory. Nature here repeats the same Work, and in the
+same Method; only the Materials are now a little more refin’d, and
+purg’d by the Fire: They both rise out of a Chaos, and that, in effect,
+the same in both Cases; for though in forming the first Earth, I
+suppos’d the Chaos or confus’d Mass, to reach down to the Center, I did
+that only for the Ease of our Imagination; that so the whole Mass might
+appear more simple and uniform. But in reality, that Chaos had a solid
+Kernel of Earth within, as this hath; and that Matter which fluctuated
+above in the Regions of the Air, was the true Chaos, whose Parts, when
+they came to a Separation, made the several Elements, and the Form of an
+habitable Earth, betwixt the Air and Water. This Chaos, upon Separation,
+will fall into the same Form and Elements; and so, in like manner,
+create or constitute a second _Paradisaical_ World.
+
+I say, a _Paradisaical_ World; for it appears plainly, that this
+new-form’d Earth must agree with that primigenial Earth, in the two
+principal and fundamental Properties. First, it is of an even, entire,
+uniform, and regular Surface, without Mountains or Sea. Secondly, that
+it hath a straight and regular Situation to the Sun, and the _Axis_ of
+the _Ecliptick_. From the Manner of its Formation, it appears
+manifestly, that it must be of an even and regular Surface. For the Orb
+of liquid Fire, upon which the first Descent was made, being smooth and
+uniform every where, the Matter that fell upon it would take the same
+Form and Mould: And so the second or third Region, that were
+superinduc’d, would still imitate the Fashion of the first; there being
+no Cause or Occasion of any Inequality. Then as to the Situation of its
+_Axis_, this Uniformity of Figure would determine the Center of its
+Gravity to be exactly in the Middle, and consequently there would be no
+Inclination of one Pole, more than another, to the general Center of its
+Motion; but, upon a free Libration in the liquid Air, its _Axis_ would
+lie parallel with the _Axis_ of the Ecliptick where it moves. But these
+Things having been deduc’d more fully in the second Book about
+_Paradise_ and the _primigenial Earth_, they need no further Explication
+in this Place.
+
+If Scripture had left us several distinct Characters of the _New
+Heavens_, and the _New Earth_, we might, by comparing with those, have
+made a full Proof of our Hypothesis. One indeed St. _John_ hath left us
+in very express Terms; _There was no Sea there_, he says: His Words are
+these: _And I saw a New Heaven, and a New Earth; for the first Heaven
+and the first Earth were passed away; AND THERE WAS NO MORE SEA_. This
+Character is very particular, and you see it exactly answers to our
+Hypothesis; for in the new form’d Earth, the Sea is cover’d and
+inconspicuous, being an Abyss; not a Sea; and wholly lodg’d in the Womb
+of the Earth. And this one Character, being inexplicable upon any other
+Supposition, and very different from the present Earth, makes it a
+strong Presumption that we have hit upon the true Model of the _new
+Heavens_ and _new Earth_ which St. _John_ saw.
+
+To this Sight of the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_, St. _John_
+immediately subjoins the Sight of the _new Jerusalem_, _ver._ 2. as
+being contemporary, and, in some respects, the same Thing. ’Tis true,
+the Characters of the _new Jerusalem_, in these two last Chapters of the
+_Apocalypse_, are very hard to be understood; some of them being
+incompatible to a _terrestrial_ State, and some of ’em to a _celestial_;
+so as it seems to me very reasonable to suppose, that the _new
+Jerusalem_, spoken of by St. _John_, is two-fold: That which he saw
+himself, _ver._ 2. and that which the Angel shewed him afterwards,
+_ver._ 9. For I do not see what need there was of an _Angel_, and of
+_taking him up into a great and high Mountain_, only to shew him that
+which he had seen before, at the Foot of the Mountain: But however that
+be, we are to consider, in this Place, the terrestrial new _Jerusalem_
+only, or that which is the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_. And as St.
+_John_ hath joined these two together, so the Prophet _Isaiah_ hath done
+the same thing before, _Chap._ lxv. 17, 18. when he had promised _new
+Heavens and a new Earth_, he calls them under another Name, _Jerusalem_;
+and they both use the same Character in Effect, in the Description of
+their _Jerusalem_. _Ver._ 19. _Isaiah_ says, _And I will rejoice in_
+Jerusalem, _and joy in my People, and the Voice of weeping shall be no
+more heard in her_, _nor the Voice of crying_, _Apoc._ xxi. 3, 4. St.
+_John_ says also in his _Jerusalem_, _God shall dwell with them, and
+they shall be his People: And he shall wipe away all Tears from their
+Eyes; and there shall be no more Death, neither Sorrow, nor Crying,
+neither shall there be any more Pain._ Now in both these Prophets, when
+they treat upon this Subject, we find they make frequent Allusions to
+_Paradise_ and a _paradisaical_ State; so as they may be justly taken as
+a Scripture Character of the _new Heavens_ and the _new Earth_. The
+Prophet _Isaiah_ seems plainly to point at a _paradisaical_ State,
+throughout that Chapter, by an universal Innocency, and Harmlesness of
+Animals; and Peace, Plenty, Health, Longevity or Immortality of the
+Inhabitants. St. _John_ also hath several Allusions to _Paradise_, in
+those two Chapters where he describes the new _Jerusalem_, Ch. xxi. and
+Ch. xxii. And in his Discourse to the seven Churches, in one Place (Ch.
+ii. 7.) _To him that overcometh_ is promised, _to eat of the Tree of
+Life, which is in the midst of the Paradise of God_. And in another
+Place (Ch. iii. 12.) _To him that overcometh_ is promised, _to have the
+Name of the new_ Jerusalem _writ upon him_. These I take to be the same
+Thing, and the same Reward of Christian Victors; the _new Jerusalem_, or
+the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_, and the _Paradise of God_. Now this
+being the general Character of the _new Earth_, that it is
+_paradisaical_; and the particular Character that it _hath no Sea_; and
+both these agreeing with our Hypothesis, as apparently deducible from
+those Principles, and that Manner of its Formation which we have set
+down; we cannot but allow, that the Holy Scriptures, and the natural
+Theory agree in their Testimony, as to the Conditions and Properties of
+the _New Heavens_ and _New Earth_.
+
+From what hath been said in this and the precedent Chapter, it will not
+be hard to interpret what St. _Paul_ meant by his _habitable Earth to
+come_; Τὴν οἰκουμένην τῆς μέλλουσαν; πατὴρ τοῦ μέλλοντος αἰῶνος, _Isai.
+ix. 6._ which is to be subjected to our Saviour, and not to the Angels.
+In the second Chapter to the _Hebrews_, ver. 5. he says, _For unto the
+Angels hath he not put in Subjection the WORLD TO COME_; so we read it,
+but, according to the strictest and plainest Translation, it should be
+_the habitable Earth to come_. Now, what Earth is this, where our
+Saviour is absolute Sovereign; and where the Government is neither
+Human, nor Angelical, but peculiarly Theocratical? In the first Place,
+this cannot be the present World, or the present Earth, because the
+Apostle calls it _future_, or the _Earth to come_. Nor can it be
+understood of the Days of the Gospel; seeing the Apostle acknowledges,
+_ver._ 8. that this Subjection, whereof he speaks, is not yet made. And
+seeing Antichrist will not finally be destroyed till the Appearance of
+our Saviour, (_2 Thess. ii. 8._) nor Satan bound, while Antichrist is in
+Power; during the Reign of these two (who are the Rulers of the Darkness
+of the World) our Saviour cannot properly be said to begin his Reign
+here, _Ephes. vi. 12._ ’Tis true, he exercises his Providence over his
+Church, and secures it from being destroyed: He can, by a Power
+paramount, stop the Rage either of Satan or Antichrist; _Hitherto ye
+shall go, and no farther_. As sometimes when he was upon Earth, he
+exerted a Divine Power, which yet did not destroy his State of
+Humiliation; so he interposes now when he thinks fit, but he does not
+finally take the Power out of the Hands of his Enemies, nor out of the
+Hands of the Kings of the Earth. The _Kingdom is not deliver’d up to
+him_, and all _Dominion and Power_; Ch. vii. 13, 25, 26. That _all
+Tongues and Nations should serve him_. For St. _Paul_ can mean no less
+in this Place than that Kingdom in _Daniel_, _Heb. ii. 8._ seeing he
+calls it _putting all Things in Subjection under his Feet_, and says
+that it is not yet done. Upon this account also, as well as others, our
+Saviour might truly say to _Pilate_, _Joh. xviii. 36._ _My Kingdom is
+not of this World_. And to his Disciples, _The Son of Man came not to be
+ministred unto, but to minister_, _Matt. xx. 28._ When he comes to
+receive his Kingdom, he comes in the Clouds of Heaven (_Dan. vii. 13,
+14._) not in the Womb of a Virgin. He comes with the Equipage of a King
+and Conqueror: with Thousands and Ten Thousands of Angels; not in the
+Form of a Servant, or of a weak Infant, as he did at his first coming.
+
+I allow the Phrase αἰὼν μέλλων, or in the _Hebrew_ עולם הבא, _the World
+to come_, is sometimes used in a large Sense, as comprehending all the
+Days of the Messiah, whether at his first or second coming, (for these
+two comings are often undistinguished in Scripture) and respect the
+moral World, as well as the natural. But the Word οἰχομένη, _Orbis
+habitabilis_, which St. _Paul_ here uses, does primarily signify the
+natural World, or the habitable Earth, in the proper use of the Word
+amongst the _Greeks_, and frequently in Scripture, _Luke iv. 5._ and
+_xxi. 26._ _Rom. x. 18._ _Heb. i. 6._ _Apoc. iii. 10._ Neither do we
+here exclude the moral World, or the Inhabitants of the Earth, but
+rather necessarily include them: Both the natural and moral _World to
+come_, will be the Seat and Subject of our Saviour’s Kingdom and Empire,
+in a peculiar Manner. But when you understand nothing by this Phrase but
+the _present moral World_, it neither answers the proper Signification
+of μέλλουσα, nor of οἰκουμένη, of the first or second Part of the
+Expression; and tho’ such like Phrases may be used for the Dispensation
+of the Messiah in Opposition to that of the Law, yet the height of that
+Distinction or Opposition, and the fulfilling of the Expression, depends
+upon the second coming of our Saviour, and upon the _future Earth_ or
+habitable World, where he shall reign, and which does peculiarly belong
+to him and his Saints.
+
+Neither can this _World to come_, or this _Earth to come_, be understood
+of the Kingdom of Heaven. For the _Greek_ Word will not bear that Sense,
+nor is it ever us’d in Scripture for _Heaven_. Besides, the Kingdom of
+Heaven, when spoken of as _future_, is not properly till the last
+Resurrection and final Judgment. Whereas _this World to come_, which our
+Saviour is to govern, must be therefore that Time, and will then expire.
+For all his Government as to this World, expires at the Day of Judgment,
+_1 Cor. xv. 24_, _&c._ and _he will then deliver up the Kingdom into the
+Hands of his Father, that he may be all in all_: Having reigned first
+himself, _and put down all Rule and all Authority and Power_. So that
+St. _Paul_, in these two Places of his Epistles, refers plainly to the
+same Time, and the same Reign of Christ; which must be in a _future
+World_, and before the _last Day of Judgment_, and therefore, according,
+to our Deductions, in the _new Heavens_ and the _new Earth_.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. III.
+
+
+ _Concerning the Inhabitants of the new Earth. That natural Reason
+ cannot determine this Point. That according to Scripture, the Sons
+ of the first Resurrection, or the Heirs of the Millennium, are to be
+ the Inhabitants of the new Earth. The Testimony of the Philosophers,
+ and of the Christian Fathers, for the Renovation of the World. The
+ first Proposition laid down._
+
+
+Thus we have settled the true Notion, according to Reason and Scripture,
+of the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_: But where are the Inhabitants,
+you’ll say? You have taken the Pains to make us a new World, and now
+that it is made, it must stand empty. When the first World was
+destroyed, there were eight Persons preserv’d, with a Set of living
+Creatures of every Kind, as a Seminary or Foundation of another World;
+but the Fire, it seems, is more merciless than the Water; for in this
+Destruction of the World, it does not appear that there is one living
+Soul left, of any sort, upon the Face of the Earth. No Hopes of
+Posterity, nor of any Continuation of Mankind, in the usual Way of
+Propagation; and Fire is a barren Element, that breeds no living
+Creatures in it, nor hath any Nourishment proper for their Food or
+Sustenance.
+
+We are perfectly at a Loss therefore, so far as I see, for a new Race of
+Mankind, or how to People this new-form’d World. The inhabitants, if
+ever there be any, must either come from Heaven, or spring from the
+Earth; there are but these two Ways. But _natural Reason_ can determine
+neither of these, sees no Track to follow in these unbeaten Paths, nor
+can advance one Step farther. Farewell then, dear Friend; I must take
+another Guide, and leave you here, as _Moses_ upon Mount _Pisgah_, only
+to look into that Land, which you cannot enter. I acknowledge the good
+Service you have done, and what a faithful Companion you have been, in a
+long Journey; from the Beginning of the World to this Hour, in a Tract
+of Time of six thousand Years. We have travelled together thro’ the dark
+Regions of a first and second _Chaos_; seen the World twice shipwreck’d:
+Neither Water, nor Fire, could separate us; but now you must give place
+to other Guides.
+
+Welcome, _Holy Scriptures_, the Oracles of God, a Light shining in
+Darkness, a Treasury of hidden Knowledge; and where _Human Faculties_
+cannot reach, a seasonable Help and Supply to their Defects. We are now
+come to the utmost Bounds of their Dominion; they have made us a New
+World, but, how it shall be inhabited, they cannot tell; know nothing of
+the History or Affairs of it. This we must learn from other Masters,
+inspir’d with the Knowledge of Things to come: And such Masters we know
+none, but the holy Prophets and Apostles. We must therefore now put our
+selves wholly under their Conduct and Instruction, and from them only
+receive our Information concerning the moral State of the future
+habitable Earth.
+
+In the first place therefore, the Prophet _Isaiah_ tells us, as a
+Preparation to our farther Enquiries, _The Lord God created the Heavens,
+God himself that formed the Earth, he created it not in vain, he formed
+it to be inhabited, Isa. xlv. 18._ This is true, both of the present
+Earth and the _future_, and of every habitable World whatsoever. For to
+what purpose is it made habitable, if not to be inhabited? That would
+be, as if a Man should manure, and plough, and every Way prepare his
+Ground for Seed, but never sow it. We do not build Houses, that they
+should stand empty, but look out for Tenants as fast as we can; as soon
+as they are made ready and become tenantable. But if Man could do things
+in vain, and without Use or Design, yet God and Nature never do any
+thing _in vain_; much less so great a Work as the making of a World;
+which if it were in vain, would comprehend ten thousand Vanities or
+useless Preparations in it. _We_ may therefore, in the first place,
+safely conclude, _that the new Earth will be inhabited_.
+
+But _by whom will it be inhabited_? This makes the second Enquiry. St.
+_Peter_ answers this Question for us, and with a particular Application
+to this very Subject of the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_: They shall be
+inhabited, he says, by the _Just_ or the _Righteous_. His Words which we
+cited before, are these; when he had described the Conflagration of the
+World, he adds, But we _expect new Heavens and a new Earth, WHEREIN
+DWELLETH RIGHTEOUSNESS_. By _Righteousness_ here, it is generally
+agreed, must be understood righteous Persons; for Righteousness cannot
+be without righteous Persons. It cannot hang upon Trees, or grow out of
+the Ground; ’tis the Endowment of reasonable Creatures. And these
+righteous Persons are eminently such, and therefore call’d Righteousness
+in the Abstract, or purely righteous without Mixture of Vice.
+
+So we have found Inhabitants for the _new Earth_, Persons of an high and
+noble Character; like those describ’d by St. _Peter_, (_1 Eph. ii. 9._)
+_A chosen Generation, a royal Priesthood, an holy Nation, a peculiar
+People._ As if into that World, as into St. _John’s_ _new Jerusalem,_
+nothing impure or unrighteous was to be admitted, _Apoc. xxi. 27._ These
+being then the happy and holy Inhabitants; the next Enquiry is, _Whence
+do they come?_ From what Off-spring, or from what Original? We noted
+before, that there was no Remnant of Mankind left at the Conflagration,
+as there was at the Deluge; nor any Hopes of a Restauration that Way.
+Shall we then imagine that these new Inhabitants are a Colony wafted
+over from some neigbouring World; as from the Moon, or Mercury, or some
+of the higher Planets? You may imagine what you please, but that seems
+to me not imaginary only, but impracticable: And that the Inhabitants of
+those Planets are Persons of so great Accomplishments, is more than I
+know; but I am sure they are not the Persons here understood; for these
+must be such as inhabited this Earth before. We look for _new Heavens_
+and _new Earth_, says the Apostle: Surely to have some Share and
+Interest in them, otherwise there would be no Comfort in that
+Expectation. And the Prophet _Isaiah_ said before, I create _new
+Heavens_ and a _new Earth_, and the former shall come no more in
+Remembrance; but be _YOU glad and rejoyce for ever in that which I
+create_. The Truth is, none can have so good Pretensions to this Spot of
+Ground we call the Earth, as the Sons of Men, seeing they once possessed
+it; and if it be restor’d again, ’tis their Propriety and Inheritance.
+But ’tis not Mankind in general that must possess this new World, but
+the _Israel of God_, according to the Prophet _Isaiah_; or the _Just_,
+according to St. _Peter_; and especially those that have suffer’d for
+the Sake of their Religion. For this is that _Palingenesia_, as we noted
+before, that _Renovation_, or _Regeneration_ of all Things, where our
+Saviour says, those that suffer Loss for his Sake, shall be recompensed,
+_Matth._ xix. 28, 29.
+
+But they must be then raised from the Dead. For all Mankind was
+destroyed at the Conflagration: and there is no Resource for them any
+other way, than by a Resurrection. ’Tis true: and St. _John_ (_Apoc._
+xx.) gives us a fair Occasion to make this Supposition, _that_ there
+will be some raised from the Dead, before the general Day of Judgment.
+For he plainly distinguisheth of a _first_ and _second_ Resurrection,
+and makes the first to be a thousand Years before the second, and before
+the general Day of Judgment. Now, if there be truly and really a
+two-fold Resurrection, as St. _John_ tells us; and that a Thousand Years
+Distance from one another: It may be very rationally be presum’d, that
+those that are raised in the first Resurrection, are those _Just_ that
+will inhabit the _New Heavens_ and _New Earth_; or whom our Saviour
+promis’d to reward in the Renovation of the World.
+
+For otherwise, who are those _Just_ that shall inhabit the _New Earth_,
+and whence do they come? Or when is that Restauration which our Saviour
+speaks of, wherein those that suffer’d for the Sake of the Gospel shall
+be rewarded? St. _John_ says, the _Martyrs_, at this first Resurrection,
+shall live again, and reign with Christ: Which seems to be the Reward
+promis’d by our Saviour, to those that suffer’d for his sake, and the
+same Persons in both Places. _And I saw the Souls of them_ (says St.
+_John_) _that were beheaded for the Witness of Jesus, and for the Word
+of God; and which had not worshipped the Beast, &c. and they lived and
+reigned with Christ a Thousand Years_, Apoc. xx. 4. These, I say, seem
+to be the same Persons, to whom Christ had before promis’d and
+appropriated a particular Reward. And this Reward of theirs, or this
+Reign of theirs, is upon _Earth_; upon some Earth, new or old, not in
+Heaven. For, besides that we read nothing of their Ascension into Heaven
+after their Resurrection; there are several Marks that shew, it must
+necessarily be understood of a State upon Earth. For _Gog_ and _Magog_
+came from the _four Quarters of the Earth_, and besieged the _Camp of
+the Saints, and the beloved City_, ver. 9. That Camp and that City
+therefore were upon the Earth. And _Fire came down from Heaven, and
+devoured them._ If it came down from Heaven, it came upon the Earth.
+Farthermore, those Persons that are raised from the _Dead_, are said to
+be _Priests of God and of Christ, and to reign with him a thousand
+Years_, ver. 6. Now these must be the same Persons with the _Priests_
+and _Kings_, mention’d in the fifth Chapter, ver. 10. which are there
+said expressly _to reign upon Earth_, or that they should _reign upon
+Earth_. It remains therefore only to determine, _what Earth_ this is,
+where the _Sons of the first Resurrection_ will live and reign. It
+cannot be the present Earth, in the same State, and under the same
+Circumstances it is now: For what Happiness or Privilege would that be,
+to be called back into a mortal Life, under the Necessities and
+Inconveniencies of sickly Bodies, and an incommodious World; such as the
+present State of Mortality is, and must continue to be, till some Change
+be made in Nature. We may be sure therefore, that a Change will be made
+in Nature, before that Time, and that the State they are rais’d into,
+and the Earth they are to inhabit, will be, at least, _Paradisaical_;
+and consequently can be no other than the _New Heavens_ and _New Earth_,
+which we are to expect after the Conflagration.
+
+From these Considerations, there is a great Fairness to conclude, both
+as to the Characters of the Persons, and of the Place or State, that
+_the Sons of the first Resurrection_ will be Inhabitants of the _New
+Earth_, and reign there with Christ a Thousand Years. But seeing this is
+one of the principal and peculiar Conclusions of this Discourse, and
+bears a great Part in this last Book of the Theory of the Earth, it will
+deserve a more full Explication, and a more ample Proof, to make it out.
+We must therefore take a greater Compass in our Discourse, and give a
+full Account of that State which is usually call’d the _Millennium_; the
+Reign of the Saints a Thousand Years, or the Kingdom of Christ upon
+Earth. But before we enter upon this new Subject, give me leave to close
+our present Argument, about the _Renovation of the World_, with some
+Testimonies of the antient Philosophers, to that purpose. ’Tis plain to
+me, that there were among the Antients several Traditions, or
+traditionary Conclusions, which they did not raise themselves, by Reason
+and Observation, but received them from an unknown Antiquity. An
+Instance of this is the _Conflagration of the World_; a Doctrine as
+antient, for any Thing I know, as the World it self; at least as antient
+as we have any Records, and yet none of those Antients that tell us of
+it, give any Argument to prove it. Neither is it any Wonder, for they
+did not invent it themselves, but receiv’d it from others without Proof,
+by the sole Authority of Tradition. In like manner the _Renovation of
+the World_, which we are now speaking of, is an antient Doctrine, both
+amongst the _Greeks_ and _Eastern_ Philosophers: But they shew us no
+Method _how_ the World may be _renew’d_, nor make any Proof of its
+future Renovation; for it was not a Discovery which they first made, but
+receiv’d it with an implicit Faith, from their Masters and Ancestors:
+And these traditionary Doctrines were all Fore-runners of that Light
+which was to shine more clearly at the Opening of the Christian
+Dispensation; to give a more full Account of the Fate and Revolutions of
+the natural World, as well as of the moral.
+
+The _Jews_, ’tis well known, held the _Renovation_ of the World, and a
+_Sabbath_ after Six Thousand Years; according to the Prophecy that was
+current among them; whereof we have given a larger Account in the
+precedent Book, _Chap._ v. And that future State they called עולם הבא,
+_Olam Hava_, or the _World to come_, which is the very same with Saint
+_Paul’s habitable Earth to come_, ἡ οἰκουμένη ἥ μέλλουσα, _Heb. ii. 6._
+Neither can I easily believe, that those Constitutions of _Moses_ that
+proceed so much upon a _septenary_, or the Number _seven_, and have no
+Ground or Reason, in the Nature of the Thing, for that particular
+Number. I cannot easily believe, I say, that they are either accidental
+or humoursome, without Design or Signification; but that they are
+typical, or representative of some _Septenary_ State, that does
+eminently deserve and bear that Character. _Moses_, in the History of
+the Creation, makes six Days Work, and then a Sabbath: Then, after six
+Years, he makes a _Sabbath-Year_; and after a Sabbath of Years, a Year
+of Jubilee, _Levit. xxv._ All these lesser Revolutions seem to me to
+point at the grand Revolution, the great _Sabbath_ or _Jubilee_, after
+six Millenaries; which, as it answers the Type in point of Time, so
+likewise in the Nature and Contents of it; being a State of Rest from
+all Labour, and Trouble, and Servitude; a State of Joy and Triumph, and
+a State of _Renovation_, when Things are to return to their first
+Condition and pristine Order. So much for the _Jews_.
+
+The Heathen Philosophers, both _Greeks_ and _Barbarians_, had the same
+Doctrine of the _Renovation_ of the _World_ current amongst them, and
+that under several Names and Phrases; as of the _Great Year_, the
+_Restauration_, the _Mundane Periods_, and such-like. They suppos’d
+stated and fix’d Periods of Time, upon Expiration whereof there would
+always follow some great Revolution of the World, and the Face of Nature
+would be renewed: particularly after the Conflagration, the _Stoicks_
+always suppos’d a new World to succeed, or another Frame of Nature to be
+erected in the Room of that which was destroyed. And they use the same
+Words and Phrases upon this Occasion that Scripture useth. _Chrysippis_
+calls it _Apocatastasis_ (_Lact._ l. 7. c. 23.) as St. _Peter_ does,
+_Acts_ iii. 21. _Marcus Antonius_ in his _Meditations_, several times
+calls it _Palingenesia_, as our Saviour does, _Matt._ xix. 28. And
+_Numenius_ hath two Scripture words, _Resurrection_ and _Restitution_,
+(_Euseb. præp. Ev._ l. 7. c. 23.) to express this Renovation of the
+World. Then as to the _Platonicks_, that Revolution of all Things hath
+commonly been call’d the _Platonick_ Year, as if _Plato_ had been the
+first Author of that Opinion; but that’s a great Mistake; he receiv’d it
+from the _Barbarick_ Philosophers, and particularly from the _Ægyptian_
+Priests, amongst whom he liv’d several Years, to be instructed in their
+Learning. But I do not take _Plato_ neither to be the first that brought
+this Doctrine into _Greece_: For, besides that the _Sibylls_, whose
+Antiquity we do not well know, sung this Song of old, as we see it
+copy’d from them by _Virgil_ in his fourth Eclogue; _Pythagoras_ taught
+it before _Plato_, and _Orpheus_ before them both; and that’s as high as
+the _Greek_ Philosophy reaches.
+
+The _Barbarick_ Philosophers were more antient; namely, the _Ægyptians_,
+_Persians_, _Chaldeans_, _Indian Brackmans_, and other Eastern Nations.
+Their Monuments indeed are in a great measure lost; yet from the Remains
+of them which the _Greeks_ have transcribed, and so preserv’d in their
+Writings, we see plainly they all had this Doctrine of the _future
+Renovation_. And to this Day the Posterity of the _Brackmans_ in the
+_East-Indies_ retain the same Notion, _that_ the World will be renew’d
+after the last Fire. You may see the Citations, if you please, for all
+these _Notions_, in the _Latin_ Treatise, _Ch._ v. which I thought would
+be too dry and tedious to be render’d into _English_.
+
+To these Testimonies of the Philosophers of all Ages, for the future
+Renovation of the World, we might add the Testimonies of the Christian
+Fathers, _Greek_ and _Latin_, antient and modern. I will only give you a
+bare List of them, and refer you to the _Latin_ Treatise (_Chap._ ix.)
+for the Words or the Places. Amongst the _Greek_ Fathers, _Justin
+Martyr_, _Irenæus_, _Origen_: The Fathers of the _Council of Nice_,
+_Eusebius_; _Basil_; the two _Cyrils_, of _Jerusalem_ and _Alexandria_:
+The two _Gregories_, _Nazianzen_ and _Nyssen_; St. _Chrysostom_,
+_Zacharias Mitylenensis_; and of later Date, _Damascen_, _Oecumenius_,
+_Euthymius_, and others. These have all set their Hands and Seals to
+this Doctrine. Of the _Latin_ Fathers, _Tertullian_, _Lactantius_, St.
+_Hillary_, St. _Ambrose_, St. _Austin_, St. _Jerome_; and many later
+Ecclesiastical Authors. These, with the Philosophers before-mention’d, I
+count good Authority, sacred and prophane; which I place here as an
+Out-guard upon Scripture, where our principal Force lies. These three
+united, and acting in Conjunction, will be sufficient to prove this
+first Post, and to prove our first Proposition, which is this; _That
+after the Conflagration of this World,_ _there will be new Heavens and a
+new Earth; and that Earth will be inhabited._ (Propos. I.)
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. IV.
+
+
+ _The Proof of a_ Millennium, _or of a blessed Age to come, from
+ Scripture. A View of the_ Apocalypse, _and of the Prophecies of_
+ Daniel, _in reference to this Kingdom of Christ and of his Saints._
+
+
+We have given fair Presumptions, if not Proofs, in the precedent
+Chapter, that the Sons of the first Resurrection will be the Persons
+that shall inhabit the _new Earth_, or the World to come. But to make
+that Proof complete and unexceptionable, I told you, it would be
+necessary to take a larger Compass in our Discourse, and to examine what
+is meant by _that Reign with Christ a thousand Years_, which is promis’d
+to the Sons of the _first Resurrection_, by St. _John_ in the
+_Apocalypse_; and in other places of Scripture is usually call’d the
+_Kingdom of Christ_, and the Reign of the Saints: And by Ecclesiastical
+Authors, in Imitation of St. _John_, it is commonly styled, the
+_Millennium_. We shall indifferently use any of these Words or Phrases;
+and examine, first, the Truth of the Notion and Opinion, whether, in
+Scripture, there be any such an happy State promised to the Saints under
+the Conduct of Christ; and then we will proceed to examine the Nature,
+Characters, Place and Time of it. And I am in hopes when these Things
+are duly discuss’d and stated, you will be satisfied that we have found
+out the true Inhabitants of the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_; and the
+true Mystery of that State which is called the _Millennium_, or the
+Reign of Christ and of his Saints.
+
+We begin with St. _John_, whose Words in the xxth Chapter of the
+_Apocalypse_, ver. 1, 2, 4, 5, 6. are express, both as to the first
+Resurrection, and as to the Reign of those Saints that rise with Christ
+for a Thousand Years; Satan in the mean Time being bound, or disabled
+from doing Mischief, and seducing Mankind. The Words of the Prophet are
+these; _And I saw an Angel come down from Heaven, having the Key of the
+bottomless Pit, and a great Chain in his Hand. And he laid hold on the
+Dragon, that old Serpent, which is the Devil and Satan, and bound him a
+Thousand Years. And I saw Thrones, and they sat upon them, and Judgment
+was given unto them; And I saw the Souls of them that were beheaded for
+the Witness of Jesus, and for the Word of God, and which had not
+worshipped the Beast, neither his Image, neither had received his Mark
+upon their Foreheads, or in their Hands; and they lived and reigned with
+Christ a thousand Years. But the rest of the Dead lived not again until
+the thousand Years were finished. This is the first Resurrection.
+Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection; on such
+the second Death hath no Power, but they shall be Priests of God, and of
+Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand Years_. These Words do fully
+express a Resurrection, and a Reign with Christ a thousand Years. As for
+that particular Space of Time, of a _Thousand Years_, it is not much
+material to our present Purpose: but the Resurrection here spoken of,
+and the Reign with Christ, make the Substance of the Controversy, and in
+effect prove all that we enquire after at present. This Resurrection,
+you see, is call’d the _first Resurrection_, by way of Distinction from
+the second and general Resurrection; which is to be placed a Thousand
+Years after the first. And both this first Resurrection, and the Reign
+of Christ, seem to be appropriated to the Martyrs in this Place: For the
+Prophet says, _The Souls of those that were beheaded for the Witness of
+Jesus, &c. they lived and reigned with Christ a Thousand Years_. From
+which Words, if you please, we will raise this Doctrine; that _those
+that have suffer’d for the Sake of Christ, and a good Conscience, shall
+be raised from the Dead a Thousand Years before the general
+Resurrection, and reign with Christ in an happy State_. This Proposition
+seems to be plainly included in the Words of St. _John_, and to be the
+intended Sense of this Vision; but you must have Patience a little as to
+your Enquiry into Particulars, till, in the Progress of our Discourse,
+we have brought all the Parts of this Conclusion into a fuller Light.
+
+In the mean time there is but one Way, that I know of, to evade the
+Force of these Words, and of the Conclusion drawn from them; and that
+is, by supposing that the _first Resurrection_ here mention’d, is not to
+be understood in a literal Sense, but is allegorical and mystical,
+signifying only a Resurrection from Sin to a spiritual Life: As we are
+said to be _dead in Sin_, and to be _risen with Christ_, by Faith and
+Regeneration. This is a manner of Speech which St. _Paul_ does sometimes
+use, as _Eph._ ii. 6. and ver. 14, and _Col._ 3. 1. But how can this be
+applied to the present Case? Were the Martyrs dead in Sin? ’Tis they
+that are here rais’d from the Dead: Or, after they were beheaded for the
+Witness of Jesus, naturally dead and laid in their Graves, were they
+then regenerate by Faith? There is no Congruity in Allegories so
+apply’d. Besides, why should they be said to be regenerate a Thousand
+Years before the Day of Judgment? or to reign with Christ, after this
+Spiritual Resurrection, such a limited Time, a Thousand Years? Why not
+so to Eternity? For in this allegorical Sense of _rising_ and
+_reigning_, they will reign with him for everlasting. Then, after a
+Thousand Years, must all the Wicked be regenerate, and rise into a
+Spiritual Life? ’Tis said here, _the rest of the Dead lived not again,
+until the Thousand Years were finished, ver._ 5. That implies, that at
+the End of these Thousand Years, the rest of the Dead did live again;
+which, according to the Allegory, must be, that, after a Thousand Years,
+all the Wicked will be regenerate, and rais’d into Spiritual Life. These
+Absurdities arise upon an allegorical Exposition of this Resurrection,
+if apply’d to single Persons.
+
+But Dr. _Hammond_, a learned and worthy Divine, (but one that loves to
+contract and cramp the Sense of Prophecies) making this first
+Resurrection allegorical, applies it not to single Persons, but to the
+State of the Church in general: The Christian Church, he says, shall
+have a Resurrection for a Thousand Years; that is, shall rise out of
+Persecution, be in a prosperous Condition, and an undisturbed Profession
+of the true Religion, for so long a Time. But this agrees with the
+Prophecy as little as the former; if it be a State of the Church in
+general, and of the Church then in being, why is this Resurrection
+apply’d to the Martyrs? Why are they said to rise; seeing the State they
+liv’d in, was a troublesome State of the Church, and it would be no
+Happiness to have that reviv’d again? Then as to the Time of this
+Resurrection of the Church, where will you fix it? The Prophet _Daniel_
+places this Reign of Christ, at, or after the Dissolution of the fourth
+Monarchy; and Saint _John_ places it a Thousand Years before the last
+Day of Judgment. How will you adjust the allegorical Resurrection of the
+Church to these Limits? Or if, in point of Time, you was free, as to
+Prophecy, yet how would you adjust it to History? Where will you take
+these Thousand Years of Happiness and Prosperity to the Church? These
+Authors suppose them past, and therefore must begin them either from the
+first Times of the Gospel, or from the Time of _Constantine_. Under the
+first Ages of the Gospel, were, you know, the great Persecutions by the
+_Heathen_ Emperors; could those be call’d the Reign of Christ and of his
+Saints? Was Satan then bound? Or was this _Epocha_ but a thousand Years
+before the Day of Judgment? And if you begin this Resurrection of the
+Church from the Days of _Constantine_, when the Empire became Christian,
+how will you reckon a thousand Years from that Time, for the Continuance
+of the Church in _Peace_ and _Purity_? For the Reign of Christ and of
+his Saints must necessarily imply both those Characters. Besides, who
+are the _rest of the Dead_, (ver. 5.) that lived after the Expiration of
+those thousand Years, if they began at _Constantine_? And why is not the
+second Resurrection and the Day of Judgment yet come? Lastly, you ought
+to be tender of interpreting the first Resurrection in an allegorical
+Sense, lest you expose the second Resurrection to be made an Allegory
+also.
+
+To conclude; The Words of the Text are plain and express for a literal
+Resurrection, as to the first, as well as the second; and there is no
+allegorical Interpretation that I know of, that will hold through all
+the Particulars of the Text, consistently with it self and with History.
+And when we shall have proved this future Kingdom of Christ from other
+Places of the _Apocalypse_, and of Holy Writ, you will the more easily
+admit the literal Sense of this Place; which, you know, according to the
+receiv’d Rule of Interpreters, is never to be quitted or forsaken,
+without Necessity: But when I speak of confirming this Doctrine from
+other Passages of Scripture, I do not mean as to that definite Time of a
+_Thousand Years_, for that is no where else mention’d in the
+_Apocalypse_, or in Scripture, that I know of; and seems to be mention’d
+here, in this Close of all Things, to mind us of that Type that was
+propos’d in the Beginning of all Things, _of six Days and a Sabbath_;
+whereof each Day comprehends a Thousand Years, and the _Sabbath_, which
+is the _Millennial State_, hath its Thousand; according to the known
+Prophecy of _Elias_, Book III. Ch. v. which, as I told you before, was
+not only receiv’d among the _Jews_, but also own’d by very many of the
+Christian Fathers.
+
+To proceed therefore to other Parts of St. _John’s_ Prophecies, that set
+forth this Kingdom of Christ; the Vision of the _Seven Trumpets_ is one
+of the most remarkable in the _Apocalypse_; and the Seventh Trumpet,
+which plainly reaches to the End of the World, and the Resurrection of
+the Dead, opens the Scene to the _Millennium_; hear the Sound of it, Ch.
+xi. 15, 16, 17, 18. _The seventh Angel sounded, and there were great
+Voices in Heaven, saying, The Kingdoms of this World are become the
+Kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ, and he shall reign for ever and
+ever. And the four and twenty Elders, which sat before God on their
+Seats, fell upon their Faces, and worshipped God; saying, we give thee
+Thanks, O Lord God Almighty, which art, and wast, and art to come;
+because thou hast taken to thee thy great Power, and hast reigned. And
+the Nations were angry, and thy Wrath is come, and the Time of the Dead,
+that they should be judged, and that thou shouldest give Reward unto thy
+Servants the Prophets, and to the Saints, and them that fear thy Name,
+small and great, and shouldest destroy them that destroy the Earth_, &c.
+This is manifestly the Kingdom of Christ; and with this is joined the
+Resurrection of the Dead, and the rewarding of the suffering Prophets
+and Saints, as in the xxth _Chapter_. This is that _Mystery of God that
+was to be finished in the Days of the Voice of the seventh Angel_, as is
+said in the xxth Chap. ver. 7. _As he hath declared to his Servants the
+Prophets_; namely, the Mystery of this Kingdom, which was foretold by
+the Prophets of the _Old Testament_, and more especially by _Daniel_, as
+we shall see hereafter.
+
+The _new Jerusalem_ (as it is set down, _Apoc._ xxi. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.)
+is another Instance or Image of this Kingdom of Christ. And the
+_Palm-bearing Company_, Chap. vii. 9, _&c._ are some of the Martyrs that
+shall enjoy it. They are plainly describ’d there as Christian Martyrs;
+(_ver._ 14.) and their Reward, or the State of Happiness they are to
+enjoy, (ver. 15, 16, 17.) is the same with that of the Inhabitants of
+the _new Jerusalem_, Ch. xxi. 2, 3, 4, _&c._ as, upon comparing those
+two Places, will easily appear. Farthermore, at the Opening of the
+_Seals_, Chap. v. which is another principal Vision, and reaches to the
+End of the World, there is a Prospect given us of this Kingdom of
+Christ, and of that Reward of his Saints. For when they sing the new
+Song to the Lamb, (_ver._ 9, 10.) they say, _Thou art worthy to take the
+Book, and to open the Seals thereof; for thou wast slain and hast
+redeemed us to God, by thy Blood; and hast made us into our God Kings
+and Priests, and we shall reign on the Earth._ This must be the same
+State, and the same Thousand-Years-Reign mention’d in the xxth _Chap._
+where ’tis said, (_Ver._ 6.) the Partakers of it _shall be Priests of
+God, and of Christ, and shall reign with him a Thousand Years_.
+
+Another completory Vision, that extends it self to the End of the World,
+is that of the _Seven Vials_, Chap. xv. and xvi. And as at the Opening
+of the Seals, so at the pouring out the Vials, a triumphal Song is sung,
+and ’tis call’d the _Song of Moses and of the Lamb_, Ch. xv. 3. ’Tis
+plainly a Song of Thanksgiving for a Deliverance, but I do not look upon
+this Deliverance as already wrought, before the pouring out of the
+Vials, tho’ it be plac’d before them; as often the grand Design and
+Issue of a Vision is plac’d at the Beginning: It is wrought by the Vials
+themselves, and by their Effusion, and therefore upon the pouring out of
+the last Vial, the Voice came out of the Temple of Heaven, from the
+Throne, saying, _Consummatum est_; _It is done_, Ch. xvi. 17. Now the
+Deliverance is wrought, now the Work is at an End; or, _the Mystery of
+God is finished_, as the Phrase was before, concerning the 7th Trumpet,
+_Chap._ x. 7. You see therefore this terminates upon the same Time, and
+consequently upon the same State, of the _Millennium_; and that they are
+the same Persons that triumph here, and reign there, _Chap._ xx. you may
+see by the same Characters given to both of them, _Ch._ xv. 2. Here,
+those that triumph, are said _to have gotten the Victory_ over the
+Beast, and over his Image, _and over his Mark, and over the Number of
+his Name_, Ch. xx. 4. And there, those that reign with Christ, are said
+to be those _that had not worshiped the Beast, neither his Image,
+neither had received his Mark upon their Foreheads, or in their Hands_.
+These are the same Persons therefore, triumphing over the same Enemies,
+and enjoying the same Reward.
+
+And you shall seldom find any _Doxology_ or _Hallelujah_ in the
+_Apocalypse_, but ’tis in Prospect of the Kingdom of Christ, and the
+Millennial State: This is still the Burthen of the sacred Song, the
+Complement of every grand Vision, and the Life and Strength of the whole
+System of Prophecies in that Book: Even those _Hallelujahs_ that are
+sung at the Destruction of _Babylon_, in the xixth Chapter, _ver._ 6, 7.
+are rais’d upon the succeeding State, _the Reign of Christ_. For the
+Text says, _And I heard as it were a Voice of a great Multitude, and as
+the Voice of many Waters, and as the Voice of mighty Thunders, saying,
+Hallelujah_: FOR THE LORD GOD OMNIPOTENT REIGNETH. _Let us be glad and
+rejoyce, and give Honour to him_: FOR THE MARRIAGE OF THE LAMB IS COME,
+AND HIS WIFE HATH MADE HER SELF READY. This appears plainly to be the
+_new Jerusalem_, if you consult the 21st _Ch. ver. 2. And I _John_ saw
+the Holy City, new _Jerusalem,_ coming down from God out of Heaven_,
+PREPARED AS A BRIDE ADORNED FOR HER HUSBAND. ’Tis, no doubt, the same
+Bride and Bridegroom, in both Places; the same Marriage or Preparations
+for Marriage, which are compleated in the Millennial Bliss, in the
+Kingdom of Christ and of his Saints.
+
+I must beg your patience a little longer, in pursuing this Argument
+throughout the _Apocalypse_; As towards the latter End of St. _John_’s
+Revelation, this Kingdom of Christ shines out in a more full Glory; so
+there are the Dawnings of it in the very Beginning and Entrance into his
+Prophecies. As at the Beginning of a Poem, we have commonly, in a few
+Words, the Design of the Work, in like Manner Ch. i. 5, 6. St. _John_
+makes this Preface to his Prophecies, _From Jesus Christ, who is the
+faithful Witness, the first begotten of the Dead, and the Prince of the
+Kings of the Earth; unto him that loved us, and washed us from our Sins
+in his own Blood; and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his
+Father; to him be Glory and Dominion for ever and ever, Amen. Behold, he
+cometh in the Clouds, &c._ In this Prologue the grand Argument is
+pointed at, and that happy Catastrophe and last Scene, which is to crown
+the Work, the Reign of Christ and of his Saints at his second Coming. He
+hath _made us Kings and Priests unto God_; this is always the
+Characteristick of those that are to enjoy the Millennial Happiness, as
+you may see at the Opening of the Seals, Ch. v. 10. and in the Sons of
+the _first Resurrection_, Ch. xx. 6. And this being joined to the Coming
+of our Saviour, puts it still more out of Doubt. That Expression also,
+of being _washed from our Sins in his Blood_, is repeated again both at
+the Opening of the Seals, _chap. v. 9._ and in the _Palm-bearing_
+Company, _chap. vii. 14._ both which Places we have cited before, as
+referring to the Millennial State.
+
+Give me Leave to add farther, that as in this general Preface, so also
+in the introductory Visions of the _seven Churches_, there are, covertly
+or expresly, in the Conclusion of each, glances upon the _Millennium_;
+as in the first to _Ephesus_, the Prophet concludes, _chap. ii. 7._ _He
+that hath an Ear, let him hear, what the Spirit says to the Churches_:
+TO HIM THAT OVERCOMETH, WILL I GIVE TO EAT OF THE TREE OF LIFE, WHICH IS
+IN THE MIDST OF THE PARADISE OF GOD. This is the Millennial Happiness
+which is promised to the Conqueror; as we noted before concerning that
+Phrase. In like manner in the second to _Smyrna_, he concludes, _chap.
+ii. 11._ _He that overcometh, shall not be hurt of the second Death._
+This implies, he shall be Partaker of the _first Resurrection_, for
+that’s the Thing understood; as you may see plainly by their being
+joyn’d in the _xxth Chapter ver. 6._ _Blessed and holy is he that hath
+Part in the first Resurrection; on such the second Death hath no Power,
+but they shall be Priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him
+a thousand Years._ In the third to _Pergamus_, the Promise is, _chap.
+ii. 7._ _To eat of the hidden Manna, to have a white Stone, and a new
+Name written in it_: But seeing the Prophet adds, _which no Man knoweth,
+saving he that receiveth it_, we will not presume to interpret that new
+State, whatsoever it is, _chap. ii. 26, 27._ In _Thyatira_, the Reward
+is, _To have Power over the Nations_, and to have the Morning Star;
+which is to reign with Christ, who is the Morning Star, in his
+Millennial Empire: Both these Phrases being us’d in that Sense in the
+Close of this Book, Ch. iii. 5. In Sardis the Promise is, _To be
+cloathed in white Raiment, and not to be blotted out of the Book of
+Life_. And you see afterwards the _Palme bearing_ Company are cloathed
+in _white Robes_, Ch. vii. 9, 14. and those that are admitted into the
+_new Jerusalem_, Chap. iii. 12. are such as are _written in the Lamb’s
+Book of Life_, Ch. xxi. 27. Then as to Philadelphia, the Reward promised
+there does openly mark the Millennial State, by the _City of God_; _new
+Jerusalem which cometh down out of Heaven from God_, compar’d with Ch.
+xxi. 2. Lastly, to the Church of _Laodicea_ is said, Ch. iii. 21. _To
+him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my Throne._ And that
+is the usual Phrase to express the Dignity of those that reign with
+Christ, in his Millennial Kingdom; as you may see, _Apoc. xx. 4._ _Matt.
+xix. 28._ _Dan. vii. 9, 13, 14._ So all these Promises to the Churches
+aim at one and the same thing, and terminate upon the same Point: ’Tis
+the same Reward express’d in different Ways; and seeing it is still
+fix’d upon a Victory, and appropriated to those that overcome, it does
+the more easily carry our Thoughts to the _Millennium_, which is the
+proper Reward of Victors, that is, of Martyrs and Confessors.
+
+Thus you see how this Notion and Mystery of the Millennial Kingdom of
+Christ, does both begin and End the _Apocalypse_, and run thorough all
+its Parts, as the Soul of that Body of Prophecies; a Spirit or Ferment
+that actuates the whole Mass. And if we could thoroughly understand that
+illustrious Scene, at the Opening of this Apocalyptical Theatre in the
+ivth and vth _Chapter_, I do not doubt but we should find it a
+Representation of the Majesty of our Saviour in the Glory of his future
+Kingdom; but I dare not venture upon the Explication of it, there are so
+many Things of Difficulty, and dubious Interpretation, coucht under
+those Schemes. Wherefore having made these Observations upon the
+Prophecies of St. _John_, we will now add to them some Reflections upon
+the Prophecies of _Daniel_: that by the Agreement and Concurrence of
+these two great Witnesses, the Conclusion we pretend to prove, may be
+fully established.
+
+In the Prophecies of _Daniel_ there are two grand Visions, that of the
+_Statue_ or Image, _Chap. ii._ and that of the four Beasts, _Chap. vii._
+and both these Visions terminate upon the _Millennium_, or the Kingdom
+of Christ. In the Vision of the Statue, representing to us the four
+great Monarchies of the World successively, whereof by the general
+Consent of Interpreters, the _Roman_ is the fourth and last, after the
+Dissolution of the last of them, a fifth Monarchy, the Kingdom of
+Christ, is openly introduc’d, in these Words: _And in the Days of these
+Kingdoms, shall the God of Heaven set up a Kingdom, which shall never be
+destroyed; and the Kingdom shall not be left to other People, but it
+shall break in Pieces, and consume all those Kingdoms, and it shall
+stand for ever, Ch. ii. ver. 44._ This may be verified, in some measure,
+by the first coming of our Saviour in the Days of the fourth Kingdom,
+when his Religion, from small Beginnings, in a short Time over-spread
+the greatest Part of the known World. As the _Stone cut out without
+Hands_, became a great _Mountain, and filled the whole Earth, ver. 34,
+35._ but the full and final Accomplishment of this Prophecy cannot be
+till the second coming of our Saviour. For not till then will he, _Ver.
+35_, _break in pieces and consume all those Kingdoms; and that in such a
+manner, that they shall become like the Chaff of the Summer-threshing
+Floor, carried away by the Wind; so as no Place shall be found for
+them_. This, I say, will not be done, nor an everlasting Kingdom erected
+in their place, over all the Nations of the Earth, till his second
+coming, and his Millennial Reign.
+
+But this Reign is declared more expresly, in the Vision of the four
+Beasts, _Ch. vii. ver. 13._ For after the Destruction of the fourth
+Beast, the Prophet says, _I saw in the Night Visions, and behold one
+like the Son of Man, came with the Clouds of Heaven, and came to the
+Antient of Days, and they brought him near before him: And there was
+given him Dominion, and Glory, and a Kingdom, that all People, Nations
+and Languages should serve him; his Dominion is an everlasting Dominion,
+which shall not pass away; and his Kingdom that which shall not be
+destroyed_. Accordingly, he says, _Ver. 21, 22._ _The last Beast, and
+the little Horn, made war against the Saints, until the Antient of Days
+came, and Judgment was given to the Saints of the most High; and the
+Time came that the Saints possessed the Kingdom_. And lastly, in Pursuit
+still of the same Argument, he concludes to the same Effect in fuller
+Words, ver. 26, 27. _But the Judgment shall sit, and they shall take
+away his Dominion, to consume and to destroy it unto the End. And the
+Kingdom and Dominion, and the Greatness of the Kingdom under the whole
+Heaven, shall be given to the People of the Saints of the most High;
+whose Kingdom is an everlasting Kingdom, and all Dominions shall serve
+and obey him._
+
+_Here is the End of the Matter_, says the Prophet, Chap. vii. ver. 28.
+Chap. xii. ver. 13. Here is the Upshot and Result of all; here terminate
+both the Prophecies of _Daniel_ and St. _John_, and all the Affairs of
+the terrestrial World. _Daniel_ brings in this Kingdom of Christ, in the
+Conclusion of two or three Visions; but St. _John_ hath interwoven it
+every where with his Prophecies, from first to last: And you may as well
+open a Lock without a Key, as interpret the _Apocalypse_ without the
+_Millennium_. But after these two great Witnesses, the one for the _Old
+Testament_, the other for the _New_, we must look into the rest of the
+sacred Writers; for tho’ every single Author there, is an Oracle, yet
+the Concurrence of Oracles is still a farther Demonstration, and takes
+away all Remains of Doubt or Incredulity.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. V.
+
+
+ _A View of other Places of Scripture concerning the_ Millennium _or
+ future Kingdom of Christ. In what Sense all the Prophets have borne
+ Testimony concerning it._
+
+
+The Wife of _Zebedee_ came to our Saviour, and begg’d of him, like a
+fond Mother, that her two Sons might sit, one at his Right Hand, the
+other at his Left, when he came into his Kingdom, _Matt._ xx. 21. Our
+Saviour does not deny the Supposition, or general Ground of her Request,
+that _he was to have a Kingdom_; but tells her, the Honours of that
+Kingdom were not then in his Disposal. He had not drunk his Cup, nor
+been baptiz’d with his last Baptism; which were Conditions, both to him
+and others, of entring into that Kingdom. Yet, in another place,
+(_Matt._ xix. 28.) our Saviour is so well assur’d of his Interest and
+Authority there, by the Good-will of his Father, that he promises to his
+Disciples and Followers, that for the Losses they should sustain here,
+upon his Account, and for the Sake of his Gospel, they should receive
+there an hundred-fold, and sit upon Thrones with him, judging the Tribes
+of _Israel_. The Words are these: _And Jesus said unto them, Verily I
+say unto you, that ye which have followed me_, in the Regeneration or
+Renovation, _when the Son of Man shall sit in the Throne of his Glory,
+ye also shall sit upon twelve Thrones, judging the twelve Tribes of_
+Israel. These Thrones, in all Reason, must be understood to be the same
+with those, which we mention’d in the foregoing Chapter out of _Daniel_
+vii. 9. and _Apocal._ xx. 4. and therefore mark the same Time, and the
+same State. And seeing, in those Places, they plainly signify the
+Millennial State, or the Kingdom of Christ and of his Saints, they must
+here signify the same, in this Promise of our Saviour to his suffering
+Followers. And as to the Word _Palingenesia_, which is here translated
+_Regeneration_, ’tis very well known, that both the _Greek_
+Philosophers, and _Greek_ Fathers, use that very Word for the
+_Renovation of the World_; which is to be, as we shall hereafter make
+appear, at or before the Millennial State.
+
+Our Saviour also, in his Divine Sermon upon the Mount, makes this one of
+his _Beatitudes_, _Blessed are the Meek, for they shall inherit the
+Earth_: But _how_, I pray, or _where_, or _when_, do the Meek inherit
+the Earth? Neither at present, I am sure, nor in any past Ages. ’Tis the
+great ones of the World, ambitious Princes and Tyrants, that slice the
+Earth amongst them; and those that can flatter them best, or serve them
+in their Interests or Pleasures, have the next best Shares: But a meek,
+modest and humble Spirit, is the most unqualified Person that can be,
+for a Court, or a Camp; to scramble for Preferment, or Plunder. Both he,
+and his self denying Notions, are ridicul’d, as Things of no Use, and
+proceeding from Meanness and Poorness of Spirit. _David_, who was a
+Person of an admirable Devotion, but of an unequal Spirit; subject to
+great Dejections, as well as Elevations of Mind; was so much affected
+with the Prosperity of the Wicked in this World, that he could scarce
+forbear charging Providence with Injustice. You may see several Touches
+of a repining Spirit in his _Psalms_, and in the lxxiiid _Psalm_,
+compos’d upon that Subject, you have both the Wound and the Cure. Now
+this Beatitude pronounc’d here by our Saviour, was spoken before by
+_David_, _Psal._ xxxvii. 11. the same _David_, that was always so
+sensible of the hard Usage of the Just in this Life. Our Saviour also,
+and his Apostles, preach’d the Doctrine of the Cross every where, and
+foretell the Sufferings that shall attend the Righteous in this World.
+Therefore neither _David_, nor our Saviour, could understand this
+_Inheritance of the Earth_, otherwise than of some future State, or of a
+State yet to come. But as it must be a future State, so it must be a
+terrestrial State; for it could not be call’d the _Inheritance of the
+Earth_, if it was not so. And ’tis to be a State of _Peace_, as well as
+_Plenty_, according to the Words of the _Psalmist_, _But the Meek shall
+inherit the Earth, and shall delight themselves in the abundance of
+Peace_. It follows therefore from these Premisses, that both our
+Saviour, and _David_, must understand some future State of the Earth,
+wherein the _Meek_ will enjoy both Peace and Plenty; and this will
+appear to be the future Kingdom of Christ, when, upon a fuller
+Description, we shall have given you the Marks and Characters of it.
+
+In the mean time, why should we not suppose this Earth, which the Meek
+are to inherit, to be that _habitable Earth to come_, which St. _Paul_
+mentions (_Heb._ ii. 6.) and represents as subject to our Saviour in a
+peculiar Manner, at his Disposal, and under his Government, as his
+Kingdom? Why should not that Earth be the Subject of this Beatitude, the
+promis’d Land, the Lot of the Righteous? This I am sure of, that both
+this Text and the former deserve our serious Thoughts; and tho’ they do
+not expresly, and in Terms, prove the future Kingdom of our Saviour, yet
+upon the fairest Interpretations they imply such a State. And it would
+be very uneasy to give a satisfactory Account, either of the
+_Regeneration_ or _Renovation_, when our Saviour and his Disciples shall
+sit upon Thrones; or of that _Earth_ which the _Meek shall inherit_: Or,
+lastly, of that _habitable World_, which is peculiarly subject to the
+Dominion of Jesus Christ, without supposing, on this side Heaven, some
+other Reign of Christ and his Saints, than what we see, or what they
+enjoy, at present.
+
+But to proceed in this Argument, it will be necessary, as I told you, to
+set down some Notes and Characters of the Reign of Christ and of his
+Saints, whereby it may be distinguish’d from the present State and
+present Kingdoms of the World: And these Characters are chiefly three,
+_Justice_, _Peace_, and _Divine Presence_ or Conduct, which uses to be
+called _Theocracy_. By these Characters it is sufficiently distinguish’d
+from the Kingdoms of this World; which are generally unjust in their
+Titles or Exercise, stain’d with Blood, and so far from being under a
+particular Divine Conduct, that Human Passions and Human Vices are the
+Springs that commonly give Motion to their greatest Designs: But more
+particularly and restrainedly, the Government of Christ is oppos’d to
+the Kingdom and Government of Antichrist, whose Characters arc
+diametrically opposite to these, being _Injustice_, _Cruelty_, and
+_human or diabolical Artifices_.
+
+Upon this short View of the Kingdom of Christ, let us make Enquiry after
+it amongst the Prophets of the _Old Testament_; and we shall find, upon
+Examination, that there is scarce any of them, greater or lesser, but
+take notice of this mystical Kingdom, either expresly, or under the
+Types of _Israel_, _Sion_, _Jerusalem_, and such-like. And therefore I
+am apt to think, that when St. _Peter_, in his Sermon to the _Jews_,
+_Acts_ iii. says, all the holy Prophets spoke of _the Restitution of all
+Things_, he does not mean the Renovation of the World separately from
+the Kingdom of Christ, but complexly, as it may imply both. For there
+are not many of the old Prophets that have spoken of the Renovation of
+the _natural_ World, but a great many have spoken of the Renovation of
+the _moral_, in the Kingdom of Christ. These are St. _Peter_’s Words,
+_Acts_ iii. 19, 20, 21. _Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that
+your Sins may be blotted out, when the Times of refreshing shall come
+from the Presence of the Lord. And he shall send Jesus Christ which
+before was preached unto you; whom the Heavens must receive until the
+Times of RESTITUTION OF ALL THINGS._ The Apostle here mentions three
+Things, the _Times of refreshing_, the _second coming_ of our Saviour,
+and the _Times of Restitution of all Things_: And to the last of these
+he immediately subjoins, _which God hath spoken by the Mouth of all his
+holy Prophets, since the World began_. This _Restitution of all Things_,
+I say, must not be understood abstractly from the Reign of Christ, but
+as in Conjunction with it; and in that Sense, and no other, it is the
+general Subject of the Prophets.
+
+To enter therefore into the Schools of the Prophets, and enquire their
+Sense concerning this Mystery, let us first address our selves to the
+Prophet _Isaiah_, and the royal Prophet _David_; who seem to have had
+many noble Thoughts or Inspirations upon this Subject. _Isaiah_, in the
+lxvth Chapter, from the xviith Verse to the End, treats upon this
+Argument; and joins together the Renovation of the natural and moral
+World, as St. _Peter_, in the Place fore-mentioned, seems to do: And
+accordingly the Prophet, having set down several natural Characters of
+that State, as Indolency and Joy, Longevity, Ease, and Plenty, from
+_ver._ 18. to the 24th, he there begins the moral Characters of Divine
+Favour, and such a particular Protection, that they are heard and
+answer’d before they pray. And lastly, he represents it as a State of
+universal Peace and Innocency, _ver._ 23. _The Wolf and the Lamb shall
+feed together_, &c.
+
+This last Character, which comprehends _Peace_, _Justice_ and
+_Innocency_, is more fully display’d by the same Prophet, in the xith
+Chapter, where he treats also of the Kingdom of Christ. Give me leave to
+set down his Words, ver. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. _But with Righteousness shall
+he judge the Poor, and reprove with Equity, for the Meek of the Earth:
+and he shall smite the Earth with the Rod of his Mouth, and with the
+Breath of his Lips shall he slay the Wicked. And Righteousness shall be
+the Girdle of his Loins, and Faithfulness the Girdle of his Reins. The
+Wolf also shall dwell with the Lamb, and the Leopard shall lie down with
+the Kid; and the Calf and the young Lyon, and the Fatling together, and
+a little Child shall lead them. And the Cow and the Bear shall feed, and
+their young Ones shall lie down together; and the Lyon shall eat Straw
+like the Ox. And the sucking Child shall play on the Hole of the Asp,
+and the weaned Child shall put his Hand on the Cockatrice-Den. They
+shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy Mountain; for the Earth shall
+be full of the Knowledge of the Lord, as the Waters cover the Sea._ Thus
+far the Prophet. Now if we join this to what we noted before, from his
+lxvth Chapter, concerning the same State, ’twill be impossible to
+understand it of any Order of Things, that is now, or hath been hitherto
+in the World; And consequently it must be the Idea of some State to
+come, and particularly of that which we call the future Kingdom of
+Christ.
+
+The same pacifick Temper, Innocency and Justice, are celebrated by this
+Prophet, when the _Mountain of the Lord shall be established in the Top
+of the Mountains_, Chap. ii. 2, 4. _And he shall judge amongst the
+Nations, and shall rebuke many People; and they shall beat their Swords
+into Plow-shares, and their Spears into Pruning-hooks. Nation shall not
+lift up Sword against Nation, neither shall they learn War any more._
+And as to Righteousness, he says, in the xxiiid Chapter, _Behold a King
+shall reign in Righteousness, and Princes shall rule in Judgment_, &c.
+These Places, I know, usually are apply’d to the first coming of our
+Saviour; the Peaceableness of his Doctrine, and the Propagation of it
+thro’ all the World. I willingly allow this to be a true Sense, so far
+as it will go: But ’tis one thing to be a true Sense to such a Degree,
+and another thing to be the final Sense and Accomplishment of a
+Prophecy. The Affairs of the first and second coming of our Saviour are
+often mingled together in the Prophecies of the _Old Testament_; but in
+that Mixture there are some Characters whereby you may distinguish what
+belongs to his first, and what to his second coming; what to the Time
+when he came to suffer, and what to the Time when he shall come to
+reign. For Instance, in these Prophecies recited, though there are many
+Things very applicable to his first coming, yet that _Regality_ which is
+often spoken of, and that universal Peace and Innocency that will
+accompany it, cannot be verified of his coming in the Flesh, seeing it
+is plain, that in his State of Humiliation he did not come as a King, to
+rule over the Nations of the Earth, (_Matt._ xx. 21. _Luke_ xxiii. 42.)
+And he says himself expresly, _That his Kingdom is not of this World_,
+John xviii. 36. And the Prayer of _Salome_, and of the good Thief upon
+the Cross, suppose it not then present, but to come. Then as to the
+Establishment of _Peace_ in his Kingdom, it does not at all appear to me
+that there is more Peace in the World now, than there was before our
+Saviour came into it; or that the Christian Parts of the World are more
+peaceable than the Unchristian. Therefore these great Promises of a
+_pacifick Kingdom_, which are express’d in Terms as high and emphatical
+as can be imagin’d, must belong to some other Days, and some other Ages,
+than what we have seen hitherto.
+
+You’ll say, it may be, ’Tis not the Fault of the Gospel that the World
+is not peaceable, but of those that profess it, and do not practice it.
+This is true, but it does not answer the Prophecy; for that makes no
+Exception, and by such a Reserve as this, you may elude any Prophecy. So
+the _Jews_ say, their _Messiah_ defers his coming beyond the Time
+appointed by Prophecy, because of their Sins; but we do not allow this
+for a good Reason. The _Israelites_ had their promised _Canaan_, tho’
+they had render’d themselves unworthy of it; and by this Method of
+interpreting Prophecies, all the Happiness and Glory promised in the
+Millennial Kingdom of Christ may come to nothing, upon a pretended
+Forfeiture. Threatnings indeed may have a tacit Condition; God may be
+better than his Word, and, upon Repentance, divert his Judgments; but he
+cannot be worse than his Word, or fail of Performance, when, without any
+Condition express’d, he promises or prophecies good Things to come: This
+would destroy all Assurance of Hope or Faith. Lastly, this Prophecy
+concerning pacifick Times or a _pacifick Kingdom_, is in the lxvth
+Chapter of _Isaiah_, subjoin’d to the _Renovation of the Heavens and the
+Earth_, and several Marks of a Change in the natural World; which Things
+we know did not come to pass at the first coming of our Saviour; there
+was no Change of Nature then, nor has been ever since: And therefore
+this happy Change, both in the natural and moral World, is yet to come.
+
+But, as we said before, we do not speak this exclusively of the first
+coming of our Saviour, as to other Parts of these Prophecies; for no
+doubt that was one great Design of them. And in the Prophecies of the
+Old Testament, there are often three Gradations, or gradual
+Accomplishments; the first, in some King of _Israel_, or some Person or
+Affair relating to _Israel_, as National only: The second, in the
+Messiah at his first coming: And the last, in the Messiah, and his
+Kingdom at his second coming. And that which we affirm and contend for,
+is, that the Prophecies fore-mentioned have not a final and total
+Accomplishment, either in the Nation of the _Jews_, or at the first
+coming of our Saviour; and this we abide by.
+
+The next Prophet that we mention’d as a Witness of the future Kingdom of
+Christ, is _David_; who, in his _Psalms_, seems to be pleas’d with this
+Subject above all others: And when he is most exalted in his Thoughts
+and prophetical Raptures, the Spirit carries him into the Kingdom of the
+Messiah, to contemplate its Glory, to sing Praises to its King, and
+triumph over his Enemies, _Psal._ lxviii. _Let God arise, let his
+Enemies be scattered; Let them also that hate him flee before him: As
+Smoak is driven away, so drive them away; at Wax melteth before the
+Fire, so let the Wicked perish at the Presence of God: But let the
+Righteous be glad_, &c. The plain Ground he goes upon in this _Psalm_,
+is the Deliverance out of _Ægypt_, and bringing the _Israelites_ into
+the Land of _Canaan_; but when he is once upon the Wing, he soars to an
+higher Pitch (_ver._ 18.) from the Type to the Antitype; to the Days of
+the Messiah, the Ascension of our Saviour; and, at length, to his
+Kingdom and Dominion over all the Earth, _ver._ 32, _&c._ The xlvth
+_Psalm_ is an _Epithalamium_ to Christ and the Church, or to the _Lamb_
+and his _Spouse_. And when that will be, and in what State, we may learn
+from St. _John_, _Apoc._, xix. 7, 8. and _chap._ xix. 2, 9. Namely,
+after the Destruction of _Babylon_, in the _New Jerusalem_’s Glory. The
+Words and Matter of the two Prophets, answer to one another. Here, in
+this _Psalm_, there is a Fight and Victory celebrated as well as a
+Marriage; and so there is in that xixth Chapter of Saint _John_. Here
+the Prophet says, _Gird thy Sword upon thy Thigh, O most Mighty, with
+thy Glory and thy Majesty. And in thy Majesty ride prosperously because
+of Truth and Meekness and Righteousness; and thy right Hand shall teach
+thee terrible Things. Thy Throne, O God, is for ever and ever: The
+Scepter of thy Kingdom is a right Scepter_, &c. _Psal._ xlv. 3, 4, 6.
+There St. _John_ says, having describ’d a Conqueror on a white Horse,
+_Out of his Mouth goeth a sharp Sword, that with it he should smite the
+Nations, and he shall rule them with a Rod of Iron; and he treadeth the
+Wine-press of the Fierceness and Wrath of Almighty God: And he hath on
+his Vesture, and on his Thigh a Name written, KING of KINGS, and LORD of
+LORDS_, Apoc. xix. 15, 16. This is the same glorious Conqueror and
+Bridegroom in both Places; and this Victory is not gain’d, nor these
+Nuptials compleated, till the second Coming of our Saviour.
+
+In many other _Psalms_ there are Reflections upon this happy Kingdom,
+and the Triumph of Christ over his Enemies, as _Psal._ ii. _Psal._ ix.
+_Psal._ xxi. and xxiv. and xlvii. and lxxxv. and cx. and others. In
+these, and such-like _Psalms_, there are Lineaments and Colours of a
+fairer State than any we have yet seen upon Earth. Not but that in their
+first Instances and Grounds they may sometimes respect the State of
+_Israel_, or the Evangelical State; but the Eye of the Prophet goes
+farther; this does not terminate his Sight: His Divine Enthusiasm
+reaches into another World; a World of _Peace_, and _Justice_, and
+_Holiness_; of Joy, and Victory, and Triumph over all the Wicked; and
+consequently such a World, as neither we nor our Fathers, have yet seen.
+This is an Account of two Prophets _David_, and _Isaiah_; and of what
+they have more openly declar’d concerning the future Kingdom of Christ.
+But to verify St. _Peter_’s Words, in that fore-mention’d Place, _Acts_
+iii. 21. _viz._ That all of the _Holy Prophets since the World began_,
+have spoken of the Restauration of all Things at the second coming of
+Christ. I say, to verify this Assertion of St. _Peter_, we must suppose,
+that, where the Prophets speak of the Restauration and future Glory of
+_Judah_ and _Jerusalem_, they do, under those Types, represent to us the
+Glory and Happiness of the Church in the future Kingdom of Christ: And
+most of the Prophets, in this Sense, and under these Forms, have spoken
+of this Kingdom; in foretelling the Restauration of _Jerusalem_ and
+_Sion_; and happy Days, Peace, Plenty, and Prosperity to the People of
+_Israel_.
+
+Most of the Prophets, I say, from _Moses_ to _Malachi_, have spoken of
+this _Restauration_. _Moses_, in the xxxth of _Deut._ ver. 4, 5, 9.
+_David_ also in many of those _Psalms_ we have cited: _Isaiah_, besides
+the Places fore-mentioned, treats amply of this Subject, _chap._ li. and
+in several other Places. So likewise the Prophets _Ezekiel_, _Daniel_,
+_Hosea_, _Joel_, _Amos_, _Obadiah_, _Micah_, _Zephaniah_, _Haggai_,
+_Zachary_, _Malachi_: All these have, either expresly, or under the
+Types of _Jerusalem_ and _Sion_, foretold happy Days, and a glorious
+Triumph to the Church of God. And seeing in the New Testament, and in
+the Prophecies of St. _John_, the Christian Church is still represented,
+as under Persecution and Distress, till the Fall of Anti-christ, and the
+millennial Kingdom; ’tis then, and not till then, that we must expect
+the full Accomplishment of these Prophecies; the _Restauration_ that St.
+_Peter_ says was spoken of, by _all the Prophets_; and the _Mystery_,
+which St. _John_ says (_Apoc._ x. 7.) was _declared by his Servants the
+Prophets, and_ would be finish’d under the _seventh Trumpet_, which
+ushers in the Kingdom of Christ.
+
+It would be too long to examine all these Places in the Prophets, which
+you may consult at Leisure. However, it cannot seem strange that
+_Jerusalem_ should be us’d in a typical or allegorical Sense, seeing we
+often find such Applications of it in the New Testament; as _Gal._ iv.
+26. _Heb._ xii. 22. _Apoc._ iii. 12. And ’tis very natural that
+_Jerusalem restor’d_, should signify the same thing as _new Jerusalem_;
+and therefore that St. _John_, by his _new Jerusalem_, intended the same
+thing, or the same State, that the antient Prophets did by their
+Restauration of _Jerusalem_. And it neither can be understood in a
+literal Sense, which, I believe, you will not contend for, they must
+both be interpreted of the future Happiness and Glory of the Church in
+the Kingdom of Christ.
+
+But to conclude this Point wholly as to Scripture; if we make Reflection
+upon all the Passages alledged in this and the foregoing Chapter,
+whether out of the Old or New Testament, we must at least acknowledge
+thus much, that there are happy Days, at one time or other: Days of
+Peace and Righteousness; of Joy and Triumph, of external Prosperity, and
+internal Sanctity; when Virtue and Innocency shall be in the Throne, and
+Vice and vicious Men out of Power or Credit. That there are such happy
+Days prophesied of in Scripture, and promised to the Church of God.
+Whether you call this the _Reign of Christ_ and of his Saints or by any
+other Name, it is not material at present to determine; let the Title be
+what you will, as to the Substance it cannot be denied to be a general
+Doctrine of prophetical Scripture. And we must not imagine, that the
+Prophets wrote like the Poets; feigned an Idea of a romantick State,
+that never was, nor ever will be, only to please their own Fancies, or
+the credulous People. Neither is it the State of Heaven and eternal Life
+that is here meant or intended: For, besides that they had little or no
+Light concerning those Notions, in the Old Testament, the Prophets
+generally, in their Description of this Happiness, either express the
+Earth, or at least give plain Marks of a terrestrial State. Wherefore,
+the only Question that remains, is this, _Whether_ these happy Days are
+past already, or to come? Whether this blessed State of the Church is
+behind us, or before us? Whether our Predecessors have enjoyed it, or
+our Posterity is to expect it? For we are very sure that it is not
+present. The World is full of Wars, and Rumours of Wars; of Vice and
+Knavery, of Oppression and Persecution: and these are things directly
+contrary to the Genius and Characters of the State which we look after.
+
+And if we look for it in Times past, we can go no farther back than the
+beginning of Christianity. For St. _John_, the last of the Apostles,
+prophesied of these Times, as to come; and plac’d them at the End of his
+System of Prophecies; whereby one might conclude, that they are not only
+within the Compass of the Christian Ages, but far advanc’d into them.
+But however, not to insist upon that at present, where will you find a
+thousand Years, from the Birth of Christianity to this present Age, that
+deserves the Name, or answers to the Characters of this _pure_ and
+_pacifick_ State of the Church? The first Ages of Christianity, as they
+were the most pure, so likewise were they the least peaceable;
+continually, more or less, under the Persecution of the Heathen
+Emperors; and so far from being the Reign and Empire of Christ and his
+Saints over the Nations, that Christians were then, every where, in
+Subjection or Slavery; a poor, feeble, helpless People, thrust into
+Prisons, or thrown to the Lions, at the Pleasure of their Princes or
+Rulers. ’Tis true, when the Empire became Christian under _Constantine_,
+in the fourth Century, there was, for a time, Peace and Prosperity in
+the Church, and a good Degree of Purity and Piety; but that Peace was
+soon disturb’d, and that Piety soon corrupted. The growing Pride and
+Ambition of the Ecclesiasticks, and their easiness to admit or introduce
+superstitious Practices, destroy’d the Purity of the Church. And as to
+the Peace of it, their Contests about Opinions and Doctrines, tore the
+Christians themselves into Pieces; and, soon after, an Inundation of
+barbarous People fell into Christendom, and put it all into Flames and
+Confusion. After this Eruption of the _Northern_ Nations, _Mahometanism_
+rose in the _East_; and swarms of _Saracens_, like Armies of Locusts,
+invaded, conquer’d, and planted their Religion in several Parts of the
+_Roman_ Empire, and of the Christianiz’d World. And can we call such
+Times the Reign of Christ, or the Imprisonment of Satan? In the
+following Ages, the _Turks_ overran the _Eastern_ Empire and the _Greek_
+Church, and still hold that miserable People in Slavery. Providence
+seems to have so order’d Affairs, that the Christian World should be
+never without a WOE upon it, lest it should fancy it self already in
+those happy Days of Peace and Prosperity, which are reserv’d for future
+Times. Lastly, whosoever is sensible of the Corruptions and Persecutions
+of the Church of _Rome_, since she came to her Greatness; whosoever
+allows her to be _Mystical Babylon_, which must fall before the Kingdom
+of Christ comes on, will think that Kingdom duly plac’d by St. _John_ at
+the End of his Prophecies, concerning the Christian Church; and that
+there still _remains, according_ to the Words of St. _Paul_, (Heb. iv.
+9.) _a Sabbatism to the People of God_.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. IV.
+
+
+ _The Sense and Testimony of the Primitive Church concerning the_
+ Millennium, _or future Kingdom of Christ; from the Times of the
+ Apostles to the_ Nicene _Council. The second Proposition laid down.
+ When, by what Means, and for what Reasons, that Doctrine was
+ afterwards neglected or discountenanc’d._
+
+
+You have heard the Voice of the _Prophets_ and _Apostles_, declaring the
+future Kingdom of Christ: Next to these, the _Primitive Fathers_ are
+accounted of good Authority; let us therefore now enquire into their
+Sense concerning this Doctrine, that we may give Satisfaction to all
+Parties; and both those that are guided by Scripture alone, and those
+that have a Veneration for Antiquity, may find Proofs suitable to their
+Inclinations and Judgment.
+
+And to make few Words of it, we will lay down this Conclusion; _That the
+millennial Kingdom of Christ was the general Doctrine of the Primitive
+Church, from the Times of the Apostles to the_ Nicene _Council_,
+inclusively. St. _John_ out-liv’d all the rest of the Apostles, and
+towards the latter end of his Life, being banish’d into the Isle of
+_Pathmos_, he wrote his _Apocalypse_; wherein he hath given us a more
+full and distinct Account of the millennial Kingdom of Christ, than any
+of the Prophets or Apostles before him. _Papias_, Bishop of
+_Hierapolis_, and Martyr, one of St. _John_’s Auditors, as _Ireneus_
+testifies, _Iren. Lib 5. c. 33._ taught the same Doctrine after St.
+_John_. He was the familiar Friend of _Polycarp_, another of St.
+_John_’s Disciples; and either from him, or immediately from St.
+_John_’s Mouth, he might receive this Doctrine. That he taught it in the
+Church, is agreed on by all Hands; both by those that are his Followers,
+as _Irenæus_; and those that are not Well-wishers to this Doctrine, as
+_Eusebius_ and _Jerome_.
+
+There is also another Channel wherein this Doctrine is traditionally
+deriv’d from St. _John_, namely, by the Clergy of _Asia_; as _Irenæus_
+tells us in the same Chapter. For, arguing the Point, he shews that the
+Blessing promis’d to _Jacob_ from his Father _Isaac_, was not made good
+to him in this Life, and therefore he says, _without doubt those Words
+had a farther Aim and Prospect upon the Times of the Kingdom:_ (so they
+us’d to call the millennial State) _when the Just rising from the Dead,
+shall reign; and when Nature renew’d and set at Liberty, shall yield
+Plenty and Abundance of all things; being blest with the Dew of Heaven,
+and a great Fertility of the Earth according as has been related by
+those Ecclesiaticks or Clergy, who saw S._ John, _the Disciple of
+Christ; and heard of him WHAT OUR LORD HAD TAUGHT CONCERNING THOSE
+TIMES_. This you see, goes to the Fountain Head: The Christian Clergy
+receive it from St. _John_, and St. _John_ relates it from the Mouth of
+our Saviour.
+
+So much for the original Authority of this Doctrine, as a Tradition;
+that it was from St. _John_, and by him from Christ. And as to the
+Propagation and prevailing of it in the Primitive Church, we can bring a
+Witness beyond all exception, _Justin Martyr_, cotemporary with
+_Irenæus_, and his Senior. He says, _that himself, and all the Orthodox
+Christians of his Time, did acknowledge the Resurrection of the Flesh_
+(suppose the first Resurrection) _and a thousand Years reign in_
+Jerusalem _restor’d_, or in the new Jerusalem, _Dial. with_ Tryphon _the
+Jew_. _According as the Prophets_ Ezekiel, _and_ Isaiah, _and others,
+attest with common Consent_. As St. _Peter_ had said before, _Acts_ iii.
+21. _That all the Prophets had spoken of it._ Then he quotes the lxvth
+_Chapter_ of _Isaiah_, which is a Bulwark for this Doctrine, that never
+can be broken. And to shew the _Jew_, with whom he had this Discourse,
+that it was the Sense of our Prophets, as well as of theirs, he tells
+him, that _a certain Man amongst us Christians, by Name_ John, _one of
+the Apostles of Christ, in a Revelation made to him did prophesy, that
+the faithful Believers in Christ should live a thousand Years in the_
+New Jerusalem; _and after that should be the general Resurrection and
+Day of Judgment_. Thus you have the Thoughts and Sentiments of _Justin
+Martyr_, as to himself; as to all the reputed Orthodox of his Time; as
+to the Sense of the Prophets in the Old Testament, and as to the Sense
+of St. _John_ in the _Apocalypse_; all conspiring in Confirmation of the
+millennary Doctrine.
+
+To these three Witnesses, _Papias_, _Irenæus_ and _Justin Martyr_, we
+may add two more within the second Age of the Church; _Melito_, Bishop
+of _Sardis_, and St. _Barnabas_, or whosoever was the Author of the
+Epistle under his Name. This _Melito_, by some, is thought to be the
+Angel of the Church of _Sardis_, to whom St. _John_ directs the Epistle
+to that Church, _Apoc._ iii. 1. but I do not take him to be so ancient;
+however, he was Bishop of that Place, at least in the second Century,
+and a Person of great Sanctity and Learning: He wrote many Books, as you
+may see in St. _Jerome_; and, as he notes out of _Tertullian_, _was by
+most Christians reputed a Prophet_ (_De Script. Eccles. Dogm. Eccl._ c.
+lv.) He was also a declar’d _Millennary_, and is recorded as such, both
+by _Jerome_ and _Gennadius_. As to the Epistle of _Barnabas_, which we
+mention’d, it must be very ancient, whosoever is the Author of it, and
+before the third Century; seeing it is often cited by _Clemens
+Alexandrinus_, who was himself within the second Century: The Genius of
+it is very much _Millennarian_, in the Interpretation of the _Sabbath_,
+the _promis’d Land_, a _Day_ for a _thousand Years_, and concerning the
+_Renovation of the World_. In all which, he follows the Footsteps of the
+Orthodox of those Times; that is, of the _Millennarians_.
+
+So much for the first and second Centuries of the Church. By which short
+Account it appears, that the millennary Doctrine was _Orthodox_ and
+_Catholick_ in those early Days; for these Authors do not set it down as
+a private Opinion of their own, but as a _Christian Doctrine_, or an
+_Apostolical Tradition_. ’Tis remarkable what _Papias_ says of himself,
+and his way of Learning, in his Book call’d, _The Explanation of the
+Words of the Lord_, as St. _Jerome_ gives an Account of it: (_De Script.
+Eccles._) He says in his Preface, _He did not follow various Opinions,
+but had the Apostles for his Authors: And that he consider’d what_
+Andrew, _and what_ Peter _said; what_ Philip, _what_ Thomas, _and other
+Disciples of the Lord; as also what_ Aristion, _and_ John _the Senior,
+Disciples of the Lord, what they spoke. And that he did not profit so
+much by reading Books, as by the living Voice of these Persons, which
+resounded from them to that Day._ This hath very much the Air of Truth
+and Sincerity, and of a Man that, in good earnest, sought after the
+Christian Doctrine, from those that were the most authentick Teachers of
+it. I know _Eusebius_, in his _Ecclesiastical History_, gives a double
+Character of this _Papias_; in one Place he calls him, _A very eloquent
+Man in all Things, and skilful in Scripture_; and in another, he makes
+him a Man of a _small Understanding_, (_Vid._ Hieron. _Epist._ 28. _ad_
+Lucinium.) But what Reason there is to suspect _Eusebius_ of Partiality
+in this Point of the _Millennium_, we shall make appear hereafter.
+However, we do not depend upon the Learning of _Papias_, or the Depth of
+his Understanding; allow him but to be an honest Man and a fair Witness,
+and ’tis all we desire. And we have little reason to question his
+Testimony in this Point, seeing it is back’d by others of good Credit;
+and all because there is no Counter-Evidence, nor any Witness that
+appears against him: For there is not extant, either the Writing, Name,
+or Memory, of any Person that contested this Doctrine in the first or
+second Century: I say, that call’d in question this millennary Doctrine,
+propos’d after a Christian Manner, unless such Hereticks as denied the
+Resurrection wholly, or such Christians as deny’d the Divine Authority
+of the _Apocalypse_.
+
+We proceed now to the third Century; where you find _Tertullian_,
+_Origen_, _Victorinus_, Bishop and Martyr; _Nepos Ægyptius_, _Cyprian_,
+and, at the End of it, _Lactantius_; all openly professing, or
+implicitly favouring, the millennary Doctrine. We do not mention
+_Clemens Alexandrinus_, contemporary with _Tertullian_, because he hath
+not any thing, that I know of, expresly either for, or against the
+_Millennium_: But he takes notice that the _Seventh Day_ hath been
+accounted _Sacred_, both by the _Hebrews_ and _Greeks_, because of the
+_Revolution_ of the _World_, and the _Renovation of all Things_. And
+giving this as a Reason why they kept that Day _holy_, seeing there is
+not a Revolution of the World, every seven Days, it can be in no other
+Sense than as the _Seventh Day_ represents the _seventh Millennary_, in
+which the Renovation of the World and the Kingdom of Christ, is to be.
+As to _Tertullian_, St. _Jerome_ reckons him, in the first place,
+amongst the _Latin Millennaries_. And tho’ his Book, about the _Hope_ of
+the _Faithful_, as also that about _Paradise_, which should have given
+us the greatest Light in this Affair, be both lost or suppress’d; yet
+there are sufficient Indications of his millennary Opinion in his Tracts
+against _Marcion_, and against _Hermogenes_. St. _Cyprian_ was
+_Tertullian_’s Admirer, and inclines to the same Opinion, so far as one
+can judge, in this particular; for his Period of _six thousand Years_,
+and making the _seventh Millennary_ the consummation of all, is wholly
+according to the Analogy of the millennary Doctrine. As to the two
+Bishops, _Victorinus_ and _Nepos_, St. _Jerome_ vouches for them: The
+Writings of the one are lost, and of the other so chang’d, that the
+Sense of the Author does not appear there now. But _Lactantius_, whom we
+nam’d in the last Place, does openly and profusely teach this Doctrine,
+in his _Divine Institutions_, (Book vii.) and with the same Assurance
+that he does other Parts of the Christian Doctrine; for he concludes
+thus, speaking of the _Millennium_, _This is the Doctrine of the holy
+Prophets, which we Christians follow; this is our Wisdom_, &c. Yet he
+acknowledges there, that it was kept as a Mystery or Secret amongst the
+Christians, lest the Heathens should make any perverse or odious
+Interpretation of it. And for the same or like Reason, I believe, the
+Book of the _Apocalypse_ was kept out of the Hands of the Vulgar for
+some time, and not read publickly, lest it should be found to have
+spoken too openly of the Fate of the _Roman_ Empire, or of this
+millennial State.
+
+So much for the first, second, and third Centuries of the Church: But by
+our Conclusion, we engag’d to make out this Proof as far as the _Nicene
+Council_, inclusively. The _Nicene Council_ was about the Year of Christ
+325. and we may reasonably suppose _Lactantius_ was then living; at
+least he came within the Time of _Constantine_’s Empire. But however,
+the Fathers of that Council are themselves our Witnesses in this Point;
+for in their _Ecclesiastical Forms_ or _Constitutions_, in the Chapter
+_about the Providence of God_, and _about the World_, they speak thus:
+_The World was made meaner, or less perfect, providentially; for God
+foresaw that Man would Sin: Wherefore we expect new Heavens and a new
+Earth, according to the holy Scriptures, at the Appearance and Kingdom
+of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ._ And then, as _Daniel_
+says (chap. vii. 18.) _The Saints of the most High shall take the
+Kingdom, and the Earth shall be pure, holy, the Land of the Living, not
+of the Dead._ _Which_ David _foreseeing by the Eye of Faith_, cries out,
+(_Psal._ xxvii. 13.) _I believe to see the good Things of the Lord, in
+the Land of the Living. Our Saviour says, happy are the Meek, for they
+shall inherit the Earth_, Mat. v. 5. _And the Prophet_ Isaiah _says_,
+(Chap. xxvi. 6.) _the Feet of the meek and lowly shall tread upon it_.
+So you see, according to the Judgment of these Fathers, there will be a
+Kingdom of Christ upon Earth; and moreover, that it will be in the _new
+Heavens_ and the _new Earth_: And, in both these Points, they cite the
+Prophets, and our Saviour in Confirmation of them.
+
+Thus we have discharg’d our Promise, and given you an account of the
+Doctrine of the _Millennium_, or future Kingdom of Christ, throughout
+the three first Ages of the Church, before any considerable Corruptions
+were crept into the Christian Religion. And those Authorities of single
+and successive Fathers, we have seal’d up all together, with the
+Declaration of the _Nicene_ Fathers, in a Body. Those that think
+Tradition a Rule of Faith, or a considerable Motive to it, will find it
+hard to turn off the Force of these Testimonies: And those that do not
+go so far, but yet have a Reverence for Antiquity and the Primitive
+Church, will not easily produce better Authorities, more early, more
+numerous, or more uncontradicted, for any Article that is not
+fundamental: Yet these are but Seconds to the Prophets and Apostles, who
+are truly the Principals in this Cause. I will leave them all together,
+to be examin’d and weigh’d by the impartial Reader. And because they
+seem to me to make a full and undeniable Proof, I will now, at the Foot
+of the Account, set down our second Proposition, which is this, _That
+there is a millennial State, or a future Kingdom of Christ and his
+Saints, prophesied of and promised, in the Old and New Testament; and
+receiv’d by the Primitive Church as a Christian and Catholick Doctrin._
+(Propos. I.)
+
+Having dispatch’d this main Point; to conclude the Chapter and this Head
+of our Discourse, it will be some Satisfaction possibly to see, _How_ a
+Doctrine so generally receiv’d and approv’d came to decay, and almost
+wear out of the Church, in following Ages. The Christian millennary
+Doctrine was not call’d into Question, so far as appears from History,
+before the middle of the third Century; when _Dionysius Alexandrinus_
+wrote against _Nepos_, an _Ægyptian_ Bishop, who had declar’d himself
+upon that Subject. But we do not find that this Book had any great
+Effect; for the Declaration or Constitution of the _Nicene Fathers_ was
+after; and in St. _Jerome_’s Time, who wrote towards the End of the
+fourth Century, this Doctrine had so much Credit, that he, who was its
+greatest Adversary, yet durst not condemn it, as he says himself; _Quæ
+licet non sequamur, tamen damnare non possumus; quia multi
+Ecclesiasticorum virorum & martyres ista dixerunt: Which Things or
+Doctrines_, speaking of the Millennium, _tho’ we do not follow, yet we
+cannot condemn; because many of our Churchmen, and Martyrs have affirmed
+these things_. And when _Apollinarius_ reply’d to that Book of
+_Dionysius_, St. _Jerome_ says, that, _not only those of his own Sect,
+but a great Multitude of other Christians did agree with_ Apollinarius
+_in that particular: Ut presagâ mente jam cernam, quantorum in me rabies
+concitanda sit; That now I foresee, how many will be enrag’d against me,
+for what I have spoken against the millennary Doctrine_.
+
+We may therefore conclude that in St. _Jerome_’s Time the Millennaries
+made the greater Party in the Church; for a little Matter would not have
+frighted him from censuring their Opinions. St. _Jerome_ was a rough and
+rugged Saint, and an unfair Adversary, that usually run down with Heat
+and Violence, what stood in his Way. As to his Unfairness, he shews it
+sufficiently in this very Cause, for he generally represents the
+millennary Doctrine after a _Judaical_, rather than a _Christian_
+Manner. And in reckoning up the chief Patrons of it, he always skips
+_Justin Martyr_; who was not a Man so obscure as to be over-look’d: And
+he was a Man that had declar’d himself sufficiently upon this Point; for
+he says, _Both himself and all the Orthodox of his time, were of that
+Judgment_, and applies both the _Apocalypse_ of St. _John_, and the
+lxvth Chapter of _Isaiah_, for the Proof of it; as we noted before.
+
+As St. _Jerome_ was an open Enemy to this Doctrine, so _Eusebius_ was a
+back Friend to it; and represented every thing to its Disadvantage, so
+far as was tolerably consistent with the Fairness of an Historian. He
+gives a slight Character of _Papias_, without any Authority for it; and
+brings in one _Gaius_, that makes _Cerinthus_ to be the Author of the
+_Apocalypse_ and of the _Millennium_ (_Eccles. Hist._ _l._ iii. _c._
+32.) and calls the Visions there, Τερετολογίας, _monstrous Stories_. He
+himself is willing to shuffle off that Book from _John_ the _Evangelist_
+to another _John_ a _Presbyter_; and to shew his Skill in the
+Interpretation of it, (_l._ 3. _c._ 32. _de vit. Constan._) he makes the
+_new Jerusalem_ in the xxith Chapter to be _Constantine’s Jerusalem_,
+when he turn’d the Heathen Temples there into Christian: A wonderful
+Invention. As St. _Jerome_ by his Flouts, so _Eusebius_, by sinister
+Insinuations, endeavour’d to lessen the Reputation of this Doctrine; and
+the Art they both us’d was, to misrepresent it as _Judaical_. But we
+must not cast off every Doctrine which the _Jews_ believ’d, only for
+that Reason; for we have the same Oracles which they had, and the same
+Prophets; and they have collected from them the same general Doctrine
+that we have, namely, that _there will be an happy and pacifick State of
+the Church, in future Times_. But as to the Circumstances of this State
+we differ very much: They suppose the _Mosaical_ Law will be restor’d,
+with all its Pomp, Rites, and Ceremonies: whereas we suppose the
+Christian Worship, or something more perfect, will then take Place. Yet
+St. _Jerome_ has the Confidence, even there where he speaks of the many
+Christian Clergy and Martyrs that held this Doctrine; has the
+Confidence, I say, to represent it, as if they held that _Circumcision_,
+_Sacrifices_, and all the _Judaical_ Rites, should then be restor’d.
+Which seems to me to be a great Slander, and a great Instance how far
+Mens Passions will carry them, in misrepresenting an Opinion, which they
+have a Mind to disgrace.
+
+But as we have Reason to blame the Partiality of those that opposed this
+Doctrine; so, on the other Hand, we cannot excuse the Patrons of it from
+all Indiscretions. I believe they might partly themselves make it
+obnoxious; by mixing some things with it, from pretended Traditions, or
+the Books of the _Sybills_, or other private Authorities, that had so
+sufficient warrant from Scripture; and things, sometimes, that Nature
+would not easily bear. Besides, in latter Ages, they seem to have dropt
+one half of the Doctrine, namely, the _Renovation of Nature_, which
+_Irenæus_, _Justin Martyr_, and the Antients, join inseparably with the
+_Millennium_: And by this Omission, the Doctrine hath been made less
+intelligible, and one Part of it inconsistent with another. And when
+their Pretensions were to reign upon this present Earth, and in this
+present State of Nature, it gave a Jealousy to temporal Princes, and
+gave occasion likewise to many of Fanatical Spirits, under the Notion of
+Saints, to aspire to Dominion, after a violent and tumultuary Manner.
+This I reckon as one great Cause that brought the Doctrine into
+Discredit. But I hope by reducing of it to the true State, we shall cure
+this and other Abuses for the future.
+
+Lastly, It never pleas’d the Church of _Rome_; and so far as the
+Influence and Authority of that would go, you may be sure it would be
+depress’d and discountenanced. I never yet met with a Popish Doctor that
+held the _Millennium_; and _Baronius_ would have it to pass for an
+Heresy, and _Papias_ for the Inventor of it; whereas, if _Irenæus_ may
+be credited, it was receiv’d from St. _John_, and by him from the Mouth
+of our Saviour. And neither St. _Jerome_, nor his friend Pope _Damasus_,
+durst ever condemn it for an _Heresy_. It was always indeed uneasy, and
+gave Offence to the Church of _Rome_; because it does not suit to that
+Scheme of Christianity, which they have drawn. They suppose Christ
+reigns already, by his Vicar, the Pope; and treads upon the Necks of
+Emperors and Kings: And if they could but suppress the _Northern
+Heresy_, as they call it, they do not know what a _Millennium_ would
+signify, or how the Church could be in an happier Condition than she is.
+The _Apocalyse_ of St. _John_ does suppose the true Church under
+hardship and Persecution, more or less, for the greatest Part of the
+Christian Ages; namely, for 1260 Years, while the Witnesses are in
+sack-cloth. But the Church of _Rome_ hath been in prosperity and
+Greatness, and the commanding Church in Christendom, for so long, or
+longer, and hath rul’d the Nations with a Rod of Iron; so as that Mark
+of the true Church does not favour her at all. And the _Millennium_
+being properly a Reward and Triumph for those that come out of
+Persecution, such as have liv’d always in Pomp and Prosperity, can
+pretend to no Share in it, or Benefit by it. This has made the Church of
+_Rome_ have always an ill Eye upon this Doctrine, because it seem’d to
+have an ill Eye upon her; And as she grew in Splendor and Greatness, she
+eclips’d and obscur’d it more and more; so that it would have been lost
+out of the World as an obsolete Error, it it had not been revived by
+some of the Reformation.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. VII.
+
+
+ _The true State of the Millennium, according to Characters taken
+ from Scripture; some Mistakes concerning it examin’d._
+
+
+We have made sufficient Proof of a millennial State, from Scripture and
+Antiquity; and upon that firm Basis have settled our second Proposition.
+We should now determine the _Time_ and _Place_ of this future Kingdom of
+Christ: not whether it is to be in Heaven, or upon Earth; for that we
+suppose determin’d already; but whether it is to be in the present
+Earth, and under the present Constitution of Nature, or in the _new
+Heavens_, and _new Earth_, which are promis’d after the _Conflagration_:
+This is to make our _third Proposition_: And I should have proceeded
+immediately to the Examination of it, but that I imagine it will give us
+some Light in this Affair, if we enquire farther into the true State of
+the _Millennium_, before we determine its Time and Place.
+
+We have already noted some _moral_ Characters of the millennial State;
+and the great _natural_ Character of it is this in general, that it will
+be _Paradisaical_; free from all Inconveniencies, either of external
+Nature, or of our own Bodies. For my part, I do not understand, how
+there can be any considerable Degree of Happiness without _Indolency_;
+nor how there can be _Indolency_, while we have such Bodies as we have
+now, and such an external Constitution of Nature. And as there must be
+_Indolency_, where there is Happiness; so there must not be _Indigency_,
+or want of any due Comforts of Life: For where there is _Indigency_,
+there is Solicitude, and Distraction, and Uneasiness, and Fear; Passions
+that do as naturally disquiet the Soul, as Pain does the Body. Therefore
+Indolency and Plenty seem to be two essential Ingredients of every happy
+State; and these two, in Conjunction, make that State we call
+_Paradisaical_.
+
+Now the Scripture seems plainly to exempt the Sons of the _new
+Jerusalem_, or of the _Millennium_, from all _Pain_ or _Want_, in those
+Words, _Apoc._ xxi. 4. _And God shall wipe away all Tears from their
+Eyes: And there shall be no more Death, neither Sorrow, nor crying;
+neither shall there be any more Pain: For the former Things are passed
+away._ And the Lord of that Kingdom, _He that sat upon the Throne_,
+said, _Behold I make all Things new_, ver. 5. This Renovation is a
+Restauration to some former State; and I hope, not that State of
+Indigency and Misery, and Diseasedness, which we languish under at
+present; but to that pristine _Paradisaical_ State, which was the
+Blessing of the first Heavens and the first Earth.
+
+As Health and Plenty are the Blessings of Nature; so, in Civil Affairs,
+_Peace_ is the greatest Blessing: And this is inseparably annex’d to the
+_Millennium_; an indelible Character of the Kingdom of Christ. And by
+_Peace_, we understand not only Freedom from Persecution upon religious
+Accounts, but that _Nation shall not rise up against Nation_, upon any
+Account whatsoever. That bloody Monster, _War_, that hath devoured so
+many Millions of the Sons of _Adam_, is now at length to be chain’d up;
+and the Furies, that run throughout the Earth, with their Snakes and
+Torches, shall be thrown into the Abyss, to sting and prey upon one
+another: All evil and mischievous Passions shall be extinguished; and
+that not in Men only, but even in brute Creatures, according to the
+Prophets. _The Lamb and the Lion shall lie down together, and the
+sucking Child shall play with the Basilisk._ Happy Days, when not only
+the Temple of _Janus_ shall be shut up for a thousand Years, and the
+_Nations shall beat their Swords into Plowshares_; but all Enmities and
+Antipathies shall cease, all Acts of Hostility, throughout all Nature.
+And this universal Peace is a Demonstration also of the former
+Character, _universal Plenty_; for where there is a Want and
+Necessitousness, there will be quarrelling.
+
+Fourthly, ’Tis a Kingdom of Righteousness, as well as of Peace: these
+also must go together: For unrighteous Persons will not live long in
+Peace, no more than indigent Persons. The _Psalmist_ therefore joins
+them together; and _Plenty_, also, as their necessary Preservative, in
+his Description of the Kingdom of Christ, _Psal._ lxxxv. 10, 11, 12.
+_Mercy and Truth are met together: Righteousness and Peace have kissed
+each other. Truth shall spring out of the Earth, and Righteousness shall
+look down from Heaven. Yea, the Lord shall give good, and our Land shall
+yield her Increase._ This will not be a Medley-State, as the present
+World is, good and bad mingled together; but _a chosen Generation_, _a
+royal Priesthood_, _an holy Nation_, _a peculiar People_. Those that
+have a Part in the first Resurrection, the Scripture pronounceth them
+_Holy_ and _Blessed_; and says, _The second Death shall have no Power
+over them._ Satan is also bound and shut up in the bottomless Pit, and
+has no Liberty of tempting or seducing this People, for a thousand
+Years: but at the End of that Time, he will meet with a degenerate Crew,
+separate and Aliens to the holy City, that will make War against it, and
+perish in the Attempt. In a word, those that are to enjoy this State,
+are always distinguish’d from the Multitude, as People redeemed from the
+Earth, (_Apoc._ v. 9.) that have wash’d their Robes, and made them white
+in the Blood of the Lamb; and are represented as Victors over the World;
+with such other Characters as are incompatible to any but the Righteous,
+_ch._ vii. 14. _ch._ xiv. 3, 4. _ch._ xxi. 27.
+
+Fifthly, This will be a State under a peculiar divine Presence and
+Conduct. It is not easy indeed to determine the Manner of this Presence;
+but the Scripture plainly implies some extraordinary divine Presence to
+enlighten and enliven that State. When the _new Jerusalem_ was come
+down, St. _John_ says, _Apoc._ xxi. 3. _And I heard a great voice out of
+Heaven, saying, behold the Tabernacle of God is with Men; and he will
+dwell with them, and they shall be his People; and God himself shall be
+with them, and be their God._ And the like is promis’d to the
+Palm-bearing Company, _ch._ vii. 19. where they are admitted to the
+Privileges of the _new Jerusalem_. When our Saviour was incarnate, and
+vouchsafed to dwell amongst the Children of Men, the same Phrase is us’d
+by this same Author, ἐσχήνωσε. _Joh._ i. 14. _The Word was made Flesh,
+and tabernacled amongst us; and we beheld his Glory_, &c. We read it,
+_He dwelt amongst us_, but render’d more closely, it is, _He_ set his
+_Tabernacle amongst us_. And that which the _Hebrews_ call the שכינה
+_Shekinah_, or _divine Presence_, _Maimon. Mor. Nev. par._ 1. _c._ 25
+comes from a Word of the like Signification and Sound with the _Greek_
+Word here us’d. Therefore there will be a _Shekinah_ in that Kingdom of
+Christ; but as to the Mode of it, I am very willing to confess my
+Ignorance.
+
+The last Character that belongs to this State, or rather to those that
+enjoy it, is, that they are _Kings and Priests unto God_. This is a
+Character often repeated in Scripture, and therefore the more to be
+regarded. It occurs thrice in the _Apocalypse_ in formal Terms, _ch._ i.
+6. _ch._ v. 10. _ch._ xx. 6. And as to the Regal Dignity apart, that is
+farther exprest, either by the _Donation of a Kingdom_, as in _Daniel_’s
+Phrase, _chap._ vii. 18, 22, 27. Or by _placing upon Thrones_, with a
+judicial Power; which is the New Testament Style, _Mat._ xix. 28. _Luke_
+xxii. 29, 30. _Rev._ xx. 4. These two Titles, no doubt, are intended to
+comprehend the highest Honours that we are capable of; these being the
+highest Dignities in every Kingdom; and such as were by the Antients,
+both in the _East_ and in the _West_, commonly united in one and the
+same Person; Their Kings being Priests, like _Melchisedeck_, or, as the
+_Roman_ Emperor was, _Pontifex Maximus_. But as to the sacerdotal
+Character, that seems chiefly to respect the Temper of the Mind; to
+signify a People dedicated to God and his Service, separate from the
+World, and from secular Affairs, spending their time in Devotion and
+Contemplation, which will be the great Employments of that happy State.
+For where there is Ease, Peace, and Plenty of all Things, refin’d
+Bodies, and purified Minds, there will be more Inclination to
+intellectual Exercises and Entertainments; which they may attend upon,
+without any Distraction, having neither Want, Pain, nor worldly
+Business.
+
+The Title of _King_ implies a Confluence of all Things that constitute
+temporal Happiness. ’Tis the highest thing we can wish any in this
+World, to be a King; So as the _Regal_ Dignity seems to comprehend all
+the Goods of Fortune, or external Felicity, and the _Sacerdotal_, the
+Goods of the Mind, or internal; both which concur in the Constitution of
+true Happiness. There is also a further Force and Emphasis in this
+Notion _of the Saints being made Kings_, if we consider it
+_comparatively_, with respect to what they were before in this World;
+where they were not only mean and despicable, in Subjection and
+Servility, but often under Persecution, abus’d and trampled upon by the
+Secular and Ecclesiastical Powers. But now the Scene is chang’d, and you
+see the reverse of Providence, according as _Abraham_ said to the
+Rich-Man; _Son, remember that thou in thy Life time receivedst thy good
+things, and likewise_ Lazarus _evil things: But now he is comforted, and
+thou art tormented._ Now they are set upon Thrones and Tribunals, who
+were before arraigned as Criminals, and brought before tyrannical
+Judicatures: They are now Laws and Law-givers to themselves, in a true
+State of Royal Liberty, neither under the Domination of evil Men, nor of
+their own evil Passions.
+
+Some possibly may think, that this high Character of _being made
+Priests_ and _Kings to God_, is not general to all that enjoy the
+_Millennium_; but a Prerogative belonging to the Apostles and some of
+the chief Martyrs, who are eminently rewarded for their eminent
+Services. But Scripture as far as I perceive, applies it to all that
+inherit that Kingdom. _The redeemed out of every Kindred, and Tongue,
+and People, and Nation_, are made _Kings and Priests to God, and shall
+reign on the Earth_, Apoc. v. 9, 10, And in the xxth _chap. ver._ 6. all
+the Sons of the first Resurrection are made _Priests of God, and shall
+reign with him a thousand Years_. Here is no Distinction or
+Discrimination thus far: Not that we suppose an unversal Equality of
+Conditions in the millennial State; but as to all these Characters which
+we have given of it, I do not perceive that they are restrain’d or
+confin’d by Scripture to single Persons, but make the general Happiness
+of that State, and are the Portion of every one that is admitted into
+the _new Jerusalem_.
+
+Others possibly may think that this Privilege of the _first
+Resurrection_ is not common to all that enjoy the millennial State. For
+tho’ St. _John_, who is the only Person that hath made express mention
+of the _first Resurrection_, and of the _thousand Years Reign of_
+Christ, does join these two as the same thing, and common to the same
+Persons; yet I know there are some that would distinguish them as things
+of a different Extent, and also of a different Nature. They suppose the
+Martyrs only will rise from the Dead, and will be immediately translated
+into Heaven, and there pass their _Millennium_ in celestial Glory; while
+the Church is still here below, in her _Millennium_, such as it is: A
+State indeed better than ordinary, and free from Persecution, but
+obnoxious to all the Inconveniences of our present mortal Life, and a
+Medley of good and bad People, without Separation. This is such an Idea
+of the _Millennium_, as, to my Eye, hath neither Beauty in it, nor
+Foundation in Scripture. That the Citizens of the _new Jerusalem_ are
+not a miscellaneous Company, but a Community of righteous Persons, we
+have noted before, and that the State of Nature will be better than it
+is at present. But, besides this, what Warrant have they for this
+Ascension of the Martyrs into Heaven at that Time? Where do we read of
+that in Scripture? And in those things that are not Matters of natural
+Order, but of divine Oeconomy, we ought to be very careful how we add to
+Scripture.
+
+The Scripture speaks only of the Resurrection of the Martyrs, _Apoc._
+xx. 45. but not a Word concerning their Ascension into Heaven. Will that
+be visible? We read of our Saviour’s Resurrection and Ascension, and
+therefore we have Reason to affirm them both. We read also of the
+Resurrection and Ascension of the _Witnesses_, (_Apoc._ xi.) in a
+figurative Sense; and in that Sense we may assert them upon good
+Grounds. But as to the Martyrs, we read of their Resurrection only,
+without any thing exprest or imply’d about their Ascension. By what
+Authority then shall we add this new Notion to the History or Scheme of
+the _Millennium_? The Scripture, on the contrary, makes mention of the
+Descent of the _new Jerusalem_, _Apoc._ xxi. 2. making the Earth the
+Theatre of all that Affair: And the Camp of the Saints is upon the
+Earth, _ver._ 9. and these Saints are the same Persons, so far as can be
+collected from the Text, that rose _from the Dead, and reign’d with
+Christ_, and were _Priests to God_, _ver._ 4, 5, 6. Neither is there any
+Distinction made, that I find, by St. _John_, of two sorts of Saints in
+the _Millennium_, the one in Heaven, and the other upon Earth. Lastly,
+the four and twenty Elders, _chap._ v. 10. tho’ they were _Kings_ and
+_Priests unto God_, were content to reign upon Earth. Now who can you
+suppose of a superior Order to these four and twenty Elders? Whether
+they represent the twelve Patriarchs and twelve Apostles, or whomsoever
+they represent, they are plac’d next to him that sits upon the Throne,
+and they have Crowns of Gold upon their Heads, _chap._ iv. 4. _ch._ xi.
+16. There can be no Marks of Honour and Dignity greater than these are;
+and therefore seeing these highest Dignitaries in the Millennium or
+future Kingdom of Christ, are to reign upon Earth, there is no Ground to
+suppose the Assumption of any other into Heaven, upon that Account, or
+upon that Occasion.
+
+This is a short and general Draught of the millennial State, or future
+Reign of the Saints, according to Scripture. Wherein I have endeavour’d
+to rectify some Mistakes or Misconceptions about it; that viewing it in
+its true Nature, we may be the better able to judge, when and where it
+will obtain: which is the next Thing to be consider’d.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. VIII.
+
+
+ _The third Proposition laid down, concerning the Time and Place of
+ the_ Millennium: _Several Arguments us’d, to prove, that it cannot
+ be till after the Conflagration; and that the new Heavens and the
+ new Earth are the true Seat of the blessed_ Millennium.
+
+
+We now come to the third and last Head of our Discourse; to determine
+the _Time_ and _Place_ of the _Millennium_. And seeing it is
+indifferent, whether the Proofs lead or follow the Conclusion, we will
+lay down the Conclusion in the first Place, that our Business may be
+more in View; and back it with Proofs in the following Part of the
+Chapter. Our third and last Proposition therefore is this, _That the
+blessed Millennium, Propos. 3._ (properly so called) _according as it is
+describ’d in Scripture, cannot obtain in the present Earth, nor under
+the present Constitution of Nature and Providence; but it is to be
+celebrated in the new Heavens and new Earth, after the Conflagration._
+This Proposition it may be, will seem a Paradox or Singularity to many,
+even of those that believe a _Millennium_: We will therefore make it the
+Business of this Chapter, to state it, and prove it, by such Arguments
+as are manifestly founded in Scripture and in Reason.
+
+And to prevent Mistakes, we must premise this in the first Place; that
+tho’ the blessed _Millennium_ will not be in this Earth; yet we allow
+that the State of the Church here, will grow much better than it is at
+present. There will be a better Idea of Christianity, and according to
+the Prophecies, a full _Resurrection of the Witnesses_, and an
+_Ascension_ into Power, and the tenth Part of the City will fall; which
+things imply ease from Persecution, the Conversion of some Part of the
+Christian World to the reformed Faith, and a considerable Diminution of
+the Power of Antichrist. But this still comes short of the Happiness and
+Glory wherein the future Kingdom of Christ is represented; which cannot
+come to pass till the _Man of Sin_ be destroyed, with a total
+Destruction. After the Resurrection of the Witnesses, there is a third
+_WOE_ yet to come; and how long that will last, does not appear. If it
+bear proportion with the preceeding _WOES_, it may last some hundreds of
+Years. And we cannot imagine the _Millennium_ to begin till that _WOE_
+be finished: As neither till the _Vials_ be pour’d out, in the xvth
+_chap._ which cannot be all pour’d out till after the Resurrection of
+the Witnesses; those _Vials_ being the last Plagues that compleat the
+Destruction of Antichrist. Wherefore allowing that the Church, upon the
+Resurrection and Ascension of the Witnesses, will be advanc’d into a
+better Condition, yet that Condition cannot be the millennial State;
+where the Beast is utterly destroy’d, and Satan bound, and cast into the
+bottomless Pit.
+
+This being premis’d, let us now examine what Grounds there are for the
+Translation of that blessed State into the _new Heavens_ and _new
+Earth_; seeing that Thought, it may be, to many Persons, will appear new
+and extraordinary. In the first Place, we suppose it out of Dispute,
+that there will be _new Heavens_ and a _new Earth_ after the
+Conflagration. This was our first Proposition, and we depend upon it, as
+sufficiently prov’d both from Scripture and Antiquity. This being
+admitted, how will you flock this _new Earth_? What use will you put it
+to? ’Twill be a much nobler Earth, and better built than the present;
+and ’tis a pity it should only float about, empty and useless in the
+wild Air. If you will not make it the Seat and Habitation of the Just in
+the blessed _Millennium_, what will you make it? How will it turn to
+Account? What hath Providence design’d it for? We must not suppose new
+Worlds made without Counsel or Design. And as, on the one Hand, you
+cannot tell what to do with this new Creation, if it be not thus
+employ’d; so, on the other Hand, it is every way fitted and suited to be
+an happy and _paradisaical_ Habitation, and answers all the natural
+Characters of the millennial State; which is a great Presumption that it
+is design’d for it.
+
+But to argue this more closely upon Scripture-grounds: St. _Peter_ says,
+the Righteous shall inhabit the new Heavens and the new Earth: 2 _Pet._
+iii. 13. _Nevertheless, according to his Promise, we look for new
+Heavens and new Earth_, WHEREIN DWELLETH RIGHTEOUSNESS: that is, a
+righteous People, as we have shewn before. But who are these righteous
+People? That’s the great Question. If you compare St. _Peter_’s new
+Heavens and new Earth with St. _John_’s _Apoc._ xxi. 1, 2. it will go
+far towards the Resolution of this Question: For St. _John_ seems
+plainly to make the Inhabitants of the _new Jerusalem_ to be in this
+_new Earth_. _I saw_, says he, _new Heavens and a new Earth_, and the
+_new Jerusalem descending from God out of Heaven_; therefore descending
+into this _new Earth_, which he had mention’d immediately before. And
+there _the Tabernacle of God was with Men_, _ver._ 3. and there he that
+sat upon the Throne, said, _Behold I make all Things new._ Referring
+still to the new Heavens and new Earth, as the Theatre where all these
+Things are acted, or all these Scenes exhibited; from the first Verse to
+the eighth: Now the _new Jerusalem_ State being the same with the
+Millennial, if the one be in the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_, the
+other is there also. And this Interpretation of St. _John_’s Word is
+confirm’d and fully assur’d to us by the Prophet _Isaiah_; who also
+placeth the Joy and Rejoicing of the _new Jerusalem_ in the new Heavens
+and new Earth, Chap. lxv. 17, 18. _For behold I create new Heavens and a
+new Earth; and the former shall not be remembred: but be you glad and
+rejoice for ever in that which I create; for behold, I create_ Jerusalem
+_a Rejoicing, and her People a Joy_: Namely, in that new Heavens and new
+Earth; which answers to St. _John_’s Vision of the new _Jerusalem_ being
+let down upon the new Earth.
+
+To these Reasons, and Deductions from Scripture, we might add the
+Testimony of several of the Fathers; I mean of those that were
+Millennaries: For we are speaking now to such as believe the
+_Millennium_, but place it in the present Earth before the Renovation;
+whereas the antient _Millennaries_ suppos’d the Regeneration and
+Renovation of the World before the Kingdom of Christ came: As you may
+see in [1]_Irenæus_, [2]_Justin Martyr_, [3]_Tertullian_,
+[4]_Lactantius_, and [5]the Author _ad Orthodoxos_. And the Neglect of
+this, I look upon as one Reason, as we noted before, that brought that
+Doctrine into Discredit and Decay. For when they plac’d the Kingdom of
+the Saints upon this Earth, it became more capable of being abus’d, by
+fanatical Spirits, to the Disturbance of the World, and the Invasion of
+the Rights of the Magistrates, Civil or Ecclesiastical, under that
+Notion of Saints; and made them also dream of sensual Pleasures, such as
+they see in this Life: Or at least gave an Occasion and Opportunity to
+those, that had a Mind to make the Doctrine odious, of charging it with
+these Consequences. All these Abuses are cut off, and these Scandals
+prevented, by placing the Millennium aright: Namely, not in this present
+Life, or on this present Earth, but in the new Creation, where Peace and
+Righteousness will dwell. And this is our first Argument why we place
+the Millennium in the new Heavens and new Earth; and ’tis taken partly,
+you see, from the Reason of the Thing itself, the Difficulty of
+assigning any other use of the new Earth, and its fitness for this; and
+partly from Scripture-evidence, and partly from Antiquity.
+
+The second Argument for our Opinion, is this; the present Constitution
+of Nature will not bear that Happiness, that is promis’d in the
+Millennium, or is not consistent with it. The Diseases of our Bodies,
+the Disorders of our Passions, the Incommodiousness of external Nature;
+Indigency, Servility, and the Unpeaceableness of the World; these are
+things inconsistent with the Happiness that is promis’d in the Kingdom
+of Christ. But these are constant Attendants upon this Life, and
+inseparable from the present State of Nature. Suppose the Millennium was
+to begin nine or ten Years hence, as some pretend it will; how shall
+this World, all of a sudden, be metamorphos’d into that happy State?
+_Apoc._ xxi. 4. No more _Sorrow, nor crying, nor Pain, nor Death_, says
+St. _John_: _All former Things are past away._ But how past away? Shall
+we not have the same Bodies; and the same external Nature; and the same
+Corruptions of the Air; and the same Excesses and Intemperature of
+Seasons? Will there not be the same Barrenness of the Ground, the same
+Number of People to be fed; and must they not get their living by the
+Sweat of their Brows, with servile Labour and Drudgery? How then are all
+former Evils past away? And as to publick Affairs, while there are the
+same Necessities of human Life, and a Distinction of Nations, those
+Nations sometimes will have contrary Interests, will clash and interfere
+one with another; whence Differences, and Contests, and Wars will arise,
+and the _thousand Years Truce_, I am afraid, will be often broken. We
+might add also, that if our Bodies be not chang’d, we shall be subject
+to the same Appetites, and the same Passions; and upon those Vices will
+grow, as bad Fruit upon a bad Tree: To conclude, so long as our Bodies
+are the same, external Nature the same, the Necessities of human Life
+the same; which things are the Roots of Evil; you may call it a
+_Millennium_, or what you please, but there will be still Diseases,
+Vices, Wars, Tears and Cries, Pain and Sorrow in this _Millennium_; and
+if so, ’tis a _Millennium_ of your own making, for that which the
+Prophets describe, is quite another thing.
+
+Farthermore, if you suppose the Millennium will be upon this Earth, and
+begin, it may be, ten or twenty Years hence, how will it be introduc’d?
+How shall we know when we are in it, or when we enter upon it? If we
+continue the same, and all Nature continue the same, we shall not
+discern when we slip into the Millennium. And as to the moral State of
+it, shall we all, on a sudden, _become Kings and Priests to God_?
+Wherein will that Change consist, and how will it be wrought? St. _John_
+makes the _first Resurrection_ introduce the Millennium; and that’s a
+conspicuous Mark and Boundary: But as to the modern or vulgar
+Millennium, I know not how ’tis usher’d in. Whether they suppose a
+visible Resurrection of the Martyrs, and a visible Ascension; and that
+to be a Signal to all the World that the Jubilee is beginning; or
+whether ’tis gradual, and creeps upon us insensibly; or the Fall of the
+Beast marks it: These things need both Explication and Proof: for to me
+they seem either arbitrary or unintelligible.
+
+But to pursue our Design and Subject: That which gives me the greatest
+Scandal in this Doctrine of the vulgar Millennium, is their joining
+Things together that are really inconsistent; a natural World of one
+Colour, and a moral World of another. They will make us happy in spight
+of Nature; as the _Stoicks_ would make a Man happy in _Phalaris his
+Bull_; so must the Saints be in full Bliss in the Millennium, tho’ they
+be under a Fit of the Gout, or the Stone. For my part, I could never
+reconcile Pain to Happiness; it seems to me to destroy and drown all
+Pleasure, as a loud Noise does a still Voice: It affects the Nerves with
+Violence, and over-bears all other Motions. But if, according to this
+modern Supposition, they have the same Bodies, and breath the same Air
+in the Millennium, as we do now, there will be both private and
+epidemical Distempers, in the same Manner as now. Suppose then a Plague
+comes and sweeps away half an hundred thousand Saints in the Millennium,
+is this no Prejudice or Dishonour to the State? Or a War makes a Nation
+desolate; or, in single Persons, a lingring Disease makes Life a
+Burthen; or a burning Fever, or a violent Cholick tortures them to
+Death; where such Evils as these reign, christen the thing what you
+will, it can be no better than a Mock-Millennium. Nor shall I ever be
+persuaded that such a State as our present Life, where an aking Tooth,
+or an aking Head, does so discompose the Soul, as to make her unfit for
+Business, Study, Devotion, or any useful Employment; and that all the
+Powers of the Mind, all its Virtue, and all its Wisdom, are not able to
+stop these little Motions, or to support them with Tranquillity: I can
+never persuade my self, I say, that such a State was design’d by God or
+Nature, for a State of Happiness.
+
+Our third Argument is this; the future Kingdom of Christ will not take
+place, till the Kingdom of Antichrist be wholly destroy’d: But that will
+not be wholly destroy’d till the End of the World, and the appearing of
+our Saviour; therefore the Millennium will not be till then. Christ and
+Antichrist cannot reign upon Earth together; their Kingdoms are
+opposite, as Light and Darkness: Besides, the Kingdom of Christ is
+universal, extends to all the Nations, and leaves no room for other
+Kingdoms at that time. Thus it is describ’d in _Daniel_, in the Place
+mention’d before, _chap._ vii. 13, 14. _I saw in the Night Visions, and
+behold, one like the Son of Man, came with the Clouds of Heaven, and
+came to the Ancient of Days; and there was given him Dominion and Glory,
+and a Kingdom; that all People, Nations, and Languages, should serve
+him._ And again ver. 27. _And the Kingdom and Dominion, and the
+Greatness of the Kingdom under the whole Heaven, shall be given to the
+People of the Saints of the most High; whose Kingdom is an everlasting
+Kingdom, and all Dominion shall serve and obey him._ The same Character
+of Universality is given to the Kingdom of Christ by _David_, _Psal._
+ii. and _Psal._ lxxii. _Isaiah_ ii. 2. and other Prophets. But the most
+direct Proof of this, is from the _Apocalypse_, where the _Beast_ and
+_false Prophet_ are thrown into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone, (_chap._
+xix. 20.) before the Millennium comes on, _chap._ xx. This, _being cast
+into a Lake of Fire burning with Brimstone_, must needs signify utter
+Destruction: Not a Diminution of Power only, but a total Perdition and
+Consumption. And that this was before the Millennium, of the Beast and
+false Prophets being in the Lake of Fire, as of a Thing past, and
+formerly transacted. For when Satan, at length, is thrown into the same
+Lake ’tis said, he is thrown into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone, _where
+the Beast and the false Prophets are_, Apoc. xx. 10. They were there
+before, it seems; namely, at the beginning of the Millennium; and now at
+the Conclusion of it, the Devil is thrown in to them: Besides, the
+Ligation of Satan proves this Point effectually; for so long as
+Antichrist reigns, Satan cannot be said to be bound; but he is bound at
+the Beginning of the Millennium, therefore Antichrist’s Reign was then
+totally expir’d. Lastly, the Destruction of _Babylon_, and the
+Destruction of Antichrist go together; but you see _Babylon_ utterly and
+finally destroy’d, (_Apoc._ xviii. and xix.) before the Millennium comes
+on: I say, _utterly and finally destroy’d_. For she is not only said to
+be made an utter Desolation, but to be consum’d by Fire; and absorpt as
+a Millstone thrown into the Sea; and that he shall be found no more at
+all, _chap._ xviii. 21. Nothing can express a total and universal
+Destruction more effectually, or more emphatically. And this is before
+the Millennium begins; as you may see both by the Order of the
+Prophesies, and particularly, in that upon this Destruction, the
+_Hallelujah_’s are sung, _ch._ xix. and concluded thus, _ver._ 6, 7.
+_Hallelujah, for the God omnipotent reigneth. Let us be glad and
+rejoice, and give Honour to him; for the Marriage of the Lamb is come,
+and his Wife hath made her self ready._ This, I suppose, every one
+allows to be the millennial State, which now approaches, and is making
+ready, upon the Destruction of _Babylon_.
+
+Thus much for the first Part of our Argument, that the Kingdom of Christ
+will not take place, till the Kingdom of Antichrist be wholly destroy’d.
+We are now to prove the second Part, that the Kingdom of Antichrist will
+not be wholly destroy’d till the End of the World, and the coming of our
+Saviour. This, one would think, is sufficiently prov’d from St. _Paul_’s
+Words alone, _2 Thess._ ii. 8. _The Lord shall consume the Man of Sin_,
+who is suppos’d the same with Antichrist, _with the Spirit of his Mouth,
+and shall destroy him with the Brightness of his coming_. He will not
+then be destroyed before the coming of our Saviour; and that will not be
+till the End of the World. For St. _Peter_ says, _Acts_ iii. 21. _The
+Heaven must receive him_, speaking of Christ, _until the Times of
+Restitution of all things_; that is, the Renovation of the World. And if
+we consider that our Saviour’s coming will be in _Flames of Fire_, as
+the same Apostle St. _Paul_ tells us, _2 Thess._ i. 7, 8. ’tis plain,
+that his coming will not be till the Conflagration; in which last Flames
+Antichrist will be universally destroy’d. This Manner of Destruction
+agrees also with the _Apocalypse_ and with _Daniel_, and the Prophets of
+the Old Testament. As to the _Apocalypse_, _Babylon_, the Seat of
+Antichrist, is represented there as destroy’d by Fire, _ch._ xviii. 8,
+18. _ch._ xiv. 11. _ch._ xix. 3, 20. And in _Daniel_, when the Beast is
+destroy’d, _ch._ vii. 11. _His Body was given to the burning Flame._
+Then as to the other Prophets, they do not, you know, speak of
+Antichrist or the Beast in Terms, but under the Types of _Babylon_,
+_Tyre_, and such-like; and these Places or Princes are represented by
+them as to be destroy’d by Fire, _Isa._ xiii. 19. _Jer._ ii. 25. _Ezek._
+xxviii. 18.
+
+So much for this third Argument; the fourth Argument is this; the future
+Kingdom of Christ will not be till the Day of Judgment and the
+Resurrection; but that will not be till the End of the World: Therefore,
+neither the Kingdom of Christ. By the Day of Judgment here, I do not
+mean the final and universal Judgment; nor by the Resurrection, the
+final and universal Resurrection; for these will not be till after the
+Millennium. But we understand here the first Day of Judgment and the
+first Resurrection, which will be at the End of this present World;
+according as St. _John_ does distinguish them, in the xxth _chap._ of
+the _Apocalypse_. Now that the Millennium will not be till the Day of
+Judgment in this Sense, we have both the Testimonies of _Daniel_ and of
+St. _John_. _Daniel_, in _chap._ vii. _ver._ 9, _&c._ _ver._ 26, _&c._
+supposes the Beast to rule _till Judgment shall sit_, and then _they
+shall take away his Dominion_, and it shall be given to the People of
+the Saints of the most High. St. _John_ makes an explicit Declaration of
+both these, in his xxth _chap._ of the _Apocalypse_, which is the great
+Directory in this point of the Millennium; he says there were Thrones
+set, as for a Judicature, _ver._ 4. Then there was a Resurrection from
+the Dead, and those that rise, reigned with Christ a thousand Years:
+Here’s a judicial Session, a Resurrection, and the Reign of Christ
+joined together. There is also another Passage in St. _John_ that joins
+the Judgment of the Dead with the Kingdom of Christ; ’tis in the xith
+Chapter, under the seventh Trumpet; the Words are these, ver. 15. _And
+the seventh Angel sounded, and there were great Voices in Heaven,
+saying, the Kingdoms of this World are become the Kingdoms of our Lord
+and of his Christ; and he shall reign for ever and ever, And the four
+and twenty Elders, &c. And the Nations were angry, and thy Wrath is
+come, and the time of the Dead, that they should be judged, and that
+thou shouldst give Reward unto thy Servants the Prophets, and to the
+Saints, and them that fear thy Name._ Here are two things plainly
+express’d and link’d together, _The judging of the Dead_, and the
+_Kingdom of Christ_; wherein the Prophets and Saints are rewarded. Now
+as the _judging of the Dead_ is not in this Life, so neither is the
+Reward of the Prophets and Saints in this Life; as we are taught
+sufficiently in the Gospel, and by the Apostles, _Mat._ xix. 28. _1
+Thess._ i. 7. 2 _Tim._ iv. 8. 1 _Pet._ i. 7. and _ch._ v. 4. Therefore
+the Reign and Kingdom of Christ, which is joined with these two, cannot
+be in this Life, or before the End of the World: And as a farther
+Testimony and Confirmation of this, we may observe that St. _Paul_ to
+_Timothy_ hath joined together these three things; the _Appearance of
+Christ_, the _Reign of Christ_, and the _judging of the Dead. I charge
+thee therefore before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the
+quick and the dead, at his appearing, and his Kingdom_, 2 Tim. iv. 1.
+
+This might also be prov’d from the Order, Extent and Progress of the
+Prophesies of the _Apocalypse_; whereof some are such as reach to the
+End of the World, and yet must be accomplish’d before the Millennium
+begins, as the Vials. Others are so far already advanc’d towards the End
+of the World, as to leave no room for a thousand Years Reign; as the
+Trumpets. But because every one hath his own Interpretation of these
+Prophesies, and it would be tedious here to prove any single Hypothesis
+in Contradistinction to all the rest, we will therefore leave this
+Remark, to have more or less Effect, according to the Minds it falls
+upon; and proceed to our fifth Argument.
+
+Fifthly, The _new Jerusalem_ State is the same with the millennial
+State; but the _new Jerusalem_ State will not be till the End of the
+World, or till after the Conflagration; therefore neither the
+Millennium: That the _new Jerusalem_ State is the same with the
+Millennium, is agreed upon, I think, by all Millennaries, ancient and
+modern: _Justin Martyr_, _Irenæus_ and _Tertullian_, speak of it in that
+Sense; and so do the latter Authors, so far as I have observed. And St.
+_John_ seems to give them good Authority for it; in the xxth _chap._ of
+the _Apocalypse_, he says, the _Camp of the Saints_, and _the beloved
+City_ were besieg’d by Satan and his gigantick Crew at the End of the
+Millennium: That _beloved City_ is the _new Jerusalem_, and you see it
+is the same with the Camp of the Saints, or, at least, contemporary with
+it. Besides, the Marriage of the Lamb was in, or at the Appearance of
+the _new Jerusalem_, for that was the _Spouse of the Lamb_, Apoc. xxi.
+2. Now this Spouse was ready, and this Marriage was said to be come, at
+the Destruction of _Babylon_, which was the Beginning of the Millennium,
+_chap._ xviii. 7. Therefore the _new Jerusalem_ run all along with the
+Millennium, and was indeed the same thing under another Name. Lastly,
+what is this _new Jerusalem_, if it be not the same with the millennial
+State? It is promis’d a Reward to the Sufferers for Christ _Apoc._ iii.
+12. and you see its wonderful Privileges, _chap._ xxi. 3, 4. and yet it
+is not Heaven and eternal Life; for it is said to come down from God out
+of Heaven, _ch._ xxi. 2. and _ch._ iii. 12. It can therefore be nothing
+but the glorious Kingdom of Christ upon Earth, where the Saints shall
+reign with him a thousand Years.
+
+Now as to the second Part of our Argument, that the _new Jerusalem_ will
+not come down from Heaven till the End of the World; of this St. _John_
+seems to give us a plain Proof or Demonstration; for he places the _new
+Jerusalem_ in the _new Heaven_ and _new Earth_, which cannot be till
+after the Conflagration. Let us hear his Words, _Apoc._ xxi. 1, 2. _And
+I saw a new Heaven and a new Earth, for the first Heaven and the first
+Earth were passed away, and there was no more Sea. And I John saw the
+holy City, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of Heaven; prepared
+as a Bride adorned for her Husband._ When the new Earth was made, he
+sees the _new Jerusalem_ coming down upon it; and this Renovation of the
+Earth not being till the Conflagration, the _new Jerusalem_ could not be
+till then neither. The Prophet _Isaiah_ had long before said the same
+thing, though not in terms so express; he first says, _Behold I create
+new Heavens and a new Earth, wherein you shall rejoice_: Then subjoins
+immediately, _Behold, I create Jerusalem a rejoicing_, Isa. lxv. 17, 18.
+This rejoicing is still in the same Place; in the _new Heavens_ and _new
+Earth_, or in the _new Jerusalem_. And St. _John_, in a like Method,
+first sets down the _new Earth_, then the _new Jerusalem_; and expresses
+the Mind of the Prophet _Isaiah_ more distinctly.
+
+This leads me to a sixth Argument to confirm our Conclusion: The Time of
+the _Restitution_ or _Restauration of all Things_, spoken of by St.
+_Peter_ and the Prophets, is the same with the Millennium; but that
+Restauration will not be till the coming of Christ, and the End of the
+World; therefore neither the Millennium. That this Restitution of all
+things will not be till the coming of our Saviour, St. _Peter_ declares
+in his Sermon, _Acts_ iii. 21. and that the coming of our Saviour will
+not be till the End of the World, or till the Conflagration, both St.
+_Paul_ and St. _Peter_ signify to us, _1 Thess._ i. 7, 8. _2 Pet._ iii.
+10. therefore it remains only to prove, that this Restitution of all
+Things spoken of here by the Apostle, is the same with the Millennium. I
+know that which it does directly and immediately signify, is the
+Renovation of the World: but it must include the moral World as well as
+the Natural; otherwise it cannot be truly said, as St. _Peter_ does
+there, that all the Prophets have spoken of it. And what is the
+Renovation of the natural and moral World, but the _new Jerusalem_ or
+the _Millennium_?
+
+These Arguments, taken together, have, to me, an irresistible Evidence
+for the Proof of our Conclusion; that the blessed Millennium cannot
+obtain in the present Earth, or before the Conflagration; but when
+Nature is renew’d, and the Saints and Martyrs rais’d from the Dead, then
+they shall reign together with Christ, in the _new Heavens_ and _new
+Earth_, or in the _new Jerusalem_; Satan being bound for a thousand
+Years.
+
+Footnote 1:
+
+ _Lib. 5. ch. 32, &c._
+
+Footnote 2:
+
+ Dial. _cum_ Tryph.
+
+Footnote 3:
+
+ _Contra Marc._
+
+Footnote 4:
+
+ _Lib. 7._
+
+Footnote 5:
+
+ _Quest. & respon. 93._
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. IX.
+
+
+ _The chief Employment of the Millennium, DEVOTION and
+ CONTEMPLATION._
+
+
+We have now done with the Substance of our Discourse; which is
+comprehended in these three Propositions:
+
+ I. _After the Conflagration of this World, there will be new Heavens
+ and a new Earth, and that Earth will be inhabited._
+
+ II. _That there is an happy millennial-State, or a future Kingdom of
+ Christ and his Saints, prophesied of and promis’d in the Old and New
+ Testament; and receiv’d by the Primitive Church, as a Christian and
+ Catholick Doctrine._
+
+ III. _That this blessed millennial-State, according as it is
+ describ’d in Scripture, cannot take place in the present Earth, nor
+ under the present Constitution of Nature and Providence; But is to
+ be celebrated in the new Heavens and new Earth, after the
+ Conflagration._
+
+These three Propositions support this Work, and if any of them be
+broken, I confess my Design is broken, and this Treatise is of no
+Effect: But what remains to be spoken to in these last Chapters, is more
+circumstantial or modal; and an Error or Mistake in such things, does
+not wound any vital Part of the Argument. You must not therefore lay
+aside your Severity and rigorous Censures; we are very happy, if, in
+this Life, we can attain to the Substance of Truth; and make rational
+Conjectures concerning Modes and Circumstances, where every one hath
+Right to offer his Sense, with Modesty and Submission. Revelations made
+to us from Heaven in this present State, are often incompleat, and do
+not tell us all; as if it was on purpose to set our Thoughts a-work to
+supply the rest; which we may lawfully do, provided it be according to
+the Analogy of Scripture and Reason.
+
+To proceed therefore; we suppose, as you see, the _new Heavens_ and the
+_new Earth_ to be the Seat of the _Millennium_, and that new Creation to
+be _Paradisiacal_: Its Inhabitants also to be righteous Persons, the
+Saints of the most High. And seeing the ordinary Employments of our
+present Life will then be needless and superseded, as Military-Affairs,
+Sea-Affairs, most Trades and Manufactures, Law, Physick, and the
+laborious part of Agriculture; it may be wonder’d, how this happy People
+will bestow their Time; what Entertainment they will find in a State of
+so much Ease, and so little Action. To this one might answer in short,
+by another Question, _How_ would they have entertain’d themselves in
+Paradise, if Man had continued in Innocency? This is a Revolution of the
+same State, and therefore they may pass Time as well now as they could
+have done then. But to answer more particularly, besides all innocent
+Diversions, ingenuous Conversations, and Entertainments of Friendship,
+the greatest part of their Time will be spent in _Devotion_ and
+_Contemplation_. O happy Employment, and next to that of Heaven it self!
+What do the Saints Above, but sing Praises unto God, and contemplate his
+Perfections! And how mean and despicable, for the most part, are the
+Employments of this present Life, if compar’d with those intellectual
+Actions! If Mankind was divided into ten Parts, nine of those ten employ
+their Time to get Bread to their Belly, and Cloaths to their Back; and
+what Impertinences are these to a reasonable Soul, if she was free from
+the Clog of a mortal Body, or if that could be provided for, without
+Trouble or lots of Time? Corporeal Labour is from Need and Necessity,
+but intellectual Exercises are matter of Choice, that please and perfect
+at the same Time.
+
+Devotion warms and opens the Soul, and disposes it to receive divine
+Influences. It sometimes raises the Mind into an heavenly Ecstasy, and
+fills it with a Joy that is not to be express’d. When it is pure, it
+leaves a strong Impression upon the Heart, of Love to God; and inspires
+us with a Contempt of this World, having tasted the Pleasures of the
+World to come. In the State which we speak of, seeing the _Tabernacle of
+God will be with Men_, _Apoc. xxi. 3_. we may reasonably suppose that
+there will be greater Effusions and Irradiations of the Holy Spirit,
+than we have or can expect in this Region of Darkness; and consequently,
+all the Strength and Comfort that can arise from private Devotion.
+
+And as to their publick Devotions, all Beauties of Holiness, all
+Perfection of divine Worship, will shine in their Assemblies. Whatsoever
+_David_ says of _Sion_ and _Jerusalem_, _Psal. lxxxiv._ are but Shadows
+of this _New Jerusalem_, and of the Glory that will be in those
+Solemnities, _Psal. lxxxvii._ Imagine what a Congregation will be there
+of Patriarchs, Prophets, Apostles, Christian Martyrs, and Saints of the
+first Rank, throughout all Ages: And these all known to one another by
+their Names and History. This very meeting together of such Persons,
+must needs create a Joy unspeakable: But when they unite in their
+Praises to God and to the Lamb, with pure Hearts full of divine Love;
+when they sing their Hallelujahs to him that sits upon the Throne, that
+hath wash’d them in his Blood, and redeem’d them out of every Kingdom,
+and Tongue, and People, and Nation: When, with their Palms in their
+Hands, they triumph over Sin and Death, and Hell, and all the Powers of
+Darkness; can there be any thing, on this side Heaven, and a Choir of
+Angels, more glorious or more joyful?
+
+But why did I except Angels? Why may not they be thought to be present
+at these Assemblies? In a Society of Saints and purified Spirits, why
+should we think their Converse impossible? In the Golden Age, the Gods
+were always represented, as having freer Intercourse with Men; and
+before the Flood, we may reasonably believe it so. I cannot think,
+_Enoch_ was translated into Heaven without any Converse with its
+Inhabitants before he went thither: And seeing the Angels vouchsafed
+often, in former Ages, to visit the Patriarchs upon Earth, we may with
+Reason judge, that they will much more converse with the same Patriarchs
+and holy Prophets, now they are risen from the Dead, and cleans’d from
+their Sins, and seated in the _New Jerusalem_. I cannot but call to
+mind, upon this Occasion, that Representation which St. _Paul_ makes to
+us, of a glorious State and a glorious Assembly, too high for this
+present Earth: ’Tis, (_Hebr. xii. 22_, _&c._) in these Words: _But you
+are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the City of the living God, the
+heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable Company of Angels; to the
+general Assembly and Church of the First-born, which are written in
+Heaven; and to God the Judge of all, and to the Spirits of just Men made
+perfect._ This, I know, several apply to the Times and State of the
+Gospel, in Opposition to that of the Law; and it is introduc’d in that
+manner; but here are several Expressions too high for any present State
+of Things; they must respect a future State, either of Heaven, or of the
+Millennial Kingdom of Christ: And to the latter of these Expressions
+agree, and have a peculiar Fitness and Applicability to it. And what
+follows in the Context, _ver. 26, 27, 28_. _About shaking the Heavens
+and the Earth once more_; removing the former Scenes, and bringing on a
+new Kingdom that cannot be shaken: All this, I say, answers to the
+Kingdom of Christ, which is to be establish’d in the new Heavens and new
+Earth.
+
+But to proceed in their publick Devotions; Suppose this August Assembly,
+inflam’d with all divine Passions, met together to celebrate the Name of
+God, with Angels intermixt, to bear a Part in this holy Exercise: And
+let this Concourse be, not in any Temple made with Hands, but under the
+great Roof Heaven, (the true Temple of the most High,) so as all the Air
+may be fill’d with the chearful Harmony of their Hymns and Hallelujahs:
+Then, in the height of their Devotion, as they sing Praises to the Lamb,
+and to him that sits upon the Throne, suppose the Heavens to open, and
+the Son of God to appear in his Glory, _Apoc. v. 11._ with thousands and
+ten thousands of Angels round about him; that their Eyes may see him,
+who, for their Sakes was crucified upon Earth, now encircled with Light
+and Majesty. This will raise them into as great Transports as human
+Nature can bear: They will wish to be dissolv’d, they will strive to fly
+up to him in the Clouds, or to breathe out their Souls in repeated
+Doxologies of _Blessing, Ch. v. 13. and Honour, and Glory, and Power, to
+him that sits upon the Throne, and to the Lamb, for ever and ever_.
+
+But we cannot live always in the Flames of Devotion; the Weakness of our
+Nature will not suffer us to continue long under such strong Passions,
+and such Intenseness of Mind. The Question is therefore, What will be
+the ordinary Employment of that Life? How will they entertain their
+Thoughts, or spend their Time? For we suppose they will not have that
+multiplicity of frivolous Business that we have now; about our Bodies,
+about our Children; in Trades and Mechanicks; in Traffick and
+Navigation; or Wars by Sea or Land. These things being swept away
+wholly, or in a great Measure, what will come in their Place? How will
+they find Work or Entertainment for a long Life? If we consider, who
+they are that will have a Part in this first Resurrection, and be
+Inhabitants of that World that is to come, we may easily believe that
+the most constant Employment of their Life will be CONTEMPLATION. Not
+that I exclude any innocent Diversions, as I said before; the
+Entertainments of Friendship, or ingenuous Conversation; but the great
+Business and Design of that Life is Contemplation, as preparatory to
+Heaven and eternal Glory. _Ut paulatim assueseant capere Deum, L. 5. c.
+32._ as _Irenæus_ says, that they may, by Degrees, enlarge their
+Capacities, fit and _accustom themselves to receive God_. Or, as he says
+in another Place, _That they may become capable of the Glory of the
+Father_; that is, capable of bearing the Glory and Presence of God;
+capable of the highest Enjoyment of him, which is usually call’d the
+_Beatifical Vision_; and is the Condition of the Blessed in Heaven.
+
+It cannot be deny’d, that in such a Millennial State, where we shall be
+freed from all the Incumbrances of this Life, and provided of better
+Bodies and greater Light of Mind: It cannot be doubted, I say, but that
+we shall then be in a Disposition to make greater Proficiency in the
+Knowledge of all Things, divine and intellectual; and consequently of
+making happy Preparations for our entring upon a further State of Glory:
+For there is nothing certainly does more prepare the Mind of Man for the
+highest Perfections, than Contemplation, with that Devotion which
+naturally flows from it, as Heat follows Light. And this Contemplation
+hath always a greater or less Effect upon the Mind according to the
+Perfection of its Object; so as the Contemplation of the divine Nature
+is, of all others, the most perfective in it self, and to us, according
+to our Capacities and Decree of Abstraction. An _immense Being_ does
+strangely fill the Soul; and Omnipotency, Omnisciency, and infinite
+Goodness, do enlarge and dilate the Spirit, while it fixily looks upon
+them. They raise strong Passions of Love and Admiration, which melt our
+Nature, and transform it into the Mould and Image of that which we
+contemplate: What the Scripture says of our _Transformation_ into the
+divine Likeness; what St. _John_ and the _Platonists_ say of our _Union_
+with God; and whatever is not cant in the _mystical Theology_, when they
+tell us of being deified; all this must spring from these Sources of
+Devotion and Contemplation: They will change and raise us from
+Perfection to Perfection, as from Glory to Glory, into a greater
+Similitude and nearer Station to the divine Nature.
+
+The Contemplation of God and his Works comprehends all Things; for the
+one makes the uncreated World, and the other the created: And as the
+divine Essence and Attributes are the greatest Objects that the Mind of
+Man can set before it self; so next to that are the Effects and
+Emanations of the Divinity, or the Works of the divine Goodness, Wisdom
+and Power in the created World. This hath a vast Extent and Variety, and
+would be sufficient to entertain their Time, in that happy State, much
+longer than a thousand Years; as you will easily grant, if you allow me
+but to point at the several Heads of those Speculations.
+
+The Contemplation of the _created World_ divides it self into three
+Parts; that of the _intellectual_ World; that of the _corporeal_; and
+the Government and Administration of both, which is usually call’d
+_Providence_. These three, drawn into one Thought, with the Reasons and
+Proportions that result from them, compose that GRAND IDEA, which is the
+Treasury and Comprehension of all Knowledge; whereof we have spoken more
+largely in the last Chapter of the second Book of this _Theory_, under
+the Name of the _Mundane Idea_. But at present we shall only mention
+such Particulars, as may be thought proper Subjects for the Meditations
+and Enquiries of those who shall enjoy that happy State which we now
+treat of.
+
+As to the intellectual World, excepting our own Souls, we know little,
+in this Region of Darkness where we are at present, more than bare
+Names: We hear of Angels and Archangels, of Cherubins and Seraphins, of
+Principalities and Powers, and Thrones, and Dominions: We hear the Sound
+of these Words with Admiration, but we know little of their Natures;
+wherein their general Notion, and wherein their Distinction consists;
+what peculiar Excellencies they have, what Offices and Employments, of
+all this we are ignorant; only in general, we cannot but suppose that
+there are more Orders and Degrees of intellectual Beings, betwixt us and
+the Almighty, than there are Kinds or Species of living Creatures upon
+the Face of the Earth; betwixt Man their Lord and Master, and the least
+Worm that creeps upon the Ground; nay, than there are Stars in Heaven,
+or Sands upon the Sea-shore. For there is an infinite Distance and
+Interval betwixt us and God Almighty, and all that is fill’d with
+created Beings of different Degrees of Perfection, still approaching
+nearer and nearer to their Maker. And when this invisible World shall be
+open’d to us, when the Curtain is drawn, and the Celestial Hierarchy set
+in order before our Eyes, we shall despise our selves, and all the petty
+Glories of a mortal Life, as the Dirt under our Feet.
+
+As to the corporeal Universe, we have some Share already in the
+Contemplation and Knowledge of that; though little in Comparison of what
+will be then discover’d. The Doctrine of the Heavens, fixed Stars,
+Planets and Comets, both as to their Matter, Motion and Form, will be
+then clearly demonstrated; and what are Mysteries to us now, will become
+matter of ordinary Conversation: We shall be better acquainted with our
+neighbouring Worlds, and make new Discoveries as to the State of their
+Affairs. The Sun especially, the great Monarch of the planetary Worlds;
+whose Dominion reaches from Pole to Pole, and the Greatness of his
+Kingdom is under the whole Heaven: Who sends his bright Messengers every
+Day through all the Regions of his vast Empire; throwing his Beams of
+Light round about him, swifter and farther than a Thought can follow:
+This noble Creature, I say, will make a good part of their Study in the
+succeeding World. _Eudoxus_, the Philosopher, wish’d he might dye like
+_Phaeton_, in approaching too near to the Sun, provided he could fly so
+near it, and endure it so long, till he had discover’d its Beauty and
+Perfection. Who can blame his Curiosity? Who would not venture far to
+see the Court of so great a Prince, who hath more Worlds under his
+Command than the Emperors of the Earth have Provinces or Principalities?
+Neither does he make his Subjects Slaves to his Pleasure, or Tributaries
+to serve and supply his Wants: On the contrary, they live upon him, he
+nourishes and preserves them; gives them Fruits every Year, Corn, and
+Wine, and all the Comforts of Life: This glorious Body, which now we can
+only gaze upon and admire, will be then better understood. A Mass of
+Light and Flame, and ethereal Matter, ten thousand times bigger than
+this Earth; enlightning and enlivening an Orb that exceeds the Bulk of
+our Globe, as much as that does the least Sand upon the Sea-shore, may
+reasonably be presum’d to have some great Being at the Centre of it; but
+what that is we must leave to the Enquiries of another Life.
+
+The _Theory of the Earth_ will be a common Lesson there; carried through
+all its Vicissitudes and Periods from first to last, till its entire
+Revolution be accomplish’d. I told you in the Preface, the _Revolution
+of the World_ was one of the greatest Speculations that we are capable
+of in this Life; and this little World where we are, will be the first
+and easiest Instance of it, seeing we have Records, Historical, or
+Prophetical, that reach from the Chaos to the End of the new Heavens and
+new Earth; which course of Time makes up the greatest part of the Circle
+or Revolution. And as what was before the Chaos, was but, in my Opinion,
+the first Remove from a fixed Star, so what is after the thousand Years
+Renovation, is but the last Step to it again.
+
+The _Theory of human Nature_ is also an useful and necessary
+Speculation, and will be carried on to Perfection in that State. Having
+fix’d the true Distinction betwixt Matter and Spirit, betwixt the Soul
+and the Body, and the true Nature and Laws of their Union, the original
+Contract, and the Terms ratified by Providence at their first
+Conjunction, it will not be hard to discover the Springs of Action and
+Passion; how the Thoughts of our Mind and the Motions of our Body act in
+dependance one upon another. What are the primary Differences of
+Genius’s and Complexions, and how our Intellectuals or Morals depend
+upon them? What is the Root of Fatality, and how far it extends? By
+these Lights they will see into their own and every Man’s Breast, and
+trace the Foot-steps of the divine Wisdom in that strange Composition of
+Soul and Body.
+
+This indeed is a mix’d Speculation, as most others are, and takes in
+something of both Worlds, intellectual and corporeal; and may also
+belong in part to the third Head we mention’d, _Providence_: But there
+is no need of distinguishing these Heads so nicely, provided we take in,
+under some or other of them, what may be thought best to deserve our
+Knowledge now, or in another World. As to _Providence_, what we intend
+chiefly by it here, is the general Oeconomy of our Religion, and what is
+reveal’d to us in Scripture, concerning God, Angels, and Mankind. These
+Revelations, as most in Sacred Writ, are short and incompleat; as being
+design’d for Practice more than for Speculation, or to awaken and excite
+our Thoughts rather than to satisfy them. Accordingly, we read in
+Scripture of a Triune Deity; of God made Flesh in the Womb of a Virgin;
+barbarously crucified by the _Jews_; descending into Hell; rising again
+from the Dead; visibly ascending into Heaven; and sitting at the Right
+Hand of God the Father, above Angels and Archangels. These great things
+are imperfectly revealed to us in this Life; which we are to believe so
+far as they are revealed, in hopes these Mysteries will be made more
+intelligible in that happy State to come, where Prophets, Apostles and
+Angels, will meet in Conversation together.
+
+In like manner, how little is it we understand concerning the _Holy
+Ghost_? that he descended like a _Dove_ upon our Saviour, _Mat. iii.
+16._ Like cloven Tongues of Fire upon the Apostles the Place being
+fill’d with a rushing mighty Wind, _Acts ii._ That he over shadow’d the
+blessed Virgin, and begot the Holy Infant, _Mat. i. 18._ That he made
+the Apostles speak all sorts of Tongues and Languages _ex tempore_, and
+pour’d out strange Virtues and miraculous Gifts upon the Primitive
+Christians, _Luke i. 35._ These things we know as bare Matter of Fact,
+but the Method of these Operations we do not at all understand. Who can
+tell us now, what that is which we call INSPIRATION? What Change is
+wrought in the Brain, and what in the Soul, and how the Effect follows?
+Who will give us the just Definition of a _Miracle_? What the proximate
+Agent is above Man, and whether they are all from the same Power? How
+the Manner and Process of those miraculous Changes in Matter may be
+conceiv’d? These Things we see darkly, and hope they will be set in a
+clearer Light, and the Doctrines of our Religion more fully expounded to
+us, in that future World. For as several things obscurely express’d in
+the Old Testament, are more clearly reveal’d in the New; so the same
+Mysteries, in a succeeding State, may still receive a farther
+Explication.
+
+The History of the Angels, good or bad, makes another Part of this
+providential System. Christian Religion gives us some Notices of both
+Kinds, but very imperfect; what Interest the good Angels have in the
+Government of the World, and in ordering the Affairs of this Earth and
+Mankind? What Subjection they have to our Saviour? And what Part in his
+Ministry? Whether they are Guardians to particular Persons, to Kingdoms,
+to Empires? All that we know at present, concerning these Things, is but
+conjectural. And as to the bad Angels, who will give us an Account of
+their Fall and of their former Condition? I had rather know the History
+of _Lucifer_, than of all the _Babylonian_ and _Persian_ Kings; nay,
+than of all the Kings of the Earth. What the Birth-right was of that
+mighty Prince? What his Dominions? Where his Imperial Court and
+Residence? How he was depos’d? For what Crime, and by what Power? How he
+still wages War against Heaven, in his Exile? What Confederates he hath?
+What is his Power over Mankind, and how limited? What Change or Damage
+he suffer’d by the Coming of Christ, and how it alter’d the Posture of
+his Affairs? Where he will be imprison’d in the _Millennium_; and what
+will be his last Fate and final Doom? whether he may ever hope for a
+Revolution or Restauration? These things lie hid in the secret Records
+of Providence, which then, I hope, will be open’d to us.
+
+With the Revolution of _Worlds_, we mention’d before the Revolution of
+_Souls_; which is another great Circle of Providence, to be studied
+hereafter: We know little here, either of the Pre-existence or
+Post-existence of our Souls. We know not what they will be, till the
+loud Trump awakes us, and calls us again into the corporeal World. Who
+knows how many Turns he shall take upon this Stage of the Earth, and how
+many Trials he shall have, before his Doom will be finally concluded?
+Who knows where, or what, is the State of Hell? Where the Souls of the
+Wicked are said to be for ever? What is the true State of Heaven? What
+our celestial Bodies? and, what that sovereign Happiness that is call’d
+the _Beatifical Vision_? Our Knowledge and Conceptions of these things
+are, at present, very general and superficial; but in the future Kingdom
+of Christ, which is introductory to Heaven it self, these Imperfections,
+in a great measure, will be done away; and such Preparations wrought,
+both in the Will and Understanding, as may fit us for the Life of
+Angels, and the Enjoyment of God in eternal Glory.
+
+Thus you see in general, what will be the Employment of the Saints in
+the blessed _Millennium_: And tho’ they have few of the trifling
+Businesses of this Life, they will not want the best and noblest of
+Diversions. ’Tis an happy thing when a Man’s Pleasure is also his
+Perfection; for most Men’s Pleasures are such as debase their Nature. We
+commonly gratify our lower Faculties, our Passions, and our Appetites;
+and these do not improve, but depress the Mind; and besides they are so
+gross that the finest Tempers are surfeited in a little time. There is
+no lasting Pleasure but _Contemplation_; all others grow flat and
+insipid upon frequent Use; and when a Man hath run thorow a Set of
+Vanities, in the Declension of his Age he knows not what to do with
+himself, if he cannot Think; he saunters about, from one dull Business
+to another to wear out time; and hath no Reason to value Life, but
+because he is afraid of Death: But Contemplation is a continual Spring
+of fresh Pleasures. Truth is inexhausted, and when once you are in the
+right Way, the farther you go, the greater Discoveries you make, and
+with the greater Joy. We are sometimes highly pleased, and even
+transported, with little inventions in Mathematicks, or Mechanicks, or
+natural Philosophy; all these things will make part of their Diversion
+and Entertainment in that State, all the Doctrine of Sounds and Harmony,
+of Light, Colours, and Perspective, will be known in Perfection: But
+these I call Diversions, in comparison of their higher and more serious
+Speculations, which will be the Business and Happiness of that Life.
+
+Do but imagine, that they will have the Scheme of all humane Affairs
+lying before them, from the Chaos to the last Period; the universal
+History and Order of Times; the whole Oeconomy of the Christian
+Religion, and of all the Religions in the World; the Plan of the
+Undertaking of the Messiah, with all other Parts and Ingredients of the
+Providence of this Earth: Do but imagine this, I say, and you will
+easily allow, that when they contemplate the Beauty, Wisdom and Goodness
+of the whole Design, it must needs raise great and noble Passions, and a
+far richer Joy than either the Pleasures or Speculations of this Life
+can exite in us; and this being the last Act and Close of all human
+Affairs, it ought to be the more exquisite and elaborate, that it may
+crown the Work, satisfy the Spectators, and end in a general Applause;
+the whole Theatre resounding with the Praises of the great Dramatist,
+and the wonderful Art and Order of the Composition.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAP. X.
+
+
+ _Objections against the Millennium, answer’d. With some Conjectures
+ concerning the State of Things after the Millennium; and what will
+ be the final Consummation of this World._
+
+
+You see how Nature and Providence have conspir’d, to make the
+_Millennium_ as happy a State, as any terrestrial State can be: For,
+besides Health and Plenty, Peace, Truth, and Righteousness will flourish
+there, and all the Evils of this Life stand excluded. There will be no
+ambitious Princes, studying Mischief one against another, or contriving
+Methods to bring their own Subjects into Slavery; no mercenary Statesmen
+to assist and intrigue with them, no Oppression from the Powerful, no
+Snares or Traps laid for the Innocent, no treacherous Friends, no
+malicious Enemies, no Knaves, Cheats, Hypocrites; the Vermin of this
+Earth, that swarm every where. There will be nothing but Truth, Candor,
+Sincerity and Ingenuity; as in a Society or Commonwealth of Saints and
+Philosophers: In a Word, ’twill be _Paradise restor’d_, both as to
+Innocency of Temper, and the Beauties of Nature.
+
+I believe you will be apt to say, if this be not true, ’tis pity but it
+should be true: For ’tis a very desirable State, where all good People
+would find themselves mightily at ease. What is it that hinders it then?
+It must be some ill _Genius_; for Nature tends to such a Renovation, as
+we suppose; and Scripture speaks loudly of an happy State to be some
+time or other on this side Heaven: And what is there, pray, in this
+present World, Natural and Moral, if I may ask with Reverence, that
+could make it worth the while for God to create it, if it never was
+better, nor ever will be better? Is there not more Misery than
+Happiness? Is there not more Vice than Virtue in this World? As if it
+had been made by a _Manichean_ God. The Earth barren, the Heavens
+inconstant; Men wicked and God offended: This is the Posture of our
+Affairs, such hath our World been hitherto, with Wars and Bloodshed,
+Sickness, and Diseases, Poverty, Servitude and perpetual Drudgery for
+the Necessaries of a mortal Life. We may therefore reasonably hope, from
+a God infinitely good and powerful, for better Times and a better State,
+before the last Period and Consummation of all Things.
+
+But it will be objected, it may be, that, according to Scripture, the
+Vices and Wickedness of Men will continue to the End of the World; and
+so there will be no room for such an happy State, as we hope for, _Luk.
+xviii. 8_. Our Saviour says, _When the Son of Man cometh, shall he find
+Faith upon the Earth?_ They shall _eat and drink and play_, as before
+the Destruction of the _old World_, or of _Sodom_, (_Luke xvii. 26_,
+_&c._) and the Wickedness of those Men, you know, continued to the last.
+This Objection may pinch those that suppose the Millennium to be in the
+present Earth, and a thousand Years before the coming of our Saviour;
+for his Words seem to imply that the World will be in a State of
+Wickedness even till his coming. Accordingly Antichrist or the _Man of
+Sin_, is not said to be destroy’d till the coming of our Saviour, _2
+Thess. ii. 8_. and till he be destroy’d, we cannot hope for a
+Millennium. Lastly, The coming of our Saviour is always represented in
+Scripture as sudden, surprizing and unexpected; as _Lightning_ breaking
+suddenly out of the Clouds, (_Luke xvii. 24._ and _ch. xxi. 34, 35_.) or
+as a _Thief in the Night_, _1 Thess. v. 2, 3, 4._ _2 Pet. iii. 10._
+_Apoc. xvi. 15._ But if there be such a Fore-runner of it as the
+millennial State, whose Bounds we know, according as that expires and
+draws to an End, Men will be certainly advertis’d of the approaching of
+our Saviour: But this Objection, as I told you, does not affect our
+Hypothesis, for we suppose the Millennium will not be till after the
+coming of our Saviour, and the Conflagration. And also that his coming
+will be sudden and surprising; and that Antichrist will continue in
+being, tho’ not in the same degree of Power, till that time: So that
+they that place the Millennium in the present Earth, are chiefly
+concern’d to answer this first Objection.
+
+But you will object, it may be, in the second Place, that this
+Millennium, wheresoever it is, would degenerate at length into
+Sensuality, and a _Mahometan Paradise:_ For where there are earthly
+Pleasures and earthly Appetites, they will not be kept always in order
+without any Excess or Luxuriancy; especially as to the Senses to Touch
+and Taste. I am apt to think this is true, if the Soul have no more
+Power over the Body than she hath at present, and our Senses, Passions,
+and Appetites be as strong as they are now: But according to our
+Explication of the Millennium, we have great Reason to hope, that the
+Soul will have a greater Dominion over the Resurrection-Body, than she
+hath over this; and you know we suppose that none will truly inherit the
+Millennium, but those that rise from the Dead: Nor do we admit any
+Propagation there, nor the Trouble or Weakness of Infants. But that all
+rise in a perfect Age, and never die; being translated, at the final
+Judgment, to meet our Saviour in the Clouds, and to be with him for
+ever: Thus we easily avoid the Force of this Objection. But those that
+place the Millennium in this Life, and to be enjoy’d in these Bodies,
+must find out some new Preservatives against Vice, otherwise they will
+be continually subject to Degeneracy.
+
+Another Objection may be taken from the personal Reign of Christ upon
+Earth, which is a thing incongruous, and yet asserted by many modern
+Millennaries; that Christ should leave that Right-Hand of his Father, to
+come and pass a thousand Years here below, living upon Earth in an
+heavenly Body: This, I confess, is a thing I never could digest, and
+therefore I am not concern’d in this Objection; not thinking it
+necessary that Christ should be personally present and resident upon
+Earth in the Millennium. I am apt to believe that there will be then a
+celestial Presence of Christ, or a _Shekinah_, as we noted before; as
+the Sun is present to the Earth, yet never leaves its Place in the
+Firmament; so Christ may be visibly conspicuous in his heavenly Throne,
+as he was to St. _Stephen_, _Acts vii. 55, 56_. and yet never leave the
+Right Hand of his Father. And this would be a more glorious and
+illustrious Presence, than if he should descend, and converse amongst
+Men in a personal Shape: But these things not being distinctly reveal’d
+to us, we ought not to determine any thing concerning them, but with
+Modesty and Submission.
+
+We have thus far pretty well escap’d, and kept our selves out of the
+reach of the ordinary Objections against the Millennium: But there
+remains one, concerning a _double Resurrection_, which must fall upon
+every Hypothesis, and ’tis this. The Scripture, they say, speaks but of
+one Resurrection; whereas the Doctrine of the Millennium supposes two;
+one at the Beginning of the Millennium, for the Martyrs, and those that
+enjoy that happy State, and the other at the End of it; which is
+universal and final, in the last Day of Judgment. ’Tis true, Scripture
+generally speaks of the Resurrection in gross; without distinguishing
+first and second; and so it speaks of the _Coming_ of our Saviour,
+without Distinction of first or second yet it does not follow from that,
+that there is but one coming of our Saviour, so neither that there is
+but one Resurrection. And seeing there is one place of Scripture that
+speaks distinctly of two Resurrections, namely, the _xxth chap._ of the
+_Apocalypse_, that is to us a sufficient Warrant for asserting two; as
+there are some things in one Evangelist that are not in another, yet we
+think them authentick if they be but in one: There are also some things
+in _Daniel_, concerning the _Messiah_, and concerning the
+_Resurrection_, that are not in the rest of the Prophets; yet we look
+upon his single Testimony as good Authority. St. _John_ wrote the last
+of all the Apostles, and as the whole Series of his Prophecies is new,
+reaching through the latter Times to the Consummation of all Things; so
+we cannot wonder if he had something more particular reveal’d to him
+concerning the Resurrection: That which was spoken of before in general,
+being distinguish’d now into _first_ and _second_, or particular and
+universal, in this last Prophet. _See Mr. Mede._ Some think St. _Paul_
+means no less, when he makes an _Order_ in the Resurrection; some rising
+sooner, some later, _1 Cor. xv. 23, 24_, _1 Thess.. iv. 14, 15_, _&c._
+but whether that be so or no, St. _John_ might have a more distinct
+Revelation concerning it, than St. _Paul_ had, or any one before him.
+
+After these Objections, a great many Queries and Difficulties might be
+propos’d relating to the Millennium: But that’s no more than what is
+found in all other Matters, remote from our Knowledge. Who can answer
+all the Queries that may be made concerning _Heaven_, or _Hell_, or
+_Paradise_? When we know a Thing as to the Substance, we are not to let
+go our Hold, tho’ there remain some Difficulties unresolv’d; otherwise
+we should be eternally sceptical in most Matters of Knowledge.
+Therefore, tho’ we cannot, for Example, give a full Account of the
+Distinction of Habitations and Inhabitants in the _future Earth_; or, of
+the Order of the _first Resurrection_, whether it be perform’d by
+degrees and successively, or all the Inhabitants of the _new Jerusalem_
+rise at once, and continue throughout the whole Millennium: I say, tho’
+we cannot give a distinct Account of these, or such like Particulars, we
+ought not therefore to deny or doubt whether there will be a _new
+Earth_, or a _first Resurrection_. For the Revelation goes clearly so
+far, and the Obscurity is only in the Consequences and Dependences of
+it; which Providence thought fit, without farther Light, to leave to our
+Search and Disquisition.
+
+Scripture mentions one Thing, at the End of the Millennium, which is a
+common Difficulty to all; and every one must contribute their best
+Thoughts and Conjectures towards the Solution of it: ’Tis the strange
+Doctrine of _Gog_ and _Magog_, _Apoc. xx. 8, 9_. which are to rise up in
+Rebellion against the Saints, and besiege the holy City, and the holy
+Camp: And this is to be upon the Expiration of the thousand Years, when
+Satan is loosen’d; for no sooner will his Chains be knock’d off, but he
+will put himself in the Head of this Army of Giants, or Sons of the
+Earth, and attack Heaven, and the Saints of the most High: But with ill
+Success, for there will come down Fire and Lightning from Heaven, and
+consume them. This, methinks, hath a great Affinity with the History of
+the Giants, rebelling and assaulting Heaven, and struck down by
+Thunder-Bolts: But that of setting Mountains upon Mountains, or tossing
+them into the Sky, that’s the poetical Part, and we must not expect to
+find it in the Prophecy. The Poets told their Fable, as of a thing past,
+and so it was a Fable; but the Prophets speak of it, as of a Thing to
+come, and so it will be a Reality: But how and in what Sense it is to be
+understood and explain’d, every one has the Liberty to make the best
+Judgment he can.
+
+_Ezekiel_ mentions _Gog_ and _Magog_, _ch._ xxxviii. and xxxix. which I
+take to be only Types and Shadows of these which we are now speaking of,
+and not yet exemplify’d, no more than his Temple. And seeing this People
+is to be at the End of the _Millennium_, and in the same Earth with it,
+we must, according to our Hypothesis, plant them in the future Earth,
+and therefore all former Conjectures about the _Turks_, or _Scythians_,
+or other _Barbarians_, are out of Doors with us, seeing the Scene of
+this Action does not lie in the present Earth: They are also represented
+by the Prophet, as a People distinct and separate from the Saints, not
+in their Manners only, but also in their Seats and Habitations; for
+(_Apoc. xx. 8, 9._) they are said to come up from the four Corners of
+the Earth, upon the Breadth of the Earth, and there to besiege the _Camp
+of the Saints and the beloved City_: This makes it seem probable to me,
+that there will be a double Race of Mankind in that _future Earth_; very
+different one from another, both as to their Temper and Disposition, and
+as to their Origin: The one born from Heaven, Sons of God, and of the
+Resurrection, who are the true Saints and Heirs of the _Millennium_. The
+other born of the Earth, Sons of the Earth, generated from the Slime of
+the Ground, and the Heat of the Sun, as brute Creatures were at first:
+This second Progeny or Generation of Men in the future Earth, I
+understand to be signified by the Prophet under these borrowed or
+feigned Names of _Gog_ and _Magog_: And this Earth-born Race, increasing
+and multiplying after the Manner of Men, by carnal Propagation, after a
+thousand Years, grew numerous, as the Sand by the Sea; and thereupon
+made an Irruption or Inundation upon the Face of the Earth, and upon the
+Habitations of the Saints; as the barbarous Nations did formerly upon
+Christendom; or as the Giants are said to have made War against the
+Gods: But they were soon confounded in their impious and sacrilegious
+Design, being struck and consum’d by Fire from Heaven.
+
+Some will think, it may be, that there was such a double Race of Mankind
+in the first World also: _The Sons of Adam, and the Sons of God_;
+because it is said, _Gen. vi._ _When Men began to multiply upon the Face
+of the Earth_, that _the SONS OF GOD SAW THE DAUGHTERS OF MEN, that they
+were fair, and they took them Wives of all that they lik’d._ And it is
+added, presently, _ver. 4._ _There were Giants in the Earth in those
+Days; and also after that, when the Sons of God came in unto the
+Daughters of Men, and they bare Children to them; the same became mighty
+Men, which were of old, Men of Renown._ Here seem to be two or three
+Orders or Races in this Ante-diluvian World. _The Sons of God; the Sons
+and Daughters of Adam_; and a third Sort arising from the Mixture and
+Copulation of these, which are call’d _Mighty Men of old_, or Heroes.
+Besides, here are Giants mention’d, and to which they are to be reduc’d,
+it does not certainly appear.
+
+This Mixture of these two Races, whatsoever they were, gave, it seems,
+so great Offence to God, that he destroy’d that World upon it, in a
+Deluge of Water. It hath been matter of great Difficulty to determine,
+who these _Sons of God_ were, that fell in Love with and married the
+Daughters of Men. There are two Conjectures that prevail most; one, that
+they were Angels; and another, that they were of the Posterity of
+_Seth_, and distinguished from the rest, by their Piety, and the Worship
+of the true God; so that it was a great Crime for them to mingle with
+the rest of Mankind, who are suppos’d to have been Idolaters: Neither of
+these Opinions is to me satisfactory. For as to Angels, good Angels
+neither _marry, nor are given in Marriage_, _Mat. xxii. 30._ and bad
+Angels are not called the _Sons of God_. Besides, if Angels were capable
+of those mean Pleasures, we ought in Reason to suppose, that there are
+Female Angels, as well as Male; for surely those Capacities are not in
+vain through a whole _Species_ of Beings. And if there be Female Angels,
+we cannot imagine, but that they must be of a far more charming Beauty
+than the dowdy Daughters of Men. Then as to the Line of _Seth_, it does
+not appear that there was any such Distinction of Idolaters and true
+Worshipers before the Flood, or that there was any such thing as
+Idolatry at that time, nor for some Ages after. Besides, it is not said,
+that the Sons of God fell in Love with the Daughters of _Cain_, or of
+any degenerate Race, but with the Daughters of _Adam_; which may be the
+Daughters of _Seth_, as well as of any other: These Conjectures
+therefore seem to be shallow and ill-grounded. But what the Distinction
+was of those two Orders, remains yet very uncertain.
+
+St. _Paul_ to the _Galatians_, (_chap. iv. 21, 22_, _&c._) makes a
+Distinction also of a double Progeny; that of _Sarah_, and that of
+_Hagar_: One was born according to the Flesh, after a natural Manner;
+and the other by the divine Power, or in virtue of the divine Promise.
+This Distinction of a natural and supernatural Origin, and of a double
+Progeny; the one born to Servitude, the other to Liberty, represents
+very well either the Manner of our present Birth, and of our future, at
+the Resurrection; or that double Progeny and double manner of Birth,
+which we suppose in the _future Earth_. ’Tis true, St. _Paul_ applies
+this to the Law and the Gospel; but typical Things, you know, have
+different Aspects and Complexions, which are not exclusive of one
+another; and so it may be here. But however, this double Race of Mankind
+in the future Earth, to explain the Doctrine of _Gog_ and _Magog_, is
+but a Conjecture; and does not pretend to be otherwise considered.
+
+The last Thing that remains to be considered and accounted for, is the
+Upshot and Conclusion of all; namely, what will become of the Earth
+after the thousand Years expir’d? Or after the Day of Judgment past, and
+the Saints translated into Heaven, what will be the Face of Things here
+below? There being nothing expresly reveal’d concerning this, we must
+not expect a positive Resolution of it: And the Difficulty is not
+peculiar to our Hypothesis; for though the _Millennium_, and the final
+Judgment, were concluded in the present Earth, the Quære would still
+remain, _What_ would become of this Earth after the last Day? So that
+all Parties are equally concern’d, and equally free, to give their
+Opinion, _What_ will be the _last State and Consummation_ of this Earth:
+Scripture, I told you, hath not defin’d this Point; and the Philosophers
+say very little concerning it. The Stoicks indeed speak of the final
+Resolution of all things into _Fire_, or into _Ether_: which is the
+purest and subtlest sort of Fire: So that the whole Globe or Mass of the
+Earth, and all particular Bodies, will, according to them, be at last
+dissolv’d into a liquid Flame. Neither was this Doctrine first invented
+by the Stoicks; _Heraclitus_ taught it long before them, and I take it
+to be as ancient as _Orpheus_ himself; who was the first Philosopher
+amongst the _Greeks_: And he deriving his Notions from the _Barbarick_
+Philosophers, or the Sages of the _East_, that School of Wisdom may be
+look’d upon as the true Seminary of this Doctrine, as it was of most
+other natural Knowledge.
+
+But this Dissolution of the Earth into Fire, may be understood two Ways;
+either that it will be dissolv’d into a loose Flame, and so dissipated
+and lost as Lightning in the Air, and vanish into nothing; or that it
+will be dissolv’d into a fix’d Flame, such as the Sun is, or a fix’d
+Star. And I am of Opinion, that the Earth after the last Day of
+Judgment, will be chang’d into the Nature of a Sun, or of a fix’d Star,
+and shine like them in the Firmament: Being all melted down into a Mass
+of æthereal Matter, and enlightning a Sphere or Orb round about it. I
+have no direct and demonstrative Proof of this I confess, but if Planets
+were once fixed Stars, as I believe they were, their Revolution to the
+same State again, in a great Circle of Time, seems to be according to
+the Methods of Providence, which loves to recover what was lost or
+decay’d, after certain Periods, and what was originally good and happy,
+to make it so again, all Nature, at last, being transform’d into a like
+Glory with the Sons of God, (_Rom._ viii. 21.)
+
+I will not tell you what Foundation there is in Nature, for this Change
+or Transformation from the interiour Constitution of the Earth, and the
+Instances we have seen of new Stars appearing in the Heavens. I should
+lead the _English_ Reader too far out of his Way, to discourse of these
+things: But if there be any Passages or Expressions in Scripture, that
+countenance such a State of things after the Day of Judgment, it will
+not be improper to take Notice of them. That radiant and illustrious
+_Jerusalem_, describ’d by St. _John Apoc._ xxi. _ver._ 10, 11, 12, &c.
+compos’d all of Gemms and bright Materials, clear and sparkling, as a
+Star in the Firmament: Who can give an Account what that is? Its
+Foundations, Walls, Gates, Streets, all the Body of it, resplendent as
+Light or Fire? What is there in Nature, or in this Universe, that bears
+any Resemblance with such a Phænomenon as this, unless it be a Sun or a
+fix’d Star? Especially if we add and consider what follows, _ver._ 23.
+That _the City had no need of the Sun, nor of the Moon to shine in it_,
+_ver. 25_. And that _there was no Night there_. This can be no
+terrestrial Body; it must be a Substance luminous in it self, and a
+Fountain of Light, as a fix’d Star: And upon such a Change of the Earth,
+or Transformation, as this, would _be brought to pass the Saying that is
+written_, DEATH IS SWALLOWED UP IN VICTORY. Which indeed St. _Paul_
+seems to apply to our Bodies in particular, _1 Cor. xv. 54_. But in the
+eighth Chap. to the _Romans_ he extends it to all Nature, _ver. 21_.
+_The Creation it self also shall be deliver’d from the Bondage of
+Corruption, into the glorious Liberty of the Sons of God._ And
+accordingly St. _John_, speaking of the same Time with St. _Paul_ in
+that Place to the _Corinthians_, namely, of the general Resurrection and
+Day of Judgement, says, _Death_ and _Hades_, which we render Hell, _were
+cast into the Lake of Fire, Apoc. xx. 14._ This is their being
+_swallowed up in Victory_, which St. _Paul_ speaks of; when _Death_ and
+_Hades_, that is, all the Region of Mortality, the Earth and all its
+Dependences, are absorpt into a Mass of Fire; and converted, by a
+glorious Victory over the Powers of Darkness, into a luminous Body and a
+Region of Light.
+
+This great Issue and Period of the Earth, and of all human Affairs, tho’
+it seem to be founded in Nature, and supported by several Expressions of
+Scripture; yet we cannot, for want of full Instruction, propose it
+otherwise than as a fair Conjecture: The Heavens and the Earth shall
+flie away at the Day of Judgment, says the Text, _Apoc. xx. 11_. _And
+their Place shall not be found._ This must be understood of our Heavens
+and our Earth; and their _flying away_ must be their removing to some
+other Part of the Universe, so as their Place or Residence shall not be
+found any more here below. This is the easy and natural Sense of the
+Words; and this Translation of the Earth will not be without some Change
+preceeding, that makes it leave its Place, and, with a lofty Flight,
+takes its Seat amongst the Stars.——There we leave it; having conducted
+it for the Space of seven thousand Years thro’ various Changes, from a
+_dark Chaos to a bright Star_.
+
+_FINIS._
+
+
+
+
+ A REVIEW Of the SACRED Theory of the Earth,
+
+ And of its
+
+ PROOFS:
+
+ Especially in Reference to
+
+ SCRIPTURE.
+
+ _LONDON_:
+ Printed for J. HOOKE in _Fleet-street_.
+
+ A Review.
+
+
+
+
+To take a _Review_ of this _Theory_ of the _Earth_, which we have now
+finish’d, we must consider, first, the Extent of it, and then the
+principal Parts whereof it consists: It reaches, as you see, from one
+End of the World to the other; from the first Chaos to the last Day, and
+the Consummation of all Things. This probably, will run the length of
+seven thousand Years; which is a good competent Space of Time to
+exercise our Thoughts upon, and to observe the several Scenes which
+Nature and Providence bring into View within the Compass of so many
+Ages.
+
+The Matter and principal Parts of this _Theory_ are such things as are
+recorded in Scripture: We do not feign a Subject, and then discant upon
+it, for Diversion; but endeavour to give an intelligible and rational
+Account of such Matters of Fact, past or future, as are there specified
+and declared. What it hath seem’d good to the Holy Ghost to communicate
+to us, by History or Prophecy, concerning the several States and general
+Changes of this Earth, makes the Argument of our Discourse: Therefore
+the Things themselves must be taken for granted, in one Sense or other,
+seeing, besides all other Proofs, they have the Authority of a
+Revelation; and our Business is only to give such an Explication of
+them, as shall approve it self to the Faculties of Man, and be
+conformable to Scripture.
+
+We will therefore first set down the Things themselves, that make the
+subject Matter of this _Theory_; and remind you of our Explication of
+them: Then recollect the general Proofs of that Explication, from Reason
+and Nature; but more fully and particularly shew how it is grounded upon
+Scripture. The primary _Phænomena_ whereof we are to give an Account,
+are these five or six.
+
+ I. _The Original of the Earth from a Chaos._
+
+ II. _The State of Paradise, and the antediluvian World._
+
+ III. _The universal Deluge._
+
+ IV. _The universal Conflagration._
+
+ V. _The Renovation of the World, or the new Heavens and new Earth._
+
+ VI. _The Consummation of all Things._
+
+These are unquestionably in Scripture; and these all relate, as you see,
+to the several Forms, States and Revolutions of this Earth. We are
+therefore oblig’d to give a clear and coherent Account of these
+_Phænomena_, in that Order and Consecution wherein they stand to one
+another.
+
+There are also in Scripture some other Things, relating to the same
+Subjects, that may be call’d the secondary Ingredients of this _Theory_,
+and are to be referr’d to their respective primary Heads. Such are, for
+Instance,
+
+ I. _The Longevity of the Ante-diluvians._
+
+ II. _The Rupture of the great Abyss, at the Deluge._
+
+ III. _The appearing of the Rainbow after the Deluge, as a Sign that
+ there never should be a second Flood._
+
+These things Scripture hath also left upon Record, as Directions and
+Indications how to understand the ante-diluvian State, and the Deluge it
+self. Whosoever therefore shall undertake to write the _Theory_ of the
+_Earth_, must think himself bound to give us a just Explication of these
+secondary _Phænomena_, as well as of the primary; and that in such a
+Dependance and Connexion, as to make them give and receive Light from
+one another.
+
+The former Part of the Task is concerning the World behind us, Times and
+Things past, that are already come to Light: The latter is concerning
+the World before us, Times and Things to come; that lie yet in the Bosom
+of Providence, and in the Seeds of Nature. And these are chiefly the
+_Conflagration_ of the World, and the _Renovation_ of it. When these are
+over and expir’d, then _comes the End_, as St. _Paul_ says, _1 Cor. xv._
+Then the _Heavens and the Earth fly away_, as St. _John_ says, _Apoc.
+xx._ Then is the _Consummation_ of all Things, and the last Period of
+this sublunary World, whatsoever it is: Thus far the Theorist must go,
+and pursue the Motions of Nature, till all Things are brought to Rest
+and Silence: And in this latter Part of the _Theory_, there is also a
+collateral Phænomenon, the _Millennium_, or thousand Years Reign of
+Christ and his Saints upon Earth, to be consider’d. For this, according
+as it is reported in Scripture, does imply a Change in the natural
+World, as well as in the Morals and therefore must be accounted for in
+the _Theory_ of the _Earth_: At least it must be there determin’d,
+whether that State of the World, which is singular and extraordinary,
+will be before or after the Conflagration.
+
+These are the Principals and Incidents of this _Theory_ of the _Earth_,
+as to the Matter and Subject of it; which, you see, is both important,
+and wholly taken out of Scripture: As to our Explication of these
+Points, that is sufficiently known, being set down at large in four
+Books of this Theory; Therefore it remains only, having seen the Matter
+of the Theory, to examine the Form of it, and the Proofs of it; for from
+these two things it must receive its Censure. As to the Form, the
+Characters of a regular Theory seem to be these three; _Few and easy
+Postulatums; Union of Parts_; and _a Fitness to answer, fully and
+clearly, all the Phænomena to which it is to be apply’d_.
+
+We think our Hypothesis does not want any of these Characters: As to the
+first, we take but one single _Postulatum_ for the whole Theory, and
+that an easy one, warranted both by Scripture and Antiquity; namely,
+_That this Earth rise, at first, from a Chaos_: As to the second, _Union
+of Parts_, the whole Theory is but one Series of Causes and Effects from
+that first Chaos. Besides, you can scarce admit any one Part of it,
+first, last, or intermediate, but you must, in Consequence of that,
+admit all the rest. Grant me but that the Deluge is truly explain’d, and
+I’ll desire no more Proof for all the Theory: Or, if you begin at the
+other End, and grant the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_ after the
+Conflagration, you will be led back again to the first Heavens and first
+Earth that were before the Flood. For St. _John_ says, that _new Earth_
+was without a _Sea_, _Apoc. xxi. 1_. And it was a _Renovation_, or
+_Restitution_ to some former State of Things: There was therefore some
+former Earth without a Sea; which not being the present Earth, it must
+be the ante-diluvian. Besides, both St. _John_, and the Prophet
+_Esaias_, have represented the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_, as
+_paradisiacal_, according as it proved, _Book IV. Chap. 2_. And having
+told us the Form of the new-future-Earth, that it will have _no Sea_, it
+is a reasonable Inference that there was no Sea in the _paradisiacal
+Earth_. However, from the Form of this future Earth, which St. _John_
+represents to us, we may at least conclude, that an _Earth without a
+Sea_ is no Chimæra, or Impossibility; but rather a fit Seat and
+Habitation for the Just and the Innocent.
+
+Thus you see the Parts of the Theory link and hold fast one another,
+according to the Second Character: And as to the third, of being _suited
+to the Phænomena_, we must refer that to the next Head of _Proofs_. It
+may be truly said, that bare Coherence and Union of Parts is not a
+sufficient Proof; the Parts of a Fable or Romance may hang aptly
+together, and yet have no Truth in them: This is enough indeed to give
+the Title of a just Composition to any Work, but not of a true one; till
+it appear that the Conclusions and Explications are grounded upon good
+natural Evidence, or upon good Divine Authority. We must therefore
+proceed now to the third thing to be consider’d in a Theory, _What_ its
+Proofs are? Or the Grounds upon which it stands, whether Sacred or
+Natural?
+
+According to natural Evidence, things are proved from their Causes or
+their Effects; and we think we have this double Order of Proofs for the
+Truth of our Hypothesis: As to the Method of Causes, we proceed from
+what is more simple, to what is more compound, and build all upon one
+Foundation. Go but to the Head of the Theory, and you will see the
+Causes lying in a Train before you, from first to last; and tho’ you did
+not know the natural History of the World, past or future, you might, by
+Intuition, foretel it, as to the grand Revolutions and successive Faces
+of Nature, through a long Series of Ages. If we have given a true
+Account of the Motions of the Chaos, we have also truly form’d the first
+habitable Earth; and if that be truly form’d we have thereby given a
+true Account of the State of _Paradise_, and of all that depends upon
+it; and not of that only, but also of the universal Deluge. Both these
+we have shewn in their Causes; The one from the Form of that Earth, and
+the other from the Fall of it into the Abyss: And tho’ we had not been
+made acquainted with these things by Antiquity, we might, in
+Contemplation of the Causes, have truly conceiv’d them as Properties or
+Incidents to the first Earth. But as to the Deluge, I do not say, that
+we might have calculated the Time, Manner, and other Circumstances of
+it: These things were regulated by Providence, in subordination to the
+moral World; but that there would be, at one Time or other, a Disruption
+of that Earth, or of the great Abyss, and in Consequence of it, an
+universal Deluge; so far, I think, the Light of a Theory might carry us.
+
+Farthermore, in Consequence of this Disruption of the primæval Earth, at
+the Deluge, the present Earth was made hollow and cavernous, [_Theor.
+Book iii. chap. 7, and 8._] and by that means, (due Preparations being
+used) capable of _Combustion_, or of perishing by an universal Fire:
+Yet, to speak ingenuously, this is as hard a Step to be made, in virtue
+of natural Causes, as any in the whole _Theory_. But in Recompence of
+that Defect, the Conflagration is so plainly and literally taught us in
+Scripture, and avow’d by Antiquity, that it can fall under no dispute,
+as to the Thing it self; and as to a Capacity or Disposition to it in
+the present Earth, that I think is sufficiently made out.
+
+Then, the Conflagration admitted, in that way it is explain’d in the
+third Book; the Earth, you see, is, by that Fire, reduc’d to a second
+Chaos. A Chaos truly so call’d; and from that, as from the first, arises
+another Creation, or _new Heavens_ and a _new Earth_; by the same
+Causes, and in the same Form, with the _paradisiacal_. This is the
+_Renovation_ of the World; the _Restitution_ of all Things mention’d
+both by Scripture and Antiquity; and by the Prophet _Isaiah_, St.
+_Peter_ and St. _John_, call’d the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_: With
+this, as the last Period, and most glorious Scene of all human Affairs,
+our _Theory_ concludes, as to this Method of Causes, whereof we are now
+speaking.
+
+I say, here it Ends as to the _Method of Causes_: For tho’ we pursue the
+Earth still farther, even to its last Dissolution, which is call’d the
+Consummation of all Things; yet all that we have superadded upon that
+Occasion, is but problematical, and may, without Prejudice to the
+_Theory_, be argued and disputed on either Hand. I do not know, but that
+our Conjectures there may be well grounded; but however, not springing
+so directly from the same Root, or, at least, not by Ways so clear and
+visible, I leave that Part undecided: Especially seeing we pretend to
+write no more than the _Theory of the Earth_, and therefore as we begin
+no higher than the _Chaos_, so we are not oblig’d to go any farther than
+to the last State of a terrestrial Consistency; which is that of the new
+Heavens and the new Earth.
+
+This is the first natural Proof, from the Order of Causes: The second is
+from the Consideration of Effects; namely, of such Effects as are
+already in being: And therefore this Proof can extend only to that Part
+of the _Theory_, that explains the present and past Form and Phænomena
+of the Earth. What is future, must be left to a farther Trial, when the
+Thing comes to pass, and present themselves to be examin’d and compar’d
+with the Hypothesis. As to the present Form of the Earth, we call all
+Nature to Witness for us; the Rocks and the Mountains, the Hills and the
+Valleys, the deep and wide Sea, and the Caverns of the Ground: Let these
+speak, and tell their Origin: How the Body of the Earth came to be thus
+torn and mangled? If this strange and irregular Structure was not the
+Effect of a Ruin; and of such a Ruin as was universal over the Face of
+the whole Globe. But we have given such a full Explication of this, in
+the first Part of the Theory, from _chap. ix._ to the End of that
+Treatise, that we dare stand to the Judgment of any that reads those
+four Chapters to determine if the Hypothesis does not answer to all
+those Phænomena, easy and adequately.
+
+The next Phænomenon to be consider’d, is the _Deluge_, with its
+Adjuncts: This also is fully explain’d by our Hypothesis, in the iid,
+iiid, and vith Chapters of the first Book: Where it is shewn, that the
+_Mosaical Deluge_, that is, an universal Inundation of the whole Earth,
+above the Tops of the highest Mountains, made by a breaking open of the
+great Abyss, (for thus far _Moses_ leads us) is fully explain’d by this
+Hypothesis, and cannot be conceiv’d in any other Method hitherto
+propos’d. There are no Sources or Stores of Water sufficient for such an
+Effect, that may be drawn upon the Earth, and drawn off again, but by
+supposing such an Abyss, and such a Disruption of it, as the Theory
+represents.
+
+Lastly, As to the Phænomena of _Paradise_, and the ante-diluvian World,
+we have set them down in Order in the second Book; and apply’d to each
+of them its proper Explication, from the same Hypothesis. We have also
+given an Account of that Character which Antiquity always assign’d to
+the first Age of the World, or the Golden Age, as they call’d it;
+namely, _Equality of Seasons_ throughout the Year, or a perpetual
+Equinox. We have also taken in all the Adjuncts or Concomitants of these
+States, as they are mention’d in Scripture. _The Longevity_ of the
+Ante-diluvians, and the Declension or their Age by degrees, after the
+Flood: As also that wonderful Phænomenon, the _Rainbow_; which appear’d
+to _Noah_ for a Sign, that the Earth should never undergo a second
+Deluge. And we have shewn [_Theor._ _Book ii. ch. 5._] wherein the Force
+and Propriety of that Sign consisted, for confirming _Noah_’s Faith in
+the Promise and in the Divine Veracity.
+
+Thus far we have explain’d the past Phænomena of the natural World: The
+rest are Futurities, which still lie hid in their Causes; and we cannot
+properly prove a Theory from Effects that are not yet in Being: But so
+far as they are foretold in Scripture, both as to Substance and
+Circumstance, in Prosecution of the same Principles we have ante-dated
+their Birth, and shew’d how they will come to pass. We may therefore, I
+think, reasonably conclude, that this Theory has perform’d its Task and
+answer’d its Title; having given an Account of all the general Changes
+of the natural World as far as either Sacred History looks backwards, or
+Sacred Prophecy looks forwards; so far as the one tells us what is past
+in Nature, and the other what is to come; And if all this be nothing but
+an Appearance of Truth, ’tis a kind of Fatality upon us to be deceiv’d.
+
+So much for natural Evidence, from the Causes or Effects: We now proceed
+to Scripture, which will make the greatest Part of this Review. The
+Sacred Basis upon which the whole Theory stands, is the Doctrine of St.
+_Peter_, deliver’d in his _second Epistle_ and _third Chapter_,
+concerning the _triple Order_ and Succession of the Heavens and the
+Earth; that comprehends the whole Extent of our Theory; which indeed is
+but a large Commentary upon St. _Peter_’s Text. The Apostle sets out a
+three-fold State of the Heavens and Earth, with some general Properties
+of each, taken from their different Constitution and different Fate. The
+Theory takes the same three-fold State of the Heavens and the Earth; and
+explains more particularly, wherein their different Constitution
+consists; and how, under the Conduct of Providence, their different Fate
+depends upon it. Let us set down the Apostle’s Words, with the Occasion
+of them; and their plain Sense, according to the most easy and natural
+Explication.
+
+ _2 Pet. iii. ver. 3. Knowing this first, that there shall come in
+ the last Days Scoffers, walking after their own Lusts._
+
+ 4. _And saying, where is the Promise of his coming? For since the
+ Fathers fell asleep, all Things continue as they were from the
+ Beginning of the Creation._
+
+ 5. _For this they willingly are ignorant of, that by the Word of
+ God, the Heavens were of old, and the Earth consisting of Water and
+ by Water._
+
+ 6. _Whereby the World that then was, being overflowed with Water,
+ perished._
+
+ 7. _But the Heavens and the Earth that are now, by the same Word,
+ are kept in Store, reserved unto Fire against the Day of Judgment,
+ and Perdition of ungodly Men._—
+
+ 10. _The Day of the Lord will come as a Thief in the Night, in which
+ the Heavens shall pass away with a great Noise, and the Elements
+ shall melt with fervent Heat; the Earth also and the Works that are
+ therein shall be burnt up._
+
+ 13. _Nevertheless we, according to his Promise, look for new Heavens
+ and a new Earth, wherein dwelleth Righteousness._
+
+This is the whole Discourse so far as relates to our Subject: St.
+_Peter_, you see, had met with some that scoff’d at the future
+Destruction of the World, and the coming of our Saviour; and they were
+Men, it seems, that pretended to Philosophy and Argument; and they use
+this Argument for their Opinion, _Seeing there has been no Change in
+Nature, or in the World, from the Beginning to this Time, why should we
+think there will be any Change for the future?_
+
+The Apostle answers to this, that they willingly forget, or are
+ignorant, that there were Heavens of old, and an Earth, so and so
+constituted; consisting of Water and by Water; by reason whereof that
+World, or those Heavens and that Earth, perish’d in a Deluge of Water.
+But, saith he, the Heavens and the Earth, that are now, are of another
+Constitution, fitted and reserved to another Fate; namely to perish by
+Fire: And after these are perish’d, there will be new Heavens and a new
+Earth, according to God’s Promise.
+
+This is an easy Paraphrase, and the plain and genuine Sense of the
+Apostle’s Discourse; and no Body, I think, would ever look after any
+other Sense, if this did not carry them out of their usual Road, and
+point to Conclusions which they did not fancy. The Sense, you see, hits
+the Objection directly, or the Cavil which these Scoffers made; and
+tells them, that they vainly pretend that there hath been no change in
+the World since the Beginning; for there was one sort of Heavens and
+Earth before the Flood, and another Sort now, the first having been
+destroy’d at the Deluge. So that the Apostle’s Argument stands upon this
+Foundation, that there is a Diversity betwixt the present Heavens and
+Earth, and the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth; take away that, and you
+take away all the Force of his Answer.
+
+Then as to his _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_ after the Conflagration,
+they must be material and natural, in the same Sense and Signification
+with the former Heavens and Earth; unless you will offer open Violence
+to the Text. So that this Triplicity of the Heavens and the Earth, is
+the first, obvious, plain Sense of the Apostle’s Discourse; which every
+one would readily accept, if it did not draw after it a long Train of
+Consequences, and lead them into other Worlds than they ever thought of
+before, or are willing to enter upon now.
+
+But we shall have Occasion by and by, to examine this Text more fully in
+all its Circumstances: Give me leave in the mean time to observe, that
+St. _Paul_ also implies that _triple Creation_ which St. _Peter_
+expresses. St. _Paul_, I say, in the viiith Chapter to the _Romans_,
+ver. 20, 21. tells us of a _Creation_ that will be _redeem’d from
+Vanity_, which are the new Heavens and new Earth to come. A _Creation in
+Subjection to Vanity_; which is the present State of the World; and a
+_Creation_ that was subjected to Vanity, in hopes of being restored,
+which was the first _Paradisiacal_ Creation: And these are the three
+States of the natural World, which make the Subject of our Theory.
+
+To these two Places of St. _Peter_ and St. _Paul_, I might add that
+third in St. _John_, concerning the new Heavens and new Earth, with that
+distinguishing Character, that the Earth was _without a Sea_: As this
+distinguisheth it from the present Earth, so, being a _Restitution_ or
+_Restauration_, as we noted before, it must be the same with some former
+Earth; and consequently it implies, that there was another precedent
+State of the natural World, to which this is a Restitution. These three
+Places I alledge, as comprehending and confirming the Theory in its full
+Extent; But we do not suppose them all of the same Force and Clearness;
+St. _Peter_ leads the Way, and gives Light and Strength to the other
+two: When a Point is prov’d by one clear Text, we allow others, as
+Auxiliaries, that are not of the same Clearness; but being open’d,
+receive Light from the primary Text, and reflect it upon the Argument.
+
+So much for the Theory in general: We will now take one or two principal
+Heads of it, which virtually contain all the rest, and examine them more
+strictly and particularly, in reference to their Agreement with
+Scripture. The two Heads we pitch upon, shall be our Explication of the
+Deluge, and our Explication of the new Heavens and new Earth: We told
+you before, these two were as the Hinges, upon which all the Theory
+moves, and which hold the Parts of it in firm Union one with another. As
+to the Deluge, if I have explain’d that aright, by the Disruption of the
+great Abyss, and the Dissolution of the Earth that cover’d it, all the
+rest follows in such a Chain of Consequences as cannot be broken.
+Wherefore, in order to the Proof of that Explication, and of all that
+depends upon it, I will make bold to lay down this Proposition, _That
+our Hypothesis concerning the universal Deluge, is not only more
+agreeable to Reason and Philosophy, than any other yet propos’d to the
+World, but is also more agreeable to Scripture_: Namely, to such Places
+of Scripture as reflect upon the _Deluge_, the _Abyss_, and the Form of
+the _first Earth_: And particularly to the _History of Noah’s Flood, as
+recorded by Moses_. If I can make this good, it will, doubtless, give
+Satisfaction to all that are free and intelligent; and I desire their
+Patience, if I proceed slowly and by several Steps. We will divide our
+Task into Parts, and examine them separately; first, by Scripture in
+general, and then by _Moses_ his History and Description of the Flood.
+
+Our Hypothesis of the Deluge consists of three principal Heads, or
+differs remarkably in three Things from the common Explication. First,
+in that we suppose the ante-diluvian Earth to have been of another Form
+and Constitution from the present Earth; with the Abyss placed under it.
+
+Secondly, In that we suppose the Deluge to have been made, not by any
+Inundation of the Sea, or overflowing of Fountains and Rivers; nor
+(principally) by an Excess of Rains; but by a real Dissolution of the
+exteriour Earth, and Disruption of the Abyss which it cover’d: These are
+the two principal Points; to which may be added, as a Corollary,
+
+Thirdly, That the Deluge was not in the nature of a standing Pool; the
+Waters lying every where level, of an equal Depth, and with an uniform
+Surface; but was made by a Fluctuation and Commotion of the Abyss upon
+the Disruption: Which Commotion being over, the Waters retired into
+their Channels, and let the dry Land appear.
+
+These are the most material and fundamental Parts of our Hypothesis; and
+these being prov’d consonant to Scripture, there can be no doubt of the
+rest.
+
+We begin with the first: That the ante-diluvian Earth was of another
+Form and Constitution from the present Earth, with the Abyss placed
+under it: This is confirm’d in Scripture, both by such Places as assert
+a Diversity in general; and by other Places that intimate to us, wherein
+that Diversity consisted, and what was the form of the first Earth. That
+Discourse of St. _Peter_’s, which we have set before you concerning the
+past, present and future Heavens and Earth, is so full a Proof of this
+Diversity in general, that you must either allow it, or make the
+Apostle’s Argumentation of no Effect: He speaks plainly of the natural
+World, _The Heavens and the Earth_; and he makes a plain Distinction, or
+rather Opposition, betwixt those before and after the Flood. So that the
+least we can conclude from his Words, is a Diversity betwixt them; in
+answer to that Identity or Immutability of Nature, which the Scoffers
+pretended to have been ever since the Beginning.
+
+But tho’ the Apostle, to me, speaks plainly of the _natural World_,
+and distinguishes that which was before the Flood, from the present;
+yet there are some that will allow neither of these to be contain’d in
+St. _Peter_’s Words; and by that means would make this whole Discourse
+of little or no Effect, as to our Purpose: And seeing we, on the
+contrary, have made it the chief Scripture-Basis of the whole Theory
+of the Earth, we are oblig’d to free it from those false Glosses or
+Mis-interpretations, that lessen the Force of its Testimony, or make
+it wholly ineffectual.
+
+These Interpreters say, that St. _Peter_ meant no more than to mind
+these Scoffers, that the World was once destroy’d by a Deluge of Water;
+meaning the _Animate World_, Mankind and living Creatures: And that it
+shall be destroyed again by another Element, namely, by Fire. So as
+there is no Opposition or Diversity betwixt the two natural Worlds,
+taught or intended by the Apostle; but only in reference to their
+different Fate or Manner of perishing, and not of their different Nature
+or Constitution.
+
+Here are two main Points, you see, wherein our Interpretations of this
+Discourse of the Apostle’s differ. First, in that they make the Apostle
+(in that _sixth verse_) to understand only the World _Animate_, or Men
+in brute Creatures: That these were indeed destroy’d, but not the
+natural World, or the Form and Constitution of the then Earth and
+Heavens. Secondly, that there is no Diversity or Opposition made by St.
+_Peter_ betwixt the antient Heavens and Earth, and the present, as to
+their Form and Constitution. We pretend that these are Mis-apprehensions
+or Mis-representations of the Sense of the Apostle in both respects, and
+offer these Reasons to prove them to be so.
+
+For the first Point; That the Apostle speaks here of the natural World,
+particularly in the 6th verse; and that it perished, as well as the
+animate, these Considerations seem to prove.
+
+First, because the Argument or Ground these Scoffers went upon, was
+taken from the natural World, its Constancy and Permanency in the same
+State from the Beginning; therefore if the Apostle answers _ad idem_,
+and takes away their Argument, he must understand the same natural
+World, and shew that it hath been chang’d, or hath perish’d.
+
+You will say, it may be, the Apostle doth not deny, nor take away the
+Ground they went upon, but denies the Consequence they made from it;
+that _therefore there would be no Change because there had been none_.
+No, neither doth he do this, if by the _World_ in the 6th verse, he
+understands Mankind only; for their Ground was this, _There hath been no
+Change in the natural World_; their Consequence this, _Therefore there
+will be none_, nor any Conflagration. Now the Apostle’s Answer according
+to you, is this, _You forget that Mankind hath been destroy’d in a
+Deluge._ And what then? What’s this to the natural World, whereof they
+were speaking? This takes away neither Antecedent nor Consequent,
+neither Ground nor Inference nor any way toucheth their Argument, which
+proceeded from the natural World, to the natural World. Therefore you
+must either suppose that the Apostle takes away their Ground, or he
+takes away nothing.
+
+Secondly, What is it that the Apostle tells these Scoffers they were
+ignorant of? That there was a Deluge that destroy’d Mankind? They could
+not be ignorant of that, nor pretend to be so: It was therefore the
+Constitution of those old Heavens and Earth, and the Change or
+Destruction of them at the Deluge, that they were ignorant of, or did
+not attend to; and of this the Apostle minds them. These Scoffers appear
+to have been _Jews_ by the Phrase they use, _Since the Fathers fell
+asleep_, which in both Parts of it is a _Judaical_ Expression; and does
+St. _Peter_ tell the _Jews_ that had _Moses_ read to them every Sabbath,
+that _they were ignorant that Mankind was once destroyed with a Deluge
+in the Days of Noah_? Or could they pretend to be ignorant of that
+without making themselves ridiculous both to _Jews_ and Christians[6]?
+Besides, these do not seem to have been of the Vulgar amongst them, for
+they bring a Philosophical Argument for their Opinion; and also in their
+very Argument they refer to the History of the Old Testament, in saying,
+_Since the Fathers fell asleep_, amongst which Fathers, _Noah_ was one
+of the most remarkable.
+
+_Thirdly_, The Design of the Apostle is to prove to them, or to dispose
+them to the Belief of the Conflagration, or future destruction of the
+World; which I suppose you will not deny to be a Destruction of the
+natural World; therefore to prove or persuade this, he must use an
+Argument taken from a precedent Destruction of the natural World; for to
+give an instance of the perishing of Mankind only, would not reach home
+to his Purpose. And you are to observe here, that the Apostle does not
+proceed against them barely by Authority; for what would that have
+booted? If these Scoffers would have submitted to Authority, they had
+already the Authority of the Prophets and Apostles in this Point: but he
+deals with them at their own Weapon, and opposes Reasons to Reasons;
+What hath been done may be done, and if the natural World hath been once
+destroyed, ’tis not hard, nor unreasonable to suppose those Prophecies
+to be true, that say, it shall be destroyed again.
+
+_Fourthly_, Unless we understand here the natural World, we make the
+Apostle both redundant in his Discourse, and also very obscure in an
+easy Argument: If his Design was only to tell them that Mankind was once
+destroy’d in a Deluge, what’s that to the Heavens and the Earth? The 5th
+verse would be superfluous; which yet he seems to make the foundation of
+his Discourse. He might have told them how Mankind had perished before
+with a Deluge, and aggravated that Destruction as much as he pleas’d,
+without telling them how the Heavens and the Earth were constituted
+then; what was that to the Purpose, if it had no Dependence or
+Connection with the other? In the precedent Chapter, _ver. 5._ when he
+speaks only of the Floods destroying Mankind, he mentions nothing of the
+Heavens or the Earth; and if you make him to intend no more here, what
+he says more is superfluous.
+
+I also add, that you make the Apostle very obscure and operose in a very
+easy Argument: How easy had it been for him, without this _Apparatus_,
+to have told them, as he did before, that God brought a Flood upon the
+World of the ungodly; and not given us so much Difficulty to understand
+his Sense, or such a Suspicion and Appearance, that he intended
+something more? For that there is at least a great Appearance and
+Tendency to a farther Sense, I think none can deny; And St. _Austin_,
+_Didymus Alex. Bede_, as we shall see hereafter, understood it plainly
+of the natural World; also modern Expositors and Criticks; as _Cajetan_,
+_Estius_, _Drusius_, _Heinsius_, have extended it to the natural World,
+more or less, tho’ they had no Theory to mislead them, nor so much as an
+Hypothesis to support them; but attended only to the Tenor of the
+Apostle’s Discourse, which constrained them to that Sense, in whole or
+in Part.
+
+Fifthly, The Opposition carries it upon the natural World: The
+Opposition lies betwixt the οἱ ἔκπαλαι οὐρανοὶ καὶ γῆ and οἱ νῦν οὐρανοὶ
+καὶ γῆ the Heavens that were of old, and the Earth, and the present
+Heavens and Earth, or the two natural Worlds: And if they will not allow
+them to be oppos’d in their Natures (which yet we shall prove by and by)
+at least they must be oppos’d in their Fate; and as this is to perish by
+Fire, so that perished by Water; and if it perish’d by Water, it
+perish’d; which is all we contend for at present.
+
+Lastly, If we would be as easily govern’d in the Exposition of this
+Place, as we are of other Places of Scripture, it would be enough to
+suggest, that in Reason and Fairness of Interpretation, the same World
+is destroy’d in the 6th _verse_, that was describ’d in the foregoing
+_verse_; but it is the natural World that is describ’d there, the
+Heavens and the Earth, so and so constituted; and therefore in Fairness
+of Interpretation they ought to be understood here; that World being the
+Subject that went immediately before, and there being nothing in the
+Words that restrains them to the animate World or to Mankind. In the iid
+_ch. ver. 5._ the Apostle does restrain the Word κόσμος by adding
+ἀσεβῶν, _the World of the ungodly_; but here ’tis not only illimited,
+but, according to the Context, both preceding and following, to be
+extended to the natural World. I say by the following Context too; for
+so it answers to the World that is to perish by Fire; which will reach
+the Frame of Nature as well as Mankind.
+
+For a Conclusion of this first Point, I will set down St. _Austin_’s
+Judgment in this Case; who in several Parts of his Works hath
+interpreted this Place of St. _Peter_, _of the natural World_. As to the
+Heavens, he hath these Words in his Expositian upon _Genesis_, _Hos
+etiam aërios cœlos quondam periisse Diluvio, in quâdam earum, quæ
+Canonica appellantur, Epistolâ legimus. We read in one of the Epistles
+called Canonical_, meaning this of St. _Peter_’s, _that the aërial
+Heavens perished in the Deluge_. And he concerns himself there to let
+you know that it was not the starry Heavens that were destroy’d; the
+Waters could not reach so high, but the Regions of our Air. Then
+afterwards he hath these Words, _Faciliùs eos (cœlos) secundum illius
+Epistolæ authoritatem credimus periisse, & alios, sicut ibi scribitur
+repositos. We do more easily believe, according to the Authority of that
+Epistle, those Heavens to have perished; and others, as it is there
+written, substituted in their Place_. In like manner, and to the same
+Sense, he hath these Words upon _Psal. ci._ _Aerii utique cœli perierunt
+ut propinqui Terris, secundum quod dicuntur volucres cœli; sunt autem &
+cœli cœlorum, superiores in Firmamento, sed utrùm & ipsi perituri sint
+igne, an hi soli, qui etiam diluvio perierunt, disceptatio est aliquanto
+scrupulosior inter doctos._ And in his Book _de Civ. Dei_, he hath
+several Passages to the same purpose, _Quemadmodum in Apostolicâ illâ
+Epistolâ à toto Pars accipitur, quod diluvio periisse dictus est mundus,
+quamvis sola ejus cum suis cœlis pars ima perierit._ These being to the
+same Effect with the first Citation, I need not make them English; and
+this last Place refers to the Earth as well as the Heavens, as several
+other places in St. _Austin_ do, whereof we shall give you an Account,
+when we come to shew his Judgment concerning the second Point, _the
+diversity of the ante-diluvian and post-diluvian World_: This being but
+a Foretaste of his good Will and Inclinations towards this Doctrine.
+
+These Considerations alledg’d, so far as I can judge, are full and
+unanswerable Proofs, that this Discourse of the Apostle’s comprehends
+and refers to the natural World; and consequently they warrant our
+Interpretation in this Particular, and destroy the contrary. We have but
+one Step more to make good, _That there was a Change made in this
+natural World at the Deluge_, according to the Apostle; and this is to
+confute the second Part of their Interpretation, which supposeth that
+St. _Peter_ makes no Distinction or Opposition betwixt the ante-diluvian
+Heavens and Earth, and the present Heavens and Earth, in that respect.
+
+This second Difference betwixt us, methinks is still harsher than the
+first; and contrary to the very Form, as well as to the Matter of the
+Apostle’s Discourse. For there is a plain Antithesis, or Opposition made
+betwixt the Heavens and the Earth of old (_ver. the 5th_) and the
+Heavens and the Earth that are now (_ver. the 7th_) οἱ ἔκπαλαι οῦρανοὶ
+καὶ ἡ γῆ, and οἱ νῦν οῦρανοὶ καὶ ἡ γῆ, and the adversitive Particle, δὲ
+_but_, you see marks the Opposition; so that it is full and plain
+according to Grammar and Logick. And that the Parts or Members of this
+Opposition differ in Nature from one another, is certain from this,
+because otherwise the Apostle’s Argument or Discourse is of no Effect,
+concludes nothing to the Purpose; he makes no Answer to the Objection,
+nor proves any thing against the Scoffers, unless you admit that
+Diversity. For they said, _All Things had been the same from the
+Beginning in the natural World_; and unless he say, as he manifestly
+does, that there hath been a Change in Nature, and that the Heavens and
+Earth that are now, are different from the ancient Heavens and Earth
+which perish’d at the Flood, he says nothing to destroy their Argument,
+nor to confirm the prophetical Doctrine of the future Destruction of the
+natural World.
+
+This, I think, would be enough to satisfy any clear and free Mind
+concerning the Meaning of the Apostle; but because I desire to give as
+full a Light to this Place as I can, and to put the Sense of it out of
+Controversy, if possible, for the future, I will make some farther
+Remarks to confirm this Exposition.
+
+And we may observe that several of those Reasons which we have given to
+prove, that the _natural World_ is understood by St. _Peter_, are double
+Reasons; and do also prove the other Point in Question, a _Diversity
+betwixt the two natural Worlds_, the ante-diluvian and the present. As
+for Instance, unless you admit this Diversity betwixt the two natural
+Worlds, you make the 5th _verse_ in this _Chapter_ superfluous and
+useless; and you must suppose the Apostle to make an Inference here
+without Premises. In the _vith verse_ he makes an Inference,
+[7]_Whereby_ the World, that then was perish’d in a Deluge; What does
+this _whereby_ relate to? _by Reason_ of what? Sure of the particular
+Constitution of the Heavens and the Earth immediately before describ’d.
+Neither would it have signified any thing to the Scoffers, for the
+Apostle to have told them how the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth were
+constituted, if they were constituted just in the same Manner as the
+present.
+
+Besides, what is it, as I ask’d before, that the Apostle tells these
+Scoffers they were ignorant of? does he not say formally and expresly
+(_ver. 5._) that they were ignorant that the Heavens and the Earth were
+constituted so and so, before the Flood? But if they were constituted as
+these present Heavens and Earth are, they were not ignorant of their
+Constitution? Nor did pretend to be ignorant, for their own (mistaken)
+Argument supposeth it.
+
+But before we proceed any further, give me leave to note the Impropriety
+of our Translation, in the _5th verse_, or latter Part of it; Ἐξ ὕδατος
+καὶ δὶ ὕδατων (vel δὶ ὔδατος) συνισῶτα. This we translate _standing in
+the Water, and out of the Water_, which is done manifestly in compliance
+with the present Form of the Earth, and the Notions of the Translators,
+and not according to the natural Force and Sense of the _Greek_ Words.
+If one met with this Sentence[8] in a _Greek_ Author, who would ever
+render it _standing in the Water, and out of the Water_? Nor do I know
+any _Latin_ Translator that hath ventur’d to render them in that Sense,
+nor any _Latin_ Father; St. _Austin_ and St. _Jerome_ I’m sure do not,
+but _Consistens ex aquâ_, or _de aquâ, & per aquam_; for that later
+Phrase also συνεσάναι δὶ ὕδατος, does not with so good Propriety signify
+_to stand in the Water_, as to consist or subsist by Water, or by the
+Help of Water, _Tanquam per causam sustinentem_, as St. _Austin_ and
+_Jerome_ render it. Neither does that Instance they give from _1 Pet.
+iii. 20._ prove any thing to the contrary, for the Ark was sustain’d by
+the Waters, and the _English_ does render it accordingly.
+
+The Translation being thus rectified, you see the ante-diluvian Heavens
+and Earth consisted of Water, and by Water; which makes Way for a second
+Observation to prove our Sense of the Text; for if you admit no
+Diversity betwixt those Heavens and Earth, and the present, shew us
+pray, how the present Heavens and Earth consist of Water, and by Water?
+What watry Constitution have they? The Apostle implies rather, that _the
+new Heavens and Earth_ have a fiery Constitution. We have now Meteors of
+all Sorts in the Air, Winds, Hail, Snow, Lightning, Thunder, and all
+Things engender’d of fiery Exhalations, as well as we have Rain; but
+according to our Theory, _Book ii. c. 5._ the ante-diluvian Heavens, of
+all these Meteors had none but Dews and Vapours, or watry Meteors only;
+and therefore might very aptly be said by the Apostle to be _constituted
+of Water_, or to have a watry σίζασις. Then the Earth was said to
+_consist by Water_, because it was built upon it, and at first was
+sustain’d by it. And when such a Key as this is put into our Hands, that
+does so easily unlock this hard Passage, and makes it intelligible,
+according to the just Force of the Words, why should we pertinaciously
+adhere to an[9] Interpretation, that neither agrees with the Words, nor
+makes any Sense that is considerable.
+
+Thirdly, If the Apostle had made the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth the
+same with the present, his Apodosis in the 7th verse, should not have
+been οἱ δε νῦν οῦρανοι, but καὶ οἱ αὐτοὶ καὶ ἡ γῆ τεθησαυρισμένοι εἰσί,
+&c. I say, it would not have been by way of Antithesis, but of Identity
+or Continuation; _And the same Heavens and Earth are kept in store
+reserv’d unto Fire_, &c. Accordingly we see the Apostle speaks thus, as
+to the _Logos_, or the _Word of God, ver. 7._ τῷ αὐτῷ λόγῳ, _by the same
+Word of God_; where the Thing is the same, he expresseth it as the same;
+and if it had been the same Heavens and Earth, as well as the same Word
+of God, why should he use a Mark of Opposition for the one, and of
+Identity for the other? To this I do not see what can be fairly
+answer’d.
+
+Fourthly, The ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth were different from the
+present, because, as the Apostle intimates, they were such, and so
+constituted, as made them obnoxious to a Deluge; whereas ours are of
+such a Form, as makes them incapable of a Deluge, and obnoxious to a
+Conflagration; the just contrary Fate, _Theor._ _Book i. c. 2._
+
+If you say there was nothing of natural Tendency or Disposition in
+either World to their respective Fate, but the first might as well have
+perished by Fire as Water, and this by Water as by Fire, you unhinge all
+Nature and natural Providence in that Method, and contradict one main
+Scope of the Apostle in this Discourse. His first Scope is to assert,
+and mind them of that Diversity there was betwixt the antient Heavens
+and Earth, and the present; and from that, to prove against those
+Scoffers, that there had been a Change and Revolution in Nature: And his
+second Scope seems to be this, to shew that Diversity to be such, as,
+under the divine Conduct, leads to a different Fate, and expos’d that
+World to a Deluge; for when he had describ’d the Constitution of the
+first Heavens and Earth, he subjoins, δὶ ὧν ὅ τοτε κόσμος ὑδατι
+κατακλυοθεὶς ἀπόλετο. _Quia talis erat_, saith _Grotius_, _qualem
+diximus, constitutio & Terræ & Cœli._ _WHEREBY the then World perish’d
+in a Flood of Water._ This _whereby_ notes some kind of casual
+Dependance, and must relate to some Means or Conditions precedent. It
+cannot relate to _Logos_, or _the Word of God_, Grammar will not permit
+that; therefore it must relate to the State of the ante-diluvian Heavens
+and Earth immediately premis’d: And to what purpose indeed should he
+premise the Description of those Heavens and Earth, if it was not to lay
+a Ground for this Inference?
+
+Having given these Reasons for the Necessity of this interpretation: in
+the last place, let us consider St. _Austin_’s Judgment and his Sense
+upon this Place, as to the Point in Question; as also the Reflections
+that some other of the Ancients have made upon this Doctrine of St.
+_Peter_’s. _Didymus Alexandrinus_, who was for some time St. _Jerome_’s
+Master, made such a severe Reflection upon it, that he said this Epistle
+was corrupted, and should not be admitted into the Canon, because it
+taught the Doctrine of a _triple_ or _triform World_ in this third
+Chapter; as you may see in his _Enarr. in Epist. Canonicas_. Now this
+three-fold World is first that in the _6th_ verse, _The World that then
+was_. In the _7th_ verse, _The Heavens and the Earth that are now_. And
+in the _13th_ verse, _We expect new Heavens and a new Earth, according
+to his Promise._ This seems to be a fair Account that St. _Peter_ taught
+the Doctrine of a triple World; and I quote this Testimony, to shew what
+St. _Peter_’s Words do naturally import, even in the Judgment of one
+that was not of his Mind; and a Man is not prone to make an Exposition
+against his own Opinion, unless he thinks the Words very pregnant and
+express.
+
+But St. _Austin_ owns the Authority of this Epistle, and of this
+Doctrine, as deriv’d from it, taking notice of this Text of St.
+_Peter_’s in several Parts of his Works. We have noted three or four
+Places already to this purpose, and we may further take notice of
+several Passages in his Treatise, _de Civ. Dei_, which confirm our
+Exposition. In his xxth Book, _ch._ xxiv. he Disputes against
+_Porphyry_, who had the same Principles with these Eternalists in the
+Text; or, if I may so call them Incorruptarians; and thought the World
+never had, nor ever would undergo any Change, especially, as to the
+Heavens. St. _Austin_ could not urge _Porphyry_ with the Authority of
+St. _Peter_, for he had no Veneration for the Christian Oracles, but it
+seems he had some for the _Jewish_; and arguing against him, upon that
+Text in the Psalms, _Cœli peribunt_, he shews, upon Occasion, how he
+understands St. _Peter_’s Destruction of the old World. _Legitur Cœlum &
+Terra transibunt, Mundus transit, sed puto quod præterit transit,
+transibunt aliquantò mitius dicta sunt quam peribunt. In Epistolà quoque
+Petri Apostoli, ubi aquâ inundatus, qui tum erat, periisse dictus est
+Mundus, satis clarum est quæ pars mundi a toto significata est, &
+quatenus periisse dicta sit, & qui Cœli repositi igni reservandi._ This
+he explains more fully afterwards by subjoining a Caution (which we
+cited before) that we must not understand this Passion of St. _Peter_’s
+concerning the Destruction of the ante-diluvian World, to take in the
+whole Universe, and the highest Heavens, but only the aerial Heavens,
+and the sublunary World. _In Apostolicâ illâ Epistola a toto pars
+accipitur, quod Diluvio periisse dictus est Mundus quamvis sola ejus,
+cum suis Cœlis pars ima perierit. In that Apostolical Epistle, a part is
+signified by the whole, when the World is said to have perished in the
+Deluge, although the lower part of it only, with the Heavens belonging
+to it, perished_; that is, the Earth with the Regions of the Air that
+belong to it. And consonant to this, in his Exposition of that ci.
+_Psalm_, upon those Words, _The Heavens are the work of thy Hands; they
+shall perish, but thou shalt endure._ This perishing of the Heavens, he
+says, St. _Peter_ tells us, hath been once done already, namely, at the
+Deluge: _Apertè dixit hoc Apostolus Petrus, Cœli erant olim & Terra, de
+aquâ & per aquam constituti, Dei verbo; per quod qui factus est mundus,
+aquâ inundatus deperiit; Terra autem & Cœli qui nunc sunt, igni
+reservantur. Jam ergo dixit periisse Cœlos per Diluvium._
+
+These Places shew us, that St. _Austin_ understood St. _Peter_’s
+Discourse to aim at the natural World, and his _periit_ or _periisse_
+(ver. 6) to be of the same Force as _peribunt_ in the _Psalms_, when
+’tis said the Heavens _shall perish_; and consequently that the Heavens
+and the Earth, in this Father’s Opinion, were as really changed and
+transformed at the Time of the Flood, as they will be at the
+Conflagration. But we must not expect from St. _Austin_, or any of the
+Antients, a distinct Account of this Apostolical Doctrine, as if they
+knew and acknowledg’d the Theory of the first World; that does not at
+all appear, but what they said was either from broken Tradition, or
+extorted from them by the Force of the Apostle’s Words and their own
+Sincerity.
+
+There are yet other Places in St. _Austin_ worthy our Consideration upon
+this Subject; especially his Exposition of this iiid Chapter of St.
+_Peter_, as we find it in the same Treatise, _de Civ. Dei_, _cap._
+xviii. There he compares again, the Destruction of that World at the
+Deluge, with that which shall be at the Conflagration, and supposeth
+both the Heavens and Earth to have perish’d: _Apostolus commemorans
+factum ante Diluvium, videtur admonuisse quodammodo quatenùs in fine
+hujus seculi mundum istum periturum esse credamus. Nam & illo tempore
+periisse dixit, qui tunc erat, mundum; nec solum orbem terræ, verum
+etiam cœlos._ Then giving his usual Caution, that the Stars and starry
+Heavens should not be comprehended in that mundane Destruction, he goes
+on, _Atque hoc modo_ (penè totus aër) _cum terra perierat; cujus Terræ
+utique prior facies_ (nempe ante-diluviana) _fuerat deleta Diluvia. Qui
+autem nunc sunt cœli & terra eodem verba repositi sunt igni reservandi;
+Proinde qui Cœli & quæ Terra id est, qui mundus, pro eo mundo qui
+Diluvio periit, ex eádem aquâ repositus est, ipse igni novissimo
+reservatur._ Here you see St. _Austin_’s Sense upon the whole Matter;
+which is this, that the natural World, the Earth with the Heavens about
+it, was destroyed and chang’d at the Deluge into the present Heavens and
+Earth; which shall again, in like Manner, be destroyed and chang’d by
+the last Fire. Accordingly, in another place, to add no more, he saith,
+the Figure of the (sublunary) World shall be changed at the
+Conflagration, as it was chang’d at the Deluge: _Tunc figura hujus
+mundi_, &c. _cap._ xvi.
+
+Thus you see, we have St. _Austin_ on our side, in both Parts of our
+Interpretation; that St. _Peter_’s Discourse is to be referr’d to the
+natural inanimate World, and that the present natural World is distinct
+and different from that which was before the Deluge. And St. _Austin_
+having applied this expresly to St. _Peter_’s Doctrine by way of
+Commentary, it will free us from any Crime or Affectation of Singularity
+in the Exposition we have given of that Place.
+
+Venerable _Bede_ hath followed St. _Austin_’s Footsteps in this
+Doctrine; for, interpreting St. _Peter_’s _original World_ (Αρχαῖος
+Κόσμος) 2 _Pet._ ii. 5. he refers both that and this (_chap._ iii. 6.)
+to the natural inanimate World, which he supposeth to have undergone a
+Change at the Deluge. His Words are these, _Idem ipse mundus est_ (nempe
+quoad materiam) _in quo nunc humanum genus habitat, quem inhabitaverunt
+hi qui ante diluvium fuerunt, sed tamen rectè Originalis Mundus, quasi
+alius dicitur; quia sicut in consequentibus hujus Epistolæ scriptum
+continetur, Ille tunc mundus aquâ inundatus periit. Cælis videlicet qui
+erant prius, id est, cunctis aëris hujus turbulenti spatiis, aquarum
+accrescentiun altitudine consumptis, ac Terrâ in alteram faciem,
+excedentibus aquis, immutatâ. Nam etsi montes aliqui atque convalles ab
+initio facti creduntur, non tamen tanti quanti nunc in orbe cernuntur
+universo. ’Tis the same World_ (namely, as to the Matter and Substance
+of it) _which Mankind lives in now, and did live in before the Flood,
+but yet that is truly called the ORIGINAL WORLD, being as it were
+another from the present. For it is said in the Sequel of this Epistle,
+that the World that was then, perished in the Deluge; namely, the
+Regions of the Air were consumed by the Height and Excess of the Water;
+and by the same Waters the Earth was changed into another Form or Face.
+For although some Mountains and Valleys are thought to have been made
+from the Beginning, yet not such great ones as now we see throughout the
+whole Earth._
+
+You see this Author does not only own a Change made at the Deluge, but
+offers at a farther Explication wherein that Change consisted, _viz._
+That the Mountains and Inequalities of the Earth were made greater than
+they were before the Flood; and so he makes the Change, or the
+Difference betwixt the two Worlds gradual, rather than specifical, if I
+may so term it. But we cannot wonder at that, if he had no Principles to
+carry it farther, or to make any other Sort of Change intelligible to
+him. _Bede_ [_De 6 dier. creat._] also pursues the same Sense and Notion
+in his Interpretation of that _Fountain_, _Gen._ ii. 5. that watered the
+Face of the Earth before the Flood. And many other Transcribers of
+Antiquity have recorded this Tradition concerning a Difference, gradual
+or specifical, both in the ante-diluvian Heavens (_Gloss. Ordin. Gen._
+ix. _de Iride. Lyran. ibid. Hist. Scholast._ _c. 35. Rab. Maurus &
+Gloss. Inter. Gen._ ii. 5, 6. _Alcuin. Quæst. in Gen. inter._ 135.) and
+in the ante-diluvian Earth, as the same Authors witness in other Places:
+As _Hist. Schol. c. 34. Gloss. Ord. in Gen._ vii. _Alcuin. Inter. 118,
+&c._ Not to Instance those that tell us the Properties of the
+ante-diluvian World under the Name and Notion of _Paradise_.
+
+Thus much concerning this remarkable Place in St. _Peter_, and the true
+Exposition of it; which I have the more largely insisted upon, because I
+look upon this Place as the chief Repository of that great natural
+Mystery, which in Scripture is communicated to us concerning the triple
+State or Revolution of the World. And of those Men that are so
+scrupulous to admit the Theory we have propos’d, I would willingly know,
+whether they believe the Apostle in what he says concerning the _new
+Heavens_ and the _new Earth to come_? ver. 13. and if they do, why they
+should not believe him as much concerning the _old Heavens_ and the _old
+Earth_ past? _ver._ 5, and 6. which he mentions as formally, and
+describes more distinctly than the other. But if they believe neither
+past nor to come, in a natural Sense, but an unchangeable State of
+Nature from the Creation to its Annihilation, I leave them then to their
+Fellow-Eternalists in the Text, and to the Character or Censure the
+Apostle gives them, Κατὰ τὰς ἴδιας αὐτῶν ἐπιθυμίας πορευόμενοι, Men that
+go by their own private Humour and Passions, and prefer that to all
+other Evidence.
+
+They deserve this Censure, I am sure, if they do not only disbelieve,
+but also scoff, at this Prophetick and Apostolick Doctrine concerning
+the Vicissitudes of Nature and a triple World. The Apostle in this
+Discourse does formally distinguish three Worlds (for ’tis well known
+that the _Hebrews_ have no Word to signify the natural World, but use
+that Periphrasis, _the Heavens_ and _the Earth_) and upon each of them
+engraves a Name and Title that bears a Note of Distinction in it: He
+calls them the _old Heavens and Earth_, the _present Heavens and Earth_,
+and the _new Heavens and Earth_. ’Tis true, these three are one, as to
+Matter and Substance; but they must differ as to Form and Properties;
+otherwise what is the Ground of this Distinction and of these three
+different Appellations? Suppose the _Jews_ had expected _Ezekiel_’s
+Temple for the third, and last, and most perfect; and that in the Time
+of the second Temple they had spoke of them with this Distinction, or
+under these different Names, the _old Temple_, the _present Temple_, and
+the _new Temple_ we expect; would any have understood those three of one
+and the same Temple; never demolish’d, never chang’d, never rebuilt;
+always the same, both as to Materials and Form? No, doubtless, but of
+three several Temples succeeding one another. And have we not the same
+Reason to understand this Temple of the World, whereof St. _Peter_
+speaks, to be three-fold in Succession; seeing he does as plainly
+distinguish it into the _old_ Heavens and Earth, the _present_ Heavens
+and Earth? and the _new_ Heavens and Earth. And I do the more willingly
+use this Comparison of the Temple, because it hath been thought an
+Emblem of the outward World.
+
+I know we are naturally averse to entertain any Thing that is
+inconsistent with the general Frame and Texture of our own Thoughts;
+that’s to begin the World again; and we often reject such things without
+Examination. Neither do I wonder that the generality of Interpreters
+beat down the Apostle’s Words and Sense to their own Notions; they had
+no other Grounds to go upon, and Men are not willing, especially in
+natural and comprehensible things, to put such a Meaning upon Scripture,
+as is unintelligible to themselves; they rather venture to offer a
+little Violence to the Words, that they may pitch the Sense at such a
+convenient Height, as their Principles will reach to: And therefore
+though some of our modern Interpreters, whom I mention’d before, have
+been sensible of the natural Tendency of this Discourse of St.
+_Peter_’s, and have much ado to bear off the Force of the Words, so as
+not to acknowledge that they import a real Diversity betwixt the two
+Worlds spoken of; yet having no Principles to guide or support them in
+following that Tract, they are forc’d to stop or divert another way.
+’Tis like entring into the Mouth of a Cave, we are not willing to
+venture farther than the Light goes: Nor are they much to blame for
+this, the Fault is only in those Persons that continue wilfully in their
+Darkness; and when they cannot otherwise resist the Light, shut their
+Eyes against it, or turn their Head another Way.—But I am afraid I have
+staid too long upon this Argument; not for my own sake, but to satisfy
+others.
+
+You may please to remember that all that I have said hitherto, belongs
+only to the first Head: To prove a _Diversity in general_ betwixt the
+ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth, and the present; not expressing what
+their particular Form was. And this general Diversity may be argued also
+by Observations taken from _Moses_ his History of the World, before and
+after the Flood: From the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians; the Rainbow
+appearing after the Deluge; and the breaking open an Abyss capable to
+overflow the Earth. The Heavens that had no Rain-bow, and under whose
+benign and steady Influence, Men liv’d seven, eight, nine hundred Years
+and upwards, [See _Theor. Book_ ii. _ch._ 5.] must have been of a
+different Aspect and Constitution from the present Heavens: And that
+Earth that had such an Abyss, that the Disruption of it made an
+universal Deluge, must have been of another Form than the present Earth;
+and those that will not admit a Diversity in the two Worlds, are bound
+to give us an intelligible Account of these Phænomena: How they could
+possibly be in Heavens and Earth, like the present? Or if they were
+there once, why they do not continue so still, if Nature be the same?
+
+We need say no more, as to the ante-diluvian Heavens; but as to the
+Earth, we must now, according to the second part of the first Head,
+enquire, if that _particular Form_, which we have assign’d it before the
+Flood, be agreeable to Scripture. You know how we have described the
+Form and Situation of that Earth; namely, that it was built over the
+Abyss, as a regular Orb, covering and incompassing the Waters round
+about, and founded, as it were, upon them. There are many Passages of
+Scripture that favour this Description; some more expresly, others upon
+a due Explication. To this purpose there are two express Texts in the
+_Psalms_; as _Psal._ xxiv. 1, 2. _The Earth is the Lord’s, and the
+Fulness thereof; the habitable World, and they that dwell therein. FOR
+he has founded it upon the[10] Sea, and established it upon the Floods_.
+An Earth founded upon the Seas, and establish’d upon the Waters, is not
+this Earth we have describ’d? The first Earth, as it came from the Hands
+of its Maker? Where can we now find in Nature such an Earth, as the Seas
+and the Water for its Foundation? Neither is this Text without a second,
+as a Fellow Witness to confirm the same Truth; for in _Psal._ cxxxvi.
+_ver._ 4, 5, 6. we read to the same Effect, in these Words, _To him who
+alone does great Wonders; to him that by Wisdom made the Heavens; to him
+that stretched out the Earth above the Waters_. We can hardly express
+that Form of the ante-diluvian Earth, in Words more determinate than
+these are: Let us then, in the same Simplicity of Heart, follow the
+Words of Scripture; seeing this literal Sense is not repugnant to
+Nature, but, on the contrary, agreeable to it upon the strictest
+Examination. And we cannot, without some Violence, turn the Words to any
+other Sense. What tolerable Interpretation can these admit of, if we do
+not allow the Earth once to have encompass’d and over-spread the Face of
+the Waters? To be _founded_ upon the Waters, to be _establish’d_ upon
+the Waters, to be _extended_ upon the Waters, what rational or
+satisfactory Account can be given of these Phrases and Expressions from
+any thing we find in the present Situation of the Earth? Or how can they
+be verified concerning it? Consult Interpreters, antient or modern, upon
+these two Places; see if they answer your Expectation, or answer the
+natural Importance of the Words, unless they acknowledge another Form of
+the Earth, than the present. Because a Rock hangs its Nose over the Sea,
+must the Body of the Earth be said to be _stretched over the Waters_?
+Or, because there are Waters in some subterraneous Cavities, is the
+Earth therefore _founded upon the Seas_? Yet such lame Explications as
+these you will meet with; and while we have no better Light, we must
+content our selves with them; but when an Explication is offer’d, that
+answers the Propriety, Force and Extent of the Words, to reject it, only
+because it is not fitted to our former Opinions, or because we did not
+first think of it, is to take an ill Method in expounding Scripture.
+This _Foundation_ or _Establishment_ of the Earth upon the Seas, this
+_Extention_ of it above the Waters, relates plainly to the Body, or
+whole Circuit of the Earth, not to Parcels and Particles of it; as
+appears from the Occasion, and its being join’d with the Heavens, the
+other Part of the World. Besides, _David_ is speaking of the Origin of
+the World, and of the divine Power and Wisdom in the Constitution and
+Situation of our Earth; and these Attributes do not appear from the
+Holes of the Earth, and broken Rocks, which have rather the Face of a
+Ruin, than of Wisdom; but in that wonderful Libration and Expansion of
+the first Earth over the Face of the Waters, sustained by its own
+Proportions, and the Hand of his Providence.
+
+These two Places in the _Psalms_ being duly consider’d, we shall more
+easily understand a third Place, to the same effect, in the _Proverbs_;
+delivered by _WISDOM_, concerning the Origin of the World, and the Form
+of the first Earth, in these Words, _Chapter_ viii. 27. _When he
+prepared the Heavens I was there, when HE SET an Orb or Sphere upon the
+Face of the Abyss._ We render it, when we set a Compass upon the Face of
+the Abyss; but if we have rightly interpreted the Prophet _David_, ’tis
+plain enough what Compass is here to be understood; not an imaginary
+Circle, (for why should that be thought one of the wonderful Works of
+God?) but that exterior Orb of the Earth that was set upon the Waters:
+That was the Master-piece of the divine Art in framing of the first
+Earth, and therefore very fit to be taken Notice of by _Wisdom_. And
+upon this Occasion, I desire you to reflect upon St. _Peter_’s
+Expression, concerning the first Earth, and to compare it with
+_Solomon_’s, to see if they do not answer one another. St. _Peter_ calls
+it, γῆ καθεστῶσα δὶ ὕδάτων, _an Earth consisting, standing_, or
+_sustained by the Waters_. And _Solomon_ calls it חונ על בני תהום _An
+Orb drawn upon the Face of the Abyss._ And St. _Peter_ says, that was
+done τῷ λόγῳ τοῦ Θεοῦ, by the _Wisdom of God_; which is the same Λόγος
+or _Wisdom_, that here declares her self to have been present at this
+Work. Add now to these two Places, the two foremention’d out of the
+_Psalmist_; _An Earth founded upon the Sea_, (Psal. xxiv. 2.) and an
+_Earth stretched out above the Waters_; (_Psal._ cxxxvi. 6.) Can any
+Body doubt or question; but all these four Texts refer to the same
+Thing? And seeing St. _Peter_’s Description refers certainly to the
+ante-diluvian Earth, they must all refer to it; and do all as certainly
+and evidently agree with our Theory concerning the Form and Situation of
+it.
+
+The pendulous Form and Posture of that first Earth being prov’d from
+these four Places, ’tis more easy and emphatical to interpret in this
+Sense that Passage in _Job ch._ xxvi. 7. _He stretcheth out the North
+over the Tohu_, (for so it is in the Original) _and hangeth the Earth
+upon nothing._ And this strange Foundation or no Foundation of the
+exterior Earth seems to be the Ground of those noble Questions propos’d
+to _Job_ by God Almighty, _chap._ xxxviii. _Where wast thou, when I laid
+the Foundations of the Earth? Declare if thou hast understanding,
+whereupon are the Foundations thereof fastned, and who laid the
+Corner-Stone?_ There was neither Foundation, nor Corner-Stone, in that
+piece of Architecture; and that was it which made the Art and Wonder of
+it. But I have spoken more largely to these Places in the Theory it
+self, _Book_ i. _p._ 119. And if the four Texts before mention’d be
+consider’d without Prejudice, I think there are few Matters of natural
+Speculation that can be so well prov’d out of Scripture, as the Form
+which we have given to the ante-diluvian Earth.
+
+But yet it may be thought a just, if not a necessary Appendix to this
+Discourse, concerning the Form of the ante-diluvian Earth, to give an
+Account also of the _ante-diluvian Abyss_, and the Situation of it
+according to Scripture; for the Relation which these two have to one
+another, will be a farther Means to discover, if we have rightly
+determined the Form of that Earth. The _Abyss_ or _Tehom Rabbah_ is a
+Scripture Notion, and the Word is not us’d, that I know of, in that
+distinct and peculiar Sense in Heathen Authors. ’Tis plain that in
+Scripture it is not always taken for the Sea (as _Gen._ i. 2. and vii.
+11. and xlix. 25. _Deut._ xxxiii. 13. _Job_ xxviii. 14. and xxxviii. 16.
+_Psal._ xxxiii. 7. and lxxi. 20. and lxxviii. 15. and cxxxv. 6. _Apoc_.
+xx. 1, 3.) but for some other Mass of Waters, or subterraneous
+Store-house. And this being observ’d, we may easily discover the Nature,
+and set down the History of the Scripture-Abyss.
+
+The Mother-Abyss is no doubt that in the Beginning of _Genesis_, _v._ 2.
+which had nothing but Darkness upon the Face of it, or a thick
+caliginous Air. The next News we hear of this Abyss is at the Deluge,
+(_Gen._ vii. 11.) where ’tis said to be broke open, and the Waters of it
+to have drowned the World. It seems then, this Abyss was clos’d up some
+Time betwixt the Creation and the Deluge, and had got another Cover than
+that of Darkness. And if we will believe _Wisdom_, (_Prov._ viii. 27.)
+who was there present at the Formation of the Earth, an _Orb was set
+upon the Face of the Abyss_, at the Beginning of the World.
+
+That these three Places refer to the same Abyss, I think, cannot be
+questioned by any that will compare them and consider them. That of the
+Deluge, _Moses_ calls there _Tehom-Rabbah_, the great _Abyss_; and can
+there be any greater than the forementioned Mother-Abyss? And _WISDOM_,
+in that Place in the _Proverbs_, useth the same Phrase and Words with
+_Moses_, _Gen._ i. 2. על פני תהום _upon the Face of the Deep_, or of the
+_Abyss_; changing _Darkness_ for that _Orb_ of the exterior Earth, which
+was made afterwards to inclose it. And in this Sort it lay, and under
+this Cover, when the _Psalmist_ speaks of it in these Words, _Psal._
+xxxiii. 7. _He gathereth the Waters of the Sea, as in a[11] Bag; he
+layeth up the Abyss in Store-houses._ Lastly, we may observe, that ’twas
+this Mother-Abyss, whose Womb was burst at the Deluge, when the Sea was
+born, and broke forth as if it had issued out of a Womb; as God
+expresseth it to _Job_, _ch._ xxxviii. 8. in which Place the _Chaldee_
+Paraphrase reads it, when it broke forth, _coming out of the Abyss_.
+Which Disruption at the Deluge seems also to be alluded to _Job_ xii.
+14, 15. and more plainly, _Prov._ iii. 20. _by his Knowledge the Abysses
+are broken up_.
+
+Thus you have already a three-fold State of the Abyss, which makes a
+short History of it; first, _open_, at the Beginning; then _covered_
+till the Deluge; then _broke open_ again, as it is at present. And we
+pursue the History of it no farther; but we are told, _Apoc._ xx. 3.
+That it shall be shut up again, and the great Dragon in it, for a
+thousand Years. In the mean time we may observe from this Form and
+Posture of the ante-diluvian Abyss, how suitable it is and coherent with
+that Form of the ante-diluvian Earth which St. _Peter_ and the
+_Psalmist_ had described, _sustained by the Waters_; _founded upon the
+Waters_; _stretched above the Waters_; for if it was the Cover of this
+Abyss (and it had some Cover that was broke at the Deluge) it was spread
+as a Crust of Ice upon the Face of those Waters, and so made an _Orbis
+Terrarum_, an habitable Sphere of Earth about the Abyss.
+
+So much for the Form of the ante-diluvian Earth and Abyss; which as they
+aptly correspond to one another, so, you see, our Theory answers, and is
+adjusted to both; and, I think, so fitly, that we have no reason
+hitherto to be displeased with the Success we have had in the
+Examination of it, according to Scripture. We have dispatch’d the two
+main Points in Question, first, to prove a Diversity in general betwixt
+the two natural Worlds, or betwixt the Heavens and the Earth before and
+after the Flood. Secondly, to prove wherein this Diversity consisted; or
+that the particular Form of the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth was such
+according to Scripture, as we have describ’d it in the Theory. You’ll
+say, then the Work is done; what needs more, all the rest follows of
+Course? For if the ante-diluvian Earth had such a Form as we have
+propos’d and prov’d it to have had, there could be no Deluge in it but
+by a Dissolution of its Parts and exterior Frame: And a Deluge so made,
+would not be in the Nature of a Standing-Pool, but of a violent
+Agitation and Commotion of the Waters. This is true; these Parts of the
+Theory are so cemented, that you must grant all, if you grant any.
+However we will try, if even these two Particulars also may be prov’d
+out of Scripture; that is, if there be any Marks or Memorandums left
+there by the Spirit of God, of such a Fraction or Dissolution of the
+Earth at the Deluge; and also such Characters of the Deluge it self, as
+shew it to have been by a Fluctuation and impetuous Commotion of the
+Waters.
+
+To proceed then; that there was a Fraction or Dissolution of the Earth
+at the Deluge, the History of it by _Moses_ gives us the first Account,
+seeing he tells us, as the principal Cause of the Flood, that the
+Fountains of the _great Abyss_ were _cloven_ or _burst asunder_; and
+upon this Disruption the Waters gush’d out from the Bowels of the Earth,
+as from the widen’d Mouths of so many Fountains. I do not take
+_Fountains_ there to signify any more than Sources or Stores of Water;
+noting also this Manner of their Eruption from below, or out of the
+Ground, as Fountains do. Accordingly in the _Proverbs_, (_chap._ iii.
+20.) ’tis only said, the _Abysses were broken open_. I do not doubt, but
+this refers to the Deluge, as _Bede_, and others understand it; the very
+Word being us’d here, both in the _Hebrew_ and Septuagint, נבקעו
+ἐῤῤάγησαν that express the Disruption of the Abyss at the Deluge.
+
+And this breaking up of the Earth at that Time, is elegantly exprest in
+_Job_, by the bursting of the Womb of Nature, when the Sea was first
+brought to Light; _ch._ xxxviii. when after many Pangs and Throws and
+Dilacerations of her Body, Nature was delivered of a Burthen, which she
+had born in her Womb sixteen hundred Years.
+
+These three Places I take to be Memorials and Proofs of the Disruption
+of the Earth, or of the Abyss, at the universal Deluge. And to these we
+may add more out of the Prophets, _Job_, and the _Psalms_, by Way of
+Allusion commonly to the State of Nature at that Time. The Prophet
+_Isaiah_, in describing the future Destruction of the World, _chap._
+xxiv. 18, 19. seems plainly to allude and have respect to the past
+Destruction of it at the Deluge; as appears by that leading Expression,
+_the Windows from on high are open_, ארבות סמיום נפתחו θυρίδες ἐκ τῷ
+οὐρανῶ ἠνεώχθησαν, taken manifestly from _Gen._ vii. 11. Then see how
+the Description goes on; _the Windows from on high are open, and the
+Foundations of the Earth do shake, the Earth is utterly broken down, the
+Earth is quite dissolved, the Earth is exceedingly moved_. Here are
+Concussions, and Fractions, and Dissolutions, as there were in the
+mundane Earthquake and Deluge; which we had exprest before only by
+_breaking open the Abyss_. By the Foundations of the Earth here and
+elsewhere, I perceive many understand the Center; so by _moving_ or
+_shaking_ the Foundations, or putting them out of Course, must be
+understood a displacing of the Center; which was really done at the
+deluge, as we have shewn in its proper Place, _Theor._ _Book_ ii.
+_Chap._ 3. If we therefore remember, that there was both a Dislocation,
+as I may so say, and a Fraction in the Body of the Earth, by that great
+Fall; a Dislocation as to the Center, and a Fraction as to the Surface
+and exterior Region, it will truly answer to all those Expressions in
+the Prophet, that seem so strange and extraordinary. ’Tis true, this
+Place of the Prophet respects also and foretels the future Destruction
+of the World; but that being by Fire, when the _Elements shall melt with
+fervent Heat, and the Earth with the Works therein shall be burnt up_,
+these Expressions of _Fractions and Concussions_, seem to be taken
+originally from the Manner of the World’s first distruction, and to be
+transferr’d, by way of Application, to represent and signify the second
+Destruction of it, though, it may be, not with the same Exactness and
+Propriety.
+
+There are several other Places that refer to the Dissolution and
+Subversion of the Earth at the Deluge, _Amos_ ix. 5, 6. _The Lord of
+Hosts is he, that toucheth the Earth, and it shall melt, or be
+dissolv’d.——and it shall rise up wholly like a Flood, and shall be
+drowned as by the Flood of Ægypt._ By _this_ and by _the next verse_ the
+Prophet seems to allude to the Deluge, and to the Dissolution of the
+Earth that was then. This in _Job_ seems to be called _breaking down the
+Earth, and overturning the Earth_, chap. xii. 14, 15. _Behold he
+breaketh down and it cannot be built again, He shutteth upon Man, and
+there can be no opening. Behold, he with-holdeth the Waters, and they
+dry up; also he sendeth them out, and they overturn the Earth:_ Which
+Place you may see paraphras’d, _Theo._ _Book_ i. _p._ 124, 125. We have
+already cited, and shall hereafter cite, other Places out of _Job_; and
+as that ancient Author (who is thought to have liv’d before the
+_Judaical_ Oeconomy, and nearer to _Noah_ than _Moses_) seems to have
+had the _Præcepta Noachidarum_, so also he seems to have had the
+_Dogmata Noachidarum_; which were deliver’d by _Noah_ to his Children
+and Posterity, concerning the Mysteries of natural Providence, the
+Origin and Fate of the World, the Deluge and ante-diluvian State, _&c._
+and accordingly we find many Strictures of these Doctrines in the Book
+of _Job_. Lastly, In the _Psalms_ there are Texts that mention the
+_shaking of the Earth_, and the _Foundations_ of the World, in reference
+to the Flood, if we judge aright; whereof we will speak under the next
+Head, _concerning_ the raging of the Waters in the Deluge.
+
+These Places of Scripture may be noted, as left us to be Remembrancers
+of that general Ruin and Disruption of the Earth at the Time of the
+Deluge. But I know it will be said of them, that they are not strict
+Proofs, but Allusions only: Be it so; yet what is the Ground of those
+Allusions? Something must be alluded, and something that hath past in
+Nature, and that is recorded in Sacred History; and what is that, unless
+it be the universal Deluge, and that Change and Disturbance that was
+then in all Nature? If others say, that these and such like Places are
+to be understood morally and allegorically, I do not envy them their
+Interpretation; but when Nature and Reason will bear a literal Sense,
+the Rule is, that we should not recede from the Letter. But I leave
+these Things to every one’s Thoughts; which the more calm they are, and
+the more impartial, the more easily they will feel the Impressions of
+Truth: In the mean Time, I proceed to the last particular mention’d,
+_The Form of the Deluge it self_.
+
+This we suppose to have been, not in the Way of a standing Pool, the
+Waters making an equal Surface, and an equal Height every where; but
+that the extream Height of the Waters was made by the extream Agitation
+of them; caus’d by the Weight and Force of great Masses or Regions of
+Earth falling at once into the Abyss; by which Means, as the Waters in
+some Places were press’d out, and thrown at an excessive Height into the
+Air, so they would also in certain Places gape, and lay bare even the
+Bottom of the Abyss; which would look as an open Grave ready to swallow
+up the Earth, and all it bore. Whilst the Ark, in the mean time, falling
+and rising by these Gulphs and Precipices, sometimes above Water, and
+sometimes under, was a true Type of the State of the Church in this
+World: And to this Time and State _David_ alludes in the Name of the
+Church, _Psalm._ xlii. 7. _Abyss calls unto Abyss at the Noise of thy
+Cataracts or Water-Spouts; all thy Water and Billows have gone over me._
+And again, _Psal._ xlvi. 2, 3. in the Name of the Church, _Therefore
+will not we fear tho’ the Earth be removed, and tho’ the Mountains be
+carried into the midst of the Seas. The Waters thereof roar and are
+troubled, the Mountains shake with the swelling thereof._
+
+But there is no Description more remarkable or more eloquent, than of
+that Scene of Things represented, _Psalm._ xviii. 7, 8, 9, _&c._ which
+still alludes, in my Opinion, to the Deluge-Scene, and in the Name of
+the Church. We will set down the Words at large.
+
+ Ver. 6. _In my distress I called upon the Lord, and cryed unto my
+ God; He heard my Voice out of his Temple, and my Cry came before him
+ into his Ears._
+
+ 7. _Then the Earth shook and trembled, the Foundations also of the
+ Hills moved and were shaken, because he was wroth._
+
+ 8. _There went up a Smoak from his Nostrils, and Fire out of his
+ Mouth devoured; Coals were kindled by it._
+
+ 9. _He bowed the Heavens also and came down, and Darkness was under
+ his Feet._
+
+ 10. _And he rode upon a Cherub and did fly, he did fly upon the
+ Wings of the Wind._
+
+ 11. _He made Darkness his secret Place; his Pavilion round about him
+ was dark Waters and thick Clouds of the Sky._
+
+ 12. _At the Brightness before him the thick Clouds passed, Hail and
+ Coals of Fire._
+
+ 13. _The Lord also thunder’d in the Heavens, and the Highest gave
+ his Voice, Hail and Coals of Fire._
+
+ 14. _Yea, he sent out his Arrows, and scattered them; and he shot
+ out Lightnings and discomfited them._
+
+ 15. _Then the Channels of Waters were seen, and the Foundations of
+ the World were discovered; at thy rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of
+ the Breath of thy Nostrils._
+
+ _He sent from above, he took me; he drew me out of great Waters._
+ מים רבים
+
+This is a rough, I think, Draught of the Face of the Heavens and the
+Earth at the Deluge, as the last Verses do intimate; and ’tis apply’d to
+express the Dangers and Deliverances of the Church: The Expressions are
+so far too high to be apply’d to _David_ in his Person, and to his
+Deliverance from _Saul_; no such Agonies or Disorders of Nature as are
+here instanc’d, were made in _David_’s Time, or upon his Account; but
+’tis a Scheme of the Church, and of her Fate, particularly, as
+represented by the Ark, in that dismal Distress, when all Nature was in
+Confusion. And though there may be some Things here intermixt to make up
+the Scene, that are not so close to the Subject as the rest, or that
+they may be refer’d to the future Destruction of the World; yet that is
+not unusual, nor amiss, in such Descriptions, if the great Strokes be
+fit and rightly placed. That there was Smoak, and Fire, and Water, and
+Thunder, and Darkness, and Winds, and Earthquakes, at the Deluge, we
+cannot doubt, if we consider the Circumstances of it: Waters dash’d and
+broken made a Smoak and Darkness, and no Hurricane could be so violent
+as the Motions of the Air at that Time: Then the Earth was torn in
+pieces, and its Foundations shaken. And as to Thunder and Lightning, the
+Encounters and Collisions of the mighty Waves, and the Cracks of a
+falling World, would make Flashes and Noises, far greater and more
+terrible, than any that can come from Vapours and Clouds. There was an
+universal[12] Tempest, a Conflict and Clashing of all the Elements; and
+_David_ seems to have represented it so; with God Almighty in the midst
+of it, ruling them all.
+
+But I am apt to think, some will say, all this is Poetical in the
+Prophet, and these are hyperbolical and figurative Expressions, from
+which we cannot make any Inference, as to the Deluge and the natural
+World: ’Tis true, those that have no Idea of the Deluge, that will
+answer to such a Scene of things, as is here represented, must give such
+a slight Account of this _Psalm_. But on the other hand, if we have
+already an Idea of the Deluge, that is rational, and also consonant to
+Scripture upon other Proofs, and the Description here made by the
+Prophet answer to that Idea, whether then is it not more reasonable to
+think, that it stands upon that Ground, than to think it a mere Fancy
+and poetical Scene of Things? This is the true State of the Case, and
+that which we must judge of. Methinks ’tis very harsh to suppose all
+this a bare Fiction, grounded upon no matter of Fact, upon no sacred
+Story, upon no Appearance of God in Nature. If you say it hath a moral
+Signification, so let it have, we do not destroy that: It hath
+reference, no doubt, to the Dangers and Deliverances of the Church; but
+the Question is, whether the Words and natural Sense be a Fancy only, a
+Bundle of random Hyperboles? or, whether they relate to the History of
+the Deluge, and the State of the Ark there representing the Church? This
+makes the Sense doubly rich, Historically and Morally; and grounds it
+upon Scripture and Reason, as well as upon Fancy.
+
+That violent Eruption of the Sea out of the Womb of the Earth, which
+_Job_ speaks of, is, in my Judgment, another Description of the Deluge;
+’tis _ch._ xxxviii. 8, 9, 10, 11. _Who shut up the Sea with Doors, when
+it broke forth, as if it had issued out of a womb; when I made the Cloud
+the Garment thereof, and thick Darkness a swadling Band for it. And
+broke up for it my decreed Place.——Hitherto shalt thou come_, &c. Here
+you may see the Birth and Nativity of the Sea, or of _Oceanus_,
+describ’d[13], how he broke out of the Womb, and what his first Garment
+and Swadling-Cloaths were; namely, Clouds and thick Darkness. This
+cannot refer to any thing, that I know of, but to the Face of Nature at
+the Deluge; when the Sea was born, and wrapt up in Clouds and broken
+Waves, and a dark impenetrable Mist round the Body of the Earth. And
+this seems to be the very same, that _David_ had express’d in his
+Description of the Deluge, _Psal._ xviii. 11. _He made Darkness his
+secret Place, his Pavilion round about him were dark Waters and thick
+Clouds of the Skies._ For this was truly the Face of the World in the
+Time of the Flood, tho’ we little reflect upon it. And this dark
+Confusion every where, above and below, arose from the violent and
+confus’d Motion of the Abyss; which was dash’d in pieces by the falling
+Earth; and flew into the Air in misty Drops, as Dust flies up in a great
+Ruin. [See _Theor._ _Book_ i. _p._ 136.]
+
+But I am afraid, we have stay’d too long upon this Particular, _The Form
+of the Deluge_; seeing ’tis but a Corollary from the precedent Article
+about the Dissolution of the Earth. However, Time is not ill spent about
+any thing that relates to natural Providence, whereof the two most
+signal Instances in our sacred Writings, are, the _Deluge_ and the
+_Conflagration_. And seeing _Job_ and _David_ do often reflect upon the
+Works of God in the external Creation, and upon the Administrations of
+Providence, it cannot be imagin’d, that they should never reflect upon
+the Deluge; the most remarkable Change of Nature that ever hath been,
+and the most remarkable Judgment upon Mankind. And if they have
+reflected upon it any where, ’tis, I think, in those Places and those
+Instances, which I have noted; and if those Places do relate to the
+Deluge, they are not capable, in my Judgment, of any fairer or more
+natural Interpretation, than that which we have given them; which you
+see, how much it favours and confirms our Theory.
+
+I have now finished the Heads I undertook to prove, that I might shew
+our Theory to agree with Scripture in these three principal Points;
+first, in that it supposeth a Diversity and Difference betwixt the
+ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth, and the present Heavens and Earth:
+Secondly, in assigning the particular Form of the ante-diluvian Earth
+and Abyss; Thirdly, in explaining the Deluge by a Dissolution of that
+Earth, and an Eruption of the Abyss. How far I have succeeded in this
+Attempt, as to others, I cannot tell; but I am sure I have convinced my
+self, and am satisfied that my Thoughts, in that Theory, have run in the
+same Tract with the Holy Writings, with the true Intent and Spirit of
+them. There are some Persons that are wilfully ignorant in certain
+things, and others that are willing to be ignorant, as the Apostle
+phraseth it; speaking of those Eternalists that denied the Doctrine of
+the Change and Revolutions of the natural World: And ’tis not to be
+expected but there are many still of the same Humour, and therefore may
+be called _willingly ignorant_; that is, they will not use that Pains
+and Attention that is necessary for the Examination of such a Doctrine,
+nor Impartiality in judging after Examination; they greedily lay hold on
+all Evidence on one side, and willingly forget, or slightly pass over,
+all Evidence for the other. This, I think, is the Character of those
+that are _willingly ignorant_; for I do not take it to be so deep as a
+downright wilful Ignorance, where they are plainly conscious to
+themselves of that Wilfulness: but where an insensible Mixture of human
+Passions inclines them one Way, and makes them averse to the other; and
+in that Method draws on all the Consequences of a willing _Ignorance_.
+
+There remains still, as I remember, one Proposition that I am bound to
+make good; I said, at first, that our Hypothesis concerning the Deluge
+was more agreeable not only to Scripture in general, but also to the
+particular History of the Flood left us by _Moses_; I say, more
+agreeable to it than any other Hypothesis, that hath yet been propos’d.
+This may be made good in a few Words; for in _Moses_’s History of the
+Deluge, there are two principal Points, the Extent of the Deluge, and
+the Causes of it; and in both these we do fully agree with that sacred
+Author. _As to the Extent of it_, he makes the Deluge universal; _All
+the high Hills under the whole Heaven were cover’d fifteen Cubits
+upwards._ We also make it universal, over the Face of the whole Earth;
+and in such a Manner as must needs raise the Waters above the Top of the
+highest Hills every where. As _to the Causes of it_, _Moses_ makes them
+to be the Disruption of the _Abyss_, and the _Rains_, and no more; and
+in this also we exactly agree with him; we know no other Causes, nor
+pretend to any other but those two. Distinguishing therefore _Moses_ his
+Narration as to the Substance and Circumstances of it, it must be
+allowed that these two Points make the Substance of it, and that an
+Hypothesis that differs from it in either of these two, differs from it
+more than ours; which, at the worst, can but differ in Matter of
+Circumstance. Now seeing the great Difficulty about the Deluge is the
+Quantity of Water required for it, there have been two Explications
+proposed, besides ours, to remove or satisfy this Difficulty; one
+whereof makes the Deluge not to have been universal, or to have reach’d
+only _Judea_ and some neighbouring Countries, and therefore less Water
+would suffice; the other owning the Deluge to be universal, supplies it
+self with Water from the divine Omnipotency, and says _new_ Waters were
+created then for the nonce, and again annihilated, when the Deluge was
+to cease. Both these Explications, you see, (and I know no more of Note
+that are not obnoxious to the same Exceptions) differ from _Moses_ in
+the Substance, or in one of the two substantial Points, and consequently
+more than ours doth. The first changeth the Flood into a kind of
+National Inundation; and the second assigns other Causes of it than
+_Moses_ had assign’d; And as they both differ apparently from the
+_Mosaical_ History, so you may see them refuted upon other Grounds also,
+in the third Chapter of the first Book of the _Theory_.
+
+This may be sufficient as to the History of the Flood by _Moses_: But
+possibly it may be said, the principal Objection will arise from _Moses_
+his six Days Creation in the first Chapter of _Genesis_; where another
+sort of Earth, than what we have form’d from the Chaos, is represented
+to us; namely, a terraqueous Globe such as our Earth is at present. ’Tis
+indeed very apparent, that _Moses_ hath accommodated his six Days
+Creation to the present Form of the Earth, or to that which was before
+the Eyes of the People, when he wrote. But it is a great Question
+whether that was ever intended for a true Physical Account of the Origin
+of the Earth; or whether _Moses_ did either Philosophize or Astronomize
+in that Description. The antient fathers, when they answer the Heathens,
+and the Adversaries of Christianity, do generally deny it; as I am ready
+to make good upon another Occasion. And the Thing it self bears in it
+evident Marks of an Accommodation and Condescension to the vulgar
+Notions concerning the Form of the World: Those that think otherwise,
+and would make it literally and physically true in all the Parts of it,
+I desire them, without entring upon the strict Merits of the Cause, to
+determine these Preliminaries. First, whether the whole Universe rise
+from a terrestrial Chaos? Secondly, what System of a World this six Days
+Creation proceeds upon; whether it supposes the Earth, or the Sun, for
+the Center? Thirdly, whether the Sun and fix’d Stars are of a later
+Date, and a later Birth, than this Globe of Earth? And lastly, where is
+the Region of the Super-celestial Waters? When they have determin’d
+these Fundamentals, we will proceed to other Observations upon the six
+Days Work, which will farther assure us, that ’tis a Narration suited to
+the Capacity of the People, and not to the strict and physical Nature of
+Things. Besides, we are to remember, that _Moses_ must be so interpreted
+in the first Chapter of _Genesis_, as not to interfere with himself in
+other Parts of his History; nor to interfere with St. _Peter_, or the
+Prophet _David_, or any other sacred Authors, when they treat of the
+same Matter. Nor lastly, so, as to be repugnant to clear and uncontested
+Science. For, in things that concern the natural World, that must always
+be consulted.
+
+With these Precautions, let them try if they can reduce that Narrative
+of the Origin of the World, to physical Truth; so as to be consistent,
+both with Nature, and with Divine Revelation every where. It is easily
+reconcileable to both, if we suppose it wrote in a vulgar Style, and to
+the Conceptions of the People; and we cannot deny that a vulgar Style is
+often made use of in the holy Writings. How freely and unconcernedly
+does Scripture speak of God Almighty, according to the Opinions of the
+Vulgar? Of his _Passions_, _local Motions_, _Parts and Members of his
+Body_: Which all are things that do not belong, or are not compatible
+with the Divine Nature, according to Truth and Science. And if this
+Liberty be taken, as to God himself, much more may it be taken as to his
+Works. And accordingly we see, what Motion the Scripture gives to the
+Sun; what Figure to the Earth; what Figure to the Heavens: All according
+to the Appearance of Sense and popular Credulity without any Remorse for
+having transgressed the Rules of intellectual Truth.
+
+This vulgar Style of Scripture, in describing the Nature of Things, hath
+been often mistaken for the real Sense, and so become a Stumbling-Block
+in the Way of Truth. Thus the _Anthropomorphites_ of old contended for
+the human Shape of God, from the Letter of Scripture, and brought many
+express Texts for their purpose; but sound Reason, at length, got the
+upper hand of literal Authority. Then several of the Christian Fathers
+contended, that there were no _Antipodes_; and made that Doctrine
+irreconcilable to Scripture; But this also, after a while, went off, and
+yeilded to Reason and Experience. Then, the Motion of the Earth must by
+no means be allow’d, as being contrary to Scripture; for so it is
+indeed, according to the Letter and vulgar Style. But all intelligent
+Persons see thorough this Argument, and depend upon it no more in this
+Case, than in the former. Lastly, the Original of the Earth from a
+Chaos, drawn according to the Rules of Phisiology, will not be admitted;
+because it does not agree with the Scheme of the six Days Creation. But
+why may not this be wrote in a vulgar Style, as well as the rest?
+Certainly there can be nothing more like a vulgar Style, than to set God
+to _work by the Day_, and in six Days to finish his Task; as he is there
+represented. We may therefore probably hope that all these Disguises of
+Truth will at length fall off, and that we shall see God and his Works
+in a pure and naked Light.
+
+Thus I have finished what I had to say in Confirmation of this Theory
+from Scripture; I mean of the former Part of it, which depends chiefly
+upon the Deluge, and the ante-diluvian Earth. When you have collated the
+Places of Scripture, on either side, and laid them in the Balance, to be
+weigh’d one against another; if you do but find them equal, or near to
+an equal Poise, you know in whether Scale the natural Reasons are to be
+laid; and of what Weight they ought to be in an Argument of this kind.
+There is a great Difference betwixt Scripture with Philosophy on its
+side, and Scripture with Philosophy against it, when the Question is
+concerning the natural World: And this is our Case; which I now leave to
+the Consideration of the unprejudic’d Reader, and proceed to the Proof
+of the second Part of the Theory.
+
+The latter Part consists of the _Conflagration of the World_, and the
+_new Heavens_ and _new Earth_; and seeing there is no Dispute concerning
+the former of these two, our Task will now lie in a little Compass;
+being only this, to prove that there will be new Heavens, and a new
+Earth, after the Conflagration. This, to my Mind, is sufficiently done
+already, in the first, second and third Chapters of the ivth book, both
+from Scripture and Antiquity, whether Sacred or Prophane; and therefore,
+at present, we will only make a short and easy Review of
+Scripture-Testimonies, with design chiefly to obviate and disappoint the
+Evasions of such, as would beat down solid Texts into thin Metaphors and
+Allegories.
+
+The Testimonies of Scripture concerning the _Renovation of the World_,
+are either express, or implicit: Those I call express, that mention the
+new Heavens and new Earth; and those implicit, that signify the same
+Thing, but not in express Terms. So when our Saviour speaks of a
+_Palingenesia_, or Regeneration; (_Matt._ xix. 28, 29.) or St _Peter_,
+of an _Apocatastasis_ or Restitution; (_Acts_ iii. 21.) these being
+Words used by all Authors, Prophane or Ecclesiastical, for the
+_Renovation_ of the World, ought, in reason, to be interpreted in the
+same Sense in the Holy Writings. And in like Manner, when St. _Paul_
+speaks of his _future Earth_, or an _habitable World to come_, Hebr. ii.
+5. ἡ οἰκουμένη ἡ μέλλουσα or of a _Redemption_ or Melioration of the
+present State of Nature, _Rom._ iii. 21, 22. these lead us again, in
+other Terms, to the same _Renovation_ of the World. But there are also
+some Places of Scripture, that set the _new Heavens_ and _new Earth_ in
+such a full and open View, that we must shut our Eyes not to see them.
+St. _John_ says, he saw them, and observed the Form of the new Earth,
+_Apoc._ xxi. 1. _Isa._ lxv. 17. The Seer _Isaiah_ spoke of them in
+express Words, many hundred Years before. And St. _Peter_ marks the Time
+when they are to be introduc’d, namely, after the Conflagration, or
+after the Dissolution of the present Heavens and Earth, 2 _Pet._ iii.
+12, 13.
+
+These later Texts of Scripture being so express, there is but one Way
+left to elude the Force of them; and that is, by turning the _Renovation
+of the World_ into an Allegory; and making the new Heavens and new Earth
+to be allegorical Heavens and Earth, not real and material, as ours are.
+This is a bold Attempt of some modern Authors, who chuse rather to
+strain the Word of God, than their own Notions. There are Allegories, no
+doubt, in Scripture, but we are not to allegorize Scripture without some
+Warrant; either from an Apostolical Interpretation, or from the
+Necessity of the Matter; and I do not know how they can pretend to
+either of these, in this Case. However, that they may have all fair
+Play, we will lay aside, at present, all the other Texts of Scripture,
+and confine our selves wholly to St. _Peter_’s Words; to see and examine
+whether they are, or can be turn’d into an Allegory, according to the
+best Rules of Interpretation.
+
+St. _Peter_’s Words are these, 2 _Pet._ iii. 11, 12, 13. _Seeing then
+all these Things shall be dissolved, what manner of Persons ought ye to
+be in all holy Conversation and Godliness? Looking for, and hasting the
+Coming of the Day of God; wherein the Heavens being on Fire shall be
+dissolved, and the Elements shall melt with fervent Heat. Nevertheless
+we, according to his Promise, look for new Heavens and a new Earth;
+wherein Righteousness shall dwell._ The Question is concerning this last
+Verse, _Whether the new Heavens and Earth_ here promis’d, are to be real
+and material Heavens and Earth, or only figurative and allegorical. The
+Words, you see, are clear; and the general Rule of Interpretation is
+this, _That_ we are not to recede from the Letter, or the literal Sense,
+unless there be a Necessity from the Subject-matter; such a Necessity,
+as makes a literal Interpretation absurd. But where is that Necessity in
+this Case? Cannot God make new Heavens and a new Earth, as easily as he
+made the old ones? Is his Strength decayed since that Time, or is Matter
+grown more disobedient? Nay, does not Nature offer her self voluntarily
+to raise a new World from the second Chaos, as well as from the first;
+and, under the Conduct of Providence, to make it as convenient an
+Habitation as the primæval Earth? Therefore no Necessity can be
+pretended of leaving the litteral Sense, upon an Incapacity of the
+Subject-matter.
+
+The second Rule to determine an Interpretation to be literal or
+allegorical, is the use of the same Words or Phrase in the Context, and
+the Signification of them there: Let’s then examine our Case according
+to this Rule. St. _Peter_ had us’d the same Phrase of _Heavens and
+Earth_ twice before in the same Chapter. The _old Heavens and Earth_,
+_ver._ 5. The _present Heavens and Earth_, _ver._ 7. and now he uses it
+again, _ver._ 13. the _new Heavens and Earth._ Have we not then Reason
+to suppose, that he takes it here in the same Sense, that he had done
+twice before, for real and material Heavens and Earth? There is no Mark
+set of a new Signification, nor why we should alter the Sense of the
+Words. That he used them always before for the material Heavens and
+Earth, I think none will question; and therefore, unless they can give
+us a sufficient Reason, why we should change the Signification of the
+Words, we are bound by this second Rule also, to understand them in a
+litteral Sense.
+
+Lastly, The very Form of the Words, and the Manner of their Dependence
+upon the Context, leads us to a litteral Sense, and to material Heavens
+and Earth. _Nevertheless_, says the Apostle, _we expect new Heavens,
+&c._ Why _Nevertheless!_ that is, notwithstanding the Dissolution of the
+present Heavens and Earth. The Apostle foresaw, what he had said might
+raise a Doubt in their Minds, whether all Things would not be at an End;
+nothing more of Heavens and Earth, or of any habitable World, after the
+Conflagration: And to obviate this, he tells them, _Notwithstanding_
+that wonderful Desolation that I have describ’d, we do, accordding to
+God’s Promises, expect new Heavens and a new Earth, to be an Habitation
+for the Righteous.
+
+You see then the new Heavens and new Earth, which the Apostle speaks of,
+are substituted in the Place of those that were destroyed at the
+Conflagration; and would you substitute allegorical Heavens and Earth in
+the Place of Material? Shadow for a Substance? What an Equivocation
+would it be in the Apostle, when the Doubt was about the material
+Heavens and Earth, to make an Answer about allegorical. Lastly, The
+timing of the Thing determines the Sense: When shall this new World
+appear? after the Conflagration, the Apostle says: Therefore it cannot
+be understood of any moral Renovation, to be made at, or in the Times of
+the Gospel, as these Allegorists pretend. We must therefore, upon all
+Accounts, conclude that the Apostle intended a literal Sense; real and
+material Heavens, to succeed these after the Conflagration; which was
+the Thing to be prov’d. And I know not what Bars the Spirit of God can
+set, to keep us within the Compass of a literal Sense, if these be not
+sufficient.
+
+Thus much for the Explication of St. _Peter_’s Doctrine concerning the
+new Heavens and new Earth; which secures the second Part of our Theory:
+For the Theory stands upon two Pillars, or two Pedestals, the
+ante-diluvian Earth and the future Earth; or in St. _Peter_’s Phrase,
+the old Heavens and Earth, and the new Heavens and Earth; and it cannot
+be shaken, so long as these two continue firm and immoveable. We might
+now put an End to this Review, but it may be expected possibly that we
+should say something concerning the _Millennium_? which we have,
+contrary to the general Sentiment of the modern _Millennaries_, plac’d
+in the _future_ Earth. Our Opinion hath this Advantage above others,
+that all fanatical Pretensions to Power and Empire in this World, are,
+by these Means, blown away, as Chaff before the Wind. Princes need not
+fear to be dethroned, to make way to the Saints; nor Governments
+unhinged, that they may rule the World with a Rod of Iron. These are the
+Effects of the wild Enthusiasm; seeing the very State which they aim at,
+is not to be upon this Earth.
+
+But that our Sense may not be mistaken or misapprehended in this
+Particular, as if we thought the Christian Church would never, upon this
+Earth, be in a better and happier Posture than it is in at present: We
+must distinguish betwixt a _Melioration_ of the World, if you will allow
+that Word; and a _Millennium_. We do not deny a Reformation and
+Improvement of the Church, both as to Peace, Purity, and Piety: That
+Knowledge may increase, Mens Minds be enlarged, and Christian Religion
+better understood: That the Power of Antichrist shall be diminish’d,
+Persecution cease, Liberty of Conscience allow’d amongst the Reformed;
+and a greater Union and Harmony established: That Princes will mind the
+publick Good, more than they do now; and be themselves better Examples
+of Virtue and true Piety. All this may be, and I hope will be e’er long.
+But the _apocalyptical Millennium_, or the _new Jerusalem_, is still
+another Matter: It differs not in Degree only from the present State,
+but in a new Order of Things; both in the moral World and in the
+natural; and that cannot be till we come into the _new Heavens_ and _new
+Earth_. Suppose what Reformation you can in this World, there will still
+remain many Things inconsistent with the true millennial State;
+Antichrist, tho’ weakned, will not be finally destroyed till the coming
+of our Saviour, nor Satan bound. And there will be always Poverty, Wars,
+Diseases, Knaves and Hypocrites, in this World, which are not consistent
+with the _new Jerusalem_, as St. _John_ describes it, _Apoc._ xxi. 2, 3,
+4, _&c._
+
+You see now what our Notion is of the Millennium, as we deny this Earth
+to be the Seat of it: ’Tis the State that succeeds the first
+Resurrection, when Satan is lock’d up in the bottomless Pit: The State
+when the Martyrs are to return into Life, and wherein they are to have
+the first Lot and chief Share: A State which is to last a thousand
+Years. _And Blessed and Holy is he, that hath a Part in it; on such the
+second Death hath no Power; but they shall be Priests of God and Christ,
+and shall reign with him a thousand Years._ If you would see more
+particular Reasons of our Judgment in this Case, why such a Millennium
+is not to be expected in this World; they are set down in the _8th_
+Chap. of the _4th_ Book, and we do not think it necessary that they
+should be here repeated.
+
+As to that Dissertion that follows the Millennium, and reaches to the
+Consummation of all Things seeing it is but problematical, we leave it
+to stand or fall by the Evidence already given; and should be very glad
+to see the Conjectures of others more learned, in Speculations so
+abstruse and remote from common Knowledge. They cannot surely be thought
+unworthy or unfit for our Meditations, seeing they are suggested to us
+by Scripture it self: And to what end were they propos’d to us there, if
+it was not intended, that they should be understood, sooner or later?
+
+I have done with this Review; and shall only add one or two Reflections
+upon the whole Discourse, and so conclude. You have seen the State of
+the Theory of the Earth, as to the _Matters_, _Form_, and _Proofs_ of
+it, both natural and sacred: If any one will substitute a better in its
+Place, I shall think my self more obliged to him, than if he had shewed
+me the Quadrature of the Circle. But it is not enough to pick Quarrels
+here and there; that may be done by any Writing, especially when it is
+of so great Extent and Comprehension: They must build up, as well as
+pull down; and give us another Theory instead of this, fitted to the
+same natural History of the Earth, according as it is set down in
+Scripture; and then let the World take their Choice. He that cuts down a
+Tree, is bound in Reason to plant two; because there is an Hazard in
+their Growth and Thriving.
+
+Then as to those that are such rigorous Scripturists, as to require
+plainly demonstrative and irresistible Texts for every thing they
+entertain or believe; they would do well to reflect and consider,
+whether, for every Article in the three Creeds (which have no Support
+from natural Reason) they can bring such Texts of Scripture as they
+require of others; or a fairer and juster Evidence, all things
+consider’d, than we have done for the Substance of this Theory. We have
+not indeed said all that might be said, as to Antiquity; that making no
+part in this Review, and being capable still of great Additions. But as
+to Scripture and Reason I have no more to add: Those that are not
+satisfied with the Proofs already produc’d upon these two Heads, are
+under a Fate, good or bad, which is not in my Power to overcome.
+_FINIS._
+
+Footnote 6:
+
+ There was a Sect amongst the _Jews_ that held this Perpetuity and
+ Immutability of Nature; and _Maimonides_ himself was of this
+ Principle, and gives the same Reason for it with the Scoffers here in
+ the Text, _Quod mundus retinet & sequitur Consuetudinem suam._ And as
+ to those of the _Jews_ that were _Aristoteleans_, it was very suitable
+ to their principles to hold the Incorruptibility of the World, as
+ their Master did. _Vid. Med. in loc._
+
+Footnote 7:
+
+ δὶ ῀ὠν, _per que_. Vulgat. _Quamobrem_, Beza. _Quâ de causâ_, Grot.
+ _Nemo interpretum reddidit_ δὶ ῀ὠν, per quas; _subintelligendo_ aquas.
+ _Hoc enim argumentationem Apostolicana tolleret, supponeretque
+ illusores illos ignorâsse quod olim fuerit Diluvium; Quod supponi non
+ posse supra ostendimus._
+
+Footnote 8:
+
+ This Phrase or manner of Speech συνισάναι ἐκ vel ἐξ is not usual in
+ _Greek_ Authors; and upon a like Subject, _Plato_ saith, τὸν δὲ κόσμον
+ συνισάναι ἐκ πυρὸς ὕδατος, ἀέρος, γῆς, but he that should translate
+ _Plato_, _the World stands out of Fire, Water_, _&c._ would be thought
+ neither _Grecian_, nor Philosopher. The same Phrase is us’d in
+ reciting _Heraclitus_ his Opinion, τὰ πάντα ἐκ πυρὸς συνεσάναι, καὶ
+ εἰς τοῦτο ἀναλιέως. And also in _Thales_ his which is still nearer to
+ the Subject, ἐκ τοῦ ὑδατός, φηοι, συνιζάναι πάντα, which _Cicero_
+ renders, _ex aquâ, dixit, constare omnia_. So that it is easy to know
+ the true Importance of this Phrase, and how it is ill render’d in the
+ English, _standing out of the Water_.
+
+Footnote 9:
+
+ Whether you refer the Words ἐξ ὕδατ. καὶ δὶ ὕδατ separately to the
+ Heavens and the Earth, or both to the Earth, or both to both, it will
+ make no great Difference as to our Interpretation.
+
+Footnote 10:
+
+ I know some would make this Place of no effect by rendering the
+ _Hebrew_ Particle על _juxta, by_ or _near_ to; so they would read it
+ thus, _he had founded the Earth by the Sea-side_, and establish’d it
+ by the Floods. What is there wonderful in this, that the Shores should
+ lie by the Sea-side? Where could they lie else? What Reason or
+ Argument is this, why the Earth should be the Lord’s? The Earth is the
+ Lord’s, _for_ he hath founded it _near_ the Seas. Where is the
+ Consequence of this? But if he founded it upon the Seas, which could
+ not be done by any other Hand but his, it shews both the Workman and
+ the Master. And accordingly in that other, _Psal._ cxxxvi. 6, if you
+ render it, He _stretched_ out the Earth _near_ the Waters, How is that
+ one of God’s great Wonders, as it is there represented to be? Because
+ in some few Places this Particle is rendered otherwise, where the
+ Sense will bear it, must we therefore render it so when we please, and
+ where the Sense will not bear it? This being the most usual
+ Signification of it, and there being no other Word that signifies
+ _above_ more frequently or determinately than this does, why must it
+ signify otherwise in this Place? Men will wriggle any way to get from
+ under the Force of a Text, that does not suit to their own Notions.
+
+Footnote 11:
+
+ This reading or translating is generally followed, (_Theor. Book_ i.
+ _p._ 86.) though the _English_ Translation read _on a heap_,
+ unsuitably to the Matter and to the Sense.
+
+Footnote 12:
+
+ See _Philo Judæus_ his Description of the Deluge, both as to the
+ Commotions of the Heavens, and the Fractions of the Earth. In his
+ first Treatise _de Abrahamo_, _mih_, _p._ 279.
+
+Footnote 13:
+
+ _Uti comparatio præcedens_, ver. 4, 5, 6. _de ortu Telluris, sumitur
+ ab ædificio, ita hæc altera de orsu maris, sumitur à partu; &
+ exhibetur Oceanus, primùm, ut fœtus inclusus in utero, dein ut
+ erumpens & prodeuns, denique ut fasciis & primus suis panniis
+ involvutus. Atque ex aperto Terræ utero prorupit aquarum moles, ut
+ proluties illæ, quam simul cum fœtu profundere solet puerpera_.
+
+
+
+
+ AN ANSWER TO THE EXCEPTIONS MADE BY _Mr._ ERASMUS WARREN,
+ Against the SACRED THEORY OF THE EARTH.
+
+ THE FOURTH EDITION.
+
+ _LONDON_:
+
+ Printed for J. HOOKE, at the _Flower de Luce_ in
+ _Fleetstreet_, MDCCXXVI.
+
+
+
+
+ AN ANSWER TO THE EXCEPTIONS MADE BY _Mr._ ERASMUS WARREN, AGAINST THE
+ _THEORY_ of the _EARTH_.
+
+
+If it be Civility to return a speedy Answer to a Demand or Message, I
+will not fail to pay that Respect to the late Author of the _Exceptions
+against the Theory of the Earth_. I know, short Follies, and short
+Quarrels, are the best: And to offer Satisfaction at the first
+Opportunity, is the fairest Way to put an End to Controversies. Besides,
+such personal Altercations as these, are but _Res perituræ_, which do
+not deserve much Time or Study; but, like Repartees, are best made off
+hand, and never thought on more. I only desire that Friendliness, that
+some Allowance may be made as to Unaccuracy of Style: Which is always
+allow’d in hasty Dispatches.
+
+I shall make no Excursions from the Subject, nor use any other Method
+than to follow the learned _Exceptor_ from Chapter to Chapter, and
+observe his Steps and Motions, so far as they are contrary to the
+Theory. But if he divert out of his Way, for his Pleasure, or other
+Reasons best known to himself, I may take notice of it perhaps, but
+shall not follow him any farther than my Business leads me; having no
+design to abridge his Liberty, but to defend my own Writings where they
+are attack’d. Give me leave therefore, without any other Preface or
+Ceremony, to fall to our Work.
+
+
+ CHAP. I.
+
+
+This Chapter is only an Introduction, and treats of other Things,
+without any particular Opposition to the Theory. And therefore I shall
+only give you the Conclusion of it, in the Author’s own Words: _So much
+for the first Chapter; which may be reckoned as an Introduction to the
+following Discourse. Which if any shall look upon as a Collection of
+Notes, somewhat confusedly put together, rather than a formal, well
+digested Treatise, they will entertain the best or truest Idea of it._ A
+severe Censure: But every Man best understands his own Works.
+
+
+ CHAP. II.
+
+
+Here he begins to enter upon particular Exceptions: And his first Head
+is against the _Formation of the Earth_, _pag._ 45. as explained by the
+Theory. To this he gives but one Exception in this Chapter: Namely, That
+_it would have taken up too much Time; the World being made in six
+Days_. Whereas many Separations of the Chaos, and of the Elements, were
+to be made, according to the Theory, which could not be dispatch’d in so
+short a Time. To this Exception, the general Answer may be this; either
+you take the Hypothesis of an ordinary Providence, or of an
+extraordinary, as to the Time allowed for the Formation of the Earth: If
+you proceed according to an ordinary Providence, the Formation of the
+Earth would require much more Time than six Days: But if according to an
+extraordinary, you may suppose it made in six Minutes, if you please.
+’Twas plain Work, and a simple Process, according to the Theory;
+consisting only of such and such Separations, and a Concretion: And
+either of these might be accelerated, and dispatch’d in a longer or
+shorter Time, as Providence thought fit.
+
+However, this Objection does not come well from the Hands of this
+Author, who makes all the Mountains of the Earth (the most operose Part
+of it, as one would think) to be rais’d in a small Parcel of a Day by
+the Heat and Action of the Sun; as we shall find in the tenth Chapter,
+hereafter. He seems to proceed by natural Causes; for such are the Heat
+and Action of the Sun: And if so, he will find himself as much
+straiten’d for Time, as the Theorist can be. But if he say, the Work of
+Nature and of the Sun was accelerated by an extra-ordinary Power, he
+must allow us to say the same Thing of the Separations of the Chaos, and
+the first Concretion of the Earth. For he cannot reasonably debar us
+that Liberty which he takes himself, unless we have debarr’d and
+excluded our selves. Now ’tis plain, the Theorist never excluded an
+extraordinary Providence in the Formation and Construction of the Earth;
+as appears, and is openly express’d in many Parts of the Theory, _Eng.
+Theor. p._ 88. See, if you please, the Conclusion of the _fifth
+Chapter_, which treats about the Formation of the Earth. The last
+Paragraph is this: _Give me leave only, before we proceed any farther,
+to annex here a short Advertisement, concerning the Causes of this
+wonderful Structure of the first Earth: ’Tis true, we have propos’d the
+natural Causes of it, and I do not know wherein our Explication is false
+or defective; but in Things of this Kind we may easily be too credulous:
+And this Structure is so marvellous, that it ought rather to be
+consider’d as a particular Effect of the Divine Art, than as the Work of
+Nature. The whole Globe of the Water vaulted over, and the exterior
+Earth hanging above the Deep, sustain’d by nothing but its own Measures
+and Manner of Construction: A Building without Foundation or
+Corner-stone. This seems to be a Piece of Divine Geometry or
+Architecture; and to this, I think, is to be referr’d that magnificent
+Challenge which God Almighty made to_ Job; Where wast thou, when I laid
+the Foundations of the Earth? Declare, _&c._ Moses _also, when be had
+describ’d the Chaos, saith_, The Spirit of God mov’d upon, _or sat
+brooding upon_, the Face of the Waters; _without all doubt, to produce
+some Effects there_. _And St._ Peter, _when he speaks of the Form of the
+Anti-deluvian Earth, how it stood, in reference to the Waters, adds_, By
+the Word of God, _or by the Wisdom of God_, it was made so. _And this
+same Wisdom of God, in the_ Proverbs, _as we observed before, takes
+notice of this very Piece of Work in the Formation of the Earth_: When
+he set an Orb over the Face of the Deep, I was there. _Wherefore to the
+great Architect, who made the boundless Universe out of nothing, and
+form’d the Earth out of a Chaos, let the Praise of the whole Work, and
+particularly, of this Master-piece, for ever, with all Honour, be
+given._ In like Manner, there is a larger Account of Providence, both
+ordinary and extraordinary, as to the Revolutions of the natural World,
+in the last Paragraph of the eighth Chapter; and like Reflections are
+made in other Places, when Occasion is offer’d.
+
+We have not, therefore, any where excluded the Influence and Benefit of
+superior Causes, where the Case requires it: Especially, when ’tis only
+to modify the Effect, as to Time and Dispatch. And in that Case, none
+will have more need of it than himself; as we shall find in the
+Examination of his tenth Chapter, about the Origin of Mountains.
+
+The rest of this second Chapter is spent in three Excursions. One in
+justifying the _Cartesian_ Way of forming Light and the Sun, as
+agreeable to _Moses_. The second about the _Jewish Cabala_, and
+_Cabalistical Interpretations_. And the third about _mystical Numbers_.
+But the Theory not being concern’d in these Things, I leave them to the
+Author, and his Readers, to enjoy the Pleasure and Profit of them. And
+proceed to the third Chapter.
+
+
+ CHAP. III.
+
+
+In this Chapter a second Exception against the Formation of the Earth,
+as propos’d in the Theory, is alledg’d: And ’tis this; The Fluctuation
+of the Chaos, or of that first watery Globe, would hinder, he says, any
+Concretion of Earth upon its Surface. Not that there were Winds or
+Storms then, to agitate those Waters; neither would the Motion of the
+Earth, or the Rotation of that Globe, disturb them, as he allows there;
+but the Disturbance would have Rise from Tides, _p._ 74. _lin._ 18, 19.
+or the Ebbings and Flowings of that great Ocean, which, he says, must
+have been then, as well as now; And the Reason he gives, is this;
+because the Flux and Reflux of the Sea depend upon the Moon; and the
+Moon was then present, as he says, in our Heavens, or in our Vortex: And
+therefore, would have the same Effect then, upon that Body of Waters
+which lay under it, that it hath now upon the Sea.
+
+That the Moon was in the Heavens, and in our Neighbourhood, when the
+Earth was form’d, he proves from the six Days Creation: and spends two
+or three Pages in Wit and Scolding upon this Subject, _p._ 77, 78, 79.
+But, with his leave, when all is done, his Argument will be of no Force,
+unless he can prove, that the _fourth Day’s Creation was before the
+third_. I confess, I have heard of a Wager that was lost upon a like
+Case, namely, Whether _Henry_ VIII. was before _Henry_ VII? But that was
+done by Complot in the Company, to whom it was referr’d to decide the
+Question. We have no Plot here, but appeal fairly to that Judge the
+Exceptor hath chosen, namely, to Scripture, which tells us, that the
+Moon was made the fourth Day, and the Earth was form’d the third.
+Therefore, unless the fourth Day was before the third, the Moon could
+not hinder the Formation of the Earth.
+
+But I hope, say you, this is a Misrepresentation. The Animadverter sure
+would not put the Matter upon this Issue. Yes, he does. For when he had
+oppos’d to our Formation of the Earth, the Fluctuation of the Waters,
+caus’d, as he phrases it, by the _bulky Presence_ of the Moon, he
+concludes with these Words, (_p._ 77. _Parag._ 3.) _But in reference to
+this Matter, there is a Doubt made by the Theorist, which must be
+consider’d and removed; otherwise most of what hath been said, touching
+the Instability and Fluctuation of these Waters, will be vain and
+groundless: The Doubt is, Whether the Moon were then in our
+Neighbourhood._ You see that Matter is put upon this Issue, Whether the
+Moon was in the Neighbourhood of the Earth, at the Time of its
+Formation. We say she was not; and prove it by this plain Argument, If
+she was not in Being at that Time, she was not in our Neighbourhood: But
+unless the _fourth_ Day was before the _third_, she was not in Being.
+_Ergo._
+
+But after all, if the Moon had been present then, and there had been
+Tides, or any other Fluctuation towards the Poles, we have no Reason to
+believe, according to the Experiences we have now, that that would have
+hinder’d the Formation of the Earth, upon the Surface of the Chaos. For
+why should they have hinder’d that more, than they do the Formation of
+Ice upon the Surface of the Sea? We know, in cold Regions, the Seas are
+frozen, notwithstanding their Tides; and in the Mouths of Rivers, where
+there is both the Current and Stream of the River on one hand, and the
+Counter-Current of the Tides on the other; these, together, cannot
+hinder the Concretion that is made on the Surface of the Water: And our
+Water is a Substance more thin, and easily broken, than that tenacious
+Film was, that cover’d the Chaos. WHEREFORE, upon all Suppositions, we
+have Reason to conclude, that no Fluctuations of the Chaos could hinder
+the Formation of the first Earth.
+
+Lastly, The Observator opposes the Reasons that are given by the
+Theorist, _why the Presence of the Moon_ was less needful in the first
+World. Namely, _because there were no long Winter Nights; nor the great
+Pool of the Sea to move or govern_. As to the second Reason, ’tis only
+hypothetical; and if the Hypothesis be true, _That_ there was no open
+Sea at that Time, (which must be elsewhere examin’d,) the Consequence is
+certainly true. But as to the first Reason, he will not allow the
+Consequence, tho’ the Hypothesis be admitted. For he says, _p._ 79. _As
+there were no long Winter Nights then, so there were no short Summer
+ones neither: So that set but the one against the other, and the
+Presence of the Moon may seem to have been as needful then, in regard of
+the Length of Nights, as she is now._ This looks like a witty
+Observation, but it does not reach the Point. Is there as much need of
+the Moon in _Spain_, as in _Lapland_, or the Northern Countries? There
+is as much Night in one Place as another, within the Compass of a Year,
+but the great Inconvenience is, when the Night falls upon the Hours of
+Travel, or the Hours of Work and Business; for if it fall only upon
+Hours of Sleep, or of Rest and Retirement, as it does certainly more in
+_Spain_, and in those Climates that approach nearer to an Equinox; the
+Moon is there less necessary in that Respect: We can sleep without
+Moonshine, or without Light, but we cannot travel, or do Business
+abroad, without Hazard and great Inconvenience, if there be no Light. So
+that the Reason of the Theorist holds good, _viz._ That there would be
+more Necessity of Moon-shine in long Winter Nights, than in a perpetual
+Equinox.
+
+We proceed now to the rest of this Chapter, which is made up of some
+secondary Charges against this Part of the Theory, concerning the Chaos
+and the Formation of the first Earth. As, First, That it is, _p._ 80,
+81. _Precarious:_ Secondly, _p._ 83. _Unphilosophical_: And, Thirdly,
+_Antiscriptural_; which we shall answer in order. He seems to offer at
+three or four Instances of _Precariousness_, as to the Ingredients of
+the Chaos, their Proportions and Separations; but his Quarrel is chiefly
+with the oily Particles: These he will scarce allow at all; nor that
+they could separate themselves in due Time to receive the terrestrial,
+at least in due Proportions.
+
+First, He would have no oily Particles in the Chaos. But why so, I pray?
+What Proof or just Exception is there against them? Why may not there be
+original oily Particles, as well as original salt Particles? Such as
+your great Master _Des Cartes_ supposes, _Prin. ph._ _l._ 4. §. 84.
+_Meteor._ _c._ 1. §. 8. He who considers that vast Quantity of
+oleaginous Matter that is dispers’d every where, in Vegetables, in
+Animals, and in many sorts of Earths, and that this must have been from
+the Beginning, or as soon as the Earth had any Furniture; will see
+Reason to believe that such Particles must be thought original and
+primeval; not forg’d below the Abyss, and extracted from the inferior
+Regions of the Earth: For that would require a Process of many Ages;
+whereas, these being the Principles of Fertility, it is reasonable to
+suppose, that a new World abounds with them more than an old one.
+Lastly, If we suppose oily Particles to be tenuious and branchy, as your
+Philosopher does, too gross to be Air, and too light for Water; why
+should we imagine that in that vast Mass and Variety of Particles,
+whereof the Chaos consisted, there should not be any of this Figure, as
+well as of others? Or, what Reason is there to suppose, that there are
+none of that Figure, but what are brought from the inferior Regions of
+the Earth? For, of all others, these seem to be the most unlikely, if
+not incapable, of being extracted from thence. And if there be only a
+gradual Difference, in Magnitude and Mobility, betwixt the Particles of
+Air and Oil, as that Philosopher seems to suppose, _Prin. phil._ _l._ 4.
+§. 76. why must we exclude these Degrees, and yet admit the higher and
+lower?
+
+The second Thing which he charges with _Precariousness_, is the
+Separation of this oily Matter, in due time, so as to make a Mixture and
+Concretion with the terrestrial Particles that fell from above. This
+Objection was both made and answered by the Theorist; _Eng. Theor._ _p._
+79. which the Observator might have vouchsaf’d to have taken notice of;
+and either confuted the Answer, or spar’d himself the Pains of repeating
+the Objection.
+
+The third _Precariousness_ is, concerning the Quantity and Proportion of
+these Particles: And the fourth, concerning the Quantity and Proportion
+of the Water. The Exceptor, it seems, would have had the Theorist to
+have gauged these Liquors, and told him the just Measure and Proportion
+of each; but, in what Theory or Hypothesis is that done? Has his great
+Philosopher, in his Hypothesis of _Three Elements_, (which the Exceptor
+makes use of, _p._ 52.) or in his several Regions of the unform’d Earth,
+the _Fourth Book of his Principles_, defin’d the Quantity and Dimensions
+of each? Or in the mineral Particles and Juices, which he draws from the
+lower Regions, does he determine the Quantity of them? And yet these, by
+their Excess, or Defect, might be of great Inconvenience to the World:
+Neither do I censure him for these Things, as _precarious_. For, when
+the Nature of a Thing admits a Latitude, the original Quantity of it is
+left to be determin’d by the Effects; and the Hypothesis stands good, if
+neither any Thing antecedent, nor any present _Phænomena_, can be
+alledged against it.
+
+But if these Examples, from his great Philosopher be not sufficient, I
+will give him one from an Author beyond all Exceptions; And that is from
+himself. Does the Animadverter, in his new Hypothesis concerning the
+Deluge, _Ch._ 15. give us the just Proportions of his Rock-Water, and
+the just Proportions of his Rain-Water, that concurred to make the
+Deluge? I find no Calculations there, but general Expressions, that the
+one was far greater than the other; and that may be easily presumed,
+concerning the oily Substance, and the watery Chaos: What Scruples
+therefore, _p._ 80, 81. he raises, in reference to the Chaos, against
+the Theorist, for not having demonstrated the Proportions of the Liquors
+of the Abyss, fall upon his own Hypothesis; for the same or greater
+Reasons. And you know what the old Verse says,
+
+ _Turpe est Doctori, cum culpa redurguit ipsum._
+
+But, however, he will have such Exceptions, _p._ 81. to stand good
+against the Theorist, though they are not good against other Persons;
+because the Theorist stands upon Terms[14] of Certainty, and in one
+Place of his Book, has this Sentence, _Ego quidem_, &c. These Words, I
+think, are very exceptionable, if they be taken with the Context: For
+this Evidence and Certainty, which the Theorist speaks of, is brought in
+there in Opposition to such uncertain Arguments, as are taken from the
+Interpretation of _Fables_ and _Symbols_; or from _Etymologies_ and
+_Grammatical Criticisms_, which are expresly mention’d in the preceding
+Discourse: And yet this Sentence, because it might be taken in too great
+an Extent, is left out in the second Edition of the Theory, and
+therefore, none had Reason to insist upon it. But I see the Exceptor
+puts himself into a State of War, and thinks there is no foul Play
+against an Enemy.
+
+So much for his Charge of _Precariousness_. We now come to the second,
+which is call’d _Unphilosophicalness_. And, why is the Theorist, in this
+Case, unphilosophical? Because, says the Exceptor, he supposes
+terrestrial Particles to be dispers’d through the whole Sphere of the
+Chaos, as high as the Moon: And why not, pray, if it be a mere Chaos?
+Where, antecedently to Separations, all Things are mix’d and blended
+without Distinction of Gravity or Levity; otherwise it is not a mere
+Chaos: And when Separations begin to be made, and Distinction of Parts
+and Regions, so far it is ceasing to be a mere Chaos. But then, says the
+Observator, why did not the Moon come down, as well as these terrestrial
+Particles? I answer by another Question, Why does not the Moon come down
+now? Seeing she is still in our Vortex, and at the same Distance; and so
+the same Reason which keeps her up now, kept her up then: Which Reason
+he will not be at a loss to understand, if he understand the Principles
+of his great Philosopher.
+
+We come now to the last Charge: That the Theory, in this Part of it, is
+_antiscriptural_. And why so? Because it supposes the Chaos _dark_,
+whereas the Scripture says, there was Light the first Day. Well, but
+does the Scripture say, that the Chaos was throughly illuminated the
+first Day? The Exceptor, _p._ 52. as I remember, makes the primigenial
+Light to have been the Rudiment of a Sun; and calls it there, _lin._ 17.
+a _faint Light_, and a _feeble Light_; and in this Place, _lin._ 27. a
+_faint Glimmering_. If then the Sun, in all its Strength and Glory,
+cannot sometimes dispel a Mist out of the Air, what could this _faint,
+feeble Glimmering_ do, towards the Dissipation of such a gross
+caliginous Opacity, as that was? This Light might be sufficient to make
+some Distinction of Day and Night in the Skies; and we do not find any
+other Mark of its Strength in Scripture, nor any other Use made of it.
+
+So we have done with this Chapter. Give me leave only, without Offence,
+to observe the Style of the Exceptor, in reference to Scripture, and the
+Theory. He is apt to call every Thing _antiscriptural_, that suits not
+his Sense; neither is that enough, but he must also call it, _p._ 78. a
+_bold Affront_ to Scripture. He confesses, he hath made, _p._ 299.
+_pen._ a _little bold_ with Scripture himself, in his new Hypothesis;
+how much that _little_ will prove, we shall see hereafter. But however,
+as to that hard Word, _Affront_, a discreet Man, as he is not apt to
+give an Affront, so neither is he forward to call every cross Word, an
+Affront: Both those Humours are Extreams, and breed Quarrels. Suppose a
+Man should say boldly, God Almighty _hath no Right Hand_. Oh, might the
+Animadverter cry, _That’s a bold Affront to Scripture_: For I can shew
+you many and plain Texts of Scripture, both in the _Old Testament_, and
+in the _New Testament_, where express Mention is made of God’s _Right
+Hand_. And will you offer to oppose _Reason_ and _Philosophy_ to express
+Words of Scripture, often repeated, and in both Testaments? _O Tempora,
+O Mores!_ So far as my Observation reaches, weak Reasons commonly
+produce strong Passions. When a Man hath clear Reasons, they satisfy and
+quiet the Mind; and he is not much concern’d, whether others receive his
+Notions, or no: But when we have a strong Aversion to an Opinion, from
+other Motives and Considerations, and find our Reasons doubtful or
+insufficient; then, according to the Course of human Nature, the
+Passions rise for a farther Assistance; and what is wanting, in point of
+Argument, is made up by Invectives and Aggravations.
+
+Footnote 14:
+
+ _Eg: quidem i et sum sententis, so in barum resum de quibus agnt
+ regnitienem, a alarum qunque, quo mements snt, sum s Des aut Natur ut
+ pat estes perviniendi, ratio i ce est, aliq claris invi: Non
+ eujecturatis, v, Quetras nimpe i, que opesmi sui, qui meimi sicavent
+ ab, quam amcteren._
+
+
+ CHAP. IV.
+
+
+This Chapter is chiefly concerning the _Central Fire_, and the _Origin_
+of the _Chaos_; of both which, the Theorist had declared he would not
+treat: And ’tis an unreasonable Violence to force an Author to treat of
+what Things we please, and not allow him to prescribe Bounds to his own
+Discourse. As to the first of these, see what the Theorist hath said,
+_Engl. Theor._ _p._ 451, and 86, 67. By which Passages it is evident,
+that he did not meddle with the central Parts of the Earth; nor thought
+it necessary for his Hypothesis: As is also more fully express’d in the
+_Latin Theory_, _p._ 45. For, do but allow him a Chaos from the Bottom
+of the Abyss, upwards to the Moon, and he desires no more for the
+Formation of an habitable Earth: Neither is it the Part of Wisdom, to
+load a new Subject with unnecessary Curiosities.
+
+Then as to the Origin of the Chaos, see how the Theorist bounds his
+Discourse as to that, [15]_Engl. Theor._ _p._ 451. _I did not think it
+necessary to carry the Story and Original of the Earth, higher than the
+Chaos, as_ Zoroaster _and_ Orpheus _seem to have done; but taking that
+for our Foundation which Antiquity, sacred and profane, does suppose,
+and natural Reason approve and confirm, we have form’d the Earth from
+it_. To form an habitable Earth from a Chaos given, and to shew all the
+great Periods and general Changes of that Earth, throughout the whole
+Course of its Duration, or while it remain’d an Earth, was the adequate
+Design of the Theorist. And was this Design so short or shallow, that it
+could not satisfy the great Soul of the Exceptor, _p._ 88. but it must
+be a _Flaw_ in the Hypothesis, that it did go higher than the Chaos? We
+content our selves with these Bounds at present. And when a Man
+declares, that he will write only the _Roman_ History, will you say his
+Work’s imperfect, because it does not take in the _Persian_ and
+_Assyrian_?
+
+These Things consider’d, to speak freely of this Chapter, it seems to
+me, in a great Measure, impertinent; unless it was design’d to shew the
+Learning of the Observator, who loves, I perceive, to dabble in
+Philosophy, though little to the Purpose: For, as far as I see, his
+Disquistions generally end in Scepticism; he disputes first one way,
+then another; and, at last determines nothing. He rambles betwixt _Des
+Cartes_ and _Moses_, the _Rabbies_, the _Septuagint_, the _Platonists_,
+_Magnetisme_, _striate Particles_, and _Præ-existence of Souls_: And
+ends in nothing, as to the Formation of the Earth, which was to be the
+Subject of the Chapter. We proceed therefore to the next, in hopes to
+meet with closer Reasoning.
+
+Footnote 15:
+
+ _Si admittamus insupor Ignam Centratem, sive Maisom ignir in centra
+ Terra, quod quidem ain est basus argumenti. Neque partem intimam
+ Chaos, niji ibiter & pro formo, conjiaeravi, cum ad um, nesram non
+ spestet._ _Vid. etiam_ p. 186.
+
+
+ CHAP. V.
+
+
+From the manner of the Earth’s Formation, the Exceptor, _p._ 106. now
+proceeds to the _Form_ of it, if compleated. And his first Exception is,
+That it would want _Waters_, or Rivers to water it. He says, there would
+either be no Rivers at all, or none, at least, in due time.
+
+The Theorist hath replenish’d that Earth with Rivers, flowing from the
+extreme Parts of it, towards the middle, in continual Streams; and
+watering, as a Garden, all the intermediate Climates. And this constant
+Supply of Water was made from the Heavens, by an uninterrupted Stream of
+Vapours, which had their Course through the Air, from the middle Parts
+of the Earth towards the extreme; and falling in Rains, return’d again
+upon the Surface of the Earth, from the extreme Parts to the middle: For
+that Earth being of an oval or something oblong Figure, there would be a
+Declivity all along, or Descent, from the Polar Parts towards the
+Equinoctial; which gave Course and Motion to these Waters. And the
+Vapours above never falling in their Course, the Rivers would never fail
+below; but a perpetual Circulation would be establish’d, betwixt the
+Waters of the Heavens and of the Earth.
+
+This is a short Account of the State of the Waters in the primeval
+Earth. Which you may see represented and explain’d more at large, in the
+_second Book of the Theory_, _Chap._ 5. And this, I believe, is an Idea
+more easily conceiv’d, than any we could form concerning the Waters and
+Rivers of the present Earth, if we had not Experience of them. Suppose a
+Stranger, that had never seen this terraqueous Globe, where we live at
+present, but was told the general Form of it; how the Sea lies, how the
+Land, and what was the Constitution of the Heavens: If this Stranger was
+asked his Opinion, whether such an Earth was habitable; and
+particularly, whether they could have Waters commodiously in such an
+Earth, and how the inland Countries would be supplied? I am apt to
+think, he would find it more difficult (upon an Idea only, without
+Experience) to provide Waters for such an Earth, as ours is at present,
+than for such an one as the primeval Earth was. ’Tis true, he would
+easily find Rains, possible and natural, but with no Constancy or
+Regularity; and these, he might imagine, would only make transient
+Torrents, not any fix’d and permanent Rivers. But as for Fountains
+deriv’d from the Sea, and breaking out in higher Grounds, I am apt to
+believe, all his Philosophy would not be able to make a clear Discovery
+of them: But Things that are familiar to us by Experience, we think easy
+in Speculation, or never enquire into the Causes of them. Whereas, other
+Things, that never fall under our Experience, though more simple and
+intelligible in themselves, we reject often as Paradoxes or Romances.
+Let this be applied to the present Case, and we proceed to answer the
+Exceptions.
+
+Let us take that Exception first, as most material, _p._ 114. that
+pretends there would have been no Rivers at all in the primeval Earth,
+if it was of such a Form as the Theorist had describ’d. And for this, he
+gives one grand Reason, Because the Regions towards the Poles, where the
+Rains are suppos’d to fall, and the Rivers to rise, would have been all
+frozen and congeal’d; and consequently, no fit Sources of Water for the
+rest of the Earth. Why we should think those Regions would be frozen,
+and the Rains that fell in them, he gives two Reasons, the Distance, and
+the Obliquity of the Sun. As also the Experience we have now, of the
+Coldness and Frozenness of those Parts of the Earth. But as to the
+Distance of the Sun, He confesses, _p._ 118. that is not the Thing _that
+does only or chiefly_ make a Climate cold. He might have added,
+_particularly in that Earth, where the Sun was never at a greater
+Distance than the Equator_. Then, as to the Obliquity of the Sun,
+neither was that so great, nor so considerable, in the first Earth, as
+in the present. Because the Body of that lay in a direct Position to the
+Sun; whereas the present Earth lies in an oblique. And though the Polar
+Circles or Circumpolar Parts of that Earth, did not lie so perpendicular
+to the Sun as the Equinoctial, and consequently were cooler, yet there
+was no Danger of their being frozen or congeal’d. It was more the
+Moisture and excessive Rains of those Parts that made them
+uninhabitable, than the extreme Coldness of the Climate, of it self. And
+if the Exceptor had well consider’d the Differences betwixt the present
+and primitive Earth, as to Obliquity of Position, and that which follows
+from it, the Length of Nights, he would have found no Reason to have
+charg’d that Earth with _nipping and freezing Cold_; where there was
+not, I believe, one Morsel of Ice, from one Pole to another: But that
+will better appear, if we consider the Causes of Cold.
+
+There are three general Causes of Cold: The Distance of the Sun, his
+Obliquity, and his total Absence; I mean in the Nights. As to Distance,
+that alone must be of little Effect, seeing there are many Planets
+(which must not be look’d upon as mere Lumps of Ice) at a far greater
+Distance from the Sun, than ours: And as to Obliquity, you see it was
+much less considerable in the respective Parts of the Primitive Earth,
+than of the present. Wherefore, these are to be consider’d but as
+secondary Causes of Cold, in respect of the third, the total Absence of
+the Sun in the Night Time: And where this happens to be long and
+tedious, there you must expect Excess of Cold. Now, in the primitive
+Earth there was no such Thing as long Winter Nights, but every where a
+perpetual Equinox, or a perpetual Day. And consequently, there was no
+Room or Cause of excessive Cold in any Part of it. But on the contrary,
+the Case is very different in the present Earth; for in our Climate, we
+have not the Presence of the Sun, in the Depth of Winter, half as long
+as he is absent; and towards the Poles they have Nights that last
+several Weeks or Months together: And then ’tis that the Cold rages,
+binds up the Ground, freezes the Ocean, and makes those Parts more or
+less uninhabitable. But where no such Causes are, you need not fear any
+such Effects.
+
+Thus much to shew that there might be Rains, Waters, and Rivers, in the
+primigenial Earth, and towards the extreme Parts of it, without any
+Danger of freezing. But however, says the other Part of the Exception,
+_These Rivers would not be made in due Time._ That’s wholly according to
+the Process you take; if you take a mere natural Process, the Rivers
+could not flow throughout the Earth, all on a sudden; but you may
+accelerate that Process, as much as you please, by a Divine Hand. As to
+this Particular indeed of the Rivers, one would think there should be no
+Occasion for their sudden flowing through the Earth, because Mankind
+could not be suddenly propagated throughout the Earth: And if they did
+but lead the Way, and prepare the Ground in every Country, before
+Mankind arrived there, that seems to be all that would be necessary upon
+their Account: Neither can it be imagined, but that the Rivers would
+flow faster than Mankind could follow; for it is probable, in the first
+hundred Years, Men did not reach an hundred Miles from Home, or from
+their first Habitations: And we cannot suppose the Defluxion of Water,
+upon any Declivity, to be half so slow. As to the Channels of these
+Rivers, the Manner of their Progress, and other Circumstances, those
+Things are set down fully enough in the fifth Chapter of the second
+_Book_ of the _English Theory_, and it would be needless to repeat them
+here.
+
+But the Anti-Theorist says, this slow Production and Propagation of
+Rivers is contrary to Scripture; both because of the Rivers of Paradise,
+and also, because Fishes were made the sixth Day. As to that of the
+Fishes, he must first prove that those were River-Fishes; for the
+Scripture, _Gen._ i. 21. and 22. makes them Sea-Fish, and instances in
+great Whales. But he says (_p._ 113, 114.) it will _appear in the Sequel
+of his Discourse_, that the Abyss could be no Receptacle of Fishes. To
+that Sequel of his Discourse therefore we must refer the Examination of
+this Particular. Then as to Paradise, that was but one single Spot of
+Ground, _ch._ xiii. according to the ordinary Hypothesis; which he seems
+to adhere to: And Rivers might be there as soon as he pleases, seeing
+its Seat is not yet determin’d. But as for the Lands which they are said
+to traverse or encompass, that they might be the Work of Time, when
+their Channels and Courses were extended and settled; as they would be,
+doubtless, long before the Time that _Moses_ writ that Description: But
+as to the _Rivers of Paradise_, it would be a long Story to handle that
+Dispute here. And ’tis fit the Authors should first agree amongst
+themselves, before we determine the Original of its River, or Rivers.
+
+
+ CHAP. VI.
+
+
+We come now to the Deluge, where the great Exception is this, _p._ 121.
+That according to the Theory, the Deluge would have come to pass,
+whether Mankind had been degenerate, or no.
+
+We know Mankind did degenerate, and ’tis a dangerous Thing to argue upon
+false Suppositions; and to tell what would have come to pass, in case
+such a Thing had not come to pass: Suppose _Adam_ had not sinn’d, what
+would have become of the _Messiah_? _Eph._ i. 4. 1 _Pet._ i. 20. _Apoc._
+xiii. 8. and the Dispensation of the Gospel, which yet is said to have
+been determin’d more early than the Deluge? Let the Anti-Theorist answer
+himself this Question, and he may answer his own.
+
+But to take a gentler Instance, suppose _Adam_ had not eaten the
+forbidden Fruit, how could he and all his Posterity have liv’d in
+Paradise? A few Generations would have fill’d that Place; and should the
+rest have been turn’d out into the wide World, without any sin or Fault
+of theirs? You suppose the Ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth to have been
+the same with the present, and, consequently, subject to the same
+Accidents and Inconveniences. The Action of the Sun would have been the
+same then as now, according to your Hypothesis: The same Excesses of
+Heat and Cold, in the several Regions and Climates; the same Vapours and
+Exhalations extracted out of the Earth; the same Impurities and
+Corruptions in the Air: And in Consequence of these, the same external
+Disposition to epidemical Distempers. Besides, there would be the same
+Storms and Tempests at Sea, the same Earthquakes, and other Desolations
+at Land. So that _had all the Sons and Daughters of Men_, to use the
+Exceptor’s elegant Style, _p._ 122. _been as pure and bright as they
+could possibly have dropt out of the Mint of Creation, they should
+still_ have been subject to all these Inconveniences and Calamities. If
+Mankind had continued spotless and undegenerate ’till the Deluge, or for
+sixteen hundred Years, they might as well have continued so for sixteen
+hundred more. And in a far less Time, according to their Fruitfulness
+and Multiplication, the whole Face of the Earth would have been thick
+covered with Inhabitants: Every Continent and every Island, every
+Mountain and every Desert, and all the Climates from Pole to Pole. But
+could naked Innocency have liv’d happy in the frozen Zones, where Bears
+and Foxes can scarce subsist? in the midst of Snows and Ice, thick Fogs,
+and more than _Ægyptian_ Darkness, for some Months together? Would all
+this have been a _Paradise_, or a paradisaical State, to these virtuous
+Creatures? I think it would be more advisable for the Exceptor, not to
+enter into such Disputes, grounded only upon Suppositions. God’s
+Prescience is infallible, as his Counsels are immutable.
+
+But the Exceptor further suggests, _p._ 121. that the Theory does not
+allow a judicial and extraordinary Providence in bringing on the Deluge,
+as a Punishment upon Mankind. Which, I must needs say, is an untrue and
+uncharitable Suggestion, as any one may see, both in the _Latin_ Theory
+[16] _Chap._ 6. and in the _English_, in several Places. So at the
+Entrance upon the Explication of the Deluge (_Theor._ _p._ 92.) are
+these Words, _Let us then suppose, that at a Time appointed by Divine
+Providence, and from Causes made ready to do that great Execution upon a
+sinful World, that this Abyss was open’d, and the Frame of the Earth
+broke,_ &c. And accordingly in the Conclusion of that Discourse about
+the Deluge, are these Words, (Theor. p. 144.) _In the mean time I do not
+know any more to be added in this Part, unless it be to conclude with an
+Advertisement to prevent any Mistake or Misconstruction, as if this
+Theory, by explaining the Deluge in a natural Way, or by natural Causes,
+did detract from the Power of God, by which that GREAT JUDGMENT WAS
+BROUGHT UPON THE WORLD, IN A PROVIDENTIAL AND MIRACULOUS MANNER._ And in
+the three following Paragraphs (_Theor._ _p._ 144, 145, 146.) which
+conclude that Chapter, there is a full Account given both of an ordinary
+and extraordinary Providence, in reference to the Deluge, and other
+great Revolutions of the natural World.
+
+But it is a Weakness however to think, that, when a Train is laid in
+Nature, and Methods concerted, for the execution of a Divine Judgment,
+therefore it is not _providential_. God is the Author and Governor of
+the natural World, as well as of the Moral: And he sees thorough the
+Futuritions of both, and hath so dispos’d the one, as to serve him in
+his just Judgments upon the other. Which Method, as it is more to the
+Honour of his Wisdom, so it is in no way to the Prejudice of his Power
+or Justice. And what the Exceptor suggests concerning Atheists, and
+their presum’d Cavils at such an Explication of the Deluge, is a Thing
+only said at random and without Grounds. On the contrary, so to
+represent the Sense of Scripture, in natural Things, as to make it
+unintelligible, and inconsistent with Science and Philosophick Truth, is
+one great Cause, in my Opinion, that breeds and nourishes Atheism.
+
+Footnote 16:
+
+ _Notandum verò, quamvis mundi veteris dissolutionem & rationes Diluvii
+ secundum ordinem causarum naturalium, explicemus, quòd eo modo magis
+ clarè & distinctè intelligantur; non ideò in pœnam humani generis
+ ordinatum suisse diluvium, singulisque ipsius motibus præfuisse
+ providentiam, inficiamur: imò in eo elucet maximè Sapientia divina,
+ quòd mundum naturalem morali ita coaptet & attemperet, ut hujus
+ ingenio, illius ordo & dispositio semper respondeat: & amberum
+ libratis momentis, simul concurrant & unà compleantur utriusque
+ tempora & vicissitudines; ipse etiam Apostolus Petrus diluvii &
+ excidii mundani causas naturales assignat, cùm ait_, δὶ ὧν, &c.
+
+
+ CHAP. VII.
+
+
+This Chapter is about the Places of Scripture, alledg’d in Confirmation
+of the Theory: And chiefly concerning that remarkable Discourse in St.
+_Peter_, 2 _Epist._ iii. which treats of the Difference of the
+Ante-diluvian World, and the present World. That Discourse is so fully
+explain’d in the _Review of the Theory_, that I think it is plac’d
+beyond all Exception. And the Animadverter here makes his Exception only
+against the first Words, _ver._ 5. Λανσθάνει γὰρ αὐτοῦς τοῦτο θέλοντας,
+which we thus render, _For this they willingly are ignorant of._ But he
+generally renders it, _wilfully ignorant of_, and lays a great Stress
+upon that word _wilfully_. But if he quarrel with the _English_
+Translation, in this particular, he must also fault the _Vulgate_, and
+_Beza_, and all others that I have yet met withal. And it had been very
+proper for him, in this Case, to have given us some Instances or Proofs,
+out of Scripture or _Greek_ Authors, where this Phrase signifies a
+_wilful and obstinate Ignorance_. He says it must have been a wilful
+Ignorance, otherwise it was not blameable: Whereas St. _Peter_ gives it
+a sharp Reproof. I answer, There are many Kinds and Degrees of blameable
+Ignorance; a contented Ignorance, an Ignorance from Prejudices, from
+Non-attendance, and want of due Examination. These are all blameable in
+some Degree, and all deserve some Reproof; but it was not their
+Ignorance that St. _Peter_ chiefly reproves, but their deriding and
+_scoffing_ at the Doctrine of the coming of our Saviour, and the
+Conflagration of the World. And therefore he calls them, _Scoffers,
+walking after their own Lusts_.
+
+But the Exceptor seems at length inclinable to render the forementioned
+Words thus, _p._ 137. _They are willingly mindless or forgetful._ And I
+believe the Translation would be proper enough. And what gentler Reproof
+can one give, than to say, you are _willing to forget_ such an Argument,
+or such a Consideration; which implies little more than Non-attention,
+or an Inclination of the Will towards the contrary Opinion? We cannot
+tell what Evidence, or what Traditions they might have then concerning
+the Deluge, but we know they had the History of it by _Moses_, and all
+the Marks in Nature, that we have now, of such a Dissolution. And they,
+that pretended to philosophize upon the Works of Nature, and the
+Immutability of them, might very well deserve that modest Rebuke, that
+they were _willing to forget_ the first Heavens and first Earth, and the
+Destruction of them at the Deluge, when they talk’d of an immutable
+State of Nature.
+
+Neither is there any Thing in all this, contrary to what the Theorist
+had said, _Theor._ _c._ 1. concerning the ancient Philosophers: That
+none of them ever invented or demonstrated from the Causes, the true
+State of the first Earth. This must be granted; but it is one Thing to
+demonstrate from the Causes, or by way of Theory, and another Thing to
+know at large: Whether by Scripture, Tradition, or Collection from
+Effects. The Mutability and Changes of the World, which these
+Pseudo-Christians would not allow of, was a knowable Thing, taking all
+the Means which they might and ought to have attended to: At least,
+before they should have proceeded so far as to reject the Christian
+Doctrine concerning the future Changes of the World, with Scorn and
+Derision. Which is the very Thing the Apostle so much censor’d them for.
+
+So much for what is said by the Exceptor concerning this place of St.
+_Peter_. To all the rest he gives an easy Answer, (in the Contents of
+this Chapter) _viz._, That they are _figurative, and so not
+argumentative_. The Places of Scripture upon which the Theory depends,
+are fixed distinctly and in order, in the REVIEW: And, to avoid
+Repetitions, we must sometimes refer to that, _Review_, p. 371, 372.
+particularly, as to two remarkable Places, _Psal._ xxiv. 2. and _Psal._
+cxxxvi. 6. concerning the _Foundation and Extension of the Earth upon
+the Seas_. Which the Exceptor quickly dispatches by the Help of a
+_Particle_ and a _Figure_. על.
+
+The next he proceeds to, is, _Psal._ xxxiii. 7. _He gathereth the Waters
+of the Sea, as in a Bag: He layeth up the Abyss in Store-Houses._ But,
+he says, it should be render’d, as _on an Heap_: Which is the _English_
+Translation. Whether the Authorities produced, in this case, by the
+Theorist, _Eng. Theor._ p. 117. or by the Exceptor, are more
+considerable, I leave the Reader to judge. But, however, he cites
+another place, _Psal._ lxxviii. 13. where the same Word is us’d and
+apply’d to the Red Sea, which could not be enclos’d as in a Bag. Take
+whether Translation you please for this second place; it is no Prejudice
+to the Theory, if you render it _on an Heap_: For it was a Thing done by
+Miracle. But the other Place speaks of the ordinary Posture and
+Constitution of the Waters, which is not _on an Heap_, but in a Level or
+spherical Convexity with the rest of the Earth. This Reason the
+Animadverter was not pleas’d to take notice of, tho’ it be intimated in
+that same Place of the Theory which he quotes, _p._ 86. But that which I
+might complain of most, is his unfair Citation of the next Paragraph of
+the Theory, _Excep._ _p._ 140. which he applies peculiarly to this Text
+of _Psal._ xxxiii. 7. whereas it belongs to all the Texts alledg’d out
+of the _Psalms_, and is a modest Reflection upon the Explication of
+them, as the Reader may plainly see, if he please to look the Theory,
+and compare it with his Citation.
+
+The next Place he attacks, is, _Job_ xxvi. 7. _He stretches the North
+over the Tohu_, or, as we render it, _over the empty Places: And hangeth
+the Earth upon nothing_. Here he says, _p._ 141. _Job_ did either
+accommodate himself to the Vulgar, or else was a perfect _Platonist._
+Methinks _Plato_ should rather be a _Jobist_, if you would have them to
+imitate one another. Then he makes an Objection, and answers it himself:
+concluding, however, that _Job_ could not but mean this of the present
+Earth, because in the next Verse he mentions _Clouds_. But how does it
+appear, that every Thing that _Job_ mentions in that Chapter, refers to
+the same time?
+
+The next Place, is, _Job_ xxxviii. 4, 5, 6. _Where wast thou when I laid
+the Foundations of the Earth?_ &c. These eloquent Expostulations of the
+Almighty, he applies all to the present Form of the Earth: Where he
+says, there are the _Embossings of Mountains, the Enamelling of lesser
+Seas, the open Work of the vast Ocean, and the fret Work of Rocks_, &c.
+These make a great Noise, but they might all be apply’d to the Ruins of
+an old Bridge, fallen into the Water. Then he makes a large Harangue in
+Commendation of Mountains, and of the present Form of the Earth: Which,
+if you please, you may compare with the tenth _Chapter_ of the _Latin
+Theory_, and then make your Judgment upon both.
+
+But it is not enough for the Exceptor to admire the Beauty of Mountains,
+but he, _p._ 146. will make the Theorist to do so too, because he hath
+exprest himself much pleas’d with the Sight of them. Can we be pleas’d
+with nothing in an Object but the Beauty of it? Does not the Theorist
+say there, in the very Words cited by the Exceptor, _Sæpe loci ipsius
+insolentia & spectaculorum novitas delectat magis quam venustas in rebus
+notis & communibus._ We are pleas’d in looking upon the Ruins of a
+_Roman_ Amphitheatre, or a triumphal Arch, tho’ time have defac’d its
+Beauty. A Man may be pleas’d in looking upon a Monster, will you
+conclude therefore that he takes it for a Beauty? There are many Things
+in Objects, besides Beauty, that may please; but he that hath not Sense
+and Judgment enough to see the Difference of those Cases, and whence the
+Pleasures arise, it would be very tedious to beat it into him by
+Multitude of Words.
+
+After his Commendation of Mountains, he falls upon the Commendation of
+Rain: Making those Countries, that enjoy it, to be better water’d than
+by Rivers; and consequently the present Earth better than that
+paradisaical Earth describ’d by the Theorist. And in this he says, he
+follows the Rule of Scripture, for these are his Words, p. 148, _And
+that these Rules, whereby we measure the Usefulness of this Earth, and
+shew it to be more excellent than that of the Theory, are the most true
+and proper Rules, is manifest from God’s making use of the same, in a
+Case not unlike: For he, comparing_ Ægypt _and_ Palestine, _prefers the
+latter before the former; because in_ Ægypt _the Seed sown was_ watered
+with the Foot, as a Garden of Herbs; _but Palestine was_ a Land of Hills
+and Valleys, and drank Water of the Rain of Heaven, _Deut._ xi. 10, 11.
+
+Let this rest a while: In the mean time let us take notice how unluckily
+it falls out for the Observator, that a Country that had no Rain, should
+be compared in Scripture, or join’d in Privilege, with Paradise it self,
+and the Garden of God. For so is this very _Ægypt_, _Gen._ xiii. 10,
+tho’ it had no Rain, but was water’d by Rivers. The Words of Scripture
+are these. _And Lot lifted up his Eyes, and beheld all the Plain of
+Jordan, that it was well-watered every where (before the Lord destroyed
+Sodom and Gomorrah) even as the Garden of the Lord, like the Land of
+Ægypt._ The Plain of _Jordan_ you see is commended for its Fruitfulness,
+and being well watered: And as the height of its Commendation, it is
+compar’d with _Ægypt_, and with the _Paradise of God_. Now in _Ægypt_ we
+know there was little or no Rain: And we read of none in Paradise: But
+they were both water’d by Rivers. Therefore the greatest Commendation of
+a Land, for Pleasure and Fertility, according to Scripture, is its being
+well water’d with Rivers: Which makes it like a Paradise. Surely then
+you cannot blame the Theorist, having this Authority besides all other
+Reasons, for making the _paradisaical Earth_ to have been thus water’d.
+
+Now let the Exceptor consider how he will interpret and apply his place
+in _Deuteronomy_, and make it consistent with this _Genesis_. Till I see
+a better Interpretation, I like this very well, tho’ quite contrary to
+his: Namely, _That_ they were not to expect such a Land as _Ægypt_, that
+was a Plain naturally fruitful, as being well water’d; but the Land they
+were to possess, depended upon the Benediction of Heaven: And therefore
+they might expect more or less Fertility, according as they kept God’s
+Commandments. And so much for those two Texts of Scripture.
+
+Lastly, The Exceptor, _p._ 149. in the Conclusion of his Discourse about
+that place in _Job_, makes a Reflection upon the Impropriety of those
+Expressions made in _Job_, about _Foundations_ and _Corner-stones_, if
+they be apply’d to the first Earth describ’d by the Theorist. But this
+seems to me an Elegancy in that Discourse, which he makes a Fault:
+Whether it be understood as an Allusion only to our manner of Building,
+by deep Foundations, and strong Corner-stones: Or an ironical
+Interrogation, as it seems to me; implying, that there was no Foundation
+(strictly so call’d) nor Corner-stone, in that great Work, tho’ we
+cannot build a Cottage or little Bridge, without such Preparations.
+
+He proceeds then to the following Verses in that thirty-eighth Chapter.
+_Who shut up the Sea with Doors, when it broke forth as if it had issued
+out of a Womb?_ This the Theorist understands of the _Disruption_ of the
+_Abyss_ at the Deluge, when the Sea broke forth out of the Womb of the
+Earth: Or out of that subterraneous Cavity, where it was enclosed as in
+a Womb. ’Tis plainly imply’d in the Words of the Text, that the Sea was
+shut up in some _Womb_, before it broke forth. I desire therefore to
+know in what _Womb_ that was. You will find Interpreters much at a loss
+to give a fair Answer to that Question: What was that enclos’d State of
+the Sea? And what Place, or Part of Nature, was that Receptacle where it
+lay? But the Exceptor hath found out a new Answer. He says, it was that
+_Womb_ of Non-entity. These are his Words, _It just then_ (at its
+Creation) _gushed out of the Womb of Nothing, into Existence_. This is a
+subtle and far-fetch’d Notion. Methinks the _Womb of Nothing_, is
+much-what the same as _no Womb_. And so this is no Answer. But however
+let us consider how far it would suit this Case, if it was admitted. If
+you understand the _Womb of Non-entity_, _Gen._ i. 2. the Sea broke out
+of that Womb the first Day, and had no Bars or Doors set to it, but
+flow’d over all the Earth without Check or Control. Therefore that could
+not be the Time or State here spoken of. And to refer that Restraint, or
+those Bars and Doors, to another Time, which are spoken of here in the
+same Verse, would be very inexcusable in the Exceptor: _p._ 150. seeing
+he will not allow the Theorist to suppose those Things that are spoken
+of in different Verses, to be understood of different Times. To
+conclude, this metaphysical Notion of the _Womb of Nothing_, is
+altogether impertinent, at least in this Case: For the Text is plainly
+speaking of Things local and corporeal, and this Prison of the Sea must
+be understood as such.
+
+He proceeds now to the last Place alleg’d, _Prov._ viii. 27, 28. _When
+he prepared the Heavens, I was there: When he set a Compass upon the
+Face of the Deep._ The word חוג which we tender _Compass_, he says,
+signifies no more than the Rotundity or spherical Figure of the Abyss.
+And so the Sense will run thus, _When God set a Rotundity_, or
+_spherical Figure, upon the Face of the Abyss_. But whereas the Word may
+as well signify a _Sphere_ or _Orb_, the Theorist thinks it more
+reasonable that it should be so translated: And so the Sentence would
+run thus, _When God set an Orb upon the Face of the Deep._ And this
+Discourse of _Solomon_’s, referring to the Beginning of the World, he
+thinks it rational to understand it of the _first habitable Earth_:
+Which is really an _Orb set over the Face of the Deep_.
+
+One cannot swear for the Signification of a Word in every particular
+Place, where it occurs: But when there are two Senses whereof it is
+capable, and the one is much more important than the other, it is a fair
+Presumption to take it in the more important Sense; especially in such a
+Place, and upon such an Occasion, where the great Works of the Divine
+Wisdom and Power are celebrated: As they are here by _Solomon_. And it
+cannot be deny’d, that our Sense of the Words is more important than the
+other: For of what Consequence is it to say, _God made the Body of the
+Abyss_ round. Every one knows, that Fluids of their own accord run into
+that Figure. So as that would be a small Remark upon a great Occasion.
+
+The Construction of this Orb we speak of, minds me of an Injustice which
+the Exceptor hath done the Theory, in the precedent Part of this
+Chapter, by a false Accusation. For he says, the Theory makes the
+Construction of the first Earth to have been _merely mechanical_. At
+least, his Words seem to signify as much, which are these, _p._ 143.
+_And so its Formation_, speaking of the first Earth, _had been merely
+mechanical, as the Theory makes it_. That the Construction was not
+merely mechanical, in the Opinion of the Theorist, you may see, _Eng.
+Theor._ _p._ 88. which, because we have cited it before, we will not
+here repeat. The Theorist might also complain, that the Exceptor cites
+the first Edition of the Theory for such Things as are left out in the
+second: Which yet was printed a Twelvemonth before his Animadversions.
+And therefore in Fairness he ought always to have consulted the last
+Edition, and last Sense of the Author, before he had censured him, or
+his Work. But this unfair Method, it seems, pleas’d his Humour better:
+_p._ 81. _p._ 100, last Part, as you may see in this Chapter, _p._ 154.
+_p._ 227, 228. _p._ 244. and in several other Places; where Passages are
+cited and insisted upon, that are no where to be found in the second
+Edition. Not to mention his defective Citations, omitting that Part that
+qualifies the Sentence, as _p._ 99. last Citation, and elsewhere, _p._
+279, 280. _p._ 288. I make this Note, that the Reader may judge, how
+well this answers that _Sincerity_, with which he profest he would
+examine this Work: _Only as a Friend and Servant to Truth. And therefore
+with such Candor, Meekness, and Modesty, as becomes one who assumes and
+glories in so fair a Character_, _p._ 43.
+
+The rest of this Chapter is a general Censure of Citations out of
+Scripture, that are only tropical or figurative Schemes of Speech. These
+must be made so indeed, if our Sense of them be not allow’d. But what
+Necessity is there of a figurative interpretation of all these Texts?
+The Rule we go by, and I think all good Interpreters, is this, that we
+are not to leave the literal Sense, unless there be a Necessity, from
+the Subject-Matter. And there is no such Necessity in this Case, upon
+our Hypothesis: For it suits with the literal Sense. And ’tis to beg the
+Question, to say, the literal Sense is not to be admitted, because it
+complies too much with the Theory. But as for that Text of his own,
+which he instances in, _The Pillars of the Earth tremble_, that cannot
+be understood (by the same Rule) of Pillars _literally_; because there
+are no such Pillars of the Earth, upon any Hypothesis.
+
+
+ CHAP. VIII.
+
+
+This Chapter is concerning that grand Property of the ante-diluvian
+Earth, _a perpetual Equinox_, or a right Position to the Sun. This
+perpetual Equinox the Exceptor will by no means admit. But I’m afraid he
+mistakes the Notion: For as he explains it in the two first Sections of
+this Chapter, he seems to have a false Idea of the whole Matter. He
+thinks, I perceive, that when the Earth chang’d its Situation, it was
+translated from the Equator into the Ecliptick: And that before that
+Change in the ante-diluvian State, it moved directly under the Equator.
+For these are his Words, _p._ 158. So _that in her annual Motion about
+the Sun_, namely, the Earth, before that Change, _she was carried
+directly under the Equinoctial, without any Manner of Obliquity in her
+Site, or Declination towards either of the Tropicks in her Course; and
+therefore could never cut the Equinoctial, by passing (as now she is
+presumed to do) from one Tropick to the other_. By which Words, you see,
+he imagines that the Earth mov’d perpetually under the Equator, when it
+had a perpetual Equinox. And when it came out of that State, into this
+wherein it is now, it did not only change its Position, and the Posture
+of its Axis, but was also really translated from one Part of the Heavens
+into another, namely, from under the Equator to the Ecliptick, and so
+took another Road in its annual Course about the Sun. This is a great
+Mistake: And I cannot blame him, if he was so averse to admit this
+Change, seeing it lay so cross in his Imagination. For what Pullies or
+Leavers should we employ to remove the Earth out of the Equator into the
+Ecliptick? _Archimedes_ pretended, if he had Ground to plant his Engines
+upon, that he would move the Earth out of its Place; but that it was
+done before, I never knew, nor heard of: And if the Exceptor had
+consider’d what is said in the Theory upon that Occasion, _Lat. Theor.
+li._ 2. _c._ 4. he might easily have prevented his Mistake. But we shall
+meet with the same Error again in another Place. Let us consider now,
+what Arguments he uses against this Change.
+
+He says, _p._ 159. _If there had been such a Change_, either Providence,
+or Mankind, would have preserv’d the Memory of it. How far the Memory of
+it hath been preserv’d, we shall see hereafter. In the mean Time, we
+will give him Instances of other Things to reflect upon, that are lost
+out of Memory, unless he be the happy Man that shall retrieve them. The
+_Age of the World_ hath been preserv’d, either by the Memory of Man, or
+by the Care of Providence. And was not that both a Thing of Importance,
+and of easy Preservation? _Noah_ could not but know the Age of the
+World, for he was contemporary with five or six Generations, that were
+contemporary with _Adam_. And knowing the Age of the World himself, he
+could not easily forbear, one would think, to tell it to his Sons and
+Posterity. But, to this Day, we do not know what the true Age of the
+World is. There are three Bibles, if I may so say, or three
+_Pentateuchs_, the _Hebrew_, _Samaritan_, and _Greek:_ Which do all
+differ very considerably in their Accounts, concerning the Age of the
+World: And the most learned Men are not yet able to determine with
+Certainty, which of the three Accounts is most authentick. Then, what
+think you of the Place of _Paradise_? How well is the Memory or
+Knowledge of that preserv’d? Could _Noah_ be ignorant of it? And was it
+not a fit Subject to discourse of, and entertain his Sons and Nephews,
+and by them to communicate it to Posterity? Yet we seek it still in
+vain. The _Jews_ were as much at a Loss as we are: _p._ 263, 264, 265.
+and the Christian Fathers, you think, were out in their Opinions, both
+about the Place and Conditions of it: Neither do you venture to
+determine them your self: So that Paradise is lost in a Manner out of
+the World. What Wonder then if this single Property of it be lost? If
+the Exceptor had well consider’d (_Eng. Theor._ _p._ 400, 401.) what the
+Theorist has said concerning the providential Conduct of Knowledge in
+the World, this Doubt or Objection might have been spar’d.
+
+After a long Excursion, little to the Purpose, but to shew his Reading,
+_p._ 166. he tells us next, that Scripture does not favour this Notion
+of a perpetual Equinox before the Flood: And cites _Gen._ viii. 22.
+which the Theorist had cited as a Place that did suggest to us that
+Vicissitude of Seasons that was established after the Flood. The Words
+indeed are not so determinate in themselves, but that they may be
+understood, either of the Restoration of a former Order in the Seasons
+of the Year, or of the Establishment of a new one. And in whether Sense
+they are to be taken, is to be determin’d by collateral Reasons and
+Considerations. Such the Theorist had set down, to make it probable,
+that they ought to be understood as a Declaration of such an Order of
+the Seasons of the Year, as was brought in at that Time, and was to
+continue to the End of the World. The Exceptor hath not thought fit to
+take notice of, or refute those Reasons, and therefore they stand good,
+as formerly. Besides, the Exceptor must remember, that this Text stands
+betwixt two remarkable Phænomena, the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians in
+the old World, and the Appearance of the Rainbow in the new. Both which
+were Marks of a different State of Nature in the two Worlds.
+
+He further excepts, _p._ 168. against that perpetual Equinox before the
+Flood, for another Scripture-reason: _viz._ Because the Earth was curst
+before that Time, and consequently, he says, had not a perpetual
+Equinox. But if that Curse was supernatural, it might have its Effect in
+any Position of the Earth. For God can make a Land barren, if he think
+fit, in spite of the Course of Nature. And so he also must suppose it to
+have been in this Case. For, upon all Suppositions, whether of a
+perpetual Equinox, or no, the Earth is granted to have been very
+fruitful at first: And so would have continued, if that Curse had not
+interven’d.
+
+Lastly, He makes that an Argument, _p._ 169. that the Air was cold and
+intemperate in Paradise, and consequently no constant Equinox, _because_
+Adam _and_ Eve _made themselves Aprons to cover their Nakedness_. So, he
+confesses, Interpreters generally understand, that it was to _cover
+their Nakedness_. But he will not allow that to be the true Sense, but
+says those Fig-Leaves were to keep them warm. And the other
+Interpretation of _covering their Nakedness_, he will not admit, for
+three Reasons: First, because the Scripture, as he pretends, does not
+declare it so. See, pray, _Gen._ iii. 7. Secondly, _What Shame_, says
+he, _need there have been betwixt Husband and Wife_? Thirdly, _If it was
+Modesty; when they were innocent, they should have been more modest._
+Some Arguments answer themselves, and I do not think these deserve a
+Confutation. But, he says, _p._ 170. however God made them _Coats of
+Skins_ afterwards, and that was to be a _Defence against Cold._ He must
+tell us in what Climate he supposes Paradise to have stood: And which
+way, and how far _Adam_ and _Eve_ were banish’d from it. When those
+Things are determin’d, we shall know what to judge of this Argument, and
+of _Coats of Skins_.
+
+After _Lastly_, I expected no more: But he hath two or three Reasons
+after the _Last_. As first, he says, _p._ 171. upon our Hypothesis, one
+Hemisphere of the Globe must have been unpeopled: Because the torrid
+Zone was unpassable. And was not the Ocean as unpassable, upon your
+Hypothesis? How got they into _America_? And not only into _America_,
+but into all the Islands of the Earth, that are remote from Continents?
+Will you not allow us one Miracle, for your many? I’m sure the Theorist
+never excluded the Ministry of Angels; and they could as easily carry
+them thorough the torrid Zone, as over the Ocean. But secondly, he says,
+There could be no Rains to make the Flood, if there was a perpetual
+Equinox. Were not those Rains, that made the Flood, extraordinary, and
+out of the Course of Nature? You would give one angry Words that should
+deny it. Besides, the _Flood-Gates of Heaven_ were open’d when the
+_great Deep_ was broken up, (_Gen._ vii. 11.) and no Wonder the
+Disruption of the Earth should cause some extraordinary Commotions in
+the Air, _Eng. Theor._ _p._ 135. and either compress the Vapours, or
+stop their usual Course towards the Poles, and draw them down in Streams
+upon several Parts of the Earth. But the Exceptor says, this could not
+be, because the Theorist makes the Rains fall before the Disruption of
+the Abyss. But he does not suppose the _Cataracts of Heaven_ to have
+been open’d before, which made the grand Rains. And how unfairly that
+Passage of the Theory is represented, we shall see hereafter in the
+fourteenth Chapter.
+
+Lastly, He concludes all with this Remark, _p._ 176. That all sorts of
+Authors have disputed in what Season of the Year the Deluge came, and in
+what Season of the Year the World began: Therefore they thought there
+were then different Seasons of the Year. These Disputes, he confesses,
+did _manifestly proceed from Inadvertency_, or something worse: Because
+there could not be any one Season throughout all the Earth at once. He
+might have added, unless upon the Supposition of the Theory, which makes
+an universal Equinox at that Time. And why may not that have given
+Occasion to the general Belief, _That the World begun in the Spring_?
+And when the true Reason of the Tradition was lost, they fell into those
+impertinent Questions, _In what Season of the Year the World began_. But
+however, we do not depend upon the Belief, either of the Antients or the
+Moderns, as to the Generality: For we know they had other Notions of
+these Things than what the Theory proposes; otherwise it would have been
+a needless Work. But notwithstanding the general Error, that Providence
+did preserve some Traditions and Testimonies, concerning that ancient
+Truth, we shall see in the next following Discourse.
+
+So much for Scripture and Reasons. He now comes to examine Authorities:
+Namely, such Testimonies as are alledg’d by the Theorist, to shew that
+there was a Tradition among the Antients, of _a Change that had been, as
+to the Position of the Earth_: And consequently, as to the Form and
+Seasons of the Year. The first Testimony that he excepts against, is,
+that of _Diogenes_ and _Anaxagoras_; who witness plainly, _p._ 177. That
+there had been an _Inclination_ of the Earth, or a Change of Posture,
+since it was form’d and inhabited. But the Exceptor says, they have not
+assign’d a true _final Cause_, nor such as agrees with the Theory. The
+second Testimony, is, that of _Empedocles_, p. 178. which he excepts
+against, because he hath not given a good _efficient Cause_ of that
+Change. The third Witness is _Leucippus_; against whom he makes the same
+Exception, _p._ 179. that he doth not assign the Causes a-right. The
+fourth Witness, is _Democritus_; whom he, _p._ 180. quarrels with upon
+the same Account. But is this a fair hearing of Witnesses? Or are these
+just and legal Grounds of rejecting their Testimony, as to matter of
+Fact, because they are unskilful in giving the Causes and Reasons of
+that matter of Fact? That is not requir’d in Witnesses: And they are
+often impertinent when they attempt to do it. The Theorist does not cite
+these Authors to learn of them the Causes, either efficient or final, of
+that _Inclination_, or Change of Posture in the Earth, but only matter
+of Fact: To let you see, that according to their Testimony, there was a
+Tradition in that Time, which they took for true, concerning a Change
+made in the Posture of the Earth. And this is all we require from them.
+If you pretend to invalidate their Testimony, because they do not
+philosophize well about that Change; that’s as if you should deny that
+there was such a War as the _Peloponnesian_ War, because the Historian
+hath not assigned the true Causes and Reasons of it: Or as if a Man
+should give you the History of a Comet, that appear’d in such a Year,
+was of such a Form, and took such a Course in the Heavens; and you
+should deny there was any such Comet, because the same Author had not
+given a good Account of the Generation of that Comet, nor of the Causes
+of its Form and Motion. The Exceptions made against the Testimonies of
+these Philosophers, seem to me to be no less injudicious.
+
+After these Testimonies, he _p._ 181. makes three or four Remarks or
+Reflections upon them. But they all concern, either the Time of this
+Change, or the Causes of it. Neither of which the Theorist either
+engag’d or intended to prove from these Witnesses.
+
+There is still one Testimony behind, which the Exceptor hath separated
+from the rest, that he might encounter it singly. ’Tis another Passage
+from _Anaxagoras_, which both notes this _Inclination_, and the Posture
+of the Heavens and Earth before that Inclination. But here the Exceptor
+quarrels, first, with the word θολοειδῶς: Because _Ambrosius_ the Monk,
+would have it to be θολερπῶς, but without the Authority of any
+Manuscript: And, as _Casaubon_ says, _malè_. Then, he says,
+_Aldobrandinus_ translates it _turbulentè_, but gives no Reason for that
+Translation, in his Notes. Therefore he cannot rest in this, but in the
+third Place, he gives another Sense to Φορὰ Θολοειδής. And if that will
+not please you, he hath still a fourth Answer in reserve. I do not like
+when a Man shifts Answer so often; ’tis a sign he has no great
+Confidence in any one. But let us have his fourth Answer. ’Tis this,
+That _Anaxagoras_ was a kind of heterodox Philosopher, and what he says
+is not much to be heeded. These are the Words of the Exceptor, p. 184.
+_If this will not satisfy, I have one Thing more to offer. Grant that_
+Anaxagoras _should mean that very Declination, which the Theory would
+have him, yet this truly would contribute little towards the Proof of
+the Thing. For he was a Man as like to be heterodox; as like to broach
+and maintain false and groundless Opinions, as any of the learned
+Antients._ Had he made this Exception against this Witness at first, it
+might have sav’d both himself and us a great deal of Pains. For we do
+allow, if you can prove a Witness to be _persona infamis_, or _non
+compos mentis_, ’tis sufficient to invalidate his Testimony.
+
+But this is a rude and groundless Censure; shall that famous
+_Anaxagoras_, that was call’d _MENS_, κατὶ ἐοχὴν, not be thought so much
+as _mentis compos_; nor have Credit enough for an honest Witness? I am
+apt to think, from those Sentences, and those Remains we have left of
+him, that there was not a more considerable Man amongst the Antients,
+for Nobleness of Mind and natural Knowledge. I could bring the
+Testimonies of many antient Authors, and of many Christian Fathers, to
+clear his Reputation, and place it above Envy. ’Tis generally
+acknowledg’d, that he first introduc’d an intellectual Principle, in the
+Formation of the Universe, to dispose and order confus’d Matter. And
+accordingly _Eusebius_ gives him this fair Character, _Præp. Evan. l._
+10. _c. ult. p._ 504. _Col._ δὴ πρῶτος διήρθρωσε, &c. _He first
+rectified the Doctrine of Principles: For he did not only discourse
+about the Matter or Substance of the Universe, as other Philosophers:
+But also of the Cause and Principle of its Motion._ And the same Author,
+in his fourteenth Book, _ch._ 14. _p._ 750. repeats and enlarges this
+Character.
+
+I wonder the Exceptor, of all Men, should lessen the Name of
+_Anaxagoras_. For, besides his Orthodoxy as to the intellectual World;
+he was one that establish’d the Notion of _Vortices_, in the Corporeal.
+As you may see in _Clem. Alexandrinus_, _Strom._ 2. _p._ 364. and in
+_Plato’s Phædo Phæd._ _p._ 99. And tho’ the _Father_, and _Socrates_,
+(who never was a Friend to natural Philosophy) both blame him for it,
+yet the Exceptor, who is deservedly pleas’d with that system of
+_Vortices_, ought to have shew’d him some Favour and Esteem, for the
+Sake of this Doctrine. Lastly, as to his moral Temper, his Contempt of
+the World, and his Love of Contemplation; you may have many Instances of
+it in the short Story of his Life in _Laertius_. And I shall always
+remember that excellent Saying of his in _Clemens Alexandrinus_, _Strom.
+p._ 416. Τὴν θεωρίαν τοῦ βίου τέλος εἶναι, καὶ τὴν ἀπὸ ταύτης
+ἐλευθερίαν. _That the End of Life is Contemplation; and that Liberty,
+that accompanies it, or flows from it._
+
+But we are not to imagine, that all the Opinions of the ancient
+Philosophers, are truly convey’d or represented to us. Neither can we,
+in Reason or Justice, believe that they could be guilty of such absurd
+Notions, as are sometimes fathered upon them. The Exceptor instances in
+an extravagant Assertion, (as the Story is told to us) ascrib’d to
+_Anaxagoras_, of a _Stone that fell from the Sun_. This cannot be
+literally true, nor literally the Opinion of _Anaxagoras_, if he
+believed _Vortice_; therefore methinks so witty a Man as the Exceptor,
+and so well versed in the modern Philosophy, should rather interpret
+this of the Incrustation of a fix’d Star, and its Descent into the lower
+World: That a Star fell from the etherial Regions, and became an opake
+and terrestrial Body: Especially seeing _Diogenes_, as he says, supposes
+it a Star. Some Things were ænigmatically spoken at first: And some
+Things afterwards so much corrupted, in passing through unskilful Hands,
+that we should be very injurious to the Memory of those great Men, if we
+should suppose every Thing to have come so crudely from them, as it is
+now delivered to us. And as to this Philosopher in particular; as the
+_Ionick_ Physiology, in my Opinion, was the most considerable amongst
+the Antients; so there was none, of that Order, more considerable than
+_Anaxagoras_. Whom, tho’ you should suppose extravagant, _quoad hoc_,
+that it would not invalidate his Testimony in other Things.
+
+Upon the whole Matter, let us now sum up the Evidence, and see what it
+will amount to. Here are five or six Testimonies of considerable
+Philosophers: _Anaxagoras_, _Diogenes_, _Empedocles_, _Leucippus_ and
+_Democritus_. To which he might have added _Plato_, both in his
+_Politicus_ and _Phædo_, _Li._ 2. _c._ 10. _p._ 274. if he had pleased
+to have look’d into the second Edition of the _Latin_ Theory. These
+Philosophers do all make mention of a Change that hath been in the
+Posture of the Earth and the Heavens. And tho’ they differ in assigning
+Causes, or other Circumstances, yet they all agree as to Matter of Fact;
+that there was such a Thing, or, at least, a Tradition of such a Thing.
+And this is all that the Defendant desir’d or intended to prove from
+them, as Witnesses in this Cause.
+
+To these _Philosophers_, he might have added the Testimonies of the
+_Poets_, who may be admitted as Witnesses of a Tradition, though it be
+further questioned, whether that Tradition be true or false. These
+Poets, when they speak of a _Golden Age_, or the _Reign of Saturn_, tell
+us of a _perpetual Spring_, or a Year without Change of Seasons. This is
+expresly said by _Ovid_, _Ver erat æternum_, &c. And upon the Expiration
+of the Golden Age, he says;
+
+ _Jupiter Antiqui contraxit tempora Veris,
+ Perque Hyemes, Æstusque, & inæquales Autumnos,
+ Et breve Ver, spatiis exegit quatuer annum._
+
+_Ovid_ liv’d in the Time of our Saviour. And the Tradition, it seems,
+was then a-foot, and very express too. _Plato_, who was much more
+antient, hath said the same Thing in his _Politicus_, concerning the
+_Reign of Saturn_. And if we may have any Regard to _Mythology_, (vid.
+_Theor. Lat._ _li._ 2. _c._ 10. _in fine_.) and make _Janus_ the same
+with _Noah_, which is now an Opinion generally received, that Power,
+that is given him by the Antients, of _changing Times and Seasons_,
+cannot be better expounded, than by that great Change of Time, and of
+the Seasons of the Year, that happened in the Days of _Noah_. Neither
+must we count it a mere Fable, what is said by the Antients, concerning
+the Inhabitability of the _Torrid Zone_: And yet that never was, if the
+Earth was never in any other Posture, than what it is in now.
+
+Lastly, as the Philosophers and Poets are Witnesses of this Tradition,
+so many of the Christian Fathers have given such a Character of
+_Paradice_, as cannot be understood upon any other Supposition, than of
+a _perpetual Equinox_. This _Card. Bellarmine_[17] hath noted to our
+Hands; and also observ’d, that there could not be a perpetual Equinox in
+the Countries of _Asia_, nor indeed in any topical Paradise, (unless it
+stood in the middle of the Torrid Zone) _nisi alius tunc fuerit cursus
+solis, quam nunc est_; _unless the Course of the Sun_, or, which is all
+one, the Posture of the Earth, _was otherwise at that Time than what it
+is now_: Which is a true Observation. The _Jewish_ Doctors also, as well
+as the Christian, seem to go upon the same Supposition, when they place
+Paradise under the Equinoctial; see _Eng. Theor._ p. 351. Because they
+suppos’d it certain, as _Eben Ezra_ tells us, that the Days and Nights
+were always equal in Paradise.
+
+We have now done with the Examination of Witnesses: _Philosophers_,
+_Poets_, _Jews_, and _Christians_. From all these we collect, that there
+was an Opinion, or Tradition, amongst the Antients, of a Change made in
+the State of the natural World, as to the Diversity of Seasons in the
+Year: And that this did arise from the Change of the Posture of the
+Earth. Whether this Opinion, or this Tradition, was _de jure_, as well
+as _de facto_, is a Question of another Nature, that did not lie before
+us at present. But the Thing that was only in Debate in this Chapter,
+was matter of Fact, which I think we have sufficiently prov’d.
+
+In the Close of this Chapter, the Exceptor makes two Queries: Still by
+way of Objection to the ante-diluvian Equinox. The first is this, p.
+185. _Supposing an Equinox in the Beginning of the World, would it (in
+Likelyhood) have continued to the Flood._ If you grant the first Part, I
+believe few will scruple the second. For why should we suppose a Change
+before there appear any Cause for it? He says, the Waters might possibly
+have weigh’d more towards one Pole, than towards another. But why the
+Waters more than the Air? The Waters were not more rarified towards one
+Pole than towards another, no more than the Air was: For which the
+Exceptor, _p._ 180. had justly blam’d _Leucippus_ before. But however,
+_says he_, that Earth would be very unstable, because, in Process of
+Time, there would be an empty Space betwixt the exterior Region of the
+Earth, and the Abyss below. But that empty Space would be fill’d with
+such gross Vapours, that it would be little purer than Water: And would
+stick to the Earth much closer than its Atmosphere that is carried about
+with it. We have no Reason to change the Posture of the Earth, till we
+see some antecedent Change that may be a Cause of it. And we see not any
+till the Earth broke. But then indeed, whether its Posture depended
+barely upon its _Æquilibrium_, or upon its _Magnetism_, either, or both
+of them, when its Parts were thrown into another Situation, might be
+changed. For the Parts of a Ruin seldom lie in the same Libration the
+Fabrick stood in. And as to the Magnetism of the Earth, that would
+change, according as the Parts and Regions of the Earth changed their
+Situation.
+
+The second Query is this, granting there was such an Equinox in the
+first World, _p._ 187. _Would not the natural World, towards the latter
+End of that World, have been longer, than in the former Periods of the
+same?_ Suppose this was true, which yet we have no Reason to believe,
+that the Days were longer towards the Flood, than towards the beginning
+of the World; why is this contrary to Scripture? He tells you how, in
+these Words, _p._ 188. _That the Days just before the Flood were of no
+unusual Length, is evident in the very Story of the Flood; the Duration
+of which we find computed by Months, consisting of thirty Days a-piece._
+Whereas _had Days been grown longer, fewer of them would have made a
+Month_. This is a mere Paralogism, or a mere Blunder. For if thirty Days
+were to go to a Month, whether the Days were longer or shorter, there
+must be thirty of them; and the Scripture does not determine the Length
+of the Days. If thirty Circumgyrations of the Earth makes a Month,
+whether these Circumgyrations are slow or swift, thirty are still
+thirty. But I suppose that which he would have said and which he had
+confusedly in his Mind, was this, that the _Month_ would have been
+longer at the Flood than it was before. _Longer_, I say, as to extent of
+Time, or Duration in general, but not as to number of Days. And you
+could not cut off a slip of one Day, and tack it to the next, through
+the intermediate Night, to make an Abridgment for the Whole. Therefore
+this Objection is grounded upon a Mistake, and ill Reasoning, which is
+now sufficiently detected.
+
+Footnote 17:
+
+ _De Grat. prim. tm. c. 12._
+
+ _Accedit adbat, quad Paradisus ita deferiditus à Sinsto_ Basilio_, in
+ I. ’to de Paradiso; à_ Joan. Damasceno,_ Libre secundo, de fide,
+ capit; à Sano_ Augustino _Libre decim: quarto et cevit ete Dei, capit.
+ 10. Ab A, A & Claud. Ma._
+
+
+ CHAP. IX.
+
+
+This Chapter is against the _oval Figure of the first Earth_, p. 189.
+which the Theorist had asserted, and grounded upon a general Motion of
+the Waters, forc’d from the Equinoctial Parts towards the Polar. But
+before we proceed to his Objections against this Explication, we must
+rectify one Principle. The Exceptor seems to suppose, _p._ 190. that
+terrestrial Bodies have a _Nitency inwards or downwards, towards their
+central Point_. Whereas the Theorist supposes, that all Bodies moving
+round, have, more or less, a Nitency from the Centre of their Motion:
+And that ’tis by an external Force that they are prest down, against
+their first Inclination or Nitency.
+
+This being premised, we proceed to his Exceptions: Where his first and
+grand Quarrel is about the Use of a Word; whether the Motion of the
+Water from the middle of the Earth towards the Poles, can be call’d
+_defluxus_; seeing those polar Parts, in this supposed Case, were as
+high, or higher than the Equinoctial. I think we do not scruple to say
+_undæ defluunt ad littora_: Tho’ the Shores be as high, or higher than
+the Surface of the Sea. For we often respect, as the Theorist did, the
+_middle_ and the _sides_, in the use of that Word; And so, _defluere è
+medio ad latera_, is no more than _prolabi ad latera_. But ’tis not
+worth the while to contest about a Word; especially seeing ’tis
+explained in the second Edition of the Theory, _p._ 186, by adding
+_detrusione_: But it would have spoil’d all this Pedantry, and all his
+little Triumphs, if he had taken notice of that Explication.
+
+Wherefore setting aside the _Word_, let us consider his _Reasons_
+against this Motion of the Waters towards the Poles; which, he says,
+could not be, because it would have been an Ascent, not a Descent. We
+allow and suppose that. But may not Waters ascend by Force and
+Detrusion; when it is the easiest way they can take to free themselves
+from that Force, and persevere in their Motion? And this is the Case we
+are speaking to. They were impell’d to ascend, or recede from the
+Centre, and it was easier for them to ascend laterally, than to ascend
+directly: Upon an inclined Plain, than upon a perpendicular one. Why
+then should we not suppose that they took that Course? Methinks the
+Observator, who seems to be much conversant in the _Cartesian_
+Philosophy, might have conceived this Detrusion of the Waters towards
+the Poles by the Resistance of the superambient Air, as well as their
+flowing towards, and upon the Shores, by the Pressure of the Air under
+the Moon. And if the Moon continued always in the same Place, or over
+the middle of the Sea, that Posture of the Waters would be always the
+same: Though it be an Ascent, both upon the Land and into the Rivers.
+And this, methinks, is neither Contradiction, nor Absurdity. But an
+Enemy, that is little us’d to Victory, makes a great Noise upon a small
+Advantage.
+
+He proceeds now to shew, _p._ 195. that it was improbable that the
+Figure of the first Earth should be oval, upon other Considerations. As
+first, because of its Position; which would be cross to the Stream of
+the Air, that turns it round, or carries it about the Sun: As a Ship, he
+says, that stands side-ways against a Stream, cannot sail. But if that
+Ship was to turn round upon her Axis, as a Mill-Wheel, and as the Earth
+does, what Posture more likely to have such an Effect, than to stand
+cross to the Stream that turns it? And the Stream would take more hold
+of an oblong Body, than of a round. Then, as to its annual Course, which
+he mentions, that’s nothing, but so many Circumvolutions: For in turning
+round it is also progressive, as a Cylinder in rowling a Garden: And
+three hundred sixty five Circumgyrations compleat its annual Course. So
+that this Argument turns wholly against him, and does rather confirm the
+oval Figure of the Earth.
+
+His second Argument against the oval Figure of the first Earth, is the
+spherical Figure of the present Earth. And how does he prove that? First
+from Authorities, _Anaximander_, _Pythagoras_, and _Perminedes_ thought
+so. But how does he prove that their asserting the Earth to be _round_,
+was not meant in Opposition to its being _plain_; as the _Epicureans_
+and the Vulgar would have it? That was the Question _Socrates_ promis’d
+himself to be resolv’d in by _Anaxagoras_, _Plat. in Phæd._ πότερεν ἡ γῆ
+πλατεῖα ἔπις, ἢ αρογγύλη. _Whether the Earth was flat or round._ And
+’tis likely the Dispute was generally understood in that Sense. However
+the Theorist hath alledg’d many more Authorities than these, in favour
+of the oval Figure of the Earth. For besides _Empedocles_ in particular,
+and those whom _Plutarch_ mentions in general, the Philosophy of
+_Orpheus_, the _Phœnician_, _Ægyptian_, and _Persian Philosophers_, did
+all compare the Earth to an Egg; with respect to its oval external Form,
+as well as internal Composition. These you may see fully set down in the
+_Theory: Lat. Theor. li. 2. c. 10_. And it had been fair in the Exceptor
+to have taken some notice of them, if he would contend in that way of
+Authorities. But he has thought fit rather to pass them over wholly in
+Silence.
+
+His Reasons, _p._ 197. to prove the Figure of the present Earth to be
+spherical, and not oval, are taken first from the Conical Figure of the
+Shadow of the Earth, cast upon the Moon. But that cannot make a
+Difference sensible to us at this Distance, whether the Body that cast
+the Shadow was exactly spherical or oval. His second Reason is _from the
+Place of the Waters_; which, he says, would all retire from the Poles to
+the Equator, if the polar Parts were higher. But this has been answer’d
+before. The same Cause that drives the Waters thither, would make them
+keep there: As we should have a perpetual Flood, if the Moon was always
+in our Meridian: And whereas he suggests, that by this Means the Sea
+should be shallowest under the Poles; which, he says, is against
+Experience: We tell him just the contrary, That, according to our
+Hypothesis, the Sea should be deepest towards the Poles; which agrees
+with Experience. That the Sea should be deepest under the Poles, if it
+was of an oval Form, _p._ 186. he may see plainly by his own Scheme, or
+by the Theory Scheme: _Theor. Lat. li. 2. c. 5_. So that if his
+Observation be true, of an extraordinary Depth of the Ocean in those
+Parts, it confirms our Suspicion, that the Sea continues still oval.
+Lastly, he urges, _p._ 198. If this Earth was oval, Navigation towards
+the Poles would be extremely difficult, if not impossible, because upon
+an Ascent. But if there be a continual Draught of Waters from the
+Equator towards the Poles, this will ballance the Difficulty, and be
+equivalent to a gentle Tide, that carries Ships into the Mouth of a
+River, though upon a gradual Ascent.
+
+Thus much we have said in Complacency to the Exceptor. For the Theorist
+was not oblig’d to say any Thing in Defence of the oval Form of the
+present Earth, seeing he had no where asserted it: It not being
+possible, as to what Evidence we have yet, to determine in what Order
+the Earth fell, and in what Posture the Ruins lay after their Fall. But
+however, to speak my Mind freely upon this Occasion, I am inclinable to
+believe, that the Earth is still oval or oblong. What Things the
+Anti-theorist hath suggested, will not decide the Controversy; nor, it
+may be, any natural History, nor any of those Observations that we have
+already. The Surface of the Sea lies more regular than that of the Land,
+and therefore I should think that Observations made there would have the
+best Effect. I should particularly recommend these two: First, That they
+would observe toward the Poles, whether the Sun rise and set, according
+to the Rules of a true Globe, or of a Body exactly spherical. Secondly,
+That they would observe whether the Degrees of Latitude are of equal
+Extent in all the Parts of a Meridian; that is, if the Quantity of Sea
+or Land that answers to a Degree in the Heavens, be of equal Extent
+towards the Equator as towards the Poles. These two Observations would
+go the nearest of any I know, to determine whether the Figure of the
+Earth be truly spherical or oblong.
+
+
+ CHAP. X.
+
+
+This Chapter is concerning the _original Mountains_, and that they were
+before the Flood, or from the Beginning; which the Exceptor endeavours
+to prove from Scripture; not directly, but because Mention is made of
+them in the same Places where the Beginning of the Earth is mentioned,
+_p._ 291. as _Psal._ xc. 1, 2. and _Prov._ viii. 25. therefore they must
+be co-eval and contemporary. We have, I think, noted before, that Things
+are not always Synchronal that are mentioned together in Scripture. The
+Style of Scripture is not so accurate, as not to speak of Things in the
+same Place, that are to be referr’d to different Times. Otherwise we
+must suppose the Destruction of _Jerusalem_, and of the _World_, to have
+been intended for the same Time; seeing our Saviour joins them in the
+same Discourse, (_Mat._ xxiv.) without any Distinction of Time; or with
+such a Distinction, as rather signifies an immediate Succession, (_ver._
+29.) than so great a Distance as we now find to be betwixt the
+Destruction of _Jerusalem_ and the End of the World. Greater than that,
+betwixt the Beginning and the Flood: So in the Prophets sometimes, in
+the same Discourse, one Part is to be referr’d to the first Coming of
+our Saviour, and another Part to the second. _Isa._ ix. 6, 7. _Isa._ ix.
+1. &c. _Luke_ i. 31, 32, 33. without making any Distinction of Time, but
+what is to be gather’d from the Sense. Neither is there any Incongruity
+in the Sense, or in the Tenor of the Words, if those Expressions in the
+Psalmist be referr’d to different Times. God existed _before the
+Mountains were brought forth, and the Earth and the World were made_.
+This is certainly true, whether you take it of the same or different
+Times. And if you take it of different Times, ’tis a way of Speaking we
+often use. As suppose a Man should say, concerning the Antiquity of
+_Troy_, that it existed before _Rome_ and _Carthage_; that does not
+necessarily imply, that _Rome_ and _Carthage_ were built at the same
+Time; but only that _Troy_ was before them both. And so this of the
+Psalmist may be very well thus exprest, by a Gradation from a lower
+Epocha to an higher. Then as for that Place, _Prov._ _ch._ viii. it
+would be very hard to reduce all those Things that are mentioned there,
+(from _ver._ 22. to 30.) to the same Time of Existence; and there is no
+Necessity from the Words that they should be so understood. The Design
+and Intention of the Holy Ghost is plain in both these Places: In the
+one to set out the Eternity of God, and in the other, of the _Logos_ in
+particular. And this is done by shewing their Præ-existence to this
+Earth, and to all its greatest and most remarkable Parts.
+
+He mentions also, _p._ 202. _Deut._ xxxiii. 15. where the Hills are
+call’d _Lasting_, and the Mountains _Antient_. And _therefore they were
+before the Flood_. This is a hard Consequence. The River _Kishon_ is
+call’d the _antient_ River, _Judg._ v. 21. but I do not therefore think
+it necessary, that that Brook should have been before the Flood. Things
+may very well deserve that Character of _lasting_ or _antient_, though
+they be of less Antiquity than the Deluge. If one should say the
+_lasting Pyramids_, and _antient Babylon_, none could blame the
+Expression, nor yet think that they were therefore from the Beginning of
+the World.
+
+After these Allegations from Scripture, _p._ 205. he descends to a
+natural Argument taken from the _Mountains in the Moon_; which, he says,
+are much higher than the Mountains upon the Earth: And therefore, seeing
+her Body is less, they could not be made by a Dissolution of that
+Planet, as these of the Earth are said to have been. Though we are not
+bound to answer for the Mountains in the Moon, yet however, ’tis easy to
+see that this is no good Argument: For, besides that the Orb there might
+be more thick, all Ruins do not fall alike. They may fall double, or in
+Ridges and Arches, or in steep Piles, some more than others, and so
+stand at a greater Height. And we have Reason to believe that those in
+the Moon fell otherwise than those of the Earth; because we do not see
+her turn round: Nor can we ever get a Sight of her Backside, that we
+might better judge of the Shapes of her whole Body.
+
+From this natural Argument, _p._ 206. he proceeds to an historical
+Argument, taken from the _Talmudists_ and _Josephus_. The _Talmudists_
+say, that _many Giants sav’d themselves from the Flood upon Mount Sion_.
+But this, the Exceptor confesses, _is wholly fabulous_. What need it
+then be mentioned as an Argument? Then he says, _Josephus_ reports, that
+_many sav’d themselves from the Flood upon the Mountain_ Baris _in_
+Armenia. But this also, _p._ 207. he says, is _false in the Gross_, and
+a _formal Fiction_. Why then, say I, is it brought in as an Argument?
+Lastly, he quotes a Passage out of _Plato_, who says, when the _Gods
+shall drown the Earth, the Herdsmen and Shepherds shall save themselves
+upon Mountains_. And this (_ibid._) the Exceptor calls a _Piece of
+confus’d Forgery_. Why then, say I still, is it alledged as an Argument
+against the Theory? But however, says the Exceptor, these Things argue
+that many thought there were Mountains before the Flood. But did the
+Theorist ever deny, that it was the vulgar and common Opinion? Therefore
+such Allegations as these may be of some Use to shew Reading, but of no
+Effect at all to confute the Theory.
+
+Yet the Exceptor is not content with these Stories, but he must needs
+add a Fourth; which, he says, _p._ 208. is a _plain Intimation that
+there were Mountains in the Beginning of the World_. Take his own Words
+for the Story, and the Application of it. _I will only add that
+traditional Story which is told of_ Adam; _namely, how that after his
+Fall, and when he repented of his Sin, he bewailed it for several
+hundred of Years, upon the Mountains of_ India. _Another plain
+Intimation that THERE WERE MOUNTAINS_ in the Beginning of the World.
+This is a plain Intimation indeed, that those that made this Fable,
+thought there were Mountains then: But is it a Proof that there really
+was so? As you seem to infer. Does the Exceptor really believe, that
+_Adam_ wander’d an hundred Years upon the Mountains of _India_? If the
+Matter of Fact be false, the Supposition it proceeds upon may as well be
+false. And he does not so much as cite an Author here, for the one or
+the other.
+
+We are now come to the main Point, a new Hypothesis concerning the
+_Original of Mountains_, which the Exceptor, _p._ 208, 209, _&c._ hath
+vouchsafed to make for us: And, in short, it is this. When the Waters
+were drain’d off the Land on the third Day, while it was moist and full
+of Vapours, the _Sun_, by his Heat, made the Earth heave and rise up in
+many Places, which thereupon became Mountains. But lest we mistake or
+misrepresent the Author’s Sense, _p._ 209. we will give it in his own
+Words. _Now the Earth, by this Collection of the Waters into one Place,
+being freed from the Load and Pressure of them, and laid open to the
+Sun, the Moisture within, by the Heat of his Beams, might quickly be
+turn’d into Vapours. And these Vapours being still increased by the
+continued rarifying Warmth from above, at length they wanted Space
+wherein to expand or dilate themselves. And at last, not enduring the
+Confinement they felt, by Degrees heaved up the Earth above; somewhat
+after the Manner that Leaven does Dough, when it is laid by a Fire; but
+much more forcibly and unevenly. And lifting it up thus in numberless
+Places, and in several Quantities, and in various Figures, Mountains
+were made of all Shapes and Sizes_; whose Origin and Properties, he
+says, upon this Hypothesis, _will be obvious, or at least intelligible,
+to thinking and philosophick Minds_.
+
+I must confess I am none of those _thinking and philosophick Minds_, to
+whom this is either obvious or intelligible: For there seem to me to be
+a great many palpable Defects or Oversights in this new Hypothesis:
+Whereof this is one of the grossest, that he supposes the Sun, by his
+Heat, the third Day to have raised these Mountains upon the Earth;
+whereas the Sun was not created till the fourth Day, p. 51. _the fourth
+Day was the first Day of the Sun’s Existence_: So that it had this
+powerful Effect, it seems, one Day before it came into Being.
+
+But suppose the Sun had then existed: This is a prodigious Effect for
+the Sun to perform, in so short a Time, and with so little Force. The
+greatest Part of that Day was spent in draining the Waters from off the
+Land; which had a long Way to go, from some inland Countries, to reach
+the Sea, or their common Receptacle. And he says, _p._ 209, without an
+extraordinary Power, _perhaps they could not have been drained off the
+Earth in one Day_. Let us then allow, at least, half a Day for clearing
+the Ground; for the Sun might begin his Work about Noon; and before
+Night he had rais’d all the Mountains of one Hemisphere. It will require
+a strong philosophick Faith, to believe this could be all done by the
+Action of the Sun, an in so short a Time. Besides, we must consider,
+that the Sun, by Noon, had past all the Eastern Countries, yet covered
+with Water, or not well drain’d: So that after they were dried, he could
+only look back upon them with faint and declining Rays. Yet the
+Mountains of the East are as great and considerable as elsewhere. But
+there is still another great Difficulty in the Case, as to the Northern
+and Southern Mountains of the Earth; for they lie quite out of the Road
+of the Sun; being far remov’d towards either Pole; where, by reason of
+his Distance and Obliquity, his Beams have little Force. How would he
+heave up the _Riphæan_ Mountains, those vast Heaps of Stone and Earth,
+that lie so far to the North? You see what Observations the Exceptor
+hath made(_p._ 119, 120.) concerning the Cold of those Countries: And it
+falls out very untowardly for this new Hypothesis, that the Northern
+Parts of the Earth, as _Norway_, _Swedeland_, _Iseland_, _Scythia_,
+_Sarmatia_, &c. should be such mountainous and rocky Countries; where he
+had before declar’d the Sun had so little Force. And, indeed, according
+to his Scheme, all the great Mountains of the Earth should have been
+under the Equator, or, at least, betwixt the Tropicks.
+
+But to examine a little the Manner and Method of this great Action, and
+what kind of Bodies these new Mountains would be; either the Sun drew up
+only the Surface and outward Skin of the Earth, as Cupping-Glasses raise
+Blisters; or his Beams penetrated deep into the Earth, and heaved up the
+Substance of it, as Moles cast up Mole-Hills. If you take the first
+Method, these superficial Mountains would be nothing but so many Bags of
+Wind; and not at all answerable to those huge Masses of Earth and Stone,
+whereof our Mountains consist. And if you take the second Method, and
+suppose them push’d out of the solid Earth, and thrown up into the Air,
+imagine then how deep these Rays of the Sun must have penetrated in a
+few Hours Time, and what Strength they must have had, to agitate the
+Vapours to that Degree, that they should be able to do such Prodigies as
+these. Several Mountains, upon a moderate Computation, are a Mile high
+from the Level of the Earth. So that it was necessary that the Beams of
+the Sun should penetrate at least a Mile deep, in so short a Time; and
+there loosen and rarify the Vapours, and then tear up by the Roots vast
+Loads and Extents of Ground, and heave them a Mile high into the open
+Air: And all this in less than half a Day. Such Things surely are beyond
+all imagination, and so extravagant, that one cannot, in Conscience,
+offer them to the Belief of a Man. Can we think that the Sun, who is two
+or three Hours in licking up the Dew from the Grass in a _May_ Morning,
+should be able, in as many more Hours, to suck the _Alps_ and
+_Pyreneans_ out of the Bowels of the Earth; and not to spend all his
+Force upon them neither? For he would have as much Work in other
+Countries. To raise up _Taurus_, for instance, and _Imaus_, and frozen
+_Caucasus_ in _Asia_; and the mighty _Atlas_, and the _Mountains_ of the
+_Moon_ in _Africk_; besides the _Andes_ in _America_, which, they say,
+far exceed all the Mountains of our Continent. One would be apt to
+think, that this Gentleman never saw the Face of a mountainous Country;
+for he writes of them, as if he had taken his Idea of Mountains, and the
+great Ridges of Mountains, upon the Earth, from the _Devil’s Ditch_, and
+_Hogmagog Hills_: And he raises them faster than Mushrooms out of the
+Ground. If the newborn Sun, at his first Appearance, could make such
+great Havock, and so great Changes upon the Face of the Earth, what hath
+he been doing ever since? We never heard nor read of a Mountain, since
+the Memory of Man, rais’d by the Heat of the Sun. We may therefore
+enquire, in the last Place,
+
+Why have we no Mountains made now by the same Causes? We have no Reason
+to believe that the Heat or Strength of the Sun is lessen’d since that
+Time; why then does it not produce like Effects? But I imagine he hath
+an Answer for this: Namely, that the Moisture of the first Earth, when
+it was new drain’d and marshy, contributed much to this Effect; which
+now its Dryness hinders. But besides, that the Dryness of the Earth
+should rather give an Advantage, by the Collection of Vapours within its
+Cavities: However, we might expect, according to this Reason, that all
+our drain’d Fens and marshy Grounds, should presently be rais’d into
+Mountains; whereas we see them all to continue arrand Plains, as they
+were before. But if you think these are too little Spots of Ground to
+receive a strong Influence from the Sun, take _Ægypt_ for an Instance:
+That’s capacious enough, and ’tis overflow’d every Year, and by that
+Means made soft and moist to your Mind, as the new Earth when it rises
+from under the Abyss. Why then is not _Ægypt_ converted into Mountains,
+after the Inundation and Retirement of _Nile_? I do not see any
+Qualification wanting, according to the Exceptor’s Hypothesis: _Ægypt_
+hath a moist Soil, and a strong Sun, much stronger than the _Alps_ or
+_Pyreneans_ have; and yet it continues one of the plainest Countries
+upon the Earth. But there is still a greater Instance behind against
+this Hypothesis, than any of the former; and that is, of the whole Earth
+after the Deluge: When it had been overflow’d a second Time by the
+Abyss, upon the Retirement of those Waters it would be much what in the
+same Condition, as to Moisture, that it was in the third Day, when it
+first became dry Land. Why then should not the same Effect follow again,
+by the Heat of the Sun; and as many new Mountains be rais’d upon this
+second Draining of the Earth, as upon the first? These are plain and
+obvious Instances, and as plainly unanswerable. And the whole Hypothesis
+which this Virtuoso hath propos’d concerning the _Origin_ of Mountains,
+is such an Heap of Incredibilities, and Things inconsistent one with
+another, that I’m afraid I shall be thought to have spent too much Time
+in Confutation of it.
+
+In the Conclusion of this Chapter, _p._ 215. he hath an Attempt to prove
+that there were Mountains before the Flood, _because there were Metals_;
+which are commonly found about the Roots of Mountains. But the Theorist,
+he says, _to shun this great Inconvenience, fairly consents to the
+abolishing of Metals out of the first State of Nature_. Yet he is hard
+put to it, to prove that the Theorist hath any where asserted,
+whatsoever he thought, that there were no Metals then. The first
+Citation he produces, only recites the Opinion of others, and says, _p._
+216. he _thinks they do not want their Reasons_. Of the two other
+Citations out of the Preface, the first does not reach home, making no
+mention of Metals. And the second is wholly misconstrued, and perverted
+to a Sense quite contrary to what the Author intended, or the Context
+will bear. But however the Theorist appears doubtful, whether there were
+Metals or no in in the first World: And, upon this Doubt, the Exceptor
+lays this heavy Charge, _p._ 215. _li._ 24. _Thus the Fidelity of_
+Moses_ is assaulted, and another intolerable Affront put upon the HOLY
+GHOST: For do not both inform us, that the City_ Enoch _was built, and
+the Ark prepared, before the Flood? But how could either be done without
+Iron-Tools?_ But does either _Moses_, or the Holy Ghost tell us, that
+there were Iron-Tools in building that City, or the Ark? If they do not,
+we only affront the Consequence, which the Exceptor draws from the
+Words, and not the Authors of them. By what divine Authority does the
+Animadverter assert, that there was Iron, or Iron-Tools, in Building
+this City, or that Ark? I’m sure Scripture does not mention either, upon
+those Occasions. And seeing it mentions only _Gopher Wood_ and _Pitch_
+for the Building of the Ark, _Gen._ vi. 14. ’tis a Presumption rather,
+that there were no other Materials us’d. And as to the City, ’tis true,
+if he fancy the City which _Enoch_ built, to have been like _Paris_, or
+_London_, he has Reason to imagine, that they had Iron-Tools to make it.
+But suppose it was a Number of Cottages, made of Branches of Trees, of
+Osiers and Bulrushes, (and what needed they any other House, when the
+Air was so temperate?) or, if you will, of Mud-Walls, and a Roof of
+Straw, with a Fence about it to keep out Beasts, there would be no such
+Necessity of Iron-Tools. Consider, pray, how long the World was without
+knowing the Use of Iron, in several Parts of it, as in the North, and in
+_America_: And yet they had Houses and Cities after their Fashion. For
+the Northern Countries you may see _Olaus Magnus_, _li._ 12. _c._ 13.
+For _America_, _Pet. Martyr. Dec. 1._ But the Exceptor will save you
+your Pains, as to the _Indians_, for he says himself, _p._ 250. in
+another Place, that they had no Instruments of Iron, when the
+_Spaniards_ came amongst them. And if in those late Ages of the World,
+they were still without the Use of Iron, or Iron-Tools, we have less
+Reason to believe that the Children of _Cain_ had them four or five
+thousand Years before.
+
+It is also worthy our Consideration, how many Things must have been
+done, before they could come at these Iron-Tools. How came the Children
+of _Cain_ to dig into the Earth, I know not to what Depth, to seek for a
+Thing they had never heard of before, when it was so difficult to dig
+into the Earth without such Tools? More difficult, methinks, than to
+build an House without them. But suppose they did this, we know not how;
+and, amongst many other Stones, or Earths, found that which we call
+Iron-Ore: How did they know the Nature and Use of it? Or, if they
+guess’d at that, how did they know the Way and Manner of preparing it,
+by Furnaces, Wind-Forges, and Smelting-mills? These would be as hard to
+make or build, without Iron Tools, as dwelling Houses. And when they had
+got a Lump of Iron, till they knew how to temper it, they could not make
+Tools of it still. Unless _Cain_’s Children had an Inspiration from
+Heaven, I do not see how they could discover all these Things, in so
+short a Time. And this is only to make good what the Theorist said, that
+such an Hypothesis _does not want its Reasons_. And as to _Tubal-Cain_,
+let those that positively assert that there was no Iron in the first
+World, tell us in what Sense that Place is to be understood. For, I
+believe, Iron or Brass is not once mention’d in all the Theory.
+
+
+ CHAP. XI.
+
+
+This Chapter is to prove that the _Sea was open_ before the Deluge. ’Tis
+something barren of philosophical Arguments, but we will begin with such
+as it has, which are taken from this Topick, _That the Fishes could not
+live in our Abyss_: _p._ 224. and that for three Reasons. First, because
+it was too dark. Secondly, too close; and thirdly, too cold. As for
+Coldness, methinks he might have left that out, unless he suppose that
+there are no Fish in the frozen Seas, towards the North and South; which
+is against all Sense and Experience: For cold Countries abound most in
+Fish. And according to Reason, there would be more Danger of too much
+Warmth, in those subterraneous Waters, than of too much Cold, in respect
+of the Fishes.
+
+Then as to Darkness and Closeness, this minds me of the Saying of
+_Maimonides_: _That no Man_ ever would believe, that a Child could live
+so many Months, shut up in its Mother’s Belly, if he had never seen the
+Experience of it. There’s Closeness and Darkness, in the Highest Degree.
+And in Animals, that, as soon as born, cannot live without Respiration.
+Whereas Fishes, of all Creatures, have the least need of Respiration, if
+they have any. And as for _Darkness_, how many subterraneous Lakes have
+we still, wherein Fishes live? And we can scarce suppose the main and
+fathomless Ocean to have Light to the Bottom; at least when it is
+troubled or tempestuous. How the Eyes of Fish are, or might be, form’d
+or conform’d, we cannot tell, but we see they feed and prey on the Night
+Time, and take Baits as greedily as on the Day. But it is likely they
+were less active and agile in that Abyss, than they are now; their Life
+was more sluggish then, and their Motions more slow, _Job_ xxxviii. 8.
+as being still in that _Womb_ of Nature that was broke up at the Deluge.
+And as to Air, they would have enough for their imperfect way of
+breathing in that State. But if they have a more perfect now, which is
+still a Question, they might have some Passages in their Body open’d,
+(at the Disruption of the Abyss) when they were born into the Light and
+free Air, which were not open’d before. As we see in Infants, upon their
+Birth, a new Passage is made into their Lungs, and a new Circulation of
+the Blood, which before took another Course.
+
+So much for pretended Reasons and Philosophy. The rest of this long
+Chapter is spent either in Consequences made from Scripture, or in a
+prolix Discourse about Rain. As to Scripture, _p._ 219, 220. he makes
+this the first Objection, that, whereas _Adam_ had a Dominion given him
+over the Fish of the Sea, it could have no Effect, if they were inclosed
+in the Abyss. _Adam_ had no more Dominion given him over the Fish of the
+Sea, than over the Fowls of the Air; which he could not come at, or
+seize at his Pleasure, unless he could fly into the Air after them.
+_Adam_ was made Lord of all Animals upon this Earth, and had a Right to
+use them for his Conveniency, when they came into his Power: But I do
+not believe that _Adam_ was made stronger than a Lyon, nor could master
+the Leviathan, or command him to the Shore. He had a Right, however, and
+his Posterity, to dispose of all Creatures for their Use and Service,
+whensoever, upon Occasion offered, they fell into their Power.
+
+Next he says, _p._ 225, 226. The Waters were gather’d into one Place,
+and a Firmament was made to divide the Waters from the Waters. Well,
+allow this, tell us then what was that Firmament? For it is said there,
+_Gen._ i. 17. that God set the Sun, Moon, and Stars, in the Firmament.
+Therefore you can argue nothing from this, unless you suppose
+supercelestial Waters: Which, when you have prov’d, we will give you an
+Account of the subcelestial, and of the subterraneous. And here the
+Exceptor cites some Things from the Theory, that are not in the second
+Edition, and therefore the Theorist is not concern’d to answer them.
+
+Lastly, The Exceptor comes to his long Harangue in Commendation of the
+_Clouds_ and of _Rain_: Which takes up a great Part of this Chapter. In
+his _Exordium_ he makes this Compliment to the Clouds, p. 234.
+_Sometimes they mount up and fly aloft, as if they forgat, or disdain’d
+the Meanness of their Origin. Sometimes again they sink and stoop so
+low, as if they repented of their former proud Aspirings, and did
+remorseful humble Penance for their high Presumption. And though I may
+not say they weep to expiate their Arrogance, or kiss the Earth with
+bedewed Cheeks, in Token of their Penitence, yet they often prostrate in
+the Dust, and sweep the lowest Grounds of all, with their misty foggy
+Trains. One while they_, &c. This Harangue about the Clouds and Rain, is
+pursued for fourteen or fifteen Pages, and, with Submission to better
+Judgments, I take it to be a Country Sermon, about the _Usefulness of
+Rain_: And, I believe, whosoever reads it, will, both from its Matter
+and Form, be of the same Opinion. I do not speak this in Derogation to
+his Sermon, but he would have done better, methinks, to have printed it
+in a Pamphlet by it self; there being no Occasion for it in this Theory.
+
+Towards the Conclusion of the Chapter, _p._ 246. he answers an Objection
+made by the Theorist against the supposed Islands and Continents in the
+first Earth. Namely, _That it would render the Propagation of Mankind
+difficult, into those broken Parts of the World_. And the many imperfect
+shifting Answers which the Exceptor gives, or conjectures without
+Authority, do but confirm the Objection of the Theorist, or make his
+Words true, _quod Res esset difficilis explicatu_. Which is all that the
+Theorist said upon that Subject.
+
+
+ CHAP. XII.
+
+
+This is a short Chapter, and will be soon dispatch’d. ’Tis to prove that
+the _Rainbow was before the Flood_. And notwithstanding that, a good
+Sign that there should never be a Flood again. This is to me a Paradox,
+but he confirms it by a greater Paradox: For he says, God might as well
+(as to Significancy, or Authenticalness) _have appointed the Sun, as the
+Rainbow, for a Sign that there never should have been another Flood_. So
+that if God had said to _Noah_, I do assure thee there shall never be a
+second Deluge, and for a Sign of this, _Behold I set the Sun in the
+Firmament_: This would have done as well, he says, as the Rainbow. That
+is, in my Judgment, it would have done nothing at all more than the bare
+Promise. And if it had done no more than the bare Promise, it was
+superfluous. Therefore if the Rainbow was no more than the Sun would
+have been, it was a superfluous Sign. They to whom these two Signs are
+of equal Significancy and Effect, lie without the Reach of all
+Conviction, and I am very willing to indulge them in their own Opinions.
+
+But he says, _p._ 257. _God sometimes has made things to be Signs, that
+are common and usual. Thus the Fruit of a Tree growing in Paradise, was
+made a Sign of Man’s Immortality._ But how does it appear that this was
+a common Tree; or that it was given to _Adam_ as a Sign that he should
+be immortal? Neither of these appear from Scripture. Secondly, he says,
+2 _Kings_ xiii. 17. _Shooting with Bow and Arrows upon the Ground, was
+made a Sign to_ Joash _of his prevailing against the_ Syrians. This was
+only a Command to make war against _Syria_, and a Prophecy of Success;
+both deliver’d in a symbolical or hieroglyphical Way. The Command was
+signify’d by bidding the King shoot an Arrow, which was the Sign of War.
+And the Sign of Victory or of divine Assistance, was the Prophet’s
+strengthening the King’s Hands to draw the Bow. This is nothing as to a
+Sign given in Nature, or from the natural World, in Confirmation of a
+divine Promise: Which is the thing we are only to consider.
+
+All the rest of this Chapter is lax Discourse without Proof. And as to
+the Significancy of the Rainbow, upon Supposition that it was a new
+Appearance; and its Insignificancy upon Supposition that it was an old
+Appearance, we have spoken so fully in the Theory it self, _Eng. Theor._
+_Book_ 2. _ch._ 5. that it would be needless here to make any longer
+Stay upon this Argument.
+
+
+ CHAP. XIII.
+
+
+This Chapter is concerning _Paradise_; but our Author fairly baulks all
+the Difficulties in that Doctrine, and contents himself with a few
+Generals, which every body knows. The Doctrine of Paradise consists
+chiefly of two Parts; the Site or Place of it; and the State or
+Properties of it. As to the first, if the Exceptor would have confuted
+the Theory, he should have let down the Conclusions that are advanc’d by
+the Theory, (_Eng. Theor._ _Book._ 2. _c._ 7.) concerning the Place of
+Paradise, which are these; first, the Place of Paradise cannot be
+determin’d by Scripture only. Neither the Word _Mekeddem_, (_Gen._ ii.
+8.) nor the four Rivers mentioned there, make the Place of it
+defineable. Secondly, The Place of Paradise cannot be determin’d by the
+Theory. Seeing then neither Scripture, nor Reason determine the Place of
+Paradise, if we will determine it, it must be by Antiquity. And if we
+appeal to Antiquity in this Case, we shall find, First, That it was not
+in _Mesopotamia_. Secondly, That according to the Plurality of Votes,
+both amongst the Heathen and Christian Authors, it was plac’d in the
+other Hemisphere. And this is all the Theory says upon that Point. As
+you may see, _Eng. Theor_ _Book_ 2. _ch._ 7. and _Lat. Theor._ _Edit._
+2. _p._ 194. and _p._ 214, 215. Wherefore if the Animadverter would
+undertake to confute the Theory in this Point, he should have confuted
+those four Particulars. But he slips over these, _p._ 265. and gives us
+only a Paraphrase upon Verses in the second and third _Chapters_ of
+_Genesis_, which says little to this Purpose, and yet more than it
+proves.
+
+In the second Place, as to the State and Properties of Paradise, or the
+ante-diluvian World; _the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians_ is the Thing
+he insists upon. But this he handles so loosely, _p._ 273. that in the
+Conclusion of his Discourse, one cannot tell whether he affirms it, or
+denies it. This sceptical Humour of the Exceptor hath been taken notice
+of before, and ’tis continued in this Chapter, where there is little or
+nothing positively determin’d. The Theorist, on the contrary, expressly
+affirms the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians, and gives these Reasons for
+his Assertion. First, Because all the Lives, and all the Generations
+recorded in Scripture, before the Flood, from Father to Son, in a Line
+of sixteen hundred Years, are longeval: Of six, seven, eight, nine
+hundred Years a-piece. Secondly, Antiquity, both _Greek_ and _Barbarian_
+have attested the same thing, and recorded the Tradition; see the Table
+of both. Thirdly, The Generations recorded in Scripture after the Flood,
+as they exceed the Term of succeeding Ages, _Eng. Theor._ _p._ 204. so
+they decline by degrees from the ante-diluvian Longevity. Lastly,
+_Jacob_ complains of the Shortness of his Life, and lowness of his Days,
+in Comparison of his Forefathers, when he had liv’d one hundred and
+thirty Years; _Gen._ xlvii. 9. which had been a groundless Complaint, if
+his Ancestors had not lived much longer.
+
+These two last Reasons the Exceptor has not thought fit to take notice
+of. And, in Answer to the two former, he hath only the usual
+Subterfuges: As, that the long Lives of the ante-diluvian Patriarchs was
+a Thing extraordinary and providential, confin’d to their Persons; not
+of a general Extent, nor according to the Course of Nature. But how does
+this appear? It must be made out, either by Scripture or Reason.
+Scripture makes no Distinction, nor Exception of Persons in this Case;
+all, whereof it hath left any Account, as to Term of Life, are declar’d
+to have liv’d several hundred of Years. And why should we not conclude
+the same Thing concerning the rest? Then as to Reason, you cannot
+suppose Longevity, in that World, against Reason or Nature, unless you
+first suppose the Form and Constitution of that World to have been the
+same with the present: Which is to beg the Question. Admitting that Form
+and Constitution of the first Heavens and Earth, which the Theory hath
+given, Longevity will be a natural Consequence of it. _Theor._ _Book_ 2.
+_ch._ 3, _&_ 4. And having such a Course of Nature laid before us, as
+agrees with the Reports of Scripture, and with general Tradition, why
+should we quit that, to comply with an imaginary Presumption; that these
+were miraculously preserv’d, and all the rest were short-liv’d? I know
+he pretends, p. 277. we may as well conclude all Men were Giants in
+those Days, because _Moses_ says, _There were Giants upon the Earth in
+those Days_, Gen. vi. 4. as conclude that all Men were long liv’d in
+those Days, because _Moses_ mentions some that were so. There had been
+some Pretence for this, if _Moses_ had made a Distinction of two Races
+of Men in the first World, long Livers and short Livers; as he hath
+distinguish’d the Giant from the common Race of Mankind: Or, as he hath
+said in one Case, _There were Giants on the Earth in those Days_; so if
+he had said in the other, _There were long Livers upon the Earth in
+those Days_, and upon that, had given us a List of the long-liv’d
+Patriarchs: This indeed would have made the Cases pretty parallel. But,
+on the contrary, _Moses_ makes no such Distinction of long-living and
+short-living Races, before the Flood; nor yet notes it as a Mark of
+divine Favour, or extraordinary Benediction upon those Persons that
+liv’d so long. Therefore, not to suppose it general to Mankind at that
+Time, is a groundless Restriction, which is neither founded upon
+Scripture nor Reason.
+
+As to the second Argument for ante-diluvian Longevity, taken from
+Tradition and the Testimony of the Antients, he objects, _p._ 276, 277.
+that _Josephus_ does not seem to be firm in that Opinion himself. But
+what then? The Theorist lays no Stress upon _Josephus_’s single Opinion,
+but refers to the Testimonies of those Authors, whether _Greeks_, or
+such as have given on Account of the _Ægyptian_, _Chaldean_, and
+_Phœnician_ Antiquities: Which are call’d in by _Josephus_, as Witnesses
+of this Truth or Tradition, concerning the long Lives of the first Men.
+And at last, the Exceptor seems content, this Tradition should be
+admitted, _p._ 278. seeing the _Authors are too many, or too
+considerable, to have their Testimonies question’d or rejected_. But
+then he will make a further Question, _Why_ there should not also be a
+Tradition concerning the _perpetual Equinox_, or _perpetual Spring_,
+upon which this Longevity depended? But this Question is fully answer’d,
+and the Tradition fully made out before, in the eighth Chapter, which I
+need not here repeat. In like manner, all the secondary Questions, which
+he then mentions, depending upon, and being included in this first,
+receive their Resolution from it. For when a perpetual Equinox is once
+truly stated, there is no Difficulty concerning the rest.
+
+After these Contests about Traditions, he hath one or two _Reasons_
+against this _ante-diluvian Longevity_, p. 279, 280. First, because the
+Earth, by this Means, would have been over-stock’d with People before
+the Time of the Deluge. Secondly, They should all have been of the same
+Longevity before the Flood. Neither of these, me-thinks, have any
+Strength in them. As to the first, That Earth was much more capacious
+than this is, where the Sea takes away half of its Surface, and renders
+it uninhabitable. And whereas he suggests, as a Recompence, _ibid._
+_That Mountains_ have more Surface and Capacity than Plains; that’s
+true, but they are also less habitable, by Reason of their Barrenness
+and Ruggedness. Who can believe that there are as many People in
+_Wales_, as in other Parts of _England_, upon the same Compass of level
+Ground? Or no more in _Holland_, than upon a like Number of Acres upon
+the _Alps_ or _Pyreneans_? There would be room enough for twice as many
+People as there are in the World, and twice as many Animals, if there
+was Food enough to nourish them. But here I have two things to complain
+of, as foul Play: First, the Exceptor cites the Theory partially.
+Secondly, he does not mark the Place whence he takes that Citation; as
+if it was on purpose to hide his Partiality. The Words he cites are
+these: _If we allow the first Couple, at the end of one hundred Years,
+or of the first Century, to have left ten Pair of Breeders, which is an
+easy Supposition, there would arise from these in fifteen hundred Years,
+a greater Number than the Earth was capable of; allowing every Pair to
+multiply in the same decuple Proportion the first Pair did_, Eng. Theor.
+p. 32. Here the Exceptor stops, and makes this Inference; that upon an
+_easy Supposition_, which the Theorist makes and allows, the Earth would
+have been over-stock’d in fifteen hundred Years. This is an _easy
+Supposition_ for the _first Century_, as the Theorist put it; but it
+would be a very uneasy one for the following Centuries, when they came
+to be at any considerable Distance from the Beginning. And therefore the
+Theorist tells you, in that very Page, _The same Measure cannot run
+equally through all the Ages._ And in his Calculation you see, after the
+first Century, he hath taken only a _quadruple Proportion for the
+Increase of Mankind_. As judging that a _moderate and reasonable Measure
+betwixt the highest and the lowest_. This the Exceptor might easily have
+observ’d, _ibid._ and as easily avoided this Misapplication of the Words
+of the Theorist.
+
+His second Reason against the ante-diluvian Longevity is slighter than
+the first, _p._ 280. For he pretends that all Ante-diluvians, upon that
+Supposition, should have been equally long-liv’d. You may as well say,
+that all the Children of the same Parents, and that live in the same
+Place, should now be equally long-liv’d; the external World being the
+same to them all. But, besides Accidents, their _Stamina_ and
+Constitutions might then be of a different Strength, as well as now;
+tho’ they were born of the same Parents, and liv’d in the same Air.
+Lastly, he moves a Difficulty about the Multiplication of Animals in the
+first World, _p._ 281. that they would have been too numerous before the
+Flood. I can say nothing to that, nor he neither, upon good Grounds:
+Unless we knew what Species of Animals were then made, and in what
+Degrees they multiplied. The Theorist always supposes a divine
+Providence to superintend, proportion, and determine, both the Number
+and Food of Animals upon the Earth; suitably to the Constitution and
+Circumstances of every World. And seeing that Earth was no less under
+the Care and Direction of Providence, than the present, we may conclude
+that due Measures were taken for adjusting the Numbers and Food of
+Animals in such manner, as neither to be a Burden to one another, nor to
+Man.
+
+
+ CHAP. XIV.
+
+
+This Chapter is against the Explication of the Deluge by the
+_Dissolution of the Earth_. That Dissolution, as is pretended, being
+unfit or insufficient to produce such an Effect. And to prove this, the
+Ante-theorist gives us five Arguments, whereof the first is this; _p._
+285. _Moses_ having left us an accurate Description of Paradise,
+_according to the proper Rules of Topography_, such a Description would
+have been improper and insufficient to determine the Place of Paradise,
+and consequently useless, if the Earth had been dissolv’d; and by that
+means the Bounds of those Countries, and the Channels of those Rivers,
+broken and chang’d. This Objection, I’m afraid, will fall heavier upon
+_Moses_, or upon the Exceptor himself, than upon the Theorist. However,
+one would have expected that the Exceptor should have determin’d here
+the Place of Paradise in virtue of that Description. So learned and
+sagacious a Person, having before him an exact Draught of Paradise,
+_according to the proper Rules of Topography_, could not fail to lay his
+Finger upon the very Spot of Ground where it stood. Yet I do not find
+that he has ventur’d to determine the Place of Paradise, either in this
+Chapter, or in the preceding: Which gives me a great Suspicion, that he
+was not satisfy’d where it stood, notwithstanding the _Mosaical_
+Topography. Now if it cannot be understood or determin’d by that
+Topography, one of these two things must be allow’d, either that the
+Description was insufficient and ineffectual; or that there has been
+some great Change in the Earth, whereby the Marks of it are destroy’d;
+namely, the Bounds of Countries, and the Courses of the the Rivers. If
+he take the second of these Answers, he joins with the Theorist. If the
+first, he reflects, according to his way of arguing, upon the Honour of
+_Moses_, or confutes himself.
+
+But here is still a further Charge, _p._ 286. _Moses_’s Description of
+Paradise would have been _told_ (which he notes for _horrid Blasphemy_)
+if the Earth was broken at the Deluge: For then those Rivers, by which
+_Moses_ describes Paradise, could not have been before the Flood. But
+why so, I pray? The Theorist supposes Rivers before the Flood, in great
+Plenty; and why not like to these? And if their Channels were very much
+chang’d by the Flood, that’s no more than what good Interpreters
+suppose. Being unable, upon any other Submission, to give an Account why
+it is so hard (notwithstanding _Moses_’s Description) to determine the
+Place of Paradise. Now where is the _Blasphemy_ of this? _Ibid._ _Horrid
+Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost?_ A rude and injudicious Defence of
+Scripture, by Railing and ill Language, is the true Way to lessen and
+disparage it: Especially when we make our own Consequences to be of the
+same Authority with the Word of God; and whatsoever is against them,
+must be charg’d with Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost. Is it not a
+strange Thing, that the Dissolution of the Earth should be made
+Blasphemy, when the Prophets and inspir’d Authors speak so often of the
+_Disruptions_, _Fractions_, _Concussions_, and _Subversions_ of the
+Earth? See _Review_, _p._ 380, _&c._ And that very Expression, that the
+_Earth is dissolv’d_, is a Scripture Expression, (_Psal._ lxxv. 3.
+_Isai._ xxiv. 19. _Amos_ ix. 5) which, methinks, might have been enough
+to have protected it from the Imputation of Blasphemy. But there is
+nothing safe against blind Zeal, and opinionative Ignorance; which, by
+how much they find themselves weaker in Reasons, by so much they become
+more violent in Passions.
+
+But to return to the Objection; upon the whole Matter, he casts the
+Burden of the Charge upon _Moses_ himself, as we noted before: For take
+whether Hypothesis you will, that the Earth was, or was not broken, the
+Question still returns, if the Mosaical Topography was exact and
+sufficient, why can we not yet find out the Situation of Paradise? ’Tis
+now above three thousand Years since _Moses_ died, and Men have been
+curious and very inquisitive in all Ages, to find out the Place of
+Paradise; but it is not found out to this Day to any Satisfaction: So
+that, methinks, upon the whole, the Theory, which supposeth the Earth
+very much chang’d, makes the fairest Apology both for _Moses_ and
+Mankind, in this Particular. But to proceed to his second Argument.
+
+Secondly, says the Exceptor, p. 288. _The Dissolution of the Earth could
+not be the Cause of the general Flood, because it would have utterly
+destroy’d_ Noah_’s Ark, and all that were in it_. I thought the Theorist
+had effectually prevented this Objection, by putting the Ark under the
+Conduct of its Guardian Angels, and of a miraculous Providence; _Eng.
+Theor._ _p._ 147. These are his Words: _I think it had been impossible
+for the Ark to have liv’d upon the raging Abyss, or for_ Noah _and his
+Family to have been preserv’d, if there had not been a miraculous Hand
+of Providence to take Care of them._ Now, either the Exceptor did not
+take notice of this Passage in the Theory, or he does not allow that a
+miraculous Hand was sufficient to preserve the Ark; or thirdly, he made
+an Objection, which he knew himself to be impertinent. And, I confess, I
+am inclinable to think the last is true: For as to the first, he
+confesses (_p._ 354.) that the _Theory represents the Ark, with its
+Guardian Angels about it, in the Extremity of the Flood_. And as to the
+second, he himself makes use of a miraculous Power to preserve the Ark
+upon his Hypothesis; in Answer to the eighth Objection, _p._ 351, 352,
+_&c._ Why then may not we make use of the same Power, and with the same
+Effect? It remains therefore, that he was conscious to himself that he
+made this Objection to no purpose.
+
+But that is not all: He has also us’d foul Play in his Citation: For
+whereas the great Danger of the Ark would be at the first Fall of the
+Earth, or the Disruption of the Abyss; the Theorist, he says, to prevent
+this, makes the Ark to be a-float by the Rains, before the Abyss was
+broken. But is that all the Theorist says in that Place? Does he not
+assign another Way how the Ark might be a-float? Namely, in a River, or
+in a Dock. These are the Words of the Theory, _p._ 133, 134. _So as the
+Ark, if it could not float upon these Rain-Waters, at least taking the
+Advantage of a River, or of a Dock or Cistern made to receive them, it
+might be a-float before the Abyss was broken open._ And these Words
+being in the same Place whence he makes his Citation, it must be a
+wilful Dissimulation not to take notice of them. But he saw they would
+have taken off the Edge of his Objection, and therefore thought fit not
+to touch upon them. But after all, there is no Necessity that the Ark
+should be a-float before the Earth broke: Those Things, were premis’d in
+the Theory, only to soften the Way to Men that are of hard Belief in
+such extraordinary Matters: For the Angels (whose Ministry we openly
+own, upon these grand Occasions) could as easily have held the Ark
+a-float, in the Air, as on the Water. And the Ark, being an Emblem of
+the Church, God certainly did _give his Angels Charge over it; that they
+should bear it up in their Hands, that it might not be dash’d against a
+Stone_. And this having been more than once profess’d by the Theorist,
+we must again conclude this Objection superfluous and useless.
+
+The third Objection is this. If the Earth had been thus dissolv’d, _p._
+289. _The present Earth would have been, in likelihood of another
+Figure, than what now it bears._ These are his Words; but I suppose he
+means, that it would have been of another Form, as to Sea and Land. And
+the Reason he gives is this: Because, says he, it would have broke first
+in the Equator, and consequently that Part falling down first, would
+have been swallowed up by the Waters, and become all Sea. Whereas we
+find, that under the Equator that then was (which he supposeth (_ibid._)
+the present Ecliptick) _the dry Ground is of most spacious Extent and
+Continuity_. We need not examine his Account of Sea and Land, because it
+proceeds upon a false Supposition, (_See_ p. 27. _before_.) He relapses
+here into his former astronomical Error, or to his first adds a second;
+_viz._ That the Earth, when it chang’d its Situation, chang’d its Poles
+and Circles. This is a great Mistake; the Change of Position in Respect
+of the Heavens, did not change the Places of its Circles in Respect to
+its own Globe. As when you change a Sphere or a Globe out of a _right
+Situation_ into an _oblique_, the Circles do not change their Places, as
+to that Sphere or Globe; but have only another Position to the Heavens.
+The Earth’s Ecliptick runs thorough the same Places it did before; and
+the equinoctial Regions of that Earth were the same with the equinoctial
+Regions of this, only bear another Posture to the Heavens and the Sun.
+These Circles have not chang’d Places with one another, as he imagines;
+and which is worse, would father this imagination upon the Theory, in
+these Words, _Under the Ecliptick (which, in the present Situation of
+the Earth, (ACCORDING TO THE THEORY) was its Equinoctial, and divided
+the Globe into two Hemispheres, as the Equator does now) the dry
+Ground_, &c. He that affirms this, with Respect to the Earth, neither
+understands the _Theory, nor the Doctrine of the Sphere_. But let’s
+press no further upon a Mistake.
+
+The fourth Objection is this; _p._ 290. That such a Dissolution of the
+Earth, would have caus’d great Barrenness after the Flood: Partly by
+turning up some dry and unfruitful Parts of the Earth; and partly by the
+Soil and Filth that would be left upon its Surface. As to the first, I
+willingly allow, that some of the interior and barren Parts of the Earth
+might be turn’d up; as we now see in mountainous and wild Countries; but
+this rather confirms the Theory, than weakens it. But as to the second,
+that the Filth and Soil would have made the Earth more barren, I cannot
+allow that. For good Husbandmen overflow their Grounds, to make their
+Crop more rich. And ’tis generally suppos’d, that the Inundation of
+_Nile_, and the Mud it leaves behind it, makes _Ægypt_ more fruitful.
+Besides, this Part of the Objection lies against the common Explication
+of the Deluge, as well as against that which is given by the Theory. For
+if you suppose an universal Deluge, let it come from what Causes you
+please, it must overflow all the Earth, and leave Mud and Slime and
+Filth upon the Surface of it: And consequently cause Barrenness,
+according to this Argumentation.
+
+He adds another Consideration under this Head, _p._ 292. namely, that if
+the Earth had been dissolv’d in this manner, _All the Buildings erected
+before the Flood, would have been shaken down, or else overwhelm’d. Yet
+we read of some that outstood the Flood, and were not demolish’d. Such
+were the Pillars of_ Seth, _and the Cities_ Henochia _and_ Joppa. As to
+_Seth_’s Pillars, they are generally accounted fabulous; and I perceive
+the Exceptor will not vouch for them: For he concludes, (_p._ 295) _I
+know the very Being is question’d of_ Seth_’s Pillars_, &c. If he will
+not defend them, why should I take the Pains to confute them? I do not
+love to play with a Man, that will put nothing to the Stake; that will
+have his Chance to win, but can lose nothing, because he stakes nothing.
+Then as to the City _Henochia_, it hath no Authority, but that of
+_Annius Viterbiensis_, and his _Berosus_: A Book generally exploded, as
+fictitious. Lastly, As to _Joppa_, the Authority indeed is better, tho’
+still uncertain. But however, suppose the Ruins of one Town remain’d
+after the Flood, does this prove that the Earth was not dissolv’d? I do
+not doubt, but there were several Tracts of the Earth, much greater than
+that Town, that were not broken all to Pieces by their Fall. But you and
+your _English_ Historian, are mistaken, if you suppose the Altars and
+Inscriptions mention’d by _Mela_, to have been ante-diluvian Altars and
+Inscriptions: Unless you will make the Fable of _Perseus_ and
+_Andromeda_, and the _Sea-Monster_, to have been an ante-diluvian Fable.
+Neither hath your Historian been lucky in translating those Words of
+_Mela_, _cum religione plurima, with the Grounds and Principles of their
+Religion_, which signify only, _with a religious Care of Superstition_.
+But to leave Fables, and proceed:
+
+His last Argument against the Dissolution is this, _p._ 296. Had the
+Dissolution of the Earth been the Cause of the Deluge, _It would have
+made God’s Covenant with_ Noah, _a very vain and trifling Thing_. So
+much is true, That the Deluge, in the course of Nature, will not return
+again in the same Way. But unless God prevent it, it both may, and will
+return in another Way. That is, if the World continue long enough, the
+Mountains will wear and sink, and the Waters in Proportion rise, and
+overflow the whole Earth; as is plainly shewn, by a parallel Case, in
+the _first Book_ of the _Theory_, _ch._ iv. Besides, God might, when he
+pleas’d, by an extraordinary Power, and for the Sins of Men, bring
+another Deluge upon the World. And that is the Thing which _Noah_ seems
+to have fear’d, and which God, by his Covenant, secur’d him against.
+For, as the Exceptor hath said himself, in answering an harder
+Objection, (p. 152.) _When God assigned to the Waters the Place of their
+Abode, he did not intend to fortify them in it against his own
+Omnipotence, or to divest himself of his Soveraign Prerogative of
+calling them forth when he pleased._ This being allowed, with what we
+said before, that Covenant was not vain nor trifling, either in Respect
+of an ordinary or extraordinary Providence.
+
+Thus we have done with all the Exceptions against the Theory: For the
+two next Chapters are concerning a new Hypothesis of his own; and the
+last of all excepts not against the Truth of the Theory, but the
+Certainty of it. In Reflection upon this whole Matter, give me leave to
+declare two Things: First, That I have not knowingly omitted any
+Objection that I thought of moment: Secondly, That I have not, from
+these Exceptions, found Reason to change any Part of the Theory, nor to
+alter my Opinion, as to any Particular in it. No doubt there are several
+Texts of Scripture, which, understood according to the Letter in a
+vulgar Way, stand cross, both to this, and other natural Theories. And a
+Child, that had read the first Chapters of _Genesis_, might have
+observ’d this as well as the Exceptor; but could not have loaded his
+Charge with so much Bitterness. Some Men, they say, though of no great
+Valour, yet will fight excellently well behind a Wall. The Exceptor,
+behind a Text of Scripture, is very fierce and rugged: But in the open
+Field of Reason and Philosophy, he’s gentle and tractable. _Eng. Theor._
+_Book_ 2. _c._ 9. _at the End._ The Theorist had declar’d his
+Intentions, and oblig’d himself, to give a full Account of _Moses_ his
+_Cosmopœia_, or _six Day’s Creation_; but did not think it proper to be
+done in the vulgar Language, nor before the whole Theory was compleated.
+This might have spared much of the Exceptor’s Pains; but till that
+Account be given, if the Exceptor thinks fit to continue his
+Animadversions, and go through the two last Books, as he hath done the
+two first, it will not be unacceptable to the Theorist; provided it be
+done with Sincerity, in reciting the Words, and representing the Sense
+of the Author.
+
+
+ CHAP. XV.
+
+
+In this Chapter the Ante-theorist lays down a new Hypothesis for the
+Explication of the Deluge, _p._ 299. And the War is chang’d, on his
+Side, from offensive, to defensive. ’Tis but fair that he should lie
+down in his Turn; and if some Blows smart a little, he must not
+complain, because he begun the Sport. But let’s try his Hypothesis,
+without any further Ceremony, _p._ 299, 300. The first Proposition laid
+down for the establishing of it, is this: _That the Flood was but
+fifteen Cubits high, above the ordinary Level of the Earth._ This is an
+unmerciful Paradox, and a very unlucky Beginning; for under what Notion
+must this Proportion be received? As a _Postulatum_, or as a
+_Conclusion_? If it be a _Postulatum_, it must be clear from its own
+Light, or acknowledg’d by general Consent. It cannot pretend to be clear
+from its own Light, because it is matter of Fact, which is not known,
+but by Testimony. Neither is it generally acknowleg’d; for the general
+Opinion is, that the Waters covered the Tops of the Mountains; nay, that
+they were fifteen Cubits higher than the Tops of the Mountains. And this
+he confesses himself, in these Words, p. 300. _We shall find there is a
+great Mistake in the common Hypothesis, touching their Depth_: Namely,
+of the Waters. _For whereas they have been supposed to be fifteen Cubits
+higher than the highest Mountains: They were indeed but fifteen Cubits
+high in all, above the Surface of the Earth._ And this Opinion, or
+Doctrine, he calls, _p._ 329. _lin._ 19. _c._ 31. _The general standing
+Hypothesis: The usual Hypothesis_: _p._ 339. _lin._ 18. _The usual Sense
+they have put upon the Sacred Story._ It must not therefore be made a
+_Postulatum_, that such an Hypothesis is false, but the Falsity of it
+must be demonstrated by good Proofs. Now I do not find that this new
+Hypothesis, of a _fifteen Cubit Deluge_, offers at any more than one
+single Proof, namely, from _Gen._ vii. 20. But before we proceed to the
+Examination of that, give me leave to note one or two Things, wherein
+the new Theorist seems to be inconsistent with himself, or with good
+Sense.
+
+At his Entrance upon this new Hypothesis, he hath these Words, (_p._
+300.) _Not that I will be bound to defend what I say, as true and real_,
+&c. But why then does he trouble himself or the World, with an
+Hypothesis, which he does not believe to be _true_ and _real_? Or, if he
+does believe it to be so, why will he not defend it? For we ought to
+defend Truth. But he says moreover, (_p._ 302. _lin._ 19.) _Our
+Supposition stands supported by Divine Authority; as being founded upon
+Scripture. Which tells us, as plainly as it can speak, that the Waters
+prevailed but fifteen Cubits upon the Earth._ If his Hypothesis be
+founded upon Scripture; and upon Scripture, _as plainly as it can
+speak_, why will not he defend it as _true_ and _real_? For to be
+supported by Scripture, and by plain Scripture, is as much as we can
+alledge for the Articles of our Faith; which every one surely is bound
+to defend.
+
+But this is not all the Difficulty we meet with. The whole Period which
+we quoted, runs thus: _Not that I will be bound to defend what I say, as
+true or real; any more than to believe (what I cannot well endure to
+speak) that the Church of God has ever gone on in an irrational way of
+explaining the Deluge: Which yet the must needs have done, if there be
+no other rational Method of explaining it, and no other intelligible
+Causes of it, than what the Theory has propos’d._ Now for the Word
+_Theory_, put the Word _Exceptor_, or _Exceptor’s Hypothesis_, and see
+if this Charge, _that the Church of God has ever gone on in an
+irrational way of explaining the Deluge_, does not fall as much upon the
+Exceptor’s new Hypothesis, as upon the Theory. If the Church Hypothesis
+was rational, what need he have invented a new one? Why does he not
+propose that Hypothesis, and defend it? I’m afraid it will be found that
+he does not only contradict the Church Hypothesis, but reject it as
+mistaken and irrational. For what is the Church Hypothesis, but the
+_common Hypothesis_? (_p._ 300. _l._ 24.) The _general standing_
+Hypothesis; the _usual_ Hypothesis; the _usual Sense they put upon the
+sacred Story_; all these he rejects and disputes against, as you may see
+in the Places fore-cited: And also he calls them, _p._ 312. _ult._ such
+_Inventions_, as _have been_, and _justly may be disgustful, not only to
+nice and squeamish, but to the best and soundest philosophick
+Judgments_. And _p._ 319. he says, by his Hypothesis, _We are excused
+from running to those Causes or Methods, which seem unreasonable to
+some, and unintelligible to others, and unsatisfactory to most._ And to
+name no more, he says, _p._ 330. the ordinary Supposition, that the
+Mountains were cover’d with Water in the Deluge, brings on a _Necessity
+of setting up a new Hypothesis for explaining the Flood_. Now, whose
+Methods, Inventions, and Suppositions are these, which he reflects upon?
+Are they not the commonly receiv’d Methods and Suppositions? ’Tis plain,
+most of those which he mentions, (_p._ 310, 311, 313, 314, 318.) are not
+the Theorist’s: For the Theorist had rejected before, (_Eng. Theor._
+_ch._ 2, and 3.) those very Methods and Inventions, which the Exceptor
+rejects now; and so far he justifies the Theory[18]: These Reflections
+therefore must fall upon some other Hypothesis; and what Hypothesis is
+that, if it be not the Church Hypothesis? To conclude, I argue thus, in
+short, to shew the Exceptor inconsistent with himself in this
+Particular. The Church Way of explaining the Deluge, is either
+_rational_, or _irrational_. If he say it is _rational_, why does he
+desert it, and invent a new one? And if he says it is _irrational_, then
+that dreadful Thing, which _he cannot well endure to speak, that the
+Church of God has ever gone on in an irrational Way of explaining the
+Deluge_, falls flat upon himself.
+
+Thus much in general, for his Introduction. We proceed now to examine
+particularly his new Hypothesis: Which, as we told you before, consists
+chiefly in this, _That the Waters of the Deluge were but fifteen Cubits
+higher than the common unmountainous Surface of the Earth._ _This_,
+which seems so odd and extravagant, he says, _p._ 301. is the
+_Foundation_ of the Hypothesis. And, which is still more surprizing, he
+says this Depth, or rather Shallowness of the Waters of the Deluge, is
+told us by Scripture, _as plainly as it can speak_, p. 302. l. 23. This
+must needs raise our Curiosity, to see that Place of Scripture, which
+has been overlook’d by all the Learned hitherto. Well, ’tis _Gen._ vii.
+20. in these words, _Fifteen Cubits upwards did the Waters prevail._
+This, methinks, is somewhat general; for the Basis of these _fifteen
+Cubits_ not express’d in these Words. But why does our Author stop in
+the middle of a Verse? Why does he not transcribe the whole Verse; for
+the last Part of it is as good Scripture as the first? And that says
+plainly, that the _Mountains were cover’d with the Waters_. The whole
+Verse runs thus: _Fifteen Cubits upwards did the Waters prevail; AND THE
+MOUNTAINS WERE COVERED._ Now, if the Basis of these fifteen Cubits was
+the common Surface, or plain Level of the Earth, as this new Hypothesis
+will have it; how could fifteen Cubits, from that Basis, reach to the
+Tops of the Mountains? Are the highest Mountains but fifteen Cubits
+higher than the common Surface of the Earth? 1 _Sam._ xvii. 4. _Goliah_
+was six Cubits and a Span high; so _Pic Tenariff_ would not be thrice as
+high as _Goliah_: Yet _David_ flung a Stone up to his Forehead. Take
+what Cubit you please, sacred or common, it does not amount to two Foot.
+So the Height of the greatest Mountains, from Bottom to Top, must not be
+thirty Foot, or ten Paces, according to this new Hypothesis. Who ever
+measured Mountains at this Rate? The modern Mathematicians allow for
+their Height a Mile perpendicular, upon a moderate Computation; and that
+makes three thousand Foot: How then could Waters that were not thirty
+Foot high, cover Mountains that were three thousand Foot high? That the
+highest Mountains of the Earth were cover’d with the Waters, you may see
+express’d more fully in the precedent Verse, _Gen._ vii. 19. _And the
+Waters prevailed exceedingly upon the Earth. And all the high Hills that
+were under the whole Heavens were cover’d._ There can scarce be Words
+more plain and comprehensive. The Exceptor says, the Scripture tells us,
+as _plainly as it can speak_, that the Waters were but fifteen Cubits
+high from the common Surface of the Earth: And I say, the Scripture
+tells us as _plainly as it can speak_, That _all the high Hills under
+the whole Heaven were covered with Water_. And it must be a strange sort
+of Geometry, that makes fifteen Cubits of Water reach to the Top of the
+highest Hills. Lastly, the same History of _Moses_ says, the Tops of the
+Mountains were discover’d, when the Waters begun to decrease, _Gen._
+viii. 5. Is not that a plain Demonstration that they were cover’d
+before, and cover’d with those Waters?
+
+We may therefore safely conclude two Things: First, that this new
+Hypothesis, besides all other Faults, is contrary to the general
+Exposition of the Text of _Moses_[19]. Secondly, that it is contrary to
+the general receiv’d Doctrine of the Deluge. And if he has deliver’d a
+Doctrine, contrary to the two, methinks it should be hard for him to
+maintain his Ground, and not pronounce, at the same Time, what he dreads
+so much to speak, _That the Church of God has ever gone on in an
+irrational Way of explaining the Deluge_. But let’s reflect a little
+upon this fifteen-cubit Deluge; to see what Figure it would make, or
+what Execution it would do upon Mankind, and upon other Creatures. If
+you will not believe _Moses_ as to the overflowing of the Mountains, at
+least I hope you will believe him, as to the universal Destruction made
+by the Deluge. Hear his Words, _Gen._ vii. 21, 22, 23. we’ll take only
+the last Verse, which is this, _And every living Substance was
+destroyed, which was upon the Face of the Ground, both Man and Cattle,
+and creeping Things, and the Fowl of the Heavens; and they were
+destroyed from the Earth; and_ Noah _only remained alive, and they that
+were with him in the Ark_. Now I would gladly know, how this could be
+verified in a fifteen-cubit Deluge? The Birds would naturally fly to the
+Tops of Trees, when the Ground was wet; and the Beasts would retire, by
+Degrees, to the Mountains and higher Parts of the Earth, as the lower
+begun to be overflow’d: And if no Waters could reach them there, how
+were they all destroy’d, while they had so many Sanctuaries and Places
+of Refuge?
+
+Or if you suppose some of these Creatures had not Wit enough to save
+themselves, (though their Wit and Instincts lie chiefly in that) at
+least Mankind would not be so stupid; when Men see the Waters begin to
+rise, they could not fail to retire into Mountains: And tho’ the upper
+Stories of their Houses might be sufficient to save them from fifteen
+Cubits of Water; yet if Fear made them think themselves not secure
+there, whither could it drive them, but still into higher Places? And an
+House seated upon an Eminency, or a Castle upon a Rock, would be always
+a safe Retreat from this diminutive Deluge. I speak all this upon the
+Suppositions of the Exceptor, _p._ 215, 216, 292, _&c._ who allows, not
+only Mountains and Rocks, but also Castles and Cities before the Deluge,
+built of good Timber, and Stone, and Iron, and such substantial
+Materials. But how, in such a Case, and in such a State of Things, all
+Mankind (except _Noah_ and his Family) should be destroy’d by fifteen
+Cubits of Water, is a Lump of Incredibilities, too hard and big for me
+to swallow.
+
+But there is still another Difficulty, that we have not mention’d: As
+those that were upon the Land might easily save themselves from Ruin, so
+those that were upon the Sea in Ships, would never come in Danger. For
+what would it signify to them, if the Sea was made a few Fathoms deeper,
+by these new Waters? It would bear their Vessels as well as it did
+before, and would be no more to them than a Spring-Tide. And lastly, how
+shall we justify the Divine Wisdom, which gave such punctual Orders, for
+the Building of an Ark, to save _Noah_, and a Set of Creatures for a new
+World, when there were so many more easy and obvious Ways to preserve
+them without that Trouble?
+
+These Objections, in my Opinion, are so plain and full, that it is not
+needful to add any more: Nor to answer such Evasions as the new Theorist
+attempts to make to some of them. As, for Instance, to that plain
+Objection from _Moses_’s Words, _p._ 330. that _the Mountains were
+covered with the Waters_; he says, first, that it is a _Synecdoche_,
+where the Whole is put for a Part: Or, secondly, ’tis an _Hyperbole_,
+where more is said than understood: Or, thirdly, ’tis a _poetical
+History:_ Or, lastly, if none of these will do, by the _Tops_ of the
+Mountains is to be understood the _Bottoms_ of the Mountains, _p._ 331,
+333. and that cures all. The Truth is, he has taken a great deal of
+Pains in the next Chapter, to cure an incurable Hypothesis. We will give
+you but one Instance more: ’Tis about the _Appearance of the Tops of the
+Mountains at the Decrease of the Deluge_; which argue strongly that they
+were cover’d in the Deluge. But take it in his own Words, with the
+Answer, _p._ 337. _It is recorded_, Gen. viii. 5. _that the Waters
+decreased continually until the tenth Month, and on the first Day of the
+Month WERE THE TOPS OF THE MOUNTAINS SEEN. Now if the Mountains had not
+been quite under Water, and so invisible for the Time they were
+overwhelmed, how could they be said to become visible again, or to be
+seen upon the Floods going off?_ This is a plain and bold Objection: And
+after two Answers to it, which he seems to distrust, his third and last
+is this, _p._ 339. _If these two Considerations will not satisfy, we
+must carry on the Enquiry a little farther, and seek for a third. And
+truly some one or other must needs be found out.—Thirdly, therefore we
+consider, that the Tops of the Mountains may be said to be seen at the
+Time mentioned, upon account of their EMERGENCY OUT OF DARKNESS, NOT OUT
+OF WATERS._ This is his final Answer. The Tops of the Mountains, at the
+Decrease of the Deluge, were seen; not that they were covered before
+with Water, says he, but with Darkness. Where finds he this Account:
+’Tis neither in the Text, nor in Reason. If it was always so dark, and
+the Tops of the Mountains and Rocks naked and prominent every where, how
+could the Ark avoid them in that Darkness? Moreover, if the Deluge was
+made in that gentle way that he supposes, I see no Reason to imagine
+that there would be Darkness, after the forty Days Rain. For these Rains
+being fallen, and all the Vapours and Clouds of the Air discharg’d,
+methinks there should have ensued an extraordinary Clearness of the Air,
+as we often see after rainy Seasons. Well, ’tis true: But the Rains he
+supposes were no sooner fallen, but the Sun retracted them again in
+Vapours, with that Force and Swiftness, that it kept the Air in
+perpetual Darkness. Thus he says afterwards, _p._ 341. He’s mightily
+beholden to the Sun, upon many Accounts; and the Sun is no less beholden
+to him; for he gave him a miraculous Power to raise Mountains, and draw
+up Waters. ’Tis well the Sun did not presently fall to his old Work
+again, of raising Mountains out of this moist Earth, as the Exceptor
+says he did, when the Earth was first drain’d. _See Chap._ 10. That he
+contented himself to suck up the Waters only, and let the Earth alone:
+We are not a little beholden to him for this. For he seems to have had
+the same Power and Opportunity, at the Decrease of the Deluge, of making
+new Ravages upon the Earth, that he had before when it was first
+drain’d. But let’s see _how_, or _when_, these Waters were suck’d up, or
+resolv’d into Vapours.
+
+Upon the Expiration of the forty Days Rain, whether was the Air purg’d
+of Vapours and clear, or no? Yes, it was purg’d, he says, (p. 343.) _The
+Atmosphere was never so exhausted of Vapours, and never so thin, as when
+the Waters were newly come down._ Then, in that clear Air the Tops of
+the Mountains might have been seen, if they lay above Water. But _Moses_
+says, _Gen._ viii. 5. it was in the _tenth Month_ that they begun to be
+seen, when the Waters were decreas’d; ’twas therefore the Waters, not
+the gross Air, that hinder’d the Sight of them before. And according to
+this Method of the Exceptor, after the first forty Days, the Deluge
+begun to decrease. For the Sun forthwith set his Engines a-work, and
+resolv’d the Waters into Vapours and Exhalations at such a Rate, _p._
+341. that he presently made the Atmosphere dark with thick Mists and
+Clouds; and, in Proportion, lessen’d the Waters of the Deluge. But we do
+not read in _Moses_, of any Abatement in the Deluge, till the End of one
+hundred and fifty Days; (_Gen._ viii. 3.) which is four Months after
+this Term. The Truth is, the whole Notion of _spending the Waters of the
+Deluge by Evaporation_, is no better than what the Exceptor suspected it
+would be thought, p. 343. _A mere Fancy, a whimsical groundless
+Figment._ For what could the Sun do, in the Northern and Southern Parts
+of the World, towards the exhaling of these Waters? And in the temperate
+Climates, why should they not fall again in Rains, (if he had a Power to
+exhale them) as they do now? Was not the Earth in the same Position, and
+the Sun of the same force? Besides, where does he find this Notion in
+Scripture, that the Waters of the Deluge were consum’d by Evaporation?
+_Moses_ says, the _Waters returned from off the Earth, in going and
+returning_, Gen. viii. 3, 5. That is, after frequent Reciprocations,
+they settled at length in their Channels; where _Bounds were set them,
+that they might not pass over; that they return not again to cover the
+Earth_. Seeing therefore this Notion hath no Foundation, either in
+Scripture or Reason, ’tis rightly enough stil’d, in the Exceptor’s
+Words, a _mere Fancy_, and _groundless Figment_.
+
+But I think we have had enough of these Shifts and Evasions. Let us now
+proceed to the second Part of his new Hypothesis, which is this, _p._
+303. That the _Abyss_, or _Tehom-Rabbah_, which was broken open at the
+Deluge, and (together with the Rains) made the Flood, was nothing but
+the Holes and Caverns of Rocks and Mountains; which open’d their Mouths
+at that Time, and pour’d out a great Quantity of Water. To support this
+new Notion of _Tehom-Rabbah_, he alledgeth but one single Text of
+Scripture, _Psal._ lxxviii. 15. _He clave the Rocks in the Wilderness,
+and gave them Drink, as out of the great Depths_; that is, copiously and
+abundantly, as if it were out of the great Deep. So the next Verse
+implies, and so it is generally understood: As you may see both by
+Interpreters, and also by the _Septuagint_ and _Vulgate_ Translations,
+and those of the _Chaldee Paraphrase_, and the _Syriack_. But the
+Exceptor, by all Means, will have these Holes in the Rocks to be the
+same with the _Mosaical Abyss_, or great Deep, that was broken open at
+the Deluge: So the _great Deep_ was not one Thing, or one continued
+Cavity, as _Moses_ represents it, but ten thousand Holes, separate and
+distant one from another. Neither must the great Deep, according to him,
+signify a _low Place_, but an _high Place_: For he confesses these
+Caverns were higher than the common Level of the Earth[20]. But I do not
+see how, with any tolerable Propriety, or good Sense, that which is
+higher than the Surface of the Earth can be called the _great Deep_. An
+Abyss in the Earth, or in the Water, is certainly _downwards_, in
+respect of their common Surface, as much as a Pit is _downwards_; and
+what is downwards from us, we cannot suppose to be above us, without
+confounding all Dimensions, and all Names of Things; calling that low
+which is high, a Mountain a Valley, or a Garret a Cellar.
+
+Neither is there any Thing in this Text, _Psal._ lxxviii. 15. that can
+justly induce us to believe the _great Abyss_ to be the same Thing with
+Caverns in Rocks. For whether you suppose it to be noted here as a
+miraculous Thing, that God should give them Water _out of a Rock, or out
+of a Flint_[21], as plentifully as if it had been out of the great
+Abyss; or whether you understand the Original of Fountains to be noted
+here, which are said in Scripture to come from the Sea, or the great
+Abyss; neither of these Senses make any Thing to the Purpose of the new
+Hypothesis, and yet they are the fairest and easiest Sense that can be
+put upon the Words; and that which agrees best with other Places of
+Scripture, where the same Matter of Fact, or the same History is
+related: And therefore there can be no Necessity, from this Text, of
+changing the general Notion and Signification of _Deep_, or _Abyss_;
+both from that which it hath in common Use, and that which it hath in
+Scripture Use.
+
+I say, as in the common Use of Words, _Deep_, or _Abyss_, signifies some
+low or inferior Place; so the general Use of it in Scripture is, in the
+same Sense, either to signify the Sea, or some subterraneous Place. _Who
+shall descend into the_ (Abyss, or) _Deep_? says the Apostle, _Rom._ x.
+7. Is that as much as if he had said, Who shall _ascend_ into the Holes
+of the Rocks? And when _Jacob_ speaks of the Blessings of the Abyss, or
+of the Deep, he calls them the Blessings of the _Deep that lyeth under_,
+_Gen._ xix. 25. In like Manner, _Moses_ himself calls it the _Deep that
+couched beneath_, _Deut._ xxxiii. 13. And I know no Reason why we should
+not understand the same _Deep_ there, that he mentioned before in the
+History of the Deluge; which therefore was subterraneous, as this is.
+Then, as for the other Use of the Word, namely, for the Sea, or any Part
+of the Sea, (whose Bottom is always lower than the Level of the Earth,)
+that is the most common Use of it in Scripture. And I need not give you
+Instances which are every where obvious.
+
+One must needs think it strange, therefore, that any Man of Judgement
+should break thorough both the common Use of a Word, and so many plain
+Texts of Scripture, that show the Signification of it, for the sake of
+one Text, which, at most, is but dubious; and then lay such Stress upon
+that new Signification, as to found a new Doctrine upon it: And a
+Doctrine that is neither supported by Reason, nor agrees with the
+History of the Deluge. For, as we noted before, at the Decrease of the
+Deluge, the Waters are said to _return from off the Earth, Gen. viii.
+3_. Did they not return to the Places from whence they came? But if
+those Places were the Caverns in the Rocks, whose Mouths lay higher than
+the Surface of the Deluge, as he says they did, _p. 303, 305_. I see no
+Possibility of the Waters returning into them. But the Exceptor hath
+found out a marvellous Invention to invade this Argument. He will have
+the _returning_ of the Waters to be understood of their returning into
+their Principles, (that is, into Vapours,) not to their Places: In good
+Time: So the Dove’s _returning_ was her returning into her Principles;
+that is, into an Egg, not into the Ark. Subtleties ill-founded, argue
+two Things, Wit and Want of Judgment. _Moses_ speaks as plainly of the
+local Return of the Waters, _in going and returning_; as of the local
+going and returning of the Raven and Dove. See _Gen. viii. 3, and 5_.
+compar’d with Verse seventh and ninth.
+
+Lastly, That we end this Discourse; the whole Notion of these Water-Pots
+in the Tops of Mountains, and of the broaching of them at the Deluge, is
+a groundless Imagination. What Reason have we to believe, that there
+were such Vessels then, more than now, if there was no Fraction of the
+Earth at the Deluge, to destroy them? And he ought to have gag’d these
+Casks, (according to his own Rule, _Ch. 3._) and told us the Number and
+Capacity of them, that we might have made some Judgment of the Effect.
+Besides, if the opening the Abyss at the Deluge had been the opening of
+Rocks, why did not _Moses_ express it so; and tell us, that the _Rocks
+were cloven, and the Waters gushed out_, and so made the Deluge? This
+would have been as intelligible, if it had been true, as to tell us that
+the _Tehom-Rabbah_ was broken open. But there is not one Word of
+_Rocks_, or the _cleaving of Rocks_, in the History of the Flood. Upon
+all Accounts, therefore, we must conclude, that this Virtuoso might have
+as well suspected, that his whole Theory of the Deluge, as one Part of
+it, _p. 343._ would be accounted _a mere Fancy_, and _groundless
+Figment_.
+
+Footnote 18:
+
+ The Exceptor rejects, first the _Waters of the Sea_: Then the _Waters
+ in the Bowels of the Earth_: Then the _supercelestial Waters_: Then a
+ _new Creation of Waters_: Then the _Mass of Air_ chang’d into Water:
+ And lastly, a _partial Deluge_. And therefore he puts Men fatally,
+ either upon the Theory, or upon his new Hypothesis.
+
+Footnote 19:
+
+ This he acknowledges, _p._ 325. (_We expound a Text or two of
+ Scripture so as none ever did; and deferring the common received
+ Sense, put an unusual Gloss upon them_, not to say, ἰδίαν ἐπίλυσιν, _a
+ private Interpretation_,) and p. 359.
+
+Footnote 20:
+
+ P. 303. _But though these Caverns be called Deeps, we must not take
+ them for profound Places, that went down into the Earth, below the
+ common Surface of it: On the contrary, they were situate above it._
+
+Footnote 21:
+
+ Psal. cxiv. 7, 8. _Tremble, then Earth, at the Presence of the Lord,
+ at the Presence of the God of_ Jacob: _Which turned the Rock into a
+ standing Water, the Flint into a Fountain of Waters_.
+
+ Numb. xx. 10, 11. _And_ Moses _and_ Aaron _gathered the Congregation
+ together before the Rock, and he said unto them, Hear now, you Rebels;
+ must we fetch you Water out of this Rock? And_ Moses _lift up his
+ Hand, and with his Rod he smite the Rock twice, and the Water came out
+ abundantly_.
+
+
+ CHAP. XVI.
+
+
+This Chapter is made up of eight Objections, against his own Hypothesis.
+And those that have a mind to see them, may read them in the Author. I
+have taken as much Notice of them as I thought necessary, in the
+precedent Chapter; and therefore leave the Exceptor now to deal with
+them all together. I omitted one Objection (_p._ 311.) concerning the
+shutting up of the Abyss, and the Fountains of the Abyss, because it was
+answer`d before in the _English_ Theory, _p._ 143. namely, there were
+Fountains in the Abyss, as much as Windows in Heaven; and those were
+shut up, as well as these; that is, ceas’d to act, and were put into a
+Condition to continue the Deluge no longer.
+
+
+ CHAP. XVII.
+
+
+There is nothing in this Chapter against the Truth of the Theory; but
+the Author is blam’d for believing it to be true: I think it had been
+more blame-worthy, if he had troubled the World with a Theory which he
+did not believe to be true, and taken so much Pains to compose what he
+thought himself no better than a Romance. As to what the Theorist has
+said in Reference to his Assurance or Belief of the Theory, which the
+Exceptor calls _Positiveness_, upon Examination, I cannot find any Thing
+amiss in his Conduct, as to that Particular. For, first, he imposes his
+Sentiments upon no Man; he leaves every one their full Liberty of
+dissenting. _Preface to the Reader_ at the End. _Lastly, in Things
+purely speculative, as these are, and no Ingredients of our Faith, it is
+free to differ from one another in our Opinions and Sentiments; and so I
+remember St._ Austin _hath observed upon this very Subject of Paradise.
+Wherefore, as we desire to give no Offence our selves, so neither shall
+we take any at the Difference of Judgment in others; provided this
+Liberty be mutual, and that we all agree to study PEACE, TRUTH, and a
+GOOD LIFE._ And as the Theorist imposes his Sentiments upon no Man; so,
+as to Matter of Certainty, he distinguisheth always betwixt the
+_Substance_ of the Theory, and _Particularities_. So, at the latter End
+of the _first Book_, this Profession is made, _Eng. Theor._ _p._ 207. _I
+mean this only_, speaking about Certainty, _as to the general Parts of
+the Theory. For as to Particularities, I look upon them only as
+problematical; and accordingly I affirm nothing therein, but with a
+Power of Revocation, and a Liberty to change my Opinion when I shall be
+better inform’d._ And accordingly he says in another Place, _Eng.
+Theor._ _p._ 12. _I know how subject we are to Mistakes, in these great
+and remote Things, when we descend to Particularities. But I am willing
+to expose the Theory to a full Trial, and to shew the Way for any to
+examine it, provided they do it with Equity and Sincerity. I have no
+other Design than to contribute my Endeavours to find out Truth_, &c.
+Lastly, to cite no more Places, he says, _Eng. Theor._ _p._ 402. _There
+are many particular Explications that are to be consider’d with more
+Liberty and Latitude; and may, perhaps, upon better Thoughts, and better
+Observations, be corrected_, &c. The Theorist having thus stated and
+bounded his Belief or Assurance, and given Liberty of dissenting to all
+others, according to their particular Judgments or Inclinations, I see
+nothing unfair or undecent in this Conduct. How could the Observator
+have made it more unexceptionable? Would he have had the Theorist to
+have profess’d Scepticism, and declar’d that he believ’d his own
+Theorist no more than a Romance or fantastical Idea? that had been both
+to bely his own Conscience, and to mock the World. I remember I have
+heard a good Author once with, that there were an _Act of Parliament_,
+that whoever printed a Book, should, when he took a License, swear, that
+he thought the _Contents of his Book to be true_, as to Substance: And I
+think such a Method would keep off a great many Impertinencies. We ought
+not to trouble the World with our roving Thoughts, merely out of an Itch
+of Scripturiency, when we do not believe our selves what we write. I
+must always profess my Assent to the Substance of that Theory; and am
+the more confirm’d in it by the Weakness and Inefficacy of these
+Exceptions.
+
+We need not take Notice of the particular Citations he makes use of, to
+prove this _Positiveness_ of the Theorist; for they only affirm what we
+still own: That the Theory is more than an _Idea_, or that it is not an
+_imaginary Idea_, or that it is a _Reality_: And, together with its
+Proofs from Scripture, especially from St. _Peter_, hath more than the
+Certainty of a _bare Hypothesis_, or a _moral Certainty_. These are the
+Expressions he cites, and we own all, that, in fair Construction, they
+amount to; and find no Reason, either from the Nature of the Thing, or
+from his Objections, to change our Opinion, or make any Apology for too
+much Positiveness.
+
+I wish the Exceptor had not more to answer for, as to his _Partiality_,
+than the Theorist hath, for his _Positiveness_. And now, that we draw to
+a Conclusion, it will not be amiss to observe, how well the Exceptor
+hath answered that Character, which he gave himself at the Beginning of
+his Work. These are his Words, _p._ 43. _This I will endeavour to do_,
+namely, To examine the Theory, _with all Sincerity; and that only as a
+Friend and Servant to Truth: And therefore, with such Candor, Meekness,
+and Modesty, as becomes one who assumes and glories in so fair a
+Character: And also with such Respect to the Virtuoso who wrote the
+Theory, as may testify to the World, that I esteem his Learning, while I
+question his Opinion._ ’Tis of little Consequence what Opinion he has of
+the _Virtuoso_, as he calls him: But let us see with what _Sincerity_
+and _Meekness_, he has examin’d his Work. As to his Sincerity, we have
+given you some Proofs of it before, (_p._ 26.) both in his defective and
+partial Citations; and also, in his never taking Notice of the last
+Edition of the Theory; where several Citations he has made use of, are
+not extant. Now, by his own Rule, he ought to have had regard to this;
+for he says, (_p._ 356.) he will there take Notice only of the _English_
+Edition, _as coming out after the other; and so with more Deliberation
+and mature Thoughts of Things_. By the same Reason, say I, he ought to
+have taken Notice of the last Edition of the Theory, as being the last
+Product, and the most _deliberate and mature Thoughts_ of the Author.
+But this, it seems, was not for his Purpose.
+
+So much for his Sincerity: Now for his _Meekness_. So impatient he is to
+fall upon his Adversary, that he begins his Charge in the Preface, and a
+very fierce one it is, (_p._ 3.) _The Theorist hath assaulted Religion,
+and that in the very Foundation of it._ Here I expected to have found
+two or three Articles of the Creed assaulted or knock’d down by the
+Theory. But that is not the Case, it seems, he understands something
+more general, namely, our contradicting Scripture: For so he explains
+himself in the next Page. _In several Things (as will appear by our
+Discourse) it contradicts Scripture; and by too positive asserting the
+Truth of its Theorems, makes that to be false, upon which our Religion
+is founded._ Let us remember, that this contracting Scripture here
+pretended, is only in natural Things; and also observe, how far the
+Exceptor himself, in such Things, hath contradicted Scripture. As for
+other Reproofs which he gives us, those that are more gentle, I easily
+pass over; but somewhere he makes our Assertions, _p._ 78. _too bold an
+Affront to Scripture_. And in another Place represents them, as (either
+directly, or consequentially) _p._ 286. _Blasphemy against the Holy
+Ghost_, which is the unpardonable Sin, _Matt._ xii. 31.
+
+There is no Pleasure in repeating such Expressions, and dreadful
+Sentences. Let us rather observe, if the Exceptor hath not made himself
+obnoxious to them. But first, we must state the Case truly, that so the
+Blame may not fall upon the Innocent. The Case therefore is this,
+_Whether_, to go contrary to the Letter of Scripture, in Things that
+relate to the natural World, be _destroying the Foundations of
+Religion_, _affronting Scripture_, and _blaspheming the Holy Ghost_? In
+the Case propos’d, _We_ take the _Negative_, and stand upon that Plea.
+But the Exceptor hath taken the _Affirmative_; and therefore, all those
+heavy Charges must fall upon himself, if he go contrary to the literal
+Sense of Scripture, in his philosophical Opinions or Assertions. And
+that he hath done so, we will give you some Instances, out of this
+Treatise of his; _p._ 314. He says, _It it most absurd to think, that
+the Earth is the Center of the World._ Then the Sun stands still, and
+the Earth moves, according to his Doctrine. But this is expressly
+contrary to Scripture, in many Places. The _Sun rejoices, as a strong
+Man, to run his Race_, says _David_ Ps. xix. 5, 6. _His going forth is
+from the End of the Heaven, and his Circuit unto the Ends of it_,
+_Josh._ x. 12, 13. 2 _Kings_ xx. 10, 11. _Isa._ xxxviii. 8. No such
+Thing, says the Exceptor; the Sun hath no Race to run; he is fix’d in
+his Seat, without any progressive Motion. He hath no Course from one End
+of the Heavens to the other. In like manner, _Sun, stand thou still
+upon_ Gibeon, says the sacred Author, _and the Sun stood still_. No,
+says the Exceptor, ’twas the Earth stood still, upon that Miracle; for
+the Sun always stood still. And ’tis _absurd_, yea, _most absurd_, to
+think otherwise, _p._ 157. And he blames _Tycho Brahe_ for following
+Scripture in this Particular. Now, is not this, in the Language of the
+Exceptor, to _destroy the Foundations of Religion_, to _affront
+Scripture_, and _blaspheme against the Holy Ghost_? But this is not all:
+The Exceptor says, (_Chap._ 10.) the Sun rais’d up the Mountains on the
+third Day; and the Sun was not in being till the fourth Day, according
+to Scripture, _Gen._ i. 14. The Moon also, which, according to
+Scripture, was not created till the fourth Day, he says, would hinder
+the Formation of the Earth, which was done the third Day. Lastly, in
+this new Hypothesis, _p._74. he makes the Waters of the Deluge to be but
+fifteen Cubits higher than the Plain, or common Surface of the Earth;
+which Scripture affirms expressly to have cover’d the Tops of the
+highest Hills, or Mountains, under Heaven, _Gen._ vii. 19, 20. These two
+Things are manifestly inconsistent. The Scripture says, _Gen._ viii. 5.
+they cover’d the Tops of the highest Mountains: And the Exceptor says
+they reached but fifteen Cubits about, or upon the Skirts of them. This,
+I think, is truly to contradict Scripture; or, according to his Talent
+of loading Things with great Words, _p._ 216. _This is not only flatly,
+but loudly contradictory to the most express Word of the infallible
+God._
+
+These Observations, I know, are of small Use, unless, perhaps, to the
+Exceptor himself. But, if you please, upon this Occasion, let us reflect
+a little upon the literal Style of Scripture; and the different
+Authority of that Style, according to the Matter that it treats of. The
+Subject Matter of Scripture is either such as lies without the
+Cognizance and Comprehension of human Reason, or such as lies within it:
+If it be the former of these, ’tis what we call properly and purely
+_Revelation_; and there we must adhere to the literal Style, because we
+have nothing to guide us but that. Such is the Doctrine of the Trinity,
+and the Incarnation; wherein we have nothing to authorize our Deviation
+from the Letter and Words of Scripture: And therefore the
+School-Divines, who have spun those Doctrines into a Multitude of
+Niceties and Subtleties, had no Warrant for what they did, and their
+Conclusions are of no Authority.
+
+The second Matter or Subject of Scripture is such as falls under the
+View and Comprehension of Reason, more or less; and, in the same
+Proportion, gives us a Liberty to examine the literal Sense; how far it
+is consistent with Reason. and the Faculties of our Mind. Of this Nature
+there are several Things in the holy Writings, both moral, theological,
+and natural, wherein we recede from the Letter, when it is manifestly
+contrary to the Dictates of Reason. I will give some Instances in every
+kind: First, as to moral Things. Our Saviour says, _Mat._ v. 29, 30. _If
+thy right Eye offend thee, pluck it out: If thy Right Hand offend thee,
+cut it off._ There is no Man that thinks himself obliged to the literal
+Practice of this Doctrine; and yet it is plainly delivered, you see, in
+these Terms in the Gospel. Nay, which is more, our Saviour backs and
+enforces the Letter of this Doctrine with a _Reason_: _For it is
+profitable for thee that one of thy Members should perish, and not that
+thy whole Body should be cast into Hell_: As if he had intended, that
+his Precept should have been really executed according to the Letter. In
+like manner our Saviour says, _If any Man wilt sue thee at Law, and take
+away thy Coat, let him have thy Cloak also._ And yet there is no
+Christian so good-natur’d as to practice this, nor any Casuist so rigid
+as to enjoy it, according to the Letter. Other Instances you may see in
+our Saviour’s Sermon upon the Mount, where we do not scruple to lay
+aside the Letter, when it is judg’d contrary to the Light of Nature, or
+impracticable in human Society.
+
+In all other Things also, that lie within the Sphere of human Reason, we
+are allowed to examine their _Practicability_, or their _Credibility_.
+To instance in something theological, the Words of _Consecration_ in the
+Sacrament. Our Saviour, when he instituted the last Supper, us’d these
+Words: _This is my Body_, taking the Bread into his Hand; which Words,
+join’d with that Action, are very formal and expressive; yet we do not
+scruple to forsake the literal Sense, and take the Words in another Way:
+But upon what Warrant do we this? because the literal Sense contains an
+Absurdity; because it contradicts the Light of Nature; because it is
+inconsistent with the Idea of a Body, and so destroys it self. In like
+Manner, upon the Idea of the Divine Nature, we dispute absolute
+Reprobation, and Eternity of Torments, against the Letter of Scripture.
+And, lastly, whether the Resurrection Body consists of the same
+individual Parcels and Particles, whereof the mortal Body consisted,
+before it was putrefied or dispers’d? And, _Phil._ iv. 3. _Apoc._ iii. 5
+and xx. 12. whether the _Books of Life_ are to be understood in a
+literal Sense?
+
+The last Head is of such Things as belong to the natural World. And to
+this may be reduced innumerable Instances, where we leave the literal
+Sense, if inconsistent with Science or Experience. And the Truth is, if
+we should follow the vulgar Style and literal Sense of Scripture, we
+should all be _Anthropomorphites_, as to the Nature of God: And as to
+the Nature of his Works in the external Creation, we must renounce
+Philosophy and natural Experience, if the Descriptions and Accounts
+given in Scripture, concerning the _Heavens_, the _Earth_, the _Sea_,
+and other Parts of the World, be received as accurate and just
+Representations of the State and Properties of those Bodies. Neither is
+there any Danger, lest this should affect or impeach the Divine
+Veracity; for Scripture never undertook, nor was ever designed to teach
+us Philosophy, or the Arts and Sciences: And whatsoever the Light of
+Nature can reach and comprehend, is improperly the Subject of
+Revelation. But some Men, out of Love to their own Ease, and in Defence
+of their Ignorance, are not only for a Scripture Divinity, but also for
+a Scripture Philosophy. ’Tis a cheap and compendious Way, and saves them
+the Trouble of farther Study or Examination.
+
+Upon the whole, you see, it is no Fault to recede from the literal Sense
+of Scripture; but the Fault is, when we leave it without a just Cause:
+As it is no Fault for a Man to separate from a Church, or for a Prince
+to make War against his Neighbour, but to do the one or the other,
+without a just Cause, is a real Fault. We all leave the literal Sense in
+certain Cases, and therefore that alone is no sufficient Charge against
+any Man. But he that makes a Separation, if I may so call it, without
+good Reasons, he is truly obnoxious to Censure. The great Result of all,
+therefore, is this, to have some common Rule to direct us, when every
+one ought to follow, and when to leave, the literal Sense. And that Rule
+which is generally agreed upon by good Interpreters, is this, _Not_ to
+leave the literal Sense, when the Subject-Matter will bear it, without
+Absurdity or Incongruity. This Rule I have always proposed to my self,
+and always endeavoured to keep close to it. But some inconsiderate Minds
+make every Departure from the Letter, let the Matter or Cause be what it
+will, to be an Affront to Scripture: And there, where we have the
+greatest Liberty, I mean in Things that relate to the natural World,
+they have no more Indulgence or Moderation, than if it was an
+Intrenchment upon the Articles of Faith. In this Particular I cannot
+excuse the present Animadverter; yet, I must needs say, he is a very
+Saint in Comparison of another Animadverter, who hath writ upon the same
+Subject; but neither like a Gentleman, nor like a Christian, nor like a
+Scholar. And such Writings answer themselves.
+
+
+
+
+ A SHORT CONSIDERATION OF _Mr._ ERASMUS WARREN’S DEFENCE OF HIS
+ EXCEPTIONS AGAINST THE _THEORY_ of the _EARTH_.
+
+
+_In a_ LETTER _to a Friend_.
+
+
+_SIR_,
+
+
+I have read over Mr. _Erasmus Warren’s_ Defence of his Exceptions
+against _the Theory of the Earth_; which, it may be, few will do after
+me; as not having Curiosity or Patience enough to read such a long
+Pamphlet, of private or little Use. Such Altercations as these, are to
+you, I believe, as they are to me, a sort of Folly; but the Aggressor
+must answer for that, who makes the Trouble unavoidable to the
+Defendant. And ’tis an unpleasant Exercise, a kind of Wild-goose-chase;
+where he that leads must be followed, through all his Extravagancies.
+
+The Author of this Defence must pardon me, if I have less Apprehensions
+both of his Judgment and Temper, than I had before: For, as he is too
+verbose and long-winded ever so make a close Reasoner; so it was
+unexpected to me to find his Style so captious and angry, as it is in
+this last Paper. And the same Strain continuing to the End, I was sorry
+to see that his Blood had been kept upon the Fret, for so many Months
+together, as the Pamphlet was a making.
+
+He might have made his Work much shorter, without any Loss to the Sense.
+If he had left out his popular Enlargements, juvenile Excursions,
+Stories and Strains of Country-Rhetorick, (whereof we shall give you
+some Instances hereafter) his Book would have been reduc’d to half the
+Compass: And if from that reduc’d half, you takeaway again trifling
+Altercations and pedantick Repartees, the Remainder would fall into the
+Compass of a few Pages. For my part, I am always apt to suspect a Man
+that makes me a long Answer; for the precise Point to be spoken to, in a
+multitude of Words, is easily lost, and Words are often multiplied for
+that very Purpose.
+
+However, if his Humour be verbose, it might have been, at least, more
+easy and inoffensive; there having been no Provocation given him in that
+kind. But let us guess, if you please, as well as we can, what it was in
+the late Answer, that so much discomposed the Exceptor and altered his
+Style: Either it must be the Words and Language of that Answer, or the
+Sense of it, without Respect to the Language. As to the Words, ’tis
+true, he gives some instances of Expressions offensive to him; yet they
+are but three or four, and those, methinks, not very high, _p._ 31. tho’
+he calls them the _Brats of Passion_; they are these, _indiscreet_,
+_rude_, _injudicious_ and _uncharitable_. These Characters, it seems,
+are applied to the Exceptor, in some part of the Answer, upon Occasion
+offer’d; and whether those Occasions were just or no, I dare appeal to
+your Judgment. As to the Word _rude_, which seems the most harsh, I had
+said indeed, that he was _rude_ to _Anaxagoras_; and so he was, not to
+allow him to be a competent Witness in matter of Fact, whom all
+Antiquity, sacred and prophane, hath represented to us as one of the
+greatest Men amongst the Antients. I had also said in another Place,
+that _a rude_, and _injudicious Defence of Scripture_, by _Railing and
+ill Language_, is the _true way to lessen and disparage it_. This I
+still justify as true; and if he apply it to himself, much good may it
+do him. I do not remember that it is any where said, that he was _rude_
+to the Theorist; if it be, ’tis possibly upon his charging him with
+_Blasphemy, horrid Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost_, for saying, _the
+Earth was dissolv’d at the Deluge_. And I appeal to any Man, whether
+this is not an _uncharitable_, and a _rude_ Charge. If a Man had cursed
+God, or call’d our Saviour an Impostor, what could he have been charg’d
+with more, than _Blasphemy, horrid Blasphemy_? And if the same things be
+charg’d upon a Man, for saying, the Earth was dissolv’d at the Deluge,
+either all Crimes and Errors must be equal, or the Charge must be rude.
+But however it must be rude in the Opinion of the Theorist, who thinks
+this neither Crime nor Error.
+
+What says the _Defence_ of the Exceptions to this; _p._ 153. it makes
+use of Distinctions for Mitigation of the Censure; and says, it will
+_indirectly_, _consequentially_, or _reductively be of blasphemous
+Importance_. Here Blasphemy is changed into _blasphemous Importance_,
+and _horrid Blasphemy_ into _consequential_, _&c._ But taking all these
+Mitigations, it seems however, according to his Theology, all Errors in
+Religion are _Blasphemy_ or of _blasphemous Importance_. For all Errors
+in Religion must be against Scripture one way or other; at least
+consequentially, indirectly, or reductively; and all that are so,
+according to the Doctrine of this Author, must be _Blasphemy_, or of
+_blasphemous Importance_. This is crude Divinity, and the Answerer had
+Reason to subjoin what he cited before, that a rude and injudicious
+Defence of Scripture, is the true way to lessen and disparage it.
+
+Thus much for _rude_ and _uncharitable_; as for the other two Words,
+_indiscreet_ and _injudicious_, I cannot easily be induc’d to make any
+Apology for them. On the contrary, I’m afraid I shall have Occasion to
+repeat these Characters again, especially the latter of them, in the
+Perusal of this Pamphlet. However, they do not look like _Brats of
+Passion_, as he calls them; but rather as cool and quiet Judgments, made
+upon Reasons and Premisses. I had forgot one Expression more: The
+Answer, it seems, somewhere calls the Exceptor a _Dabler_ in
+_Philosophy_, which he takes ill: But that he is a Dabler, both in
+Philosophy and Astronomy, I believe will evidently appear upon this
+second Examination of the same Passages upon which that Character was
+grounded. We will therefore leave that to the Trial, when we come to
+those Passages again, in the following Discourse.
+
+These, _Sir_, as far as I remember, are the Words and Expressions which
+he hath taken Notice of, as offensive to him, and Effects of Passion.
+But, methinks, these cannot be of Force sufficient to put him so much
+out of Humour, and change his Style so much, as we find it to be in this
+last Pamphlet: And therefore I am inclinable to believe, that ’tis the
+Sense, rather than the Words, or Language of the Answer, that hath had
+this Effect upon him; and that some unhappy Passages, that have expos’d
+his Mistakes, were the true Causes of these Resentments. Such Passages I
+will guess at, as well as I can, and note them to you as they occur to
+my Memory.
+
+But give me leave, first, upon this occasion of his new way of Writing,
+to distinguish and mind you of three sorts of arguing, which you may
+call _reasoning_, _wrangling_, and _scolding_. In fair reasoning, Regard
+is had to Truth only, not to Victory, let it fall on whether side it
+will. But in wrangling and scolding, ’tis Victory that is pursued and
+aim’d at in the first Place, with little Regard to Truth. And if the
+Contention be managed in civil terms, ’tis but wrangling; if in uncivil,
+’tis scolding. I will not so far anticipate your Judgment, as to rank
+this Arguer in any of the three Orders: It you have Patience to read
+over his Pamphlet, you will best see how and where to set him in his
+proper Place.
+
+We now proceed to those Passages in the Answer, which probably have most
+exasperated the Author of the Exceptions and the Defence, _Exc._ _p._
+77, _&c._ In his Exceptions he had said, the Moon being present, or in
+her present Place in the Firmament, at the time of the Chaos, she would
+certainly trouble and discompose it, as she does now the Waters of the
+Sea; and, by that Means, hinder the Formation of the Earth. To this we
+answer’d, that the _Moon that was made the fourth Day, could not hinder
+the formation of the Earth, which was made the third Day_. This was a
+plain intelligible Answer, and at the same time discover’d such a
+manifest Blunder in the Objection, as could not but give an uneasy
+Thought to him that made it.
+
+However we must not deny, but that he makes some Attempt to silence it
+off in his Reply; for he says, _Def._ _p._ 12. _The Earth formed the
+third Day was_ Moses’s _Earth, which the Exceptor contends for; but the
+Earth he disputes against is the Theorist’s, which could not be formed
+the third Day_. He should have added, and therefore _would be hinder’d
+by the Moon_, otherwise this takes off nothing. And now the Question
+comes to a clear State; for when the Exceptor says, the Moon would have
+hinder’d the Formation of the Earth, either he speaks upon _Moses_’s
+Hypothesis, or upon the Theorist’s Hypothesis. Not upon the Theorist’s
+Hypothesis, for the Theorist does not suppose the Moon present then;
+_Eccl._ _p._ 77, 78. _Def._ _p._ 73. _l._ 12, 13. And if he speaks upon
+_Moses_’s Hypothesis, the Moon that was made the fourth Day, must have
+hinder’d the Formation of the Earth the third Day. So that the Objection
+is a Blunder upon either Hypothesis.
+
+Furthermore, whereas he suggests that the Answerer makes use of
+_Moses_’s Hypothesis to confute his Adversary, but does not follow it
+himself: ’Tis so far true, that the Theorist never said that _Moses_’s
+six Days Creation was to be understood literally; but however it is
+justly urged against those that understand it literally, and they must
+not contradict that Interpretation, which they own and defend.
+
+So much for the Moon, and this first Passage, which I suppose was
+troublesome to our Author. But he makes the same Blunder in another
+Place, as to the _Sun_: Both the Luminaries, it seems, stood in his Way.
+In the tenth Chapter of his Exceptions, he gives us a new Hypothesis
+about the _Origin of Mountains_, which, in short, is this; that they
+were drawn or suck’d out of the Earth by the Influence and
+Instrumentality of the Sun: Whereas the Sun was not made, according to
+_Moses_, till the fourth Day, and the Earth was form’d the third Day.
+’Tis an unhappy Thing to split twice upon the same Rock, and upon a Rock
+so visible. He that can but reckon to four, can tell whether the third
+Day, or fourth Day came sooner.
+
+To cure this Hypothesis about the _Origin of Mountains_, he takes great
+pains in his _Defence_, _pag._ 97, 98, 99, 100, 101. and attempts to do
+it by help of a Distinction, dividing Mountains into _Maritime_ and
+_Inland_. Now ’tis true, says he, _These maritime Mountains, and such as
+were made with the Hollow of the Sea, must rise when that was sunk or
+deprest_; namely, the third Day. Yet inland ones, he says, might be
+raised some earlier, and some later, and by the Influence of the Sun.
+This is a weak and vain Attempt to defend his Notion; for, betides that
+this Distinction of _maritime_ and _inland Mountains_, as arising from
+different Causes, and at different Times, is without any Ground, either
+in Scripture or Reason, if their different Origin was admitted, the
+Sun’s extracting these inland Mountains out of the Earth, would still be
+absurd and incongruous upon other Accounts.
+
+Scripture, I say, makes no such Distinction of Mountains, made at
+different Times, and from different Causes. This is plain, seeing
+_Moses_ does not mention Mountains at all in his six Days Creation, nor
+any where else, till the Deluge: What Authority have we then to make
+this Distinction; or to suppose that all the great Mountains of the
+Earth were not made together? Besides, what length of Time would you
+require, for the Production of these inland Mountains? Were they not all
+made within the six Days Creation? Hear what _Moses_ says at the end of
+the sixth Day. _Thus the Heavens and the Earth were finished, and all
+the Host of them_, Gen. c. xxi. _And on the seventh Day, God ended his
+Work which he had made._ Now if the Exceptor says, that the Mountains
+were all made within these six Days, we will not stand with him for a
+Day or two; for that would make little Difference as to the Action of
+the Sun. But if he will not confine their Production to _Moses_’s six
+Days, how does he keep to the _Mosaical_ Hypothesis? Or how shall we
+know where he will stop in his own Way? For if they were not made within
+the six Days, for any thing he knows, they might not be made till the
+Deluge; seeing Scripture no where mentions Mountains before the Flood.
+
+And as Scripture makes no Distinction of _maritime and inland Mountain_,
+so neither hath this Distinction any Foundation in Nature or Reason: For
+there is no apparent or discernable Difference betwixt maritime and
+inland Mountains, nor any Reason why they should be thought to proceed
+from different Causes, or to be rais’d at different Times. The maritime
+Mountains are as rocky, as ruderous, and as irregular and various in
+their Shape and Posture, as the inland Mountains. They have no
+distinctive Characters, nor any different Properties, internal or
+external, in their Matter, Form, or Composition, that can give us any
+Ground to believe, that they came from a different Original. So that
+this Distinction is merely precarious, neither founded in Scripture nor
+Reason, but made for the nonce to serve a Turn.
+
+Besides, what Bounds will you give to these maritime Mountains? Are they
+distinguished from inland Mountains barely by their Distance from the
+Sea, or by some other Character? If barely by Distance, tell us then how
+far from the Sea do the maritime Mountains reach, and where do the
+inland begin, and how shall we know the _Terminalis Lapis_? Especially
+in a continued Chain of Mountains, that reach from the Sea many hundreds
+of Miles, inland; as the _Alps_ from the Ocean to _Pontus Euxinus_, and
+_Taurus_, as he says, _Def._ _p._ 143. fifteen hundred Miles in length,
+from the _Chinese_ Ocean to the Sea of _Pamphylia_. In such an
+uninterrupted Ridge of Mountains, where do the Land-Mountains end, and
+Sea-Mountains begin? Or what Mark is there, whereby we may know that
+they are not all of the same Race, or do not all spring from the same
+Original? Such obvious Enquiries as these, shew sufficiently, that the
+Distinction is merely arbitrary and ficticious.
+
+But suppose this Distinction was admitted, and the maritime Mountains
+made the third Day, but inland Mountains I know not when: The great
+Difficulty still remains, _How_ the Sun rear’d up these inland
+Mountain’s afterward? Or if his Power be sufficient for such Effects,
+why have we not Mountains made still to this Day? Seeing our
+Mountain-maker, the Sun, is still in the Firmament, and seems to be as
+busy at Work as ever. The _Defender_ hath made some Answer to this
+Question, in these Words, _Def. p._ 99. _The Question is put, why have
+we no Mountains made now? It might as well have been ask’d_, says he,
+_Why does not the Fire make a Dough-bak’d Loaf swell and puff up?_ And,
+he says, _this Answer must be satisfactory to the Question propounded_.
+It must be, that is, for want of a better; for otherwise this
+Dough-comparison is unsatisfactory upon many Accounts. First, there was
+no Ferment in the Earth, as in this Dough-cake: at least it is not
+prov’d, or made appear, that there was any. Nay, when this Hypothesis
+was propos’d, there was no Mention at all made of any Ferment or Leaven
+in the Earth; but the Effect was wholly imputed to _Venus_ and the
+_Sun_. But to supply their Defects, he now ventures to add the Word,
+_fermentive_, as he calls it. A _fermentive, flatulent Principle_, which
+heav’d up the Earth, as Leaven does Dough. But, besides, that this is a
+mere groundless and gross _Postulatum_, to suppose any such Leaven in
+the Earth; if there had been such a Principle, it would have swollen the
+whole Mass uniformly, heav’d up the exterior Region of the Earth every
+where, and so not made Mountains, but a swollen bloated Globe.
+
+This, Sir, is a second Passage, which I thought might make the Defender
+uneasy. We proceed now to a third and fourth in his Geography and
+Astronomy. In the 14th Chapter of his Exceptions, _p._ 289. speaking of
+the Change of the Situation of the Earth, from a right Posture to an
+oblique, he says, _according to the Theory, the Ecliptick in the
+primitive Earth, was its Equinoctial now_. This, he is told by the
+Answer, is a great Mistake; namely, to think that the _Earth, when it
+chang’d its Situation, chang’d its Poles and Circles_. What is now
+reply’d to this? _He speaks against a Change_, says the Defence, _in the
+Poles and Circles of the Earth; a needless Trouble, and occasioned by
+his own Oversight. For had he but looked into the Errata’s, he might
+have seen there, that these Parentheses, upon which he grounded what he
+says, should have been left out._ So this is acknowledg’d an _Erratum_
+it seems, but an _Erratum Typographicum_; not in the Sense, but only in
+the _Parentheses_, which, he says, should have been left out. Let us
+then lay aside the Parentheses, and the Sentence stands thus: _For under
+the Ecliptick, which in the primitive Situation of the Earth, according
+to the Theory_, was its _Equinoctial, and divided the Globe into two
+Hemispheres, as the Equator does now. The dry Ground, &c._ How does this
+alter or mend the Sense? Is it not still as plainly affirm’d, as before,
+that according to the Theory, the Ecliptick in the primitive Earth was
+equinoctial? And the same thing is suppos’d throughout all this
+Paragraph, _Exc._ p. 289, 290. And if he will own the Truth, and give
+Things their proper Name, ’tis downright Ignorance, or gross Mistake in
+the _Doctrine of the Sphere_, which he would first father upon the
+_Theory_, and then upon the _Parentheses_.
+
+And this leads me to a fourth Passage, much-what of the same Nature,
+where he would have the Earth to have been translated out of the Æquator
+into the Ecliptick, and to have chang’d the Line of its Motion about the
+Sun, when it chang’d its Situation. His Words are these, _Exc._ p. 158,
+159. _So that in her annual Motion about the Sun, she_, namely the
+Earth, before her Change of Situation, _was carried directly under the
+Equinoctial_. This is his Mistake; the Earth mov’d in the Ecliptick,
+both before and after her Change of Situation; for the Change was not
+made in the Circle of her Motion about the Sun, but in her Posture or
+Inclination in the same Circle: Whereas he supposes that she _shifted
+both Posture, and also her Circuit about the Sun_, Ibid. _p._ 159. as
+his Words are in the next Paragraph. But we shall have Occasion to
+reflect upon this again in its proper Place. We proceed now to another
+astronomical Mistake.
+
+A fifth Passage, which probably might disquiet him, is his false
+Argumentation at the end of the eighth Chapter concerning _Days_ and
+_Months_, _Exc._ p. 187. He says there, if the natural Days were longer
+towards the Flood than at first, (which no body however affirms) fewer
+than thirty would have made a Month; whereas the Duration of the Flood
+is computed by Months, consisting of thirty Days a-piece; _Therefore_,
+says he, _they were no longer than ordinary_. This Argumentation the
+_Answer_ told him, _was a mere Paralogism, or a mere Blunder_: For
+thirty Days are thirty Days, whether they are longer or shorter; and
+Scripture does not determine the Length of the Days. There are several
+Pages spent in the _Defence_, to get off the Blunder: Let’s hear how he
+begins, _p._ 78, 79, 80, 81. _Tho’ Scripture does not limit or account
+for the Length of Days expresly, yet it does it implicitly, and withal
+very plainly and intelligibly._ This is deny’d: And if he makes this
+out, that Scripture does very _plainly_ and _intelligibly_ determine the
+Length of Days at the Deluge, and makes them equal with ours at present,
+then, I acknowledge, he hath remov’d the Blunder; otherwise it stands
+the same, unmov’d and unmended. Now observe how he makes this out:
+_For_, says he, _Scripture gives us to understand, that Days before the
+Flood, were of the same Length, that they are of now, BY INFORMING US,
+that Months and Years, which were of the same Length then that they are
+of at present, were made up of the same Number of Days_. Here the
+Blunder is still continued, or, at best, it is but transferr’d from Days
+to Months, or from Months to Years. He says, _Scripture informs us that
+Months and Years were of the same Length then, that they are of at
+present_. If he mean by the _same Length_, the same _Number of_ Days, he
+relapses into the old Blunder, and we still require the Length of those
+Days. But if Scripture informs us that the Months and Years at the
+Flood, were of the same Length that they are of now, according to any
+absolute and known Measure, distinct from the _Number of Days_, then the
+Blunder is sav’d. Let’s see therefore by whether of these two Ways he
+proves it in the next Words, which are these: _For how could there be
+just twelve Months in the Year, at the time of the Deluge; and thirty
+Days in each of those Months, if the Days then had not consisted, as
+they do now, of twenty four Hours a-piece?_ We allow a Day might then
+consist of twenty four Hours, if the Distinction of Hours was so
+ancient. But what then? the Question returns concerning the Length of
+those _Hours_, as it was before concerning the Length of the _Days_; and
+this is either _idem per idem_, or the same Error in another Instance.
+If you put but _Hours_ in the place of _Days_, the Words of the _Answer_
+have still the same Force: _Twenty four Hours were to go to a Day,
+whether the Hours were longer or shorter, and Scripture does not
+determine the Length of the Hours._ This, you see, is still the same
+Case, and the same Paralogism hangs upon both Instances.
+
+But he goes on still in this false Tract, in these Words: _And as
+Providence hath so ordered Nature, that Days (that depend upon its
+diurnal Motion) should be measur’d by Circumgyrations of the Earth——So
+it hath taken Care that each of these Circumrotations should be
+performed in twenty four Hours; and consequently that every Day should
+be just so long, that thirty of them (in way of round reckoning) might
+complete a Month._ Admit all this, that thirty Days complete a Month;
+still if Scripture hath not determin’d the Length of those Days, nor the
+Slowness or Swiftness of the Circumgyrations that make them, it hath not
+determin’d the Length of those Months, nor of the Years that depend upon
+them. This one would take to be very intelligible; yet he goes on in the
+same Maze, thus: _But now had the Circumgyrations of the Earth grown
+more slow towards the Deluge (by such Causes as the Exceptor suggested)
+so as every Day had consisted of thirty Hours_, &c. But how so, I pray?
+This is a wild Step; why thirty Hours? Where does Scripture say so, or
+where does the _Theorist_ say so? We say the Day consisted then, as now,
+of twenty four Hours, whether the Hours were longer or shorter; and that
+Scripture hath not determin’d the Length of those Hours, nor
+consequently of those Months, nor consequently of those Years. So after
+all this ado, we are just where we were at first, namely, that Scripture
+not having determin’d the absolute Length of any one, you cannot by that
+determine the Length of any other. And by his shifting and multiplying
+Instances, he does but _absurda absurdis accumulare, ne perpluant_.
+
+We offer’d before, in our Answer, to give the Exceptor some Light into
+his Mistake, by distinguishing in these Things, what is _absolute_ from
+what is _relative_: The former whereof cannot, under these or any such
+like Circumstances, be determin’d by the latter. For Instance: A Man
+hath ten Children, and he will not say absolutely and determinatively
+what Portion he will give with any one of them; but he says, I will give
+my eldest Child a tenth Part more than my second; and my second a ninth
+Part more than my third; and my third an eighth Part more than my
+fourth; and so downwards, in proportion to the youngest: Not telling
+you, in any absolute Sum, what Money he will give the youngest, or any
+other; you cannot, by this, tell what Portion the Man will give with any
+of his Children. I leave you to apply this, and proceed to a nearer
+Instance, by comparing the Measures of _Time_ and _Longitude_. If you
+know how many Inches make a Foot, how many Feet a Pace, how many Paces a
+Mile, _&c._ you cannot by these Numbers determine the absolute Quantity
+of any one of the aforesaid Measures, but only their relative Quantity
+as to one another. So if Scripture had determin’d, of how many Hours a
+Day consisted; of how many Days a Month; of how many Months a Year; you
+could not by this alone determine the absolute Duration or Quantity of
+any one of these, nor whether they were longer or shorter than our
+present Hours, Days, Months, or Years. And therefore, I say still, as I
+said at first, thirty Days are thirty Days, whether they are longer or
+shorter; and thirty Circumgyrations of the Earth are thirty, whether
+they be slower or swifter: And that no Scripture-Proof can be made from
+this, either directly or consequentially, that the Days before the Flood
+were, or were not, longer than they are at present. But we have been too
+long upon this Head.
+
+We proceed now from his Astronomy to his Philosophy. ’Twas observ’d in
+the _Answer_, p. 38. that the Exceptor in the Beginning of the ninth
+Chapter, suppos’d terrestrial Bodies to have _Nitency inwards, or
+downwards, towards the Center_. This was noted as a false Principle in
+Philosophy, and to rectify his Mistake, he now replies, _Def._ p. 82.
+That he understood that Expression only of _self-central_ and _quiescent
+Bodies_: Whereas, in truth, the Question he was speaking to, was about a
+fluid Body turning upon its Axis. But however, let us admit his new
+Sense, his Principle, I’m afraid, will still need Rectification; namely,
+he affirms now, that _quiescent earthly Bodies_ are _impregnated with a
+Nitency inward, or downward towards the Center_. I deny also this
+reform’d Principle; if Bodies be turn’d round, they have a Nitency
+upwards, or from the Center of their Motion. If they be not turn’d
+round, nor mov’d, but quiescent, they have no Nitency at all, neither
+upwards nor downwards, but are indifferent to all Lines of Motion,
+according as an external Impulse shall carry them, this Way or that Way.
+So that his _Impregnation with a Nitency downwards_, is an occult and
+fictitious Quality, which is not in the Nature of Bodies, whether in
+Motion or in Rest. The Truth is, the Author of the Exceptions makes a
+great Flutter about the _Cartesian Philosophy_, and the _Copernican
+System_, but the frequent Mistakes he commits in both, give a just
+Suspicion that he understands neither.
+
+Lastly, we come to the grand Discovery of a _fifteen-cubit Deluge_,
+which, it may be, was as uneasy to him upon second Thoughts, as any of
+the rest; at least one would guess so, by the Changes he hath made in
+his Hypothesis. For he hath now, in this _Defence_, p. 181, 182. reduc’d
+the Deluge to a Destruction of the World by _Famine_, rather than by
+_Drowning_. I do not remember in Scripture any Mention made of _Famine_
+in that great Judgment of Water brought upon Mankind; but he thinks he
+hath found out something that favours his Opinion; namely, _that a good
+Part of Mankind at the Deluge, were not drown’d, but starv’d for want of
+Victuals_. And the Argument is this, because in the Story of the Deluge,
+Men are not said to be _drown’d_, but to _perish_, _die_, or be
+_destroy’d_. But are they said any where in the Story of the Deluge, to
+have been _famish’d_? And when God says to _Noah_, Gen. vi. 17. _I will
+bring a Flood of Waters upon the Earth, to destroy all Flesh_; does it
+not plainly signify, that that Destruction should be by _drowning_? But
+however, let us hear our Author; when he had been making use of this new
+Hypothesis of _starving_, to take off some Arguments urged against his
+fifteen-cubit Deluge, (particularly, that it would not be sufficient to
+destroy all Mankind) he adds these Words by way of Proof: _Def._ p. 182.
+_And methinks there is one Thing which seems to insinuate, that a good
+Part of the animal World might perhaps came to an End thus; by being
+driven to such Straights by the overflowing Waters, as to be FAMISH’D or
+STARV’D to Death. The Thing is this, in the Story of the Deluge, it is
+no where said of Men and living Creatures, that they were drown’d, but
+they died, or were destroyed._ Those that are _drown’d_ are _destroy’d_,
+I imagine, as well as those that are _starv’d_; so this proves nothing.
+But that the Destruction here spoken of, was by drowning, seems plain
+enough, both from God’s Word to _Noah_ before the Flood, and by his
+Words after the Flood, when he makes his Covenant with _Noah_, in this
+Manner: _I will establish my Covenant with you, neither shall all Flesh
+be cut off any more by the Waters of a Flood_, Gen. ix. 11. Now, to be
+cut off, or destroy’d by the Waters of a Flood, is, methinks, to be
+drown’d; And I take _all Flesh_ to comprehend the animal World, or, at
+least, all Mankind. Accordingly our Saviour says, _Matth._ xxiv. 39. in
+_Noah_’s Time, _the Flood came and took them all away_; namely, all
+Mankind.
+
+This is one Expedient our Author hath found out, to help to bear off the
+Inconveniencies that attend his fifteen-cubit Deluge; namely, by
+converting a good Part of it into a _Famine_. But he hath another
+Expedient to join to this, by increasing the Waters; and that is done by
+making the _common Surface_ of the Earth, or the _highest Parts_ of it,
+as he calls them, _Def._ 165 and 180, to signify ambiguously, or any
+Height that pleases him; and consequently fifteen Cubits above that,
+signifies also what Height he thinks fit. But in reality, there is no
+Surface common to the Earth, but either the _exterior Surface_, whether
+it be high or low; or the _ordinary Level_ of the Earth, as it is a
+Globe or Convex Body. If by his _common Surface_ he mean the _exterior
+Surface_, that takes in Mountains as well as Lowlands, or any other
+superficial Parts of the Earth. And therefore, if the Deluge was fifteen
+Cubits above this common Surface, it was fifteen Cubits above the
+highest Mountains, as we say it was. But, if by the common Surface he
+mean the common Level of the Earth, as it is a Globular or Convex Body,
+then we gave it a right Name, when we call’d it the _ordinary Level_ of
+the Earth; namely, that Level or Surface that lies in an equal Convexity
+with the Surface of the Sea: And his fifteen Cubits of Water from that
+Level, would never drown the World. Lastly, if by the common Surface of
+the Earth, he understand a third Surface, different from both these, he
+must define it, and define the Height of it; that we may know how far
+this fifteen-cubit Deluge rise, from some known Basis. One known Basis
+is the Surface of the Sea, and that Surface of the Land that ties in an
+equal Convexity with it: Tell us then, if the Waters of the Deluge were
+but fifteen Cubits higher than the Surface of the Sea, that we may know
+their Height by some certain and determinate Measure; and upon that
+examine the Hypothesis: But tell us they were fifteen Cubits above, not
+the Mountains or the Hills, but the Highlands, or the _highest Parts of
+the common Surface of the Earth_, and not to tell us the Height of these
+highest Parts from any known Basis; nor how they are distinguish’d from
+Hills and Mountains, which incur our Senses, and are the Measures given
+us by _Moses_: This, I say, is but to cover his Hypothesis with
+Ambiguities, when he had made it without Grounds, and to leave room to
+set his Water-Mark higher or lower, as he should see Occasion or
+Necessity. And of this indeed we have an Instance in his last Pamphlet;
+for he has rais’d his Water-Mark there, more than an hundred Cubits
+higher than it was before. In his _Exceptions_, he said, _p._ 300. _not
+that the Waters were no where higher than just fifteen Cubits_ above the
+Ground, they might in most Places be _thirty_, _forty_, or _fifty Cubits
+higher_. But, in his _Defence_, he says, _p._ 180. the Waters might be
+an _hundred_ or _two hundred Cubits higher_ than the _general ordinary
+Plain_ of the Earth. Now what Security have we, but that, in the next
+Pamphlet they may be five hundred or a thousand Cubits higher than the
+ordinary Surface of the Earth?
+
+This is his second Expedient, raising his Water-Mark indefinitely. But
+if these two Methods be not sufficient to destroy Mankind, and the
+animate World, he hath yet a third, which cannot fail; and that is,
+_destroying them by evil Angels_, Def. p. 90. _Flectere si nequeo_—This
+is his last Refuge; to which Purpose he hath these Words, _When Heaven
+was pleas’d to give Satan leave, he caus’d the Fire to consume_ Job_’s
+Sheep, and caused the Wind to destroy his Children. And how easily could
+these Spirits, that are Ministers of God’s Vengeance, have made the
+Waters of the Flood fatal to those Creatures that might have escaped
+them, if any could have done it?_ As suppose an Eagle, or a Faulcon; the
+Devil and his Crew catch them all, and held their Noses under Water:
+However, methinks, this is not fair Play to deny the Theorist the
+Liberty to make use of the Ministry of _good Angels_, when he himself
+makes use of _evil Spirits_.
+
+These, Sir, and such like Passages, where the Notions of the Exceptor
+have been exposed, were the Causes, I imagine, of his angry Reply. Some
+Creatures, you know, are more fierce after they are wounded; and some,
+upon a gentle Chase, will fly from you; but if you press them, and put
+them to Extremities, they turn, and fly in your face. I see, by our
+Author’s Example, how easily, in these personal Altercations, Reasoning
+degenerates into Wrangling, and Wrangling into Scolding. However, if I
+may judge from these two Hypotheses which he hath made, about the _Rise
+of Mountains_, and a _fifteen-Cubit Deluge_, of all Trades, I should
+never advise him to turn _Hypothesis-Maker_. It does not seem at all to
+lie to his Hand; and Things never thrive that are undertaken, _Diis
+iratis, Genioque sinistro_.
+
+But as we have given you some Account of this Author’s philosophical
+Notions, so it may be you will expect that we should entertain you with
+some Pieces of his Wit and Eloquence. The Truth is, he seems to delight
+and value himself upon a certain kind of Country-Wit and popular
+Eloquence, and I will not grudge you the Pleasure of enjoying them both,
+in such Instances as I remember. Speaking in Contempt of the Theory and
+the Answer, (which is one great Subject of his Wit) he expresses himself
+thus, _Def._ p. 48. _But if Arguments be so weak, that they will fall
+with a Phillip, why should greater Force be used to beat them down? To
+draw a Rapier to stab a Fly, or to charge a Pistol to kill a Spider, I
+think would be preposterous._ I think so too; in this we are agreed. In
+another Place, being angry with the Theorist, that he would not
+acknowledge his Errors to him, he hath these Words, p. 128. _’Tis
+unlucky for one to rest his Head against a Post; but when he hath done,
+if he will say he did not do it, and stand in, and defend what he says,
+’tis a Sign he is as senseless as he was unfortunate, and is fitter to
+be pitied than confuted._ This Wit, it may be, you’ll say is downright
+Clownery. The Truth is, when I observ’d, in reading his Pamphlet, the
+Coarseness of his Repartees, and of that sort of Wit wherein he deals
+most, and pleases himself, it often rais’d in my Mind, whether I would
+or no, the Idea of a _Pedant_, of one that had seen little of the World,
+and thought himself much wittier and wiser than others would take him to
+be: I will give you but one Instance more of his rustical Wit. Telling
+the Theorist of an Itch of Writing, _p._ 214. _Methinks_, says he, _he
+might have laid that prurient Humour, by scratching himself with the
+Briars of a more innocent Controversy, or by SCRUBBING SOUNDLY against
+something else than the Holy Scripture._ He speaks very sensibly, as if
+he understood the Disease, and the Way of dealing with it: But I think
+_Holy Scripture_ does not come in well upon that Occasion.
+
+All this is nothing, Sir, in comparison of his popular Eloquence: See
+with what Alacrity he runs it off-hand, in a Similitude betwixt _Adam_
+and a Lord Lieutenant of a County, _p._ 113. _When the King makes a
+Gentleman Lord Lieutenant of a County, by virtue of his Commission is he
+presently the strongest Man that is in it? Does it enable him to
+encounter whole Regiments of Soldiers in his single Person? Does it
+impower him to carry a Cannon upon his Neck? Or when the great Gun is
+fired off, to catch the Bullet as it flies, and put it up in his Pocket?
+So when God gave_ Adam _Dominion over the Fowls, did he mean that he
+should dive like a Duck, or soar like a Falcon? That he should swim as
+naturally as the Swan, and hunt the Kite or Hobby, as Boys do the Wren?
+Did he mean that he should hang up Ostriches in a Cage, as People do
+Linnets, or fetch down the Eagles to feed with his Pullen, and make them
+perch with his Chickens in the Henroost?_
+
+So much for the Fowls; now for the Fish. _Ibid._ When God _gave_ Adam
+_Dominion over the Sea, was he to be able to dwell at the Bottom, or to
+walk on the Top of it? To drain it as a Ditch, or to take all its Fry at
+once in a Drag-Net? Was he to snare the Shark, as we do young Pickarels;
+or to bridle the Sea-Horse, and ride him for a Pad; or to put a Slip
+upon the Crocodile’s Neck, and play with him as with a Dog?_ &c. Sir, I
+leave it to you, as a more competent Judge, to set a just Value upon his
+Gifts and Elocution. For my Part, to speak freely, dull Sense, in a
+phantastick Style, is to me doubly nauseous.
+
+But lest I should cloy you with these luscious Harangues, I will give
+you but one more; and ’tis a Miscellany of several Pieces of Wit
+together. _Def._ p. 68. _Should twenty Mariners_, says he, _confidently
+affirm that they sailed in a Ship from_ Dover _to_ Calais, _by a brisk
+Gale out of a Pair of Bellows? Or if forty Engineers should positively
+swear, that the Powder-Mill near_ London _was late blown up, by a Mine
+then sprung at_ Great Waradin _in_ Hungary, _must they not be grievously
+perjur’d Persons?——Or if the Historian that writes the_ Peloponnesian
+_War, had told that the Soldiers who fell in it, fought only with
+Sun-beams, and single Currants which grew thereabouts, and that hundreds
+and thousands were stabb’d with the one, and knocked on the Head with
+the other; who would believe that ever there were such Weapons in that
+War, that ever there was such a fatal War in that Country? Even so_, &c.
+These, Sir, are Flights and Reaches of his Pen, which I dare not
+censure, but leave them to your Judgment.
+
+Thus much is to give you a Taste only of his Wit and Eloquence; and if
+you like it, you may find more of the same Strain, here and there, in
+his Writings. I have only one Thing to mind him of, _that_ he was
+desired by the Theorist, _Eng. Theor._ p. 401. to _write in Latin (if he
+was a Scholar) as being more proper for a Subject of this Nature_. If he
+had own’d and follow’d that Character, I’m apt to think it would have
+prevented a great many Impertinences: His Tongue, probably, would not
+have been so flippant in popular Excursions and Declamations, as we now
+find it. Neither is this any great Presumption or Rashness of Judgment,
+if we may guess at his Skill in that Language by his Translations here
+and there: _Except,_ _p._ 293. _Cum plurima Religione_ is rendered _with
+the Principle of their Religion_. And if he say he followed Sir _W.
+Rawleigh_ in his Translation, he that follows a bad Translator, without
+Correction or Notice, is suppos’d to know no better himself: And this
+will appear the more probable, if we consider another of his
+Translations, in this present Work. _Rei Personam_ he translates _the
+Representation of the Thing_, instead of the _Person of the Guilty_, or
+the Person of him that is _Reus_ not _Actor_: And in this, I dare say,
+he was seduc’d by no Example. But lest we should be thought to
+misrepresent him, take his own Words, such as they are, _Def._ 168, 169.
+_Yea, tho’ it was spoken never so positively, it was but to set forth
+REI PERSONAM, to make the more full and lively Representation of the
+supposed Thing._ Here, you see, he hath made a double Blunder; first, in
+jumbling together _Person_ and _Thing_; then, if they could be jumbled
+together, _Rei Persona_ would not signify the _full and lively
+Representation of the Thing_, but rather a Disguise or personated
+Representation of the Thing. However, I am satisfied from these
+Instances, that he had good Reason, notwithstanding the Caution or
+Desire of the Theorist to the contrary, to write his Books in his
+Mother’s Tongue.
+
+Thus we have done with the first Part, which was to mark out such
+Passages, as we thought might probably have enflam’d the Author’s Style
+in this Reply: When Men are resolved not to own their Faults, you know
+there is nothing more uneasy and vexatious to them, than to see them
+plainly discovered and expos’d. We must now give you some Account of the
+Contents of his Chapters, so far as they relate to our Subject. _Chap._
+i. _Nothing._ _Chap._ II. is against _extraordinary Providence_; or that
+the Theorist should not be permitted to have Recourse to it upon any
+Occasion. This Recourse to extraordinary Providence being frequently
+objected in other Places, and of use to be distinctly understood; we
+will speak of it apart at the latter end of the Letter. _Chap._ III. is
+about the _Moon’s hindring the Formation of the Earth before she was
+formed herself, or in our Neighbourhood_, as we have noted before.
+Another Thing in this Chapter, is, his urging _oily_ or _oleaginous_
+Particles not to have been in the _Chaos_, but made since: I’ll give a
+short Answer to this; either there was or was not _oleaginous_ Matter in
+the new-made Earth, (I mean in its superficial Region,) when it came
+first out of a _Chaos_? If there was, there was also in the _Chaos_, out
+of which that Earth was immediately made: And if there was no oleaginous
+Matter in the new-made Earth, how came the Soil to be so fertile, so
+fat, so unctuous? I say not only _fertile_, but particularly _fat_ and
+_unctuous_: For he uses these very Words frequently in the Description
+of that Soil, _Exc._ p. 211. _Def._ p. 69, and p. 98. And all fat and
+unctuous Liquors are _oleaginous_; and accordingly we have used those
+Words promiscuously, in the Description of that Region: (_Eng. Theor._
+_Chap._ V.) understanding only such unctuous Liquors as are lighter than
+Water, and swim above it, and consequently would stop and entangle the
+terrestrial Particles in their Fall or Descent: And seeing such unctuous
+and oleaginous Particles were in the new-made Earth, they must certainly
+have been in the Matter out of which it was immediately formed, namely,
+in the _Chaos_. All the rest of this Chapter we are willing to leave in
+its full Force; apprehending the Theory, or the Answer, to be in no
+Danger from such Argumentations or Reflections.
+
+The fourth Chapter is very short, and hath nothing argumentative. The
+fifth Chapter is concerning the Cold in the circumpolar Parts, which was
+spoken to in the Answer sufficiently, and we stand to that: What is
+added about extraordinary Providence, will be treated of in its proper
+Place. The sixth Chapter is also short, against this Particular, _that
+it is not safe to argue upon Suppositions actually false_. And I think
+there needs no more to prove it, than what was said in the Answer. Chap.
+VII. is chiefly about Texts of Scripture, concerning which I see no
+Occasion of saying any more than what is said in the _Review of the
+Theory_. He says, (_p._ 49.) that the Theorist catches himself in a
+Trap, by allowing that _Ps._ xxxiii. 7. is to be understood of the
+ordinary Posture of the Waters, and yet applying it to their
+extraordinary Posture under the Vault of the Earth: But that was not an
+extraordinary Posture according to the Theorist, but their natural
+Posture in the first Earth: Yet I allow the Expression might have been
+better thus, in _a level or spherical Convexity, as the Earth_. He
+interprets גן יהוה (_p._ 53.) which we render _the Garden of the Lord_,
+Gen. xiii. x. not to be Paradise, but any pleasant Garden; yet gives us
+no Authority either of ancient Commentator or Version, for this novel
+and paradoxical Interpretation. The Septuagint render it παράδεισος τοῦ
+θεοῦ: The _Vulgate_, _Paradisus Domini_, and all ancient Versions that I
+have seen, render it to the same Sense. Does he expect then that his
+single Word and Authority should countervail all the ancient Translators
+and Interpreters? To the last Place alledged by the Theorist, _Prov._
+viii. 28. he says, the Answerer charges him unjustly, that he
+understands by that Word חון no more than the _Rotundity_ or _spherical
+Figure_ of the Abyss; which, he says, is a _Point of Nonsense_: I did
+not think the Charge had been so high however, seeing some Interpreters
+understand in so: But if he understand by תונ the _Banks_ or _Shores_ of
+the sea, then he should have told us how those Banks or Shores are על
+פבי תהום _super faciem Abissi_, as it is in the Text.
+
+_Page_ 59. He says the Exceptor does not misrepresent the Theorist when
+he makes him to affirm the Construction of the first Earth to have been
+merely mechanical; and he cites to this purpose two Places, which only
+prove, that the Theorist made use of no other Causes, nor see any Defect
+in them; but never affirm’d that these were the only Causes. You may see
+his Words to this purpose expressly, _Eng. Theor. p._ 88. whereof the
+Exceptor was minded in the _Answer_, p. 3. In the last Paragraph of this
+Chapter, _p._ 60. if he affirms any Thing, he will have _the Pillars of
+the Earth_ to be understood _literally_. Where then, pray, do these
+Pillars stand that bear up the Earth? Or if they bear up the Earth, what
+bears them up? What are their Pedestals, or their Foundations? But he
+says Hypotheses must not regulate Scripture, though in natural Things,
+but be regulated by it, and the by the Letter of it: I would gladly know
+then, how his Hypothesis of the Motion of the Earth, is regulated by
+Scripture, and by the Letter of it? And he unhappily gives an Instance,
+just contrary to himself, namely, of the Anthropomorphites; for they
+regulate natural Reason and Philosophy, by the Letter or literal Sense
+of Scripture, and therein fall into a gross Error: Yet we must not call
+the Author _injudicious_, for fear of giving Offence.
+
+The eighth Chapter, _ibid._ begins with the Earth’s _being carried
+directly under the Equinoctial_, before its Change of Situation;
+_without any manner of Obliquity in her Site, or Declination towards
+either of the Tropicks in HER COURSE._ Here you see, when the Earth
+changed its Situation, it chang’d according to his Astronomy, two
+Things; its _Site_, and its _Course_; its Site upon its Axis, and its
+Course in the Heavens: and so he says again in the next Paragraph, _Put
+the Case the Earth shift her Posture, and also her Circuit about the
+Sun, in which the persisted till the Deluge_. Here is plainly the same
+Notion repeated; that the Earth changed not only its _Site_, but also
+its _Road_ or _Course_ about the Sun: And in consequence of this, he
+supposes its Course formerly to have been under the Equinoctial, and now
+under the Ecliptick; it being translated out of the one into the other,
+at its Change. Yet he seems now to be sensible of the Absurdity of this
+Doctrine, and therefore will not own it to have been his Sense; and as
+an Argument that he meant otherwise, he alledges, that he declared
+before, that by the Earth’s right Situation to the Sun, _is meant that
+the Axis of the Earth was always kept in a Parallelism to that of the
+Ecliptick_, p. 61. But what’s this to the Purpose? This speaks only of
+the _Site_ of the Earth, whereas his Error was is supposing its _Course_
+or _Annual Orbit_ about the Sun, as well as its Site upon its own Axis,
+to have been different, and changed at the Deluge; as his Words already
+produced against him, plainly testify.
+
+What follows in this Chapter, is concerning the perpetual Equinox: And
+as to the reasoning Part of what he says in Defence of his Exceptions,
+we do not grudge him the Benefit of it, let it do him what Service it
+can. And as to the historical Part, he will not allow a Witness to be a
+good Witness, as to Matter of Fact, if he did not assign true Causes of
+that Matter of Fact. To which I only reply, tho’ _Tiverton_ Steeple was
+not the Cause of _Goodwin Sands_, as the _Kentish_ Men thought, yet
+their Testimony was so far good, that there were such Sands, and such a
+Steeple. He also commits an Error as to the Nature of _Tradition:_ When
+a Tradition is to be made out, it is not expected that it should be made
+appear that none were ignorant of that Tradition in former Ages; or that
+all that mentioned it, understood the true Grounds and Extent of it; but
+is is enough to shew the plain Footsteps of it in Antiquity, as a
+Conclusion, tho’ they did not know the Reasons and Premisses upon which
+it depended. For Instance, the Conflagration of the World is a Doctrine
+of Antiquity, traditionally deliver’d from Age to Age; but the _Causes_
+and _Manner_ of the Conflagration, they either did not know, or have nor
+deliver’d to us. In like manner, the first Age and State of the World
+was without Change of Seasons, or under a perpetual Equinox: Of this we
+see many Footsteps in _Antiquity_, amongst the Jews, Christians,
+Heathens, Poets, Philosophers; but the Theory of this perpetual Equinox,
+the Causes and Manner of it, we neither find, nor can reasonably expect,
+from the Antients: So much for the Equinox.
+
+This Chapter, as it begun with an Error, so it unhappily ends with a
+Paralogism; namely, that, _because thirty Days made a Month at the
+Deluge, therefore those Days were neither longer nor shorter than ours
+are at present_. Tho’ we have sufficiently exposed this before, yet one
+thing more may be added, in answer to his confident Conclusion, in these
+Words: But to talk, _as the Answerer does, that the Month should be
+lengthened by the Days being so, is a fearful Blunder indeed: For let
+the Days (by slackening the Earth’s diurnal Motion) have been never so
+long, yet (its Annual Motion continuing the same) the Month must needs
+have kept its usual Length, only fewer Days would have made it up_. ’Tis
+not usual for a Man to persevere so confidently in the same Error, as if
+the Intervals of Time, Hours, Days, Months, Years, could not be
+proportionably increas’d, so as to contain one another in the same
+Proportion they did before, and yet be every one increas’d as to
+absolute Duration. Take a Clock, for Instance, that goes too slow; the
+Circuit of the Dial-plate is twelve Hours, let these represent the
+twelve Signs in his Zodiack, and the Hand to be the Earth that goes
+through them all; and consequently, the whole Circuit of the Dial-plate
+represents the Year. Suppose, as we said, this Clock to go too slow,
+this will not hinder, but still fifteen Minutes make a Quarter in this
+Clock, four Quarters make an Hour, and twelve Hours the whole Circuit of
+the Dial-plate: But every one of these Intervals will contain more Time
+than it did before, according to absolute Duration, or according to the
+Measures of another Clock that does not go too slow: This is the very
+Case which he cannot or will not comprehend, but concludes thus in
+Effect, that because the Hour consists still of four Quarters in this
+Clock, therefore it is no longer than ordinary.
+
+The ninth Chapter also begins with a false Notion, that _Bodies
+quiescent_ (as he hath now alter’d the Case) _have a Nitency downwards:_
+Which Mistake we rectified before, if he please. Then he proceeds to the
+_oval_ Figure of the Earth, and many Flourishes and Harangues are made
+here to little purpose; for he goes on upon a false Supposition, that
+the Waters of the Chaos were made oval by the Weight or Gravitation of
+the Air; a Thing that never came into the Words or Thoughts of the
+Theorist. Yet upon this Supposition he runs into the _Deserts of
+Bilebulgerid_, Def. _p. 85, 86._ and the Waters of _Mare del Zur_; Words
+that make a great Noise, but to no Effect. If he had pleas’d he might
+have seen the Theorist made no Use of the Weight of the Air upon this
+Occasion, by the Instance he gave of the Pressure of the Moon, and the
+Flux of the Waters by that Pressure: Which is no more done by the
+Gravitation of the Air, than the Banks are prest in a swift Current and
+narrow Channel, by the Gravitation of the Water. But he says, rarified
+Air makes less Resistance than gross Air; and rarified Water in an
+Æolipile, it may be he thinks, presses with less Force than unrarified.
+Air possibly may be rarified to that Degree as to lessen its Resistance;
+but we speak of Air moderately agitated, so as to be made only more
+brisk and active. Moreover, he says, the Waters that lay under the Poles
+must have risen perpendicularly, and why might they not, as well have
+done so under the Equator? The Waters that lay naturally and originally
+under the Poles, did not rise at all; but the Waters became more deep
+there, by those that were thrust thither from the middle Parts of the
+Globe. Upon the whole, I do not perceive that he hath weaken’d any one
+of the Propositions upon which the Formation of an oval Earth depended;
+which were these: _First_, That the Tendency of the Waters from the
+Centre of this Motion, would be greater and stronger in the Equinoctial
+Parts, than in the Polar, or in those Parts where they moved in greater
+Circles; and consequently swifter, than in those where they were moved
+in lesser Circles and slower. _Secondly_, Agitated Air hath more Force
+to repel what presses against it than stagnant Air; and that the Air was
+more agitated and rarified under the Equinoctial Parts, than under the
+Poles. _Thirdly_, Waters hinder’d and repell’d in their primary
+Tendency, take the easiest way they can to free themselves from that
+Force, so as to persevere in their Motion. _Lastly_, To flow laterally
+upon a Plain, or to ascend upon an inclin’d Plain, is easier than to
+rise perpendicularly. These are the Propositions upon which that
+Discourse depended, and I do not find that he hath disprov’d any one of
+them. And this, Sir, is a short Account of a long Chapter, Impertinences
+omitted.
+
+_Chapter_ X. Is concerning the Original and Causes of Mountains, which
+the Exceptor unhappily imputes to the Heat and Influence of the Sun.
+Whether his Hypothesis be effectually confuted or not, I am very willing
+to stand to the Judgment of any unconcern’d Person, that will have the
+Patience to compare the _Exceptions_ and the _Answer_, in this Chapter.
+Then, as to his _Historical_ Arguments, as he calls them, to prove there
+were Mountains before the Flood, from _Giants that saved themselves from
+the Flood upon Mount Sion, and Adam’s wandering several hundred of Years
+upon the Mountains of India_: These, and such like, which he brought to
+prove that there were Mountains before the Flood, he now thinks fit to
+renounce, _Def. p. 97._ and says he had done so before by an
+_anticipative_ Sentence: But if they were condemn’d before by an
+_anticipative_ Sentence, as Fables and Forgeries, why were they stuff’d
+into his Book, and us’d as traditional Evidence against the Theory?
+
+_Lastly_, He contends in this Chapter for _Iron_ and _Iron Tools_ before
+the Flood, and as early as the Time of _Cain_; because he _built a
+City_, which, he says, could not be built without Iron and Iron-Tools:
+To which it was answer’d, _Ans. p. 49, 50._ that, _if he fancied that
+City of Cain_’s, like _Paris_ or _London_, _he_ had Reason to believe
+that they had _Iron-tools_ to make it: But suppose it was a Number of
+Cottages, made of Branches of Trees, of Osiers and Bulrushes; or, if you
+will, of Mud-Walls, and a Roof of Straw, with a Fence about it to keep
+out Beasts, there would be no such Necessity of Iron-Tools.
+
+Consider, pray, how long the World was without knowing the Use of Iron,
+in several Parts of it, as in the Northern Countries and _America_, and
+yet they had Houses and Cities after their Fashion. And to come nearer
+Home, consider what Towns and Cities our Ancestors, the _Britains_, had
+in _Cæsar_’s Time, more than two thousand Years after the Time of _Cain:
+Com. li. 5. Oppidum Britanni vacant, cum Sylvam impeditam vallo atque
+fossa munierant; quo incarsionis hostium nitandæ causa, convenire
+consueverunt_: Why might not _Henochia_, _Cain_’s City, be such a City
+as this?
+
+And as to the Ark, which he also would make a Proof that there were Iron
+and Iron-Tools before the Flood, _Ibid._ ’twas answer’d, that Scripture
+does not mention Iron or Iron-Tools in building of the Ark; but only
+_Gopher-Wood_ and Pitch: To which re replies, _Def._ p. 103. _If
+Scripture’s Silence concerning Things be a Ground of Presumption that
+they were not, what then shall we think of an oval and unmountainous
+Earth, an inclosed Abyss, a paradisaical World, and the like, which the
+Scripture makes no mention of?_ I cannot easily forbear calling this an
+_injudicious_ Reflection, tho’ I know he hath been angry with that Word,
+and makes it a _Brat of Passion’s_. But I do assure him, I call it so
+coolly and calmly. When a Thing is deduc’d by natural Arguments and
+Reason, the Silence of Scripture is enough: if he can prove the _Motion
+of the Earth_ by natural Arguments, and that Scripture is silent in that
+Point, we desire no better Proof. Now in all those Things which he
+mentions, an oval and unmountainous Earth, an inclosed Abyss, a
+paradisaical World, Scripture is at least silent; and therefore ’tis
+natural Arguments must determine these Cases: And this ill reasoning he
+is often guilty of, in making no Distinction betwixt Things that are, or
+that are not prov’d by natural Arguments, when he appeals to the
+Interpretation of Scripture.
+
+_Chap. XI._ Is to prove an open Sea (such as we have now) before the
+Flood: All his Exceptions were answered before, _Answ. c._ 11. and I am
+content to stand to that Answer, reserving only what is to be said
+hereafter concerning the literal Sense of Scripture. However, he is too
+lavish in some Expressions here, as when he says, (_p. 115._) That
+_Adam_ died _before so much as one Fish appeared in the World:_ And a
+little before he had said, _p. 114._ _For Fishes, if his Hypothesis be
+believed, were never upon this Earth in Adam’s Time._ These Expressions,
+I say, cannot be justified upon any Hypothesis: For why might not the
+Rivers of that Earth have Fish in them, as well as the Rivers of this
+Earth, or as our Rivers now? I’m sure the _Theory_, or the _Hypothesis_
+he mentions, never said any Thing to the contrary, but rather suppos’d
+the Waters fruitful, as the Ground was. But as to an _open Sea_, whether
+Side soever you take, that there was, or was not any before the Flood; I
+believe, however, _Adam_, to his dying Day, never saw either Sea or
+Sea-fish, nor ever exercis’d any Dominion over either.
+
+_Chap. XII._ Is concerning the Rainbow, and hath no new Argument in it,
+nor Reinforcement: But a Question is moved, whether _as well_
+necessarily signifies _as much_. The real Question to be consider’d
+here, setting aside Pedantry, is this _whether_ that Thing (Sun or
+Rainbow, or any other) could have any Significancy as a Sign, which
+signified no more than the bare Promise would have done without a Sign:
+This is more material to be consider’d and resolved, than whether _as
+well_ and _as much_ signify the same.
+
+_Chap. XIII._ Is concerning Paradise, and to justify or excuse himself
+why he baulked all the Difficulties, and said nothing new or instructive
+upon that Subject: But he would make the Theorist inconsistent with
+himself in that he had said, _Def. p. 125._ that _neither Scripture nor
+Reason determine the Place of Paradise; and yet determines it by the
+Judgment of Christian Fathers_. Where’s the Inconsistency of this? The
+Theory, as a Theory, is not concerned in a _Topical_ Paradise; and says
+moreover that neither Scripture, nor Reason, have determin’d the Place
+of it; but if we refer our selves to the Judgment and Tradition of the
+Fathers, and stand to the Majority of their Votes, (when Scripture and
+Reason are silent,) they have so far detetmin’d it, as to place it in
+the other Hemisphere, rather than in this, and so exclude that shallow
+Opinion of some Moderns, that would place it in _Mesopotamia_: And to
+baffle that Opinion was the Design of the Theorist, (as) this Author
+also seems to take notice, _p. 131._
+
+After this, and an undervaluing of the Testimonies of the Fathers, he
+undertakes to determine the Place of Paradise by Scripture, and
+particularly that it was in _Mesopotamia_, or some Region thereabouts.
+And his Argument is this, because in the last Verse of the third Chapter
+of _Genesis_, the _Cherubims_ and _flaming Sword_ are said to be plac’d
+מקדם לגן עדן, which he says is, _to the East of the Garden of Eden_. But
+the Septuagint (upon whom he must chiefly depend for the Interpretation
+of the Word מקדם in the first Place, _Chap. ii. 8._) read it here
+ἀπέναντι τοῦ παραδεῖσου τῆς τρυφῆς; And the _Vulgate_ renders it, _Ante
+Paradisum voluptatis_; and according to the _Samaritan_ Pentateuch, ’tis
+render’d _ex adverso_. Now, what better Authorities can he bring us for
+his Translation? I do not find that he gives any, as his usual Way is,
+but his own Authority. And as for the Word מקדם in the second _Chapter_
+and eighth _Verse_, which is the principal Place, ’tis well known, that
+except the _Septuagint_, all the antient Versions, _Greek_ and _Latin_,
+(besides others) render it to another Sense: And there is a like
+Uncertainty of Translation in the Word עדן as we have noted elsewhere.
+Lastly, the Rivers of Paradise, and the Countries that are said to run
+through or encompass, are differently understood by different Authors,
+without any Agreement or certain Conclusion: But these are all beaten
+Subjects, which you may find in every Treatise of Paradise, and
+therefore ’tis not worth the Time to pursue them here.
+
+Then he proceeds to the _Longevity of the Ante-Deluvians_, which, so far
+as I can understand him to affirm any Thing, he says, _p. 139._ was not
+_general_; but the Lives of some few were _extraordinary, lengthen’d by
+a special Blessing; the Elongation being a Work of Providence, not of
+Nature_. This is a cheap and vulgar Account, (and so are all the
+Contents of this Chapter) prov’d neither by Scripture, nor Reason, and
+calculated for the Humour and Capacity of those that love their Ease
+more than a diligent Enquiry after Truth. He hath indeed a bold
+Assertion afterwards, that _Moses_ does distinguish as much, or more,
+betwixt _two Races of Men before the Flood_; the one _Long-Livers_, and
+the other _Short-Livers_; as he hath distinguish’d the Giants before the
+Flood, from the common Race of Mankind. These are his Words, _p. 141._
+_Is not his Distinction equally plain in both Cases?_ Speaking of this
+fore-mentioned Distinction: Or, _if there be any Difference, does he not
+distinguish better betwixt Long-Livers, and Short-Livers, than he does
+betwixt Men of gigantick and of usual Proportion?_ Let’s see the Truth
+of this; _Moses_ plainly made mention, _Gen. vi. 4._ of two Races of
+Mankind: The ordinary Race, and those of a gigantick Race, or _Giants_.
+Now, tell me where he plainly makes mention of _Short-Livers_ before the
+Flood: And if he no where makes mention of _Short-Livers_, but of
+_Long-Livers_ only, how does he distinguish as plainly of these two
+Races, as he did of the other two; for in the other he mentioned plainly
+and severally both the Parts or Members of the Distinction, and here he
+mentions but one, and makes no Distinction.
+
+Then he comes to the Testimonies cited by _Josephus_ for the Longevity
+of the _Ante-Diluvians_, or first Inhabitants of the Earth: And these he
+roundly pronounces to be _utterly false_. This Gentleman does not seem
+to be much skill’d in Antiquity, either sacred or prophane; and yet he
+boldly rejects these Testimonies (as he did those of the Fathers before)
+as _utterly false_, _p. 142._ which _Josephus_ had alledged in
+Vindication of the History of _Moses_. The only Reason he gives is,
+because these Testimonies say, they liv’d a _thousand Years_; whereas
+_Moses_ does not raise them altogether so high. But the Question was not
+so much concerning the precise Number of their Years, as about the
+Excess of them beyond the present Lives of Men, and a round Number in
+such Cases is often taken instead of a broken Number. Besides, seeing,
+according to the Account of _Moses_, the greater Part of them liv’d
+above nine hundred Years, at least he should not have said these
+Testimonies in _Josephus_ were _utterly false_, but false in part, or
+not precisely true.
+
+Now, he comes to his Reasons against the ante-diluvian Longevity, which
+have all had their Answers before, and those we stand to. But I wonder
+he should think it reasonable, _p. 144, 145._ that Mankind throughout
+all Ages, should increase in the same Proportion as in the first Age:
+And, if a decuple Proportion of Increase was reasonable at first, the
+same should be continued all along; and the Product of Mankind, after
+sixteen hundred Years, should be taken upon that Supposition. I should
+not grudge to admit that the first Pair of Breeders might leave ten
+Pair; but that every Pair of these ten should also leave ten Pair,
+without any Failure: and every Pair in their Children should again leave
+ten Pair; and this to be continued, without Diminution or Interruption,
+for sixteen hundred Years, is not only a hard Supposition, but utterly
+incredible. For still the greater the Number was, the more Room there
+would be for Accidents of all Sorts; and every Failure towards the
+Beginning, and proportionably in other Parts, would cut off Thousands in
+the last Product.
+
+_Chap._ XIV. Is against the Dissolution of the Earth, and the Disruption
+of the Abyss at the Deluge, such as the Theory represents. Here is
+nothing of new Argument, but some Strokes of railing Wit, after his Way:
+He had said in his _Exceptions_, that the _Dissolution of the Earth was
+horrid Blasphemy_: Now he makes it _reductive Blasphemy_, as being
+_indirectly_, _consequentially_, or _reductively_, p. 153, 154. contrary
+to Scripture. By this Rule, we told him, all Errors in Religion would be
+Blasphemy; and if he extend this to Errors in Philosophy also, ’tis
+still more harsh and injudicious. I wonder how he thinks the Doctrine
+which he owns, about the Motion of the Earth, should escape the Charge
+of _Blasphemy_; that being not only indirectly, but directly and plainly
+contrary to Scripture. We thought that Expression, _the Earth is
+dissolved_, being a Scripture Expression, would thereby have been
+protected from the Imputation of _Blasphemy_, and we alledged to that
+Purpose, (besides _Psal._ lxxv. 3.) _Isa._ xxiv. 19. _Amos_ ix. 5. He
+would have done well to have proved these Places in the Prophets
+_Isaiah_ and _Amos_, to have been _figurative_ and _tropological_, as he
+calls it; for we take them both to relate to the Dissolution of the
+Earth, which literally came to pass at the Deluge: And he not having
+proved the contrary, we are in Hopes still that the _Dissolution of the
+Earth_ may not be _horrid Blasphemy_, nor of _blasphemous Importance_.
+
+Then having quarrell’d with the Guard of Angels, which the _Theorist_
+had assign’d for the Preservation of the Ark, in the Time of the Deluge,
+he falls next into his Blunder, that the _Equator_ and _Ecliptick_ of
+the Earth were interchang’d, when the Situation of the Earth was
+chang’d. This Error in the Earth is _Cousin-German_ to his former Error
+in the Heavens, _viz._ that the Earth chang’d its Tract about the Sun,
+and leap’d out of the _Equator_ into the _Ecliptick_, when it chang’d
+its Situation. The Truth is, this _Copernican System_ seems to lie cross
+in his Imagination: I think he would do better to let it alone. However,
+tho’ at other Times he is generally verbose and long-winded, he hath the
+Sense to pass this by in a few Words; laying the Blame upon certain
+_Parentheses_ or _Semicircles_, whose Innocency not withstanding we have
+fully clear’d, and shew’d the Poison to be spread throughout the whole
+Paragraph, which is too great to be made an _Erratum Typographicum_.
+
+Then after, _p. 160, 161._ _Hermus, Caister, Menander and Caius; Nile
+and its Mud, Piscenius Niger, who contended with Septimus Severus for
+the Empire, and reprimanded his Soldiers for hankering after Wine; Du
+Val, an ingenious French Writer, and Cleopatra and her admired Anthony_:
+He concludes, that the Waters of the Deluge raged amongst the Fragments,
+with _lasting_, _incessant_, and _unimaginable Turbulence_.
+
+And so he comes to an Argument against the Dissolution of the Earth, _p.
+162._ That, _all the Buildings erected before the Flood, would have been
+shaken down at that Time, or else overwhelmed_. He instanc’d in his
+_Exceptions_ in _Seth’s Pillars; Henochia, Cain’s City; and Joppa_:
+These he suppos’d such Buildings as were made before, and stood after
+the Flood. But now, _Seth_’s Pillars and _Henochia_ being dismiss’d, he
+insists upon _Joppa_ only, and says, this must have consisted of _such
+Materials, as could never be prepared, formed and set up, without
+Iron-Tools_. Tho’ I do not much believe that _Joppa_ was an
+ante-diluvian Town, yet whatever they had in _Cain_’s Time, they might,
+before the Deluge, have Mortar and Brick, which, as they are the first
+stony Materials, that we read of, for Building; so the Ruins of them
+might stand after the Deluge. And that they had no other Materials is
+the more probable, because after the Flood, at the Building of _Babel_,
+_Moses_ plainly intimates that they had no other Materials than those.
+For the Text says, _Gen._ xi. 3. _They said one to another, Go to, let
+us make Brick and burn them thoroughly; and they made Brick for Stone,
+and Slime had they for Mortar._ But now this Argument, methinks, may be
+retorted upon the Exceptor with Advantage: For, if there were no
+Dissolutions, Concussions, or Absorptions, at the Deluge, instead of the
+Ruins of _Joppa_, methinks we might have had the Ruins of an hundred
+ante-diluvian Cities; especially, if, according to his Hypothesis, they
+had good Stone, and good Iron, and all other Materials, fit for strong
+and lasting Building: And, which is also to be consider’d, that it was
+but a fifteen-cubit Deluge; so that Towns built upon Eminences or high
+Lands, would be in little Danger of being ruin’d, much less of being
+abolish’d.
+
+His last Argument, (_p. 163._) proves, if it prove any Thing, that God’s
+Promise, that _the World_ should not be _drown’d_ again, was a _vain and
+trifling Thing_ to us, who know it must be burn’d: And consequently, if
+_Noah_ understood the Conflagration of the World, he makes it a _vain
+and trifling Thing_ to _Noah_ also. If the Exceptor delight in such
+Conclusions, let him enjoy them, but they are not at all to the Mind of
+the Theorist.
+
+_Chapter_ XV. Now we come to his new Hypothesis of a _fifteen-cubit
+Deluge_; and what Shifts he hath made to destroy the World with such a
+diminutive Flood, we have noted before: First, by raising his
+Water-Mark, and making it uncertain: Then by converting the Deluge, in a
+great Measure into a _Famine_: And, Lastly, by destroying Mankind and
+other Animals, with _evil Angels_. We shall now take notice of some
+other Incongruities in his Hypothesis. When he made _Moses_’s Deluge but
+_fifteen Cubits deep_, we said that was an _unmerciful Paradox_, and
+ask’d whether he would have it receiv’d as a _Postulatum_, or as a
+_Conclusion_. All he answers to this, is, that the same Question may be
+ask’d concerning several Parts of the Theory; _p. 166._ Particularly,
+that the primitive Earth had no _open Sea_. Whether is that, says he, to
+be receiv’d as a _Postulatum_, or as a _Conclusion_? The Answer is
+ready, as a _Conclusion_, deduced from Premisses, and a Series of
+antecedent Reasons. Now, can he make this Answer for his fifteen-cubit
+Deluge? Must not that still be a _Postulatum_, and an unmerciful one? As
+to the Theory, there is but one _Postulatum_ in all, _viz._ that the
+_Earth rise from a Chaos_. All the other Propositions are deduc’d from
+Premisses, and that one _Postulatum_ also is prov’d by Scripture and
+Antiquity. We had noted further in the Answer, that the Author had said
+in his Exceptions, that he would not defend his Hypotheses as _true_ and
+_real_; and we demanded thereupon, _Why_ then did he trouble himself or
+the World with what he did not think _true_ and _real_? To this he
+replies, _Many have written ingenious and useful Things, which they
+never believ’d to be true and real_. Romances suppose, and poetical
+Fictions: Will you have your fifteen-cubit Deluge pass for such? But
+then the Mischief is, where there is neither Truth of Fact, nor
+Ingenuity of Invention, such a Composition will hardly pass for a
+Romance, or a good Fiction. But there is still a greater Difficulty
+behind. The Exceptor hath unhappily said, _Exc. p. 302. Our Supposition
+stands supported by Divine Authority, as being founded upon Scripture;
+which tells us as plainly as it can speak, that the Waters prevailed but
+fifteen Cubits upon the Earth_. Upon which Words the Answerer made this
+Remark, _Ans. p. 67. If his Hypothesis be founded upon Scripture, and
+upon Scripture as plainly as it can speak, why will he not defend it as
+TRUE and REAL? For to be supported by Scripture, and by plain Scripture,
+is as much as we can alledge for the Articles of our Faith_. To this he
+replies now, _Def. p. 168._ that he _begg’d Allowance at first, to make
+bold with Scripture a little_: This is a bold Excuse, and he especially,
+one would think, should take heed how he makes bold with Scripture,
+lest, according to his own Notion, he fall into _Blasphemy_, or
+something of _blasphemous Importance, indirectly, consequentially,_ or
+_reductively_, at least: However, this Excuse, if it was a good one,
+would take no Place here; for to understand and apply Scripture, in that
+Sense that it speaks _as plainly as it can speak_, is not to make bold
+with it, but modestly to follow its Dictates and plain Sense.
+
+He feels this Load to lie heavy upon him, and struggles again to shake
+it off with a Distinction. When he said his fifteen-cubit Deluge was
+_supported by Divine Authority_, &c. this, he says, _ibid._ was spoken
+_by him, in an hypothetick or suppositious Way, and that it cannot
+possibly be understood otherwise by Men of Sense_. Here are two hard
+Words: Let us first understand what they signify, and then we shall
+better judge how Men of Sense would understand his Words. His
+_hypothetick_ or _suppositious Way_, so far as I understand it, is the
+same Thing as by _way of Supposition_: Then his Meaning is, he
+_supposes_ his fifteen-cubit Deluge is _supported by Divine Authority_;
+and he _supposes_ it is _founded upon Scripture, as plainly as it can
+speak_: But this is to suppose the Question, and no Man of Sense would
+make or grant such a Supposition; so that I do not see what he gains by
+this _hypothetick_ and _suppositious Way_. But to draw him out of this
+Mist of Words, either he affirms this, that his _Hypothesis is supported
+by Divine Authority, and founded upon Scripture as plainly as it can
+speak_, or he denies it, or he doubts of it: If he affirm it, then all
+his Excuses and Diminutions are to no purpose, he must stand to his
+Cause, and shew us those plain Texts of Scripture; if he deny it, he
+gives up his Cause, and all that Divine Authority he pretended to; if he
+doubt of it, then he should have express’d himself doubtfully: As,
+_Scripture may admit of that Sense, or may be thought to intimate such a
+thing_, but he says with a Plerophory, _Scripture speaks it as plainly
+as it can speak_: And to mend the Matter, he unluckily subjoins in the
+following Words, _p._ 168, 169. _Yea, tho’ it was spoken never so
+positively, it was but to set forth REI PERSONAM: To make a more full
+and lively Representation of the supposed thing._ He does well to tell
+us what he means by _Rei Personam_; for otherwise no Man of Sense, as
+his Phrase is, would ever have made that Translation of those Words. But
+the Truth is, he is so perfectly at a Loss how to bring himself off, as
+to this Particular, that in his Confusion, he neither makes good Sense
+nor good _Latin_.
+
+Now he comes to another Inconsistency which was charg’d upon him by the
+_Answerer_: Namely, that he rejects the _Church Hypothesis_ concerning
+the Deluge, and yet had said before, _Exc._ _p._ 300. _I cannot believe
+(which I cannot well endure to speak) that the Church hath ever gone on
+in an irrational Way of explaining the Deluge_: That he does reject this
+Church Hypothesis, was plainly made out from his own Words, because he
+rejects the _common Hypothesis_; (_see the Citation in the Answer_, _p._
+68.) the _general standing Hypothesis_; the _usual Hypothesis_; the
+_usual Sense they put upon Sacred Story_, &c. These Citations he does
+not think fit to take Notice of in his Reply; but puts all upon this
+general Issue, which the _Answerer_ concludes with: _The Church Way of
+explaining the Deluge, is either rational or irrational: If he say it is
+rational, why does he desert it, and invent a new one: And if he say it
+is irrational, then that dreadful thing, which he cannot well endure to
+speak, that the Church of God hath ever gone on in an irrational Way of
+explaining the Deluge, falls flat upon himself._ Let’s hear his Answer
+to this Dilemma. _Def._ p. 170. _We say_, says he, _that the Church Way
+of explaining the Deluge_, (by creating and annihilating Waters for the
+Nonce) _is very rational_. Then say I still, why do you desert it, or
+why do you trouble us with a new one? Either his Hypothesis is more
+rational than the Church Hypothesis, or less rational: If less rational,
+why does he take us off from a better, to amuse us with a worse? But if
+he say, his Hypothesis is more rational than that of the Church: Then
+Woe be to him, in his own Words, _p._ 171. that so _black a Blemish
+should be fasten’d upon the wisest and noblest Society in the World_, as
+to make himself more wise than they, and his Hypothesis more rational
+than theirs. The Truth is, this Gentleman hath a mind to appear a
+_Virtuoso_, for the new Philosophy, and the _Copernican_ System; and yet
+would be a Zealot for Orthodoxy, and the Church-Way of explaining
+Things: Which two Designs do not well agree, as to the natural World;
+and betwixt two Stools he falls to the Ground, and proves neither good
+Churchman, nor good Philosopher.
+
+But he will not still be convinc’d that he deserts the Church
+Hypothesis, and continues to deny the Desertion in these Words. _Ibid._
+_We say we do not desert or reject the Church-Way of explaining the
+Deluge._ Now, to discover whether these Words are true or false; let us
+observe, _First_, What he acknowledges to have said against the Church
+Hypothesis: _Secondly_, What he hath said more than what he acknowledges
+here. He acknowledges, that he said, the Church Hypothesis _might be
+disgustful to the best and soundest philosophick Judgments_; and this is
+no good Character. Yet this is not all, for he hath fairly dropp’d a
+principal Word in his Sentence, namely, _justly_, _Exc._ p. 312. His
+Words in his _Exceptions_, were these, _such Inventions_ (which he
+applies to the Church Hypothesis) _as have been, and JUSTLY may be
+disgustful, not only to nice and squeamish, but to the best and soundest
+philosophick Judgments_. Now judge, whether he cited this Sentence
+before, truly and fairly, and whether in these Words, truly cited, he
+does not disparage the Church Hypothesis, and justify those that are
+disgusted at it.
+
+He farthermore acknowledges, that the usual Ways of explaining the
+Deluge _seem unreasonable to some, and unintelligible to others, and
+unsatisfactory to the most_: But, it seems, he will neither be of these,
+_some_, _others_, or _most_. Lastly, He acknowledges that he said,
+_Def._ p. 171. _The ordinary Supposition, that the Mountains were
+covered with Waters in the Deluge, brings on a Necessity of setting up a
+new Hypothesis for explaining the Flood._ If so, what was this _ordinary
+Supposition_? was it not the Supposition of the Church? And was that
+such, as made it necessary to set up a new Hypothesis for explaining the
+Flood? then the old Hypothesis was insufficient or irrational.
+
+Thus much he acknowledges; but he omits what we noted before, his
+rejecting or disapproving the _common Hypothesis_, the _general standing
+Hypothesis_, the _usual Sense they put upon the Sacred Story_, &c. And
+do not all these Phrases denote the Church Hypothesis? He farther omits,
+that he confess’d, (_Excep._ _p._ 325.) _he had expounded a Text or two
+of Scripture about the Deluge, so as none ever did; and, deserting the
+common receiv’d Sense, puts an unusual Gloss upon them_. And is not that
+_common receiv’d Sense_ the Sense of the Church, and his _unusual Gloss_
+contrary to it? Lastly, he says, by his Hypothesis, we need not fly to a
+_new Creation of Waters_, and gives his Reasons at large against that
+Opinion; which you may see, _Except._ _p._ 313. Now, those Reasons he
+thought either to be _good_ Reasons or _bad_ Reasons; if _bad_, why did
+he set them down, or why did he not confuse them? If good, they stand
+good against the Hypothesis of the Church; for he makes that _new
+Creation_ and _Annihilation_ of Waters at the Deluge to be the
+Hypothesis of the Church, _Def._ _p._ 170. I fear I have spent too much
+Time in shewing him utterly inconsistent with himself in this
+Particular. And I wonder he should be so sollicitous to justify the
+Hypothesis of the Church in this Point, seeing he openly dissents from
+it in a greater; I mean in that of the _System of the World_. Hear his
+Words, if you please, to this Purpose, _Def._ _p._ 136. _And what does
+the famous_ Aristotelian _Hypothesis seem to be now, but a Mass of
+Errors; where such a System was contriv’d for the Heavens, and such a
+Situation assign’d to the Earth, as neither Reason can approve, nor
+Nature allow. Yet so prosperous and prevailing was this Hypothesis, that
+it was generally receiv’d, and successfully propagated for many Ages._
+This prosperous prevailing Error, or Mass of Errors, was it not espoused
+and supported by the Church? And to break from the Church in greater
+Points, and scruple it in less, is not this to strain at Gnats, and
+swallow Camels?
+
+So much for his Inconsistency with himself: The rest of this Chapter in
+the _Answer_, shews his Inconsistency with _Moses_, both as to the
+Waters covering the Tops of the Mountains, which _Moses_ affirms, and
+the Exceptor denies; and as to the Decrease of the Deluge, which _Moses_
+makes to be by the Waters retiring into their Chanels, after frequent
+Reciprocations, _going_ and _coming_. But the Exceptor says, the Sun
+suck’d up the Waters from the Earth, just as he had before suck’d the
+Mountains out of the Earth: These Things are so groundless, or so gross,
+that it would be tedious to insist longer upon them. And whereas it is
+not reasonable to expect that any others should be idle enough, as we
+must be, to collate three or four Tracts, to discern where the Advantage
+lies in these small Altercations; I desire only, if they be so dispos’d,
+that they would collate the _Exceptions_, _Answer_, and _Defence_ in
+this one Chapter, which is our Author’s Master-Piece: And from this I am
+willing they should take their Measures, and make a Judgment of his good
+or bad Success in other Parts.
+
+What Shifts he hath us’d to make his _fifteen-cubit Deluge_ sufficient
+to destroy all Mankind, and all Animals, we have noted before; and here
+it is (_p._ 181, 182.) that he reduces them to _Famine_. And after that
+he comes to a long Excursion of seven or eight Pages, about the
+Imperfection of _Shipping_ after the Flood, _Def._ _p._ 183, 185, _&c._
+a good Argument for the Theorist, that they had not an open Sea,
+Iron-Tools, and Materials for Shipping before the Flood: For what should
+make them so inexpert in Navigation for many Years and Ages after the
+Flood, if they had the Practice and Experience of it before the Flood:
+And what could hinder their having that Practice and Experience, if they
+had an open Sea, and all Iron and other Materials, for that Use and
+Purpose?
+
+Lastly, he comes to his Notion of the _great Deep_, or _Tehom-Rabbah_,
+_Def._ _p._ 191. which he had made before, in express Words, to be the
+Holes and Caverns in the Rocks; I say, in express Words, such as these,
+_Exc._ _p._ 312. _Now supposing that the Caverns in the Mountains were
+this great Deep_, speaking of _Moses’s great Deep_, according to this
+new Hypothesis. He says farther, (_p._ 105.) _In case it be urg’d, that
+Caverns, especially Caverns so high situate, cannot properly he called
+the great Deep._ Where you see his own Objection supposes that he made
+those Caverns the _great Deep_. And in the same Page, speaking of the
+Psalmist’s _great Deeps_, (in his own Sense of making them Holes in
+Rocks,) and _Moses_’s _great Deep_, he says, _the same Thing might be
+meant by both_. By all these Expressions one would think it plain, that
+by his _great Deep_ he meant his _Caverns_ in Rocks; yet now, upon
+Objections urged against it, he seems desirous to fly off from that
+Notion, but does not yet tell us plainly what must be meant by _Moses_’s
+_great Deep_: If he, upon second Thoughts, would have the Sea to be
+understood by it, why does he not answer the Objections that are made by
+the Theorist against that Interpretation? _Engl. Theor._ p. 110, _&c._
+Nay, why does he not answer what he himself had objected before
+(_Except._ p. 310.) against that Supposition? He seems to unsay now,
+what he said before, and yet substitutes nothing in the Place of it, to
+be understood by _Moses’s Tehom. Rabbah_.
+
+_Chap._ XVI. is a few Words concerning these Expressions of _shutting
+the Windows of Heaven_, and the _Fountains of the Abyss_, after the
+Deluge: And these were both shut alike, and both of them no less than
+the _Caverns_ in the Mountains.
+
+_Chap._ XVII. hath nothing of Argumentation or Philosophy, but runs on
+in a popular declamatory Way, and (if I may use that forbidden Word)
+injudicious. All amounts to this, _whether_ we may not go contrary to
+the Letter of Scripture, in natural Things, when that goes contrary to
+plain Reason. This we affirm, and this every one must affirm, that
+believes the _Motion of the Earth_, as our Virtuoso pretends to do: Then
+he concludes all with an harmonious Close, that he follows the great
+Example of a Reverend Prelate, _Def._ p. 215. and _militates under that
+Episcopal Banner_. I am willing to believe that he wrote at first, in
+hopes to curry Favour with certain Persons, by his great Zeal for
+Orthodoxy; but he hath made such an Hotch-potch of new Philosophy and
+Divinity, that I believe it will scarce please the Party he would
+cajole; nor so much as his Reverend Patron. I was so civil to him in the
+Answer, as to make him a Saint in comparison of the former Animadverter;
+but, by the Stile and Spirit of this last Pamphlet, he hath forfeited
+with me all his Saint-ship, both absolute and comparative.
+
+Thus much for his Chapters; and as to his Reflections upon the _Review
+of the Theory_, they are so superficial and inconsiderable, that I
+believe he never expected that they should be regarded: I wonder
+however, that he should decline an Examination of the second Part of the
+_Theory_: It cannot be for want of good Will to confute it; he hath
+shewn that to the Height, whatsoever his Power was: Neither can it be
+for want of Difference or Disagreement in Opinion, as to the Contents of
+this latter Part; for he hath reckon’d the _Millennium_ amongst the
+Errors of the antient _Fathers_, (_Def._ p. 136) and the _Renovation of
+the World_ he makes _Allegorical_, (p. 214, _&c._) It must therefore be
+for want of some third Thing, which he best knows.
+
+But before we conclude, Sir, we must remember that we promised to speak
+apart to two Things, which are often objected to the Theorist by this
+Writer, and to little Purpose; namely, his flying to _extraordinary
+Providence_, and his flying from the _literal Sense_ of Scripture. As to
+extraordinary Providence, is the Theorist alone debarr’d from recourse
+to it, or would he have all Men debarr’d, as well as the Theorist? If
+so, why doth he use it so much himself? And if it be allow’d to others,
+there is no Reason it should be deny’d the Theorist, unless he have
+disown’d it, and so debarr’d himself that common Privilege: But the
+contrary is manifest, in a multitude of Places, both of the first and
+second Part of the _Theory_, Eng. Theor. _p._ 144, _&c._ For, besides a
+Discourse on Purpose upon that Subject, in the eighth _Chapter_ of the
+first Book, in the last Chapter, and last Words of the same Book
+(_Latin_) he does openly avow, both Providence (Natural and Moral) and
+Miracles; in these Words, _Denique cum certissimum sit à divina
+Providentia pendere res omnes, cujuscunque ordinis, & ab eâdem vera
+miracula edita esse_, &c. And as to the second Part of the _Theory_, the
+Ministry of Angels is there acknowledg’d frequently, both as to natural
+and moral Administrations. From all which Instances it is manifest, that
+the Theorist did not debar himself, by denying either _Miracles_,
+_angelical Ministry_, or _extraordinary Providence_: But, if the
+Exceptor be so injudicious (pardon me that bold Word) as to confound all
+extraordinary Providence with the _Acts of Omnipotency_, he must blame
+himself for that, not the Theorist. The _Creation_ and _Annihilation_ of
+Waters is an Act of pure Omnipotency: This the Theorist did not admit of
+at the Deluge; and if this be his Fault, as it is frequently objected to
+him, (_Def._ p. 9, 66, 170, _&c._) he perseveres in it still, and in the
+Reasons he gave for his Opinion, which are no where confuted: _Eng.
+Theor._ p. 25, 26. But as for Acts of angelical Power, he does every
+where acknowledge them in the great Revolutions, even of the natural
+World: _Theor. Lat._ p. 73. _Engl._ p. 146, 147. If the Exceptor would
+make the Divine Omnipotency as cheap as the Ministry of Angels, and have
+recourse as freely and as frequently to that, as to this; if he would
+make all extraordinary Providence the same, and all Miracles, and set
+all at the Pitch of infinite Power, this may be an Effect of his
+Ignorance or Inadvertency, but is no way imputable to the Theorist.
+
+In the next Place it may be observ’d, that the Theorist hath no where
+asserted, that _Moses_’s _Cosmopœia_ (which does not proceed according
+to ordinary Providence) is to be literally understood; and therefore
+what is urg’d against him from the Letter of that _Cosmopœia_, is
+improperly urg’d and without Ground. There are as good Reasons, and
+better Authorities, that _Moses_’s _six Days Creation_ should not be
+literally understood, than there are, why those Texts of Scripture that
+speak about the _Motion of the Sun_, should not be literally understood:
+And as to the Theorist, he had often intimated his Sense of that
+_Cosmopœia_, that it was express’d _more humano, & ad captum populi_, as
+appears in several Passages in the _Latin_ Theory: Speaking of the
+_Mosaical Cosmogonia_, he hath these Words, _Theor._ _lib._ 2. _c._ 8.
+_Constat hæc Cosmopœia duabus parcibus quarum prima, massas generales
+atque rerum inconditarum statum exbibet; seqniturque eadem principia, &
+eundem ordinem, quem Antiqui usque retinuerunt. Atque in hoc nobiscium
+conveniunt omnes fere interpretes Christiani; nempe_, Tohu Bohu
+_Mosaicum idem esse ac Chaos Antiquorum_. _Tenebras Mosaicas_, &c.
+_bucusque convenit Mosi cum anfiquis Philosophis,——methodium autem illam
+Philosophicam hic abrumpit, aliamque orditur, bumanam, aut, si mavis,
+Theologicam; quo, motibus Chaos, secundum leges natura, & divini amoris
+actionem, plane neglectis, & successivis ipsius mutationibus in varias
+regiones, & elementa: His inquam posthabitis, popularem narrationem de
+ortu rerum hoc modo instituit: Res omnes visibiles in sex classes_, &c.
+This is a plain Indication how the Theorist understood that _Cosmopœia_:
+And accordingly in the _English Theory_ the Author says, _p._402. &c. _I
+have not mention’d_ Moses_’s_ Cosmopœia, _because I thought it deliver’d
+by him as a Law-giver, not as a Philosopher; which I intend to shew at
+large in another Treatise, not thinking that Discussion proper for the
+vulgar Tongue_. The Exceptor was also minded of this in the Answer, _p._
+66. Now, ’tis much that he, who hath search’d all the Corners, both of
+the _English_ and _Latin_ Theory, to pick Quarrels, should never observe
+such obvious Passages as these, but still make Objections from the
+Letter of the _Mosaical Cosmopœia_, which affect the Theorist no more
+than those Places of Scripture that speak of the Motion of the Sun, or
+the Pillars of the Earth.
+
+In the last Place, the Theorist distinguish’d two Methods for explaining
+the natural World, that of an _ordinary_, and that of an _extraordinary
+Providence_: And those that take the second Way, he said, might dispatch
+their Task as soon as they pleas’d, if they engag’d Omnipotency in the
+Work. But the other Method would require Time, it must proceed by
+distinct Steps, and leisurely Motions, such as Nature can admit; and, in
+that Respect, it might not suit with the busy Lives, or impatient
+Studies of most Men, whom he left notwithstanding to their Liberty, to
+take what Method they pleas’d, provided they were not troublesome in
+forcing their hasty Thoughts upon all others. Thus the Theorist hath
+express’d himself at the End of the first Book, _c._ 12. _Interea cum
+non omnes a natura ita compositi simus, ut Philosophia studiis
+delectemur: Neque etiam liceat multis, propter occupationes vitæ, iisdem
+vacare, quibus per ingenium licuisset; iis jure permittendum est,
+compendiario sapere, & relictis viis naturæ & causarum secundarum, quæ
+sæpe longiusculæ sunt, per cansas superiores philosophari; idque
+potissimum, cum ex piis affectivus hoc quandoque fieri possit; quibus,
+vel male fundatis, aliquid dandum esse existimo, modo non sint
+turbulenti._ Thus the Theorist, you see, sets two Ways before them; and
+’tis indifferent to him whether they take, if they will go on their Way
+peaceably. And he does now, moreover, particularly declare, That he hath
+no Ambition, either to make the _Exceptor_, or any other of the same
+Dispositions of Will, and the same Elevation of Understanding,
+Proselytes to his Theory.
+
+Thus much for _Providence_: As to the _literal Sense_ of Scripture, I
+find, if what was noted before in the _Answer_, _p._ 82, 83, _&c._ had
+been duly consider’d, there would be little need of Additions upon that
+Subject. The Matter was stated freely and distinctly, and the Remarks or
+Reflections which the Exceptor hath made in his _Defence_ upon this
+Doctrine, are both shallow and partial. I say _partial_, in perverting
+the Sense, and separating such Things as manifestly depend upon one
+another. Thus the Exceptor falls upon that Expression in the _Answer_,
+_Def._ _p._ 202. _Let us remember that this contradicting Scripture,
+here pretended, is only in natural Things_, where he should have added
+the other Part of the Sentence, _and also observe how for the Exceptor
+himself, in such Things, hath contradicted Scripture_. Here he makes an
+odious Declamation, as if the Answerer had confess’d that he
+_contradicted Scripture in natural Things_; whereas the Words are
+contradicting Scripture, _here pretended_; and ’tis plain by all the
+Discourse, that ’tis the literal Sense of Scripture that is here spoken
+of, which the Exceptor is also said to contradict. Such an unmanly
+Captiousness shews the Temper and Measure of that Spirit, which, rather
+than say nothing, will misrepresent the plain Sense of an Author. In
+like manner, when he comes to those Words in the Answer, The Case
+therefore is this, whether _to go contrary to the Letter of Scripture in
+Things that relate to the natural World, be destroying the Foundation of
+Religion, affronting Scripture, and blaspheming the Holy Ghost. Def. p._
+206. He says, This is not to state the Case truly, for it is not, says
+he, _going contrary to the Letter of Scripture that draws such evil
+Consequences after it, but going contrary to the Letter of Scripture,
+where it is understood_: And _this the Theorist does_, he says, and the
+_Exceptor does not_. But who says so besides himself? This is fairly to
+beg the Question; and can he suppose the Theorist so easy as to grant
+this without Proof? It must be the Subject Matter that determines, what
+is, and what is not, to be literally understood. However, he goes on,
+begging still the Question in his own behalf, and says, Those Texts of
+Scripture, that speak of the Motion and Course of the Sun, are not to be
+understood literally. But why not? Because the literal Sense is not to
+his Mind? Of four Texts of Scripture which the Theorist alledg’d against
+him, for the Motion of the Sun, he answers but one, and that very
+superficially, to say no worse. ’Tis _Psal._ xix. where the Sun at his
+rising is said to be as a _Bridegroom coming out of his Chamber, and to
+rejoice as a strong Man to run his Race: And his going forth is from the
+end of the Heaven, and his Circuit to the end of it_, p. 207. which he
+answers with this vain Flourish: _Then the Sun must be a Man, and must
+be upon his Marriage, and must be dress’d in fine Clothes, as a
+Bridegroom is: Then he must come out of a Chamber, and must give no more
+Light, and cast no more Heat, than a Bridegroom does_, &c. If a Man
+should ridicule at this rate, the Discourse of our Saviour concerning
+_Lazarus_ in _Abraham_’s Bosom, and _Dives_ in Hell, with a great Gulph
+betwixt them, yet talking audibly to one another; _Luk._ xvi. and that
+_Lazarus_ should be sent so far, as from Heaven to Hell, only to _dip
+the Tip of his Finger in Water_, and cool _Dives_’s Tongue. He that
+should go about thus to expose our Saviour’s Parable, would have a
+thankless Office, and effect nothing: For the Substance of it would
+stand good still; namely, that Mens Souls live after Death, and that
+good Souls are in a State of Ease and Comfort, and bad Souls in a State
+of Misery. In like manner, his ridiculing some Circumstances in the
+Comparison made by the Psalmist, does not at all destroy the Substance
+of that Discourse; namely, that the Sun moves in the Firmament, with
+great Swiftness and Lustre, and hath the Circuit of its Motion round the
+Earth. This is the Substance of what the Psalmist declares, and the rest
+is but a Similitude, which need not be literally just in all
+Particulars.
+
+After this, he would fain persuade the Theorist, that he hath excused
+the Exceptor for his receding from the literal Sense, as to the Motion
+of the Earth; _Def._ p. 208. Because he hath granted, that in certain
+Cases, we may and must recede from the literal Sense. But where, pray,
+hath he granted, that the Motion of the Earth was one of those Cases?
+Yet suppose it be so, may not the Theorist then enjoy this Privilege of
+receding from the literal Sense upon occasion, as well as the Exceptor?
+If he will give, as well as take this Liberty, let us mutually enjoy it;
+but he can have no Pretence to deny it to others, and take it himself.
+It uses to be a Rule in Writing, that a Man must not _stultum fingere
+Lectorem_. You must suppose your Reader to have common Sense. But he
+that accuses another of _Blasphemy_ for receding from the literal Sense
+of Scripture in natural Things, and does himself at the same Time,
+recede from the literal Sense of Scripture, in natural Things; one would
+think, _quo ad hoc_, either had not, or would not exercise common Sense,
+in a literal Way.
+
+Lastly, he comes to the common known Rule, assign’d to direct us, when
+every one ought to follow, or leave the literal Sense; which is, _p.
+215. not to leave the literal Sense, when the Subject Matter will bear
+it, without Absurdity or Incongruity_. This he repeats in the next Page
+thus. The Rule is, _when no kind of Absurdities or Incongruities accrue
+to any Texts, from the literal Sense_. If this be _his_ Rule, to what
+Text does there accrue any Absurdity or Incongruity, by supposing the
+Sun to move? For Scripture always speaks upon that Supposition, and not
+one Word for the Motion of the Earth. Thus he states the Rule; but the
+_Answerer_ supposed, that the Absurdity or Incongruity might arise from
+the _Subject Matter_. And accordingly he still maintains, that there are
+as just Reasons, (from the Subject Matter,) and better Authorities, for
+receding from the literal Sense in the Narrative of the six Days
+Creation, than in those Texts of Scripture, that speak of the Motions
+and Course of the Sun: And to affirm the _Earth to be mov’d_, is as much
+_Blasphemy_, and more contrary to Scripture, than to affirm it to have
+been _dissolv’d_, as the Theorist hath done.
+
+Sir, I beg your Excuse for this long letter, and leave it to you to
+judge whether the Occasion was just or no. I know such Jarrings as these
+must needs make bad Musick to your Ears: ’Tis like hearing two
+Instruments play, that are not in Tune, in Concert with one another: But
+you know Self-Defence, and to repel an Assailant, is always allow’d; and
+he that begins the Quarrel, must answer for the Consequences. However,
+Sir, to make amends for this I trouble, I am ready to receive your
+Commands upon more acceptable Subjects.
+
+_Your most humble Servant_, &c.
+
+FINIS.
+
+
+
+
+ REFLECTIONS UPON THE THEORY OF THE EARTH
+
+
+ REFLECTIONS UPON THE THEORY OF THE EARTH,
+
+ Occasion’d by a
+
+ _Late_ EXAMINATION _of it_.
+
+ _In a_ LETTER _to a_ FRIEND.
+
+ _LONDON:_
+
+ Printed for J. HOOKE, at the _Flower-de-Luce_ in
+ _Fleet-Street_. M.DCC.XXVI.
+
+
+
+
+ Advertisement of the Bookseller.
+
+
+_The following Tract hath been much enquired after by some curious
+Persons, but was so scarce, that a Copy could not be procured at the
+Time of the Printing the former Edition of the Theory. Since that, an
+intimate Friend of Dr. Burnet’s hath favoured me with a Copy; so that
+the Reader may be assured, it it genuine, and was wrote by Dr. Burnet;
+and it is apprehended, it may very well deserve a Place in his Works._
+
+
+ REFLECTIONS, _&c._
+
+
+Sir,
+
+
+I Receiv’d the Honour of your Letter, with the Book you was pleas’d to
+send me, containing an Examination of _the Theory of the Earth:_ And,
+according as you desire, I shall give you my Thoughts of it, in as
+narrow a Compass as I can. The Author of the _Theory_, you know, hath
+set down in three Propositions, the Foundation of the whole Work; and so
+long as those Propositions stand firm, the Substance of the _Theory_ is
+safe, whatsoever becomes of particular Modes of Explication in some
+Parts; which are as Problems, and may be explained several Ways, without
+prejudice to the Principles upon which the _Theory_ stands.
+
+The Theorist takes but one single Postulatum, _viz._ That the _Earth
+rose from a Chaos:_ This is not call’d into Question; and this being
+granted, he lays down three Propositions consecutively. First, _That the
+primitive or ante-diluvian Earth was of a different Form and
+Construction from the present Earth_. Secondly, _That the Face of that
+Earth, as it rose from a Chaos, was smooth, regular and uniform; without
+Mountains or Rocks, and without an open Sea_. Thirdly, _That the
+Disruption of the Abyss, or Dissolution of that primeval Earth, and its
+Fall into the Abyss, was the Cause of the universal Deluge, and of the
+Destruction of the old World_: As also of the irregular Form of the
+present Earth.
+
+These are the three Fundamental Propositions laid down in the fourth,
+fifth and sixth Chapters of the _Theory_. And for a farther Proof and
+Confirmation of them, especially of the last, another Proposition is
+added (_Chap._ VII.) in these Words, _The present Form and Structure of
+the Earth, both as to the Surface, and as to the interior Parts of it,
+so far as they are accessible and known to us, do exactly answer to the
+foregoing Theory, concerning the Form and Dissolution of the first
+Earth, and is not so justly explained to any other Hypothesis yet
+known._ This is offer’d as a Proof _à Posteriori_, as they call it, or
+from the Effects; to shew the Consent and Agreement of the Parts and
+Construction of the present Earth, to that Supposition of its being a
+sort of Ruin, or the Effect and Remains of a Disruption or Dissolution.
+And to make this good, the Theorist draws a short Scheme of the general
+Form of the present Earth, and its Irregularity: Then shews more
+particularly the Marks or Signatures of Ruin or Disruption in several
+Parts of it; as in Mountains and Rocks, in the great Chanel of the Sea,
+and in subterraneous Cavities, and other broken and disfigur’d Parts of
+the Earth.
+
+These Conclusions, with their Arguments, are the Sum and principal
+Contents of the first Book; but I must also mind you of a Corollary in
+the second Book, drawn from these primary Propositions, which concerns
+the Situation of the primitive Earth: For the Theorist supposes, that
+the Posture of that Earth, or of its Axis, was not oblique to to the
+Axis of the Sun, or of the Ecliptick, as it is now, but lay parallel
+with the Axis of the Sun, and perpendicular to the Plane of the
+Ecliptick; by reason of which Position, there was a perpetual Spring, or
+perpetual Equinox, in that primitive Earth. This, tho’ a Consequence
+only from the first Propositions, I thought fit to mind you of, as being
+one of the peculiar and distinguishing Characters of this _Theory_.
+
+This being the State of the _Theory_, or of those Parts of it that
+support the rest, and wherein its Strength consists, he that will attack
+it to purpose, must throw down, in the first Place, these leading
+Propositions. If the Examiner had taken this Method, and confuted the
+Proofs that are brought in Confirmation of each of them, he needed have
+done no more; for the Foundation being destroyed, the Superstructure
+would fall of its own accord. But if, instead of this, you only pick out
+a loose Stone here or there, or strike off a Pinacle, this will not
+weaken the Foundation, nor have any considerable Effect upon the whole
+Building. Let us therefore consider, in the first Place, what this
+Examiner hath said against these fundamental Propositions, and
+accordingly you will better judge of the rest of his Work.
+
+His first Chapter is to shew, that the Deluge might be made by a
+Miracle: But whoever denied that? No doubt God by his Omnipotency may do
+whatsoever he pleases, to the utmost Extent of Possibilities. But he
+does not tell us wherein this Miracle consisted? Doth he suppose that
+the Deluge could be made without any Increase of Waters upon the Earth?
+If there was an Increase of Waters, either they were created a-new, or
+brought thither from some other Part of the Universe: So far is plain;
+and if he supposes a new Creation of Waters for this Purpose, and an
+Annihilation of them again at the end of the Flood, it had been fair to
+have answered the Arguments that are given against that Hypothesis, in
+the third Chapter of the _English Theory_. And seeing there is no
+mention made of any such thing in the sacred History, if he asserts it,
+he must bring some Proof of his Assertion; for we are not upon such
+Terms, as to trust upon bare Word. On the other Hand, if he proceed upon
+such Waters as were already in being, and for his purpose either bring
+down supercelestial Water, or bring subterraneous, he must tell us what
+those Waters are, and must answer such Objections as are brought against
+either sort in the second and third Chapters of the _Theory_; we must
+have some fix’d Point, some Mark to aim at, if the Case be argued. Upon
+the whole, I think this his first Chapter might have been spar’d, as
+either affirming nothing particularly, or giving no Proof of what is
+affirm’d.
+
+In his next Chapter about the _Chaos_, I was in hopes to have found
+something more considerable, but (besides his long _excerpta_ out of the
+_Theory_, both here and elsewhere, which make a good part of his Book) I
+find nothing but two small Objections against the Formation of the first
+Earth, as it is describ’d by the Theorist. This Examiner says, _p. 37,
+38._ That the little earthy Particles of the Chaos would not swim upon
+the Surface of Oil, or any such unctuous Liquor; for how little soever,
+yet being earthy, and Earth being heavier than Oil, they must descend
+through it. But he grants that Dust will swim upon Oil; and I willingly
+allow, if these descending Parts were _huge Lumps of solid Matter_, such
+as we shall meet with in his next Chapter, they would easily break
+through both the Oil and the Water under it; but that little tenuious
+Particles or small Dust should swim upon Oil, I think is no wonder: And
+he is so kind as to note an Instance of this himself; and to subjoin his
+Reasons for it. We see Dust, saith he, _p. 38, 39._ though specifically
+heavier than Oil, yet not to sink when cast upon it. And the Reason is,
+because all terrestrial Bodies, tho’ fluid in their kind yet in some
+degree resist Separation; and consequently, I add, viscous Liquors which
+have some sort of Entanglement amongst themselves, resist Separation
+more than others. Then he remarks farther, that according as Bodies are
+less, they have more Surface in Proportion to their Bulk, and
+consequently, that _small Bodies, whose Weight or Force to separate the
+Parts of the Fluid is but very little, may have a Surface so large, that
+they cannot overcome the Resistance of the Fluid: That is, they cannot
+make Way for their Descent through the Fluid, and therefore must swim
+upon the Surface of it_. Be it so, then the Particles here mentioned by
+the Theorist, being little, and of large Surfaces in Proportion to their
+Bulk, would swim upon the Surface of the Fluid, or mix with it, which is
+all the Theorist affirms or supposes: And as this tender Film grew into
+a Crust, and that into a solid Arch, the Parts of it would mutually
+support one another; the Concave Superficies of the Orb overspreading
+and leaning upon the Waters: And this also shews that his Instance of a
+solid Globe sinking in a Fluid, is little to the Purpose in this Case.
+
+But he hath a second objection behind, _p._ 40. or another Consideration
+to prove that those little Particles would pierce and pass through this
+oily Liquid. This Consideration is, the great Height of the Place from
+which they descended; whereby, he thinks, they would acquire such a
+Celerity and Force in their Descent, that they must needs break through
+this Orb of oily Liquors when they came at it. But this is to suppose
+that they descended without Interruption, or without having their Course
+stopp’d, and their Force broken in several Parts of their journey. This
+is an arbitrary and groundless Supposition: For these floating Particles
+did not fall like a Stone, or a ponderous Body, in one continued Line,
+but rather like Fleaks of Snow, hovering and playing in the Air, their
+Course being often interrupted and diverted, and their force broken
+again and again, before they came to the end of their Journey; so that
+this Suggestion can be of no Force or Effect in the present Case.
+However, if that will gratify him, we can allow that thousands and
+millions of these little Particles might slip or creep through this
+clammy Liquor, yet there would enough of them entangled there to make
+it, first, a gross Liquid, then a sort of Concretion, so as to stop the
+succeeding Particles from passing through it.
+
+I have done with all that is argumentative in this Chapter: But this
+Writer is pleased to go sometimes out of his way of Philosophising, to
+make Reflections of another kind. Accordingly, here and elsewhere he
+makes Insinuations and Suggestions, as if the Theorist did not own the
+Hand of Providence, or of a particular and extraordinary Providence in
+the Formation of the Earth; or as if all Things in the great Revolutions
+of the natural World were carried on solely by material and mechanical
+Causes. This Suggestion ought to be taken Notice of, as being contrary
+to the Sense of the Theorist, as it is express’d in several Places. In
+speaking of the Motions of the Chaos, the Theorist makes the _steady
+Hand of Providence which keeps all Things in Weight and Measure, to be
+the invisible Guide of all its Motions_, p. 45. And in concluding his
+Discourse about the Formation of the Earth (_Chap._ V. _p._ 45.) the
+Theorist says, _This Structure is so marvellous, that it ought rather to
+be consider’d, as a particular Effect of the Divine Art, than as the
+Work of Nature_; with many other Remarks there to the same purpose. Then
+as to the Dissolution of the Earth, and the Conduct of the Deluge, ’tis
+made miraculous also by the Theorist[22]: And upon that Occasion an
+Account is given of Providence, both ordinary and extraordinary, in
+reference to the Government of Nature; and that not only as to the
+formation and Dissolution of the Earth, but also as to its Conflagration
+and Renovation: For the Theorist always puts those great Revolutions
+under the particular Conduct and Moderation of Providence. Lastly, As to
+the whole Universe, he is far from making that the Product either of
+_Chance_ or _Necessity_, or of any purely material or mechanical Causes;
+as you may see at large in the two last Chapters of the _Theory_, _Book_
+II. So that what this Author hath said (rudely enough, according to his
+Way) of _Mr. Wotton_, _Introd._ _p._ 15. that _he either understands no
+Geometry, or else that he never read_ D.C. _his Principles_, may with a
+little Change be apply’d to himself in this Case, that either he never
+read over, or does not remember, or, which is still worse, does wilfully
+misrepresent what the Theorist hath wrote upon this Subject. The Sum of
+all is this, _Deus non deficit in necessariis, nec redundat in
+superfluis_: God is the God of Nature; and the Laws of Nature are his
+Laws: These we are to follow so far as they will go, and where they fall
+short, we must rise to higher Principles; but we ought not to introduce
+a needless Exercise of the divine Power, for a Cover to our Ignorance.
+
+To conclude this Chapter, I will leave one Advertisement with the
+Examiner concerning the Chaos. When he speaks of the World’s rising from
+the _Mosaick_ Chaos, if by _World_ he understand the whole Universe, as
+he seems to do; not this inferior World only, but the fix’d Stars also,
+and all the Heavens: If that, I say, be his Meaning and Opinion, he will
+meet with other Opponents besides the Theorist, that will contest that
+Point with him.
+
+We come now to the third Chapter, concerning the _Mountains_ of the
+Earth, which is a subject indeed that deserves Consideration, seeing it
+reaches to the three fundamental Propositions before mentioned, and the
+Form of the ante-diluvian Earth; which Form the Examiner would have to
+be the same with that of the present Earth, to have had Mountains and
+Rocks, an open Chanel of the Sea, with all the Cavities and
+Irregularities within or without the Surface of it, as at present. If he
+can prove this, he needs go no farther; he may spare his Pains for the
+rest: I’ll undertake that the Theorist shall make no farther Defence of
+his Theory, if the Examiner can make good Proof of this one Conclusion.
+But, on the other Hand, the Examiner ought to be so ingenuous as to
+acknowledge that all that he hath said besides, till this be prov’d, can
+be of little or no Effect, as to the Substance of the Theory. Let us
+then consider how he raises Mountains and Rocks, and gives us an Account
+of all the other Inequalities that we find in the present Form of the
+Earth, by an immediate Formation or Deduction from the Chaos.
+
+To shew this, he supposes, _p._ 49, 51. that the Chaos had Mountains and
+Rocks swimming in it, or, according to his Expression, _huge Lumps of
+solid Matter_. These are Things, I confess, which I never heard of
+before in a Chaos; which hath been always describ’d and suppos’d a Mass
+of fluid Matter all over. But this Author confidently says, p. 48. _We
+must conclude THEREFORE, that the Chaos was not so fluid a Mass, &c._
+This _therefore_ refers us to an antecedent Reason, which is this; he
+says, _ibid._ to make the Chaos an entirely fluid Mass is hard to be
+granted, _since the greatest Parts of Bodies we have in the Earth, at
+least so far as we can discern, are hard and solid, and there is not
+such a Quantity of Water in the Earth, as would be requisite to soften
+and liquify them all; besides a great part of them, as Stones and
+Metals, are uncapable of being liquified by Water_. Very good, what is
+this to the _Theory_? Does the Theorist any where affirm or suppose that
+there were Stones or Metals in the Chaos; or that they were liquified by
+Water? This must refer to some Hypothesis of his own, or to some other
+Author’s Hypothesis that ran in his Mind: The Theorist owns no such
+Doctrine or Supposition.
+
+However, let’s consider how this new Idea of a Chaos is consistent with
+the Laws of Nature: What made these _huge Lumps of solid Matter_,
+whether Stone or Metal, to swim in the fluid Mass? This is against all
+Rules of Gravity, and of Staticks, as he seems to acknowledge, and urged
+it when he thought it to his Purpose. In the precedent Chapter (_p._
+42.) when he speaks of Stones and Minerals, he says, _’Tis certain that
+these great heavy Bodies must have sunk to the Bottom, if they were left
+to themselves_: And he that will not allow Dust or little earthy
+Particles, to float upon an oily Liquor, I wonder how he will make, not
+little Particles, but these huge solid Lumps of Stone, Metals, or
+Minerals, to float in the Chaos.
+
+He seems to own and be sensible of this Inconvenience, (_p._ 50) and
+thereupon finds an Expedient or Evasion which a lesser Wit would not
+have thought on. He supposes, _p._ 51 that these _huge_ firm solid Lumps
+were hollow, like empty Bottles, and that would keep them from sinking.
+But who told him they were hollow? Is not this precarious? Or, if one
+would use such Terms as he does, is not this _chymerical and
+ridiculous_? What made those solid firm Lumps hollow? When, or where, or
+how were their inward Parts scrap’d out of them? Nor would this
+Hollowness, however they came by it, make them swim, unless there was a
+mere Vacuum in each of them. If they were filled with the liquid Matter
+of the Chaos, they would indeed be lighter than if wholly solid; but
+they would still be heavier than any equal Bulk of the fluid Chaos, and
+consequently would sink in it; the Preponderancy that would arise from
+the Shell or solid Part still remaining.
+
+Now let’s consider how such Mountains, or long Ridges of Mountains as we
+have upon the Earth, were formed and settled by these floating Lumps. He
+says, _p._ 50, 51. _Part of these Lumps or Masses standing out, or being
+higher than the Fluid, would compose a Mountain_, as there are
+_Mountains of Ice that float upon the Northern Seas_. But are not
+Mountains of Rock and Stone, such as ours commonly are, heavier than
+Mountains of Ice, that is specifically lighter than Water? This might
+have been consider’d by the Examiner in drawing the Parallel: And still
+I’m at a Loss what _Fluid_ it is he means, when he says, These Lumps or
+Masses _standing out, or being higher than the Fluid_. Does he mean by
+this Fluid the Whole Chaos? Did these Mountains stand at the Top of the
+Chaos, partly within, and partly above it? Then what drew them down
+below, if they stood equally pois’d there in their Fluid, and as high as
+the Moon, if the Chaos reach’d so high. This, one would think, could not
+be his Meaning, ’tis so extravagant; and yet there was no other Fluid
+than the general Chaos, till that was divided and distinguish’d into
+several Masses. Then, indeed, there was an Abyss, or Region of Waters
+that covered the interior Earth, and was separate from the Air above.
+Let us then suppose this Abyss to be the Waters or Fluid this Author
+means, upon which his Mountains stood; then the rest of the Earth, as it
+came to be form’d, must be continu’d and join’d with these Mountains,
+and in like Manner laid over the Waters; so as in this Method, you see,
+we should have an Orb of Earth built over the Abyss. This is a very
+favourable Stroke for the Theorist, and grants him in Effect his
+principal Conclusion, _viz._ That the _first ante diluvian Earth was
+built over the Abyss_: This being admitted, there could be no universal
+Deluge without a Disruption of that Earth, and an Eruption of the Abyss,
+which is a main Point gain’d. And ’tis plain we make no false Logick in
+collecting this from his Principles and Concessions: For, as we said
+before, if these Mountains were founded upon the Abyss, they must have a
+Continuity and Conjunction with the rest of the Surface of the Earth, if
+they were such as our Mountains are now, and so all the habitable Earth
+must be spread upon the Abyss.
+
+But still he hath another Difficulty to encounter, how the great Chanel
+of the Sea was made upon this Supposition: Why was not that Part of the
+Globe fill’d up by the Descent of the earthy Particles of the Chaos as
+well as the rest? The Chanel of the Ocean is commonly suppos’d to take
+up half of the Globe, how came this gaping Gulph to remain unfill’d,
+seeing it was encompass’d with the Chaos as well as any other Parts? Was
+the Motion of the Particles suspended from descending upon that Part of
+the Globe; or were they fill’d up at first, and afterwards thrown out
+again to make room for the Sea? This may deserve his Consideration, as
+well as the Mountains: And how dextrous soever this Author may be in
+other Things I know not, but, in my Mind, he hath no good Hand in making
+Mountains; and I’m afraid he would have no better Success in forming the
+Chanel of the Sea, which he is wisely pleased to take no Notice of.
+
+And indeed the Examiner seems to be sensible himself that he hath no
+good Luck in assigning the _efficient Causes_ of Mountains from the
+Chaos, and therefore he is willing to bear off from that Point, and to
+lay the whole Stress upon their _final Causes_, without any regard to
+their Origin, or how they came first into being. His Words are these,
+_p._ 52. _But supposing the efficient Causes of Mountains unknown, or
+impossible to be assign’d, yet still there remain the final Causes to be
+enquir’d into, which will do as well for our Purpose_, with what follows
+there concerning those Authors that exclude final Causes. If there be
+such Authors, let them answer for themselves, the Theorist is not
+concern’d. Grant the first Point, that Mountains could not arise from
+any known efficient Causes in the first Concretion of the Chaos, or in
+the first habitable Earth that rose from it, the Theorist readily allows
+(as appears fully in the two last Chapters of the second Book of the
+_Eng. Theor._) the Use of final Causes in the Contemplation of Nature,
+as being great Arguments of the Wisdom and Goodness of God. But this
+ought not to exclude the efficient Causes in a _Theory_, otherwise it
+would be no _Theory_, but a Work of another Nature. Though a Man knew
+the final Cause of a Watch or Clock, namely, to tell him the Hour of the
+Day, yet, if he did not know the Construction of its Parts, what was the
+Spring of Motion, what the Order of the Wheels, and how they mov’d the
+Hand of the Dial, he could not be said to understand that little
+Machine; or at least not to understand it so well as he that knew the
+Construction and Dependence of all its Parts, in virtue whereof that
+Effect was brought to pass. In many Cases we do not understand the final
+Causes, and in many we do not understand the efficient; but,
+notwithstanding, we must endeavour, so far as we are able, to join and
+understand them both; the End and the Means to it: For by the one, as
+well as the other, the divine Power and Wisdom are illustrated; and
+seeing every Effect hath its efficient Cause, if we cannot reach it, we
+must acknowledge our Speculations to be so far imperfect.
+
+After this Excursion about final Causes, he concludes, _p._ 54. _That it
+is impossible to subsist or live without Rocks or Mountains_;
+consequently no Earth is habitable without Rocks and Mountains. But how
+can he tell this? Hath he been all over the Universe to make his
+Observations? or hath he had a Revelation to tell him that there is no
+one habitable Planet throughout all the Works of God, but what is of the
+same Form with our Earth as to Rocks and Mountains. Who hath ever
+observ’d Mountains and Rocks in _Jupiter_, or in the Remains of
+_Saturn_? I should think such a general Assertion as he makes, a bold
+and unwarrantable Limitation of the divine Omniscience and Omnipotency.
+Who dares conclude that the infinite Wisdom and Power of God is confin’d
+to one single Mode or Fabrick of an habitable World? We know there are
+many Planets about our Sun besides this Earth, and of different
+Positions and Constructions: Neither do we know but there may be as many
+about other Suns, or fix’d Stars: Must we suppose that they are all cast
+in the same Mold? that they are all formed after the Model of our Earth,
+with Mountains and Rocks, and Gulphs and Caverns?
+
+ _Urbem, quam dicunt Romam, Melibœe, putavi
+ Stultus ego, huic nostræ similem._
+
+This was the Judgment of the Shepherd, who could imagine nothing
+different, or nothing better than his own Town or Village; those may
+imitate him that please. ’Tis true, _Suum cuique pulchrum_, is an usual
+Saying, but we think that to proceed from Fondness rather, and
+Self-Conceit, than from a true and impartial Judgment of Things. In
+contemplating the Works of God, we ought to have Respect to his Almighty
+and Infinite Wisdom, τῆν πολυπαίκιλον σοφίαν, _multiformem sapientiam
+Dei_, rather than to the Measures of our own Experience and
+Understanding. We may remember how an[23] Heathen hath upbraided and
+derided that Narrowness of Spirit, _Quæ tantæ sunt animi angustiæ, ut si
+Seryphi natus esses, nec unquam egrossus ex Insulá, in quâ Lepusculos
+Vulpeculasque sæpe vidisses, non crederes Leones & Pantheras esse, cúm
+tibi quales essent diceretur: Si verò de Elephanto quis diceret, etiam
+rideri te putares._ We may as well say, that there can be no Animals of
+another Form from those we have upon this Earth, as that there can be no
+Worlds, or habitable Earths of another Form and Structure from the
+present Earth. _An quicquam tam puerile dici potest_, says the same
+Author, _quám si ea genera belluarum quæ in Rubro mari, Indiâve
+gignantur, nulla esse dicamus? Atqui ne curiosissimi quidem homines
+exquirendo andire tam multa possunt, quam sunt multa quæ Terræ, Mari,
+Paludibus, Fluminibus existunt; quæ negemus esse quia nunquam vidimus?_
+I mention such Instances to shew, that ’tis Rashness or Folly, to
+confine the Varieties of Providence and Nature, to the narrow Compass of
+what we have seen, or of what falls under our Imagination. This is a
+more _strange and assuming Boldness_, as he terms it, _p._ 54 than what
+he ascribes to the Theorist for saying, We can observe no Order in the
+Situation of Mountains, nor Regularity in their Form and Shape. If the
+Examiner knows any, why does he not tell us what it is, and wherein it
+consists? Is it necessary that Mountains should be exact Pyramids or
+Cones, or any of the regular Bodies? or rang’d upon the Earth in Rank
+and File, or in a quincuncial Order, or like pretty Garden-Knots? If
+they had been design’d for Beauty, this might have done well; but
+Providence seems on Purpose to have left these Irregularities in their
+Figure and Site, as Marks and Signatures to us, that they are the
+Effects of a Ruin.
+
+But to shew farther and more particularly the Necessity of Mountains,
+the Examiner says, _p._ 55. and 61. Without them ’tis impossible there
+should be Rivers, or without Rivers an habitable World. Neither of these
+Propositions seems to me to be sure; they run still upon
+Impossibilities, which is a nice Topick, and lies much out of our Reach.
+I think Vapours may be condens’d other Ways than by Mountains, and an
+Earth might be so fram’d, as to give a Course to Rivers, though there
+were no particular Mountains, if the general Figure of it was higher in
+one Part than another. Then as to the absolute Necessity of Rivers, to
+make an Earth habitable, that is questionable too. We are told by good
+Authors, of some Countries or Islands that have no Rivers or Springs,
+and yet are habitable and fruitful, being water’d by Dews. This may give
+us an Advertisement, from a Part to the Whole, that an Earth may be made
+habitable without Rivers. If at first Vapours ascended, and fell down in
+Dews, so as to _water the whole Face of the Earth_, _Gen._ ii. 6. God
+might, if he had pleas’d, have continued the same Course of Nature. And
+it is the Opinion of many Interpreters, and seems to have been an
+antient Tradition, that there was no Rain till the Deluge. If there was
+no Rainbow in the first Earth, (which I think the Theorist hath
+undeniably prov’d, _Theor._ _Book_ II. _c._ 5.) it will be hard to prove
+that there were then any watery Clouds in the habitable Parts of the
+Earth. And our best[24] Observators will allow no Clouds or Rains in the
+Moon, (and some of them no Rivers,) yet will not suppose the Moon
+unhabitable. To conclude, ’tis a great Vanity to say no worse, for
+short-sighted Creatures, and of narrow Understandings, to prescribe to
+Providence what is necessary and indispensable to the Frame and Order of
+an habitable World.
+
+We proceed to his fourth Chapter; which is to shew the Inconveniencies
+that would fall upon the Inhabitants of the Earth, in case it had such a
+Posture as the Theorist hath assign’d to the ante-diluvian Earth:
+Namely, that its Axis was parallel to the Axis of the Ecliptick, or
+perpendicular to its Plane, and not oblique as it stands now. But will
+this Author vouch, that there are no habitable Planets in the Universe,
+or even about our Sun, that have this Posture which he blames so much?
+_Jupiter_ is known to have a perpetual Equinox, and his Axis parallel to
+the Axis of the Ecliptick; and _Mars_ hath little or no Obliquity that
+is observable. And must this be a Reflection upon Providence? Or must we
+suppose, that these Planets have no Inhabitants, or that their
+Habitations are very bad and incommodious? _Jupiter_ is the noblest
+Planet we have in our Heaven, whether you consider its Magnitude, or the
+Number of its Attendants. If then a Planet of that Order and Dignity,
+have such a Position and Aspect to the Sun, why might not our Earth have
+had the same, proper to that State, and agreeable to the Divine Wisdom?
+Yet he is so bold as to say, or suppose, _p._ 66. That _this cannot well
+agree with the infinite Wisdom of its Maker_; as if he was able to make
+a Measure or Standard for all the Works of God. ’Tis a crude and
+injudicious Thing, from a few Particulars, the rest unknown, to make an
+universal Conclution, which forward Wits are apt to do. Πρὸς ὀλίγα
+ἐπιθλεψάμενετ.—_Ad pauca respiciens, facile pronuncias_, was
+_Aristotle_’s Observation of old, and it holds in all Ages.
+
+This Examiner, _p._ 76. censures the Theorist very rudely, for making
+use of _physical Causes_, and not arguing from _final Causes_, which, he
+says, _are the true Principles of natural Philosophy_. But, if this be
+the Use he makes of final Causes, to tell God Almighty what is best to
+be done, in this or that World, I had rather content myself with
+_physical Causes_, to know what God hath done, and conclude it to be the
+best, and that we should judge it so, if we had the same Extent of
+Thought and Prospect its Maker had. There are indeed some _final Causes_
+that are so manifest, that I should think it Sottishness or Obstinacy
+for a Man to deny them; but I should also think that Man presumptuous,
+that should pretend to draw the Scheme and Plan of every World, from his
+Idea of _final Causes_. There are some Men that mightily cry out against
+_Reason_, yet none more fond of it than they are, when they can get it
+on their Side: So some Men inveigh against _physical Causes_, when
+others make use of them, and yet as gladly as any make use of them
+themselves, when they can make them serve their Purpose; and when they
+cannot reach them, then they despise them, and are all for _final
+Causes_. This Author says, _p._ 63. God always _chuses such
+Constitutions and Positions of Things, as bring with them the greatest
+Good and Utility to the Universe_. Very true, to the _Universe_? but who
+made him judge what is best to the Universe? Does he look upon this
+Earth as the Universe, whereof it is but a small Particle, or an Atom in
+comparison? Must there be no Variety in the numberless Worlds which God
+hath made? Must they all be one and the same Thing repeated again and
+again? That I’m sure does not _well agree with the infinite Wisdom and
+Power of God_.
+
+But suppose we did confine our Thoughts to this Earth, we may be assur’d
+that it hath undergone and will undergo, within the Compass of its
+Duration, very different States, and yet all accommodate to Providence.
+Those that suppose the Heavens and the Earth never to have had any other
+Constitution and Construction than what they have now, or that there
+hath never been any great Change and Revolution in our natural World,
+follow the very Doctrine which St. _Peter_ opposes and confutes in his
+_second Epistle_, Chap. 3. I mean the Doctrine of those _Scoffers_, as
+he calls them, who said, _All Things_, the Heavens and the Earth, _have
+remained in the same State they are in now, from the Beginning_, or from
+the Creation, and are to continue so. In Confutation of this Opinion,
+St. _Peter_ there minds them of the Change made at the Deluge, and of
+the different Constitution and Construction of the Heavens and the
+Earth, before and after the Deluge, whereby they were dispos’d to
+undergo a different Fate, one by Water, and the other by Fire. And he
+tells us in the same Place, that after the Conflagration, there will be
+_new Heaven_; and a _new Earth_: So that there is no one fix’d and
+permanent State even of this Earth, according to the Will and Wisdom of
+Providence. But enough hath been said by the Theorist upon this Subject
+(_Theor. Lat._ _l._ 1. _c._ 1 & 2. _Review_, p. 160. _&c._ _Archæol._
+_l._ 2. _c._ 3, 5, 6.) And if they will not consider the Arguments
+propos’d there, ’twould be in vain to repeat them here.
+
+These Things premis’d, let’s consider what Inconveniencies are alledged,
+or what Arguments against that Equality of Seasons, or the grand Cause
+of them, the Parallelism of the Axis of the Earth, with the Axis of the
+Sun. He says, upon this Supposition, there is more Heat now in the
+Climates of the Earth, than could have been then. And what if there be?
+Whether his Computation (which is aim’d against another Author) be true
+or false, ’tis little to the _Theory_: If the Heat was equal and
+moderate in the temperate and habitable Climates, who would desire the
+extreme Heats of Summer? But he says, _p._ 66. That Heat would not be
+sufficient for the Generation of Vegetables. How does that appear?
+supposing that Heat constant throughout the whole Year. Does he think
+there are no Vegetables in _Jupiter_, which hath still the same Position
+the Theorist gave to the ante-diluvian Earth. And as to Heat, that
+Planet is at vastly a greater Distance from the Sun than our Earth, and
+consequently hath so much less Heat; yet I cannot believe that great
+Planet to be only a huge Lump of bald and barren Earth. As to our
+ante-diluvian Earth, ’tis probable that the Constitution of Plants and
+Animals, was different then from what it is now, as their Longevity was
+different, to which any Excesses of Heat or Cold are noxious; and the
+Frequency and Multiplicity of Generations and Corruptions in the present
+Earth, is Part of that Vanity to which it was subjected. But this
+Examiner says moreover, If the first Earth had that Position, the
+greatest Part of it would not be habitable. But how much less habitable
+would it be than the present Earth? where the open Sea, which was not
+then, takes up half of its Surface, and makes it unhabitable. ’Tis
+likely the torrid Zone was unhabitable in that Earth; but ’tis probable
+the Poles or Polar Parts were more habitable than they are now, seeing
+they would have the Sun, or rather Half-Sun perpetually in their
+Horizon: And as to the temperate Climates, as we call them, they would
+be under such a gentle and constant Warmth, as would be more grateful to
+the Inhabitants, and more proper and effectual for a continual Verdure
+and Vegetation, than any Region of the present Earth is now.
+
+But this Objector does not consider, on the other hand, what an hard
+Life they would lead in those Days, at least in many Parts of the Earth,
+if the Seasons of the Year were the same they are now, and they confin’d
+to Herbs, Fruits, and Water; for that was the Diet of Mankind till the
+Deluge. Should we not think it an unmerciful Imposition now, to be
+interdicted the Use of Flesh-Meat all the Year long? Or rather is it
+possible that the Life of Man could be supported by Herbs and Fruits,
+and Water in the colder Climates, where the Winters are so long and
+barren, and the Cold so vehement? But, if you suppose a perpetual Spring
+throughout the Earth, the Heavens mild, and the Juices of Fruits and
+Plants more nutritive, that Objection would cease, and their Longevity
+be more intelligible.
+
+We come now to the Causes of the Change in the Posture of the Earth,
+where the Theorist hath set down his Conjectures, what he thought the
+most probable to be the Occasion of it: Namely, either some Inequality
+in the Libration of the Earth, after it was dissolved and broken; or a
+Change in the Magnetism of its Body, consequent upon its Dissolution,
+and the different Situation of its Parts. But this Examiner will neither
+allow any Change to have been made in the Position of the Earth since
+the Beginning of the World; nor, if there was a Change, that it could be
+made from such Causes. The first of these Points you see is Matter of
+Fact; and so it must be prov’d, partly by History, and partly by Reason.
+Some Things are noted before, which argue that the ante-diluvian Earth
+was different from the present, in its Frame and Constitution, as also
+in reference to the Heavens; and the Places are referred to, where the
+Matter is treated more largely by the Theorist. If it be granted, that
+there was a permanent Change made in the State of Nature at the Deluge,
+or any other Time, but deny’d that it was made by a Change of the
+Situation of the Earth, and the Consequences of it, then this Writer
+must assign some other Change made, which would have the same Effects;
+that is, which will answer and agree with the Phænomena of the first
+Earth, and also of the present. When this is done, if it be clear and
+convictive, we must acquiesce in it: But I do not see that it is so much
+as attempted by this Author.
+
+This suppos’d Change, I say, is Matter of Fact, and therefore we must
+consult History and Reason for the Proof or Disproof of it. As to
+History, the Theorist hath cited to this Purpose _Leucippus_,
+_Anaxagoras_, _Democritus_, _Empedocles_, _Plato_ and _Diogenes_. These
+were the most renowned Philosophers amongst the Antients; and all these
+speak of an Inclination of the Earth or the Poles, which hath been made
+in former Ages. These, one would think, might be allow’d as good
+Witnesses of a former Tradition concerning a Change in the Situation of
+the Earth, when nothing is brought against them. And this Change is
+particularly call’d by _Plato_ ἀναρμοσία or ἀνωμαλία, a Disharmony or
+Disconcerting of the Motions of the Heavens, which he makes the Source
+and Origin of the present Evils and Inconveniencies of Nature. Besides,
+he dates this Change from the Expiration of the Reign of _Saturn_, or
+when _Jupiter_ came to take the Government upon him: And this, you know,
+in the Style of those Times, signifies the End of the Golden Age. Thus
+far _Plato_ carries the Tradition: Now, the Poets tell us expressly that
+there was a _perpetual Spring_, or a perpetual Equinox in the Time of
+_Saturn_, and that the Inequality of the Year, or the Diversity of
+Seasons was first introduc’d by _Jupiter_. The Authors and Places are
+known and noted by the Theorist; I need not repeat them here. You see
+what this Evidence amounts to, both that there hath been a Change, and
+such a Change, as alter’d the Course of the Year, and brought in a
+Vicissitude of Seasons; and this according to the Doctrines or
+Traditions remaining amongst the Heathens. The _Jews_ and _Christians_
+say the same Thing, but in another Manner: They do not speak of the
+Golden Age, nor of the Reign of _Saturn_ or _Jupiter_, but of the State
+of Paradise, or _Gan-Eden_; and concerning that, they say the same
+Things, which the Heathen Authors say, in different Words. The _Jews_
+make a perpetual Equinox in Paradise, the _Christians_ a perpetual
+Serenity, a perpetual Spring; and this cannot be without a different
+Situation of the Earth from what it hath now. He may see the Citations
+if he please, in the _Theory_, or _Archæologia_.
+
+It were to be wish’d, that this Examiner would look a little into
+Antiquity, when he hath Time: It may be, that would awaken him into new
+Thoughts, and a more favourable Opinion of the Theory as to this
+Particular. Give me leave to mind him in his own Way, what some antient
+Astronomers have said relating to this Subject. _Baptista Mantuanus_,
+speaking of the Longevity of the Ante-Diluvians, says, _Erant illis, ut
+Astronomia & Experimento constat, Cœli propitiores; volunt namque
+Astronomi_, _&c._ This he explains by an uniform and concentrical Motion
+of the Heavens and the Earth, at that Time; to which he imputes the
+great Virtue of their Herbs and Fruit, and the long Lives of their
+Animals. _Petrus Aponensis_, who liv’d above an Age before _Mantuan_,
+give us much what the same Account: For making an Answer to this
+Question, _utrum natura humania sit debilitata ab eo quod antiquitus,
+necne?_ He says, _Cum capita Zodiaci mobilis & immobilis ordinati &
+directè concurrebant, tunc virtus perfectiori modò à primo principio per
+medias causastaliter ordinatas fortiori modo imprimebatur in ista
+inferiora, cum causæ tunc sib invicem correspondeant——Propter quod
+concludendum est, tunc naturam humanam illo tempore, ut sic fortiorem &
+longæviorem extitisse._ I give it in his own Words as they are in his
+_Conciliator. Differ. 9._
+
+_Georgius Pictorius_, or an Author under his Name, unto the same
+Question about the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians, gives a like Answer
+from the same Astronomer, in these Words: _Petrus Aponensis adsert
+rationem, & pro vario cursu & dispositione coelorum modo vitam humanam
+breviari, modo produci seribit. Ex Astronomiá argumentum colligens, cùm
+ait duos Zodiacos, unum in noná sphærâ, alterum in octava (quam
+Firmamentum vocani) in initio rerum & temporum, sic à Deo fuisse
+dispositos, ut Aries Arieti, Taurus Tauro, Geminis Gemini jungerentur: &
+amborum cocuntibus in unum viribus fortior in Terras fieret fluxus. Unde
+herbas tunc salubriores & fructus terræ meliores, & longiores vitas
+animantium fuisse affirmat. Sed dennò illá syderali dissolutá ab invicem
+per motum societate, totum ait inferiorem mundum ægrotare, atque per
+decrementum claudicare cæpisse._ This, you see, is Astronomy in an
+old-fashion’d Dress; but you can easily take off the Disguise, and apply
+it to the true System of the Heavens. The same Author refers you, for a
+more full Explication of that Matter, to his _Lectiones succisivæ, Dial.
+prim._ which Book I have not yet had an Opportunity to see. I believe it
+is in his _Opera Philologica_, printed in _Octavo_ at _Basil_.
+
+But since the first writing of the Theory, there have been _Æthiopick_
+Antiquities produc’d from an Abyssine Philosopher, and transmitted to us
+by _Francisco Patricio_ in his Dialogues. If that Account he gives of
+the _Æthiopian Archæologia_ be true and genuine, they exceed all other
+upon this Subject: for they do not only mention this Particular, of the
+Unity of Seasons in the primitive Earth, but the other principal Parts
+of the Theory: As the Concussion and Fraction of the Earth; that the
+Face of it before was smooth and uniform, and upon that Disruption it
+came into another Form, with Mountains, Rocks, Sea and Islands. These
+and other such Characters are mentioned there, whereof the Examiner may
+see an Account, if he please, in the last Edition of the _English
+Theory_, p. 189. The Story indeed is surprizing, which way soever you
+take it, whether it was the Invention of that Abyssine Philosopher, or a
+real Tradition deriv’d from the _Æthiopian_ Gymnosophists. However that
+be, there are otherwise such conspicuous Footsteps in philosophick
+History, and in what may be call’d Ecclesiastick, amongst the _Jews_ and
+_Christians_, of some Revolution in the System of the World, as must
+give occasion to any thinking Man to suppose, that there hath been a
+Change made in the Situation of the Earth. This, by some of the
+forementioned Authors, is ascrib’d expresly to the Earth; and what by
+others (according to their Hypothesis) is ascrib’d to the higher
+Heavens, we know upon a just Interpretation belongs to the Earth. Those
+also that ascribe such Phænomena to Paradise, or the Golden Age, as are
+not intelligible upon any other Supposition, must also be referr’d to
+this Change of the Site or Posture of the Earth: So that upon all
+Accounts (mediately or immediately) the Matter of Fact, that the Earth
+hath undergone such a Change, is testified by History, Antiquity and
+Tradition. It deserves also to be observ’d, that there was a general
+Tradition amongst the Antients, concerning the Inhabitability of the
+Torrid Zone; which may be an Argument or Confirmation, that there was a
+State of Nature at one time or other, when this was true, and that such
+a general Opinion could not arise, and be continued so long without some
+Foundation.
+
+So much for History to determine Matter of Fact: Now as to Reason (which
+we mentioned as the other Head, to prove or disprove this Conclusion.)
+That the Form of the primitive Earth which is assign’d by the Theorist,
+being suppos’d, namely, that it was regular, uniform, and had an equal
+Libration, it would naturally take an even and parallel Position with
+the Axis of its Orbit, or of the Ecliptick, as is set down more at large
+in the Theory: Nor can any Reason be alledg’d to the contrary. ’Tis
+true, this Examiner, _p. 83._ notwithstanding any Uniformity and
+Equilibration of that Earth, pretends it would be indifferent to any
+Position, or _retain any Position given, as a Sphere will do, put in a
+Fluid_. This might be, if that Sphere or Globe was resting; but if it
+was turn’d about its Axis, and the Axis of the Fluid (which is the
+present Case) it would certainly take a Position parallel to the Axis of
+its Fluid, if there was no other Impediment.
+
+The Matter of Fact being settled with the Cause of it, what the Causes
+of the Change were, is more problematical. The Philosophers forecited
+gave their Reason; _Aristarchus Samius_ gives another, and a _Comet_ by
+some is made the occasion of it: The Theorist thinks that the
+Dissolution of the Earth was the fundamental Cause, and that the Change
+came to pass at that time, as many Indications and Arguments shew. And
+as to the immediate Cause or Causes of it, I know none more probable
+than what the Theorist hath proposed; _Eng. Theor._ _p. 267._ Either the
+Change of its Center of Gravity, or of its Magnetism; the Line of
+Direction to those magnetick Particles, and their passing through the
+Earth being so alter’d, as to turn the Earth into another Posture, and
+hold it there. As to those Expressions that he seems to quarrel with, of
+the Inclination of the Earth, or the Pole, towards the Sun, ’tis the
+Expression of the antient Philosophers, tho’ I think it might more
+properly be called an Obliquation. Then that the former State is called
+_situs rectus_, is another Expression which he finds fault with; though
+every one sees that a _right Situation_ in such Places, is opposed to an
+_oblique_, or inclined Position to the Axis of the Sun or Ecliptick, and
+had been called _parallel_ in several other Places; and which he
+himself, _p. 71._ sometimes, as well as other Authors, call a right
+Position. This is but trifling about Words: If he grants that the
+primitive Earth being uniform, and consequently equally pois’d, its Axis
+would be parallel (which for shortness, is sometimes call’d _right_) to
+the Axis of its Orbit, and is now in a different and oblique Posture,
+this is all the Theorist desires, as to Matter of Fact. I conceive the
+whole Matter thus: When the Earth was in that even and parallel Posture
+with the Axis of the Sun, it had a perpetual Equinox and Unity of
+Seasons, the Equator and Ecliptick being coincident: And as to the
+Heavens, they with the fix’d Stars mov’d or seem’d to move uniformly and
+concentrically with the Earth. But when the Earth chang’d its Posture to
+that which it hath now, the Year became unequal, and the Equator and
+Ecliptick became distinct Circles, or, if you will, a new Circle arose
+from the Distinction. The Earth in the mean time continuing its annual
+Course in the Ecliptick, had the Position of its Axis chang’d to a
+Parallelism with the Axis of the Equator, which it holds throughout the
+whole Year. As to the Heavens, they seem’d to turn upon another Axis, or
+other Poles than they did before, and different from those of the Sun or
+the Earth: And this fundamental Change in the Site of the Earth, had a
+farther Chain of Consequences, as is noted by the Theorist, in reference
+to the State both of the animate and inanimate World, This is, in short,
+the State of the Case, which is sometimes express’d in different Terms,
+especially by the Antients, who generally followed another System of the
+Heavens and the Earth, and were not always accurate in their
+Expressions.
+
+This Author would square and conform all the Planets to the Model of the
+present Earth: Whereas there is _Diversity of Administrations_ in the
+natural World, as well as spiritual, yet the same Providence every
+where. The Axes of the Planets are not all parallel to that of the Sun,
+nor all oblique; and those that are so, have not all the same Degrees of
+Obliquity, yet we have Reason to think them all habitable. In some there
+are no different Seasons of the Year, and in some they differ in another
+manner than ours; and the Periods of their Years are very different. In
+like manner, as to the Days, in some they are longer, in others shorter:
+In the _Moon_ a Day lasts fourteen or fifteen of our Days, and their
+Nights are proportionably longer than our Nights. In _Jupiter_, the Days
+are but of five Hours, and so the Nights; that Planet being turned in
+ten Hours about his Axis. In _Mercury_ we know little what the Seasons
+or Days are, but its Year must be much shorter than ours; as also is
+that of _Venus_; and their Heat from the Sun, must be much greater.
+_Jupiter_ and _Saturn_ are at vast Distances from the Sun, and must
+proportionably have less Heat; and _Saturn_ must have a greater
+Difference of Summer and Winter than we have, by reason of his greater
+Obliquity to the Sun. These and such like Observations, show what Vanity
+it is to make an universal Standard from the State of our Earth: Or to
+say, this is best, and to make Things otherwise, would be inconsistent
+with the _infinite Wisdom of their Maker_, as this Examiner, _p. 66._
+pretends to do.
+
+But to return to his Objections: This he suggests, _ibid._ as one, that
+in case of a perpetual Equinox, the annual Motion of the Earth about the
+Sun would be to no Purpose. Of this we are no competent Judges, no more
+than of the other Differences foremention’d in the Conditions of the
+Planets. Yet, in that Case, a Distinction and Computation of Time might
+be made, by their Aspect to the different Signs of the Zodiack. There
+may be, (for any Thing we know,) in the Extent of the Universe, Planets,
+or great opaque Bodies, that have no Course about their Suns, for
+Reasons best known to their Maker; and others that have no diurnal
+Motion about their Axes: Nor ought such States, tho’ very different from
+ours, to be concluded incongruous. If this Objection of his were of any
+Force, it would lie against _Jupiter_ as well as against the
+ante-diluvian Earth. And this minds me of his Objection taken from
+_Saturn_ and _Jupiter_, whose Axes, he says, are Inclined to the Axis of
+the Ecliptick; and yet, according to the Theorist, they have suffer’d no
+Deluge. This is an unhappy Argument, for I think it hath two Errors in
+it: But let us set down his Words, that there may be no Mistake or
+Misrepresentation, _p. 76._ _Another Argument which may be brought to
+convince the Theorist that the Axis of the Earth was at first inclined
+to the Plane of the Ecliptick is, that it is certain by Observation,
+that Saturn and Jupiter (whom the Theorist will allow to have suffered
+no Deluge as yet) have their Axes not perpendicular, but inclined to the
+Planets of their Orbits; and the Position is true of all the other
+Planets, as far as they can be observ’d. And therefore, &c._ First, as
+to _Saturn_, I’m sure the Theorist never thought that Planet to be now
+in its original Form, but to be broken, and to have already suffer’d a
+Dissolution, as you may see in both Theories, _English_ and _Latin_[25].
+Then as to the Position of _Jupiter_, I know not whence he has this
+_certain_ Observation, that its Axis is oblique to the Plane of its
+Orbit: For[26] _Hugenius_ tells us just the contrary, and that it hath a
+perpetual Equinox. Let these Things be examin’d, and hereafter let us be
+cautious how we take Things upon the Examiner’s Word, if he be found to
+have committed two Faults in one Objection.
+
+Farthermore, he intimates, (_p. 94._) that the Theorist hath no Mind to
+the Notion of _Attraction_; I believe so too, nor in Philosophy to any
+other Notion that is unconceivable. He must tell us how this
+_Attraction_ differs from an _occult Quality_, whether it is a
+mechanical Principle or no; and if not, from what Principle it arises.
+When he hath told us this, we shall be better able to judge of it.
+
+After all, to conclude this Chapter, the one grand Question with the
+Theorist (whatsoever there may be with other Authors) is this, _whether_
+the Earth has chang’d its Situation since the Beginning of the World:
+And that it has done so, the Theorist does still positively maintain.
+
+Having insisted more largely upon these four first Chapters, as being
+most fundamental in the Controversy, we shall dispatch more readily this
+fifth and the seventh, leaving the sixth Chapter to a more particular
+Disquisition in the last Place.
+
+This fifth Chapter is designed against the Rivers of the primitive
+Earth, according to that Origin and Derivation that is given them by the
+Theorist. But it is to be noted in the first Place, that supposing they
+had any other Origin or Course than what is there assign’d (excepting
+only an Origin from Mountains,) the _Theory_ continues still in Force.
+For this Point about the Waters of the first Earth, and the Explication
+of them, is one of those Explications that admit of Latitude and
+Variety; and therefore as to the _Theory_, the Question is only this,
+_Whether_ an habitable Earth may have Rivers without Mountains. For if
+any Earth may have them without Mountains, why not the primitive Earth?
+Now it will be hard for the Examiner, or any other, to prove, that in
+every World, where there are Waters and Rivers, there are Mountains. We
+intimated before, that the general Frame of an Earth might be such as
+would give a Course to Waters without particular Mountains. But we will
+leave that at present to a farther Consideration, and observe now what
+his Proofs are, that there could be no Rivers in the primitive Earth.
+
+First he says, _p. 87._ _According to the Theorist’s Own Hypothesis,
+there could be no Rivers for a long Time after the Formation of the
+Earth_. Where is this said by the Theorist? His Hypothesis supposes,
+that the soft and moist Earth could not but afford Store of Vapours at
+first, as this Author in another Place hath noted for the Sense of the
+Theorist, (_p. 86._) and now he says the quite contrary: The Chanels of
+the Rivers indeed would not be so deep and hollow at first as they are
+now, their Cavities being wrought by Degrees; but still there would not
+want Vapours to supply them.
+
+Then he says, _p. 88._ when that first Moisture of the Earth was
+lessened, there could be no Supply of Vapours from the Abyss; seeing the
+Heat of the Sun could not reach so far, nor raise Vapours from it, or at
+least not in a sufficient Quantity, as he pretends to prove hereafter:
+But in the mean Time he speaks of great Cracks or Pits, whose Dimensions
+and Capacities he examines at Pleasure, and by these he makes the
+Theorist to suppose the Vapours to ascend. Now I do not find that the
+Theorist makes any Mention of these Pits, nor any Use of those Cracks
+for that Purpose. The only Question is, whether the Heat of the Sun in
+that Earth would reach so low as the Abyss, when the Earth was more
+dried, a»d its Pores enlarg’d: So that this Objection, as he states it,
+seems to refer to some other Author.
+
+But now supposing the Vapours rais’d, he considers what Course they
+would take, or which Way they would move in the open Air. But before
+that be examin’d, we must take Notice how unfairly he deals with the
+Theorist, when he seems to make him suppose, _p. 94, 95._ that Mountains
+_make way for the Motion and Dilatation of the Vapours_; which he never
+suppos’d, nor is it possible he should suppose it in the first Earth,
+where there were no Mountains. Neither does the Theorist suppose, as
+this Author would insinuate, that Mountains or Cold dilate Vapours, but
+on the contrary, that they _stop_ and _compress them_, as the Words are
+cited, even by the Examiner a little before, _p. 86._
+
+Then as to the Course of the Vapours, when they are rais’d, the Theorist
+supposes that would be towards the Poles and the coldest Climates. But
+this Author says, _p. 97._ they would all move Westward, or from East to
+West; _there being a continual Wind blowing from the East to West,
+according to the Motion of the Sun_. Whether that Wind come from the
+Motion of the Sun, or of the Earth, (which is contrary,) is another
+Question; but however, let them move at first to the West, the Question
+here is, _Where they would be condens’d_, or where they would fall. And
+there is little Probability that their Condensation would be under the
+Equator, where they are most agitated, but rather by an Impulse of new
+Vapours, they would soon divert towards the Poles, and losing their
+Agitation there, would fall in Dews or Rains. Which Condensation being
+made, and a Passage open’d that Way for new ones to supply their Places,
+there would be a continual Draught of Vapours, from the hotter to the
+colder Parts of the Earth.
+
+We proceed now to the seventh Chapter, which is in a good Measure upon
+the same or a like Subject with this, namely, concerning the Penetration
+of the Heat of the Sun into the Body of the Earth. This, he says, _p.
+148._ cannot be to any considerable Depth; nor could it pass the
+exterior Orb of the first Earth, and affect the Abyss, or raise Vapours
+from it. To prove this, he supposes that exterior Earth divided into so
+many Surfaces as he pleases, then supposing the Heat diminished in every
+Surface, he concludes it could not possibly pass through so many. Thus
+you may divide an Inch into an hundred or a thousand Surfaces, and prove
+from thence, that no Heat of the Sun could pierce through an Inch of
+Earth. We must rather consider Pores than Surfaces in this Case; and
+whether those Pores were straight or oblique, the Motion would pass
+however, though not the Light: And the Heat of the Sun might have its
+Effect, by a direct or indirect Motion, to a great Depth within the
+Earth, notwithstanding the Multitude of Surfaces that he imagines. Those
+that think a Comet, upon its nearer Approach to the Sun, would be
+pierc’d with its Heat through and through; and to such a Degree, as to
+become much hotter than red hot Iron, will not think it strange, that at
+our Distance from the Sun, its Heat should have some proportionable
+Effect upon the inward Parts of the Earth. And all those imaginary solid
+Surfaces do not hinder, you see, the magnetick Particles from running
+through the Body of the Earth, and making the Globe one great Magnet.
+
+But let those Considerations have what Effect they can, this Supposition
+however is nothing peculiar to the Theorist. I know some learned Men
+think the Heat of the Sun does penetrate deep into the Bowels of the
+Earth; others think it does not, and either of them have their
+Arguments. These alledge the equal Temper of Vaults and Mines at
+different Seasons of the Year: The other say, ’tis true, subterraneous
+Places keep their Equality of Temper much better than the external Air,
+and those Differences that appear to us, are in a great Measure by
+comparison with the Temper of our Bodies. Then for their own Opinion,
+they take an Argument from the Generation of Metals and Minerals in the
+Bowels of the Earth, and other subterraneous Fossiles. These, we see,
+are ripen’d by degrees in several Ages, and cannot, as they think, be
+brought to Maturity, and raised into the exterior Earth, without the
+Heat and Influence of the Sun: Of the same Sun that actuates all the
+vegetable World, that quickens Seeds, and raises Juices into the Roots
+of our deepest, and Tops of our highest Oaks and Cedars.
+
+But let this remain a Problem; I will instance in another remarkable
+Phænomenon, which is most for the present Purpose, I mean Earthquakes.
+Let us consider the Causes of them, and the Depths of them: I think all
+agree, that Earthquakes arise from the Rarefaction of Vapours and
+Exhalations, and that this Rarefaction must be made by some Heat; and no
+other is yet proved to us by this Author than that of the Sun. Then as
+to the Depth of Earthquakes, we find they are deeper than the Bottom of
+the Sea: For, besides that they communicate with different Countries
+divided by the Sea, they are found sometimes to arise within the Sea,
+and from the Bottom of it, at great Depths. This seems to prove, that
+there may be a strong Rarefaction of Vapours and Exhalations far within
+the Bowels of the Earth; and the Theorist desires no more. If in the
+present Constitution of the Earth, there may be such Concussions and
+Subversions for a great Extent, we have no Reason to believe, but there
+might be (at a Time appointed by Providence) an universal Disruption, as
+that Earth was constituted. Finally, whatsoever the Causes of this
+Disruption and Dissolution were, ’tis certain there was a _Disruption of
+the Abyss_, and that Disruption universal as the Deluge was; which
+answers sufficiently the Design of the _Theory_. However, if he have a
+mind to see, how this agrees with History, both sacred and prophane, he
+may consult, if he pleases, what the Theorist hath noted upon that
+Argument, _Archæol. l. 2. c. 4._ besides other Places.
+
+But this Author says farther, That supposing such a Disruption of the
+Abyss, and Dissolution of the exterior Earth, no universal Deluge
+however could follow upon it; because there could not be Water enough
+left in the Abyss to make or occasion such a Deluge: For the Rivers of
+the Earth being then supply’d from the Abyss, by such a Time, or before
+the Time of the Deluge, he says, there would be no Water left in it.
+Thus he goes from one Extreme to another: Before he said, the Power of
+the Sun could not reach or affect the Abyss to draw out any Vapours from
+it; now he would make the Evaporation so excessive, that it would have
+emptied the great Abyss before the Deluge. This is a great Undertaking,
+and to make it good he takes a great Compass: He pretends to shew us,
+what Quantity of Water all the Rivers of the Earth throw into the Sea
+every Day; and beginning with the River _Po_, and taking his Measure
+from that, he supposes there are such a certain Number of equivalent
+Rivers upon the Face of the whole Earth; and if the _Po_ casts so much
+Water into the Sea, the rest will cast so much more, and in Conclusion
+so much as would empty the Abyss.
+
+You will easily believe, _Sir_, there must be great Uncertainties in
+this Computation: But, if that was certain, as it is far from it, still
+he goes upon Suppositions that are not allow’d by the Theorist. For,
+first, he supposes the Waters of the present Sea to be equal to the
+Waters of the great Abyss: Whereas, supposing them of the same Depth,
+there would be near twice as much Water in the _great Deep_, as is now
+in the Ocean; seeing the Abyss was extended under the whole Earth, and
+the Sea reaches but to half of it. Secondly, He should prove that the
+Rivers of the ante-diluvian Earth were as many, and as great, as we have
+now. The Torrid Zone then had none, and much less would serve the
+temperate Climates than is requisite now for the Earth. Besides, the
+Rivers of that Earth were not supplied by Vapours only from the Abyss,
+but also from all the Earth, and all the Waters upon the Earth: And when
+the Rivers were partly lost and spent in the Torrid Zone, they were in a
+great Measure exhal’d there, and drawn into the Air by the Heat of the
+Sun, and would fall again in another Place, to make new Rains and a new
+Supply to the Rivers. So, in like manner, when he supposes, _p. 158._
+the Rivers that were upon the Earth, at the Time of the Disruption or
+the great Deep, to have thrown themselves off the Land, as if they were
+lost; and makes a Computation how much Water all the Rivers of the Earth
+amount to: This, I say, is a needless Computation as to the present
+Purpose. For whatsoever Mass of Waters they amounted to, it would not be
+lost: If they fell down and joined with the Abyss, they would increase
+its Store, and be thrown up again by the Fall of the Fragments, making
+so much a greater Mass to overflow the Earth; So that nothing is gain’d
+by this Supposition. The Effect would be the same as to the Deluge:
+Whether the Waters above the Earth, and those under the Earth met
+together sooner or later, when their Forces were joined, they would
+still have the same Effect, as we said before of the Vapours. And to
+conclude that Point, the whole Sum of Waters, or Vapours convertible
+into Waters, that were from the Beginning, or at any Time, would still
+be preserv’d above Ground, or under Ground: And that would turn to the
+same Account, as to the Flood.
+
+These Waters and Vapours all collected, the Theorist supposes
+sufficient, upon a Dissolution of the Earth, to make the Deluge: Not
+indeed in the Nature of a Standing Pool, as it is usually conceiv’d; a
+quiet Pool, I say, overtopping and standing calm over the Heads of the
+highest Mountains; but as a rushing Sea, overflowing and sweeping them
+with its raging Waves and impetuous Fluctuations, when it was violently
+forc’d out of all its Chanels, and the Vapours condensed into Rain. Such
+an Inundation as this, would be sufficient to destroy both Man and
+Beast, and other Creatures, those few excepted, that were miraculously
+preserv’d in the Ark. This is the Theorist’s Explication of the Deluge,
+and I see nothing in this Argument, that will destroy or weaken it.
+
+Now, this being the State of the Deluge, according to the Theorist, what
+this Author says in the next Paragraph (_p. 167._) is either a
+Misrepresentation, or an Equivocation. For the eight Oceans requir’d by
+the Theorist, is the Quantity of Water necessary for a Deluge in the Way
+of a Standing Pool: Whereas this Author represents it, as if the
+Theorist required so much Water to make a Deluge upon his Hypothesis.
+This, I suppose, upon Reflection, the Author cannot but see to be a
+Mistake, or a wilful Misrepresentation.
+
+This is the Sum of his seventh Chapter: There are besides some
+Suggestions made, which it may be were intended for Objections by the
+Author: As when he says, (_p. 151._) that the Heat of the Sun would be
+intolerable upon the Surface of the Earth, if it could pierce and
+operate upon the Abyss. We allow, that its Heat was intolerable in the
+Torrid Zone, which thereby became unhabitable; and there only the Sun
+was in its full Strength, and had its greatest Effect upon the Abyss.
+But in the other Climates, the Heat would be moderate enough; nay, so
+moderate, that this Author says in another Place, _p. 66, 69_, _&c._ it
+would not be sufficient to ripen Fruits, and in the Whole, of less Force
+than it is now in the present Constitution of the Earth. So apt is
+Contention to carry one out of one Extreme into another.
+
+His last Objection is about the Duration of the Flood, that it could not
+last in its Force a hundred and fifty Days, if it had been made by a
+Dissolution of the Earth, and an Eruption of the Abyss. But as this is
+affirm’d by him without Proof, so the contrary is sufficiently explain’d
+and made out, both in the _Latin_ and _English_ Theory, p. 52, 56.
+
+I had forgot to tell him, that he ought not to suppose, as he seems to
+do, when he is emptying the Abyss, (_p. 165._) that after the Torrid
+Zone was soak’d with Waters by the Issues of the Rivers, no more Waters
+or Vapours were drawn from it then, than were before, or consequently no
+less from the Abyss. For when the middle Parts of the Earth had drunk in
+those Waters, the Force of the Sun would be less upon the Abyss through
+those Parts, and the Vapours would be more and greater from them, than
+before when they were drier, and in the same Proportion they needed less
+Supplies from the Abyss.
+
+
+ CHAP. VI.
+ _Concerning the Figure of the Earth._
+
+
+I Deferr’d the Consideration of this Chapter to the last, because I
+thought it of a more general Concern, and might deserve a fuller
+Disquisition. ’Tis now, you know, become a common Controversy or
+Enquiry, _what the Figure of the Earth is_. Many think it not truly
+Spherical, as it was imagin’d formerly, but a Spheroid, either oblong or
+oblate; that is, either extended in Length toward the Poles, like an
+oval; or, on the contrary, swelling in Breadth under the Equator, and so
+shorter than a just Sphere betwixt Pole and Pole, and broader in the
+middle Parts. ’Tis true, the Theorist is not directly concern’d in this
+Controversy, because he does not in the _Theory_ affirm the present
+Earth to be oblong or oval, not knowing what Change might be made at its
+Dissolution. However, it may be worth the while to enquire what
+Arguments are bought, either from Causes or Effects, to determine the
+Figure of the Earth, whether past or present.
+
+’Tis easy indeed by Observation to determine, that the Earth is a convex
+Body, not plain, as the _Epicureans_ fansied; and convex on all Sides,
+and therefore in some sort orbicular; but whether it be truly spherical,
+those common Observations will not determine. The Theorist nam’d and
+pointed at such Observations, as he thought would be most likely to
+discover the precise Figure of the Earth: As to observe, for Instance,
+whether the Extent of a Degree was the same all the Earth over, in
+different Latitudes, or at different Distances from the Equator. Then to
+observe whether the Shade of the Earth in a total Eclipse of the Moon be
+truly round, or any other ways irregular. And also to observe, if
+towards the Poles, the Return of the Sun into their Horizon, be
+according to the Rules of a spherical Surface of the Earth. Let us
+consider these separately, as to the present Earth.
+
+As to the Measure of a Degree in different Latitudes, we find that
+Authors are not all of the same Mind. Some will have them unequal, and
+in such a manner, according to their Distance from the Equator, as from
+that to infer, that the Earth is oblong. This Examiner takes Notice of
+Dr. _Eisensmidius_, as one that hath made that Observation, and that
+Inference from it, and gives him very rude Words upon that occasion,
+making him a Man of _prodigious Stupidity, and Crackpot_, _p. 140_, and
+one that did _not understand the first six Elements of Euclid, or indeed
+those of common Sense, p. 143._ Whatsoever this Professor was, he was
+not the first that made that Observation and Inference. For another
+Mathematician, better known, had made the same, some time before him: I
+mean _Milliet Deschales_, in his _general Principles of Geography_, _Fr.
+l. 1. propos. 29._ But, ’tis true, he says, this Conjecture of his, that
+the Figure of the Earth is oval or ecliptick, would not be well
+grounded, if the Shade of the Earth in Lunar Eclipses was found to be
+always perfectly round; of which we shall have occasion to speak
+hereafter. For this, which he makes a Scruple against his own Opinion,
+is by others made an Occasion of suspecting that the Earth is really
+Oval. But we must also acknowledge, that the same _Deschales_ in his
+_Latin_ Works does not own the Observation, but owns the Inference,
+which is that the Examiner quarrels with. He owns it, I say, in these
+Words,[27] _Si figura terræ esset ovalis, plura milliaria decurrenúa
+essent versus Æquinoctialem ad inveniendum in elevatione poli mutationem
+unius gradûs quàm versus polos._ And he gives this Reason, _Quià ovalis
+figura prope vertices minorem sphæram imitatur: versus Æquinoctialem
+autem in majorem sphæram degenerat._ And again, having taken Notice of
+the various Computations of a Degree upon the Earth, he subjoins[28],
+_Hæc observationum discrepantia nonnullis suspicionem fecit, Tellurem
+non omninò sphæricam esse, sed sphæroidem ellipticam, ita ut versus
+polos in minorem circulum abiret. Sed opus est pluribus observationibus
+adid persuadendum._ The Theorist did not assert either the Observation
+to be true or the Inference, but mark’d it as an Observation that
+deserv’d to be enquir’d into, in order to determine the Figure of the
+Earth. For it seems apparent, that if the Body of the Earth be oblong or
+oblate, the Extent of a Degree will not be really the same as if it was
+truly spherical. Neither do I know any single Observation that would
+give us more Light, or better help us to discover what the Configuration
+of the Earth is, than the Measure of a Degree exactly taken in different
+Latitudes.
+
+I happened lately to be in Company with a learned Gentleman, and amongst
+other Things that fell into Discourse, I ask’d his Opinion, what
+Inequality there would be in the Degrees of the Earth, in case it was
+oval, and where it would fall; whether they would be greater towards the
+Poles, or towards the Equator. We were suddenly interrupted by the
+coming in of new Company, but he said he would send me his Thoughts upon
+a little Reflection; and accordingly, after a few Days he was pleased to
+send me this Letter.
+
+ _SIR_,
+
+ [Illustration: A Circle, with various Points marked.]
+
+ Having now some Leisure (the Elections for Parliament, wherein I had
+ any Concern, being over) I have here sent you my Thoughts on a
+ Subject we lately discours’d of at _Kensington_. Whether in case the
+ Earth is a long Spheroid, the Degrees of Latitude would be greater
+ near the Equator, or near the Poles. I conceive they would be
+ greater near the Equator. Let the Ellipsis _BDCF._ represent the
+ Earth, draw the Line _gp._ which may be a Tangent to the Ellipsis,
+ and likewise meeting with the Axis _BC_, and its Transverse _FD_
+ (after they are produc’d) make the Triangle _gAp_ an Isosceles, and
+ consequently the Angles at the Base _Agp_, _Apg_ each 45 Degrees. I
+ say _HC_ will measure the 45 Degrees of Latitude near the Pole, and
+ _DH_ (which by Inspection without farther Demonstration is evidently
+ bigger) those near the Equator. (I ought to have premis’d that _B_
+ and _C_ represent the Poles.) It is plain the Inhabitants at _H_
+ will be in the Latitude of 45 Degrees, by reason their horizontal
+ Plane _gp_ is by Construction 45 Degrees distant to the Horizon of
+ the Inhabitants under the Line at _D_, which lies parallel to the
+ Axis _BC_.
+
+ If the Earth be a broad Spheroid, _D_ and _F_ representing the
+ Poles, then by the same Method of Reasoning, the Degrees of Latitude
+ will be greatest near the Poles: But as the longest and shortest
+ Diameter of the Earth has in no wise so great a Disproportion as in
+ their Figure (their Difference not exceeding the two hundredth Part
+ at most) the Inequality of the Degrees of Latitude will be
+ proportionally less; but in all Cases, the long Spheroid makes the
+ Degrees greatest near the Equator; and the broad Spheroid those
+ greatest near the Poles. I hope in a Fortnight to have the
+ Satisfaction of seeing you in _London_, and remain,
+
+ _Sir, Your most Humble Servant._
+
+The Examiner would do well to consider this, lest all the reproachful
+Characters he casts upon _Eisensmidius_, should recoil upon himself.
+’Tis Prudence, as well as good Manners not to be fierce and vehement in
+Censures, for fear of a Mistake, and a Blackblow. However, the pretended
+Demonstration which this Examiner brings to prove, that, in case the
+Earth was oblong, the Degrees would be greater toward the Poles, does
+not affect _Eisensmidius_, for it proceeds upon a Supposition which that
+Author does not allow; namely, that the Vertical Lines, or the Lines of
+Gravity are to be drawn directly to the Center of the Earth: Whereas
+_Eisensmidius_ supposes they ought to be drawn at right Angles, to the
+Tangent of each respective Horizon, and would not in all Figures lead
+directly to the Center. However, we do not wonder that he is so rude to
+Strangers, seeing he bears so hard in other places, upon some of our own
+learned Countrymen.
+
+We proceed now to the Theorist’s second Observation, about Lunar
+Eclipses and the Shade of the Earth. This Shade is generally presumed to
+be exactly round, as the Section of a Cone: And yet the best Astronomers
+have doubted of it, and some upon that Occasion have doubted of the
+Figure of the Earth. _Kepler_[29] in an Observation of a Lunar total
+Eclipse, not finding the Shade of the Earth perfectly round, but rather
+oblong, _ut ejus dimetiens à Zona Torrida consurgentis sit minor
+dimetiente ejus à Polis Terræ surgentis_, suspects that the Figure of
+the Earth was so too. And that we must conclude it to be so from this
+Observation, if there was not some Obliquity in the Rays of the Sun,
+whereof he shews no Cause or Occasion. _Si retinenda esset, inquit,
+rectitudo radiorum, Globus ipse Terræ fiet oviformis, diametro per Polos
+longiore._ And a like Observation to this he cites from _Tycho Brahé_,
+in a central, or next to central Eclipse of the Moon. These two great
+Astronomers, it seems, did not find the Shade of the Earth to be justly
+conical; and thereby take away the Reason or lessen the Doubt, which
+hindered M. _Deschales_ from concluding (upon another Observation) the
+Figure of the Earth to be oval.
+
+The third Observation of the Theorist remains, which is about the Return
+of the Sun unto the polar Parts of the Earth, whether that be according
+to the Rules of a spherical Surface. The Observations that have been
+made hitherto in the Northern Climates about the Return of the Sun to
+them, make it quicker than will easily consist with a spherical Figure
+of the Earth; much less are they favourable to a gibbous Form: For that
+Gibbosity under the Equator must needs hinder the Appearance and
+Discovery of the Sun in the respective polar Parts, more than a
+spherical Figure would do. Now it hath been observ’d in _Nova Zembla_,
+that the returning Sun appear’d to them seventeen Days sooner than they
+expected, according to the Rules of Astronomy, the Earth being supposed
+truly spherical; and this may be thought an Argument that the Earth is
+rather depress’d in its middle Parts. I leave the Matter to farther
+Examination. I know ’tis usually imputed to Refractions, but that is
+upon the Presumption that the Earth is justly spherical; and a better
+Answer (upon that Supposition) I think cannot be found. Though, I think,
+it will not be easy in that Way, and upon that Solution to make all the
+Phænomena agree, or to shew that the Refractions could make so great a
+Difference. However, this is no improper Topick to be consider’d in
+reference to the Determination of the Figure of the Earth, and for that
+purpose it was noted by the Theorist.
+
+We have now done with that side of the Question, that respects the
+oblong Figure of the Earth, and it remains to consider the other Part; I
+mean the Opinion of those that make the Earth protuberant about the
+Equator, or an oblate Spheroid. This the learned Monsieur _Hugens_[30]
+thinks may be prov’d by Experiments made about the different Vibrations
+of _Pendulums_ in different Latitudes of the Earth. ’Tis found, he says,
+by Experience that a _Pendulum_ near the Equator, makes its Vibrations
+slower than another of the same Length, farther from the Equator; and
+gives an Instance of it from an Experiment made at _Caiene_ in _America_
+(which is four or five Degrees from the Equator) compar’d with another
+made at _Paris_. From this Trial he concludes, first, that the
+Gravitation is less under and near the Equator than towards the Poles,
+according to their several Degrees of Latitude. Then he infers, by
+Consequence, that the Land and the Sea are higher towards the Equator,
+than towards the Poles. And in Conclusion, that the Figure of the Earth
+is protuberant and gibbous in the Middle, and more flatted, or of a
+shorter Diameter betwixt Pole and Pole.
+
+In this Conclusion, you see, there are several Things to be considered
+according to the Premisses. First, Matter of Fact, concerning the
+Inequality of Vibrations in equal Pendulums, according to their
+different Latitudes; then the following Inferences made from that
+Inequality. As to the Matter of Fact, Monsieur _Hugens_ seems to be
+doubtful himself: He does not vouch it from his own Experience, but he
+takes it from the Report of Monsieur _Richer_; whose Person or Character
+I do not know, nor whether his Relation be extant in Print. However,
+Monsieur _Hugens_ speaks dubiously of the Experiment, as such an one
+whereof we ought to expect farther Confirmation. For he says[31], _we
+cannot trust entirely to this first Observation, whereof we have not any
+Circumstance noted to us; and still less to those that are said to be
+made at Guadeloupe, (at a greater Latitude,) where the Pendule is said
+to be shorter by two Lines than that at Paris.[32] We must expect to be
+more justly inform’d of these different Lengths of Pendules, as well
+under the Line as in other Climates._ And he refers us to a farther
+Trial by his Clocks, rectified for a second Voyage, whereof I have yet
+heard no Report. If Matter of Fact be dubious, or Experiments
+discordant, we cannot be assur’d of the Conclusion. It were to be
+wish’d, that this different Gravitation in different Latitudes, might be
+prov’d by other Experiments than that of the Pendulum. Methinks, in
+ponderous Bodies, this Difference might become sensible: Not indeed by a
+Balance or Scales, for the supposed Decrease of Gravity would have the
+same Effect upon the Counterpoise as upon the Body weighed; but by other
+Powers that do not depend immediately upon Gravity, as _Springs_, or any
+other Engines, or by Rarefactions, or whatsoever hath the Force to
+raise, sustain, or remove ponderous Bodies. For such Powers have a less
+Effect with us than near the Equator, where the Gravitation of Bodies
+that make the Counterpoise, is supposed to be much lessen’d. Neither do
+I know if they have try’d the Barometer, whether that will discover any
+such Elevation, at, or near the Equator; the Mercury sinking there much
+lower than with us, or indeed to nothing, if the Height be comparatively
+so great as is supposed. It seems strange, that the Difference of
+seventeen Miles (call it little, or call it great, compar’d with the
+Semidiameter of the Earth) should have a sensible Effect upon Pendulums
+and upon nothing else.
+
+Methinks, that Height of the Equator should make a different Horizon (as
+to the Heavens, or the Earth, and Sea) East and West, from North and
+South; the Figure of the Earth being a Sphere one way and a Spheroid in
+the other. The Sea also must be a prodigious Depth at the Equator;
+deeper by seventeen Miles, than at or near the Poles. I would gladly
+know what Experience there is of this. Then in reference to our
+_Rivers_, how swift and rapid, upon this Hypothesis, must the _Rivers_
+be that rise at or near the Equator, or how slow the Motion of those
+that ascend towards it, if at all they can be supposed to climb so great
+an Hill. The great River of the _Amazons_, in Southern _America_, is in
+some Parts of it four or five Degrees from the Equator, others say much
+more; yet runs up to the Equator with that vast load of Water, and
+throws it self there into the Ocean. In the Northern _America_, _Rio
+Negro_ is represented to us, as having a longer Course against the bent
+of the Earth, and crossing the Equator, falls down Southward several
+Degrees: So the _Nile_ in _Africa_ crosses the Line, and hath a long
+Course on this side of it. _Rivers_ do not rise higher by a natural
+Course than their Fountain’s Head, and Hydrographers usually assign two
+Foot, or two Foot and an half in a Mile for the Descent of _Rivers_, but
+upon this Hypothesis there will be fourteen or fifteen Foot (in respect
+of the Center of the Earth) for every Mile, in Rivers descending from
+the Equator; which is a Precipitation rather than a navigable Stream.
+Suppose a Canal cut from the Equator to the Pole, ’twould be a Paradox
+to say the Water would not flow in this Chanel, nor descend towards the
+Pole, having fourteen or fifteen Foot Descent for every Mile, according
+to your Figure of the Earth: And also it would be as great or a greater
+Paradox, to suppose that Rivers would rise to the Equator, and with the
+same Celerity (as we see they do) upon an Ascent of so many Feet. And
+after all, to conclude the Argument, if this Difference of Pendulums be
+found, it will still bear a Dispute from what physical Causes that
+Difference proceeds.
+
+Thus far we have considered what Arguments have been brought for the
+oblate Figure of the Earth from Effects; and have noted such
+Observations to be made, as we thought might be useful for Discovery of
+Truth, on what side soever it may fall. We are now to consider an
+Argument taken from the Causes, and brought by these Authors to prove
+the same spheroidical Figure of the Globe. To this purpose they observe,
+as is obvious and reasonable, that in the diurnal Motion of the Earth,
+the middle Parts about the Equator (where the Circles are greatest, and
+consequently the Motion swiftest) would fly off with a greater Force,
+and so rise higher than the other Parts that were mov’d in lesser
+Circles in the same time, and would have less Force to remove themselves
+from the Center of their Motion. This is agreed on all Hands, and was
+own’d by the Theorist in a fluid Globe turn’d about its Axis, in case
+there was no Impediment to hinder the rising or recession of those
+middle Parts. But before we speak to that, on both sides you see it must
+be suppos’d and granted, that the Globe of the Earth was once fluid, or
+the exterior Orb of it; and we ought to consider when, or at what Time
+this was. It must have been surely at the first Formation of the Earth,
+when it rose from a Chaos, and before its Parts were consolidated and
+grown hard. Supposing then that the interior Orb of the Earth was once
+cover’d over with an Orb of Water, the Question will be, how this Orb of
+Water came to be cover’d with dry Land, or came to be divided into Land
+and Water, as it is now.
+
+[Illustration: A: The Earth, covered with Water.]
+
+[Illustration: B: The Earth, as it is now.]
+
+Let (A) represent an Hemisphere of the Earth, in its first State, when
+covered with Water; and (B) the same Hemisphere as it is now. This
+Author must tell us, consistently with his Hypothesis, how the Earth
+could pass out of one of these States into the other, without passing
+through some intermediate State; or how this Change was made in its
+Surface, from what Causes, and in what manner. If the first Earth was a
+Concretion upon the Face of the Waters, then indeed it would have the
+same Figure with the watery Globe under it; but if it was from the
+Beginning in this present Form firm and solid, as it is now rocky and
+mountainous, then the Question is, _how_ the Parts or Regions of the
+Earth about the Equator could be raised above a spherical Figure, or
+into an oblate Spheroid, as they say the Earth is now. I take it for
+granted, that they suppose the Land raised as well as the Water; for
+otherwise the Ocean would overflow at those Parts of the Earth. Suppose
+then the Waters raised by the Circumvolution of the Earth, how was the
+_Terra firma_ rais’d, or how could it be rais’d by that or any such
+Cause?
+
+These Questions are no matter of Difficulty to the Theorist, who
+supposes the first Earth to have covered the Waters, and to have taken
+their Shape, whatsoever it was, as upon a Mold: Then upon its
+Dissolution and Disruption at the Deluge, to have fallen into that
+uneven and uninterrupted Form it hath now. But feeling this Method does
+not please the Examiner, he must tell us how, upon his Hypothesis, the
+Land or solid Parts of the Earth could be rais’d above a spherical
+Convexity into such a gibbous Figure, as he supposes them now to have
+under the Equator.
+
+Monsieur _Hugens_[33] makes this broad Spheroid of the Earth to have
+been the Effect of Gravity in the Formation of the Earth; the Matter
+whereof being then turned round, it would, as he thinks, be brought to
+settle in this oblate Figure. Very well! But this must be in its very
+first Concretion from a Chaos, before it was fix’d and compact as it is
+now; for the Rotation of the Earth could have no such effect upon it
+after it was hard. Now if you admit the exterior Globe of the Earth, to
+have been in such a State betwixt Fixtness and Fluidity, it will lead us
+directly to the Theorist’s Hypothesis, which supposes a soft and tender
+Concretion at first, over all the Face of the Waters. I say, _over all
+the Face of the Waters_: For it must be universal; both because there is
+no Reason why these earthy Particles that made the Concretion, should
+not fall upon one Part of the Globe, as well as upon another; and also
+if they did not fall upon the Equinoctial Parts, how came there to be
+Land in that part, or that Land rais’d higher than the rest, as this
+Hypothesis will have it?
+
+In these Remarks upon the protuberant Figure of the Earth, you see it is
+allow’d, that there would be a greater Tendency from the Center in the
+middle Parts of the Globe, and the Waters would rise there, if there was
+no Impediment. But the Theorist did believe that the Vortex, or
+circumfluent Orb was streighter, or of a shorter Diameter there than
+through the Poles; and consequently the Waters having less room to
+dilate, would be press’d and detruded towards the Poles. These Authors,
+it may be, will allow no Vortices to the Planets; but then they must
+assign some other sufficient Cause to carry the Planets in their
+periodical Motions (and with the same Velocity for innumerable Ages)
+about their common Center; and the Secondary about their Primary: As
+also what gives them their diurnal Rotation, and the different Position
+of their Axes. Neither would it be easy to conceive, how a great Mass of
+fluid and volatile Matter, having no Current, or Determination any one
+way, and being often check’d in its progressive Motion, should not fall
+into circular Motions, or into Vortices of one sort or other; especially
+if you place in this Mass some great solid Bodies turned about their
+Axes.
+
+These are more general Problems; and when they are determin’d with
+Certainty, we shall better judge of the Particulars that depend upon
+them. But I say still, that neither Figure of the Earth, oblong or
+oblate, can be prov’d from the Rotation of the Earth and its Gravity,
+without supposing the Globe form’d into that Shape before it came to be
+harden’d, before it came to be loaded and stiffen’d by Rocks and stony
+Mountains. Therefore upon both Hypotheses it must be allow’d, that there
+was such a Time, such a State of the Earth, when its tender Orb was
+capable of those Impressions and Modifications; and that Orb must have
+lain above the Waters, not under them, nor radicated to the Bottom of
+them, for then such Cause could not have had such an Effect upon it. And
+in the last place, this Concretion upon the Waters must have been
+throughout all the Parts of the Earth, or all the Parts of the Land
+which are now rais’d above a spherical Surface; and no reason can be
+given, as we noted before, why the rest should not be cover’d as well as
+those. So that in effect both the Hypotheses suppose that all the watery
+Globe was at first cover’d with an earthy Concretion.
+
+Now this being admitted, you have confirm’d the main Point of the
+_Theory_: Namely, that the Abyss was once, or at first cover’d with a
+terrestrial Concretion, or an Orb of Earth. Grant this, and we’ll
+compound for the rest, let the Earth at present be of what Figure it
+will: If there was such an original Earth that cover’d the Waters, both
+the Form and Equilibration of the Earth may easily appear, and how by a
+Dissolution of it a Deluge might arise. But as to the present Earth, the
+Theorist never affirm’d that its Figure was oval, but he[34] noted such
+Observations made or to be made, as he thought might be proper to
+determine its Figure, and still desires that they may be pursued. He
+added also, that he would be glad to receive any new ones, that would
+demonstrate the precise Figure of the Earth. And accordingly, he is
+willing to consider in this Particular and all others, the Arguments and
+Remarks of such eminent Authors, as have lately given a new Light to the
+System of the World.
+
+This may suffice to have spoken in general concerning these two
+spheroidical Figures of the Earth. We must now consider what particular
+Objections are made by the Examiner against its oval Figure. He says,
+_p. 103, 104_, _&c._ admitting the oval Figure of that first Earth, it
+would not be capable however, to give a Course to the Rivers from the
+polar Parts, towards the Equinoctial. And his Reason is this; because
+the same Causes which cast the Abyss or the Ocean towards the Poles,
+would also keep the Rivers from descending from the Poles: But there is
+no Parity of Reason betwixt the Abyss or the Ocean, and the Rivers. We
+see in the Flux and Reflux of the Ocean, let the Cause of it be what it
+will, it hath not that Effect upon Rivers, nor upon Lakes, nor upon
+lesser Seas; yet the Circum-rotation of the Earth continues the same.
+And his confounding the Ocean and Rivers in the ante-diluvian Earth is
+so much the worse, seeing there never was an Ocean and Rivers together
+in that Earth. While there was an open Ocean, there were no Rivers, and
+when there were Rivers, there was no open Ocean, but an inclos’d Abyss:
+So though he makes large Transcripts there and elsewhere out of the
+Theory, he does not seem always to have well digested the Method of it.
+
+After this Objection, the Examiner charges the Theorist with want of
+Skill in Logick; but his Charge is grounded upon another
+Misunderstanding or Misrepresentation. He pretends there, _p. 107._ that
+the Theorist hath made such a Ratiocination as this. _All Bodies by
+reason of the Earth’s diurnal Rotation, do endeavour to recede from the
+Axis of their Motion; but by reason of the Pressure of the Air, and the
+Streightness of the Orb, they cannot recede from the Axis of their
+Motion, therefore they will move towards the Poles, where they will come
+nearer to the Axis of their Motion._ These are the Examiner’s Words in
+that Place, where he says he will put the Theorist’s Reasoning in other
+Words: But I do not like that Method, unless the Examiner were a more
+judicious or faithful Paraphrast than he seems to be: Let every one be
+tried by their own Words, and if there be any false Logick or Nonsense
+in the forecited Words of the Examiner, let it fall upon their Author.
+The Theorist said[35], that Bodies, by reason of the Earth’s Motion did,
+_conari à centro sur motûs recederè_: These Words this Translator
+renders, _endeavour to recede from the Axis of their Motion_; and by
+changing the Word _Center_ into _Axis_ (whether carelesly or wilfully I
+know not) of plain Sense he hath made Nonsense; and then makes this
+Conclusion, _p. 108._ (which follows indeed from his own Words, but not
+from those of the Theorist) _because all Bodies do endeavour to recede
+from the Axis of their Motion, therefore they will endeavour to go to
+the Axis of their Motion_.
+
+The Theorist’s Argumentation was plainly this: Seeing in the Rotation of
+the Earth, Bodies tend from the Center of their Motion, if they meet
+with an Impediment there, they will move laterally in the next easiest
+and openest way; and therefore the Waters under the Equator being
+stopp’d in their first Tendency, would divert towards the Poles;
+wherein, I think, there is no false Logick. That there was no Impediment
+there, he must prove by other Arguments than his own Dictates or bare
+Assertion, which will not pass for a Proof.
+
+He proceeds now to discourse of the centrifugal Force and the Effects of
+it, together with Gravity: But he should have given us a better Notion
+of the centrifugal Force, than what he sets down there; for he says (_p.
+110. l. 24._) _A centrifugal Force, is that Force by which a Body is
+drawn towards the Center_: This is a strange Signification of that Word.
+And in the next Page (_p. 111. l. 22._) he says, by this centrifugal
+Force, Bodies _endeavour to recede from the Center of their Motion_;
+which is true, but contrary to what he said just before. I think ’tis
+Gravity, not centrifugal Force, that brings Bodies towards the Center.
+
+But to pass by this Contradiction, and to proceed: What he says, from
+others, about the Proportions of the centrifugal Force and Gravity in
+Bodies turn’d round, and particularly in Fluids, how they would fly off
+more or less, according to the Circles of their Motion, was always (as
+hath been mention’d before) suppos’d and allow’d by the Theorist, if
+there was no Restraint or Pressure upon one Part more than another of
+the fluid Globe: So that he might have spared here six or seven Pages.
+
+In like manner, he might have spar’d what he hath transcrib’d in his
+following Pages from those excellent Authors we referr’d to before,
+about calculating the Diminutions of Gravity made by the centrifugal
+Force, in different Latitudes; with other such Excursions. These, I say,
+might have been spar’d, as needless upon this Occasion, or to the
+Confutation of the _Theory_, till the principal Point, upon which they
+depend, be better prov’d. I made bold to say, they were transcrib’d from
+those Authors, as any one may see that pleases to consult the Originals,
+_Newt. Philos. Nat. Princ. Math. l. 3. prop. 18, 19, 20._ _Hugens
+Discour. de la cause de la Pesanteur, p._ 147, 148, _&c._ And this
+_French_ Discourse of Monsieur Hugens, he hath not so much as once
+nam’d, though he hath taken so much from it. And after all, when these
+Things are determin’d in Speculation, it will still be a Question what
+the true physical Causes of them are.
+
+At last, for a farther Confirmation of the broad spheroidical Figure of
+the Earth, he adds an Observation from the Planet _Jupiter_, which is
+found to be of such a Figure. And _therefore_, he says, _p. 137, 138._
+_We need not doubt, but that the Earth, which is a Planet like the rest,
+and turns round its Axis, as they do, is of the same Figure_. He might
+as well conclude, that every Planet, as well as the Earth, is of the
+same Figure. And what Reason can he give, why all the Planets that have
+a Rotation upon their Axis, are not broad Spheroids, as well as those
+two which he supposes to be so? If that be a sufficient Cause, and be
+found in other Planets as well as those, why hath it not the same
+Effect? Or he might as well conclude, that the Earth hath a perpetual
+Equinox, because _Jupiter_ hath so. This is the same Fault which he hath
+so often committed, of measuring all the Works of God by one or two. If
+a Man was transported into the Moon, the nearest Planet; or into
+_Mercury_ that is so near the Sun, or into _Saturn_, (or any of his
+_Satellites_) that is so remote from it; would he not find, think you, a
+much different Face and State of those Planets, from what we have upon
+this Earth? Inhabitants of a different Constitution, the Furniture of
+every World different, Animals, Plants, Waters, and other inanimate
+Things: As also different Vicissitudes of Days and Nights, and the
+Seasons of the Year; according to their different Positions, Revolutions
+and Forms? Therefore not without Reason we noted before, how much the
+Narrowness of some Mens Spirits, Thoughts and Observations, confine them
+to a particular Pattern and Model, nor considering the infinite Variety
+of the divine Works, whereof we are not competent Judges.
+
+Now comes in his rude Censure of Dr. _Eisensmidius_, both for his
+Mathematicks and bad Logick, or want of _common Sense_; but to this we
+have spoken before. He also, in the same Paragraph, _p. 142._ wonders at
+the Theorist’s strange Logick, to make the centrifugal Force of Bodies
+upon the Earth, to be the Cause of its oblong Figure. That indeed would
+be strange Logick if it was made the proximate Cause of it. But that is
+not the Theorists’s Logick but the Examiner’s, as it is distorted and
+misrepresented by him. The Theorist suppos’d the Pressure of that Tumour
+of the Waters, occasion’d by the centrifugal Force (as its original
+Cause) to be the immediate Cause of the oblong Figure of the Earth; and
+that Pressure suppos’d, there is nothing illogical in the Inference. He
+had formerly taken Notice, _p. 101, 103._ of this Reason, from the
+Streightness of the Orb in that Part, when he gave the Theorist’s
+Account of that Figure; but he thought fit to forget it now, that his
+Charge might not appear lame.
+
+This, Sir, is a short Account of this Author’s Objections; but there are
+some Things so often repeated by him, that we are forc’d to take Notice
+of them more than once; as that about Miracles and final Causes. He
+truly notes, _p. 31._ that to be _a much easier and shorter Way of
+giving an account of the Deluge_, or other Revolutions of Nature: But
+the Question is not, which is the shortest and easiest Way, but which is
+the truest. No Man in his Senses can question the divine Omnipotency,
+God could do these Things purely miraculously, if he pleas’d; but the
+Thing to be consider’d is, whether, according to the Methods of
+Providence, in the Changes and Revolutions of the natural World, the
+Course of Nature and of natural Causes is not made use of so far as they
+will go. Both _Moses_ and St. _Peter_ mention material Causes, but
+always including the divine Word and Superintendency. The Theorist does
+not think (as is sufficiently testified in several Places) that purely
+material and mechanical Causes, guided only by the Laws of Motion, could
+form this Earth, and the Furniture of it; and does readily believe all
+Miracles recorded in Holy Writ, or elsewhere, well grounded: But
+Miracles of our own making or imagining, want Authority to support them.
+Some Men when they are at a loss in the Progress of their Work, call in
+a Miracle to relieve them in their Distress. You know what hath been
+noted both by [36]Philosophers and others to that purpose.
+
+As to final Causes, the Contemplation of them is very useful to moral
+Purposes, and of great Satisfaction to the Mind, where we can attain to
+them. But we must not pretend to prove a thing to be so or so in Nature,
+because we fancy it would be better so; nor deny it to be in such a
+manner, because to our Mind it would be better otherwise. Almighty Power
+and Wisdom, that have the whole Complex and Composition of the Universe
+in View, take other Measures than we can comprehend or account for. Even
+in this small Earth that we inhabit, there are several Plants and
+Animals, which to us appear useless or noxious, and yet no doubt would
+be found proper for this State, if we had the whole Prospect and Scheme
+of Providence. As to efficient Causes, they must be either material or
+immaterial, and whatsoever is prov’d to be the immediate Effect of an
+immaterial Cause, is so much the more acceptable to the Theorist, as it
+argues a Power above Matter. But as to purely material Causes, they must
+be mechanical; there being no other Modes, or Powers of Matter (at least
+in the Opinion of the Theorist) but what are mechanical: And to explain
+Effects by such Causes, is properly natural Science.
+
+We have taken Notice before of this Author’s ambiguous use of Words,
+without declaring in what Sense he uses them: And he is no less
+ambiguous as to his Opinions. When he speaks of the Origin and Formation
+of the WORLD, he does not tell us what he means by that Word; whether
+the great Compound of the Universe, or that small Part only where we
+reside. His _centrifugal_ Force he interprets in contrary Senses, or in
+contrary Words, and reserves the Sense to himself. Sometimes he speaks
+of the Motion of the Sun, and sometimes of the Motion of the Earth, and
+sticks to no System: Neither does he tell us what he means by the
+_Mosaical_ Abyss, or _Tehom Rabbah_, which the Theorist supposes to have
+been broken up at the Deluge. We ought to know in what Sense and
+Signification he uses Words or Phrases: at least if he use them in a
+different Sense from that of the Theorist’s.
+
+I know, _Sir_, you will also take Notice of his hard Words and coarse
+Language, as, _that’s false, that’s absurd, that’s ridiculous_. This,
+you will say, is not the usual Language amongst Gentlemen; but we find
+it too usual with some Writers, according to their particular Temper and
+Experience in the World. For my part, I think Rudeness or Disingenuity
+in examining the Writings of another Person, fall more heavy (in the
+Construction of fair Readers) upon him that uses them, than upon him
+that suffers them. I am,
+
+_SIR_,
+
+_Your most humble Servant_,
+
+_FINIS_.
+
+Footnote 22:
+
+ _Engl. Theor._ _Chap._ VIII. p. 112, _&c._
+
+Footnote 23:
+
+ _Cic. de Nat. Dict. l. 1._
+
+Footnote 24:
+
+ _Galil. Syst. Cos._ _p._ 133. _Hugen. Cosmetô._ _c._ 2. _p._ 115.
+
+Footnote 25:
+
+ _Engl. p. 230, &c. Lat. p. 107._
+
+Footnote 26:
+
+ _Cosmoth. p. 135._
+
+Footnote 27:
+
+ _l. s. Prop. 4._
+
+Footnote 28:
+
+ _Ibid._ Prop. 56.
+
+Footnote 29:
+
+ _Ephames. par. 2. ad An. 1624._
+
+Footnote 30:
+
+ P. 145.
+
+Footnote 31:
+
+ _Disc. de la Pesant. p. 149._
+
+Footnote 32:
+
+ _Ibid. p. 165._
+
+Footnote 33:
+
+ _M. Hugens de la Pesant, p. 152. Il est a croire, que la Terre a pris
+ cette figure, lors qu’ elli a esté assemblee par l’effect de la
+ Pesanteux: sa matiere sient des mouvement circulatoire de 24 heures._
+
+Footnote 34:
+
+ _Lat. Theor. lib. 2. p. 185._
+
+Footnote 35:
+
+ _Theor. l. 2. 5. p. 186._
+
+Footnote 36:
+
+ _Plat. Cratyl. m. p. 425. Ἐπειάν τι ἀπορῶσιν, ἐτὶ τάς μηχανὰς
+ καταθεύγουσι, θεοῦς αἴροντεσ. Cum rei alicujus engusios, ad machines
+ consugiunt & D inducunt._ This is also remark’d and render’d in other
+ Words by _Tully_ in _Nat. Dor. l. 1._ Cum _explicare argumenti exitum
+ non pet, confugitis ad Deum_. St. _Austin_ also speaking about the
+ supercelestial Waters, hath noted this Method, and reprov’d it, in
+ these Words, _Nec quisquam echos refellere, ut decat secundum
+ omnpotentism Dei sunt possibatis nos credere equas etiam am era quam
+ novimus atque sentimus, corpori in que sunt sydera, super sufas: Nunc
+ enim quam Deus rerum secundum Scripturam ejus, nec qu convenit, non
+ solus quad in vel ad misacutum omnipotent._ You see Discretion and
+ Moderation is to be used in these and such like Matters.
+
+
+
+
+ ● Transcriber’s Notes:
+ ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+ ○ Footnotes have been moved to follow the sections in which they are
+ referenced.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76101 ***
diff --git a/76101-h/76101-h.htm b/76101-h/76101-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bca9337
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-h/76101-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,21428 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>The sacred theory of the Earth | Project Gutenberg</title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+ body { margin-left: 8%; margin-right: 10%; }
+ h1 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.4em; }
+ h2 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.2em; }
+ h3 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.2em; }
+ .pageno { right: 1%; font-size: x-small; background-color: inherit; color: silver;
+ text-indent: 0em; text-align: right; position: absolute;
+ border: thin solid silver; padding: .1em .2em; font-style: normal;
+ font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; }
+ p { text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; text-align: justify; }
+ sup { vertical-align: top; font-size: 0.6em; }
+ .fss { font-size: 75%; }
+ .sc { font-variant: small-caps; }
+ .large { font-size: large; }
+ .xlarge { font-size: x-large; }
+ .xxlarge { font-size: xx-large; }
+ abbr { border-bottom-width: thin; border-bottom-style: dotted; }
+ abbr.spell { speak-as: spell-out; }
+ .lg-container-b { text-align: center; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .lg-container-b { clear: both; }
+ .linegroup { display: inline-block; text-align: left; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .linegroup { display: block; margin-left: 1.5em; }
+ .linegroup .group { margin: 1em auto; }
+ .linegroup .line { text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em; }
+ div.linegroup > :first-child { margin-top: 0; }
+ ul.ul_1 {padding-left: 0; margin-left: 2.78%; margin-top: .5em;
+ margin-bottom: .5em; list-style-type: disc; }
+ ul.ul_2 {padding-left: 0; margin-left: 6.94%; margin-top: .5em;
+ margin-bottom: .5em; list-style-type: circle; }
+ div.footnote {margin-left: 2.5em; }
+ div.footnote > :first-child { margin-top: 1em; }
+ div.footnote .label { display: inline-block; width: 0em; text-indent: -2.5em;
+ text-align: right; }
+ div.pbb { page-break-before: always; }
+ hr.pb { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ .x-ebookmaker hr.pb { display: none; }
+ .chapter { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
+ .figcenter { clear: both; max-width: 100%; margin: 2em auto; text-align: center; }
+ div.figcenter p { text-align: center; text-indent: 0; }
+ .figcenter img { max-width: 100%; height: auto; }
+ .id001 { width:80%; }
+ .id003 { width:70%; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .id001 { margin-left:10%; width:80%; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .id003 { margin-left:15%; width:70%; }
+ .ic002 { width:100%; }
+ .ig001 { width:100%; }
+ .nf-center { text-align: center; }
+ .nf-center-c1 { text-align: left; margin: 1em 0; }
+ .c000 { margin-top: 1em; }
+ .c001 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 1em; }
+ .c002 { margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c003 { margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c004 { margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c005 { margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c006 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-top: 1em; font-size: 95%; }
+ .c007 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c008 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c009 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c010 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c011 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c012 { margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c013 { text-decoration: none; }
+ .c014 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c015 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ .c016 { margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ div.tnotes { padding-left:1em;padding-right:1em;background-color:#E3E4FA;
+ border:1px solid silver;margin:1em 5% 0 5%;text-align:justify; }
+ abbr {border:none; text-decoration:none; font-variant:normal; }
+ </style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76101 ***</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_on'>on</span>
+<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c000'>
+</div>
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c001'>The Sacred Theory of the Earth</h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='xxlarge'><b>THE SACRED THEORY OF THE EARTH.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>Containing an ACCOUNT of the</b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='xlarge'><b>Original <i>of the</i> Earth,</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>And of all the</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>GENERAL CHANGES</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>Which it hath already undergone, or is to</b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b>undergo, till the <span class='sc'>Consummation</span></b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b>of all Things.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c003'><span class='large'><b>The <span class='sc'>Two Last Books</span>,</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b><i>Concerning the Burning of the <span class='sc'>World</span>,</i></b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b><i><span class='sc'>And</span></i></b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b><i>Concerning the New Heavens, and New Earth.</i></b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b><span class='sc'>Vol. II.</span></b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><i>LONDON</i>:</div>
+ <div class='c000'>Printed for <span class='sc'><abbr class='spell'>J.</abbr> Hooke</span>, at the <i>Flower-de-luce</i>, over-against</div>
+ <div><abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Dunstan’s Church</i>, in <i>Fleetstreet</i>, 1726.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div>TO THE</div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>QUEEN’s</span></div>
+ <div>Most EXCELLENT</div>
+ <div>MAJESTY.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'><i>MADAM</i>,</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Having had the Honour to
+present the first Part of this
+Theory to your <span class='sc'>Royal
+Uncle</span>, I presume to offer
+the Second to Your Majesty. This Part
+of the Subject, I hope, will be no less
+acceptable, for certainly ’tis of no less
+Importance. They both indeed agree
+in this, that there is a <span class='sc'>World</span> made
+and destroy’d in either Treatise. But we
+are more concern’d in what is to come,
+than what is past. And as the former
+Books represented to us the Rise and Fall
+of the first World; so these give an Account
+of the present Frame of Nature
+labouring under the last Flames, and of
+the Resurrection of it in the <i>new Heavens</i>
+and <i>new Earth</i>; which, according to the
+Divine Promises, we are to expect.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Cities that are burnt, are commonly
+rebuilt more beautiful and regular than
+they were before. And when this World
+is demolish’d by the last Fire, He that
+undertakes to rear it up again, will supply
+the Defects, if there were any, of the
+former Fabrick. This Theory supposes
+the present Earth to be little better than
+an Heap of Ruins; where yet there is
+Room enough for Sea and Land, for
+Islands and Continents, for several Countries
+and Dominions: But when these are
+all melted down, and refin’d in the
+general Fire, they will be cast into a better
+Mould, and the Form and Qualities
+of the Earth will become <i>Paradisaical</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But, I fear, it may be thought no
+very proper Address, to shew Your
+Majesty a World laid in Ashes, where
+You have so great an Interest Your Self,
+and such fair Dominions; and then, to
+recompense the Loss, by giving a Reversion
+in a future Earth. But if that
+future Earth be a second <i>Paradise</i>, to be
+enjoyed for a Thousand Years; with
+Peace, Innocency, and constant Health;
+An Inheritance there will be, an happy
+Exchange for the best Crown in this
+World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I confess, I could never persuade myself
+that the Kingdom of Christ, and of
+his Saints, which the Scripture speaks of
+so frequently, was designed to be upon
+this present Earth. But however, upon
+all Suppositions, they that have done
+some Good in this Life, will be Sharers
+in the Happiness of that State. To
+humble the Oppressors, and rescue the
+Oppressed, is a Work of Generosity and
+Charity, that cannot want its Reward;
+Yet, <span class='sc'>Madam</span>, they are the greatest
+Benefactors to Mankind, that dispose the
+World to become Virtuous; and by their
+Example, Influence, and Authority, retrieve
+that <span class='sc'>Truth</span> and <span class='sc'>Justice</span>, that have
+been lost, amongst Men, for many Ages.
+The School-Divines, tell us, those that
+act or suffer great Things for the Publick
+Good, are distinguish’d in Heaven, by a
+Circle of Gold about their Heads. One
+would not willingly vouch for that: But
+one may safely for what the Prophet
+says, which is far greater: Namely, that
+They shall shine like Stars in the Firmament,
+<i>that turn many to Righteousness</i>.
+Which is not to be understood, so much,
+of the Conversion of single Souls, as of
+the turning of Nations and People; the
+turning of the World to Righteousness.
+They that lead on that great and happy
+Work, shall be distinguish’d in Glory
+from the rest of Mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We are sensible, <span class='sc'>Madam</span>, from
+Your Great Example, that Piety and
+Vertue seated upon a Throne, draw
+many to Imitation, whom ill Principles,
+or the Course of the World, might have
+led another Way. These are the best,
+as well as easiest Victories, that are
+gain’d without Contest. And as Princes
+are the Vicegerents of God upon Earth,
+so when their Majesty is in Conjunction
+with Goodness, it hath a double Character
+of Divinity upon it: And we owe
+them a double Tribute of Fear and
+Love. Which, with constant Prayers
+for Your <span class='sc'>Majesty</span>’s present and future
+Happiness, shall be always Dutifully
+paid, by</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Your MAJESTY’s</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Most Humble and</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Most Obedient Subject</i>,</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>T. BURNET.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c007'>PREFACE TO THE READER.</h2>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>I have not much to say to the
+Reader in this Preface to the
+Third Part of the Theory; seeing
+it treats upon a Subject own’d by
+all, and out of Dispute: <i>The
+Conflagration of the World</i>. The Question
+will be only about the Bounds and Limits of
+the Conflagration, the Causes and the Manner
+of it. These I have fixed, according to the
+truest Measures I could take from Scripture,
+and from Nature. I differ, I believe, from the
+common Sentiment in this, that, in following
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Philosophy, I suppose, that the
+burning of the Earth, will be a true Liquefaction
+or Dissolution of it, as to the exterior
+Region. And that this lays a Foundation for
+<i>new Heavens</i> and a <i>new Earth</i>; which seems
+to me as plain a Doctrine in Christian Religion,
+as the Conflagration itself.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I have endeavour’d to propose an intelligible
+Way, whereby the Earth may be consum’d
+by Fire. But if any one can propose
+another, more probable, and more consistent, I
+will be the first Man that shall give him
+Thanks for this Discovery. He that loves
+Truth for its own sake, is willing to receive
+it from any Hand; as he that truly loves his
+Country, is glad of a Victory over the Enemy,
+whether himself, or any other, has the
+Glory of it. I need not repeat here, what I
+have already said upon several Occasions, that
+’tis the Substance of this Theory, whether in
+this Part, or in other Parts, that I mainly regard
+and depend upon: Being willing to suppose,
+that many single Explications and Particularities
+may be rectified, upon farther Thoughts,
+and clearer Light. I know our best Writings, in
+this Life, are but <i>Essays</i>, which we leave to Posterity
+to review and correct.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the Style, I always endeavour to express
+myself in a plain and perspicuous manner;
+that the Reader may not lose Time, nor
+wait too long, to know my Meaning. To
+give an Attendant quick Dispatch, is a Civility,
+whether you do his Business or no. I would
+not willingly give any one the Trouble of
+reading a Period twice over, to know the
+Sense of it; lest, when he comes to know it, he
+should not think it a Recompence for his Pains.
+Whereas, on the contrary, if you are easy to your
+Reader, he will certainly make you an Allowance
+for it, in his Censure.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You must not think it strange however,
+that the Author sometimes, in meditating upon
+this Subject, is warm in his Thoughts and Expressions.
+For to see a World perishing in
+Flames, Rocks melting, the Earth trembling,
+and an Host of Angels in the Clouds, one must
+be very much a Stoick, to be a cold and unconcerned
+Spectator of all this. And when
+we are mov’d ourselves, our Words will have
+a Tincture of those Passions which we feel.
+Besides, in moral Reflections which are design’d
+for Use, there must be some Heat, as
+well as dry Reason, to inspire this cold Clod of
+Clay, this dull Body of Earth, which we carry
+about with us; and you must soften and
+pierce that Crust, before you can come at
+the Soul. But especially when Things future
+are to be represented, you cannot use too
+strong Colours, if you would give them Life,
+and make them appear present to the Mind.
+Farewel.</p>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c007'>CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c004'>The <span class='sc'>Third Book</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The Introduction; with the Contents and Order
+of this Treatise</i> ... <a href='#Page_1'>1</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='two'>II.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The true State of the Question is propos’d. ’Tis
+the general Doctrine of the Antients, That the present
+World, or the present Frame of Nature, is mutable
+and perishable; to which the sacred Books agree:
+And natural Reason can alledge nothing against it</i> ... <a href='#Page_7'>7</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>That the World will be destroyed by Fire, is the
+Doctrine of the Antients; especially of the Stoicks.
+That the same Doctrine is more antient than the
+Greeks, and deriv’d from the Barbarick Philosophy;
+and that probably from Noah, the Father of all traditionary
+Learning. The same Doctrine expresly authorized
+by Revelation, and inrolled into the Sacred
+Canon</i> ... <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Concerning the time of the Conflagration, and the
+End of the World. What the Astronomers say upon
+this Subject, and upon what they ground their Calculations.
+The true Notion of the Great Year, or of
+the Platonick Year, stated and explain’d</i> ... <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Concerning Prophecies that determine the End of
+the World; Of what Order soever, Prophane or
+Sacred, Jewish or Christian. That no certain Judgment
+can be made from any of them, at what Distance
+we are from the Conflagration</i> ... <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='six'>VI.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Concerning the Causes of the Conflagration. The
+Difficulty of conceiving how this Earth can be set on
+Fire. With a general Answer to that Difficulty.
+Two suppos’d Causes of the Conflagration, by the Sun’s
+drawing nearer to the Earth, or the Earth’s throwing
+out the central Fire, examin’d and rejected</i> ... <a href='#Page_60'>60</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The true Bounds of the last Fire, and how far it is
+Fatal. The natural Causes and Materials of it,
+cast into three Ranks. First, Such as are exterior
+and visible upon Earth, where the Volcano’s of this
+Earth, and their Effects, are consider’d. Secondly,
+Such Materials as are within the Earth. Thirdly,
+Such as are in the Air</i> ... <a href='#Page_73'>73</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='eight'>VIII.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Some new Dispositions towards the Conflagration,
+as to the Matter, Form, and Situation of the Earth.
+Concerning miraculous Causes, and how far the Ministry
+of Angels may be engaged in this Work</i> ... <a href='#Page_92'>92</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='nine'>IX.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>How the Sea will be diminish’d and consum’d.
+How the Rocks and Mountains will be thrown down
+and melted, and the whole exterior Frame of the Earth
+dissolv’d into a Deluge of Fire</i> ... <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='ten'>X.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Concerning the Beginning and Progress of the
+Conflagration, what Part of the Earth will first be
+burnt. The Manner of the future Destruction of Rome,
+according to the Prophetical Indications. The last
+State and Consummation of the general Fire</i> ... <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='eleven'>XI.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>An Account of these extraordinary Phænomena
+and Wonders in Nature, that, according to Scripture,
+will precede the Coming of Christ, and the Conflagration
+of the World</i> ... <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='twelve'>XII.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>An imperfect Description of the Coming of our Saviour,
+and of the World on Fire</i> ... <a href='#Page_143'>143</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The Conclusion</i> ... <a href='#Page_160'>160</a></p>
+
+<p class='c004'>The FOURTH BOOK.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The Introduction; that the World will not be
+annihilated in the last Fire. That we are to
+expect, according to Scripture, and the Christian
+Doctrine, new Heavens and a new Earth, when these
+are dissolved or burnt up</i> ... <a href='#Page_184'>184</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='two'>II.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The Birth of the new Heavens and the new Earth,
+from the second Chaos, or the Remains of the old
+World. The Form, Order, and Qualities of the new
+Earth, according to Reason and Scripture</i> ... <a href='#Page_191'>191</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Concerning the Inhabitants of the new Earth. That
+natural Reason cannot determine this Point. That,
+according to Scripture, the Sons of the first Resurrection,
+or the Heirs of the Millennium, are to be the
+Inhabitants of the new Earth: The Testimony of the
+Philosophers, and of the Christian Fathers, for the
+Renovation of the World. The first Proposition laid
+down</i> ... <a href='#Page_201'>201</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The Proof of a Millennium, or of a blessed Age to
+come, from Scripture. A View of the Apocalypse,
+and of the Prophecies of Daniel, in reference to this
+Kingdom of Christ, and of his Saints</i> ... <a href='#Page_213'>213</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>A View of other Places of Scripture, concerning
+the Millennium, or future Kingdom of Christ. In
+what Sense all the Prophets have born Testimony
+concerning it</i> ... <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='six'>VI.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The Sense and Testimony of the Primitive Church,
+concerning the Millennium, or future Kingdom of
+Christ; from the Times of the Apostles, to the Nicene
+Council. The second Proposition laid down, when, by
+what Means, and for what Reasons, that Doctrine
+was afterwards neglected or discountenanc’d</i> ... <a href='#Page_246'>246</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The true State of the Millennium, according to
+Characters taken from Scripture. Some Mistakes
+concerning it rectified</i> ... <a href='#Page_260'>260</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='eight'>VIII.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The third Proposition laid down, concerning the
+Time and Place of the Millennium. Several Arguments
+us’d to prove, that it cannot be till after the
+Conflagration; and that the new Heavens and new
+Earth, are the true Seat of the blessed Millennium</i> ... <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='nine'>IX.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>The chief Employment of the Millennium DEVOTION
+and CONTEMPLATION</i> ... <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>CHAP. <abbr title='ten'>X.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Objections against the Millennium answer’d. With
+some Conjectures concerning the State of Things after
+the Millennium: And what will be the final Consummation
+of this World</i> ... <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>THE THEORY OF THE EARTH.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c008'>BOOK <abbr title='three'> III. </abbr> <br> Concerning the <span class='sc'>Conflagration</span>.</h2>
+</div>
+<h3 class='c009'>CHAP. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr> <br> The <span class='sc'>Introduction</span>: <br> <i>With the Contents and Order of this Work.</i></h3>
+<p class='c004'>Seeing Providence hath planted in all
+Men a natural Desire and Curiosity
+of knowing Things to come; and
+such Things especially, as concern
+our particular Happiness, or the general
+Fate of Mankind; This Treatise may, in
+both respects, hope for a favourable Reception
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>amongst inquisitive Persons; seeing the Design
+of it is, to give an Account of the greatest Revolutions
+of Nature that are expected in future Ages:
+and in the first Place, of the <i>Conflagration of the
+World</i>. In which universal Calamity, when all
+Nature suffers, every Man’s particular Concern
+must needs be involved.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We see with what Eagerness Men pry into the
+Stars, to see if they can read there the Death of
+a King, or the Fall of an Empire: ’Tis not the
+fate of any single Prince or Potentate, that we
+calculate, but of all Mankind: Nor of this or that
+particular Kingdom or Empire, but of the whole
+Earth. Our Enquiries must reach to that great
+Period of Nature, when all Things are to be dissolv’d;
+both Human Affairs, and the Stage whereon
+they are acted; when the Heavens and the
+Earth will pass away, and the Elements melt
+with fervent Heat. We desire, if possible, to
+know what will be the Face of that Day, that
+great and terrible Day! when the Regions of
+the Air will be nothing but mingled Flame and
+Smoke, and the habitable Earth turn’d into a
+Sea of molten Fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But we must not leave the World in this Disorder
+and Confusion, without examining what
+will be the Issue and Consequences of it. Whether
+this will be the End of all Things, and Nature,
+by a sad Fate, lie eternally dissolv’d and
+desolate in this manner? or, Whether we may
+hope for a Restoration: <i>New Heavens</i> and a
+<i>New Earth</i>, which the Holy Writings make
+mention of, more pure and perfect than the former?
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>As if this was but as a <i>Refiner’s Fire</i>, to
+purge out the Dross and coarser Parts, and then
+cast the Mass again into a new and better Mould.
+These Things, with God’s Assistance, shall be
+matter of our present Enquiry: These make the
+general Subject of this Treatise, and of the remaining
+Parts of this <i>Theory</i> of the Earth. Which
+now, you see, begins to be a kind of Prophecy
+or Prognostication of Things to come, as it hath
+been hitherto an History of Things past; of
+such States and Changes as Nature hath already
+undergone. And if that Account which we have
+given of the Origin of the Earth, its first and
+Paradisaical Form, and the Dissolution of it at
+the universal Deluge, appear fair and reasonable;
+the second Dissolution by Fire, and the Renovation
+of it out of a second Chaos, I hope, will
+be deduc’d from as clear Grounds and Suppositions.
+And Scripture it self will be a more visible
+Guide to us in these following Parts of the
+Theory, than it was in the former. In the mean
+Time, I take occasion to declare here again, as I
+have done heretofore, That neither this, nor any
+other great Revolutions of Nature, are brought
+to pass, by Causes purely natural, without the
+Conduct of a particular Providence. And ’tis
+the sacred Books of Scripture that are the Records
+of this Providence, both as to Times past, and
+Times to come; as to all the signal Changes,
+either of the natural World, or of Mankind,
+and the different Oeconomies of Religion. In
+which respects, these Books, tho’ they did not
+contain a moral Law, would, notwithstanding, be,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>as the most mystical, so also the most valuable
+Books in the World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Treatise, you see, will consist of Two
+Parts: The former whereof is to give an Account
+of the <i>Conflagration</i>; and the latter, of the
+<i>New Heavens</i>, and <i>New Earth</i> following upon
+it; together with the State of Mankind in those
+new Habitations. As to the Conflagration, we
+<i>first</i> enquire, What the Antients thought concerning
+the present Frame of this World: Whether
+it was to perish or no: Whether to be destroyed,
+or to stand eternally in this Posture. Then, in
+what Manner they thought it would be destroy’d:
+By what Force or Violence: Whether
+by Fire or other ways. And with these Opinions
+of the Antients we will compare the Doctrine
+of the Prophets and Apostles, to discover and
+confirm the Truth of them. In the <i>second Place</i>,
+We will examine, What Calculations or Conjectures
+have been made concerning the Time of
+this great Catastrophe, or of the End of this
+World: Whether that Period be definable or
+no; and whether by natural Arguments, or by
+Prophecies. <i>Thirdly</i>, We will consider the Signs
+of the approaching Conflagration: Whether such
+as will be in Nature, or in the State of human
+Affairs; but especially such as are taken notice
+of, and recorded, in Scripture. <i>Fourthly</i>, Which
+is the principal Point, and yet that wherein
+the Antients have been most silent, <i>What Causes</i>
+there are in Nature, what Preparations, for this
+Conflagration: Where are the Seeds of this
+universal Fire, or Fuel sufficient for the Nourishing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>of it? <i>Lastly</i>, In what Order, and by what
+Degrees, the Conflagration will proceed: In
+what Manner the Frame of the Earth will be
+dissolv’d; and what will be the dreadful Countenance
+of a <i>burning World</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Heads are set down more fully in the
+Arguments of each Chapter; and seem to be
+sufficient for the Explication of this whole Matter:
+Taking in some additional Discourses, which,
+in pursuing these Heads, enter of their own accord,
+and make the Work more even and intire.
+In the Second Part, we restore the World that
+we had destroy’d: Build New Heavens and a
+New Earth, <i>wherein Righteousness shall dwell</i>.
+Establish that new Order of Things, which is so
+often celebrated by the Prophets: A Kingdom
+of Peace and of Justice, where the Enemy of
+Mankind shall be bound, and the Prince of Peace
+shall rule. A Paradise without a Serpent, and
+a Tree of Knowledge, not to wound, but to heal
+the Nations: Where will be neither <i>Curse</i>, nor
+<i>Pain</i>, nor <i>Death</i>, nor <i>Disease</i>: Where all
+Things are new, all Things are more perfect, both
+the World it self, and its Inhabitants: Where
+the First-born from the Dead, have the First-fruits
+of Glory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We dote upon this present World, and the Enjoyments
+of it: And ’tis not without Pain, and
+Fear, and Reluctancy, that we are torn from
+them; as if our Hopes lay all within the Compass
+of this Life. Yet, I know not by what good
+Fate, my Thoughts have been always fix’d upon
+Things to come, more than upon Things present.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>These I know, by certain Experience, to be but
+Trifles; and if there be nothing more considerable
+to come, the whole Being of Man is no better
+than a Trifle. But there is Room enough before
+us in that we call <i>Eternity</i>, for great and noble
+Scenes; and the Mind of Man feels itself lessen’d
+and straiten’d in this low and narrow State; wishes
+and waits to see something greater. And if it
+could discern another World a coming, on this
+side Eternal Life: a beginning Glory, the best
+that Earth can bear, it would be a kind of Immortality
+to enjoy that Prospect before-hand.
+To see, when this Theatre is dissolv’d, where
+we shall act next, and what Parts; what Saints
+and Heroes, if I may so say, will appear upon
+that Stage; and with what Lustre and Excellency:
+How easy would it be, under a View
+of these Futurities, to despise the little Pomps
+and Honours, and the Momentary Pleasures of
+a mortal Life? But I proceed to our Subject.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='two'>II</abbr> <br> <i>The true State of the Question is propos’d.</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>’Tis the general Doctrine of the Antients, that
+the present World, or the present Frame of
+Nature, is mutable and perishable: To which
+the Sacred Books agree; and natural Reason
+can alledge nothing against it.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>When we speak of the End or Destruction
+of the World, whether by Fire
+or otherwise, ’tis not to be imagin’d that we
+understand this of the <i>Great Universe</i>; Sun,
+Moon, and Stars, and the highest Heavens;
+as if these were to perish or be destroy’d some
+few Years hence, whether by Fire or any other
+Way. This Question is only to be understood
+of the <i>sublunary World</i>, of this Earth and
+its Furniture; which had its Original about Six
+thousand Years ago, according to the History
+of <i>Moses</i>; and hath once already been destroyed,
+when the Exterior Region of it broke, and
+the Abyss, issuing forth, as out of a Womb, overflow’d
+all the habitable Earth, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 17.</i> <i>Job
+<abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> 8.</i> The next Deluge is that of Fire; which
+will have the same Bounds, and overflow the
+Surface of the Earth, much what in the same
+Manner. But the Cœlestial Regions, where
+the Stars and Angels inhabit, are not concerned
+in this Fate: Those are not made of combustible
+Matter; nor, if they were, could our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>Flames reach them. Possibly those Bodies may
+have Changes and Revolutions peculiar to themselves,
+but in Ways unknown to us, and after long
+and unknown Periods of Time. Therefore, when
+we speak of the Conflagration of the World, these
+have no Concern in the Question; nor any other
+Part of the Universe, than the Earth and its Dependances.
+As will evidently appear when we
+come to explain the Manner and Causes of the
+Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And as this Conflagration can extend no farther
+than to the Earth and its Elements, so neither can
+it destroy the Matter of the Earth; but only the
+Form and Fashion of it, as it is an habitable World.
+Neither Fire, nor any natural Agent, can destroy
+Matter, that is, reduce it to nothing: It may alter
+the Modes and Qualities of it, but the Substance
+will always remain. And accordingly the Apostle,
+when he speaks of the Mutability of this World,
+says only, <i>The Figure</i> or Fashion of <i>this World
+passes away</i>, <i>1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 31.</i> This Structure of the
+Earth and Disposition of the Elements; and all
+the <i>Works</i> of the Earth, as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> says, <i>2
+Epist. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr></i> all its natural Productions, and all the
+Works of Art or human Industry; these will
+perish, be melted or torn in Pieces by the Fire;
+but without an Annihilation of the Matter, any
+more than in the former Deluge. And this will
+be farther prov’d and illustrated in the Beginning
+of the following Books.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Question being thus stated, we are next to
+consider the Sense of Antiquity upon these two
+Points: First, Whether this sublunary World is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>mutable and perishable: Secondly, By the Force
+and Action of what Causes, and in what Manner,
+it will perish; whether by Fire, or otherwise.
+<i>Aristotle</i> is very irregular in his Sentiments about
+the State of the World; he allows it neither Beginning
+nor Ending, Rise nor Fall; but wou’d have
+it eternal and immutable. And this he understands,
+not only of the great Universe, but of this sublunary
+World, this Earth which we inhabit;
+wherein he will not admit there ever have been,
+or ever will be, either general Deluges or Conflagrations.
+And, as if he was ambitious to be
+thought singular in his Opinion about the Eternity
+of the World, he says, <i>All</i> the <i>Antients</i>
+before him, gave some Beginning or Origin to
+the World; but were not, indeed, so unanimous
+as to its future Fate: Some believing it immutable,
+or, as the Philosophers call it, incorruptible;
+others, That it had its fatal Times and Periods,
+as lesser Bodies have; and a Term of Age
+prefix’d to it by Providence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But before we examine this Point any farther,
+it will be necessary to reflect upon that which
+we noted before, an Ambiguity in the Use of the
+Word <i>World</i>, which gives frequent Occasion of
+Mistakes in reading the Ancients: When that
+which they speak of the <i>great Universe</i>, we
+apply to the <i>sublunary World</i>: Or, on the contrary,
+what they speak of this Earth, we extend
+to the whole Universe. And if some of
+them, besides <i>Aristotle</i>, made the World incorruptible,
+they might mean that of the <i>great
+Universe</i>, which they thought would never be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>dissolv’d or perish as to its Mass and Bulk: But
+single Parts and Points of it (and our Earth is
+no more) may be variously transform’d, and
+made habitable and unhabitable, according to
+certain Periods of Time, without any Prejudice
+to their Philosophy. So <i>Plato</i>, for Instance,
+thinks this World will have no Dissolution: For,
+being a Work so beautiful and noble, the Goodness
+of God, he says, will always preserve it. It is
+most reasonable to understand this of the great
+Universe; For, in our Earth, <i>Plato</i> himself admits
+such Dissolutions as are made by general Deluges
+and Conflagrations; and we contend for no
+other. So likewise in other Authors, if they speak
+of the Immortality of the World, you must observe
+what World they apply it to; and whether
+to the Matter or the Form of it: And if you remember
+that our Discourse proceeds only upon the
+sublunary World, and the Dissolution of its Form,
+you will find little in Antiquity contrary to this
+Doctrine. I always except <i>Aristotle</i> (who allow’d
+of no Providence in this inferior World)
+and some <i>Pythagoreans</i> falsly so call’d, being either
+fictitious Authors, or Apostates from the Doctrine
+of their Master. These being excepted, upon
+a View of the rest, you will find very few Dissenters
+from this general Doctrine.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Plato</i>’s Argument against the Dissolution of
+the World, from the Goodness and Wisdom of
+God, would not be altogether unreasonable,
+tho’ apply’d to this Earth, if it was so to be dissolv’d,
+as never to be restor’d again. But we
+expect <i>New Heavens</i> and a <i>New Earth</i>, upon
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>the Dissolution of these; better in all Respects,
+more commodious, and more beautiful. And
+the several Perfections of the Divine Nature,
+Wisdom, Power, Goodness, Justice, Sanctity,
+cannot be so well display’d and exemplify’d in
+any one single State of Nature, as in a Succession
+of States, fitted to receive one another according
+to the Dispositions of the moral World,
+and the Order of Divine Providence. Wherefore,
+<i>Plato</i>’s Argument from the Divine Attributes,
+all Things consider’d, doth rather prove
+a Succession of Worlds, than that one single
+World should remain the same throughout all
+Ages, without Change or Variation. Next to
+the <i>Platonists</i>, the <i>Stoicks</i> were most considerable
+in Matters relating to Morality and
+Providence: And their Opinion, in this Case, is
+well known; they being look’d upon by the Moderns,
+as the principal Authors of the Doctrine
+of the <i>Conflagration</i>. Nor is it less known that
+the School of <i>Democritus</i> and <i>Epicurus</i>, made
+all their Worlds subject to Dissolution; and by
+a new Concourse of Atoms restor’d them again.
+Lastly, The <i>Ionick</i> philosophers, who had <i>Thales</i>
+for their Master, and were the first Naturalists
+amongst the <i>Greeks</i>, taught the same Doctrine.
+We have, indeed, but an imperfect Account left
+us of this Sect, and ’tis great Pity; for as it was
+one of the most antient, so it seems to have
+been one of the most considerable amongst
+the <i>Greeks</i> for Natural Philosophy. In those
+Remains which <i>Diogenes Laertius</i> hath preserv’d,
+of <i>Anaxagoras</i>, <i>Anaximenes</i>, <i>Archelaus</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>&#38;c. all great Men in their Time; we find
+that they treated much of the Origin of the
+World, and had many extraordinary Notions about
+it, which come lame and defective to us. The
+Doctrine of their Founder, <i>Thales</i>, which made
+all Things to consist of Water, seems to have a great
+Resemblance to the Doctrine of <i>Moses</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>
+about the Constitution of the first Heavens
+and Earth, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr></i> <i>2 Pet. <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 5.</i> But there is little
+in <i>Laertius</i>, what their Opinion was about the Dissolution
+of the World; other Authors inform us
+more of that. <i>Stobæus</i>, <i>Ecl. Phys. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 1. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 24</i>, joins
+them with <i>Leucippus</i> and the <i>Epicureans</i>: <i>Simplicius</i>
+with <i>Heraclitus</i>, and the <i>Stoicks</i>, in this Doctrine
+about the Corruptibility of the World. So
+that all the Schools of the <i>Greek</i> Philosophers, as
+we noted before, were unanimous in this Point,
+excepting the <i>Peripateticks</i>; whose Master, <i>Aristotle</i>,
+had neither Modesty enough to follow
+the Doctrine of his Predecessors, nor Wit enough
+to invent any Thing better.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Besides these Sects of Philosophers, there
+were Theologers amongst the <i>Greeks</i>, more
+Antient than these Sects, and more Mystical.
+<i>Aristotle</i> often distinguisheth the <i>Naturalists</i>,
+and the <i>Theologues</i>, Οἱ φυσικοὶ, οἱ θεόλογοι. Such
+were <i>Orpheus</i> and his Followers, who had more
+of the antient Oriental Learning, than the succeeding
+Philosophers. But they writ their Philosophy,
+or Theology rather, Mythologically
+and Poetically, in Parables and Allegories, that
+needed an Interpretation. All these Theologers
+supposed the Earth to rise from a Chaos; and as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>they said that <i>Love</i> was the Principle at first,
+that united the loose and severed Elements, and
+formed them into an habitable World; so they
+supposed that if <i>Strife</i> or <i>Contention</i> prevail’d,
+that would again dissolve and disunite them, and
+reduce Things into a Chaos; such as the Earth
+will be in, upon the Conflagration. And it farther
+appears, that both these Orders of the Learned
+in <i>Greece</i>, suppos’d this present Frame of Nature
+might perish, by their Doctrine of <i>Periodical
+Revolutions</i>, or of the Renovation of the
+World after certain Periods of Time; which
+was a Doctrine common amongst the Learned
+<i>Greeks</i>, and received by them from the ancient
+Barbarick Nations: As will appear more at
+large in the following Book, <i><a href='#chap-4-3'>Ch. 3</a>.</i> In the mean
+Time we may observe, that <i>Origen</i> in answering
+<i>Celsus</i>, <i>Lib. 9.</i> about the Point of the Resurrection,
+tells him, That Doctrine ought not
+to appear so strange or ridiculous to him, seeing
+their own Authors did believe and teach
+the <i>Renovation of the World</i>, after certain Ages
+or Periods. And the Truth is, this Renovation
+of the World, rightly stated, is the same Thing
+with the <i>First Resurrection</i> of the Christians.
+And as to the second and general Resurrection,
+when the Righteous shall have Cœlestial Bodies;
+’tis well known, that the <i>Platonists</i> and
+<i>Pythagoreans</i> cloathed the Soul with a Cœlestial
+Body, or, in their Language, an Æthereal Vehicle,
+as her last Beatitude or Glorification.
+So that <i>Origen</i> might very justly tell his Adversary,
+he had no Reason to ridicule the Christian
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>Doctrine of the Resurrection, seeing their
+own Authors had the main Strokes of it in their
+Traditionary Learning.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I will only add one Remark more, before we
+leave this Subject, to prevent a Mistake in the
+Word <i>Immortal</i> or <i>Immortality</i>, when applied
+to the World. As I told you before, the Equivocation
+that was in that Term <i>World</i>, it being
+us’d sometimes for the whole Universe, sometimes
+for this inferior Part of it where we live;
+so likewise we must observe, that when this
+inferior World is said to be <i>Immortal</i>, by the
+Philosophers, as sometimes it is, that commonly
+is not meant of any single State of Nature,
+or any single World, but of a Succession of
+Worlds, consequent one upon another. As a
+Family may be said Immortal, not in any single
+Person, but in a Succession of Heirs. So as,
+many Times, when the Ancients mention the
+Immortality of the World, they do not thereby
+exclude the Dissolution or Renovation of it;
+but suppose a Vicissitude, or Series of Worlds
+succeeding one another. This Observation is
+not mine, but was long since made by <i>Simplicius</i>,
+<i>Stobæus</i>, and others, who tell us in what
+Sense some of those Philosophers who allowed the
+World to be perishable, did yet affirm it to be
+immortal: Namely, by successive Renovations.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much is sufficient to shew the Sense and
+Judgment of Antiquity, as to the Changeableness
+or Perpetuity of the World. But ancient Learning
+is like ancient Medals, more esteem’d for their
+Rarity, than their real Use; unless the Authority
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>of a Prince make them currant: So neither will
+these Testimonies be of any great Effect, unless
+they be made good and valuable by the Authority
+of Scripture. We must therefore add the Testimonies
+of the Prophets and Apostles, to these of the
+<i>Greeks</i> and <i>Barbarians</i>, that the Evidence may be
+full and undeniable. That the Heavens and
+the Earth will perish, or be chang’d into another
+Form, is, sometimes, plainly express’d, sometimes
+suppos’d and alluded to in Scripture. The
+Prophet <i>David</i>’s Testimony is express, both for
+the Beginning and Ending of the World: In
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='a hundred and two'>cii.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 25, 26, 27</i>. <i>Of old hast thou
+laid the Foundation of the Earth, and the Heavens
+are the Work of thy Hands. They shall
+perish, but thou shalt endure: Yea, all of them
+shall wax old like a Garment; as a Vesture shalt
+thou change them, and they shall be changed.
+But thou art the same, and thy Years shall have
+no End.</i> The Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>’s Testimony is no less
+express, to the same Purpose, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr> 6.</i> <i>Lift up
+your Eyes to the Heavens, and look upon the
+Earth beneath: For the Heavens shall vanish
+away like Smoke, and the Earth shall wax old
+like a Garment, and they that dwell therein shall
+die in like Manner.</i> These Texts are plain and
+explicit; and in Allusion to this Day of the
+Lord, and this Destruction of the World, the
+same Prophet often useth Phrases that relate to
+it: As the <i>Concussion of the Heavens and the
+Earth, <abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> 13.</i> The <i>shaking of the Foundations
+of the World, <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 18, 19.</i> The <i>Dissolution
+of the Host of Heaven, <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='thirty-four'>xxxiv.</abbr> 4.</i> And
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>our Sacred Writers have Expressions of the
+like Force, and relating to the same Effect: As
+the <i>Hills melting like Wax, at the Presence of
+the Lord, <abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='ninety-seven'>xcvii.</abbr> 5.</i> Shattering <i>once more</i> all
+the Parts of the Creation, <i><abbr title='Haggai'>Hagg.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 6.</i> <i>Overturning
+the Mountains, and making the Pillars
+of the Earth to tremble, Job <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 5, 6.</i> If you
+reflect upon the Explication given of the Deluge,
+in the first Part of this Theory, and attend
+to the Manner of the Conflagration, as it will
+be explain’d in the Sequel of this Discourse, you
+will see the Justness and Fitness of these Expressions:
+That they are not Poetical Hyperboles, or
+random Expressions of great and terrible Things
+in general, but a true Account of what hath
+been, or will be, at that great Day of the Lord.
+’Tis true, the Prophets sometimes use such like Expressions
+figuratively, for Commotion in States
+and Kingdoms, but that is only by way of Metaphor
+and Accommodation; the true Basis they
+stand upon, is, That Ruin, Overthrow, and Dissolution
+of the Natural World, which was once
+at the Deluge, and will be again, after another
+Manner, at the general Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the New Testament, our Saviour says,
+<i>Heaven and Earth shall pass away, but his Words
+shall not pass away, Mat. <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 35.</i> <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> says,
+the <i>Scheme of this World</i>; the Fashion, Form,
+and Composition of it, <i>passeth away, 1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr>
+31.</i> And when mention is made of <i>New Heavens</i>
+and a <i>New Earth</i>, which both the Prophet
+<i>Isaiah</i>, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr> 17. &#38; <abbr title='sixty-six'>lxvi.</abbr> 22.</i> and the
+Apostles <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, <i>Rev. <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1.</i> <i>2 Pet.</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span><i><abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 13.</i> mention, ’tis plainly imply’d, that the
+Old ones will be dissolv’d. The same Thing is
+also imply’d, when our Saviour speaks of a
+<i>Renascency</i>, or <i>Regeneration</i>, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28.</i> and
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, of a <i>Restitution</i> of all Things, <i>Acts <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+21.</i> For what is now, must be abolish’d, before
+any former Order of Things can be restor’d
+or reduced. In a Word, If there was nothing
+in Scripture concerning this Subject, but that
+Discourse of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s, in his Second Epistle,
+and Third Chapter, concerning the triple Order
+and Successions of the Heavens and the Earth,
+past, present, and to come; that alone would be
+a Conviction, and Demonstration to me, that
+this present World will be dissolv’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You will say, it may be, in the last Place, we
+want still the Testimony of Natural Reason and
+Philosophy, to make the Evidence complete.
+I answer, ’tis enough if they be silent, and
+have nothing to say to the contrary. Here are
+Witnesses, Human and Divine, and if none
+appear against them, we have no reason to refuse
+their Testimony, or to distrust it. Philosophy
+will very readily yield to this Doctrine,
+that all material Compositions are dissolvable;
+and she will not wonder to see that die, which
+she had seen born: I mean this terrestrial
+World. She stood upon the Chaos, and saw it
+roll itself, with Difficulty, and after many
+Strugglings, into the form of an habitable Earth:
+And that Form she saw broken down again at
+the Deluge; and can as little hope or expect,
+now, as then, that it should be everlasting and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>immutable. There would be nothing great
+or considerable in this inferior World, if there
+were not such Revolutions of Nature. The
+Seasons of the Year, and the fresh Productions
+of the Spring, are pretty in their Way; but
+when the (<i>Annus Magnus</i>) <i>Great Year</i> comes
+about, with a new Order of all Things, in the
+Heavens, and on the Earth; and a new Dress of
+Nature throughout all her Regions, far more
+goodly and beautiful than the fairest Spring;
+this gives a new Life to the Creation, and
+shews the Greatness of its Author. Besides,
+these fatal Catastrophes are always a Punishment
+to degenerate Mankind, that are overwhelm’d
+in the Ruins of these perishing Worlds.
+And to make Nature herself execute the Divine
+Vengeance against rebellious Creatures,
+argues both the Power and Wisdom of that
+Providence that governs all Things here below.
+These Things Reason and Philosophy approve
+of; but if you further require, that they should
+shew a <i>Necessity</i> of this future Destruction of
+the World, from <i>natural Causes</i>, with the
+Time, and all other Circumstances of this Effect;
+your Demands are unreasonable, seeing these
+Things do not depend solely upon Nature. But
+if you will content yourself to know what Dispositions
+there are in Nature towards such a
+Change; how it may begin, proceed, and be
+consummate, under the Conduct of Providence,
+be pleased to read the following Discourse, for
+your further Satisfaction.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>That the World will be destroy’d by Fire, is the
+Doctrine of the Ancients, especially of the
+Stoicks. That the same Doctrine is more ancient
+than the Greeks, and deriv’d from the
+Barbarick Philosophy; and That probably
+from Noah, the Father of all Traditionary
+Learning. The same Doctrine expressly authorized
+by Revelation, and inroll’d into the
+Sacred Canon.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>That the present World, or the present
+Frame of Nature, will be destroy’d, we
+have already shewn. In what Manner this
+Destruction will be, by what Force, or what
+kind of Fate, must be our next Enquiry. The
+Philosophers have always spoken of <i>Fire</i> and
+<i>Water</i>, those Two unruly Elements, as the only
+Causes that can destroy the World, and work
+our Ruin; and accordingly, they say, all the
+great and fatal Revolutions of Nature, either
+past, or to come, depend upon the Violence of
+these Two; when they get the Mastery, and
+overwhelm all the rest, and the whole Earth,
+in a Deluge, or Conflagration. But, as they
+make these Two the destroying Elements, so
+they also make them the purifying Elements.
+And, accordingly in their Lustrations, or their
+Rites and Ceremonies for purging Sin; Fire and
+Water were chiefly made use of, both amongst
+the <i>Romans</i>, <i>Greeks</i>, and <i>Barbarians</i>. And
+when these Elements over-run the World, it is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>not, they say, for a final Destruction of it, but to
+purge Mankind, and Nature from their Impurities.
+As for Purgation by Fire and Water, the Stile of
+our Sacred Writings does very much accommodate
+itself to that Sense; and the Holy Ghost,
+who is the great Purifier of Souls, is compared in
+his Operation upon us, and in our Regeneration,
+to Fire or Water. And as for the external World,
+<abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, <i>1 <abbr title='epistle'>Ep.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21.</i> makes the Flood to have been
+a kind of <i>Baptizing</i> or Renovation of the World.
+And <abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, <i>1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 13.</i> and the Prophet <i>Malachi</i>,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>c.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 2, 3.</i> makes the last Fire, to be a purging
+and refining Fire. But to return to the Ancients.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Stoicks</i> especially, of all other Sects
+amongst the <i>Greeks</i>, have preserved the Doctrine
+of the Conflagration; and made it a considerable
+Part of their Philosophy, and almost a Character
+of their Order. This is a Thing so well known,
+that I need not use any Citations to prove it. But
+they cannot pretend to have been the first Authors
+of it neither. For, besides that amongst
+the <i>Greeks</i> themselves, <i>Heraclitus</i> and <i>Empedocles</i>,
+more ancient than <i>Zeno</i>, the Master of the
+<i>Stoicks</i>, taught this Doctrine; ’tis plainly a Branch
+of the Barbarick Philosophy, and taken from
+thence by the <i>Greeks</i>. For it is well known, that
+the most ancient and mystick Learning amongst
+the <i>Greeks</i>, was not originally their own, but
+borrowed of the more Eastern Nations, by <i>Orpheus</i>,
+<i>Pythagoras</i>, <i>Plato</i>, and many more, who
+travell’d thither, and traded with the Priests for
+Knowledge and Philosophy; and when they
+got a competent Stock, returned home, and set
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>up a School, or a Sect, to instruct their Countrymen.
+But before we pass to the Eastern Nations,
+let us, if you please, compare the <i>Roman</i> Philosophy
+upon this Subject, with that of the <i>Greeks</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Romans</i> were a great People, that made
+a Shew of Learning, but had little, in reality,
+more than Words and Rhetorick. Their Curiosity
+or Emulation in Philosophical Studies was
+so little, that it did not make different Sects
+and Schools amongst them, as amongst the
+<i>Greeks</i>. I remember no Philosophers they had,
+but such as <i>Tully</i>, <i>Seneca</i>, and some of their
+Poets. And of these <i>Lucretius</i>, <i>Lucan</i>, and
+<i>Ovid</i>, have spoken openly of the Conflagration.
+<i>Ovid</i>’s Verses are well known,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Esse quoque in fatis reminiscitur, affore tempus,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Quo mare, quo tellus, correptaque regia Cœli</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Ardeat, &#38; mundi moles operosa laboret.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>A Time decreed by Fate, at length will come,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>When Heavens, and Earth, and Seas, shall have their Doom;</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>A fiery Doom: And Nature’s mighty Frame,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Shall break, and be dissolv’d into a Flame.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>We see <i>Tully</i>’s Sense upon this Matter, in <i>Scipio</i>’s
+<i>Dream</i>. When the old Man speaks to his
+Nephew <i>Africanus</i>, and shews him from the
+Clouds, this Spot of Earth, where we live; he
+tells him, tho’ our Actions should be great, and
+Fortune favour them with Success, yet there wou’d
+be no Room for any lasting Glory in this World;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>for the World itself, is transient and fugitive.
+And a Deluge, or a Conflagration, which necessarily
+happen after certain Periods of Time, will
+sweep away all Records of human Actions. As
+for <i>Seneca</i>, he being a profess’d <i>Stoick</i>, we need
+not doubt of his Opinion in this Point. We may
+add here, if you please, the <i>Sybelline Verses</i>, which
+were kept, with great Religion, in the Capitol
+at <i>Rome</i>, and consulted with much Ceremony
+upon solemn Occasions. These <i>Sybils</i>, were
+the Prophetesses of the <i>Gentiles</i>; and tho’ their
+Writings now have many spurious Additions, yet
+none doubt but that the Conflagration of the
+World, was one of their original Prophecies.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us now proceed to the Eastern Nations.
+As the <i>Romans</i> received the small Skill they had
+in the Sciences, from the <i>Greeks</i>; so the <i>Greeks</i>,
+receiv’d their chief Mystick Learning from the
+<i>Barbarians</i>: That is, from the <i>Ægyptians</i>,
+<i>Persians</i>, <i>Phœnicians</i>, and other Eastern Nations;
+for ’tis not only the Western, or Northern
+People, that they called <i>Barbarians</i>, but indeed, all
+Nations besides themselves. For that is commonly
+the Vanity of great Empires, to uncivilize,
+in a Manner, all the rest of the World; and
+to account all those People <i>barbarous</i>, that are
+not subject to their Dominion. These however,
+whom they called so, were the most ancient
+People, and had the first Learning that was ever
+heard of after the Flood. And amongst these,
+the <i>Ægyptians</i> were as famous as any; whose
+Sentiments in this particular of the Conflagration,
+are well known. For <i>Plato</i>, who liv’d amongst
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>them several Years, tells us in his <i>Timæus</i>, that
+it was the Doctrine of their Priests, that the fatal
+Catastrophes of the World, were by <i>Fire</i> and
+<i>Water</i>. In like manner, the <i>Persians</i> made their
+beloved God, <i>Fire</i>, at length to consume all
+Things that are capable of being consum’d: For
+that is said to have been the Doctrine of <i>Hydaspes</i>,
+one of their great <i>Magi</i>, or Wise Men. As to
+the <i>Phœnicians</i>, I suspect very much, that the <i>Stoicks</i>
+had their Philosophy from them (<i>Just. Mar.
+Apol. 2.</i>) and amongst other Things the Conflagration.
+We shall take Notice of that hereafter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to comprehend the <i>Arabians</i> also, and
+<i>Indians</i>, give me leave to reflect a little upon the
+Story of the <i>Phœnix</i>. A Story well known, and
+related by some ancient Authors, and is in short this:
+The <i>Phœnix</i>, they say, is a Bird in <i>Arabia</i>, <i>India</i>,
+and those Eastern Parts, single in her Kind,
+never more than one at a Time, and very long-lived;
+appearing only at the Expiration of the
+<i>Great Year</i>, as they call it: And when she makes
+herself a Nest of Spices, which being set on fire
+by the Sun, or some other secret Power, she hovers
+upon it, and consumes herself in the Flames.
+But, which is most wonderful, out of these Ashes
+riseth a second <i>Phœnix</i>, so that it is not so
+much a Death, as a Renovation. I do not doubt
+but the Story is a Fable, as to any such kind of
+Bird, single in her Species, living, and dying,
+and reviving in that Manner: But ’tis an Apologue,
+or a Fable with an Interpretation, and was
+intended as an <i>Emblem</i> of the World; which,
+after a long Age, will be consum’d in the last
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>Fire: And from its Ashes or Remains, will arise
+another World, or a new-form’d Heavens and
+Earth. This, I think, is the true Mystery of the
+<i>Phœnix</i>, under which Symbol the Eastern Nations
+preserv’d the Doctrine of the Conflagration,
+and Renovation of the World. They tell somewhat
+a like Story of the Eagle, soaring aloft so
+near the Sun, that by his Warmth and enlivening
+Rays, she renews her Age, and becomes young
+again. To this the <i>Psalmist</i> is thought to allude,
+<abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='a hundred and three'>ciii.</abbr> 5. <i>Thy Youth shall be renewed like the
+Eagles</i>: Which the <i>Chaldee</i> Paraphrast renders,
+<span lang="la"><i>In mundo venturo renovabis, sicut Aquilæ, juventutem
+tuam</i></span>. These Things to me seem plainly to
+be Symbolical, representing that World to
+come, which the Paraphrast mentions, and the
+firing of this. And this is after the Manner of the
+Eastern Wisdom; which always lov’d to go fine,
+cloath’d in Figures and Fancies.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And not only the Eastern <i>Barbarians</i>, but the
+Northern and Western also, had this Doctrine of
+the Conflagration amongst them. The <i>Scythians</i>,
+in their Dispute with the <i>Ægyptians</i> about Antiquity,
+argue upon both Suppositions, of Fire or
+Water, destroying the last World, or beginning
+This. And in the West, the <i>Celts</i>, the most ancient
+People there, had the same Tradition; for the
+<i>Druids</i>, who were their Priests and Philosophers,
+derived not from the <i>Greeks</i>, but of the old Race
+of Wise Men, that had their Learning traditionally,
+and, as it were, hereditary from the first
+Ages: These, as <i>Strabo</i> tells us, <i>lib. 4.</i> gave the
+World a kind of Immortality, by repeated Renovations;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>and the Principle that destroy’d it, according
+to them, was always Fire or Water. I
+had forgot to mention in this List, the <i>Chaldeans</i>,
+whose Opinion we have from <i>Berosus</i>, in
+<i>Seneca</i>, <i>Nat. Quæst. 3.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 29</i>. They did not
+only teach the Conflagration, but also fix’d it to
+a certain Period of Time, when there should
+happen a great Conjunction of the Planets in
+<i>Cancer</i>. Lastly, we may add, to close the Account,
+the modern <i>Indian</i> Philosophers, the Reliques of
+the old <i>Bragmans</i>: These, as <i>Maffeus</i> tells us,
+<i>lib.</i> 16. <i>Hist. Ind.</i> declare, That the World will
+be renewed after an universal Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You see of what Extent and Universality
+throughout all Nations, this Doctrine of the
+Conflagration hath been. Let us now consider,
+what Defects or Excesses there are, in these ancient
+Opinions, concerning this Fate of the World, and
+how they may be rectified: That we may admit
+them no further into our Belief, than they are
+warranted by Reason, or by the Authority of the
+Christian Religion. The first Fault they seem to have
+committed about this Point, is this, That they made
+these Revolutions and Renovations of Nature,
+indefinite or endless: As if there would be such a
+Succession of Deluges and Conflagrations to all
+Eternity. This the <i>Stoicks</i> seem plainly to have
+asserted, as appears from <i>Numenius</i>, <i>Philo</i>, <i>Simplicius</i>,
+and others. <abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i>, <i>Ep. 60.</i> imputes this
+Opinion also to <i>Origen</i>; but he does not always hit
+the true Sense of that Father, or is not fair and just
+in the Representation of it. Whosoever held this
+Opinion, ’tis a manifest Error, and may be easily
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>rectified by the Christian Revelation; which
+teaches us plainly, that there is a final Period and
+Consummation of all Things that belong to this
+Sublunary or Terrestrial World; When the
+<i>Kingdom shall be delivered up to the Father</i>;
+and Time shall be no more.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Another Error they committed in this Doctrine,
+is, the Identity, or Sameness, if I may so say, of
+the World’s succeeding one another. They are
+made, indeed, of the same Lump of Matter, but they
+supposed them to return also in the same Form.
+And, which is worse, that there would be the
+same Face of human Affairs; the same Persons and
+the same Actions over again; so as the second
+World would be but a bare Repetition of the former,
+without any Variety or Diversity. Such a
+Revolution is commonly call’d the <i>Platonick Year</i>:
+A Period when all Things return to the same Posture
+they had been some Thousand of Years before;
+as a Play acted over again, upon the same Stage,
+and to the same Auditory: This is a groundless
+and injudicious Supposition. For, whether
+we consider the Nature of Things, the Earth,
+after a Dissolution by Fire, or by Water, could
+not return into the same Form and Fashion it
+had before; Or whether we consider Providence,
+it would no way suit with the Divine Wisdom
+and Justice, to bring upon the Stage again, those
+very Scenes, and that very Course of human Affairs,
+which it had so lately condemn’d and destroy’d.
+We may be assur’d therefore, that, upon the Dissolution
+of a World, a new Order of Things, both
+as to Nature and Providence, always appears.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>And what that new Order will be, in both respects,
+after the <i>Conflagration</i>, I hope we shall, in
+the following Book, give a satisfactory Account.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These are the Opinions, true or false, of the
+Ancients; and chiefly of the <i>Stoicks</i>, concerning
+the Mystery of the Conflagration. It will
+not be improper to enquire, in the last Place,
+how the <i>Stoicks</i> came by this Doctrine: Whether
+it was their Discovery and Invention, or
+from whom they learned it. That it was not
+their own Invention, we have given sufficient
+ground to believe, by shewing the Antiquity
+of it beyond the Times of the <i>Stoicks</i>. Besides,
+what a Man invents himself, he can give
+the Reasons and Causes of it, as Things upon
+which he founded his Invention: But the <i>Stoicks</i>
+do not this, but, according to the ancient
+traditional Way, deliver the Conclusion without
+Proof or Premises. We named <i>Heraclitus</i> and
+<i>Empedocles</i>, amongst the <i>Greeks</i>, to have taught
+this Doctrine before the <i>Stoicks</i>; And, according
+to <i>Plutarch</i> (<i>de Defec. Orac.</i>) <i>Hesiod</i> and
+<i>Orpheus</i>, Authors of the highest Antiquity, sung of
+this last Fire in their Philosophick Poetry. But I
+suspect the <i>Stoicks</i> had this Doctrine from the
+<i>Phœnicians</i>; for if we inquire into the Original of
+that Sect, we shall find that their Founder <i>Zeno</i>,
+was a Barbarian, or Semi-barbarian, deriv’d from
+the <i>Phœnicians</i>, as <i>Laertius</i> and <i>Cicero</i> give an
+Account of him. And the <i>Phœnicians</i> had a
+great Share in the Oriental Knowledge, as we
+see by <i>Sanchoniathion’s</i> Remains in <i>Eusebius</i>.
+And by their mystical Books which <i>Suidas</i> mentions,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>from whence <i>Pherecydes</i>, <i>Pythagoras</i>’s
+Master, had his Learning. We may therefore,
+reasonably presume, that it might be from
+his Countrymen, the <i>Phœnicians</i>, that <i>Zeno</i>
+had the Doctrine of the <i>Conflagration</i>. Not that
+he brought it first into <i>Greece</i>, but strongly reviv’d
+it, and made it almost peculiar to his Sect.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the <i>Stoicks</i> in particular, and the
+<i>Greeks</i> in general. We have also, you see, trac’d
+these Opinions higher, to the first Barbarick Philosophers;
+who were the first Race of Philosophers
+after the Flood. But <i>Josephus</i> tells a formal Story,
+of Pillars set up by <i>Seth</i>, before the Flood; implying
+the Foreknowledge of this fiery Destruction of
+the World, even from the Beginning of it. His
+Words, <i>lib. 1. <abbr class='spell'>c</abbr>. 3.</i> are to this Effect, give what
+Credit to them you think fit: <i>Seth and his Fellow
+Students, having found out the Knowledge of the
+Cœlestial Bodies, and the Order and Disposition
+of the Universe; and having also receiv’d from
+Adam, a Prophecy, that the World should have a
+double Destruction, one by Water, another by Fire:
+To preserve and transmit their Knowledge, in
+either Case, to Posterity, they raised two Pillars, one
+of Brick, another of Stone, and ingrav’d upon them
+their Philosophy and Inventions. And one of
+these Pillars</i>, the Author says (Κατα τον Συριαδα)
+<i>was standing in</i> Syria, <i>even to his Time</i>. I do
+not press the Belief of this Story; there being nothing,
+that I know of, in Antiquity, Sacred or Prophane,
+that gives a joint Testimony with it. And
+those that set up these Pillars, do not seem to me,
+to have understood the Nature of the <i>Deluge</i> or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span><i>Conflagration</i>; if they thought a Pillar, either of
+Brick or Stone, would be secure, in those great
+Dissolutions of the Earth. But we have pursued
+this Doctrine high enough, without the Help of
+these ante-diluvian Antiquities: Namely, to the
+earliest People, and the first Appearances of Wisdom
+after the Flood. So that, I think, we may
+justly look upon it as the Doctrine of <i>Noah</i>, and
+of his immediate Posterity. And, as that is the
+highest Source of Learning to the present World;
+so we should endeavour to carry our Philosophical
+Traditions to that Original: For I cannot persuade
+myself, but that they had amongst them,
+even in those early Days, the main Strokes, or
+Conclusions of the best Philosophy: Or, if I
+may so say, a Form of sound Doctrine concerning
+Nature and Providence. Of which Matter,
+if you will allow me a short Digression, I will
+speak my Thoughts in a few Words.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In those first Ages of the World, after the
+Flood, when <i>Noah</i> and his Children peopled the
+Earth again, as he gave them Precepts of Morality
+and Piety, for the Conduct of their Manners;
+which are usually call’d <i>Præcepta Noachidarum</i>,
+the <i>Precepts</i> of <i>Noah</i>, frequently mention’d both
+by the <i>Jews</i> and <i>Christians</i>: So also he deliver’d to
+them, at least, if we judge aright, certain Maxims,
+or Conclusions about Providence, the State of Nature,
+and the Fate of the World: And these, in
+Proportion, may be call’d <i>Dogmata Noachidarum</i>,
+the <i>Doctrines</i> of <i>Noah</i>, and <i>his Children</i>. Which
+made a System of Philosophy, or secret Knowledge
+amongst them, delivered by Tradition
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>from Father to Son; but especially preserv’d
+amongst their Priests and Sacred Persons, or such
+others as were addicted to Contemplation. This
+I take to be more ancient than <i>Moses</i> himself, or
+the <i>Jewish</i> Nation. But it would lead me too
+far out of my Way, to set down, in this Place,
+the Reasons of my Judgment. Let it be sufficient
+to have pointed only at this Fountain-head
+of Knowledge, and so return to our Argument.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have heard, as it were, a Cry of Fire,
+throughout all Antiquity, and throughout all
+the People of the Earth. But those Alarums are
+sometimes false, or make a greater Noise than
+the Thing deserves. For my Part, I never trust
+Antiquity barely upon its own Account, but always
+require a second Witness, either from Nature,
+or from Scripture: What the Voice of Nature
+is, we shall hear all along in the following Treatise.
+Let us then examine at present, what Testimony
+the Prophets and Apostles give to this ancient
+Doctrine of the Conflagration of the World.
+The Prophets see the World a Fire at a Distance,
+and more imperfectly, as a Brightness in the
+Heavens, rather than a burning Flame: But
+<abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> describes it, as if he had been standing
+by, and seen the Heavens and Earth in a red
+Fire; heard the cracking Flames, and the tumbling
+Mountains, 2 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 10. In the Day of
+the Lord, <i>The Heavens shall pass away with
+a great Noise, and the Elements shall melt with
+fervent Heat: The Earth also, and the Works
+that are therein, shall be burnt up</i>. Then, after
+a pious Ejaculation, he adds, <i>Ver.</i> 12. <i>Looking
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>for, and hastening the coming of the Day of
+God, wherein the Heavens being on Fire, shall
+be dissolv’d; and the Elements shall melt with
+fervent Heat.</i> This is as lively as a Man could
+express it, if he had the dreadful Spectacle before
+his Eyes. <abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> had before taught the same
+Doctrine (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 5, 6, 7.) but in a more Philosophick
+Way; describing the double Fate of the World,
+by Water and Fire, with relation to the Nature
+and Constitution of either World, past or present.
+<i>The Heavens and the Earth were of old, consisting
+of Water, and by Water: Whereby, the World
+that then was, being overflowed with Water, perished.
+But the Heavens and the Earth which
+are now, by the same Word are kept in Store, reserved
+unto Fire, against the Day of Judgment, and
+Perdition of Ungodly, or Atheistical Men.</i> This
+Testimony of <abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> being full, direct, and
+explicit, will give Light and Strength to several
+other Passages of Scripture, where the same Thing
+is exprest obscurely, or by Allusion. As when
+<abbr title='Saint'>S.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> says, <i>The Fire shall try every Man’s Work
+in that Day</i>, 1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12, 13. And our Saviour
+says, <i>The Tares shall be burnt in the Fire, at
+the End of the World</i>, Matth. <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> 40, 41, 42.
+Accordingly it is said, both by the Apostles
+and Prophets, that <i>God</i> will come to Judgment
+<i>in Fire</i>. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> to the <i>Thessalonians</i>, 2 <i>Thess.</i>
+<abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 7, 8. promiseth the persecuted Righteous
+Rest and Ease, <i>When the Lord shall be revealed
+from Heaven, with his mighty Angels, in
+flaming Fire; taking Vengeance on them that
+know not God</i>, &#38;c. And so to the <i>Hebrews</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span><abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> says, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 27. that for wilful Apostates,
+there remaineth no more Sacrifice for Sin, <i>but a
+certain fearful looking for of Judgment, and fiery
+Indignation, which shall devour the Adversaries</i>,
+or Enemies of God. And in <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 26,
+27, 28, 29. he alludes to the same Thing, when,
+after he had spoken of <i>shaking the Heavens</i>, and
+the <i>Earth</i> once more, he exhorteth, as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>
+does upon the same Occasion, to <i>Reverence and
+godly Fear; for our God is a consuming Fire</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In like manner the Prophets, when they speak
+of destroying the Wicked, and the Enemies of
+God and Christ, at the End of the World, represent
+it as a Destruction <i>by Fire</i>. <abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 6.
+<i>Upon the Wicked the Lord shall rain Coals, Fire,
+and Brimstone, and a burning Tempest: This
+shall be the Portion of their Cup.</i> And <abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='fifty'>l.</abbr> 3.
+<i>Our God shall come, and will not be slow: A Fire
+shall devour before him</i>, and it <i>shall be very tempestuous
+round about him</i>. And in the Beginning of
+those two triumphal Psalms, the <abbr title='sixty-eighth'>lxviiith</abbr>, and <abbr title='ninety-seventh'>xcviith</abbr>,
+we see plain Allusions to this coming of the Lord
+in Fire. The other Prophets speak in the same
+Style, of a fiery Indignation against the Wicked,
+in the Day of the Lord: As in <i>Isaiah</i> <abbr title='sixty-six'>lxvi.</abbr> 15. <i>For
+behold the Lord will come with Fire, and with
+his Chariots like a Whirlwind, to render his
+Anger with Fury, and his Rebuke with Flames
+of Fire</i> (and <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-four'>xxxiv.</abbr> 8, 9, 10) And in <i>Daniel</i>,
+<abbr title='chapter'><i>c.</i></abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9, 10. The Ancient of Days is placed upon
+his Seat of Judgment, covered in Flames.
+<i>I beheld till the Thrones were set, and the
+Ancient of Days did sit, whose Garment was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>white as Snow, and the Hair of his Head like
+the pure Wool: His Throne was like the fiery
+Flame, his Wheels as burning Fire. A fiery
+Stream issued and came forth from before him:
+thousand thousands ministred unto him, and ten
+thousand times ten thousand stood before him:
+The Judgment was set, and the Books were
+opened.</i> The Prophet <i>Malachi</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>c.</abbr> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 1. describes
+the Day of the Lord to the same Effect, and in
+like Colours; <i>Behold the Day cometh, that shall
+burn as an Oven: and all the Proud, yea, and
+all that do wickedly, shall be as Stubble; and the
+Day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the
+Lord of Hosts, that it shall leave them neither
+Root nor Branch.</i> And that Nature herself, and
+the Earth shall suffer in that Fire, the Prophet
+<i>Zephany</i> tells us, <i>c.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 8. <i>All the Earth shall be
+devoured with the Fire of my Jealousy.</i> Lastly,
+this Consumption of the Earth by Fire, even to the
+Foundations of it, is exprest livelily by <i>Moses</i> in
+his Song, <i>Deut.</i> <abbr title='thirty-two'>xxxii.</abbr> 22. <i>A Fire is kindled in
+my Anger, and shall burn unto the lowest Hell:
+and shall consume the Earth with her Increase, and
+set on Fire the Foundations of the Mountains.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If we reflect upon these Witnesses; and especially
+the first and last, <i>Moses</i> and Saint <i>Peter</i>;
+at what a great Distance of Time they writ
+their Prophecies, and yet how well they agree,
+we must needs conclude they were acted by
+the same Spirit; and a Spirit that saw thorough
+all the Ages of the World, from the Beginning
+to the End. These Sacred Writers were so
+remote in Time from one another, that they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>could not confer together, nor conspire either in
+a false Testimony, or to make the same Prediction.
+But being under one common Influence and Inspiration,
+which is always consistent with itself, they
+have dictated the same Things, tho’ at two thousand
+Years Distance sometimes from one another.
+This, besides many other Considerations, makes
+their Authority incontestable. And upon the
+whole Account, you see, that the Doctrine of the
+future <i>Conflagration of the World</i>, having run thro’
+all Ages and Nations, is, by the joint Consent
+of the Prophets and Apostles, adopted into the
+Christian Faith.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>Concerning the Time of the Conflagration, and the
+End of the World. What the Astronomers say
+upon this Subject, and upon what they ground
+their Calculations: The true Notion of the
+Great Year, or of the Platonick Year, stated and
+explained.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>Having, in this first Section, laid a
+sure Foundation, as to the Subject of
+our Discourse; the Truth and Certainty of the
+<i>Conflagration</i> whereof we are to treat; we
+will now proceed to enquire after the <i>Time</i>,
+<i>Causes</i>, and <i>Manner</i> of it. We are naturally
+more inquisitive after the End of the World,
+and the Time of that fatal Revolution, than
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>after the Causes of it: For these, we know, are
+irresistible, whensoever they come, and therefore
+we are only solicitous that they should not overtake
+us, or our near Posterity. The <i>Romans</i> thought
+they had the Fates of their Empire in the Books of
+the Sibyls, which were kept by the Magistrates as
+a Sacred Treasure. We have also our Prophetical
+Books, more sacred and more infallible than theirs,
+which contain the Fate of all the Kingdoms of the
+Earth, and of that glorious Kingdom that is to succeed.
+And of all Futurities, there is none can be
+of such Importance to be enquired after, as this
+last Scene and Close of all human Affairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If I thought it possible to determine the Time
+of the <i>Conflagration</i> from the bare Intuition of
+natural Causes, I would not treat of it in this
+Place, but reserve it to the last; after we had
+brought into View all those Causes, weigh’d their
+Force, and examin’d how and when they would
+concur to produce this great Effect. But I am
+satisfied, that the Excitation and Concourse of those
+Causes does not depend upon Nature only; and
+tho’ the Causes may be sufficient, when all united,
+yet the Union of them at such a Time, and in
+such a Manner, I look upon as the Effect of a
+particular Providence; and therefore no Fore-sight
+of ours, or Inspection into Nature, can discover
+to us the Time of this Conjuncture. This
+Method, therefore, of Prediction from natural
+Causes being laid aside as impracticable, all other
+Methods may be treated of in this Place, as being
+independent upon any Thing that is to follow
+in the Treatise; and it will be an Ease to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Argument to discharge it of this Part, and clear
+the Way by Degrees to the principal Point, which
+is, The <i>Causes</i> and <i>Manner</i> of the Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Some have thought it a Kind of Impiety in
+a Christian, to enquire after the End of the
+World; because of that Check which our Saviour
+gave his Disciples, when, after his Resurrection,
+enquiring of him about the Time of
+his Kingdom, he answer’d, <i>It is not for you to
+know the Times or the Seasons, which the Father
+hath put in his own Power, Acts <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7.</i>
+And before his Death, when he was discoursing
+of the Consummation of all Things, He told
+them expresly, that though there should be such
+and such previous Signs as he had mention’d, yet,
+<i>Of that Day and Hour knoweth no Man; no,
+not the Angels that are in Heaven, but my Father
+only, <abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 36.</i> Be it so, that the Disciples
+deserv’d a Reprimand, for desiring to know, by
+a particular Revelation from our Saviour, the
+State of future Times; when many other Things
+were more necessary for their Instruction, and
+for their Ministry. Be it also admitted, that
+the Angels, at that Distance of Time, could not
+see thorow all Events to the End of the World;
+it does not at all follow from thence, that they do
+not know it now; when, in the Course of 1600
+Years, many Things are come to pass, that may
+be Marks and Directions to them to make a Judgment
+of what remains, and of the last Period of
+all Things. However, there will be no Danger in
+our Enquiries about this Matter, seeing they are
+not so much to discover the Certainty, as the Uncertainty
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>of that Period, as to human Knowledge.
+Let us therefore consider what Methods have been
+used, by those that have been curious and busy to
+measure the Duration of the World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Stoicks</i> tell us, <i>When</i> the Sun and the Stars
+have drunk up the Sea, then the Earth shall be
+burnt. A very fair Prophecy! But, how long
+will they be a drinking? For unless we can determine
+that, we cannot determine when this Combustion
+will begin. Many of the Antients thought
+that the Stars were nourish’d by the Vapours of the
+Ocean and of the moist Earth, (<i>Cicer. de Nat.
+<abbr class='spell'>D.</abbr> lib. 2.</i>) and when that Nourishment was spent,
+being of a fiery Nature, they would prey upon
+the Body of the Earth it self, and consume that,
+after they had consum’d the Water. This is old-fashion’d
+Philosophy, and now, that the Nature
+of those Bodies is better known, will scarce pass
+for current. ’Tis true, we must expect some Dispositions
+towards the Combustion of the World,
+from a great Drought and Desiccation of the Earth:
+But this helps us nothing on our Way; for the
+Question still returns, <i>When</i> will this immoderate
+Drought or Dryness happen? and that’s as ill to
+resolve as the former. Therefore, as I said before,
+I have no Hopes of deciding the Question by Physiology
+or Natural Causes; let us then look up
+from the Earth to the Heavens, to the Astronomers
+and the Prophets: These think they can define
+the Age and Duration of the World; the one by their
+Art, and the other by Inspiration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>We begin with the Astronomers; whose Calculations
+are founded either upon the Aspects and
+Configurations of the Planets, or upon the Revolutions
+of the fixed Stars: or, lastly, upon that which
+they call <i>Annus Magnus</i>, or the <i>Great Year</i>, whatsoever
+that Notion proves to be when it is rightly
+interpreted. As to the Planets, <i>Berosus</i> tells us,
+the <i>Chaldeans</i> suppose Deluges to proceed from a
+great Conjunction of the Planets in <i>Capricorn</i>, (<i>Sen.
+Nat. qu. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 3. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 29.</i>) And from a like Conjunction
+in the opposite Sign of <i>Cancer</i>, the Conflagration
+will ensue. So that if we compute by the Astronomical
+Tables how long it will be to such a Conjunction,
+we find at the same Time how long it
+will be to the <i>Conflagration</i>. This Doctrine of the
+<i>Chaldeans</i> some Christian Authors have owned,
+and followed the same Principles and Method.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If these Authors would deal fairly with Mankind,
+they should shew us some Connexion
+betwixt these Causes and the Effects which
+they make consequent upon them. For ’tis an
+unreasonable Thing to require a Man’s Assent
+to a Proposition, where he sees no Dependance
+or Connexion of Terms; unless it come by
+Revelation, or from an infallible Authority. If
+you say, the Conflagration will be at the first
+great Conjunction of the Planets in <i>Cancer</i>,
+and I say it will be at the next Eclipse of the
+Moon, if you shew no more Reason for your
+Assertion than I for mine, and neither of us
+pretend to Revelation or Infallibility, we may
+justly expect to be equally credited. Pray what
+Reason can you give why the Planets, when
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>they meet, should plot together to set on Fire
+their Fellow-Planet, the Earth, who never did
+them any Harm? But now there is a plausible
+Reason for my Opinion; for the Moon, when
+eclips’d, may think herself affronted by the Earth
+interposing rudely betwixt her and the Sun, and
+leaving her to grope her Way in the Dark: She
+therefore may justly take her Revenge as she can.
+But you’ll say, ’tis not in the Power of the Moon
+to set the Earth on Fire, if she had Malice enough
+to do it. No, nor say I, is it in the Power of the
+other Planets that are far more distant from the
+Earth than the Moon, and as stark dull Lumps of
+Earth as she is. The plain Truth is, the Planets
+are so many Earths; and our Earth is as much
+a Planet as the brightest of them. ’Tis carried
+about the Sun with the same common Stream,
+and shines with as much Lustre to them, as
+they do to us: Neither can they do any more
+Harm to it, than it can do to them. ’Tis now
+well known, that the Planets are dark opake
+Bodies, generally made up of Earth and Water,
+as our Globe is; and have no Force or Action,
+but that of reverberating the Light which the
+Sun casts upon them. This blind superstitious
+Fear or Reverence for the Stars, had its Original
+from the antient Idolaters: They thought
+them Gods, and that they had Domination over
+human Affairs. We do not indeed worship
+them, as they did; but some Men retain still
+the same Opinion of their Vertues, of their
+Rule and Influence upon us and our Affairs,
+which was the Ground of their Worship.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>’Tis full Time now to sweep away these
+Cobwebs of Superstition, these Relicks of Paganism.
+I do not see how we are any more
+concern’d in the Postures of the Planets, than
+in the Postures of the Clouds; and you may as
+well build an Art of Prediction and Divination,
+upon the one, as the other. They must not
+know much of the Philosophy of the Heavens,
+or little consider it, that think the Fate, either of
+single Persons, or of the whole Earth, can depend
+upon the Aspects, or figur’d Dances of those Bodies.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But you’ll say, it may be, Tho’ no Reason can
+be given for such Effects, yet Experience does attest
+the Truth of them. In the first Place, I answer,
+no Experience can be produced for this Effect
+we are speaking of, the Conflagration of the
+World. Secondly, Experience fallaciously recorded,
+or wholly in favour of one side, is no
+Proof. If a publick Register was kept of all
+Astrological Predictions, and of all the Events that
+followed upon them, right or wrong, agreeing or
+disagreeing, I could willingly refer the Cause to
+the Determination of such a Register, and such
+Experience: But that which they call Experience,
+is so stated, that if one Prediction of ten
+hits right, or near right, it shall make more
+Noise, and be more taken Notice of, than all
+the Nine that are false. Just as in a Lottery,
+where many Blanks are drawn for one Prize,
+yet these make all the Noise, and those are
+forgotten. If any one be so lucky as to draw
+a good Lot, then the Trumpet sounds, and his
+Name is register’d, and he tells his good Fortune
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>to every Body he meets; whereas those
+that lose, go silently away with empty Pockets,
+and are asham’d to tell their Losses. Such a
+Thing is the Register of Astrological Experiences;
+they record what makes for their Credit,
+but drop all blank Instances, that would discover
+the Vanity or Cheat of their Art.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Planets. They have also a
+pretended Calculation of the End of the World,
+from the fix’d Stars and the Firmament. Which,
+in short, is this: They suppose these Bodies, besides
+the Hurry of their Diurnal Motion from East
+to West, quite round the Earth in 24 Hours, to
+have another retrograde Motion from West to East,
+which is more slow and leisurely: And when they
+have finished the Circle of this Retrogradation,
+and come up again to the same Place from
+whence they started at the Beginning of the
+World, then this Course of Nature will be at an
+End; and either the Heavens will cease from all
+Motion, or a new Set of Motions will be put
+a-foot, and the World begin again. This is a
+Bundle of Fictions tied up in a pretty Knot. In
+the first Place, there is no such Thing as a solid
+Firmament, in which the Stars are fix’d, as Nails
+in a Board. The Heavens are as fluid as our Air,
+and the higher we go, the more thin and subtle
+is the ethereal Matter. Then, the fix’d Stars
+are not all in one Surface, as they seem to us,
+not at an equal Distance from the Earth, but
+are placed in several Orbs higher and higher;
+there being infinite Room in the great Deep
+of the Heavens, every Way, for innumerable
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Stars and Spheres behind one another, to fill and
+beautify the immense Spaces of the Universe.
+Lastly, the fix’d Stars have no Motion common
+to them all, nor any Motion singly, unless upon
+their own Centres; and therefore, never leaving
+their Stations, they can never return to any common
+Station, which they would suppose them to
+have had at the Beginning of the World. So as
+this Period they speak of, whereby they would
+measure the Duration of the World, is merely
+imaginary, and hath no Foundation in the true
+Nature or Motion of the cœlestial Bodies.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But in the third Place, they speak of an <span class='sc'>Annus
+Magnus</span>, a <i>Great Year</i>: A Revolution so call’d,
+whatsoever it is, that is of the same Extent with
+the Length of the World. This Notion, I
+confess, is more antient and universal, and therefore
+I am the more apt to believe that it is
+not altogether groundless. But the Difficulty is,
+to find out the Notion of this <i>Great Year</i>,
+what is to be understood by it, and then of
+what Length it is. They all agree that it is a
+Time of some grand Instauration of all Things,
+or a Restitution of the Heavens and the Earth
+to their former State; that is, to the State and
+Posture they had at the Beginning of the World;
+such therefore as will restore the Golden Age,
+and that happy State of Nature wherein Things
+were at first. If so, if these be the Marks and
+Properties of this Revolution, which is called the
+<i>Great Year</i>, we need not go so far to find the
+true Notion and Interpretation of it. Those that
+have read the <i>first Part</i> of this <i>Theory</i>, may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>remember, that in the <i>2d Book, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> 3.</i> we gave
+an Account what the Posture of the Earth was at
+the Beginning of the World, and what were the
+Consequences of that Posture, <i>a perpetual Spring</i>
+and Equinox throughout all the Earth: And if the
+Earth was restor’d again to that Posture and Situation,
+all that is imputed to the <i>Great Year</i>, would immediately
+follow upon it, without ever disturbing
+or moving the fix’d Stars, Firmament, or Planets;
+and yet at the same Time all these three would
+return, or be restored to the same Posture they had
+at the Beginning of the World; so as the whole
+Character of the <i>Great Year</i> would be truly fulfill’d,
+tho’ not in that Way which they imagin’d; but in
+another, more compendious, and of easier Conception.
+My Meaning is this, If the Axis of the
+Earth was rectified and set parallel with the Axis
+of the Ecliptick, upon which the Planets, Firmament,
+and fix’d Stars are suppos’d to move, all
+Things would be as they were at first; a general
+Harmony and Conformity of all the Motions of
+the Universe would presently appear, such as they
+say, was in the Golden Age, before any Disorder
+came into the Natural or Moral World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As this is an easy, so I do not doubt, but it
+is a true Account of that which was originally
+call’d the <i>Great Year</i>, or the Great Instauration;
+which Nature will bring to pass in this simple
+Method, by rectifying the Axis of the Earth,
+without those operose Revolutions, which some
+Astronomers have fancied. But however, this
+Account being admitted, how will it help us
+to define what the Age and Duration of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>World will be? ’Tis true, many have undertaken
+to tell us the Length of this <i>Great Year</i>,
+and consequently of the World; but, besides that
+their Accounts are very different, and generally
+of an extravagant Length, if we had the true Account,
+it would not assure us when the World
+would end; because we do not know when it
+did begin, or what Progress we have already made
+in the Line of Time. For I am satisfied, the
+Chronology of the World, whether Sacred or Profane,
+is lost; till Providence shall please to retrieve
+it by some new Discovery. As to profane
+Chronology, or that of the <i>Heathens</i>, the <i>Greeks</i>,
+and the <i>Romans</i> knew nothing above the <i>Olympiads</i>;
+which fell short many Ages of the Deluge,
+much more of the Beginning of the World.
+And the Eastern barbarous Nations, as they disagreed
+amongst themselves, so generally they run
+the Origin of the World to such a prodigious
+Height, as is neither agreeable to Faith, nor Reason.
+As to sacred Chronology, ’tis well known, that
+the Difference there is betwixt the <i>Greek</i>, <i>Hebrew</i>,
+and <i>Samaritan</i> Copies of the Bible, make the
+Age of the World altogether undetermin’d: And
+there is no Way yet found out, how we may
+certainly discover which of the three Copies is most
+Authentick; and consequently, what the Age of
+the World is, upon a true Computation. Seeing
+therefore we have no Assurance how long the
+World hath stood already, neither could we be
+assur’d how long it hath to stand, tho’ by this
+<i>Annus Magnus</i>, or any other Way, the total Sum,
+or whole Term of its Duration was truly known;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>I am sorry to see the little Success we have had
+in our first Search after the End of the World,
+from Astronomical Calculations. But ’tis an useful
+Piece of Knowledge to know the Bounds of
+our Knowledge; that so we may not spend our
+Time and Thoughts about Things that lie out of
+our Reach. I have little or no Hopes of resolving
+this Point by the Light of Nature, and therefore it
+only remains now to enquire, whether Providence
+hath made it known by any Sort of Prophecy or
+Revelation. Which shall be the Subject of the
+following Chapter.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>Concerning Prophecies that determine the End of
+the World: Of what Order soever, Profane
+or Sacred; Jewish or Christian. That no
+certain Judgment can be made from any of
+them, at what Distance we are now from the
+Conflagration.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>The Bounds of human Knowledge are
+so narrow, and the Desire of knowing
+so vast and illimited, that it often puts Mankind
+upon irregular Methods of inlarging their Knowledge.
+This hath made them find out Arts of
+Commerce with evil Spirits, to be instructed by
+them in such Events as they could not of themselves
+discover. We meddle not with those
+Mysteries of Iniquity: But what hath appear’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>under the Notion of divine Prophecy, relating
+to the Chronology of the World: Giving either
+the whole Extent of it, or certain Marks of
+its Expiration; These we purpose to examine in
+this Place: How far any Thing may, or may
+not, be concluded from them, as to the Resolution
+of our Problem, <i>How long the World will last</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Amongst the Heathens, I do not remember any
+Prophecies of this Nature, except the <i>Sibylline
+Oracles</i>, as they are usually called. The antient
+Eastern Philosophers have left us no Account
+that I can call to mind, about the Time of this Fatality.
+They say, when the <i>Phœnix</i> returns, we
+must expect the Conflagration to follow; but the
+Age of the <i>Phœnix</i> they make as various and uncertain,
+as they do the Computation of their <i>Great
+Year</i>, <i>Symbolum</i> ἀποξαταστάσεως πολυχρονίου,
+<i>Phœnix. Hor. Apol. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 2. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 57.</i> which two Things
+are indeed, one and the same in Effect. Some of
+them, I confess, mention 6000 Years for the whole
+Age of the World: Which being the famous Prophecy
+of the <i>Jews</i>, we shall speak to it largely
+hereafter; and reduce to that Head, what broken
+Traditions remain amongst the Heathens of the
+same thing. As to the <i>Sibylline Oracles</i>, which
+were so much in Reputation amongst the <i>Greeks</i>
+and <i>Romans</i>, they have been tamper’d with so
+much, and chang’d so often, that they are become
+now of little Authority. They seem to
+have divided the Duration of the World into
+ten Ages, and the last of these they make a
+Golden Age, a State of Peace, Righteousness,
+and Perfection: But seeing they have not determin’d,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>in any definite Numbers, what the Length
+of every Age will be, nor given us the Sum of all,
+we cannot draw any Conclusion from this Account,
+as to the Point in question before us: But must
+proceed to the <i>Jewish</i> and <i>Christian</i> Oracles.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Jews</i> have a remarkable Prophecy,
+which expresseth both the Whole, and the Parts
+of the World’s Duration. The World, they
+say, will stand Six thousand Years: <i>Two thousand
+before the Law, Two thousand under the
+Law, and Two thousand under the Messiah</i>. This
+Prophecy they derive from <i>Elias</i>; but there
+were two of the Name, <i>Elias</i> the <i>Thesbite</i>,
+and <i>Elias</i> the <i>Rabbin</i>, or <i>Cabbalist</i>; and ’tis
+suppos’d to belong immediately to the latter of
+these. Yet this does not hinder, in my Opinion,
+but that it might come originally from the former
+<i>Elias</i>, and was preserv’d in the School of
+this <i>Elias</i> the <i>Rabbin</i>, and first made publick
+by him. Or he added, it may be, that Division
+of the Time into three Parts, and so got a Title
+to the whole. I cannot easily imagine, that a
+Doctor that lived Two hundred Years, or thereabouts,
+before Christ, when Prophecy had
+ceas’d for some Ages amongst the <i>Jews</i>, should
+take upon him to dictate a Prophecy about the
+Duration of the World, unless he had been supported
+by some antecedent Cabbalistical Tradition:
+Which being kept more secret before,
+he took the Liberty to make Publick, and so
+was reputed the Author of the Prophecy: As
+many Philosophers amongst the <i>Greeks</i>, were
+the reputed Authors of such Doctrines as were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>much more antient than themselves: But they
+were the Publishers of them in their Country, or
+the Revivers of them after a long Silence; and so,
+by forgetful Posterity, got the Honour of the first
+Invention.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You will think, it may be, the Time is too
+long, and the Distance too great, betwixt <i>Elias</i>
+the <i>Thesbite</i>, and this <i>Elias</i> the <i>Rabbin</i>, for a
+Tradition to subsist all the while, or be preserv’d
+with any competent Integrity. But it appears
+from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jude</i>’s Epistle, that the <i>Prophecies of
+Enoch</i>, (who liv’d before the Flood) relating to
+the Day of Judgment and the End of the World,
+were extant in his Time, either in Writing or by
+Tradition: And the Distance between <i>Enoch</i> and
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jude</i> was vastly greater than betwixt the two
+<i>Elias</i>’s. Nor was any fitter to be inspir’d with
+that Knowledge, or to tell the first News of that
+fatal Period, than the old Prophet <i>Elias</i>, who
+is to come again and bring the Alarum of the
+approaching Conflagration. But however this
+Conjecture may prove as to the original Author
+of this Prophecy, the Prophecy itself concerning
+the <i>Sexmillennial</i> Duration of the World, is
+very much insisted upon by the Christian Fathers.
+Which yet I believe is not so much for the bare
+Authority of the Tradition, as because they
+thought it was founded in the History of the <i>six
+Days Creation</i>, and the <i>Sabbath</i> succeeding: As
+also in some other typical Precepts and Usages
+in the Law of <i>Moses</i>. But before we speak of
+that, give me Leave to name some of those
+Fathers to you, that were of this Judgment,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>and supposed the great Sabbatism would succeed
+after the World had stood Six thousand
+Years. Of this Opinion was <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Barnabas</i>
+in his Catholick Epistle, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> Where he argues,
+that the Creation will be ended in Six
+thousand Years, as it was finish’d in six Days:
+Every Day according to the sacred and mystical
+Account, being a Thousand Years. Of the
+same Judgment is <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Irenæus</i>, both as to the
+Conclusion, and the Reason of it, <i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 5. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 28, 29,
+30</i>. He saith, the History of the Creation in six
+Days, <i>is a Narration as to what it past, and a
+Prophecy of what is to come</i>. As the Work was
+said to be consummated in 6 Days, and the Sabbath
+to be the Seventh: So the Consummation of
+all Things will be in 6000 Years, and then the
+great Sabbatism to come on in the blessed Reign of
+Christ. <i>Hippolytus</i> Martyr, Disciple of <i>Irenæus</i>,
+is of the same Judgment, as you may see in <i>Photius</i>,
+<i>c. 202.</i> <i>Lactantius</i> in his <i>Divine Institutions</i>,
+<i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 7. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 14.</i> gives the very same Account of the
+State and Condition of the World, and the same
+Proofs for it, and so does <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Cyprian</i>, in his <i>Exhortation
+to Martyrdom, <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 18</i>. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> more
+than once declares himself of the same Opinion;
+and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>, <i><abbr class='spell'>C. D. l.</abbr> 20. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 7.</i> tho’ he wavers,
+and was doubtful as to the <i>Millennium</i>, or
+Reign of Christ upon Earth, yet he receives
+this Computation without Hesitancy, and upon
+the foremention’d Grounds. So <i>Johannes Damascenus
+de Fide Orthodoxâ</i>, takes seven Millennaries
+for the intire Space of the World, from
+the Creation, to the general Resurrection, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>Sabbatism being included. And that this was a
+receiv’d and approv’d Opinion in early Times, we
+may collect from the Author of the <i>Questions
+and Answers, ad Orthodoxos</i>, in <i>Justin Martyr</i>.
+Who, giving an Answer to that Enquiry about
+the six thousand Years Term of the World, says,
+<i>We may conjecture from many Places of Scripture,
+that those are in the right, that say, six thousand
+Years is the Time prefix’d, for the Duration
+of this present Frame of the World</i>. These Authors
+I have examin’d my self: But there are many
+others brought in Confirmation of this Opinion:
+As <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Hilary</i>, <i>Anastasius Sinaita</i>, Sanctus <i>Gaudentius</i>,
+<i><abbr class='spell'>Q.</abbr> Julius Hilarion</i>, <i>Junilius Africanus</i>,
+<i>Isidorus Hispalensis</i>, <i>Cassiodorus</i>, <i>Gregorius
+Magnus</i>, and others, which I leave to be examin’d
+by those that have Curiosity and Leisure to
+do it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the mean time, it must be confess’d, that
+many of these Fathers were under a Mistake, in
+one respect, in that they generally thought the
+World was near an End in their Time. An Error,
+which we need not take Pains to confute now;
+seeing we, who live twelve hundred or fourteen
+hundred Years after them, find the World still in
+being, and likely to continue so for some considerable
+Time. But it is easy to discern whence their
+Mistake proceeded: Not from this Prophecy alone,
+but because they reckon’d this Prophecy according
+to the Chronology of the <i>Septuagint</i>: Which
+setting back the Beginning of the World many
+Ages beyond the <i>Hebrew</i>, these six thousand
+Years were very near expir’d in the Time of those
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>Fathers; and that made them conclude, that the
+World was very near an End. We will make
+no Reflections, in this Place, upon that Chronology
+of the <i>Septuagint</i>, lest it should too much
+interrupt the Thread of our Discourse. But it is
+necessary to shew how the Fathers grounded this
+Computation of six thousand Years, upon Scripture.
+’Twas chiefly, as we suggested before, upon
+the <i>Hexameron</i>, or the Creation finish’d in <i>six
+Days</i>, and the <i>Sabbath</i> ensuing. The Sabbath,
+they said, was a Type of the Sabbatism, that was
+to follow at the End of the World, according to
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr></i> to the <i>Hebrews</i>; and then by Analogy
+and Consequence, the six Days preceding
+the Sabbath, must note the Space and Duration
+of the World. If therefore they could discover
+how much a Day is reckon’d for, in this mystical
+Computation, the Sum of the six Days would be
+easily found out. And they think, that, according
+to the Psalmist (<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='ninety'>xc.</abbr> 4.</i>) and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>,
+(<i>2 Epist. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 8.</i>) <i>a Day</i> may be estimated <i>a thousand
+Years</i>, and consequently six Days must be
+counted six thousand Years, for the Duration of
+the World. This is their Interpretation, and their
+Inference: But it must be acknowledged, that there
+is an essential Weakness in all typical and allegorical
+Argumentations, in comparison of literal.
+And this being allow’d in Diminution of the Proof,
+we may be bold to say, that nothing yet appears,
+either in Nature, or Scripture, or human Affairs,
+repugnant to this Supposition of six thousand
+Years: Which hath Antiquity and the Authority
+of the Fathers, on its Side.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>We proceed now to the Christian Prophecies
+concerning the End of the World. I do
+not mention those in <i>Daniel</i>, because I am not
+satisfied that any there (excepting that of the
+fifth Kingdom itself) extend so far. But in
+the <i>Apocalypse</i> of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, which is the last
+Revelation we are to expect, there are several
+Prophecies that reach to the Consummation of
+this World, and the first Resurrection. The
+<i>seven Seals</i>, the <i>seven Trumpets</i>, the <i>seven
+Vials</i>, do all terminate upon that great Period.
+But they are rather Historical Prophecies than
+Chronological; they tell us, in their Language,
+the Events, but do not measure or express the
+Time wherein they come to pass. Others there
+are that may be call’d Chronological, as the
+<i>treading under Foot the Holy City, Forty and
+two months, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 2.</i> The <i>Witnesses</i> opposing
+Antichrist <i>One thousand Two hundred
+and sixty Days, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 3.</i> The Flight of
+the <i>Woman into the Wilderness</i>, for the same
+Number of Days, or for a <i>Time, Times, and
+half a Time, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 6 &#38; 14.</i> And lastly,
+The War of the Beasts against the Saints, <i>Forty-two
+Months, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> 5.</i> These all, you
+see, express a Time for their Completion; and
+all the same Time, if I be not mistaken: But
+they do not reach to the End of the World. Or
+if some of them did reach so far, yet because
+we do not certainly know where to fix their
+Beginning, we must still be at a Loss, when,
+or in what Year they will expire. As for Instance,
+if the Reign of the Beast, or the Preaching
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>of the Witnesses be 1260 Years, as is reasonably
+suppos’d; yet if we do not know certainly
+when this Reign, or this Preaching begun,
+neither can we tell when it will end. And the
+<i>Epocha</i>’s, or Beginnings of these Prophecies are
+so differently calculated, and are Things of so
+long Debate, as to make the Discussion of them
+altogether improper for this Place. Yet it must be
+confest, that the best Conjectures that can be made
+concerning the approaching End of the World,
+must be taken from a judicious Examination of
+these Points: And accordingly as we gather up
+the Prophecies of the <i>Apocalypse</i>, in a successive
+Completion, we see how by degrees we draw
+nearer and nearer to the Conclusion of all. But
+till some of these enlightening Prophecies be accomplish’d,
+we are as a Man that awakes in the
+Night, all is dark about him, and he knows not
+how far the Night is spent; but if he watch till the
+Light appears, the first Glimpses of that will resolve
+his Doubts. We must have a little Patience, and, I
+think, but a little; still eyeing those Prophecies of
+the <i>Resurrection</i> of the <i>Witnesses</i>, and the <i>Depression</i>
+of <i>Antichrist</i>: ’Till by their Accomplishment,
+the Day dawn, and the Clouds begin to change their
+Colour. Then we shall be able to make a near
+Guess, when the Sun of Righteousness will arise.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for Prophecies. There are also
+<i>Signs</i>, which are look’d upon as Forerunners
+of the Coming of our Saviour; and, therefore,
+may give us some Direction how to judge of
+the Distance or Approach of that great Day.
+Thus many of the Fathers thought the <i>coming of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>Antichrist</i> would be a Sign to give the World
+Notice of its approaching End. But we may
+easily see, by what hath been noted before, what
+it was that led the Fathers into that Mistake.
+They thought their six thousand Years were near
+an End, as they truly were, according to that
+Chronology they followed: and therefore they
+concluded the Reign of Antichrist must be very
+short, whensoever he came, and that he could not
+come long before the End of the World. But
+we are very well assur’d, from the Revelation
+of Saint <i>John</i>, that the Reign of Antichrist is
+not to be so short and transient; and from the
+Prospect and History of <i>Christendom</i>, that he
+hath been already upon his Throne many hundreds
+of Years. Therefore this Sign wholly falls
+to the Ground; unless you will take it from
+the Fall of Antichrist, rather than from his first
+Entrance. Others expect the <i>coming</i> of <i>Elias</i>,
+to give Warning of that Day, and prepare the
+Way of the Lord. I am very willing to admit
+that <i>Elias</i> will come, according to the Sense of
+the Prophet <i>Malachi</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 5, 6.</i> but he
+will not come <i>with Observation</i>, no more than
+he did in the Person of <i>John</i> the Baptist; He
+will not bear the Name of <i>Elias</i>, nor tell us he
+is the Man that went to Heaven in a fiery Chariot,
+and is now come down again to give us
+Warning of the last Fire. But some divine Person
+may appear before the second coming of
+our Saviour, as there did before his first coming,
+and by giving a new Light and Life to the
+Christian Doctrine, may dissipate the Mists of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Error, and abolish all those little Controversies
+amongst good Men, and the Divisions and Animosities
+that spring from them: Enlarging their
+Spirits by greater Discoveries, and uniting them
+all in the Bonds of Love and Charity, and in the
+common Study of Truth and Perfection. Such
+an <i>Elias</i> the Prophet seems to point at; and may
+he come, and be the great Peace-maker and Preparer
+of the Ways of the Lord! But at present,
+we cannot from this Sign make any Judgment
+when the World will end.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Another Sign preceding the End of the World,
+is, <i>The Conversion of the Jews</i>; and this is a
+wonderful Sign indeed. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> seems expresly to
+affirm it, <i>Rom. <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 25, 26.</i> But it is differently
+understood, either of their Conversion only, or of
+their Restoration to their own Country, Liberties
+and Dominion. The Prophets bear hard upon
+this Sense sometimes, as you may see in <i>Isaiah</i>,
+<i>Ezekiel</i>, <i>Hosea</i>, <i>Amos</i>. And to the same purpose
+the antient Promise of <i>Moses</i> is interpreted, <i><abbr title='Deuteronomy'>Deut.</abbr>
+<abbr title='thirty'>xxx.</abbr></i> Yet this seems to be a thing very unconceivable:
+Unless we suppose the ten Tribes to be
+still in some hidden Corner of the World, from
+whence they may be conducted again to their own
+Country, as once out of <i>Ægypt</i>, by a miraculous
+Providence, and establish’d there: Which,
+being known, will give the Alarm to all the other
+<i>Jews</i>, in the World, and make an universal Confluence
+to their old Home. Then our Saviour, by
+an extraordinary Appearance to them, as once to
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, <i>John <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 37.</i> and by Prophets, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr>
+<abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7.</i> <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-three'>xxiii.</abbr> 39.</i> rais’d up amongst them for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>that purpose, may convince them that he is the
+true <i>Messiah</i>, and convert them to the Christian
+Faith; which will be no more strange, than was
+the first Conversion of the <i>Gentile</i> World. But if
+we be content with a Conversion of the <i>Jews</i>,
+without their Restoration; and of those two Tribes
+only, which are now dispersed throughout the
+Christian World, and other known Parts of the
+Earth: That these should be converted to the
+Christian Faith, and incorporated into the Christian
+Commonwealth, losing their National Character
+and Distinction: If this, I say, will satisfy the Prophecies,
+it is not a Thing very difficult to be conceived.
+For when the World is reduc’d to a
+better and purer State of Christianity, and that
+Idolatry, in a great measure remov’d, which gave
+the greatest Scandal to the <i>Jews</i>, they will begin
+to have better Thoughts of our Religion, and
+be dispos’d to a more ingenuous and unprejudic’d
+Examination of their Prophecies concerning
+the <i>Messiah</i>: God raising up Men
+amongst them of divine and enlarged Spirits,
+Lovers of Truth more than of any particular
+Sect or Opinion; with Light to discern it, and
+Courage to profess it. Lastly, It will be a cogent
+Argument upon them, to see the Age of
+the World so far spent, and no Appearance yet,
+of their long expected <i>Messiah</i>. So far spent,
+I say, that there is no Room left, upon any
+Computation whatsoever, for the Oeconomy of
+a <i>Messiah</i> yet to come. This will make them
+reflect more carefully and impartially upon
+him whom the Christians propose, <i>Jesus of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>Nazareth</i>, whom their Fathers Crucified at
+<i>Jerusalem</i>: Upon the Miracles he wrought
+in his Life, and after his Death; and upon the
+wonderful Propagation of his Doctrine throughout
+the World, after his Ascension. And lastly,
+upon the Desolation of <i>Jerusalem</i>, upon their
+own scattered and forlorn Condition, foretold by
+that Prophet, as a Judgment of God upon an ungrateful
+and wicked People.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This I have said to state the Case of the Conversion
+of the <i>Jews</i>, which will be a Sign of the
+approaching Reign of Christ. But, alas! what
+Appearance is there of this Conversion in our
+Days? or what Judgment can we make from a
+Sign that is not come to pass? ’Tis ineffectual
+as to us, but may be of Use to Posterity. Yet
+even to them it will not determine, at what
+Distance they are from the End of the World, but
+be a Mark only that they are not far from it.
+There will be Signs also, in those last Days, in
+the Heavens, and in the Earth, and in the Sea,
+Forerunners of the <i>Conflagration</i>; as the Obscuration
+of the Sun and Moon, Earthquakes, Roarings
+of the troubled Sea, and such like Disorders in
+the natural World, ’tis true; but these are the
+very Pangs of Death, and the Strugglings of Nature
+just before her Dissolution, and it will be too
+late then to be aware of our Ruin when it is at
+the Door. Yet these being Signs or Prodigies
+taken Notice of by Scripture, we intend, God
+willing, after we have explained the Causes and
+Manner of the <i>Conflagration</i>, to give an Account
+also whence these unnatural Commotions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>will proceed, that are the Beginnings or immediate
+Introductions to the last Fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus we have gone through the Prophecies
+and Signs that concern the last Day and the last
+Fate of the World. And how little have we
+learned from them as to the Time of that great
+Revolution? Prophecies rise sometimes with an
+even gradual Light, as the Day riseth upon the
+Horizon: and sometimes break out suddenly like
+a Fire, and we are not aware of their Approach
+’till we see them accomplish’d. Those that concern
+the End of the World, are of this latter Sort,
+to unobserving Men; but even to the most observing,
+there will still be a Latitude; we must not
+expect to calculate the coming of our Saviour,
+like an Eclipse, to Minutes and half Minutes.
+There are <i>Times and Seasons which the Father
+hath put in his own Power</i>. If it was design’d
+to keep these Things secret, we must not think
+to out-wit Providence, and from the Prophecies
+that are given us, pick out a Discovery that was
+not intended we should ever make. It is determin’d
+in the Councils of Heaven just how far
+we shall know these Events beforehand, and
+with what Degree of Certainty: And with this
+we must be content, whatsoever it is. The
+<i>Apocalypse</i> of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> is the last Prophetical
+Declaration of the Will of God, and contains
+the Fate of the Christian Religion to the End
+of the World, its Purity, Degeneracy, and Reviviscency.
+The Head of this Degeneracy is
+call’d <i>The Beast, the false Prophet, the Whore
+of Babylon</i>, in Prophetical Terms: And in an
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Ecclesiastical Term is commonly call’d <i>Antichrist</i>.
+Those that bear Testimony against this Degeneracy,
+are call’d the <i>Witnesses</i>: Who, after they
+have been a long Time in a mean and persecuted
+Condition, are to have their Resurrection
+and Ascension; that is, be advanc’d to Power and
+Authority. And this Resurrection of the <i>Witnesses</i>,
+and Depression of <i>Antichrist</i>, is that which
+will make the great Turn of the World to Righteousness,
+and the great Crisis, whereby we may
+judge of its drawing to an End. ’Tis true, there
+are other Marks, as the passing away of the <i>second
+Woe</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr></i> which is commonly thought to
+be the <i>Ottoman</i> Empire; and the Effusion of the
+<i>Vials</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr></i> The first of these will be
+indeed a very conspicuous Mark, if it follow upon
+the Resurrection of the Witnesses, as by the Prophecy
+it seems to do, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 14.</i> But as to the
+Vials, tho’ they do plainly reach in a Series to the
+End of the World, I am not satisfied with any
+Exposition I have yet met with, concerning their
+precise Time or Contents.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In a Word, though the Sum and general
+Contents of a Prophecy be very intelligible, yet
+the Application of it to Time and Persons may
+be very lubricous. There must be Obscurity in
+a Prophecy, as well as Shadow in a Picture.
+All its Lines must not stand in a full Light. For
+if Prophecies were open and barefac’d as to
+all their Parts and Circumstances, they would
+check and obstruct the Course of human Affairs;
+and hinder, if it was possible, their own
+Accomplishment. Modesty and Sobriety are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>in all Things commendable, but in nothing more
+than in the Explication of these sacred Mysteries;
+and we have seen so many miscarry by a too close
+and particular Application of them, that we ought
+to dread the Rock about which we see so many
+Shipwrecks. He that does not err above a Century,
+in calculating the last Period of Time, from
+what Evidence we have at present, hath, in my
+Opinion, cast up his Accounts very well. But
+the Scenes will change fast towards the Evening
+of this long Day, and when the Sun is near setting,
+they will more easily compute how far he
+hath to run.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='six'>VI.</abbr> <br> <i>Concerning the Causes of the Conflagration.</i></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The Difficulty of conceiving how this Earth can
+be set on Fire. With a general Answer to that
+Difficulty. Two suppos’d Causes of the Conflagration,
+by the Sun’s drawing nearer to the
+Earth, or the Earth’s throwing out the central
+Fire, examin’d and rejected.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We have now made our Way clear to
+the principal Point, <i>The Causes of the
+Conflagration</i>: How the Heavens and the
+Earth will be set on Fire, what Materials are
+prepared, or what Train of Causes, for that
+purpose. The Antients, who have kept us
+Company pretty well thus far, here quite desert
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>us: they deal more in Conclusions than
+Causes, as is usual in all Traditional Learning.
+And the <i>Stoicks</i> themselves, who inculcate so
+much the Doctrine of the Conflagration, and
+make the Strength of it such, as to dissolve the
+Earth into a fiery Chaos, are yet very short and
+superficial in their Explications, how this shall come
+to pass. The latent Seeds of Fire, they say, shall
+every where be let loose, and that Element will
+prevail over all the rest, and transform every Thing
+into its own Nature. But these are general Things,
+that give little Satisfaction to inquisitive Persons.
+Neither do the modern Authors, that treat of
+the same Subject, relieve us in this Particular:
+They are willing to suppose the Conflagration a
+superficial Effect, that so they may excuse themselves
+the Trouble of enquiring after Causes. ’Tis
+no doubt, in a Sort supernatural; and so the Deluge
+was: Yet <i>Moses</i> sets down the Causes of the
+Deluge, the Rains from above, and the Disruption
+of the Abyss. So there must be Treasures of Fire
+provided against that Day, by whose Eruption this
+second Deluge will be brought upon the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To state the Case fairly, we must first represent
+the Difficulty of setting the Earth on
+Fire; tye the Knot, before we loose it; that
+so we may the better judge whether the Causes
+that shall be brought into View, may be sufficient
+to overcome so great Opposition. The
+Difficulty, no doubt, will be chiefly from the
+great Quantity of Water that is about our Globe;
+whereby Nature seems to have made Provision
+against any Invasion by Fire, and secur’d us
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>from that Enemy more than any other. We see
+half of the Surface of the Earth cover’d with the
+Seas, whose Channel is of a vast Depth and
+Capacity: Besides innumerable Rivers, great and
+small, that water the Face of the dry Land, and
+drench it with perpetual Moisture. Then within
+the Bowels of the Earth, there are Store-Houses
+of subterraneous Waters; which are as a Reserve,
+in case the Ocean and the Rivers should be
+overcome. Neither is Water our only Security,
+for the hard Rocks, and stony Mountains, which
+no Fire can bide upon, are set in long Ranges
+upon the Continents and Islands; and must needs
+give a Stop to the Progress of that furious Enemy,
+in case he should attack us. Lastly, the Earth
+itself is not combustible in all its Parts. ’Tis not
+every Soil that is fit Fewel for the Fire. Clay,
+and Mire, and such like Soils, will rather choak and
+stifle it, than help it on its Way. By these Means
+one would think the Body of the Earth secur’d;
+and though there may be partial Fires, or Inundations
+of Fire, here and there, in particular Regions,
+yet there cannot be an universal Fire throughout
+the Earth. At least, one would hope for a
+safe Retreat towards the Poles, where there is
+nothing but Snow, and Ice, and bitter Cold.
+These Regions sure are in no Danger to be burnt,
+whatsoever becomes of the other Climates of the
+Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This being the State and Condition of the
+present Earth, one would not imagine by these
+Preparations, ’twas ever intended that it should
+perish by an universal Fire. But such is often
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>the Method of Providence, that the exterior
+Face of Things looks one Way, and the Design
+lies another; ’till at length, touching a Spring, as
+it were, at a certain Time, all those Affairs change
+Posture and Aspect, and shew us which way Providence
+inclines. We must therefore suppose,
+before the Conflagration begins, there will be
+Dispositions and Preparatives suitable to so great a
+Work: and all Antiquity, sacred and prophane,
+does so far concur with us, as to admit and suppose
+that a great Drought will precede, and an
+extraordinary Heat and Dryness of the Air, to usher
+in this fiery Doom. And these being Things
+which often happen in a Course of Nature, we
+cannot disallow such easy Preparations, when
+Providence intends so great a Consequence. The
+Heavens will be shut up, and the Clouds yield no
+Rain; and by this, with an immoderate Heat in
+the Air, the Springs of Water will become dry,
+the Earth chapp’d and parch’d, and the Woods
+and Trees made ready Fewel for the Fire. We
+have Instances, in History, that there have been
+Droughts and Heats of this Nature, to that Degree,
+that the Woods and Forests have taken Fire,
+and the outward Turf and Surface of the Earth,
+without any other Cause than the Dryness of
+the Season, and the Vehemency of the Sun.
+And, which is more considerable, the Springs
+and Fountains being dry’d up, the greater Rivers
+have been sensibly lessen’d, and the lesser
+quite empty’d, and exhal’d. These Things,
+which happen frequently, in particular Countries
+and Climates, may, at an appointed Time,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>by the Disposition of Providence, be more universal
+throughout the Earth; and have the
+same Effects every where, that we see by Experience
+they have had in certain Places: And
+by this Means, we may conceive it as feasible
+to set the whole Earth on Fire in some little
+Space of Time, as to burn up this, or that
+Country after a great Drought. But I mean
+this, with Exception still to the main Body of
+the Sea; which will indeed receive a greater
+Diminution from these Causes, than we easily
+imagine; but the final Consumption of it will
+depend upon other Reasons, whereof we must
+give an Account in the following Chapters.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the Mountains and Rocks, their lofty
+Heads will sink when the Earthquakes begin to
+roar, at the Beginning of the Conflagration; as
+we shall see hereafter. And as to the Earth itself,
+’tis true there are several Sorts of Earth that are
+not proper Fuel for Fire; but those Soils that
+are not so immediately, as clayey Soils, and such
+like, may, by the Strength of Fire, be converted
+into Brick, or Stone, or earthen Metal, and so
+melted down and vitrified. For, in Conclusion,
+there is no terrestrial Body that does not finally
+yield to the Force of Fire, and may either be converted
+into Flame, incorporated Fire, or into a Liquor
+more ardent than either of them. Lastly, As to
+the Polar Regions, which you think will be a safe
+Retreat and inaccessible to the Fire; ’tis true,
+unless Providence hath laid subterraneous Treasures
+of Fire there unknown to us, those Parts
+of the Earth will be the last consum’d. But it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>is to be observ’d, that the Cold of those Regions
+proceeds from the Length of their Winter, and
+their Distance from the Sun when he is beyond
+the Æquator; and both these Causes will be removed
+at the Conflagration. For we suppose the
+Earth will then return to its primitive Situation,
+which we have explain’d in the second Book of
+this <i>Theory</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr></i> and will have the Sun always
+in its Æquator; whereby the several Climates of
+the Earth will have a perpetual Equinox, and those
+under the Poles a perpetual Day: And therefore
+all the Excess of Cold, and all the Consequences
+of it, will soon be abated. However, the Earth
+will not be burnt in one Day, and those Parts of the
+Earth being uninhabited, there is no Inconvenience
+that they should be more slowly consum’d
+than the rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is a general Answer to the Difficulty propos’d
+about the Possibility of the Conflagration;
+and being general only, the Parts of it must be
+more fully explain’d and confirm’d in the Sequel
+of this Discourse. We should now proceed directly
+to the Causes of the Conflagration, and shew in
+what manner they do this great Execution upon Nature:
+But to be just and impartial in this Enquiry,
+we ought first to separate the spurious and pretended
+Causes from those that are real and genuine; to
+make no false Musters, nor any shew of being stronger
+than we are; and if we can do our Work with less
+Force, it will be more to our Credit; as a Victory is
+more honourable that is gain’d with fewer Men.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are two grand capital Causes which
+some Authors make use of, as the chief Agents
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>in this Work, the <i>Sun</i>, and the <i>Central Fire</i>.
+These two great Incendiaries, they say, will be let
+loose upon us at the Conflagration; the one drawing
+nearer to the Earth, and the other breaking
+out of its Bowels into these upper Regions. These
+are potent Causes indeed, more than enough to
+destroy this Earth, if it was a thousand Times
+bigger than it is. But for that very Reason, I
+suspect they are not the true Causes; for God and
+Nature do not use to employ unnecessary Means
+to bring about their Designs. Disproportion and
+Over-sufficiency is one sort of false Measures, and
+’tis a Sign we do not thoroughly understand our
+Work, when we put more Strength to it than
+the Thing requires. Men are forward to call in
+extraordinary Powers, to rid their Hands of a
+troublesome Argument, and so make a short
+Dispatch to save themselves the Pains of further
+Enquiries; but as such Methods as these commonly
+have no Proof, so they give little Satisfaction
+to an Inquisitive Mind. This Supposition of
+burning the Earth, by the Sun drawing nearer and
+nearer to it, seems to be made in Imitation of the
+Story of <i>Phaeton</i>, who driving the Chariot of the
+Sun with an unsteady Hand, came so near the
+Earth, that he set it on Fire. But however, we
+will not reject any Pretensions without a fair
+Trial: Let us examine therefore what Grounds
+they can have for either of these Suppositions, of
+the Approximation of the Sun to the Earth, or
+the Eruption of the Central Fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the Sun, I desire first to be satisfied in
+present Matter of Fact: Whether by any Instrument
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>or Observation it hath or can be discover’d,
+that the Sun is nearer to the Earth now,
+than he was in former Ages? Or, If by any Reasoning
+or comparing Calculations, such a Conclusion
+can be made? If not, this is but an imaginary
+Cause, and as easily deny’d as propos’d.
+Astronomers do very little agree in their Opinions
+about the Distance of the Sun: <i>Ptolemy</i>,
+<i>Albategnius</i>, <i>Copernicus</i>, <i>Tycho</i>, <i>Kepler</i>, and others
+more modern, differ all in their Calculations;
+but not in such a Manner or Proportion, as
+should make us believe that the Sun comes nearer
+to the Earth, but rather goes further from it. For
+the more modern of them make the Distance
+greater than the more ancient do. <i>Kepler</i> says,
+the Distance of the Sun from the Earth lies betwixt
+700 and 2000 Semidiameters of the Earth:
+But <i>Ricciolus</i> makes it betwixt 700 and 7000:
+And <i>Gottefred Wendelme</i> hath taken 14656 Semidiameters,
+for a middle Proportion of the
+Sun’s Distance; to which <i>Kepler</i> himself came
+very near in his later Years. So that you see
+how groundless our Fears are from the Approaches
+of an Enemy, that rather flies from us,
+if he change Postures at all. And we have more
+Reason to believe the Report of the modern
+Astronomers, than of the antient, in this Matter;
+both because the Nature of the Heavens and of
+the celestial Bodies is now better known, and also
+because they have found out better Instruments and
+better Methods to make their Observations.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If the Sun and Earth were come nearer to
+one another, either the Circle of the Sun’s diurnal
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Arch would be less, and so the Day
+shorter; or the Orbit of the Earth’s annual
+Course would be less, and so the Year shorter:
+Neither of which we have any Experience of.
+And those that suppose us in the Centre of the
+World, need not be afraid ’till they see <i>Mercury</i>
+and <i>Venus</i> in a Combustion, for they lie betwixt
+us and Danger; and the Sun cannot come so
+readily at us with his fiery Darts, as at them who
+stand in his Way. Lastly, this languishing Death,
+by the gradual Approaches of the Sun, and that
+irreparable Ruin of the Earth, which at last must
+follow from it, do neither of them agree with
+that Idea of the <i>Conflagration</i>, which the Scripture
+hath given us; for it is to come suddenly and
+unexpectedly, and take us off like a Violent Fever,
+not as a lingring Consumption. And the Earth
+is also to be destroyed by Fire, as not to take
+away all Hopes of a Resurrection, or Renovation:
+For we are assur’d by Scripture, that there will be
+new Heavens and a new Earth after these are
+burnt up. But if the Sun should come so near us,
+as to make the <i>Heavens pass away with a Noise,
+and melt the Elements with fervent Heat</i>, and
+destroy the Form, and all the Works of the Earth,
+what Hopes or Possibility would there be of a Renovation,
+while the Sun continu’d in this Posture?
+He would more and more consume and prey upon
+the Carcass of the Earth, and convert it at length
+either into an Heap of Ashes, or a Lump of vitrified
+Metal.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Sun. As to the <i>Central
+Fire</i>, I am very well satisfied it is no imaginary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>Thing: All Antiquity hath preserv’d some sacred
+Monument of it: The <i>Vestal</i> Fire of the
+<i>Romans</i>, which was so religiously attended:
+The <i>Prytoneia</i> of the <i>Greeks</i> were to the same
+purpose, and dedicated to <i>Vesta</i>: And the <i>Pyretheia</i>
+of the <i>Persians</i>, where Fire was kept continually
+by the <i>Magi</i>. These all, in my Opinion,
+had the same Origin, and the same Signification.
+And tho’ I do not know any particular Observation,
+that does directly prove or demonstrate that
+there is such a Mass of Fire in the middle of the
+Earth; yet the best Accounts we have of the Generation
+of a Planet do suppose it; and ’tis agreeable
+to the whole Oeconomy of Nature: As a
+Fire in the Heart, which gives Life to her Motions
+and Productions. But, however, the Question is
+not at present, about the Existence of this Fire,
+but the Eruption of it, and the Effect of that Eruption;
+which cannot be, in my Judgment, such
+a <i>Conflagration</i> as describ’d in Scripture.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Central Fire must be enclos’d in a Shell
+of great Strength and Firmness; for being of
+itself the lightest, and most active of all Bodies,
+it would not be detained in the lowest Prison
+without a strong Guard upon it. ’Tis true,
+we can make no certain Judgment of what
+Thickness this Shell is; but if we suppose this
+Fire to have a twentieth Part of the Semidiameter
+of the Earth, on either side the Centre,
+for its Sphere, which seems to be a fair Allowance;
+there would still remain nineteen Parts
+for our Safeguard and Security: And these
+nineteen Parts of the Semidiameter of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>Earth will make 3268 Miles, for a Partition-Wall
+betwixt us and this Central Fire. Who
+would be afraid of an Enemy lock’d up in so
+strong a Prison? But you’ll say, it may be, tho’
+the Central Fire, at the Beginning of the World,
+might have no more Room or Space than what
+is mention’d; yet being of that Activity that it
+is, and corrosive Nature, it may, in the Space of
+some thousands of Years, have eaten deep into
+the Sides of its Prison; and so come nearer to
+the Surface of the Earth by some hundreds or
+thousands of Miles, than it was at first. This
+would be a material Exception, if it could be
+made out. But what Phænomenon is there in
+Nature that proves this? How does it appear by
+an Observation, that the Central Fire gains
+Ground upon us? Or is increased in Quantity,
+or come nearer to the Surface of the Earth? I
+know nothing that can be offer’d in Proof of this:
+and if there be no Appearance of a Change, nor
+any sensible Effect of it, ’tis an Argument there is
+none, or none considerable. If the Quantity of
+that Fire was considerably increas’d, it must needs,
+besides other Effects, have made the Body of the
+Earth considerably lighter. The Earth having, by
+this Conversion of its own Substance into Fire,
+lost so much of its heaviest Matter, and got so
+much of the lightest and most active Element instead
+of it: and in both these respects, its Gravity
+would be manifestly lessen’d. Which if it really
+was in any considerable Degree, it would discover
+it self by some Change, either as to the
+Motion of the Earth, or as to its Place or Station
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>in the Heavens. But there being no external
+Change observable, in this or any other respect,
+’tis reasonable to presume that there is no considerable
+inward Change, or no great Consumption of
+its inward Parts and Substance; and consequently
+no great Increase of the central Fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But if we should admit both an Increase and
+Eruption of this Fire, it would not have that
+Effect which is pretended. It might cause some
+Confusion and Disorder in those Parts of the
+Earth where it broke out, but it would not make
+an universal Conflagration, such as is represented
+to us in Scripture. Let us suppose the Earth to
+be open, or burst in any Place; under the Pole,
+for Instance, or under the <i>Æquator</i>; and let
+it gape as low as the Central Fire: At this
+Chasm or Rupture we suppose the Fire would
+gush out; and what then would be the Consequence
+of this when it came to the Surface of
+the Earth? It would either be dissipated and lost
+in the Air, or fly still higher towards the Heavens
+in a Mass of Flame. But what Execution in
+the mean time would it do upon the Body of the
+Earth? ’Tis but like a Flash of Lightning, or a
+Flame issuing out of a Pit, that dies presently.
+Besides, this Central Fire is of that Subtilty and
+Tenuity, that it is not able to inflame gross
+Bodies: no more than those Meteors we call
+<i>Lambent Fires</i>, inflame the Bodies to which
+they stick. Lastly, in explaining the Manner
+of the Conflagration, we must have regard
+principally to Scripture; for the Explications
+given there are more to the purpose, than all
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>that the Philosophers have said upon that Subject.
+Now, as we noted before, ’tis manifest in
+Scripture, that after the <i>Conflagration</i>, there will
+be a <i>Restauration</i>, <i>new Heavens</i>, and a <i>new
+Earth</i>. ’Tis the express Doctrine of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>,
+besides other Prophets: We must therefore suppose
+the Earth reduc’d to such a Chaos by this last
+Fire, as will lay the Foundation of a new World,
+<i>2 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12, 13.</i> Which can never be, if the
+inward Frame of it be broke, the Central Fire
+exhausted, and the exterior Region suck’d into
+those central Vacuities. This must needs make
+it lose its former Poise and Libration, and it will
+thereupon be thrown into some other Part of the
+Universe, as the useless Shell of a broken Granado,
+or as a dead Carcass, and unprofitable Matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Reasons may be sufficient why we
+should not depend upon those pretended Causes
+of the <i>Conflagration</i>, the Sun’s Advance towards
+the Earth, or such a Rupture of the Earth as will
+let out the Central Fire. These Causes, I hope,
+will appear superfluous, when we shall have given
+an Account of the <i>Conflagration</i> without them.
+But young Philosophers, like young Soldiers,
+think they are never sufficiently armed; and often
+take more Weapons, than they can make use
+of, when they come to fight. Not that we altogether
+reject the Influence of the Sun, or of the
+Central Fire; especially the latter: For in that
+great Estuation of Nature, the Body of the
+Earth will be much open’d and relaxated; and
+when the Pores are enlarg’d, the Steams of that
+Fire will sweat out more plentifully into all its
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>Parts; but still without any Rupture in the Vessels,
+or in the Skin. And whereas these Authors suppose
+the very Veins to burst, and the vital Blood
+to gush out, as at open Flood-Gates, we only allow
+a more copious Perspiration, and think that
+sufficient for all Purposes in this Case.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The true Bounds of the last Fire, and how far
+it is fatal. The natural Causes and Materials
+of it, cast into three Ranks: First,
+Such as are exterior and visible upon the Earth;
+where the Vulcano’s of the Earth, and their
+Effects, are consider’d. Secondly, Such Materials
+as are within the Earth. Thirdly, Such
+as are in the Air.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>As we have, in the preceding Chapter,
+laid aside those Causes of the Conflagration
+which we thought too great and cumbersome;
+so now we must, in like manner,
+examine the Effect, and reduce that to its just
+Measures and Proportions, that there may be
+nothing left superfluous on either side; then, by
+comparing the real Powers with the Work they
+are to do, both being stated within their due
+Bounds, we may the better judge how they are
+proportion’d to one another.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We noted before, that the Conflagration had
+nothing to do with the Stars, and superior
+Heavens, but was wholly confin’d to this sublunary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>World. And this Deluge of Fire will
+have much what the same Bounds, that the Deluge
+of Water had formerly. This is according
+to <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Doctrine, for he makes the same
+Parts of the Universe to be the Subject of both:
+Namely, the inferior Heavens and the Earth, <i>2 Pet.
+<abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 5, 6.</i> <i>The Heavens and the Earth which
+were then, perish’d in a Deluge of Water</i>: <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 7.
+<i>But the Heavens and the Earth that are now,
+are reserv’d to Fire.</i> The present Heavens and
+Earth are substituted in the Place of those that
+perish’d at the Deluge, and these are to be over-run
+and destroy’d by Fire, as those were by Water.
+So that the Apostle takes the same Regions, and
+the same Space and Compass for the one, as for the
+other, and makes their Fate different according to
+their different Constitution, and the different Order
+of Providence. This is the Sense <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>
+gives us of the Apostle’s Words, and these are the
+Bounds he sets to the last Fire; whereof a modern
+Commentator is so well assur’d, that he says,
+<i>Estius in loc. They neither understand Divinity,
+nor Philosophy, that would make the Conflagration
+reach above the elementary Heavens</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let these be then its Limits upwards, the
+Clouds, Air, and Atmosphere of the Earth.
+But the Question seems more doubtful, <i>How</i> far
+it will extend downwards, into the Bowels of the
+Earth? I answer still, to the same Depth that the
+Waters of the Deluge reach’d: To the lowest
+Abysses, and the deepest Caverns within the Ground.
+And seeing no Caverns are deeper or lower, at
+least according to our Theory, than the Bottom
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>of the great Ocean, to that Depth, I suppose, the
+Rage of this Fire will penetrate, and devour all before
+it. And therefore we must not imagine, that
+only the outward Turf and habitable Surface of
+the Earth will be put into a Flame and laid waste:
+the whole exterior Region of the Earth, to the
+Depth of the deepest Part of the Sea, will suffer
+in this Fire; and suffer to that Degree, as to be
+melted down, and the Frame of it dissolv’d. For
+we are not to conceive that the Earth will be
+only scorcht or charkt in the last Fire, there will
+be a Sort of Liquefaction and Dissolution; <i>Rev.
+<abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 2.</i> <i>2 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 10.</i> <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='ninety-seven'>xcvii.</abbr> 5.</i> it will become
+a <i>molten Sea mingled with Fire</i>, according to the
+Expression of Scripture. And this Dissolution may
+reasonably be suppos’d to reach as low as the Earth
+hath any Hollownesses, or can give vent to Smoak
+and Flame.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Wherefore, taking these for the Bounds and
+Limits of the last great Fire, the next Thing
+to be enquired into, are the <i>Natural Causes</i> of
+it: How this strange Fate will seize upon the
+sublunary World, and with an irresistible Fury
+subdue all Things to it self. But when I
+say <i>Natural Causes</i>, I would not be so understood,
+as if I thought the Conflagration was a
+pure <i>Natural Fatality</i>, as the <i>Stoicks</i> seem to
+do. No, ’tis a <i>mix’d Fatality</i>; the Causes indeed
+are Natural, but the Administration of
+them is from an higher Hand. Fire is the
+Instrument, or the executive Power, and hath
+no more Force given it than what it hath
+naturally; but the Concurrence of these Causes,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>or of these fiery Powers, at such a Time,
+and in such a Manner, and the Conduct of them
+to carry on and complete the whole Work
+without Cessation or Interruption, that I look
+upon as more than what material Nature could
+effect of itself, or than could be brought to
+pass by such a Government of Matter, as is the
+bare Result of its own Laws and Determinations.
+When a Ship falls gently before the Wind, the
+Mariners may stand idle; but to guide her in a
+Storm, all Hands must be at Work. There are
+Rules and Measures to be observ’d, even in these
+Tumults and Desolations of Nature, in destroying
+a World, as well as in making one, and, therefore,
+in both it is reasonable to suppose a more than
+ordinary Providence to superintend the Work.
+Let us not, therefore, be too positive or presumptuous
+in our Conjectures about these Things; for
+if there be an invisible Hand, Divine or Angelical,
+that touches the Springs and Wheels; it will not
+be easy for us to determine, with Certainty, the
+Order of their Motions. However, ’tis our
+Duty to search into the Ways and Works of
+God, as far as we can: And we may, without
+Offence, look into the Magazines of Nature; see
+what Provisions are made, and what Preparations
+for this great Day; and in what Method ’tis most
+likely the Design will be executed.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But before we proceed to mark out Materials
+for this Fire, give me leave to observe one Condition
+or Property in the Form of this present
+Earth, that makes it capable of Inflammation.
+’Tis the Manner of its Construction, in an hollow
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>cavernous Form: By reason whereof, containing
+much Air in its Cavities, and having many
+Inlets and Outlets, ’tis in most Places capable of
+Ventilation, pervious and passable to the Winds,
+and consequently to the Fire. Those that have read
+the former Part of this Theory, <i>Book 1. <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> 6, 7.</i>
+know how the Earth came into this hollow and broken
+Form; from what Causes and at what Time;
+namely, at the universal Deluge; when there was
+a Disruption of the exterior Earth that fell into
+the Abyss, and so, for a Time was overflow’d
+with Water. These Ruins, recover’d from the
+Water, we inhabit, and these Ruins, only will
+be burnt up; for being not only unequal in their
+Surface, but also hollow, loose, and incompact
+within, as Ruins use to be, they are made thereby
+capable of a second Fate, by Inflammation. <i>Thereby</i>,
+I say, they are made combustible; for if the exterior
+Regions of this Earth were as close and compact
+in all their Parts, as we have Reason to believe
+the interior Regions of it to be, the Fire could have
+little Power over it, nor ever reduce it to such a
+State as is requir’d in a compleat Conflagration,
+such as ours is to be.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This being admitted, that the exterior Region
+of the Earth stands hollow, as a well set
+Fire, to receive Air freely into its Parts, and
+hath Issues for Smoke and Flame: It remains
+to enquire, what Fuel or Materials Nature
+hath fitted to kindle this Pile, and to continue
+it on Fire ’till it be consum’d; or, in plain
+Words, what are the <i>natural Causes and Preparatives
+for a Conflagration</i>. The first and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>most obvious Preparations that we see in Nature
+for this Effect, are the <i>burning Mountains</i>, or Volcano’s
+of the Earth. These are lesser Essays or
+Preludes to the general Fire: set on purpose by
+Providence to keep us awake, and to mind us continually,
+and forewarn us of what we are to expect
+at last. The Earth, you see, is already kindled, blow
+but the Coal, and propagate the Fire, and the
+Work will go on, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty'>xxx.</abbr> 33. <i>Tophet is prepared
+of old</i>; and when the Day of Doom is come, and
+the Date of the World expir’d, <i>the Breath of the
+Lord</i> shall make it burn.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But besides these burning Mountains, there are
+Lakes of Pitch and Brimstone, and oily Liquors
+dispers’d in several Parts of the Earth. These are
+to enrage the Fire as it goes, and to fortify it against
+any Resistance or Opposition. Then all the vegetable
+Productions upon the Surface of the Earth, as
+Trees, Shrubs, Grass, Corn, and such like; every
+thing that grows out of the Ground, is Fewel for
+the Fire; and tho’ they are now accommodated
+to our Use and Service, they will then turn all
+against us; and with a mighty Blaze, and rapid
+Course, make a Devastation of the outward Furniture
+of the Earth, whether natural or artificial.
+But these Things deserve some further Consideration,
+especially that strange Phænomenon of the
+<i>Volcano</i>’s or <i>burning Mountains</i>, which we will
+now consider more particularly.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There is nothing certainly more terrible in all
+Nature than fiery Mountains to those that live
+within the View or Noise of them; but it is not
+easy for us, who never see them, nor heard them,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>to represent them to ourselves with such just and
+lively Imaginations as shall excite in us the same
+Passions, and the same Horror as they would excite,
+if present to our Senses. The Time of their
+Eruption, and of their Raging, is, of all others,
+the most dreadful; but, many times, before their
+Eruption, the Symptoms of an approaching Fit
+are very frightful to the People. The Mountain
+begins to roar and bellow in its hollow Caverns;
+cries out, as it were, in Pain to be deliver’d of
+some Burthen too heavy to be born, and too
+big to be easily discharged. The Earth shakes and
+trembles, in Apprehension of the Pangs and Convulsions
+that are coming upon her; and the Sun
+often hides his Head, or appears with a discolour’d
+Face, pale, or dusky, or bloody, as if all Nature
+was to suffer in this Agony. After these Forerunners
+or Symptoms of an Eruption, the wide
+Jaws of the Mountain open: And first, Clouds of
+Smoke issue out, then Flames of Fire, and after
+that a Mixture of all Sorts of burning Matter;
+red hot Stones, Lumps of Metal, half-dissolv’d
+Minerals, with Coals and fiery Ashes. These fall
+in thick Showers round about the Mountain, and
+in all adjacent Parts; and not only so, but are
+carried, partly by the Force of the Expulsion, and
+partly by the Winds when they are aloft in the
+Air, into far distant Countries. As from <i>Italy</i> to
+<i>Constantinople</i>, and cross the <i>Mediterranean</i> Sea
+into <i>Africk</i>; as the best Historians, <i>Procopius</i>,
+<i>Ammianus Marcellinus</i>, and <i>Dion Cassius</i>, have
+attested.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>These Vulcano’s are planted in several Regions
+of the Earth, and in both Continents, this of ours,
+and the other of <i>America</i>. For by Report of
+those that have view’d that new-found World,
+there are many Mountains in it that belch out
+Smoke and Fire; some constantly, and others by
+Fits, and Intervals. In our Continent, Providence
+hath variously dispers’d them, without any Rule
+known to us; but they are generally in Islands, or
+near the Sea. In the <i>Asiatick</i> Oriental Islands they
+are in great Abundance, and Historians tell us of
+a Mountain in the Island <i>Java</i>, that in the Year
+1586, at one Eruption, kill’d ten thousand People
+in the neighbouring Cities and Country: But
+we do not know so well the History of those
+remote Vulcano’s, as of such as are in <i>Europe</i>
+and nearer Home. In <i>Iseland</i>, tho’ it lie within
+the polar Circle, and is scarce habitable by reason
+of the Extremity of Cold, and abundance of Ice
+and Snow, yet there are three burning Mountains
+in that Island; whereof the chief and most
+remarkable is <i>Hecla</i>. This hath its Head always
+cover’d with Snow, and its Belly always fill’d with
+Fire; and these are both so strong in their kind,
+and equally powerful, that they cannot destroy
+one another. It is said to cast out, when it rages,
+besides Earth, Stones, and Ashes, a Sort of flaming
+Water; as if all Contrarieties were to meet
+in this Mountain, to make it the more perfect
+Resemblance of Hell, as the credulous Inhabitants
+fancy it to be.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But there are no Vulcano’s, in my Opinion,
+that deserve our Observation so much, as those
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>that are in and about the <i>Mediterranean Sea</i>;
+There is a Knot of them, called the <i>Vulcanian
+Islands</i>, from their fiery Eruptions, as if they
+were the Forges of <i>Vulcan</i>; as <i>Strombolo</i>, <i>Lapara</i>,
+and others, which are not so remarkable now,
+as they have been formerly. However, without
+dispute, there are none in the Christian World to
+be compared with <i>Ætna</i> and <i>Vesuvius</i>; one
+in the Island of <i>Sicily</i>, and the other in <i>Campania</i>,
+overlooking the Port and City of <i>Naples</i>.
+These two, from all Memory of Man, and the
+most antient Records of History, have been fam’d
+for the Treasures of subterraneous Fires, which
+are not yet exhausted, nor diminsh’d, so far as
+is perceivable; for they rage still, upon Occasion,
+with as much Fierceness and Violence, as
+they ever did in former Ages; as if they had a
+continual Supply to answer their Expences, and
+were to stand till the last Fire, as a Type and Prefiguration
+of it, throughout all Generations.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us therefore take these two Volcano’s as
+a Pattern for the rest; seeing they are well
+known, and stand in the Heart of the Christian
+World, where, ’tis likely, the last Fire will
+make its first Assault. <i>Ætna</i>, of the two, is
+more spoken of by the Antients, both Poets and
+Historians; and we should scarce give Credit
+to their Relations concerning it, if some later
+Eruptions did not equal, or exceed the Fame of
+all that have been reported from former Ages:
+That it heated the Waters of the Sea, and cover’d
+them over with Ashes; crack’d, or dissolv’d
+the neighbouring Rocks; darken’d the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>Sun and the Air; and cast out, not only mighty
+Streams of Flame, but a Flood of melted Ore,
+and other Materials: These Things we can now
+believe, having had Experience of greater, or and
+Account of them from such, as have been Eye-Witnesses
+of these Fires, or of the fresh Ruins and
+sad Effects of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are two Things especially, in these Eruptions
+of <i>Ætna</i>, that are most prodigious in themselves,
+and most remarkable for our Purpose:
+The Rivers of fiery Matter that break out of its
+Bowels, or are spew’d out of its Mouth; and the
+vast burning Stones which it flings into the Air,
+at a strange Height and Distance. As to these
+fiery Rivers, or Torrents, and the Matter whereof
+they are compounded, we have a full Account
+of them by <i>Alphonsus Borellus</i>, a learned Mathematician
+at <i>Pisa</i>; who, after the last great
+Eruption on the Year 1669, went into <i>Sicily</i>,
+while the Fact was fresh, to view and survey
+what <i>Ætna</i> had done or suffer’d; and he says,
+the Quantity of Matter thrown out of the Mountain
+at that Time, upon Survey, amounted to
+ninety three Millions, eight Hundred thirty
+eight Thousand, seven Hundred and fifty cubical
+Paces. So that if it had been extended in
+Length upon the Surface of the Earth, it
+would reach further than ninety three Millions
+of Paces; which is more than four times the Circumference
+of the whole Earth, taking a thousand Paces
+to a Mile. This is strange to our Imagination,
+and almost incredible, that one Mountain should
+throw out so much fiery Matter, besides all the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>Ashes that were disperst through the Air, far and
+near, and could be brought to no Account.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>’Tis true, all this Matter was not actually inflam’d
+or liquid Fire; but the rest, that was
+Sand, Stone, and Gravel, might have run into
+Glass, or some melted Liquor like to it, if it had
+not been thrown out before the Heat fully reach’d
+it: However, sixty Million Paces of this Matter,
+as the same Author computes, were liquid Fire,
+or came out of the Mouth of the Pit in that Form;
+this made a River of Fire, sometimes two Miles
+broad, according to his Computation; but, according
+to the Observation of others who also viewed
+it, the Torrent of Fire was six or seven Miles broad,
+and sometimes ten or fifteen Fathoms deep; and
+forc’d its Way into the Sea near a Mile, preserving
+it self alive in the midst of the Waters.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is beyond all the infernal Lakes and
+Rivers <i>Acheron</i>, <i>Phlegeton</i>, <i>Cocytus</i>; all that
+the Poets have talk’d of: Their greatest Fictions
+about Hell have not come up to the Reality of
+one of our burning Mountains upon Earth.
+Imagine then, all our <i>Volcano</i>’s raging at once
+in this manner——But I will not pursue that
+Supposition yet: Give me leave only to add
+here, what I mentioned in the second Place,
+the vast <i>Burning Stones</i> which this Mountain,
+in the time of its Rage and Æstuation, threw
+into the Air with an incredible Force. This
+same Author tells us of a Stone fifteen Foot
+long, that was flung out of the Mouth of the
+Pit, to a Mile’s Distance; and when it fell, it
+came from such an Height, and with such a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>Violence, that it buried it self in the Ground
+eight Foot deep. What Trifles are our Mortar-Pieces
+and Bombs, when compared with these
+Engines of Nature? When she flings, out of the
+wide Throat of a <i>Volcano</i>, a broken Rock, and
+twirls it in the Air like a little Bullet; then lets
+it fall, to do Execution here below, as Providence
+shall point and direct it! It would be hard to give
+an Account, how so great an Impulse can be given
+to a Body so ponderous: But there’s no disputing
+against Matter of Fact; and as the Thoughts of
+God are not like our Thoughts, so neither are his
+Works like our Works.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for <i>Ætna</i>. Let us now give an
+Instance in <i>Vesuvius</i>, another burning Mountain
+upon the Coast of the <i>Mediterranean</i>, which hath
+as frequent Eruptions, and some as terrible as those
+of <i>Ætna</i>. <i>Lib. 66. Dion. Cassius</i> (one of the
+best Writers of the <i>Roman</i> History) hath given us
+an Account of one that happened in the Time of
+<i>Titus Vespasian</i>; and tho’ he hath not set down
+Particulars, as the former Author did, of the Quantity
+of fiery Matter thrown out at that Time: yet
+supposing that proportionable to its Fierceness
+in other Respects, this seems to me as dreadful
+an Eruption as any we read of; and was accompanied
+with such Prodigies and Commotions in
+the Heavens and the Earth, as made it look
+like the Beginning of the last Conflagration.
+As a Prelude to this Tragedy, he says, there
+were strange Sights in the Air, and after that
+followed an extraordinary Drought: <i>Then the
+Earth begun to tremble and quake; and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Concussions were so great, that the Ground
+seem’d to rise and boil up in some Places, and in
+others the Tops of the Mountains sunk in, or
+tumbled down: At the same Time were great
+Noises and Sounds heard; some were subterraneous,
+like Thunder within the Earth; others
+above Ground, like Groans or Bellowings. The
+Sea roared, the Heavens ratled with a fearful
+Noise, and then came a sudden and mighty Crack,
+as if the Frame of Nature had broke, or all the
+Mountains of the Earth had fallen down at once.
+At length Vesuvius burst, and threw out of its
+Womb, first, huge Stones, then a vast Quantity of
+Fire and Smoke, so as the Air was all darkned,
+and the Sun was hid, as if he had been under a
+great Eclipse. The Day was turn’d into Night,
+and Light into Darkness; and the frighted People
+thought the Giants were making War against Heaven,
+and fansied they saw the Shapes and Images
+of Giants in the Smoke, and heard the Sound of
+their Trumpets: Others thought, the World was
+returning to its first Chaos, or going to be all consumed
+with Fire. In this general Confusion and Consternation,
+they knew not where to be safe; some run
+out of the Fields into the Houses, others out of the
+Houses into the Fields; those that were at Sea
+hastened to Land, and those that were at Land
+endeavoured to get to Sea; still thinking every
+Place safer than that where they were. Besides
+grosser Lumps of Matter, there was thrown out
+of the Mountain such a prodigious Quantity of
+Ashes, as cover’d the Land and Sea, and filled
+the Air, so as besides other Damages, the Birds,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Beasts and Fishes, with Men, Women, and Children
+were destroy’d, within such a Compass; and
+two entire Cities, Herculanium and Pompeios,
+were overwhelm’d with a Shower of Ashes, as the
+People were sitting in the Theatre. Nay, these
+Ashes were carried, by the Winds, over the Mediterranean
+into Africk, and into Ægypt and Syria.
+And at Rome they choak’d the Air on a sudden,
+so as to hide the Face of the Sun; Whereupon the
+People not knowing the Cause, as not having yet
+got the News from Campania, of the Eruption of
+Vesuvius, could not imagine what the Reason
+should be; but thought the Heavens and the Earth
+were coming together, the Sun coming down, and
+the Earth going to take its Place above.</i> Thus
+far the Historian.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You see what Disorders in Nature, and what
+an Alarum, the Eruption of one fiery Mountain
+is capable to make. These Things, no
+doubt, would have made strong Impressions
+upon us, if we had been Eye-Witnesses of
+them; but I know, Representations made from
+dead History, and at a Distance, though the
+Testimony be never so credible, have a much
+less Effect upon us, than what we see ourselves,
+and what our Senses immediately inform us of.
+I have only given you an Account of two <i>Volcano’s</i>,
+and of a single Eruption in either of
+them: These Mountains are not very far distant
+from one another; let us suppose two such
+Eruptions, as I have mentioned, to happen at
+the same Time, and both these Mountains to
+be raging at once in this Manner; by that Violence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>you have seen in each of them singly, you
+will easily imagine what Terror and Desolation
+they would carry round about, by a Conjunction
+of their Fury, and all their Effects, in the
+Air, and on the Earth. Then, if to these two you
+should join two more, the Sphere of their Activity
+would still be enlarged, and the Scenes become
+more dreadful. But to compleat the Supposition,
+let us imagine all the Volcano’s of the whole
+Earth to be prepar’d, and set to a certain Time;
+which Time being come, and a Signal given by
+Providence, all these Mines begin to play at once;
+I mean, all these fiery Mountains burst out, and
+discharge themselves in Flames of Fire, tear up the
+Roots of the Earth, throw hot burning Stones,
+send out Streams of flowing Metals and Minerals,
+and all other Sorts of ardent Matter, which
+Nature hath lodg’d in those Treasuries: If all
+these Engines, I say, were to play at once, the
+Heavens and the Earth would seem to be in a
+Flame, and the World in an universal Combustion.
+But we may reasonably presume, that
+against that great Day of Vengeance and Execution,
+not only all these will be employ’d, but
+also new Volcano’s will be opened, and new
+Mountains in every Region will break out into
+Smoke and Flame; just as at the Deluge, the
+Abyss broke out from the Womb of the Earth,
+and from those hidden Stores sent an immense
+Quantity of Water, which, it may be the Inhabitants
+of that World never thought of before:
+So we must expect new Eruptions, and
+also new sulphureous Lakes, and Fountains of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>Oyl, to boyl out of the Ground: and these, all
+united with that Fewel that naturally grows upon
+the Surface of the Earth, will be sufficient to give
+the first Onset, and to lay waste all the habitable
+World, and the Furniture of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But we suppose the Conflagration will go lower,
+pierce under Ground, and dissolve the Substance
+of the Earth to some considerable Depth: Therefore,
+besides these outward and visible Preparations,
+we must consider all the hidden invisible Materials
+within the Veins of the Earth; Such are all
+Minerals, or mineral Juices and Concretions that
+are igniferous, or capable of Inflammation; and
+these cannot easily be reckoned up, or estimated;
+some of the most common are Sulphur, and all
+sulphureous Bodies, and Earths impregnated with
+Sulphur, Bitumen, and bituminous Concretions;
+inflammable Salts, Coal and other Fossils that are
+ardent; with innumerable Mixtures and Compositions
+of these Kinds, which, being open’d by
+Heat, are unctuous and inflammable, or by Attrition
+discover the latent Seeds of Fire. But besides
+consistent Bodies, there is also much volatile Fire
+within the Earth, in Fumes, Steams, and Exudations,
+which will all contribute to this Effect. From these
+Stores under Ground, all Plants and Vegetables are
+fed and supplied, as to their oily and sulphureous
+Parts, and all hot Waters in Baths or Fountains,
+must have their Original from some of these, some
+Mixture or Participation of them; and as to the
+<i>British</i> Soil, there is so much Coal incorporated
+with it, that when the Earth shall burn, we have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>Reason to apprehend no small Danger from that
+subterraneous Enemy.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Dispositions, and this Fewel we find, in
+and upon the Earth, towards the last Fire. The
+third Sort of Provision is in the Air; all fiery
+Meteors and Exhalations engender’d and form’d in
+those Regions above, and discharg’d upon the Earth
+in several Ways. I believe there were no fiery Meteors
+in the antedeluvian Heavens; which therefore
+Saint <i>Peter</i> says, <i>were constituted of Water</i>,
+had nothing in them but what was watery; but
+he says <i>the Heavens that are now</i>, have Treasures
+of Fire, or are reserv’d for Fire, as Things
+laid up in a Store-House for that Purpose. We
+have Thunder and Lightning, and fiery Tempests,
+and there is nothing more vehement, impetuous,
+and irresistible, where their Force is directed. It
+seems to me very remarkable, that the Holy
+Writers describe the <i>Coming of the Lord</i>, and
+the Destruction of the Wicked, in the Nature
+of a Tempest, or a Storm of Fire, <i>Psalm <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 6.</i>
+<i>Upon the Wicked the Lord shall rain Coals,
+Fire and Brimstone, and a burning Tempest;
+this shall be the Portion of their Cup</i>. And in
+the lofty Song of <i>David</i>, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr></i> (which,
+in my Judgment, respects both the past Deluge
+and the future Conflagration) ’tis said, <i><abbr title='verse'>Ver.</abbr> 13,
+14, 15</i>. <i>The Lord also thundered in the Heavens,
+and the Highest gave his Voice, Hail-stones
+and Coals of Fire. Yea, he sent forth his Arrows
+and scattered them, and he shot out Lightnings
+and discomfited them. Then the Channels
+of Waters were seen, and the Foundations of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>the World were discover’d; at thy Rebuke, O
+Lord, at the Blast of the Breath of thy Nostrils</i>.
+And a like fiery Coming is described in the <i>97th
+Psalm</i>, as also by <i>Isaiah</i>, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='sixty-six'>lxvi.</abbr> 15.</i> <i>Daniel</i>,
+<i><abbr title='Daniel'>Dan.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9, 10.</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, <i>2 Thess. <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 8.</i>
+And lastly, in the <i>Apocalypse</i>, when the World
+draws to a Conclusion, as in the seventh Trumpet
+(<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 19.</i>) and the seventh Vial (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 18.</i>)
+we have still mention made of this fiery Tempest of
+Lightnings and Thunderings.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We may therefore reasonably suppose, that, before
+the Conflagration, the Air will be surcharg’d
+every where (by a precedent Drought) with hot
+and fiery Exhalations: And as against the Deluge
+those Regions were burthen’d with Water and moist
+Vapours, which were pour’d upon the Earth, not
+in gentle Showers, but like Rivers and Cataracts
+from Heaven; so they will now be filled with
+hot Fumes and sulphureous Clouds, which will
+sometimes flow in Streams and fiery Impressions
+through the Air, sometimes make Thunder and
+Lightnings, and sometimes fall down upon the
+Earth in Floods of Fire. In general, there is a
+great Analogy to be observed betwixt the two
+Deluges of Water and of Fire, not only as to the
+Bounds of them, which were noted before; but
+as to the general Causes and Sources upon which
+they depend, from above and from below. At
+the Flood, the Windows of Heaven were open’d
+above, and the Abyss was open’d below; and the
+Waters of these two join’d together to overflow
+the World: In like manner, at the Conflagration,
+God will rain down Fire from Heaven, as he did
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>once upon <i>Sodom</i>; and at the same time the subterraneous
+Store-houses of Fire will be broken
+open; which answers to the Disruption of the
+Abyss: And these two meeting and mingling
+together, will involve all the Heaven and Earth
+in Flames.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is a short Account of the ordinary Stores
+of Nature, and the ordinary Preparations for a
+general Fire; and, in Contemplation of these,
+<i>Pliny</i> the Naturalist said boldly, <i>It was one of
+the greatest Wonders of the World, that the World
+was not every Day set on Fire</i>. We will conclude
+this Chapter with his Words, in the second Book
+of his <i>Natural Hist.</i> <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> 106, 107. Having given
+an Account of some fiery Mountains and other
+Parts of the Earth that are the Seats and Sources
+of Fire, he makes this Reflection: <i>Seeing this
+Element is so fruitful, that it brings forth it self,
+and multiplies and encreases from the least Sparks;
+what art we to expect from so many Fires already
+kindled on the Earth? How does Nature feed and
+satisfy so devouring an Element, and such a great
+Voracity throughout all the World, without Loss or
+Diminution of herself? Add to these Fires we have
+mentioned, the Stars and the great Sun; then all
+the Fires made for human Uses; Fire in Stones, in
+Wood, in the Clouds, and in Thunder; IT EXCEEDS
+ALL MIRACLES, IN MY
+OPINION, THAT ONE DAY SHOULD
+PASS WITHOUT SETTING THE
+WORLD ALL ON FIRE.</i></p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='eight'>VIII.</abbr></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>Some new Dispositions towards the Conflagration,
+as to the Matter, Form, and Situation of the
+Earth. Concerning miraculous Causes, and
+how far the Ministry of Angels may be engaged
+in this Work.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We have given an Account, in the preceding
+Chapter, of the ordinary Preparations of
+Nature for a general Fire; we now are to give an
+Account of the extraordinary, or of any new Dispositions,
+which, towards the End of the World, may
+be super-added to the ordinary State of Nature. I do
+not, by these, mean Things openly miraculous and
+supernatural; but such a Change wrought in Nature,
+as shall still have the Face of natural Causes,
+and yet have a greater Tendency to the Conflagration.
+As, for Example, suppose a great Drought,
+as we noted before, to precede this Fate, or a general
+Heat and Dryness of the Air, and of the
+Earth; because this happens sometimes in a Course
+of Nature, it will not be look’d upon as prodigious.
+’Tis true, some of the Antients speak of a
+Drought of forty Years, that will be a Fore-runner
+of the Conflagration; so that there will not
+be a watery Cloud, nor Rainbow seen in the
+Heavens, for so long a Time. And this they impute
+to <i>Elias</i>, who at his Coming, will stop the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>Rain, and shut up the Heavens to make way
+for the last Fire. But these are excessive and ill-grounded
+Suppositions; for half forty Years Drought
+will bring an universal Sterility upon the Earth,
+and thereupon an universal Famine, with innumerable
+Diseases; so that all Mankind would be
+destroyed, before the Conflagration could overtake
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But we will readily admit an extraordinary
+Drought and Desiccation of all Bodies to usher
+in this great Fatality. And therefore, whatsoever
+we read in natural History, concerning former
+Droughts, of their drying up Fountains and Rivers,
+parching the Earth, and making the outward
+Turf take Fire in several Places; filling the
+Air with fiery Impressions, making the Woods
+and Forests ready Fewel, and sometimes to kindle
+by the Heat of the Sun, or a Flash of Lightning:
+These and what other Effects have come to
+pass in former Droughts, may come to pass
+again; and that in an higher Measure, and so as
+to be of more general Extent. And we must
+also allow, that by this means, a great degree of
+Inflammability, or Easiness to be set on Fire, will
+be super-induc’d, both into the Body of the Earth,
+and of all Things that grow upon it. The
+Heat of the Sun will pierce deeper into its
+Bowels, when it gapes to receive his Beams,
+and by Chinks and widened Pores makes way
+for their Passage to its very Heart. And, on
+the other Hand, it is not improbable, but that
+upon this general Relaxation, and Incalescency
+of the Body of the Earth, the <i>Central Fire</i> may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>have a freer Efflux, and diffuse itself in greater
+abundance every Way; so as to affect even these
+exterior Regions of the Earth, so far as to
+make them still more catching, and more combustible.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>From this external and internal Heat acting upon
+the Body of the Earth, all Minerals, that have
+the Seeds of Fire in them, will be open’d, and
+exhale their Effluviums more copiously. As Spices,
+when warm’d are more odoriferous, and fill
+the Air with their Perfumes; so the Particles of
+Fire that are shut up in several Bodies, will easily
+fly abroad, when, by a further degree of Relaxation,
+you shake off their Chains, and open the
+Prison Doors. We cannot doubt, but there are
+many Sorts of Minerals, and many Sorts of Fire-stones,
+and of Trees and Vegetables of this Nature,
+which will sweat out their oily and sulphureous
+Atoms, when by a general Heat and Dryness
+their Parts are loosen’d and agitated.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have no Experience that will reach so
+far, as to give us a full Account what the State
+of Nature will be at that Time; I mean, after
+this Drought, towards the End of the World;
+but we may help our Imagination, by comparing
+it with other Seasons and Temperaments
+of the Air. As therefore in the Spring the Earth
+is fragrant, and the Fields and Gardens are fill’d
+with the sweet Breathings of Herbs and Flowers;
+especially after a gentle Rain; when their Bodies
+are softened, and the Warmth of the
+Sun makes them evaporate more freely: So a
+greater degree of Heat acting upon all the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>Bodies of the Earth, like a stronger Fire in the
+Alembick, will extract another sort of Parts or
+Particles, more deeply incorporated, and more
+difficult to be disintangled; I mean oily Parts,
+and such undiscover’d Parcels of Fire, as lie
+fix’d and imprison’d in hard Bodies: These, I
+imagine, will be in a great measure set afloat, or
+drawn out into the Air, which will abound with
+hot and dry Exhalations, more than with Vapours
+and Moisture in a wet Season; and by this Means,
+all Elements and elementary Bodies will stand
+ready, and in a proximate Disposition to be inflamed.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much concerning the last Drought, and
+the general Effects of it. In the next Place, we
+must consider the Earthquakes that will precede
+the Conflagration, and the Consequences of them.
+I noted before, that the cavernous and broken
+Construction of the present Earth, was that which
+made it obnoxious to be destroy’d by Fire; as its
+former Construction over the Abyss, made it obnoxious
+to be destroy’d with Water. This Hollowness
+of the Earth is most sensible in mountainous
+and hilly Countries, which therefore I
+look upon as most subject to burning; but the
+plain Countries may also be made hollow and
+hilly by Earthquakes, when the Vapours, not
+finding an easy Vent, raise the Ground, and make a
+forcible Eruption, as at the springing of a Mine.
+And tho’ plain Countries are not so subject to
+Earthquakes as mountainous, because they have
+not so many Cavities, and subterraneous Vaults,
+to lodge the Vapours in; yet every Region hath
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>more or less of them: And after this Drought, the
+Vacuities of the Earth being every where enlarg’d,
+the Quantity of Exhalations much increas’d, and
+the Motion of them more strong and violent, they
+will have their Effects in many Places where they
+never had any before. Yet I do not suppose that
+this will raise new Ridges of Mountains, like the
+<i>Alps</i>, or <i>Pyreneans</i>, in those Countries that are
+now plain, but that they will break and loosen
+the Ground, make greater Inequalities in the Surface,
+and greater Cavities within, than what are
+at present in those Places: and by this means
+the Fire will creep under them, and find a Passage
+thorough them, with more Ease than if
+they were compact, and every where continu’d
+and unbroken.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But you will say, it may be, How does it
+appear that there will be more frequent Earthquakes
+towards the End of the World? If this
+precedent Drought be admitted, ’tis plain that
+fiery Exhalation will abound every where within
+the Earth, and will have a greater Agitation
+than ordinary; and these being the Causes
+of Earthquakes, when they are rarified and inflamed,
+’tis reasonable to suppose, that in such
+a State of Nature, they will more frequently
+happen, than at other Times. Besides, Earthquakes
+are taken Notice of in Scripture, as Signs
+and Fore-runners of the last Day, as they usually
+are of all great Changes and Calamities.
+The Destruction of <i>Jerusalem</i> was a Type of
+the Destruction of the World, and the Evangelists
+always mention Earthquakes amongst
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>the ominous Prodigies that were to attend it.
+But these Earthquakes we are speaking of at
+present are but the Beginnings of Sorrow, and
+not to be compar’d with those that will follow
+afterwards, when Nature is convuls’d in her
+last Agony, just as the Flames are seizing on
+her. Of which we shall have Occasion to speak
+hereafter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Changes will happen as to the <i>Matter</i>
+and <i>Form</i> of the Earth, before it is attack’d by
+the last Fire: There will be also another Change
+as to the <i>Situation</i> of it; for that will be rectified,
+and the Earth restor’d to the Posture it had at first,
+namely, of a right Aspect, and Conversion to the
+Sun. But because I cannot determine at what
+Time this Restitution will be, whether at the Beginning,
+Middle, or End of the Conflagration, I
+will not presume to lay any Stress upon it. <i>Plato</i>
+seems to have imputed the Conflagration to this
+only; which is so far true, that the Revolution,
+call’d <i>the Great Year</i>, is this very Revolution, or
+the Return of the Earth, and the Heavens to their
+first Posture. But tho’ this may be contemporary
+with the last Fire, or some way concomitant;
+yet it does not follow that it is the Cause
+of it, much less the only Cause. It may be an
+Occasion of making the Fire reach more easily
+towards the Poles, when by this Change of Situation
+their long Nights, and long Winters shall be
+taken away.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The new Dispositions in our Earth which we
+expect before that great Day, may be look’d
+upon as extraordinary, but not as miraculous,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>because they may proceed from natural Causes.
+But now in the last Place, we are to consider
+<i>miraculous Causes</i>: What Influence they may
+have, or what Part they may bear, in this great
+Revolution of Nature. By <i>miraculous Causes</i> we
+understand either God’s immediate Omnipotency,
+or the Ministry of Angels; and what may be perform’d
+by the latter, is very improperly and undecently
+thrown upon the former. ’Tis a great
+Step to Omnipotency: and ’tis hard to define
+what Miracles, on this side Creation, require an
+infinite Power. We are sure that the Angels
+are Ministring Spirits, and ten thousand times ten
+thousand stand about the Throne of the Almighty,
+to receive his Commands and execute his
+Judgments. That perfect Knowledge they have
+of the Powers of Nature, and of conducting those
+Powers to the best Advantage, by adjusting Causes
+in a fit Subordination one to another, makes
+them capable of performing, not only things
+far above our Force, but even above our Imagination:
+Besides, they have a radical inherent
+Power, belonging to the Excellency of their
+Nature, of determining the Motions of Matter,
+within a far greater Sphere than human
+Souls can pretend to. We can only command
+our Spirits, and determine their Motions within
+the Compass of our own Bodies; but their
+Activity and Empire is of far greater Extent, and
+the outward World is much more subject to
+their Dominion than to ours. From these Considerations
+it is reasonable to conclude, that the
+generality of Miracles may be, and are perform’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>by Angels; it being less decorous to employ a
+sovereign Power, where a subaltern is sufficient;
+and when we hastily cast Things upon God, for
+quick Dispatch, we consult our own Ease more
+than the Honour of our Maker.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I take it for granted here, that what is done by
+an angelical Hand, is truly providential, and of
+divine Administration; and also justly bears the
+Character of a Miracle. Whatsoever may be done
+by pure material Causes, or human Strength, we
+account natural; and whatsoever is above these,
+we call supernatural and miraculous. Now what
+is supernatural and miraculous, is either the Effect
+of an angelical Power, or of a sovereign and infinite
+Power; and we ought not to confound these
+two, no more than natural and supernatural; for
+there is a greater Difference betwixt the highest
+angelical Power and Omnipotency, than betwixt
+an human Power, and angelical. Therefore, as
+the first Rule concerning Miracles is this, that
+we must not fly to Miracles, where Man and Nature
+are sufficient; so the second Rule is this,
+that we must not fly to a sovereign infinite Power,
+where an angelical is sufficient. And the Reason
+in both Rules is the same, namely, because it
+argues a Defect of Wisdom in all Oeconomies
+to employ more and greater Means than are sufficient.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now to make Application of this to our present
+Purpose, I think it reasonable, and also
+sufficient, to admit the Ministry of Angels in
+the future Conflagration of the World. If
+Nature will not lay violent Hands upon her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>self, or is not sufficient to work her own Destruction,
+let us allow <i>Destroying Angels</i> to
+interest themselves in the Work, as the Executioners
+of the Divine Justice and Vengeance
+upon a degenerate World. We have Examples
+of this so frequently in sacred History, how the
+Angels have executed God’s Judgments upon a
+Nation or a People, that it cannot seem new or
+strange, that in this last Judgment, which by all
+the Prophets is represented as the <i>Great Day of
+the Lord</i>, the Day of his Wrath, and of his Fury,
+the same Angels should bear their Parts, and conclude
+the last Scene of that Tragedy which they
+had acted in all along. We read of the <i>Destroying
+Angel in Ægypt</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 23. of Angels that
+presided at the Destruction of <i>Sodom</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 13.</i>
+which was a Type of the future Destruction of the
+World, (<i>Jude <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr></i>) <i>2. Thess. <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7, 8.</i> and of Angels
+that will accompany our Saviour when he comes
+in Flames of Fire; not, we suppose, to be Spectators
+only, but Actors and Superintendants in this
+great Catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Ministry of Angels may be either in
+ordering and conducting such natural Causes
+as we have already given an Account of, or in
+adding new ones, if Occasion be; I mean, increasing
+the Quantity of Fire, or of fiery Materials,
+in and about the Earth; so as that
+Element shall be more abundant and more
+predominant, and overbear all Opposition that
+either Water, or any other Body, can make
+against it. It is not material whether of these
+two Suppositions we follow, provided we allow
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>that the Conflagration is a Work of Providence,
+and not a pure natural Fatality. If it be necessary
+that there should be an Augmentation made of
+fiery Matter, ’tis not hard to conceive how that
+may be done, either from the Heavens, or from
+the Earth, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='thirty'>xxx.</abbr> 26.</i> The Prophets sometimes
+speak of multiplying or strengthening the Light of
+the Sun, and it may as easily be conceiv’d of his
+Heat as of his Light; as if the Vial that was to be
+pour’d upon it, <i>Rev. <abbr title='twenty-six'>xxvi.</abbr> 8.</i> and <i>gave it a Power to
+scorch Men with Fire</i>, had something of a natural
+Sense as well as moral. But there is another Stream
+of ethereal Matter that flows from the Heavens,
+and recruits the <i>Central Fire</i> with continual Supplies;
+this may be encreas’d and strengthened, and
+its Effects convey’d throughout the whole Body
+of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But if an Augmentation is to be made of
+terrestrial Fire, or of such terrestrial Principles
+as contain it most, as Sulphur, Oyl, and such
+like, I am apt to believe, these will encrease
+of their own accord, upon a general Drought and
+Desiccation of the Earth. For I am far from
+the Opinion of some Chymists, that think these
+Principles immutable, and incapable of Diminution
+or Augmentation. I willingly admit that
+all such Particles may be broken and disfigur’d,
+and thereby lose their proper and specifick Virtue,
+and new ones may be generated to supply
+the Places of the former: Which Supplies, or
+new Productions being made in a less, or greater
+Measure, according to the general Dispositions
+of Nature; when Nature is heightened into a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>kind of Fever and Ebullition of all her Juices
+and Humours, as she will be at that Time, we
+must expect, that more Parts than ordinary,
+should be made inflammable, and those that are
+inflam’d should become more violent. Under
+these Circumstances, when all Causes lean that
+Way, a little Help from a superior Power will have
+a great Effect, and make a great Change in the
+State of the World. And as to the Power of Angels,
+I am of Opinion, that it is very great as to the
+Changes and Modifications of natural Bodies;
+that they can dissolve a Marble as easily as we can
+crumble Earth and Moulds, or fix any Liquor in
+a Moment, into a Substance as hard as Crystal:
+That they can either make Flames more vehement
+and irresistible to all Sorts of Bodies; or as
+harmless as lambent Fires, and as soft as Oyl. We
+see an Instance of this last, in <i>Nebuchadnezzar’s</i>
+fiery Furnace, <i>Daniel <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 28.</i> where the three
+Children walk’d unconcern’d in the midst of the
+Flames, under the Charge and Protection of an
+Angel: And the same Angel, if he had pleas’d,
+could have made the same Furnace seven times
+hotter than the Wrath of the Tyrant had made
+it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We will therefore leave it to their Ministry to
+manage this great Furnace, when the Heavens
+and the Earth are on Fire: To conserve,
+increase, direct, or temper the Flames, according
+to Instructions given them, as they are to
+be <i>tutelary</i> or <i>destroying</i>. Neither let any Body
+think it a Diminution of Providence, to put
+Things into the Hands of Angels; ’tis the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>true Rule and Method of it: For to imploy an
+Almighty Power where it is not necessary, is
+to debase it, and give it a Task fit for lower
+Beings. Some think it Devotion and Piety to
+have recourse immediately to the Arm of God
+to salve all things; this may be done sometimes
+with a good Intention, but commonly with little
+Judgment. God is as jealous of the Glory
+of his Wisdom, as of his Power; and Wisdom
+consists in the Conduct and Subordination of several
+Causes, to bring our Purposes to Effect;
+but what is dispatched by an immediate supreme
+Power, leaves no room for the Exercise of Wisdom.
+To conclude this Point, which I have
+touch’d upon more than once; We must not be
+partial to any of God’s Attributes, and Providence
+being a Complexion of many, Power, Wisdom,
+Justice, and Goodness, when we give due Place
+and Honour to all these, then we must honour
+<span class='sc'>Divine Providence</span>.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>
+ <h3 id='chap-3-9' class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='nine'>IX.</abbr></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>How the Sea will be diminish’d and consum’d.
+How the Rocks and Mountains will be thrown
+down and melted, and the whole exterior
+Frame of the Earth dissolv’d into a Deluge of
+Fire.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We have now taken a View of the Causes
+of the Conflagration, both ordinary and
+extraordinary: It remains to consider the Manner
+of it; how these Causes will operate, and bring
+to pass an Effect so great and so prodigious. We
+took Notice before, that the grand Obstruction
+would be from the Sea, and from the Mountains;
+we must therefore take these to Task in
+the first Place: and if we can remove them out of
+our Way, or overcome what Resistance and Opposition
+they are capable to make, the rest of the
+Work will not be uneasy to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Ocean indeed is a vast Body of Waters;
+and we must use all our Art and Skill to dry it
+up, or consume it in a good measure, before
+we can pass our Design. I remember the Advice
+a Philosopher gave <i>Amasis</i> King of <i>Ægypt</i>,
+when he had a Command sent him from
+the King of <i>Æthiopia</i>, <i>that he should drink up
+the Sea</i>. <i>Amasis</i> being very anxious and solicitous
+what Answer he should make to this
+strange Command, the Philosopher <i>Bias</i> advis’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>him to make this round Answer to the King,
+<i>That he was ready to perform his Command, and
+to drink up the Sea, provided he would stop the
+Rivers from flowing into his Cup while he was
+drinking</i>. This Answer baffled the King, for he
+could not stop the Rivers; but this we must do,
+or we shall never be able to drink up the Sea,
+or burn up the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Neither will this be so impossible as it seems
+at first Sight, if we reflect upon those Preparations
+we have made towards it, by a general
+Drought all over the Earth. This, we suppose,
+will precede the Conflagration, and by drying
+up the Fountains and Rivers which daily feed the
+Sea, will by degrees starve that Monster, or reduce
+it to such a degree of Weakness, that it shall
+not be able to make any great Resistance. More
+than half an Ocean of Water flows into the Sea
+every Day, from the Rivers of the Earth, if you
+take them altogether. This I speak upon a moderate
+Computation. <i>Aristotle</i> says, the Rivers carry
+more Water into the Sea in the Space of a
+Year, than would equal in Bulk the whole Globe
+of the Earth. Nay some have ventur’d to affirm
+this of one single River, the <i>Volga</i>, that runs into
+the <i>Caspian</i> Sea. ’Tis a great River indeed, and
+hath seventy Mouths; and so it had need have,
+to disgorge a Mass of Water equal to the Body
+of the Earth, in a Year’s Time. But we need
+not take such high Measures; there are at
+least an hundred great Rivers that flow into the
+Sea from several Parts of the Earth, Islands and
+Continents, besides several thousands of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>lesser ones; let us suppose these, all together, to
+pour as much Water into the Sea-Channel every
+Day, as is equal to half the Ocean: And we shall
+be easily convinc’d of the Reasonableness of this
+Supposition, if we do but examine the daily Expence
+of one River, and by that make an Estimate
+of the rest. This we find calculated to our
+Hands in the River <i>Po</i>, in <i>Italy</i>; a River of
+much what the same Bigness with our <i>Thames</i>,
+and disburthens it self into the Gulpp of <i>Venice</i>.
+<i>Baptista Riccioli</i> hath computed how much
+Water this River discharges in an Hour, <i>viz.</i>
+18000000 cubical Paces of Water, and consequently
+432000000 in a Day; which is scarce
+credible to those that do not distinctly compute
+it. Suppose then an hundred Rivers as great as
+this, or greater, to fall into the Sea from the
+Land; besides thousands of lesser, that pay their
+Tribute at the same Time into the great Receipt
+of the Ocean: These all taken together, are capable
+to renew the Sea twice every four and twenty
+Hours. Which Suppositions being admitted,
+if by a great and lasting Drought these Rivers were
+dried up, or the Fountains from whence they
+flow, what would then become of that vast Ocean,
+that before was so formidable to us?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>’Tis likely, you will say, these great Rivers
+cannot be dried up, tho’ the little ones may;
+and therefore we must not suppose such an universal
+Stop of Waters, or that they will all fail,
+by any Drought whatsoever. But great Rivers
+being made up of little ones, if these fail,
+those must be diminished, if not quit drain’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>and exhausted. It may be, all Fountains and
+Springs do not proceed from the same Causes,
+or the same Original; and some are much more
+copious than others: For such Differences, we
+will allow what is due; but still the Dryness of
+the Air and of the Earth continuing, and all the
+Sources and Supplies of Moisture, both from
+above and from below, being lessen’d, or wholly
+discontinued, a general Decay of all Fountains
+and Rivers must necessarily follow, and consequently
+of the Sea, and of its Fulness, that depends
+upon them; and that’s enough for our present
+Purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The first Step towards the Consumption of
+the Ocean, will be the Diminution or Suspension
+of the Rivers that run into it; the next will be
+an Evacuation by subterraneous Passages; and the
+last, by Eruptions of Fires in the very Channel
+of it, and in the midst of the Waters. As for
+subterraneous Evacuations, we cannot doubt but
+that the Sea hath Outlets at the Bottom of it,
+whereby it discharges that vast Quantity of Water
+that flows into it every Day; and that could not
+be discharg’d so fast as it comes from the wide
+Mouths of the Rivers, by Percolation, or Straining
+through the Sands. Seas also communicate
+with one another by these internal Passages; as is
+manifest from those particular Seas that have no
+external Outlet, or Issue, though they receive into
+them many great Rivers, and sometimes the Influx
+of other Seas. So the <i>Caspian</i> Sea receives not
+only <i>Volga</i>, which we mentioned before, but several
+other Rivers, and yet hath no visible Issue for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>its Waters. The <i>Mediterranean</i> Sea, besides all
+the Rivers it receives, hath a Current flowing into
+it, at either End, from other Seas; from the
+<i>Atlantick</i> Ocean at the Streights of <i>Gibraltar</i>, and
+from the <i>Black Sea</i> above <i>Constantinople</i>; and
+yet there is no Passage above Ground, or visible
+Derivation of the <i>Mediterranean</i> Waters out of
+their Channel; which seeing they do not overfill,
+nor overflow the Banks, ’tis certain they must
+have some secret Conveyances into the Bowels of
+the Earth, or subterraneous Communication with
+other Seas. Lastly, from the Whirlpools of the
+Sea, that suck in Bodies that come within their
+Reach, it seems plainly to appear, by that Attraction
+and Absorption, that there is a Descent of
+Waters in those Places.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Wherefore when the Current of the Rivers
+into the Sea is stopp’d, or in a great Measure
+diminished; the Sea continuing to empty it self
+by these subterraneous Passages, and having little
+or none of those Supplies that it used to have
+from the Land, it must needs be sensibly lessen’d
+and both contract its Channel into a narrower
+Compass, and also have less Depth in the Waters
+that remain. And in the last Place, we
+must expect fiery Eruptions in several Parts of
+the Sea Channel, which will help to suck up,
+or evaporate the remaining Waters. In the present
+State of Nature there have been several Instances
+of such Eruptions of Fire from the Bottom
+of the Sea; and in that last State of Nature,
+when all Things are in a Tendency to Inflammation,
+and when Earthquakes and Eruptions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>will be more frequent every where, we must
+expect them also more frequently by Sea, as well
+as by Land. ’Tis true, neither Earthquakes nor
+Eruptions can happen in the middle of the great
+Ocean, or in the deepest Abyss, because there are
+no Cavities, or Mines below it, for the Vapours
+and Exhalations to lodge in: But it is not so
+much of the Sea-Chanel that is so deep; and in
+other Parts, especially in Streights, and near
+Islands, such Eruptions, like Sea-Vulcano’s, have
+frequently happened, and new Islands have been
+made by such fiery Matter thrown up from the
+Bottom of the Sea. Thus, they say, those Islands
+in the <i>Mediterranean</i>, call’d the <i>Vulcanian Islands</i>,
+had their Original, being Matter cast up from the
+Bottom of the Sea, by the Force of Fire, as new
+Mountains sometimes are raised upon the Earth.
+Another Island in the <i>Archipelago</i> had the same
+Original; whereof <i>Strabo</i> gives an Account,
+<i>Lib. 1.</i> <i>The Flames, he says, sprung up through
+the Waters four Days together, so as the whole
+Sea was hot and burning; and they rais’d by
+degrees, as with Engines, a Mass of Earth,
+which made a new Island, twelve Furlongs in
+Compass.</i> And in the same <i>Archipelago</i>, Flames
+and Smoke have several times, (particularly in
+the Year 1650) risen out of the Sea, and
+fill’d the Air with sulphureous Scents and Vapours.
+In like manner in the Island of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Michael</i>,
+one of the <i>Tercera’s</i>, there have been,
+of later Years, such Eructations of Fire and
+Flames, so strong and violent, that, at the
+Depth of a hundred and sixty Fathoms, they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>forc’d their Way through the midst of the Waters,
+from the Bottom of the Sea into the open
+Air, as has been related by those that were Eyewitnesses.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In these three Ways, I conceive, the great Force
+of the Sea will be broken, and the mighty Ocean
+reduced to a standing Pool of putrid Waters, without
+Vent, and without Recruits. But there will
+still remain, in the midst of the Channel, a great
+Mass of troubled Liquors, like Dregs in the Bottom
+of the Vessel; which will not be drunk up,
+’till the Earth be all on Fire, and Torrents of melted
+and sulphureous Matter flow from the Land, and
+mingle with this dead Sea. But let us now leave
+the Sea in this humble Posture, and go on to attack
+the Rocks and Mountains, which stand next
+in our Way.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>See how scornfully they look down upon us,
+and bid Defiance to all the Elements; they
+have born the Thunder and Lightning of Heaven,
+and all the Artillery of the Skies, for innumerable
+Ages; and do not fear the crackling
+of Thorns and of Shrubs that burn at their
+Feet: Let the Towns and Cities of the Earth,
+say they, be laid in Ashes; let the Woods and
+Forests blaze away, and the fat Soil of the
+Earth fry in its own Grease; these Things will
+not affect us; we can stand naked in the midst
+of a Sea of Fire, with our Roots as deep as
+the Foundations of the Earth, and our Heads
+above the Clouds of the Air. Thus they
+proudly defy Nature; and it must be confess’d,
+that these, being, as it were, the Bones of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>Earth, when the Body is burning, will be the
+last consum’d; and I am apt to think, if they
+could keep in the same Posture they stand in now,
+and preserve themselves from falling, the Fire
+could never get an entire Power over them. But
+Mountains are generally hollow, and that makes
+them subject to a double Casualty; first, of Earthquakes;
+secondly, of having their Roots eaten
+away by Water or by Fire; but by Fire especially
+in this Case; For we suppose there will be innumerable
+subterraneous Fires smothering under
+Ground, before the general Fire breaks out; and
+these by corroding the Bowels of the Earth, will
+make it more hollow, and more ruinous; and when
+the Earth is so far dissolv’d, that the Cavities within
+the Mountains are fill’d with Lakes of Fire, then
+the Mountains will sink, and fall into those boiling
+Cauldrons, which in Time will dissolve them,
+though they were as hard as Adamant.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There is another Engine that will tear the
+Earth with great Violence, and rend in pieces
+whatsoever is above or about those Parts of it;
+and that is the Element of Water, so gentle
+in it self when undisturb’d: But ’tis found by
+Experience, that when Water falls into liquid
+Metals, it flies about with an incredible Impetuosity,
+and breaks or bears down every Thing
+that would stop its Motion and Expansion. This
+Force I take to come from the sudden and
+strong Rarefaction of its Parts, which make a
+kind of Explosion, when it is sudden and vehement;
+and this is one of the greatest Forces
+we know in Nature: Accordingly I am apt to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>think, that the marvellous Force of Vulcano’s,
+when they throw out Lumps of Rocks, great
+Fragments of the Earth, and other heavy Bodies,
+to such a vast Height and Distance, that it is done
+by this way of Explosion: And that Explosion
+made by the sudden Rarefaction of Sea Waters,
+that fall into Pans or Receptacles of molten Ore
+and ardent Liquors, within the Cavities of the
+Mountain; and thereupon follow the Noises,
+Roarings, and Eruptions of those Places. ’Tis
+observ’d, that Vulcano’s are in Mountains, and
+generally, if not always, near the Sea; and when
+its Waters, by subterraneous Passages, are driven
+under the Mountain, either by a particular Wind,
+or by a great Agitation of the Waves, they meet
+there with Metals and fiery Minerals, dissolv’d;
+and are immediately, according to our Supposition,
+rarified, and, by way of Explosion, fly out
+at the Mouth or Funnel of the Mountain, bearing
+before them whatsoever stands in their Way.
+Whether this be a true Account, or no, of the
+present Vulcano’s and their Eruptions, ’tis manifest,
+that such Cases as we have mention’d, will
+happen in the Conflagration of the Earth, and
+that such Eruptions or Disruptions of the Earth
+will follow thereupon: and that these will contribute
+very much to the sinking of Mountains,
+the splitting of Rocks, and the bringing of all
+strong Holds of Nature under the Power of the
+general Fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To conclude this Point: The Mountains will
+all be brought low, in that State of Nature
+either by Earthquakes, or subterraneous Fires;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span><i>Every Valley shall be exalted, and every Mountain
+and Hill shall be made low</i>, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='forty'>xl.</abbr> 4.</i> Which
+will be literally true at the second coming of our
+Saviour, as it was figuratively apply’d to his first
+coming, <i>Luke <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 5.</i> Now, being once levell’d
+with the rest of the Earth, the Question will only
+be, how they shall be dissolv’d? But there is no
+terrestrial Body indissolvable to Fire, if it have a
+due Strength and Continuance; and this last
+Fire will have both, in the highest degrees; so
+that it cannot but be capable of dissolving all elementary
+Compositions, how hard or solid soever
+they be.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>’Tis true, these Mountains and Rocks, as I said
+before, will have the Privilege to be the last destroy’d.
+These, with the deep Parts of the Sea,
+and the polar Regions of the Earth, will undergo
+a slower Fate, and be consum’d more leisurely.
+The Action of the last Fire may be distinguish’d
+into two Times, or two Assaults; the first Assault
+will carry off all Mankind, and all the Works of
+the Earth that are easily combustible; and this will
+be done with a quick and sudden Motion. But the
+second Assault, being employ’d about the Consumption
+of such Bodies, or such Materials, as are
+not so easily subjected to Fire, will be of long
+Continuance, and the Work of some Years. And
+’tis fit it should be so; that this flaming World
+may be view’d and consider’d by the neighbouring
+Worlds about it, as a dreadful Spectacle, and
+Monument of God’s Wrath against disloyal,
+and disobedient Creatures. That by this Example,
+now before their Eyes, they may think
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>of their own Fate, and what may befal them,
+as well as another Planet of the same Elements
+and Composition.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for the Rocks and Mountains;
+which, you see, according to our Hypothesis, will
+be levell’d, and the whole Face of the Earth reduc’d
+to Plainness and Equality; nay, which is
+more, melted and dissolv’d into a Sea of liquid
+Fire. And because this may seem a Paradox,
+being more than is usually supposed, or taken
+notice of, in the Doctrine of the Conflagration,
+it will not be improper, in this Place, to give an
+Account, wherein our Idea of the Conflagration,
+and its Effects, differs from the common Opinion,
+and the usual Representation of it. ’Tis commonly
+supposed, that the Conflagration of the
+World is like the burning of a City, where the
+Walls and Materials of the Houses are not melted
+down, but scorch’d, inflam’d, demolish’d, and
+made uninhabitable: So they think in the burning
+of the World, such Bodies, or such Parts of
+Nature, as are fit Fewel for the Fire, will be inflam’d,
+and, it may be, consum’d, or reduc’d to
+Smoke and Ashes; but other Bodies, that are
+not capable of Inflammation, will only be scorch’d
+and defac’d, the Beauty and Furniture of the
+Earth spoil’d, and by that means, say they, it will be
+laid waste and become uninhabitable. This seems
+to me a very short and imperfect Idea of the
+Conflagration; neither agreeable to Scripture,
+nor to the Deductions that may be made from
+Scripture. We therefore suppose that this is
+but half the Work; this destroying of the outward
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>Garniture of the Earth, is but the first
+Onset, and that the Conflagration will end in a
+Dissolution and Liquefaction of the Elements
+and all the exterior Region of the Earth; so
+as to become a true Deluge of Fire, or a Sea of
+Fire overspreading the whole Globe of the Earth.
+This State of the Conflagration, I think, may
+be plainly prov’d; partly by the Expressions of
+Scripture concerning it, and partly from the
+<i>Renovation</i> of the Earth that is to follow upon
+it. Saint <i>Peter</i>, who is our chief Guide in the
+Doctrine of the Conflagration, says, <i>2 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+10, 11.</i> <i>The Elements will be melted with fervent
+Heat</i>; besides burning up the Works of
+the Earth. Then adds, <i>Seeing all these Things
+shall be dissolv’d</i>, &#38;c. These Terms of <i>Liquefaction</i>
+and <i>Dissolution</i> cannot, without Violence, be
+restrained to simple Devastation, and superficial
+Scorching. Such Expressions carry the Work a
+great deal further, even to that full Sense which
+we propose. Besides, the Prophets often speak
+of the melting of the Earth, or of the Hills and
+Mountains, at the Presence of the Lord, in the
+Day of his Wrath, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='thirty-four'>xxxiv.</abbr> 3, 4. &#38; <abbr title='forty-four'>xliv.</abbr> 1, 2.</i>
+<i><abbr title='Nahum'>Nah.</abbr> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 5.</i> <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='ninety-seven'>xcvii.</abbr> 5.</i> And Saint <i>John</i>
+(<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 2.</i>) tells us of a <i>Sea of Glass, mingled
+with Fire</i>; where the Saints stood, singing the
+Song of <i>Moses</i>, and triumphing over their Enemies,
+the Spiritual <i>Pharaoh</i> and his Host, that
+were swallowed up in it. The <i>Sea of Glass</i>,
+must be a Sea of <i>molten</i> Glass; it must be fluid,
+not solid, if a Sea; neither can a solid Substance
+be said to be <i>mingled with Fire</i>, as this was.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>And to this answers the <i>Lake of Fire and Brimstone</i>,
+which the Beast and false Prophet were
+thrown into alive, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 20.</i> These all refer
+to the End of the World, and the last Fire, and
+also plainly imply, or express rather, that State of
+Liquefaction which we suppose and assert.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Furthermore, the <i>Renovation</i> of the World,
+or the <i>New Heaven</i> and <i>New Earth</i>, which
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, out of the Prophets, tells us shall
+spring out of these that are burnt and dissolved,
+do suppose this Earth reduc’d into a fluid Chaos,
+that it may lay a Foundation for a second
+World. If you take such a Skeleton of an
+Earth, as your scorching Fire would leave behind
+it; where the Flesh is torn from the Bones,
+and the Rocks and Mountains stand naked,
+and staring upon you; the Sea, half empty, gaping
+at the Sun, and the Cities all in Ruins, and
+in Rubbish; how would you raise a new World
+from this? And a World fit to be an <i>Habitation
+for the Righteous</i>? For so <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> makes that
+to be, which is to succeed after the Conflagration,
+<i>2 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 13.</i> And a World also <i>without a
+Sea</i>? So <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> describes the new Earth he saw,
+<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1.</i> As these Characters do not agree
+to the present Earth, so neither would they agree
+to <i>your</i> future one; for if that dead Lump could
+revive and become habitable again, it would
+however retain all the Imperfections of the former
+Earth, besides some Scars, and Deformities
+of its own. Wherefore, if you would cast
+the Earth into a new, and better Mould, you
+must first melt it down; and the last Fire, being
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>as a <i>Refiner</i>’s Fire, will make an Improvement
+in it, both as to Matter and Form. To conclude,
+it must be reduc’d into a fluid Mass, in the Nature
+of a Chaos, as it was at first; but this last will be
+a fiery Chaos, as that was watery; and from this
+State it will emerge again into a Paradisaical World.
+But this being the Subject of the following Book,
+we will discourse no more of it in this Place.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='ten'>X.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>Concerning the Beginning and Progress of the
+Conflagration, what Part of the Earth will
+first be burnt. The Manner of the future Destruction
+of Rome, according to prophetical
+Indications. The last State and Consummation
+of the general Fire.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>Having remov’d the chief Obstructions to our
+Design, and shew’d a Method for weakning
+the Strength of Nature, by draining the Trench,
+and beating down those Bulwarks, wherein she
+seems to place her greatest Confidence: We must
+now go to Work; making Choice of the weakest
+Part of Nature for our first Attack, where the Fire
+may be the easiest admitted, and the best maintain’d,
+and preserv’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And for our better Direction, it will be of
+Use to consider what we noted before, <i>viz.</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>That the Conflagration is not a pure <i>natural
+Fatality</i>, but a <i>mix’d Fatality</i>; or a divine
+Judgment supported by natural Causes. And if
+we can find some Part of the Earth, or of the
+Christian World, that hath more of these natural
+Dispositions to Inflammation than the rest; and is
+also represented by Scripture as a more peculiar
+Object of God’s Judgments at the coming of our
+Saviour, we may justly pitch upon that Part of the
+World, as first to be destroy’d: Nature and Providence
+conspiring to make that the first Sacrifice to
+this fiery Vengeance.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now as to natural Dispositions, in any Country
+or Region of the Earth, to be set on Fire, they
+seem to be chiefly these two; Sulphureousness of
+the Soil, and, an hollow mountainous Construction
+of the Ground. Where these two Dispositions
+meet in the same Tract or Territory, (the one
+as to the Quality of the Matter, and the other as
+to the Form) it stands like a Pile of fit Materials,
+ready set to have the Fire put to it. And as to
+divine Indications where this general Fire will begin,
+the Scripture points to the Seat of Antichrist,
+wheresoever that is, for the Beginning of it. The
+Scripture, I say, points at this two Ways: First,
+In telling us that our Saviour at his coming <i>in
+Flames of Fire shall consume the wicked One, the
+Man of Sin, the Son of Perdition, with the Spirit
+of his Mouth, and shall destroy him with the
+Brightness of his Presence, 2 Thess. <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7. <abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr>
+<abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8.</i> Secondly, under the Name of <i>Mystical
+Babylon</i>; which is allowed by all to be the
+Seat of Antichrist, and by Scripture always condemn’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>to the Fire. This we find in plain Words
+asserted by Saint <i>John</i>, in the <abbr title='eighteenth'>xviiith</abbr> <i>Chapter</i> of
+his <i>Revelations</i> (<i>Verses 8, 19.</i>) and in the
+<abbr title='nineteenth'>xixth</abbr> (<i>Verse 3</i>) under the Name of the <i>Great
+Whore</i>; which is the same City, and the same
+Seat, according to the Interpretation of Scripture
+it self, (<i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='seventeen'>xvii</abbr>, <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr></i>) And the Prophet <i>Daniel</i>,
+when he had set the <i>Antient of Days</i> upon his
+fiery Throne, says, <i>The Body of the Beast was
+given to the burning Flame, <abbr title='Daniel'>Dan.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9, 10, 11.</i>
+Which I take to be the same Thing with what <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>John</i> says afterwards, (<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 20.</i>) <i>The Beast
+and the false Prophet, were cast alive into a Lake
+of Fire, burning with Brimstone.</i> By these Places
+of Scripture it seems manifest, that Antichrist, and
+the Seat of Antichrist will be consum’d with Fire,
+at the coming of our Saviour. And ’tis very reasonable
+and decorous, that the grand Traytor and
+Head of the Apostacy, should be made the first
+Example of the divine Vengeance.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much being allow’d from Scripture,
+let us now return to Nature again; to seek out
+that Part of the Christian World, that from
+its own Constitution is most subject to burning;
+by the Sulphureousness of its Soil, and its fiery
+Mountains and Caverns. This we shall easily
+find to be the <i>Roman Territory</i>, or the Country
+of <i>Italy</i>: Which, by all Accounts, antient and
+modern, is a Store-house of Fire; as if it was
+condemn’d to that Fate by God and Nature,
+and to be an Incendiary, as it were, to the
+rest of the World. And seeing <i>Mystical Babylon</i>,
+the Seat of Antichrist, is the same <i>Rome</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>and its Territory, as it is understood by most Interpreters
+of former, and latter Ages; you see both
+our Lines meet in this Point; and, that there is
+Fairness, on both Hands, to conclude, that at the
+glorious Appearance of our Saviour, the Conflagration
+will begin at the City of <i>Rome</i>, and the
+<i>Roman</i> Territory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Nature hath sav’d us the Pains of kindling a Fire
+in those Parts of the Earth; for, since the Memory
+of Man, there have always been subterraneous
+Fires in <i>Italy</i>. And the <i>Romans</i> did not preserve
+their <i>Vestal</i> Fire with more Constancy, than Nature
+hath done her fiery Mountains in some Part
+or other of that Territory. Let us then suppose,
+when the fatal Time draws near, all these burning
+Mountains to be fill’d and replenish’d with
+fit Materials for such a Design; and when our
+Saviour appears in the Clouds, with an Host
+of Angels, that they all begin to play, as Fireworks,
+at the triumphal Entry of a Prince. Let
+<i>Vesuvius</i>, <i>Ætna</i>, <i>Strongyle</i>, and all the <i>Vulcanian</i>
+Islands, break out into Flames; and by
+the Earthquakes, which then will rage, let us
+suppose new Eruptions, or new Mountains
+open’d in the <i>Apennines</i>, and near to <i>Rome</i>; and
+to vomit out Fire in the same Manner as the old
+<i>Vulcano</i>’s. Then let the sulphureous Ground
+take Fire; and seeing the Soil of that Country,
+in several Places, is so full of Brimstone, that
+the Steams and Smoke of it visibly rise out of
+the Earth; we may reasonably suppose, that it
+will burn openly, and be inflam’d, at that Time.
+Lastly, the Lightenings of the Air, and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>flaming Streams of the melting Skies, will mingle
+and join with these Burnings of the Earth; and
+these three Causes meeting together, as they cannot
+but make a dreadful Scene, so they will easily
+destroy and consume whatsoever lies within the
+Compass of their Fury.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus you may suppose the Beginning of the
+general Fire: And it will be carried on by like
+Causes, though in lesser Degrees, in other Parts
+of the Earth: But as to <i>Rome</i>, there is still,
+in my Opinion, a more dreadful Fate that will
+attend it; namely, to absorp’d, or swallow’d
+up, in a Lake of Fire and Brimstone, after the
+Manner of <i>Sodom</i> and <i>Gomorrah</i>. This, in my
+Judgment, will be the Fate and final Conclusion
+of <i>Mystical Babylon</i>, to sink as a great Mill-stone
+into the Sea, and never to appear more.
+Hear what the Prophet says, <i>A mighty Angel took
+up a Stone, like a great Mill stone, and cast it into
+the Sea, saying, Thus with Violence shall that
+great City Babylon be thrown down, and shall
+be found no more at all, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 21.</i> Simply
+to be burnt, does not at all answer to this
+Description of its perishing, by <i>sinking like a Mill-stone
+into the Sea, and never appearing more</i>,
+nor of <i>not having its Place ever more found</i>;
+that is, leaving no Remains or Marks of it.
+A City that is only burnt, cannot be said to
+<i>fall like a Mill-stone into the Sea</i>; or, that it
+can <i>never more be found</i>; for after the Burning
+of a City, the Ruins stand, and its Place is
+well known: Wherefore, in both Respects,
+besides this exterior Burning, there must be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>an Absorption of this <i>Mystical Babylon</i>, the
+Seat of the Beast, and thereupon a total Disappearance
+of it. This also agrees with the Suddenness
+of the Judgment, which is a repeated
+Character of it, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 8, 10, 17, 19.</i>
+Now what kind of Absorption this will be, into
+what, and in what Manner, we may learn from
+what Saint <i>John</i> says afterwards, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 20.</i>
+<i>The Beast and the false Prophet were cast
+alive into a Lake of Fire and Brimstone.</i> You
+must not imagine, that they were bound Hand
+and Foot, and so thrown headlong into this
+Lake; but they were swallow’d up alive, they
+and theirs, as <i>Corah</i> and his Company; or, to use
+a plainer Example, after the manner of <i>Sodom</i>
+and <i>Gomorrah</i>, which perish’d by Fire, and at the
+same Time sunk into the <i>Dead Sea</i>, or a Lake of
+Brimstone.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This was a lively Type of the Fate of <i>Rome</i>, or
+<i>Mystical Babylon: </i>And ’tis fit it should resemble
+<i>Sodom</i>, as well in its Punishment, as in its Crimes.
+Neither is it a hard Thing to conceive how such
+an Absorption may come to pass, that being a
+Thing so usual in Earthquakes, and Earthquakes
+being so frequent in that Region. And lastly,
+That this should be, after the Manner of <i>Sodom</i>,
+turn’d into a Lake of Fire, will not be at all
+strange, if we consider, that there will be many
+subterraneous Lakes of Fire at that Time, when
+the Bowels of the Earth begin to melt, and the
+Mountains spew out Streams of liquid Fire.
+The Ground therefore being hollow and rotten
+in those Parts, when it comes to be shaken with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>a mighty Earthquake, the Foundations will sink,
+and the whole Frame fall into an Abyss of Fire
+below, as a Mill-stone into the Sea. And this
+will give Occasion to that Cry, <i>Babylon the
+great is fallen, is fallen</i>, and shall never more
+be found.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This seems to be a probable Account, according
+to Scripture and Reason, of the Beginning
+of the general Fire, and of the particular
+Fate of <i>Rome</i>. But it may be propos’d here,
+as an Objection against this Hypothesis, that the
+<i>Mediterranean</i> Sea, lying all along the Coast of
+<i>Italy</i>, must needs be a sufficient Guard to that
+Country against the Invasion of Fire, or at least
+must needs extinguish it, before it can do much
+Mischief there, or propagate itself into other
+Countries. I thought we had in a good measure
+prevented this Objection before, by shewing how
+the Ocean would be diminished before the Conflagration,
+and especially the Arms and <i>Sinus</i>’s
+of the Ocean; and of these none would be more
+subject to this Diminution, than the <i>Mediterranean</i>;
+for, receiving its Supplies from the
+<i>Ocean</i> and the <i>Black Sea</i>, if these came to sink
+in their Channels they would not rise so high,
+as to be capable to flow into the <i>Mediterranean</i>
+at either End; and these Supplies being
+cut off, it would soon empty itself so far, partly
+by Evaporation; and partly by subterraneous
+Passages, as to shrink from all its Shores, and
+become only a standing Pool of Water in the
+Middle of the Channel: Nay, ’tis possible,
+by Floods of Fire descending from the many
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>Vulcano’s upon its Shores, it might itself be
+converted into a Lake of Fire, and rather help
+than obstruct the Progress of the Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>It may indeed be made a Question, Whether
+this fiery Vengeance upon the Seat of Antichrist
+will not precede the general Conflagration, at
+some Distance of Time, as a Fore-runner and
+Fore-warner to the World, that the rest of the
+People may have Space to repent; and particularly
+the <i>Jews</i>, being Spectators of this Tragedy,
+and of the miraculous Appearance of our Saviour,
+may see the Hand of God in it, and be
+convinc’d of the Truth and divine Authority of
+the Christian Religion: I say, this Supposition
+would leave Room for these and some other Prophetick
+Scenes, which we know not well where
+to place; but seeing <i>The Day of the Lord</i> is
+represented in Scripture, as one entire Thing,
+without Interruption or Discontinuation, and that
+it is to begin with the Destruction of Antichrist,
+we have Warrant enough to pursue the rest of
+the Conflagration from this Beginning and Introduction.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us then suppose the same Preparations
+made in the other Parts of the Earth to continue
+the Fire; for the Conflagration of the
+World being a Work of Providence, we may
+be sure such Measures are taken, as will effectually
+carry it on, when once begun. The
+Body of the Earth will be loosen’d and broken
+by Earthquakes, the more solid Parts impregnated
+with Sulphur, and the Cavities fill’d with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>unctuous Fumes and Exhalations, so as the whole
+Mass will be but as one great Funeral-Pile, ready
+built, and wanting nothing but the Hand of a destroying
+Angel to give it Fire. I will not take
+upon me to determine which Way this devouring
+Enemy would steer his Course from <i>Italy</i>, or in
+what Order he will advance and enter the several
+Regions of our Continent; that would be an Undertaking
+as uncertain as useless: But we cannot
+doubt of his Success, which Way soever he goes;
+unless where the Channel of the Ocean may
+chance to stop him: But as to that, we allow,
+that different Continents may have different
+Fires: not propagated from one to another, but
+of distinct Sources and Originals; and so likewise
+in remote Islands; and therefore no long
+Passage, or Trajection, will be requir’d from
+Shore to Shore: And even the Ocean it self will,
+at length, be as fiery as any Part of the Land; but
+that, with its Rocks, like Death, will be the last
+Thing subdued.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the animate World, the Fire will over-run
+it with a swift and rapid Course, and all
+living Creatures will be suffocated, or consumed,
+at the first Assault; and at the same Time all
+the Beauty of the Fields, and the External Decorations
+of Nature will be defac’d: Then the
+Cities and the Towns, and all the Works of
+Man’s Hands, will burn like Stubble before the
+Wind. These will soon be dispatched; but
+the great Burthen of the Work still remains;
+which is, that <i>Liquefaction</i> we mention’d
+before, or a <i>melting Fire</i>, much more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>strong and vehement than these transient Blazes,
+which do but sweep the Surface of the Earth:
+This Liquefaction, I say, we prov’d before out
+of Scripture, as the last State of the fiery Deluge,
+<a href='#chap-3-9'><i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='nine'>IX.</abbr></i></a> And ’tis this which, at length will make
+the Sea itself a <i>Lake of Fire and Brimstone</i>; when,
+instead of Rivers of Waters which used to flow
+into it from the Land, there come Streams and Rivulets
+of sulphureous Liquors, and purulent melted
+Matter, which following the Tract of their
+natural Gravity, will fall into this great Drain of
+this Earth; upon which Mixture, the remaining
+Parts of sweet Water will soon evaporate, and the
+Salt mingling with the Sulphur, will make a Dead
+Sea, an <i>Asphaltites</i>, a Lake of <i>Sodom</i>, a Cup of
+the Dregs of the Wine of the Fierceness of God’s
+Wrath.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We noted before two remarkable Effects of
+the <i>burning Mountains</i>, which would contribute
+to the Conflagration of the World, and
+gave Instances of both in former Eruptions of
+<i>Ætna</i> and <i>Vesuvius</i>; one was, of those Balls,
+or Lumps of Fire, which they throw about in
+the Time of their Rage; and the other, of
+those Torrents of liquid Fire, which rowl down
+their Sides to the next Seas or Valleys. In the
+first Respect, these Mountains are as so many
+Batteries, planted, by Providence, in several
+Parts of the Earth, to fling those fiery Bombs
+into such Places, or such Cities, as are marked
+out for Destruction; and, in the second Respect,
+they are to dry up the Waters, and the Rivers,
+and the Sea it self, when they fall into its
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>Channel, <i>Annal. Sic. dec. 1. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 2. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 4.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>T.</abbr> Fazellas</i>,
+a <i>Sicilian</i>, who writ the History of that
+Island, tells us of such a River of Fire (upon an
+Eruption of <i>Ætna</i>) near twenty eight Miles long,
+reaching from the Mountain to Port <i>Longina</i>;
+and might have been much longer, if it had not
+been stopt by the Sea. Many such as these, and
+far greater, we ought in Reason to imagine, when
+all the Earth begins to melt, and to ripen towards
+a Dissolution: It will then be full of these sulphureous
+Juices, as Grapes with Wine; and these will
+be squeez’d out of the Earth into the Sea, as out
+of a Wine-press into the Receiver, to fill up that
+Cup, as we said before, <i>with the Wine of the
+Fierceness of God’s Wrath</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If we may be allowed to bring prophetical
+Passages of Scripture to a natural Sense, as
+doubtless some of those must that respect the
+End of the World; these Phrases which we
+have now suggested, of the <i>Wine-press of the
+Wrath of God, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 10, 19.</i> <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 19.</i>
+<i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 15.</i> <i>Drinking the Fierceness of his
+Wine, poured, without Mixture, into the Cup
+of his Indignation</i>; with Expressions of the like
+Nature, that occur sometimes in the old Prophets,
+but especially in the <i>Apocalypse</i>: These,
+I say, might receive a full and emphatical Explication
+from this State of Things which now
+lies before us. I would not exclude any other
+Explication of less Force, as that of alluding
+to the <i>bitter Cup</i>, or <i>mixt Potion</i>, that us’d
+to be given to Malefactors: But that, methinks,
+is a low Sense, when applied to these Places
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>in the <i>Apocalypse</i>. That these Phrases signify
+God’s remarkable Judgments, all allow; and here
+they plainly relate to the End of the World, to
+the last Plagues, and the last of the last Plagues,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 19.</i> Besides, the Angel that presided
+over this Judgment, is said to be an Angel that
+<i>had Power over Fire</i>; and those who are to drink
+this Potion are said to be <i>tormented with Fire
+and Brimstone, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 10.</i> This presiding
+Angel seems to be our Saviour himself (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr>
+15.</i>) who, when he comes to execute Divine Vengeance
+upon the Earth, gives his Orders in these
+Words, <i>Gather the Clusters of the Vine of the
+Earth, for her Grapes are fully ripe, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 18,
+19.</i> And thereupon the destroying Angel <i>thrust
+in his Sickle into the Earth, and gather’d the
+Vine of the Earth, and cast it into the great Wine-press
+of the Wrath of God</i>. And this made a Potion
+<i>compounded of several Ingredients, but not
+diluted with Water</i>; Τὸ κεκερασμένου ἀκράτου,
+(<abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 10.) and was indeed a Potion of Fire
+and Brimstone, and all burning Materials mixt together.
+The Similitudes of Scripture are seldom nice and
+exact, but rather bold, noble and great; and according
+to the Circumstances which we have
+observed, this <i>Vineyard</i> seems to be the <i>Earth</i>,
+and this <i>Vintage</i> the End of the World; the
+pressing of the <i>Grapes</i> into the Cup or Vessel that
+receives them, the Distillation of burning Liquors
+from all Parts of the Earth into the Trough of the
+Sea; and that Lake of red Fire, the Blood of those
+Grapes so flowing into it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>’Tis true, this Judgment of the Vintage and
+Wine-press, and the Effects of it, seem to aim
+more especially at some particular Region of the
+Earth, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 20.</i> And I am not against that,
+provided the Substance of the Explication be still
+retained, and the universal Sea of Fire be that
+which follows in the next Chapter, under the
+Name of a <i>Sea of Glass, mingled with Fire</i>, <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr>
+<abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 2.</i> This, I think, expresses the highest and
+complete State of the Conflagration; when the
+Mountains are fled away, and not only so, but
+the exterior Region of the Earth quite dissolv’d,
+like Wax before the Sun: The Channel of the
+Sea fill’d with a Mass of fluid Fire, and the same
+Fire overflowing all the Globe, and covering the
+whole Earth, as the Deluge, or the first Abyss.
+Then will the triumphal Songs and Hallelujahs be
+sung for the Victories of the Lamb over all his
+Enemies, and over Nature it self, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 3, 4.</i>
+<i>Great and marvellous are thy Works, Lord God
+Almighty: Just and true are thy Ways, thou King
+of Saints. Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and
+glorify thy Name? for thou only art holy: for all
+Nations shall come and worship before thee; for
+thy Judgments are made manifest.</i></p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='eleven'>XI.</abbr></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>An Account of those extraordinary Phœnomena
+and Wonders in Nature, that, according to
+Scripture, will precede the coming of Christ,
+and the Conflagration of the World.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>If we reflect upon the History of burning
+Mountains, we cannot but observe, that,
+before their Eruptions, there are usually some
+Changes in the Earth, or in the Air, in the Sea,
+or in the Sun it self, as Signs and Forerunners
+of the ensuing Storm. We may then easily
+conclude that when the last great Storm is a
+coming, and all the Vulcano’s of the Earth
+ready to burst, and the Frame of the World to
+be dissolv’d, there will be previous Signs, in the
+Heavens, and on the Earth, to introduce this
+tragical Fate: Nature cannot come to that
+Extremity, without some Symptoms of her
+Illness, nor die silently without Pangs or Complaint.
+But we are naturally heavy of Belief,
+as to Futurities, and can scarce fancy any other
+Scenes, or other State of Nature, than what is
+present, and continually before our Eyes: We
+will therefore, to cure our Unbelief, take Scripture
+for our Guide, and keep within the Limits
+of its Predictions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Scripture plainly tells us of Signs, of
+Prodigies, that will precede the Coming of our
+Saviour, and the End of the World: both in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>the Heavens, and on the Earth. The Sun, Moon,
+and Stars, will be disturb’d in their Motion, or
+Aspect; the Earth and the Sea will roar and tremble,
+and the Mountains fall at his Presence. These
+things both the Prophets and Evangelists have told
+us; but what we do not understand, we are slow
+to believe; and therefore those that cannot apprehend
+how such Changes should come to pass
+in the natural World, chuse rather to allegorize
+all these Expressions of Scripture, and to make
+them signify no more than political Changes of
+Governments, and Empires, and the great Confusions
+that will be amongst the People and Princes
+of the Earth, towards the End of the World. So
+that <i>darkening of the Sun</i>, <i>shaking of the Earth</i>,
+and such like Phrases of Scripture, according to
+these Interpreters, are to be understood only in
+a moral Sense.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And they think they have a Warrant for
+this Interpretation, from the prophetick Style
+of the Old Testament, where the Destruction
+of Cities, and Empires, and great Princes, is
+often describ’d by such Figures, taken from the
+natural World. So much is true indeed as to
+the Phrase of the old Prophets in some Places;
+but I take the true Reason and Design of
+that, to be a typical Adumbration of what was
+intended should literally come to pass in the
+great and universal Destruction of the World;
+whereof these partial Destructions were only
+Shadows and Prefigurations. But to determine
+this Case, let us take the known and approved
+Rule for interpreting Scripture, <i>Not to recede
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>from the literal Sense without Necessity</i>, or where
+the Nature of the Subject will admit of a literal
+Interpretation. Now, as to those Cases in the
+<i>Old Testament</i>, History and Matter of Fact do
+shew, that they did not come to pass literally,
+therefore must not be so understood; but as for
+those that concern the End of the World, as they
+cannot be determin’d in that way, seeing they
+are yet <i>future</i>; so neither is there any natural
+Repugnancy or Improbability that they should
+come literally to pass: On the contrary, from
+the Intuition of that State of Nature, one would
+rather conclude the Probability or Necessity of
+them; that there may, and must be such Disorders
+in the external World, before the general
+Dissolution. Besides, if we admit Prodigies in
+any Case, or providential Indications of God’s
+Judgments to come there can be no Case suppos’d,
+wherein it will be more reasonable or proper
+to admit them, than when they are to be the
+Messengers of an universal Vengeance and Destruction.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us therefore consider what Signs Scripture
+hath taken notice of, as destin’d to appear
+at that Time, to publish, as it were, and proclaim
+the approaching End of the World; and
+how far they will admit of a natural Explication,
+according to those Grounds we have already
+given, in explaining the Causes and Manner
+of the Conflagration. These Signs are
+chiefly Earthquakes, and extraordinary Commotions
+of the Seas. Then the Darkness or
+bloody Colour of the Sun and Moon; the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>shaking of the Powers of Heaven, the Fulgurations
+of the Air, and the falling of Stars. As to
+Earthquakes, we have upon several Occasions
+shewn, that these will necessarily be multiplied
+towards the End of the World; when, by an
+Excess of Drought and Heat, Exhalations will
+more abound within the Earth; and, from the
+same Causes, their Inflammation also will be
+more frequent, than in the ordinary State of Nature.
+And as all Bodies, when dried, become
+more porous and full of Vacuities; so the Body
+of the Earth will be at that Time: And the
+Mines or Cavities wherein the Fumes and Exhalations
+lodge, will accordingly be of greater Extent,
+open into one another, and continued thro’
+long Tracts and Regions; by which means, when
+an Earthquake comes, as the Shock will be more
+strong and violent, so it may reach to a vast
+Compass of Ground, and whole Islands or
+Continents be shaken at once, when these
+Trains have taken Fire. The Effects also of
+such Concussions, will not only affect Mankind,
+but all the Elements, and the Inhabitants of
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I do not wonder that frequent and
+great Earthquakes should be made a Sign of
+an approaching Conflagration; and the highest
+Expressions of the Prophets concerning the
+<i>Day of the Lord</i>, may be understood in a literal
+Sense, if they be finally referr’d to the general
+Destruction of the World, and not terminated
+solely upon those particular Countries or People,
+to whom they are at first directed. Hear
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>what <i>Ezekiel</i> says upon this Subject, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr>
+19, 20, 22.</i> <i>For in my Jealousy and in the Fire
+of my Wrath have I spoken; surely in that Day
+there shall be a great shaking in the Land of
+Israel: So that the Fishes of the Sea, and the
+Fowls of the Heaven, and the Beasts of the
+Field, and all creeping Things that creep upon the
+Earth; and all the Men that are upon the Face of
+the Earth, shall shake at my Presence; and the
+Mountains shall be thrown down, and the steep
+Places shall fall, and every Wall shall fall to the
+Ground.——And I will rain an overflowing Rain,
+and great Hail-stones, Fire and Brimstone.</i> The
+Prophet <i>Isaias</i>, (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 18, 19, 20.</i>) describes
+these Judgments in Terms as high, and relating
+to the natural World; <i>The Windows from on high
+are open, and the Foundations of the Earth do
+shake. The Earth is utterly broken down, the
+Earth is clean dissolved, the Earth is moved exceedingly.
+The Earth shall reel to and fro like a
+Drunkard, and shall be removed like a Cottage,
+and the Transgression thereof shall be heavy upon
+it, and it shall fall, and not rise again.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To restrain all these things to <i>Judea</i>, as their
+adequate and final Object, is to force both the
+Words and the Sense. Here are manifest Allusions
+and Footsteps of the Destruction of the
+World, and the Dissolution of the Earth; partly
+as it was in the Deluge, and partly as it will
+be in its last Ruin, torn, broken, and shatter’d.
+But most Men have fallen into that
+Error, to fancy both the Destructions of the
+World by Water and Fire, quiet, noiseless
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>Things; executed without any Ruins or Ruptures
+in Nature: That the Deluge was but a
+great Pool of still Waters made by the Rains,
+and Inundation of the Sea; and the Conflagration
+will be only a superficial Scorching of the
+Earth, with a running Fire. These are false Ideas,
+and unsuitable to Scripture: For as the Deluge
+is there represented a Disruption of the Abyss, and
+consequently of the then habitable Earth; so the
+future Combustion of it, according to the Representations
+of Scripture, is to be usher’d in and accompanied
+with all sorts of violent Impressions
+upon Nature; and the chief Instrument of these
+Violences will be Earthquakes. These will tear
+the Body of the Earth, and shake its Foundations;
+rend the Rocks, and pull down the tall Mountains;
+sometimes overturn, and sometimes swallow
+up Towns and Cities; disturb and disorder
+the Elements, and make a general Confusion in
+Nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Next to Earthquakes, we may consider the
+<i>Roarings of a troubled Sea</i>. This is another Sign
+of a dying World. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Luke</i>, (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 25,
+26, 27.</i>) hath set down a great many of them
+together: Let us hear his Words: <i>And there
+shall be Signs in the Sun, and in the Moon,
+and in the Stars; and upon the Earth Distress
+of Nations, with Perplexity; the Sea and the
+Waves roaring. Mens Hearts failing them for
+fear, and for looking after those things which
+are coming on the Earth; for the Powers of
+Heaven shall be shaken. And then shall they
+see the Son of Man coming in a Cloud, with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>Power and great Glory, &#38;c.</i> As some would
+allegorize these Signs, which we noted before;
+so others would confine them to the Destruction
+of <i>Jerusalem</i>. But ’tis plain, by this <i>coming of
+the Son of Man in the Clouds</i>, and the <i>Redemption
+of the Faithful</i>, (Verse 28.) and at the same
+Time the <i>Sound of the last Trumpet</i>, (<abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr>
+31) which all relate to the End of the World,
+that something further is intended than the Destruction
+of <i>Jerusalem</i>. And though there were
+Prodigies at the Destruction of that City and State,
+yet not of this Force, nor with these Circumstances.
+’Tis true, those partial Destructions and
+Calamities, as we observ’d before, of <i>Babylon</i>,
+<i>Jerusalem</i>, and the <i>Roman</i> Empire, being Types
+of an universal and final Destruction of all God’s
+Enemies, have, in the Pictures of them, some of
+the same Strokes, to shew they are all from the
+same Hand, decreed by the same Wisdom, foretold
+by the same Spirit; and the same Power and
+Providence that have already wrought the one, will
+also work the other, in due Time, the former
+being still Pledges, as well as Prefigurations, of
+the latter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us then proceed in our Explication of this
+Sign, <i>the Roaring of the Sea, and the Waves</i>,
+applying it to the End of the World. I do not
+look upon this ominous Noise of the Sea, as
+the Effect of a Tempest, for then it would not
+strike such a Terror into the Inhabitants of the
+Earth, nor make them apprehensive of some
+great Evil coming upon the World, as this will
+do; what proceeds from visible Causes, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>such as may happen in a common Course of
+Nature, does not so much amaze us, nor affright
+us: Therefore ’tis more likely these Disturbances
+of the Sea proceed from below, partly by Sympathy
+and Revulsions from the Land; by Earthquakes
+there, and exhausting the subterraneous
+Cavities of Waters, which will draw again from
+the Seas what Supplies they can; and partly by
+Earthquakes in the very Sea it self, with Exhalations
+and fiery Eruptions from the Bottom of it:
+Things indeed that happen at other Times, more
+or less; but at this Conjuncture, all Causes conspiring,
+they will break out with more Violence,
+and put the whole Body of the Waters into a tumultuary
+Motion. I do not see any Occasion,
+at this Time, for high Winds; neither can I
+think a superficial Agitation of the Waves
+would answer this Phænomenon; but ’tis rather
+from Contorsions in the Bowels of the
+Ocean, which make it roar, as it were, for
+Pain. Some Causes impelling the Waters one
+Way, and some another, make intestine Strugglings,
+and contrary Motions; from whence proceed
+unusual Noises, and such a troubled State of
+the Waters, as does not only make the Sea innavigable,
+but also strikes Terror into all the maritime
+Inhabitants, that live within the View or
+Sound of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Earth and Sea. The Face
+of the Heavens also will be changed in divers
+Respects; the Sun and the Moon darken’d,
+or of a bloody or pale Countenance; the celestial
+Powers shaken, and the Stars unsettled
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>in their Orbs. As to the Sun and Moon, their
+Obscuration or Change of Colour is no more
+than what happens commonly before the Eruption
+of a fiery Mountain. <i>Dion Cassius</i>, you see,
+hath taken notice of it in that Eruption of <i>Ætna</i>
+which he describes; and others upon the like Occasions
+in <i>Vesuvius</i>. And ’tis a Thing of easy
+Explication; for, according as the Atmosphere is
+more or less clear or turbid, the Luminaries are
+more or less conspicuous; and, according to the
+Nature of those Fumes, or Exhalations that swim
+in the Air, the Face of the Sun is discolour’d
+sometimes one Way, sometimes another. You
+see, in an ordinary Experiment, when we look
+upon one another through the Fumes of Sulphur,
+we appear pale like so many Ghosts; and
+in some foggy Days, the Sun hangs in the Firmament
+as a Lump of Blood: And both the
+Sun and Moon, at their Rising, when their Light
+comes to us through the thick Vapours of the
+Earth, are red and fiery. These are not Changes
+wrought in the Substance of the Luminaries,
+but in the Modifications of their Light, as it
+flows to us: For Colours are but Light in a
+Sort of Disguise; as it passes through Mediums
+of different Qualities, it takes different Forms,
+but the Matter is still the same, and returns to
+its Simplicity, when it comes again into a pure
+Air.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now the Air may be changed and corrupted
+to a great Degree, tho’ there appear no visible
+Change to our Eye. This is manifest from infectious
+Airs, and the Changes of the Air before
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>Storms and Rains, which we feel commonly
+sooner than we see, and some other Creatures
+perceive much sooner than we do. ’Tis no Wonder
+then, if, before this mighty Storm, the Dispositions
+of the Air be quite alter’d; especially if we
+consider, what we have so often noted before,
+that there will be a great Abundance of Fumes
+and Exhalations, thro’ the whole Atmosphere of
+the Earth, before the last Fire breaks out, whereby
+the Light of the Sun may be tinctur’d in several
+Ways: And lastly, it may be so order’d
+providentially that the Body of the Sun may contract
+at that Time some Spots, or <i>Maculæ</i>, far
+greater than usual, and by that means be really
+darkened, not to us only, but to all the neighbouring
+Planets: And this will have a proportionable
+Effect upon the Moon too, for the Diminution
+of her Light: So that upon all Suppositions,
+these Phænomena are very intelligible, if
+not necessary Forerunners of the Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The next Sign given us, is, that the <i>Powers
+of Heaven will be shaken</i>. By the <i>Heavens</i>
+in this Place is either understood the Planetary
+Heavens, or that of the <i>fix’d Stars</i>; but this
+latter being vastly distant from the Earth, cannot
+be really affected by the Conflagration;
+nor the Powers of it, that is, its Motion, or
+the Bodies contained in it, any ways shaken
+or disorder’d. But, in Appearance, these celestial
+Bodies may seem to be shaken, and their
+Motions disorder’d; as in a Tempest by Night,
+when the Ship is toss’d with contrary and uncertain
+Motions, the Heavens seem to fluctuate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>over our Heads, and the Stars to reel to and
+fro, when the Motion is only in our own Vessel:
+So possibly the uncertain Motions of the
+Atmosphere, and sometimes of the Earth it
+self, may so vary the Sight and Aspect of this
+starry Canopy, that it may seem to shake and
+tremble.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But if we understand this of the <i>planetary Heavens</i>,
+they may really be shaken; Providence
+either ordering some great Changes in the other
+Planets, previously to the Conflagration of our
+Planet; as, ’tis probable, there was a great Change
+in <i>Venus</i> at the Time of our <i>Deluge</i>: Or the
+great Shakings and Concussions of our Globe at
+that Time, affecting some of the neighbouring
+Orbs, or at least that of the Moon, may cause
+Anomalies and Irregularities in their Motions.
+But the Sense that I should pitch upon chiefly for
+explaining this Phrase of <i>Shaking the Powers of
+Heaven</i>, comprehends, in a good measure, both
+these Heavens of the fix’d Stars and of the Planets:
+’Tis that Change of Situation in the Axis
+of the Earth, which we have formerly mention’d,
+whereby the Stars will seem to change their Places,
+and the whole Universe to take another Posture.
+This is sufficiently known to those that know
+the different Consequences of a strait or oblique
+Posture of the Earth. And as the Heavens and
+the Earth were, in this Sense, once shaken, before,
+namely, at the Deluge, when they lost
+their first Situation; so now they will be
+shaken again, and thereby return to the Posture
+they had before that first Concussion. And
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>this I take to be the true literal Sense of the Prophet
+<i>Haggai</i>, repeated by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, (<i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 6.</i>,
+and <i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 26.</i>) <i>Yet once more I shake not the
+Earth only, but also Heaven.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The last Sign we shall take Notice of, is that
+of <i>falling Stars</i>. <i>And the Stars shall fall from
+Heaven</i>, says our Saviour, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 29.</i> We
+are sure, from the Nature of the Thing, that this
+cannot be understood either of fix’d Stars, or
+Planets; for if either of these should tumble from
+the Skies, and reach the Earth, they would break
+it all in Pieces or swallow it up, as the Sea does
+a sinking Ship; and at the same Time would
+put all the inferior Universe into Confusion. It
+is necessary therefore, by these Stars, to understand
+either fiery Meteors falling from the Middle
+Region of the Air, or Comets and Blazing Stars.
+No doubt, there will be all sorts of fiery Meteors
+at that Time; and, amongst others, those that
+are call’d <i>falling Stars</i>; which, tho’ they are not
+considerable singly, yet if they were multiplied in
+great Numbers, <i>falling</i> (as the Prophet says, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr>
+<abbr title='thirty-four'>xxxiv.</abbr> 4.</i>) <i>as Leafs from the Vine, or Figs from
+the Fig-tree</i>, they would make an astonishing
+Sight. But, I think, this Expression does chiefly
+refer to Comets, which are dead Stars, and may
+truly be said to fall from Heaven, when they
+leave their Seats above, and those æthereal Regions
+wherein they were fix’d, and sink into
+this lower World; where they wander about
+with a Blaze in their Tail, or a Flame about
+their Head, as if they came on purpose to be
+the Messengers of some fiery Vengeance. If
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>Numbers of these blazing Stars should fall into
+our Heaven together, they would make a dreadful
+and formidable Appearance; and, I am apt to
+think, that Providence hath so contriv’d the Periods
+of their Motion, that there will be an unusual
+Concourse of them at that Time, within the View
+of the Earth, to be a Prelude to this last and most
+tragical Scene of the sublunary World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I do not know any more in Scripture relating
+to the last Fire, that, upon the Grounds laid
+down in this Discourse, may not receive a satisfactory
+Explication. It reaches beyond the Signs
+before-mention’d to the highest Expressions of
+Scripture: as, <i>Lakes of Fire and Brimstone</i>, <i>a
+molten Sea mingled with Fire</i>, <i>the Liquefaction
+of Mountains</i>, and of the Earth it self. We
+need not now look upon these Things as hyperbolical,
+and poetical Strains, but as barefac’d
+Prophesies, and Things that will literally come
+to pass as they are predicted. One thing more
+will be expected in a just Hypothesis, or Theory
+of the Conflagration; namely, that it
+should answer, not only all the Conditions and
+Characters belonging to the last Fire, but should
+also make Way, and lay the Foundation of
+another World to succeed this, or of <i>new Heavens</i>
+and a <i>new Earth</i>: For <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> hath
+taught this Doctrine of the <i>Renovation</i> of the
+World, as positively and expresly as that of
+its <i>Conflagration</i>; and therefore they that so explain
+the Destruction of the present World, as
+to leave it afterwards in an eternal Rubbish,
+without any Hopes of Restoration, do not answer
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>the Christian Doctrine concerning it. But
+as to our Hypothesis, we are willing to stand this
+farther Trial, and be accountable for the Consequences
+of the Conflagration, as well as the Antecedents
+and Manner of it. And we have accordingly,
+in the following Book, from the Ashes
+of this, raised a New Earth, which we leave to
+the Enjoyment of the Readers. In the mean
+time, to close our Discourse, we will bid farewell
+to the present World, in a short Review of
+its last Flames.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='twelve'>XII.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>An imperfect Description of the Coming of our
+Saviour; and of the World on Fire.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>Certainly there is nothing in the whole
+Course of Nature, or of Human Affairs,
+so great and so extraordinary, as the two last
+Scenes of them, THE COMING OF OUR
+SAVIOUR, and the BURNING OF THE
+WORLD. If we could draw in our Minds
+the Pictures of these, in true and lively Colours,
+we should scarce be able to attend to any thing
+else, or ever divert our Imagination from these
+two Objects: For what can more affect us,
+than the greatest Glory that ever was visible
+upon Earth, and at the same Time the greatest
+Terror; a God descending at the Head of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>an Army of Angels, and a burning World under
+his Feet?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Things are truly above Expression; and
+not only so, but so different and remote from
+our ordinary Thoughts and Conceptions, that he
+that comes nearest to a true Description of them,
+shall be look’d upon as the most extravagant. ’Tis
+our Unhappiness to be so much used to little trifling
+Things in this Life, that when any Thing
+great is represented to us, it appears fantastical, an
+Idea made by some contemplative or melancholy
+Person: I will not venture therefrom, without
+premising Grounds out of Scripture, to say any
+thing concerning this glorious Appearance. As
+to the Burning of the World, I think we have
+already laid a Foundation sufficient to support the
+highest Description that can be made of it; but
+the Coming of our Saviour being wholly out of
+the way of natural Causes, it is reasonable we
+should take all Directions we can from Scripture,
+that we may give a more fitting and just Account
+of that sacred Pomp.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I need not mention those Places of Scripture
+that prove the second Coming of our Saviour in
+general, or his Return again to the Earth at the
+End of the World, (<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 30, 31.</i> <i>Acts
+<abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 11.</i> and <i><abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 20, 21.</i> <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7.</i> <i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 28.</i>)
+No Christian can doubt of this, ’tis so often
+repeated in those sacred Writings; but the
+Manner and Circumstances of this Coming, or
+of this Appearance, are the Things we now
+enquire into. And, in the first Place, we
+may observe, that the Scripture tells us, our
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>Saviour will come in <i>flaming</i> Fire, and with an
+<i>Host of mighty Angels</i>; so says <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> to the
+<i>Thessalonians</i>, <i>The Lord Jesus shall be revealed
+from Heaven with mighty Angels, in flaming
+Fire, taking Vengeance on them that know not God,
+and obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ</i>.
+In the second Place, our Saviour says himself,
+(<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 27.</i>) <i>The Son of Man shall come in the
+Glory of his Father, with his Angels.</i> From which
+two Places we may learn; First, that the Appearance
+of our Saviour will be with Flames of
+Fire. Secondly, with an Host of Angels. Thirdly,
+in the Glory of his Father: By which Glory of
+the Father, I think, is understood that Throne of
+Glory represented by <i>Daniel</i> for the <i>Antient of
+Days</i>. For our Saviour speaks here to the
+<i>Jews</i>, and probably in a Way intelligible to
+them; and the Glory of the Father, which they
+were most likely to understand, would be either
+the Glory wherein God appeared at Mount <i>Sinai</i>,
+upon the giving of the Law, whereof the Apostle
+speaks largely to the <i>Hebrews</i>; or that which
+<i>Daniel</i> represents Him in at the Day of Judgment,
+(<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 18, 19, 20, 21.</i>) And this latter
+being more proper to the Subject of our Saviour’s
+Discourse, ’tis more likely this Expression
+refers to it. Give me leave therefore to set down
+that Description of the Glory of the Father upon
+his Throne, from the Prophet <i>Daniel</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9.
+<i>And I beheld ’till the Thrones were set,—and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>Antient of Days did sit, whose Garment was white
+as Snow, and the Hair of his Head like the pure
+Wooll: His Throne was like the fiery Flame, and
+his Wheels as burning Fire. A fiery Stream issued
+and came forth from before him, thousand thousands
+ministred unto him, and ten thousand times ten
+thousand stood before Him</i>. With this Throne of
+the Glory of the Father, let us, if you please, compare
+the Throne of the Son of God, as it was seen
+by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> in the <i>Apocalypse, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 2, &#38;c.
+And immediately I was in the Spirit: and behold
+a Throne was set in Heaven, and one sat on the
+Throne. And he that sat, was to look upon like a
+Jasper, and a Sardine Stone: And there was a
+Rainbow round about the Throne, in Appearance
+like unto an Emerald. And out of the Throne proceeded
+Lightnings, and Thunderings, and Voices,
+&#38;c. and before the Throne was a Sea of Glass like
+unto Crystal.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In these Representations you have some Beams
+of the Glory of the Father, and of the Son; which
+may be partly a Direction to us, in conceiving the
+Lustre of our Saviour’s Appearance. Let us further
+observe, if you please, how external Nature
+will be affected at the Sight of God, or of this
+approaching Glory. The Scripture often takes Notice
+of this, and in Terms very high and eloquent.
+The <i>Psalmist</i> seems to have lov’d that Subject
+above others; to set out the Greatness of the Day
+of the Lord, and the Consternation of all Nature,
+at that Time. He throws about his Thunder
+and Lightning, makes the Hills to melt like
+Wax, at the Presence of the Lord, and the very
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>Foundations of the Earth to tremble, as you may
+see in the <abbr title='eighteenth'>xviiith</abbr> <i>Psalm</i>, and the <abbr title='ninety-seventh'>xcviith</abbr>, and
+the <abbr title='hundred and fourth'>civth</abbr>, and several others which are too long
+to be here inserted. So the Prophet <i>Habakkuk</i>,
+in his prophetick Prayer, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr></i> hath many
+Ejaculations to the like Purpose. And the Prophet
+<i>Nahum says, The Mountains quake at him,
+and the Hills melt, and the Earth is burnt at his
+Presence: yea, the World, and all that dwell
+therein.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But more particularly, as to the Face of Nature,
+just before the coming of our Saviour, that may
+be best collected from the Signs of his coming,
+mention’d in the precedent Chapter. Those all
+meeting together, help to prepare and make ready
+a Theatre, fit for an angry God to come down
+upon. The Countenance of the Heavens will be
+dark and gloomy; and a Veil drawn over the Face
+of the Sun. The Earth in a Disposition every
+where to break into open Flames. The Tops of
+the Mountains smoaking; the Rivers dry, Earthquakes
+in several Places; the Sea sunk and retir’d
+into its deepest Channel, and roaring, as against
+some mighty Storm. These Things will make
+the Day dead and melancholy; but the Night-Scenes
+will have more of Horror in them, when
+the <i>blazing Stars</i> appear, like so many Furies,
+with their lighted Torches, threatning to set all
+on Fire. For I do not doubt but the Comets will
+bear a Part in this Tragedy, and have something
+extraordinary in them, at that Time; either as to
+Number, or Bigness, or Nearness to the Earth.
+Besides, the Air will be full of flaming Meteors,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>of unusual Forms and Magnitudes; Balls of Fire
+rowling in the Sky, and pointed Lightnings
+darted against the Earth; mix’d with Claps of
+Thunder, and unusual Noises from the Clouds.
+The Moon and the Stars will be confus’d and
+irregular, both in their Light and Motions; as
+if the whole Frame of the Heavens was out of
+Order, and all the Laws of Nature were broken
+or expir’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>When all Things are in this languishing or
+dying Posture, and the Inhabitants of the Earth
+under the Fears of their last End; the Heavens
+will open on a sudden, and the Glory of God will
+appear. A Glory surpassing the Sun in its greatest
+Radiancy; which, tho’ we cannot describe, we
+may suppose it will bear some Resemblance, or
+Proportion, with those Representations that are
+made in Scripture, of <i>God upon his Throne</i>. This
+Wonder in the Heavens, whatsoever its Form
+may be, will presently attract the Eyes of all the
+Christian World. Nothing can more affect
+them than an Object so unusual, and so illustrious;
+and, that (probably) brings along with it their
+last Destiny, and will put a Period to all human
+Affairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Some of the Antients have thought, that this
+coming of our Saviour would be in the dead
+of the Night, and his first glorious Appearance
+in the midst of Darkness, <i>2 <abbr title='Peter'>Pet.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 10.</i> God
+is often describ’d in Scripture as Light, or Fire,
+with Darkness round about him. <i>He bowed
+the Heavens, and came down; and Darkness
+was under his Feet. He made Darkness his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>secret Place, <abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 9, 11, 12. His Pavilion
+round about him were dark Waters, and thick
+Clouds of the Skies. At the Brightness that
+was before him, the thick Clouds passed, <abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr>
+<abbr title='ninety-seven'>xcvii.</abbr></i> And when God appeared upon Mount
+<i>Sinai</i>, the <i>Mountain burnt with Fire unto the
+midst of Heaven, with Darkness, Clouds and
+thick Darkness, <abbr title='Deuteronomy'>Deut.</abbr> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 11.</i> Or, as the Apostle
+expresses it, with <i>Blackness</i>, and <i>Darkness</i>,
+and <i>Tempest, <abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 18.</i> Light is never
+more glorious than when surrounded with
+Darkness; and, it may be, the Sun, at that Time,
+will be so obscure, as to make little Distinction of
+Day and Night. But however, this Divine Light
+over-bears, and distinguishes itself from common
+Light, tho’ it be at Mid-day. ’Twas about Noon
+that the Light shin’d from Heaven, and surrounded
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, <i>Acts <abbr title='twenty-two'>xxii.</abbr> 6.</i> And ’twas in the Day-time
+that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Stephen</i> saw the <i>Heavens opened;
+Acts <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 55, 56. Saw the Glory of God, and
+Jesus standing at the Right Hand of God</i>. This
+Light, which flows from a more vital Source, be
+it Day or Night, will always be predominant.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>That Appearance of God upon Mount <i>Sinai</i>,
+which we mention’d, if we reflect upon it,
+will help us a little to form an Idea of this last
+Appearance. When God had declar’d, that he
+would come down in the Sight of the People,
+the Text says, <i>There were Thunders and Lightnings,
+and a thick Cloud upon the Mount, and
+the Voice of the Trumpet exceeding loud; so
+that all the People that was in the Camp trembled.
+And Mount Sinai was altogether on a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>Smoke, because the Lord descended upon it in
+Fire. And the Smoke thereof ascended as the
+Smoke of a Furnace, and the whole Mount quaked
+greatly.</i> If we look upon this Mount as an
+Epitome of the Earth, this Appearance gives
+us an imperfect Resemblance of that which is
+to come. Here are the several Parts, or main
+Strokes of it; first, the Heavens and the Earth in
+Smoke and Fire; then the Appearance of a Divine
+Glory, and the Sound of a Trumpet in the Presence
+of Angels. But as the second Coming of
+our Saviour, is a Triumph over his Enemies, and
+an Entrance into his Kingdom, and is acted upon
+the Theatre of the whole Earth; so we are to
+suppose, in proportion, all the Parts and Circumstances
+of it, more great and magnificent.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>When, therefore, this mighty God returns
+again to that Earth, where he had once been
+ill treated, not Mount <i>Sinai</i> only, but all the
+Mountains of the Earth, and all the Inhabitants
+of the World, will tremble at his Presence.
+At the the opening of the Heavens,
+the Brightness of his Person will scatter the
+dark Clouds, and shoot Streams of Light
+throughout all the Air. But that first Appearance,
+being far from the Earth, will seem to
+be only a great Mass of Light, without any
+distinct Form; till, by nearer Approaches,
+this bright Body shews it self to be an Army
+of Angels, with this King of Kings for their
+Leader. Then you may imagine how guilty
+Mankind will tremble and be astonished; and
+while they are gazing at this heavenly Host,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>the Voice of the <i>Archangel is heard</i>, the shrill
+Sound of the Trumpet reaches their Ears, and
+this gives the general Alarum to all the World:
+<i>For he cometh, for he cometh, they cry, to judge
+the Earth</i>. The crucify’d God is return’d in Glory,
+to take Vengeance upon his Enemies: Not only
+upon those that pierced his sacred Body, with
+Nails, and with a Spear, as <i>Jerusalem</i>; but those
+that also pierce him every Day by their Profaneness,
+and hard Speeches, concerning his Person, and
+his Religion. Now they see that God, whom
+they have mock’d, or blasphem’d, laugh’d at his
+Meanness, or at his vain Threats; they see Him,
+and are confounded with Shame and Fear; and
+in the Bitterness of their Anguish and Despair, call
+for the Mountains to fall upon them, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 29.</i>
+<i>Fly into the Clefts of the Rocks, and into the Caves
+of the Earth, for fear of the Lord, Rev. <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 16,
+17. and the Glory of His Majesty, when he ariseth
+to shake terribly the Earth</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As it is not possible for us to express, or conceive
+the Dread, and Majesty of this Appearance;
+so neither can we, on the other Hand, express
+the Passions and Consternation of the People
+that behold it. These Things exceed the Measures
+of Human Affairs, and of Human
+Thoughts; we have neither Words, nor Comparisons,
+to make them known by. The greatest
+Pomp and Magnificence of the Emperors
+of the <i>East</i>, in their Armies, in their Triumphs,
+in their Inaugurations, is but like the Sport
+and Entertainment of Children, if compar’d
+with this Solemnity. When God condescends
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>to an external Glory, with a visible Train and
+Equipage; when, from all the Provinces of
+his vast and boundless Empire, he summons
+his Nobles, as I may so say, the several Orders
+of Angels, and Archangels, to attend his
+Person; tho’ we cannot tell the Form or Manner
+of this Appearance, we know there is nothing
+in our Experience, or in the whole History
+of this World, that can be a just Representation of
+the least Part of it. No Armies so numerous
+as the Host of Heaven; and in the midst of those
+bright Legions, in a flaming Chariot, will sit the
+Son of Man, when he comes to be glorified in his
+Saints, and triumph over his Enemies: And
+instead of the wild Noises of the Rabble, which
+makes a great Part of our Worldly State, this
+blessed Company will breathe their <i>Hallelujahs</i>
+into the open Air, and repeated Acclamations of
+<i>Salvation to God, which sits upon the Throne, and
+to the Lamb, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 10. Now is come Salvation
+and Strength, and the Kingdom of our God,
+and the Power of his Christ, <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 10.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But I leave the rest to our silent Devotion
+and Admiration. Only give me leave, whilst
+this Object is before our Eyes, to make a short
+Reflection upon the wonderful History of our
+Saviour; and the different States which that
+sacred Person, within the Compass of our
+Knowledge, hath undergone. We now see
+him coming in the Clouds, in Glory and Triumph,
+surrounded with innumerable Angels:
+This is the same Person, who, so many Hundred
+Years ago, enter’d <i>Jerusalem</i>, with another
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>sort of Equipage, mounted upon an Ass’s Colt,
+while the little People, and the Multitude cry’d,
+<i>Hosanna to the Son of David</i>. Nay, this is
+the same Person, that, at his first Coming into
+this World, was laid in a Manger, instead of a
+Cradle; a naked Babe dropt in a Crib at <i>Bethlehem</i>
+(<i>Luke <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 12.</i>) his poor Mother not having
+wherewithal to get her a better Lodging,
+when she was to be delivered of this sacred
+Burthen. This helpless Infant, that often
+wanted a little Milk to refresh it, and support
+its Weakness; that hath often cry’d for the
+Breast with Hunger and Tears, now appears to
+be the Lord of Heaven and Earth. If this
+Divine Person had fallen from the Clouds in
+a Mortal Body, cloath’d with Flesh and Blood,
+and spent his Life here amongst Sinners, that
+alone had been an infinite Condescension: But, as
+if it had not been enough to take upon him human
+Nature, he was content, for many Months, to
+live the Life of an Animal, or of a Plant, in the
+dark Cell of a Woman’s Womb. <i>This is the Lord’s
+Doing, it is marvellous in our Eyes!</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Neither is this all that is wonderful in the
+Story of our Saviour. If the Manner of his
+Death, be compar’d with his present Glory, we
+shall think either the one or the other incredible.
+Look up first into the Heavens; see
+how they bow under him, and receive a new
+Light from the Glory of his Presence; then
+look down upon the Earth, and see a naked
+Body, hanging upon a cursed Tree in <i>Golgotha</i>,
+crucified between two Thieves, wounded,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>spit upon, mock’d, abus’d. Is it possible
+to believe, that one, and the same Person can
+act or suffer such different Parts? That he that
+is now Lord and Master of all Nature, not
+only of Death and Hell, and the Powers of
+Darkness, but of all Principalities in heavenly
+Places, is the same Infant <i>Jesus</i>, the same crucified
+<i>Jesus</i>, of whose Life and Death the Christian
+Records give us an Account? The History
+of this Person is the Wonder of this World; and
+not of this World only, but of the Angels above,
+that <i>desire to look into it</i> (1 Pet. <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 11, 12.)</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us now return to our Subject. We left
+the Earth in a languishing Condition, ready
+to be made a Burnt Offering, to appease the
+Wrath of its offended Lord. When <i>Sodom</i>
+was to be destroy’d (<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr>) <i>Abraham</i> interceded
+with God, that he would spare it for the
+Righteous Sake; and <i>David</i> (2 <i>Sam.</i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr>
+17.) interceded to save his guiltless People,
+from God’s Judgments, and the destroying
+Angel: But here is no Intercessor for Mankind
+in this last Extremity; none to interpose,
+where the Mediator of our Peace, is the Party
+offended. Shall then, <i>the Righteous perish with
+the Wicked? Shall not the Judge of all the
+Earth do right?</i> Or, if the Righteous be
+translated and deliver’d from this Fire, what shall
+become of innocent Children and Infants? Must
+these all be given up to the merciless Flames,
+as a Sacrifice to <i>Moloch</i>? And their tender
+Flesh, like burnt Incense, send up Fumes to
+feed the Nostrils of Evil Spirits? Can the God of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span><i>Israel</i> smell a sweet Savour from such Sacrifices?
+The greater half of Mankind is made up of Infants
+and Children; and if the Wicked be destroy’d;
+<i>yet these Lambs, what have they done?</i> Are there
+no Bowels of Compassion for such an harmless
+Multitude? But we leave them to their Guardian
+Angels, and to that Providence which watches
+over all Things (<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 10.)</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>It only remains, therefore, to let fall that Fire
+from Heaven, which is to consume this Holocaust.
+Imagine all Nature now standing in a
+silent Expectation to receive its last Doom; the
+tutelary and destroying Angels to have their
+Instructions; every Thing to be ready for the
+fatal Hour; and then, after a little Silence, all
+the Host of Heaven to raise their Voice, and
+sing aloud, <i>LET GOD ARISE, let his Enemies
+be scattered: As Smoke is driven away, so
+drive them away; as Wax melteth before the
+Fire, so LET the Wicked perish at the Presence
+of God.</i> And upon this, as upon a Signal
+given, all the sublunary World breaks into
+Flames, and all the Treasuries or Fire are open’d
+in Heaven, and in Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus the Conflagration begins. If one
+should now go about to represent <i>the World
+on Fire</i>, with all the Confusions that necessarily
+must be in Nature, and in Mankind upon
+that Occasion, it would seem to most Men a
+Romantick Scene: Yet we are sure there must
+be such a Scene; <i>The Heavens will pass away
+with a Noise, and the Elements will melt with
+fervent Heat, and all the Works of the Earth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>will be burnt up</i>: And these Things cannot
+come to pass without the greatest Disorders
+imaginable, both in the Minds of Men, and in
+external Nature, and the saddest Spectacles that
+Eye can behold. We think it a great Matter
+to see a single Person burnt alive; here are Millions
+shrieking in the Flames at once. ’Tis frightful
+to us to look upon a great City in Flames,
+and to see the Distractions and Misery of the
+People; here is an universal Fire through all the
+Cities of the Earth, and an universal Massacre
+of their Inhabitants. Whatsoever the Prophets
+foretold of the Desolations of <i>Judea</i>, <i>Jerusalem</i>,
+or <i>Babylon</i> (<i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr></i> <i>Jer. <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr></i> <i>Lament.</i>) in the
+highest Strains, is more than literally accomplish’d
+in this last and general Calamity; and those only
+that are Spectators of it, can make its History.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Disorders in Nature, and the inanimate
+World, will be no less, nor less strange and
+unaccountable, than those in Mankind. Every
+Element, and every Region, so far as the
+Bounds of this Fire extend, will be in a Tumult
+and a Fury, and the whole habitable
+World running into Confusion. A World is
+sooner destroyed than made; and Nature relapses
+hastily into that Chaos-State, out of which
+she came by slow and leisurely Motions: As
+an Army advances into the Field by just and regular
+Marches; but when it is broken and routed,
+it flies with Precipitation, and one cannot
+describe its Posture. Fire is a barbarous Enemy,
+it gives no Mercy; there is nothing but Fury,
+and Rage, and Ruin, and Destruction, wheresoever
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>it prevails. A Storm, or <i>Hurricano</i>, tho’
+it be but the Force of Air, makes a strange Havock
+where it comes; but devouring Flames, or
+Exhalations set on Fire, have still a far greater
+Violence, and carry more Terror along with them.
+Thunder and Earthquakes are the Sons of Fire;
+and we know nothing in all Nature more impetuous,
+or more irresistibly destructive than these
+two. And accordingly in this last War of the
+Elements, we may be sure, they will bear their
+Parts, and do great Execution in the several Regions
+of the World. Earthquakes and subterraneous
+Eruptions will tear the Body and Bowels of
+the Earth; and Thunders and convulsive Motions
+of the Air rend the Skies. The Waters of the Sea
+will boil and struggle with Streams of Sulphur that
+run into them; which will make them fume, and
+smoke, and roar, beyond all Storms and Tempests;
+and these Noises of the Sea will be answer’d
+again from the Land, by falling Rocks and Mountains.
+This is a small Part of the Disorders of
+that Day.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But ’tis not possible, from any Station, to have
+a full Prospect of this last Scene of the Earth; for
+’tis a Mixture of Fire and Darkness. This new
+Temple is fill’d with Smoke, while it is consecrating,
+and none can enter into it. But I am
+apt to think, if we could look down upon this
+burning World from above the Clouds, and have
+a full View of it, in all its Parts, we should think
+it a lively Representation of <i>Hell</i> it self. For
+Fire and Darkness are the two chief Things by
+which that State, or that Place, uses to be described;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>and they are both here mingled together,
+with all other Ingredients that make that
+<i>Tophet</i> that is prepared of old, (<i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='thirty'>xxx.</abbr></i>) Here
+are Lakes of Fire and Brimstone; Rivers of
+melted glowing Matter; ten thousand <i>Vulcano’s</i>
+vomiting Flames all at once; thick Darkness,
+and Pillars of Smoke twisted about with
+Wreaths of Flame, like fiery Snakes; Mountains
+of Earth thrown up into the Air, and the Heavens
+dropping down in Lumps of Fire. These
+Things will all be literally true, concerning that
+Day, and that State of the Earth. And if we
+suppose <i>Beelzebub</i>, and his apostate Crew, in the
+midst of this fiery Furnace (and I know not
+where they can be else;) it will be hard to
+find any Part of the Universe, or any State of
+Things, that answers to so many of the Properties
+and Characters of <i>Hell</i>, as this which is now
+before us.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But if we suppose the Storm over, and that
+the Fire hath got an entire Victory over all
+other Bodies, and subdued every Thing to itself;
+the Conflagration will end in a Deluge of Fire, or
+in a Sea of Fire, covering the whole Globe of the
+Earth: For, when the exterior Region of the Earth
+is melted into a Fluor, like molten Glass, or
+running Metal, it will, according to the Nature
+of other Fluids, fill all Vacuities and Depressions,
+and fall into a regular Surface, at an equal Distance
+every where, from its Center. This Sea
+of Fire, like the first Abyss, will cover the Face of
+the whole Earth, make a kind of second Chaos,
+and leave a Capacity for another World to rise
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>from it. But that is not our present Business.
+Let us only, if you please, to take Leave of
+this Subject, reflect, upon this Occasion, on the
+Vanity and transient Glory of all this habitable
+World; how, by the Force of one Element
+breaking loose upon the rest, all the Varieties of
+Nature, all the Works of Art, all the Labours of
+Men, are reduc’d to nothing; all that we admir’d
+and ador’d before, as great and magnificent, is
+obliterated or vanish’d; and another Form and
+Face of Things, plain, simple, and every where
+the same, overspreads the whole Earth. Where
+are now the great Empires of the World, and
+their great Imperial Cities? Their Pillars, Trophies,
+and Monuments of Glory? Shew me
+where they stood, read the Inscription, tell me
+the Victor’s Name. What Remains, what Impressions,
+what Difference or Distinction do you
+see in this Mass of Fire? <i>Rome</i> itself, <i>eternal
+Rome</i>, the great City, the Empress of the World,
+whole Domination and Superstition, <i>antient</i> and
+<i>modern</i>, make a great Part of the History of this
+Earth; what is become of her now? She laid
+her Foundations deep, and her Palaces were
+strong and sumptuous: <i>She glorified herself, and
+liv’d deliciously; and said in her Heart, I sit a
+Queen, and shall see no Sorrow</i>. But her Hour
+is come, she is wip’d away from the Face of the
+Earth, and buried in perpetual Oblivion. But
+’tis not Cities only, and Works of Mens Hands,
+but the everlasting Hills, the Mountains and Rocks
+of the Earth, are melted as Wax before the Sun;
+and <i>their Place is no where found</i>. Here stood
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>the <i>Alps</i>, a prodigious Range of Stone, the Load
+of the Earth, that covered many Countries, and
+reach’d their Arms from the <i>Ocean</i> to the <i>Black
+Sea</i>; this huge Mass of Stone is soften’d and
+dissolv’d, as a tender Cloud, into Rain. Here
+stood the <i>African</i> Mountains, and <i>Atlas</i> with
+his Top above the Clouds. There was frozen
+<i>Caucasus</i>, and <i>Taurus</i>, and <i>Imaus</i>, and the
+Mountains of <i>Asia</i>. And yonder, towards the
+North, stood the <i>Riphæan</i> Hills, cloath’d in Ice
+and Snow. All these are vanish’d, dropt away as
+the Snow upon their Heads, and swallow’d up
+in a red Sea of Fire, (<i>Revel. <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 3.</i>) <i>Great and
+marvellous are thy Works, Lord God Almighty;
+just and true are thy Ways, thou King of Saints.</i>
+Hallelujah.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'><i>The CONCLUSION.</i></h3>
+<p class='c004'>If the Conflagration of the World be a Reality,
+as, both by Scripture and Antiquity
+we are assur’d it is; if we be fully persuaded
+and convinc’d of this; ’Tis a Thing of that
+Nature, that we cannot keep it long in our
+Thoughts, without making some moral Reflections
+upon it. ’Tis both great in itself, and
+of universal Concern to all Mankind. Who
+can look upon such an Object, <i>a World in
+Flames</i>, without thinking with himself, Whether
+shall I be in the midst of these Flames,
+or no? What is my Security that I shall not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>fall under this fiery Vengeance, which is the
+Wrath of an angry God? <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, when he
+had delivered the Doctrine of the Conflagration,
+makes this pious Reflection upon it: <i>2 Ep. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 11.</i>
+<i>Seeing then, that all these Things shall be dissolved,
+what manner of Persons ought you to be, in all
+holy Conversation and Godliness?</i> The Strength of
+his Argument depends chiefly upon what he had
+said before in <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 7.</i> where he told us, that the
+<i>present Heavens and Earth were reserved unto Fire
+against the Day of Judgment, and the Perdition
+of irreligious Men</i>. We must avoid the Crime
+then, if we would escape the Punishment. But
+this Expression of <i>irreligious</i> or <i>ungodly Men</i>, is
+still very general. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, when he speaks of
+this fiery Indignation, and the Persons it is to
+fall upon, is more distinct in their Characters.
+He seems to mark out for this Destruction,
+three Sorts of Men chiefly; <i>The Atheists, Infidels,
+and the Tribe of Antichrist</i>: These are
+his Words, <i>2 Thess. <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7, 8.</i> <i>When the Lord Jesus
+shall be revealed from Heaven, with his mighty
+Angels, in flaming Fire, taking Vengeance on them
+that know not God, and that obey not the Gospel
+of our Lord Jesus Christ.</i> Then as for Antichrist
+and his Adherents, he says in the 2d Chapter,
+and <abbr title='eighth'>viiith</abbr> Verse, <i>The Lord shall consume that
+wicked One, with the Spirit of his Mouth, and
+shall destroy him with the Brightness of his Coming</i>,
+or of his Presence. These, you see, all
+refer to the same Time with <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>: Namely,
+to the Coming of our Saviour, at the Conflagration;
+and three Sorts of Persons are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>characteriz’d as his Enemies, and set out for Destruction
+at that Time. <i>First</i>, Those that know
+not God; that is, that acknowledge not God, that
+will not own the Deity. <i>Secondly</i>, Those that
+hearken not to the Gospel; that is, that reject the
+Gospel, and Christian Religion, when they are
+preach’d and made known to them: For you must
+not think, that it is the poor barbarous and ignorant
+Heathens, that scarce ever heard of God, or the
+Gospel, that are threatned with this fiery Vengeance;
+no, ’tis the Heathens that live amongst Christians;
+those that are Infidels, as to the Existence of
+God, or the Truth of Christian Religion, tho
+they have had a full Manifestation of both:
+These are properly the Adversaries of God and
+Christ. And such Adversaries, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> says
+in another Place, <i>A fearful Judgment, and fiery
+Indignation shall devour</i>: (<i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 27.</i>) Which
+still refers to the same Time, and the same Persons
+we are speaking of. Then as to the third Sort of
+Men, Antichrist, and his Followers; besides,
+this Text of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> to the <i>Thessalonians</i>, ’tis
+plain to me in the <i>Apocalypse</i>, that <i>Mystical
+Babylon</i> is to be consum’d by Fire; and the
+<i>Beast</i> and <i>False Prophet</i>, to be thrown into the
+<i>Lake that burns with Fire and Brimstone</i>.
+Which Lake is no where to be found till the
+Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You see then, for whom <i>Tophet</i> is prepar’d
+of Old; for Atheists, Infidels, and Antichristian
+Persecutors: And they will have for their
+Companions, the Devil and his Angels, the
+Heads of the Apostasy. These are all in open
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>Rebellion against God and Christ, and at Defiance,
+as it were, with Heaven; excepting
+Antichrist, who is rather in a secret Conspiracy,
+than an open Rebellion: For, under a
+pretended Commission from Jesus Christ, he
+persecutes his Servants, dishonours his Person,
+corrupts his Laws and his Government, and
+makes War against his Saints. And this is a
+greater Affront and Provocation, if possible, than
+a barefac’d Opposition would be.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are other Men, besides these, that
+are unacceptable to God, all Sorts of Sinners
+and wicked Persons; but they are not so properly
+the Enemies of God, as these we have
+mentioned. An intemperate Man is an Enemy
+to himself; and an unjust Man is an Enemy to
+his Neighbour; but those that deny God, or
+Christ, or persecute their Servants, are directly,
+and immediately Enemies to God: And, therefore,
+when the Lord comes in Flames of Fire,
+to triumph over his Enemies, to take Vengeance
+upon all that are Rebels or Conspirators against
+Him, and his Christ; these Monsters of Men will
+be the first, and most exemplary Objects of the
+Divine Wrath and Indignation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To undertake to speak to these three Orders
+of Men, and convince them of their Error,
+and the Danger of it, would be too much for
+the Conclusion of a short Treatise. And as
+for the third Sort, the Subjects of Antichrist,
+none but the Learned amongst them are allow’d
+to be inquisitive, or to read such Things
+as condemn their Church, or the Governors
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>of it; therefore, I do not not expect that this
+<i>English</i> Translation should fall into many of their
+Hands. But those of them, that are pleas’d to
+look into the <i>Latin</i>, will find, in the Conclusion
+of it, a full and fair Warning to come out of
+<i>Babylon</i>; which is there proved to be the Church
+of <i>Rome</i>. Then as to those that are Atheistically
+inclin’d, which I am willing to believe are not
+many; I desire them to consider, how mean a
+Thing it is, to have Hopes only in this Life; and
+how uneasy a Thing, to have nothing but Fears,
+as to the Future. Those, sure, must be little, narrow
+Souls, that can make themselves a Portion,
+and a Sufficiency, out of what they enjoy here;
+that think of no more; that desire no more: For,
+what is this Life, but a Circulation of little, mean
+Actions? We lie down and rise again; dress and
+undress; feed and wax hungry; work, or play,
+and are weary; and then we lie down again, and
+the Circle returns. We spend the Day in Trifles,
+and when the Night comes, we throw our
+selves into the Bed of Folly, among Dreams,
+and broken Thoughts, and wild Imaginations.
+Our Reason lies asleep by us; and we are, for
+the Time, as arrant Brutes, as those that sleep
+in the Stalls, or in the Field. Are not the Capacities
+of Man higher than these? And ought
+not his Ambition and Expectations to be greater?
+Let us be Adventurers for another World;
+’tis, at least, a fair and noble Chance; and
+there is nothing in this, worth our Thoughts,
+or our Passions. If we should be disappointed,
+we are still no worse than the rest of our Fellow-Mortals;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>and if we succeed in our Expectations,
+we are eternally happy.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>For my Part, I cannot be persuaded, that any
+Man, of atheistical Inclinations, can have a great
+and generous Soul; for there is nothing great
+in the World, if you take God out of it: Therefore,
+such a Person can have no great Thought,
+can have no great Aims, or Expectations, or
+Designs: For all must lie within the Compass
+of this Life, and of this dull Body. Neither can
+he have any great Instincts or noble Passions;
+for if he had, they would naturally excite in
+him greater Ideas, inspire him with higher Notions,
+and open the Scenes of the intellectual
+World. Lastly, he cannot have any great
+Sense of Order, Wisdom, Goodness, Providence,
+or any of the divine Perfections: And these are
+the greatest Things that can enter into the
+Thoughts of Man, and that do most enlarge and
+ennoble his Mind. And therefore I say again,
+that he that is naturally inclined to Atheism, being
+also naturally destitute of all these, must have a
+little and narrow Soul.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But you’ll say, it may be, this is to expostulate,
+rather than to prove: or to upbraid us
+with our Make and Temper, rather than to
+convince us of an Error in Speculation. ’Tis
+an Error, it may be, in Practice, or in Point of
+Prudence; but we seek Truth, whether it make
+for us, or against us: Convince us therefore
+by just Reasoning and direct Arguments, that
+there is a God, and then we’ll endeavour
+to correct these Defects in our natural Complexion.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>You say well, and therefore I have
+endeavour’d to do this before, in another Part of
+this Theory, in the <i>Second Book</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <span class='fss'><abbr title='two'>II.</abbr></span></i> concerning
+the <i>Author of Nature</i>: Where you may
+see, that the Powers of Nature, or of the material
+World, cannot answer all the Phænomena of
+the Universe, which are there represented. This
+you may consult at Leisure: But in the mean
+Time, ’tis a good Persuasive why we should
+not easily give our selves up to such Inclinations
+or Opinions, as have neither Generosity nor Prudence
+on their Side. And it cannot be amiss,
+that these Persons should often take into their
+Thoughts this last Scene of Things, the <i>Conflagration</i>
+of the World: Seeing if there be a God,
+they will certainly be found in the Number of
+his Enemies, and of those that will have their
+Portion in the Lake that burns with Fire and
+Brimstone.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The third Sort of Persons that we are to
+speak to, are the Incredulous, or such as do not
+believe the Truth of <i>Christian Religion</i>, though
+they believe there is a God. There are commonly
+Men of Wit and Pleasure, that have
+not Patience enough to consider, cooly and in
+due Order, the Grounds upon which it appears
+that Christian Religion is from Heaven, and
+of divine Authority. They ought, in the
+first Place, to examine <i>Matter of Fact</i>, and
+the History of our Saviour: That there was
+such a Person, in the Reigns of <i>Augustus</i> and
+<i>Tiberius</i>, that wrought such and such Miracles
+in <i>Judea</i>; taught such a Doctrine; was crucified
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>at <i>Jerusalem</i>; rose from the Dead the
+third Day, and visibly ascended into Heaven.
+If these Matters of Fact be denied, then the
+Controversy turns only to an historical Question,
+<i>Whether</i> the Evangelical History be a fabulous,
+or true History? which it would not be proper
+to examine in this Place. But if Matter of Fact
+recorded there, and in the Acts of the Apostles,
+and the first Ages of Christianity, be acknowledged,
+as I suppose it is, then the Question that
+remains is this, <i>Whether</i> such Matter of Fact does
+not sufficiently prove the divine Authority of
+Jesus Christ and of his Doctrine? We suppose it
+possible, for a Person to have such Testimonials
+of divine Authority, as may be sufficient to convince
+Mankind, or the more reasonable Part of
+Mankind; and if that be possible, what, pray,
+is wanting in the Testimonies of Jesus Christ?
+The Prophecies of the old Testament bear Witness
+to him: His Birth was a Miracle, and his
+Life a Train of Miracles; not wrought out
+of Levity and vain Ostentation, but for useful
+and charitable Purposes: His Doctrine and Morality
+not only blameless, but noble; designed to
+remove out of the World the imperfect Religion
+of the <i>Jews</i>, and the false Religion of the <i>Gentiles</i>;
+all Idolatry and Superstition, and thereby
+improve Mankind, under a better and more
+perfect Dispensation. He gave an Example of a
+spotless Innocency in all his Conversation, free
+from Vice or any Evil; and liv’d in a Neglect
+of all the Pomp or Pleasures of this Life, referring
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>his Happiness wholly to another World.
+He prophesied concerning his own Death, and his
+Resurrection; and concerning the Destruction of
+<i>Jerusalem</i>; which all came to pass in a signal
+Manner: He also prophesied of the Success of his
+Gospel; which, after his Death, immediately took
+Root, and spread itself every Way throughout the
+World, maugre all Opposition or Persecution
+from <i>Jews</i> or <i>Heathens</i>. It was not supported
+by any temporal Power for above three hundred
+Years: nor were any Arts used, or Measures taken,
+according to human Prudence, for the Conservation
+of it. But, to omit other Things, that
+grand Article of his rising from the Dead, ascending
+visibly into Heaven, and pouring down the
+miraculous Gifts of the Holy Ghost, (according as
+he had promis’d) upon his Apostles and their Followers;
+this alone is to me a Demonstration of
+his divine Authority. To conquer Death, to
+mount, like an Eagle, into the Skies, and to inspire
+his Followers with inimitable Gifts and Faculties,
+are Things, without Controversy, beyond all
+human Power; and may and ought to be esteem’d
+sure Credentials of a Person sent from Heaven.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>From these Matters of Fact we have all possible
+Assurance, that Jesus Christ was no Impostor
+or deluded Person; (one of which two Characters
+all Unbelievers must fix upon him) but commission’d
+by Heaven to introduce a new Religion;
+to reform the World, to remove <i>Judaism</i>
+and Idolatry; the beloved Son of God, the great
+Prophet of the later Ages, the true Messiah that
+was to come.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>It may be, you will confess, that these are
+great Arguments, that the Author of our Religion
+was a divine Person, and had supernatural
+Powers: But withal, that there are so many
+Difficulties in Christian Religion, and so many
+Things unintelligible, that a rational Man knows
+not how to believe it, though he be inclined to
+admire the Person of Jesus Christ. I answer,
+if they be such Difficulties as are made only
+by the Schools and disputacious Doctors, you
+are not to trouble your self about them, for they
+are of no Authority: But if they be in the very
+Words of Scripture, then ’tis either in Things
+practical, or in Things merely speculative. As
+to the Rules of Practice in Christian Religion,
+I do not know any Thing in Scripture obscure
+or unintelligible; and as to Speculations, great
+Discretion and Moderation is to be used in the
+Conduct of them. If these Matters of Fact,
+which we have alledged, prove the Divinity of
+the Revelation, keep close to the Words of that
+Revelation, asserting no more than it asserts,
+and you cannot err: But if you will expatiate,
+and determine Modes, and Forms, and Consequences,
+you may easily be puzled by your own
+Forwardness. For besides some Things that are
+in their own Nature infinite and incomprehensible,
+there are many other Things in Christian
+Religion, that are incompleatly revealed; the
+full Knowledge whereof, it has pleased God to
+reserve to another Life, and to give us only a
+summary Account of them at present. We have
+so much Deference for any Government, as not to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>expect that all their Counsels and Secrets should
+be made known to us, nor to censure every Action,
+whose Reasons we do not fully comprehend;
+much more in the providential Administration of
+a World, we must be content to know so much
+of the Counsels of Heaven and of supernatural
+Truths, as God has thought fit to reveal to us. And
+if these Truths be no otherwise than in a general
+Manner, summarily and incompletely revealed
+in this Life, as commonly they are, we must not
+therefore throw off the Government, or reject the
+whole Dispensation; of whose divine Authority
+we have otherways full Proof, and satisfactory
+Evidence: For this would be, to lose the Substance
+in catching at a Shadow.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But Men that live continually in the Noise of
+the World, amidst Business, and Pleasures, their
+Time is commonly shar’d betwixt those two, so
+that little or nothing is left for Meditation; at
+least, not enough for such Meditations as require
+Length, Justness, and Order. They should retire
+from the Crowd for one Month or two, to study
+the Truth of Christian Religion, if they have
+any Doubt of it. They retire sometimes to cure
+a Gout, or other Disease, and diet themselves
+according to Rule; but they will not be at that
+Pains, to cure a Disease of the Mind, which is of
+far greater, and more fatal Consequence. If they
+perish by their own Negligence or Obstinacy, the
+Physician is not to blame. Burning is the last
+Remedy in some Distempers; and they would do
+well to remember, that the World will flame about
+their Heads one of these Days; and whether they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>be amongst the Living, or amongst the Dead, at
+that Time, the Apostle makes them a Part of the
+Fewel, which that fiery Vengeance will prey
+upon. Our Saviour hath been true to his Word
+hitherto; whether in his Promises, or in his
+Threatnings. He promis’d the Apostles to send
+down the Holy Ghost upon them after his Ascension,
+and that was fully accomplish’d: He foretold,
+and threaten’d the Destruction of <i>Jerusalem</i>;
+and that came to pass accordingly, soon after he
+had left the World: And he hath told us also,
+that he will come again in <i>the Clouds of Heaven,
+<abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 30. with Power and great Glory</i>;
+and, <i><abbr title='twenty-five'>xxv.</abbr> 32.</i> <i>&#38;c.</i> and that will be to judge the
+World. <i>When the Son of Man shall come in his
+Glory, and all the holy Angels with him, then
+shall he sit upon the Throne of his Glory: and
+before him shall be gathered all Nations</i>; and he
+will separate the Good from the Bad; and to the
+Wicked and Unbelievers he will say, <i>Ver. 41.</i>
+<i>Depart from me, ye Cursed, into everlasting Fire,
+prepared for the Devil and his Angels.</i> This
+is the same Coming, and the same Fire, with
+that which we mention’d before out of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>,
+<i>2 Thess. <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7, 8, 9</i>; as you will plainly see, if
+you compare Saint <i>Matthew</i>’s Words with Saint
+<i>Paul’s</i>, which are these, <i>When the Lord Jesus
+shall be revealed from Heaven, with his mighty
+Angels, in flaming Fire, taking Vengeance on
+them that know not God, and that hearken not
+to the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: Who
+shall be punish’d with everlasting Destruction,
+from, or by, the Presence of the Lord, and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Glory of his Power</i>. This, methinks, should
+be an awakening Thought, that there is such a
+Threatning upon Record (by one who never
+yet failed in his Word) against those that do not
+believe his Testimony. Those that reject him
+now as a Dupe, or an Impostor, run a Hazard
+of seeing him hereafter coming in the Clouds
+to be their Judge. And it will be too late then
+to correct their Error, when the bright Armies
+of Angels fill the Air, and the Earth begins to
+melt at the Presence of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much concerning those three Ranks of
+Men, whom the Apostle Saint <i>Paul</i> seems to
+point at principally, and condemn to the Flames.
+But, as I said before, the rest of Sinners,
+and vicious Persons, amongst the Professors of
+Christianity, though they are not so directly
+the Enemies of God, as these are; yet being
+Transgressors of his Law, they must expect to
+be brought to Justice. In every well-govern’d
+State, not only Traitors and Rebels that offend
+more immediately against the Person of
+the Prince; but all others, that notoriously
+violate the Laws, are brought to condign Punishment,
+according to the Nature and Degree
+of their Crime: So in this Case, <i>The
+Fire shall try every Man’s Work, of what Sort
+it is</i>. ’Tis therefore the Concern of every
+Man, to reflect often upon that Day, and to
+consider what his Fate and Sentence is likely
+to be, at that last Trial. The <i>Jews</i> have a
+Tradition, that <i>Elias</i> sits in Heaven, and keeps
+a Register of all Mens Actions, good or bad.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>He hath his Under-Secretaries for the several Nations
+of the World, that take Minutes of all that passes;
+and so hath the History of every Man’s Life before
+him, ready to be produc’d at the Day of Judgment.
+I will not vouch for the literal Truth of
+this, but it is true in Effect: Every Man’s Fate shall
+be determined that Day, according to the History
+of his Life; according to the Works done in the
+Flesh, whether good or bad. And, therefore, it
+ought to have as much Influence upon us, as if
+every single Action was formally register’d in
+Heaven.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If Men would learn to contemn this World, it
+would cure a great many Vices at once. And,
+methinks, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Argument, from the approaching
+Dissolution of all Things, should put
+us out of Conceit with such perishing Vanities.
+Lust and Ambition are the two reigning Vices of
+great Men; and those little Fires might be soon
+extinguished, if they would frequently and seriously
+meditate on this last and universal Fire, which will
+put an End to all Passions, and all Contentions.
+As to Ambition, the Heathens themselves
+made use of this Argument, to abate and repress
+the vain Affectation of Glory and Greatness in this
+World. I told you before, the Lesson that was
+given to <i>Scipio Africanus</i>, by his Uncle’s
+Ghost, upon this Subject: And upon a like
+Occasion and Consideration, <i>Cæsar</i> hath a
+Lesson given him by <i>Lucan</i>, after the Battle
+of <i>Pharsalia</i>; where <i>Pompey</i> lost the Day,
+and <i>Rome</i> its Liberty. The Poet says, <i>Cæsar</i>
+took Pleasure in looking upon the dead Bodies,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>and would not suffer them to be buried, or,
+which was their Manner of burying, to be
+burnt: Whereupon he speaks to him in these
+Words.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Hos, <span class='sc'>Cæsar</span>, populos si nunc non usserit Ignis,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Uret cum Terris, uret com gurgite Ponti.</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Communis mundo superest rogus, Ossibus astra</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Misturus. Quocunque Tuam Fortuna vocabit,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Hæ quoque eunt Animæ; non altius ibis in auras,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Non meliore loco Stygia sub nocte jacebis.</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Libera fortuna Mors est: Capit omnia Tellus</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Quæ genuit; Cœlo tegitur qui non habet urnam.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Cæsar,</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>If now these Bodies want their Pile and Urn,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>At last, with the whole Globe, they’re sure to burn.</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>The World expects one general Fire: And Thou</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Must go, where these poor Souls are wand’ring now.</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Thou’lt reach no higher, in the ethereal Plain,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Nor ’mongst the Shades a better Place obtain.</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Death levels all: And he that has not Room</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>To make a Grave, Heaven’s Vault shall be his Tomb.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>These are mortifying Thoughts to ambitious
+Spirits. And surely our own Mortality, and the
+Mortality of the World itself, may be enough to
+convince all considering Men, that <i>Vanity of
+Vanities, all is Vanity under the Sun</i>; any otherwise
+than as they relate to a better Life.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>FINIS.</i></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span><span class='xxlarge'><b>THE THEORY OF THE EARTH.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>Containing an Account of the Original of the Earth,</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>And of all the</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>GENERAL CHANGES</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>Which it hath already undergone, or is to</b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b>undergo, till the <span class='sc'>Consummation</span></b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b>of all Things.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>The <span class='sc'>Fourth Book</span>,</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b><i>Concerning the New Heavens, and New Earth,</i></b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b><i>AND</i></b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='large'><b><i>Concerning the Consummation of all Things.</i></b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><i>LONDON</i>:</div>
+ <div>Printed for <span class='sc'>J. Hooke</span>, in <i>Fleet-Street</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>PREFACE TO THE READER.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>You see it is still my Lot to travel
+into new Worlds, having never found
+any great Satisfaction in this: As
+an active People leaves their Habitations
+in a barren Soil, to try if they
+can make their Fortune better elsewhere. I first
+look’d backwards, and waded through the Deluge,
+into the primæval World, to see how they lived
+there, and how Nature stood in that original Constitution.
+Now I am going forwards, to view the
+new Heavens and new Earth, that will be after
+the Conflagration. But, gentle Reader, let me
+not take you any farther, if you be weary; I do
+not love a querulous Companion: Unless your
+Genius therefore press you forwards, chuse rather
+to rest here, and be content with that Part
+of the Theory which you have seen already. Is
+it not fair to have followed Nature so far, as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>to have seen her twice in her Ruins? Why
+should we still pursue her, even after Death and
+Dissolution, into dark and remote Futurities?
+To whom therefore such Disquisitions seem needless,
+or over-curious, let them rest here; and leave
+the Remainder of this Work, which is a kind of
+<span class='sc'>Prophecy</span> concerning the <span class='sc'>State</span> of things
+after the Conflagration, to those that are of a
+Disposition suited to such Studies and Enquiries.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Not that any part of this Theory requires much
+Learning, Art, or Science, to be Master of it;
+but a Love and Thirst after Truth, Freedom of
+Judgment, and a Resignation of our Understandings
+to clear Evidence. Let it carry us which
+way it will, an honest English Reader, that looks
+only at the Sense as it lies before him, and neither
+considers nor cares whether it be new or old, so it
+be true, may be a more competent Judge than a
+great Scholar full of his own Notions, and puffed
+up with the Opinion of his mighty Knowledge;
+for such Men think they cannot in Honour own
+any thing to be true, which they did not know
+before. To be taught any new Knowledge, is to
+confess their former Ignorance; and that lessens
+them in their own Opinion, and, as they think,
+in the Opinion of the World, which are both
+uneasy Reflections to them. Neither must we
+depend upon Age only for Soundness of Judgment:
+Men in discovering and owning Truth
+seldom change their Opinions after threescore,
+especially if they be leading Opinions: It is
+then too late, we think, to begin the World
+again, and as we grow old, the Heart contracts,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>and cannot open wide enough to take in a
+great Thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Spheres of Mens Understandings are as different,
+as Prospects upon the Earth: Some stand
+upon a Rock or a Mountain, and see far round
+about; others are in an Hollow, or in a Cave,
+and have no Prospect at all. Some Men consider
+nothing but what is present to their Senses; others
+extend their Thoughts both to what is past, and
+what is future: And yet the fairest Prospect in
+this Life is not to be compar’d to the least we
+shall have in another. Our dearest Day here is
+misty and hazy; we see not far, and what we
+do see, is in a bad Light: But when we have got
+better Bodies in the first Resurrection, whereof we
+are going to treat; better Senses and a better Understanding,
+a clearer Light and an higher Station,
+our Horizon will be enlarged every Way, both as to
+the natural World, and as to the intellectual.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Two of the greatest Speculations that we are
+capable of in this Life, are, in my Opinion, The
+REVOLUTION OF WORLDS, and
+the REVOLUTION OF SOULS; one
+for the material World, and the other for the intellectual.
+Toward the former of these, our Theory
+is an Essay; and in this our Planet, (which I
+hope to conduct into a fixed Star, before I have
+done with it) we give an Instance of what may
+be in other Planets. ’Tis true, we took our Rise
+no higher than the Chaos, because that was a
+known Principle, and we were not willing to
+amuse the Reader with too many strange Stories;
+as that, I am sure would have been
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>thought one, TO HAVE brought this Earth
+from a fixed Star, and then carried it up again
+into the same Sphere; which yet, I believe, is the
+true Circle of natural Providence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the Revolution of Souls, the Footsteps
+of that Speculation are more obscure than of the
+former; for though we are assur’d by Scripture,
+that all good Souls will at length have cœlestial
+Bodies; yet, that this is a returning to a primitive
+State, or to what they had at their first
+Creation, that Scripture has not acquainted us
+with: It tells us indeed, that Angels fell from
+their primitive cœlestial Glory; and consequently
+we might be capable of a Lapse as well as they, if
+we had been in that high Condition with them;
+but that we ever were there, is not declared to us
+by any Revelation. Reason and Morality would
+indeed suggest to us, that an innocent Soul, fresh
+and pure from the Hands of its Maker, could not
+be immediately cast into Prison, before it had, by
+any Act of its own Will, or any Use of its own
+Understanding, committed either Error or Sin.
+I call this Body a Prison, both because it is a
+Confinement and Restraint upon our best Faculties
+and Capacities, and is also the Seat of Diseases
+and Loathsomness; and, as Prisons use to do,
+commonly tends more to debauch Mens Natures,
+than to improve them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But though we cannot certainly tell under
+what Circumstances human Souls were plac’d
+at first, yet all Antiquity agrees, Oriental and
+Occidental, concerning their Præ-existence in
+general, in Respect of these mortal Bodies:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>And our Saviour never reproaches or corrects the
+Jews, when they speak upon that Supposition,
+Luke <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 18, 19. John <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 2. Besides, it seems
+to me beyond all Controversy, that the Soul of the
+Messiah did exist before the Incarnation, and voluntarily
+descended from Heaven to take upon it
+a mortal Body. And though it does not appear
+that all human Souls were at first placed in Glory,
+yet, from the Example of our Saviour, we see
+something greater in them; namely, a Capacity to
+be united to the Godhead, John <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 13. and <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 38.
+and 62. and <abbr title='seventeen'>xvii.</abbr> 5. And what is possible to one,
+is possible to more. But these Thoughts are too
+high for us, while we find our selves united to nothing
+but diseased Bodies and Houses of Clay.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The greatest Fault we can commit, in such speculations,
+is to be over positive and dogmatical: To
+be inquisitive into the Ways of Providence and
+the Works of God, is so far from being a Fault
+that it is our greatest Perfection: We cultivate
+the highest Principles and best Inclinations of our
+Nature, while we are thus employ’d; and ’tis
+Littleness or Secularity of Spirit, that is the
+greatest Enemy to Contemplation. Those that
+would have a true Contempt of this World, must
+suffer the Soul to be sometimes upon the Wing, and,
+to raise herself above the Sight of this little dark
+Point, which we now inhabit. Give her a large
+and free Prospect of the Immensity of Gods Works,
+and of his inexhausted Wisdom and Goodness, if
+you would make her great and good; as the warm
+Philosopher says,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>Give me a Soul so great, so high,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let her Dimensions stretch the Sky;</div>
+ <div class='line'>That comprehends within a Thought,</div>
+ <div class='line'>The whole Extent, ’twixt God and Nought;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And from the World’s first Birth and Date,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Its Life and Death can calculate,</div>
+ <div class='line'>With all th’ Adventures that shall pass,</div>
+ <div class='line'>To ev’ry Atom of the Mass.</div>
+ </div>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>But let her be as <span class='sc'>Good</span> as <span class='sc'>Great</span>,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Her highest Throne a Mercy-Seat;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Soft and dissolving like a Cloud,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Losing herself in doing Good;</div>
+ <div class='line'>A Cloud that leaves its Place Above,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Rather than dry and useless move,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Falls in a Shower upon the Earth,</div>
+ <div class='line'>And gives ten thousand Seeds a Birth;</div>
+ <div class='line'>Hangs on the Flow’rs, and infant Plants,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Sucks not their Sweets, but feeds their Wants:</div>
+ <div class='line'>So let this mighty Mind diffuse,</div>
+ <div class='line'>All that’s her own to others Use;</div>
+ <div class='line'>And, free from private Ends, retain</div>
+ <div class='line'>Nothing of <span class='sc'>Self</span>, but a bare Name.</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>
+ <h2 class='c007'>BOOK <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr> <br> <i>Concerning the New Heavens and New Earth, AND Concerning the Consummation of all Things.</i></h2>
+</div>
+<h3 class='c009'>CHAP. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The Introduction; That the World will not be
+annihilated in the last Fire: That we are to
+expect, according to Scripture and the Christian
+Doctrine, new Heavens and a new Earth,
+when these are dissolv’d or burnt up.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We are now so far advanc’d in the Theory
+of the Earth, as to have seen the End
+of two Worlds; one destroy’d by Water,
+and another by Fire. It remains
+only to consider, whether we be yet come to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>final Period of Nature; the last Scene of all Things,
+and consequently the utmost Bound of our Enquires:
+Or, whether Providence, which is inexhausted
+in Wisdom and Goodness, will raise up,
+from this dead Mass, new Heavens and a new
+Earth; another habitable World, better and more
+perfect than that which was destroyed: That, as
+the first World began with a Paradise, and a
+State of Innocency; so the last may be a kind
+of Renovation of that happy State, whose Inhabitants
+shall not die, but be translated to a blessed
+Immortality.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I know ’tis the Opinion of some, that this
+World will be annihilated, or reduc’d to nothing,
+at the Conflagration, and that would put
+an End to all farther Enquiries. But whence
+do they learn this? From Scripture or Reason,
+or their own Imagination? What Instance or
+Example can they give us of this they call <i>Annihilation</i>?
+Or what Place of Scripture can they
+produce, that says, the World, in the last Fire,
+shall be reduc’d to nothing? If they have neither
+Instance nor Proof of what they affirm,
+’tis an empty Imagination of their own, neither
+agreeable to Philosophy, nor Divinity: Fire
+does not consume any Substance; it changes
+the Form and Qualities of it, but the Matter
+remains. And if the Design had been <i>Annihilation</i>,
+the employing of Fire would have been
+of no Use or Effect: For Smoke and Ashes are
+at as great a Distance from <i>Nothing</i>, as the
+Bodies themselves out of which they are made.
+But these Authors seem to have but a small
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>Tincture of Philosophy, and therefore it will
+be more proper to confute their Opinion from
+the Words of Scripture, which hath left us sufficient
+Evidence, that another World will succeed
+after the Conflagration of that we now
+inhabit.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Prophets, both of the Old and New
+Testament, have left us their Predictions concerning
+<i>new Heavens and a new Earth</i>. So
+says the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr> 17. <i>Behold I
+create new Heavens and a new Earth, and the
+former shall not be remembered, or come into Mind</i>;
+as not worthy our Thoughts, in comparison of
+those that will arise when these pass away. So
+the Prophet <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> in his <i>Apocalypse</i>, when he
+was come to the End of this World, says, <i>And
+I saw a new Heaven and a new Earth: For the
+first Heaven and the first Earth were passed away,
+and there was no more Sea, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1.</i> Where
+he does not only give us an Account of a new
+Heaven and a new Earth in general; but also gives
+a distinctive Character of the <i>new Earth</i>, that it
+shall have <i>no Sea</i>. And in the <i>5th Verse</i>, he that
+sate upon the Throne says, <i>Behold I make all</i>
+Things <i>new</i>: which, consider’d with the Antecedents
+and Consequents, cannot be otherwise understood
+than of a new World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But some Men make Evasions here, as to the
+Words of the Prophets, and say, they are to
+be understood in a figurative and allegorical
+Sense; and to be apply’d to the Times of the
+Gospel, either at first or towards the latter End
+of the World; so as this <i>new Heaven and new
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>Earth</i>, signify only a great Change in the moral
+World. But how can that be, seeing <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>
+places them after the End of the World? And the
+Prophet <i>Isaiah</i> connects such Things with his new
+Heavens and new Earth, as are not compatible to
+the present State of Nature, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr></i> However, to
+avoid all Shuffling and Tergiversation in this Point,
+let us appeal to <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, who uses a plain literal
+Style, and discourses downright concerning the
+natural World. In his <i><abbr title='second'>2d</abbr> Epist.</i> and <i><abbr title='third'>3d</abbr> <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i>
+when he had foretold and explain’d the future
+Conflagration, he adds, But we expect <i>new Heavens
+and a new Earth, according to his Promises</i>.
+These Promises were made by the Prophets; and
+this gives us full Authority to interpret their <i>new
+Heavens and new Earth</i> to be after the <i>Conflagration</i>.
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, when he had describ’d the Dissolution
+of the World in the last Fire, in full and
+emphatical Terms, as <i>the passing away the Heavens
+with a Noise; the melting of the Elements,
+and burning up all the Works of the Earth</i>; he
+subjoins, <i>Nevertheless</i> (notwithstanding this total
+Dissolution of the present World) <i>we, according to
+his Promises, look for new Heavens and a new
+Earth, wherein dwelleth Righteousness</i>. As if the
+Apostle should have said, Notwithstanding this
+strange and violent Dissolution of the present Heavens
+and Earth, which I have describ’d to you,
+we do not at all distrust God’s Promises, concerning
+new Heavens and a new Earth, that are
+to succeed these, and to be the Seat of the Righteous.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Here’s no room for Allegories, or allegorical Expositions,
+unless you will make the Conflagration
+of the World an Allegory: For, as Heavens and
+Earth were destroyed, so Heavens and Earth are
+restored; and if, in the first Place, you understand
+the natural material World, you must also understand
+it in the second Place; they are both Allegories,
+or neither. But to make the Conflagration
+an Allegory, is not only to contradict <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>,
+but all Antiquity, sacred or prophane. And I
+desire no more Assurance, that we shall have new
+Heavens and a new Earth, in a literal Sense, than
+we have that the present Heavens and Earth shall
+be destroyed in a literal Sense, and by material
+Fire: Let it therefore rest upon that Issue, as to the
+first Evidence and Argument from Scripture.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Some will fancy, it may be, that we shall have
+new Heavens and Earth, and yet that these shall
+be annihilated: They would have these first reduc’d
+to nothing, and then others created, spick
+and span new, out of nothing. But why so,
+pray, what’s the Humour of that? Lest Omnipotency
+should want Employment, you would
+have it to do, and undo, and do again; as if
+new-made Matter, like new Cloaths, or new
+Furniture, had a better Gloss, and was more
+credible. Matter never wears; as fine Gold,
+melt it down never so often, it loses nothing of
+its Quantity: The Substance of the World is the
+same, burnt or unburnt, and is of the same
+Value and Virtue, new or old; and we must
+not multiply the Actions of Omnipotency without
+Necessity. God does not make, or unmake
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>things, to try Experiments: He knows beforehand
+the utmost Capacities of every thing, and
+does no vain or superfluous Work. Such Imaginations
+as these, proceed only from want of true
+Philosophy, or the true Knowledge of the Nature
+of God and of his Works, which should always be
+carefully attended to in such Speculations as concern
+the natural World. But to proceed in our
+Subject.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If they suppose Part of the World to be annihilated,
+and to continue so, they philosophize still
+worse and worse: How high shall the Annihilation
+reach? Shall the Sun, Moon, and Stars be
+reduc’d to nothing? But what have they done, that
+they should undergo so hard a Fate? Must they be
+turn’d out of Being for our Faults? The whole
+material Universe will not be annihilated at this
+Bout, for we are to have Bodies after the Resurrection,
+and to live in Heaven. How much of the
+Universe then will you leave standing? or how shall
+it subsist with this great <i>Vacuum</i> in the Heart of it?
+This Shell of a World is but the Fiction of an
+empty Brain; for God and Nature, in their Works,
+never admit of such gaping Vacuities and Emptinesses.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If we consult Scripture again, we shall find that
+that makes mention of a <i>Restitution</i> and <i>Reviviscency</i>
+of all Things, at the End of the World, or
+at the Coming of our Saviour. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, whose
+Doctrine we have hitherto follow’d, in his Sermon
+to the <i>Jews</i>, after our Saviour’s Ascension,
+tells them, that he will come again, and that there
+will be then a <i>Restitution of all Things</i>, such as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>was promised by the Prophets. <i>The Heavens</i>, says
+he, <i>must receive him until the Time of Restitution
+of all Things; which God hath spoken by the Mouth
+of his holy Prophets, since the World began, Acts <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+21.</i> If we compare this Passage of Saint <i>Peter’s</i>,
+with that which we alledged before, out of his
+Second Epistle, it can scarce be doubted but that
+he refers to the same Promises in both Places; and
+what he there calls a <i>new Heaven</i>, and a <i>new Earth</i>,
+he calls here a <i>Restitution of all Things</i>: For the
+Heavens and the Earth comprehend all, and both
+these are but different Phrases for the Renovation
+of the World. This gives us also Light how to
+understand what our Saviour calls the <i>Regeneration</i>
+or <i>Reviviscency</i>, when he shall sit upon his
+Throne of Glory, and will reward his Followers
+an hundred-fold, for all their Losses in this
+World, besides everlasting Life, as the Crown of
+all, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28, 29.</i> I know, in our <i>English</i>
+Translation, we separate <i>the Regeneration</i> from
+<i>sitting upon his Throne</i>, but without any Warrant
+from the Original. And seeing our Saviour speaks
+here of bodily Goods, and seems to distinguish
+them from <i>everlasting Life</i>, which is to be the
+final Reward of his Followers; this <i>Regeneration</i>
+seems to belong to his Second Coming, when the
+World shall be renew’d or regenerated, and the
+Righteous shall possess the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Other Places of Scripture that foretel the
+Fate of this material World, represent it always
+as a <i>Change</i>, not as an <i>Annihilation</i>. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>Paul</i> says, <i>The Figure of this World passeth
+away, 1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 31.</i> The Form, Fashion, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>Disposition of its Parts, but the Substance still
+remains: As a Body that is melted down and
+dissolv’d, the Form perishes, but the Matter is not
+destroyed. And the Psalmist says, the Heavens
+and the Earth shall be <i>chang’d</i>, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='a hundred and two'>cii.</abbr> 26.</i>
+which answers to this Transformation we speak
+of. The same Apostle, in the eighth Chapter to
+the <i>Romans</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 21, 22, 23, 24. shews also,
+that this <i>Change</i> shall be, and shall be for the
+better, and calls it a <i>Deliverance of the Creation
+from Vanity and Corruption</i>, and a Participation
+of the <i>glorious Liberty of the Children of God</i>;
+being a sort of <i>Redemption</i>, as they have a <i>Redemption
+of their Bodies</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But seeing the <i>Renovation</i> of the World is a
+Doctrine generally receiv’d, both by antient and
+modern Authors, as we shall have Occasion to
+shew hereafter, we need add no more, in this
+Place, for Confirmation of it. Some Men are willing
+to throw all Things into a State of <i>Nothing</i> at
+the Conflagration, and bury them there, that they
+may not be oblig’d to give an Account of that
+State of things that is to succeed it. Those who
+think themselves bound in Honour to know every
+thing in Theology that is knowable, and find it
+uneasy to answer such Questions and Speculations
+as would arise upon their admitting a new World,
+think it more advisable to stifle it in the Birth,
+and so to bound all Knowledge at the Conflagration.
+But surely so far as Reason or Scripture
+lead us, we may and ought to follow, otherwise
+we should be ungrateful to Providence, that sent
+us those Guides, provided we be always duly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>sensible of our own Weakness: And, according
+to the Difficulty of the Subject, and the Measure
+of Light that falls upon it, proceed with that
+Modesty and Ingenuity, that becomes such fallible
+Enquirers after Truth, as we are. And this Rule
+I desire to prescribe to my self, as in all other
+Writings, so especially in this; where, though I
+look upon the principal Conclusions as fully
+prov’d, there are several Particulars, that are rather
+propos’d to Examination, than positively asserted.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='two'>II.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The Birth of the new Heavens and the new
+Earth, from the second Chaos, or the Remains
+of the old World: The Form, Order, and
+Qualities of the new Earth, according to Reason
+and Scripture.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>Having prov’d from Scripture, that we are
+to expect <i>new Heavens</i>, and a <i>new
+Earth</i>, after the Conflagration; it would be
+some Pleasure and Satisfaction to see how this
+new Frame will arise, and what Foundation
+there is in Nature for the Accomplishment of
+these Promises. For, though the Divine Power
+be not bound to all the Laws of Nature, but
+may dispense with them when there is a Necessity;
+yet it is an Ease to us in our Belief,
+when we see them both conspire in the same
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>Effect. And in order to this, we must consider in
+what Posture we left the demolish’d World, what
+Hopes there are of a Restauration. And we are not
+to be discourag’d, because we see Things at present
+wrapt up in a confus’d Mass; for, according to the
+Methods of Nature and Providence, in that dark
+Womb usually are the Seeds and Rudiments of an
+Embryo-World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Neither is there, possibly, so great a Confusion,
+in this Mass, as we imagine: The Heart, an interior
+Body of the Earth, is still entire; and that
+Part of it that is consum’d by the Fire, will be divided,
+of its own accord, into two Regions. What
+is dissolv’d and melted, being the heaviest, will
+descend as low as it can, and cover and inclose the
+Kernel of the Earth round about, as a molten Sea
+or Abyss; according as it is explain’d and set
+down in the precedent Book. But what is more
+light and volatile, will float in the Air; as Fumes,
+Smoke, Exhalations, Vapours of Water, and whatsoever
+terrestrial Parts can be elevated and supported
+by the Strength of Fire. These, all mingled
+together, of different Sizes, Figures, and Motions,
+will constitute an opake Cloud, or thick Region
+of Darkness round the Earth; so as the Globe of
+the Earth, with its Atmosphere, after the Conflagration
+is finished, will stand much-what in the
+Form represented in this Scheme.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/fig4-1.jpg' alt='The regions of the Earth, a series of concentric Circles, with A. A. denoting the Lower Region.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>Book 4 Figure 1.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now as to the lower of these two Regions,
+the Region of melted Matter, <abbr class='spell'>A. A.</abbr> we shall
+have little Occasion to take Notice of it; seeing
+it will contribute nothing to the Formation of
+the new World. But the upper Region, or all
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>above that Orb of Fire, is the true Draught of a
+Chaos; or a Mixture and Confusion of all the
+Elements, without Order or Distinction. Here
+are Particles of Earth, and of Air, and of Water,
+all promiscuously jumbled together by the
+Force and Agitation of the Fire. But when that
+Force ceases, and every one is left to its own Inclination,
+they will, according to their different
+degrees of Gravity, separate and sort themselves
+after this manner: First, the heaviest and grossest
+Parts of the Earth will subside, then the watery
+Parts will follow; then a lighter sort of Earth,
+which will stop, and rest upon the Surface of the
+Water, and compose there a thin Film or Membrane.
+This Membrane or tender Orb is the
+first Rudiment, or Foundation of a new habitable
+Earth: For, according as terrestrial Parts
+fall upon it, from all the Regions and Heights of
+the Atmosphere, or of the Chaos, this Orb will
+grow more firm, strong, and immoveable, able
+to support it self and Inhabitants too. And
+having in it all the Principles of a fruitful Soil,
+whether for the Production of Plants, or of Animals,
+it will want no Property or Character of
+an habitable Earth. And particularly, will become
+such an Earth, and of such a Form, as the first
+paradisaical Earth was, which hath been fully describ’d,
+in the first and second Books of this Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There is no occasion of examining more accurately
+the Formation of this second Earth,
+seeing it is so much the same with that of the
+first; which, is set down fully and distinctly,
+in the fifth Chapter of the first Book of this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>Theory. Nature here repeats the same Work,
+and in the same Method; only the Materials are
+now a little more refin’d, and purg’d by the Fire:
+They both rise out of a Chaos, and that, in effect,
+the same in both Cases; for though in forming
+the first Earth, I suppos’d the Chaos or confus’d
+Mass, to reach down to the Center, I did that
+only for the Ease of our Imagination; that so the
+whole Mass might appear more simple and uniform.
+But in reality, that Chaos had a solid
+Kernel of Earth within, as this hath; and that
+Matter which fluctuated above in the Regions of
+the Air, was the true Chaos, whose Parts, when
+they came to a Separation, made the several Elements,
+and the Form of an habitable Earth, betwixt
+the Air and Water. This Chaos, upon Separation,
+will fall into the same Form and Elements;
+and so, in like manner, create or constitute
+a second <i>Paradisaical</i> World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I say, a <i>Paradisaical</i> World; for it appears
+plainly, that this new-form’d Earth must agree
+with that primigenial Earth, in the two principal
+and fundamental Properties. First, it is
+of an even, entire, uniform, and regular Surface,
+without Mountains or Sea. Secondly, that
+it hath a straight and regular Situation to the
+Sun, and the <i>Axis</i> of the <i>Ecliptick</i>. From the
+Manner of its Formation, it appears manifestly,
+that it must be of an even and regular Surface.
+For the Orb of liquid Fire, upon which the first
+Descent was made, being smooth and uniform
+every where, the Matter that fell upon it
+would take the same Form and Mould: And so the second
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>or third Region, that were superinduc’d,
+would still imitate the Fashion of the first; there
+being no Cause or Occasion of any Inequality.
+Then as to the Situation of its <i>Axis</i>, this Uniformity
+of Figure would determine the Center of its
+Gravity to be exactly in the Middle, and consequently
+there would be no Inclination of one
+Pole, more than another, to the general Center of
+its Motion; but, upon a free Libration in the liquid Air,
+its <i>Axis</i> would lie parallel with the
+<i>Axis</i> of the Ecliptick where it moves. But these
+Things having been deduc’d more fully in the second
+Book about <i>Paradise</i> and the <i>primigenial
+Earth</i>, they need no further Explication in this
+Place.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If Scripture had left us several distinct Characters
+of the <i>New Heavens</i>, and the <i>New Earth</i>,
+we might, by comparing with those, have made
+a full Proof of our Hypothesis. One indeed
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> hath left us in very express Terms; <i>There
+was no Sea there</i>, he says: His Words are these:
+<i>And I saw a New Heaven, and a New Earth;
+for the first Heaven and the first Earth were
+passed away; AND THERE WAS NO
+MORE SEA</i>. This Character is very particular,
+and you see it exactly answers to our Hypothesis;
+for in the new form’d Earth, the Sea is
+cover’d and inconspicuous, being an Abyss; not a
+Sea; and wholly lodg’d in the Womb of the Earth.
+And this one Character, being inexplicable upon
+any other Supposition, and very different from
+the present Earth, makes it a strong Presumption
+that we have hit upon the true Model of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span><i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i> which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>
+saw.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To this Sight of the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new
+Earth</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> immediately subjoins the Sight
+of the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 2. as being contemporary,
+and, in some respects, the same Thing.
+’Tis true, the Characters of the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, in
+these two last Chapters of the <i>Apocalypse</i>, are very
+hard to be understood; some of them being incompatible
+to a <i>terrestrial</i> State, and some of ’em
+to a <i>celestial</i>; so as it seems to me very reasonable
+to suppose, that the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, spoken
+of by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, is two-fold: That which he saw
+himself, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 2. and that which the Angel shewed
+him afterwards, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 9. For I do not see what
+need there was of an <i>Angel</i>, and of <i>taking him
+up into a great and high Mountain</i>, only to shew
+him that which he had seen before, at the Foot
+of the Mountain: But however that be, we are
+to consider, in this Place, the terrestrial new
+<i>Jerusalem</i> only, or that which is the <i>new
+Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>. And as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> hath
+joined these two together, so the Prophet
+<i>Isaiah</i> hath done the same thing before, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i>
+<abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr> 17, 18. when he had promised <i>new Heavens
+and a new Earth</i>, he calls them under
+another Name, <i>Jerusalem</i>; and they both use
+the same Character in Effect, in the Description
+of their <i>Jerusalem</i>. <i>Ver.</i> 19. <i>Isaiah</i> says, <i>And
+I will rejoice in</i> Jerusalem, <i>and joy in my People,
+and the Voice of weeping shall be no more heard
+in her</i>, <i>nor the Voice of crying</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 3,
+4. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says also in his <i>Jerusalem</i>, <i>God shall
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>dwell with them, and they shall be his People:
+And he shall wipe away all Tears from their Eyes;
+and there shall be no more Death, neither Sorrow,
+nor Crying, neither shall there be any more Pain.</i>
+Now in both these Prophets, when they treat
+upon this Subject, we find they make frequent
+Allusions to <i>Paradise</i> and a <i>paradisaical</i> State; so
+as they may be justly taken as a Scripture Character
+of the <i>new Heavens</i> and the <i>new Earth</i>. The
+Prophet <i>Isaiah</i> seems plainly to point at a <i>paradisaical</i>
+State, throughout that Chapter, by an universal
+Innocency, and Harmlesness of Animals;
+and Peace, Plenty, Health, Longevity or Immortality
+of the Inhabitants. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> also hath several
+Allusions to <i>Paradise</i>, in those two Chapters
+where he describes the new <i>Jerusalem</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr>
+and <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-two'>xxii.</abbr> And in his Discourse to the seven
+Churches, in one Place (<abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 7.) <i>To him that
+overcometh</i> is promised, <i>to eat of the Tree of Life,
+which is in the midst of the Paradise of God</i>. And
+in another Place (<abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12.) <i>To him that overcometh</i>
+is promised, <i>to have the Name of the
+new</i> Jerusalem <i>writ upon him</i>. These I take to be
+the same Thing, and the same Reward of Christian
+Victors; the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, or the <i>new Heavens</i>
+and <i>new Earth</i>, and the <i>Paradise of God</i>.
+Now this being the general Character of the <i>new
+Earth</i>, that it is <i>paradisaical</i>; and the particular
+Character that it <i>hath no Sea</i>; and both these
+agreeing with our Hypothesis, as apparently
+deducible from those Principles, and that
+Manner of its Formation which we have set
+down; we cannot but allow, that the Holy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>Scriptures, and the natural Theory agree in their
+Testimony, as to the Conditions and Properties of
+the <i>New Heavens</i> and <i>New Earth</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>From what hath been said in this and the precedent
+Chapter, it will not be hard to interpret what
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> meant by his <i>habitable Earth to come</i>;
+Τὴν οἰκουμένην τῆς μέλλουσαν; πατὴρ τοῦ μέλλοντος
+αἰῶνος, <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isai.</abbr> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 6.</i> which is to be subjected
+to our Saviour, and not to the Angels. In the
+second Chapter to the <i>Hebrews</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 5. he says,
+<i>For unto the Angels hath he not put in Subjection
+the WORLD TO COME</i>; so we read it,
+but, according to the strictest and plainest Translation,
+it should be <i>the habitable Earth to come</i>.
+Now, what Earth is this, where our Saviour is
+absolute Sovereign; and where the Government
+is neither Human, nor Angelical, but peculiarly
+Theocratical? In the first Place, this cannot be
+the present World, or the present Earth, because
+the Apostle calls it <i>future</i>, or the <i>Earth to
+come</i>. Nor can it be understood of the Days of
+the Gospel; seeing the Apostle acknowledges, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i>
+8. that this Subjection, whereof he speaks, is
+not yet made. And seeing Antichrist will not
+finally be destroyed till the Appearance of our
+Saviour, (<i>2 Thess. <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8.</i>) nor Satan bound, while
+Antichrist is in Power; during the Reign of
+these two (who are the Rulers of the Darkness
+of the World) our Saviour cannot properly be
+said to begin his Reign here, <i>Ephes. <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 12.</i> ’Tis
+true, he exercises his Providence over his Church,
+and secures it from being destroyed: He can,
+by a Power paramount, stop the Rage either of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>Satan or Antichrist; <i>Hitherto ye shall go, and no
+farther</i>. As sometimes when he was upon Earth,
+he exerted a Divine Power, which yet did not
+destroy his State of Humiliation; so he interposes
+now when he thinks fit, but he does not finally
+take the Power out of the Hands of his Enemies,
+nor out of the Hands of the Kings of the Earth.
+The <i>Kingdom is not deliver’d up to him</i>, and all
+<i>Dominion and Power</i>; <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 13, 25, 26. That
+<i>all Tongues and Nations should serve him</i>. For
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> can mean no less in this Place than that
+Kingdom in <i>Daniel</i>, <i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8.</i> seeing he calls it
+<i>putting all Things in Subjection under his Feet</i>, and
+says that it is not yet done. Upon this account also,
+as well as others, our Saviour might truly say
+to <i>Pilate</i>, <i><abbr title='John'>Joh.</abbr> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 36.</i> <i>My Kingdom is not of
+this World</i>. And to his Disciples, <i>The Son of
+Man came not to be ministred unto, but to minister</i>,
+<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 28.</i> When he comes to receive
+his Kingdom, he comes in the Clouds of Heaven
+(<i><abbr title='Daniel'>Dan.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 13, 14.</i>) not in the Womb of a Virgin.
+He comes with the Equipage of a King and Conqueror:
+with Thousands and Ten Thousands of
+Angels; not in the Form of a Servant, or of a
+weak Infant, as he did at his first coming.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I allow the Phrase αἰὼν μέλλων, or in the
+<i>Hebrew</i> עולם הבא, <i>the World to come</i>, is sometimes
+used in a large Sense, as comprehending
+all the Days of the Messiah, whether at his
+first or second coming, (for these two comings
+are often undistinguished in Scripture) and
+respect the moral World, as well as the natural.
+But the Word οἰχομένη, <i>Orbis habitabilis</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> here uses, does primarily signify
+the natural World, or the habitable Earth, in the
+proper use of the Word amongst the <i>Greeks</i>, and
+frequently in Scripture, <i>Luke <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 5.</i> and <i><abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 26.</i>
+<i>Rom. <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 18.</i> <i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 6.</i> <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 10.</i> Neither do
+we here exclude the moral World, or the Inhabitants
+of the Earth, but rather necessarily include
+them: Both the natural and moral <i>World to come</i>,
+will be the Seat and Subject of our Saviour’s
+Kingdom and Empire, in a peculiar Manner. But
+when you understand nothing by this Phrase but
+the <i>present moral World</i>, it neither answers the
+proper Signification of μέλλουσα, nor of οἰκουμένη,
+of the first or second Part of the Expression; and
+tho’ such like Phrases may be used for the Dispensation
+of the Messiah in Opposition to that of the
+Law, yet the height of that Distinction or Opposition,
+and the fulfilling of the Expression, depends
+upon the second coming of our Saviour, and upon
+the <i>future Earth</i> or habitable World, where
+he shall reign, and which does peculiarly belong
+to him and his Saints.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Neither can this <i>World to come</i>, or this <i>Earth
+to come</i>, be understood of the Kingdom of
+Heaven. For the <i>Greek</i> Word will not bear
+that Sense, nor is it ever us’d in Scripture for
+<i>Heaven</i>. Besides, the Kingdom of Heaven,
+when spoken of as <i>future</i>, is not properly till the
+last Resurrection and final Judgment. Whereas
+<i>this World to come</i>, which our Saviour is to govern,
+must be therefore that Time, and will
+then expire. For all his Government as to this
+World, expires at the Day of Judgment, <i>1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span><abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 24</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i> and <i>he will then deliver up the Kingdom
+into the Hands of his Father, that he may be
+all in all</i>: Having reigned first himself, <i>and put
+down all Rule and all Authority and Power</i>. So
+that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>, in these two Places of his Epistles,
+refers plainly to the same Time, and the same
+Reign of Christ; which must be in a <i>future World</i>,
+and before the <i>last Day of Judgment</i>, and therefore,
+according, to our Deductions, in the <i>new
+Heavens</i> and the <i>new Earth</i>.</p>
+<h3 id='chap-4-3' class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>Concerning the Inhabitants of the new Earth. That
+natural Reason cannot determine this Point. That
+according to Scripture, the Sons of the first Resurrection,
+or the Heirs of the Millennium, are
+to be the Inhabitants of the new Earth. The
+Testimony of the Philosophers, and of the Christian
+Fathers, for the Renovation of the World.
+The first Proposition laid down.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>Thus we have settled the true Notion,
+according to Reason and Scripture, of
+the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>: But where
+are the Inhabitants, you’ll say? You have taken
+the Pains to make us a new World, and now
+that it is made, it must stand empty. When
+the first World was destroyed, there were
+eight Persons preserv’d, with a Set of living
+Creatures of every Kind, as a Seminary or
+Foundation of another World; but the Fire,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>it seems, is more merciless than the Water; for
+in this Destruction of the World, it does not appear
+that there is one living Soul left, of any sort,
+upon the Face of the Earth. No Hopes of Posterity,
+nor of any Continuation of Mankind, in the
+usual Way of Propagation; and Fire is a barren
+Element, that breeds no living Creatures in it, nor
+hath any Nourishment proper for their Food or
+Sustenance.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We are perfectly at a Loss therefore, so far as
+I see, for a new Race of Mankind, or how to
+People this new-form’d World. The inhabitants,
+if ever there be any, must either come from Heaven,
+or spring from the Earth; there are but these
+two Ways. But <i>natural Reason</i> can determine
+neither of these, sees no Track to follow in these
+unbeaten Paths, nor can advance one Step farther.
+Farewell then, dear Friend; I must take
+another Guide, and leave you here, as <i>Moses</i> upon
+Mount <i>Pisgah</i>, only to look into that Land, which
+you cannot enter. I acknowledge the good Service
+you have done, and what a faithful Companion
+you have been, in a long Journey; from the
+Beginning of the World to this Hour, in a Tract of
+Time of six thousand Years. We have travelled
+together thro’ the dark Regions of a first and second
+<i>Chaos</i>; seen the World twice shipwreck’d:
+Neither Water, nor Fire, could separate us; but
+now you must give place to other Guides.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Welcome, <i>Holy Scriptures</i>, the Oracles of
+God, a Light shining in Darkness, a Treasury
+of hidden Knowledge; and where <i>Human Faculties</i>
+cannot reach, a seasonable Help and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>Supply to their Defects. We are now come to
+the utmost Bounds of their Dominion; they have
+made us a New World, but, how it shall be inhabited,
+they cannot tell; know nothing of the
+History or Affairs of it. This we must learn from
+other Masters, inspir’d with the Knowledge of
+Things to come: And such Masters we know
+none, but the holy Prophets and Apostles. We
+must therefore now put our selves wholly under
+their Conduct and Instruction, and from them
+only receive our Information concerning the moral
+State of the future habitable Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the first place therefore, the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>
+tells us, as a Preparation to our farther Enquiries,
+<i>The Lord God created the Heavens, God himself
+that formed the Earth, he created it not in vain,
+he formed it to be inhabited, <abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='forty-five'>xlv.</abbr> 18.</i> This
+is true, both of the present Earth and the <i>future</i>,
+and of every habitable World whatsoever. For
+to what purpose is it made habitable, if not to be
+inhabited? That would be, as if a Man should
+manure, and plough, and every Way prepare his
+Ground for Seed, but never sow it. We do not
+build Houses, that they should stand empty, but
+look out for Tenants as fast as we can; as soon
+as they are made ready and become tenantable.
+But if Man could do things in vain, and without
+Use or Design, yet God and Nature never
+do any thing <i>in vain</i>; much less so great a
+Work as the making of a World; which if
+it were in vain, would comprehend ten thousand
+Vanities or useless Preparations in it. <i>We</i>
+may therefore, in the first place, safely conclude,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span><i>that the new Earth will be inhabited</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But <i>by whom will it be inhabited</i>? This makes
+the second Enquiry. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> answers this Question
+for us, and with a particular Application to
+this very Subject of the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new
+Earth</i>: They shall be inhabited, he says, by the
+<i>Just</i> or the <i>Righteous</i>. His Words which we cited
+before, are these; when he had described the
+Conflagration of the World, he adds, But we
+<i>expect new Heavens and a new Earth, WHEREIN
+DWELLETH RIGHTEOUSNESS</i>.
+By <i>Righteousness</i> here, it is generally agreed, must
+be understood righteous Persons; for Righteousness
+cannot be without righteous Persons. It cannot
+hang upon Trees, or grow out of the Ground;
+’tis the Endowment of reasonable Creatures. And
+these righteous Persons are eminently such, and
+therefore call’d Righteousness in the Abstract, or
+purely righteous without Mixture of Vice.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So we have found Inhabitants for the <i>new
+Earth</i>, Persons of an high and noble Character;
+like those describ’d by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, (<i>1 <abbr title='Ephesians'>Eph.</abbr>
+<abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 9.</i>) <i>A chosen Generation, a royal Priesthood,
+an holy Nation, a peculiar People.</i> As
+if into that World, as into <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John’s</i> <i>new
+Jerusalem,</i> nothing impure or unrighteous was
+to be admitted, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 27.</i> These being
+then the happy and holy Inhabitants; the
+next Enquiry is, <i>Whence do they come?</i> From
+what Off-spring, or from what Original? We
+noted before, that there was no Remnant of
+Mankind left at the Conflagration, as there
+was at the Deluge; nor any Hopes of a Restauration
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>that Way. Shall we then imagine that
+these new Inhabitants are a Colony wafted over
+from some neigbouring World; as from the
+Moon, or Mercury, or some of the higher Planets?
+You may imagine what you please, but
+that seems to me not imaginary only, but impracticable:
+And that the Inhabitants of those
+Planets are Persons of so great Accomplishments,
+is more than I know; but I am sure they are
+not the Persons here understood; for these must
+be such as inhabited this Earth before. We look
+for <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>, says the Apostle:
+Surely to have some Share and Interest in
+them, otherwise there would be no Comfort in
+that Expectation. And the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i> said
+before, I create <i>new Heavens</i> and a <i>new Earth</i>,
+and the former shall come no more in Remembrance;
+but be <i>YOU glad and rejoyce for ever
+in that which I create</i>. The Truth is, none
+can have so good Pretensions to this Spot of
+Ground we call the Earth, as the Sons of Men,
+seeing they once possessed it; and if it be restor’d
+again, ’tis their Propriety and Inheritance. But
+’tis not Mankind in general that must possess this
+new World, but the <i>Israel of God</i>, according to
+the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>; or the <i>Just</i>, according to
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>; and especially those that have suffer’d
+for the Sake of their Religion. For this is that
+<i>Palingenesia</i>, as we noted before, that <i>Renovation</i>,
+or <i>Regeneration</i> of all Things, where our Saviour
+says, those that suffer Loss for his Sake, shall be
+recompensed, <i>Matth.</i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28, 29.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But they must be then raised from the Dead.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>For all Mankind was destroyed at the Conflagration:
+and there is no Resource for them
+any other way, than by a Resurrection. ’Tis true:
+and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> (<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr>) gives us a fair Occasion
+to make this Supposition, <i>that</i> there will be
+some raised from the Dead, before the general
+Day of Judgment. For he plainly distinguisheth
+of a <i>first</i> and <i>second</i> Resurrection, and makes the
+first to be a thousand Years before the second,
+and before the general Day of Judgment. Now,
+if there be truly and really a two-fold Resurrection,
+as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> tells us; and that a Thousand
+Years Distance from one another: It may be very
+rationally be presum’d, that those that are raised
+in the first Resurrection, are those <i>Just</i> that will
+inhabit the <i>New Heavens</i> and <i>New Earth</i>; or
+whom our Saviour promis’d to reward in the Renovation
+of the World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>For otherwise, who are those <i>Just</i> that shall
+inhabit the <i>New Earth</i>, and whence do they
+come? Or when is that Restauration which
+our Saviour speaks of, wherein those that suffer’d
+for the Sake of the Gospel shall be rewarded?
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says, the <i>Martyrs</i>, at this first
+Resurrection, shall live again, and reign with
+Christ: Which seems to be the Reward promis’d
+by our Saviour, to those that suffer’d for
+his sake, and the same Persons in both Places.
+<i>And I saw the Souls of them</i> (says <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>)
+<i>that were beheaded for the Witness of Jesus,
+and for the Word of God; and which had not
+worshipped the Beast, &#38;c. and they lived and
+reigned with Christ a Thousand Years</i>, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 4.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>These, I say, seem to be the same Persons, to
+whom Christ had before promis’d and appropriated
+a particular Reward. And this Reward of
+theirs, or this Reign of theirs, is upon <i>Earth</i>;
+upon some Earth, new or old, not in Heaven.
+For, besides that we read nothing of their Ascension
+into Heaven after their Resurrection; there
+are several Marks that shew, it must necessarily
+be understood of a State upon Earth. For <i>Gog</i>
+and <i>Magog</i> came from the <i>four Quarters of the
+Earth</i>, and besieged the <i>Camp of the Saints,
+and the beloved City</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 9. That Camp and
+that City therefore were upon the Earth. And
+<i>Fire came down from Heaven, and devoured
+them.</i> If it came down from Heaven, it came
+upon the Earth. Farthermore, those Persons
+that are raised from the <i>Dead</i>, are said to be
+<i>Priests of God and of Christ, and to reign with
+him a thousand Years</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 6. Now these
+must be the same Persons with the <i>Priests</i> and
+<i>Kings</i>, mention’d in the fifth Chapter, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 10.
+which are there said expressly <i>to reign upon
+Earth</i>, or that they should <i>reign upon Earth</i>.
+It remains therefore only to determine, <i>what
+Earth</i> this is, where the <i>Sons of the first Resurrection</i>
+will live and reign. It cannot be
+the present Earth, in the same State, and under
+the same Circumstances it is now: For
+what Happiness or Privilege would that be,
+to be called back into a mortal Life, under
+the Necessities and Inconveniencies of
+sickly Bodies, and an incommodious World;
+such as the present State of Mortality is, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>must continue to be, till some Change be made
+in Nature. We may be sure therefore, that a
+Change will be made in Nature, before that Time,
+and that the State they are rais’d into, and the
+Earth they are to inhabit, will be, at least, <i>Paradisaical</i>;
+and consequently can be no other than
+the <i>New Heavens</i> and <i>New Earth</i>, which we
+are to expect after the Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>From these Considerations, there is a great Fairness
+to conclude, both as to the Characters of the
+Persons, and of the Place or State, that <i>the Sons
+of the first Resurrection</i> will be Inhabitants of the
+<i>New Earth</i>, and reign there with Christ a Thousand
+Years. But seeing this is one of the principal
+and peculiar Conclusions of this Discourse,
+and bears a great Part in this last Book of the
+Theory of the Earth, it will deserve a more full
+Explication, and a more ample Proof, to make
+it out. We must therefore take a greater Compass
+in our Discourse, and give a full Account
+of that State which is usually call’d the <i>Millennium</i>;
+the Reign of the Saints a Thousand Years,
+or the Kingdom of Christ upon Earth. But
+before we enter upon this new Subject, give
+me leave to close our present Argument, about
+the <i>Renovation of the World</i>, with some Testimonies
+of the antient Philosophers, to that
+purpose. ’Tis plain to me, that there were
+among the Antients several Traditions, or traditionary
+Conclusions, which they did not
+raise themselves, by Reason and Observation,
+but received them from an unknown
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Antiquity. An Instance of this is the <i>Conflagration
+of the World</i>; a Doctrine as antient, for any
+Thing I know, as the World it self; at least as
+antient as we have any Records, and yet none of
+those Antients that tell us of it, give any Argument
+to prove it. Neither is it any Wonder, for
+they did not invent it themselves, but receiv’d it
+from others without Proof, by the sole Authority
+of Tradition. In like manner the <i>Renovation of
+the World</i>, which we are now speaking of, is an
+antient Doctrine, both amongst the <i>Greeks</i> and
+<i>Eastern</i> Philosophers: But they shew us no Method
+<i>how</i> the World may be <i>renew’d</i>, nor make
+any Proof of its future Renovation; for it was
+not a Discovery which they first made, but receiv’d
+it with an implicit Faith, from their Masters and
+Ancestors: And these traditionary Doctrines were
+all Fore-runners of that Light which was to shine
+more clearly at the Opening of the Christian Dispensation;
+to give a more full Account of the Fate
+and Revolutions of the natural World, as well as
+of the moral.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Jews</i>, ’tis well known, held the <i>Renovation</i>
+of the World, and a <i>Sabbath</i> after
+Six Thousand Years; according to the Prophecy
+that was current among them; whereof
+we have given a larger Account in the
+precedent Book, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> And that future
+State they called עולם הבא, <i>Olam Hava</i>,
+or the <i>World to come</i>, which is the very same
+with Saint <i>Paul’s habitable Earth to come</i>, ἡ
+οἰκουμένη ἥ μέλλουσα, <i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 6.</i> Neither can I
+easily believe, that those Constitutions of <i>Moses</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>that proceed so much upon a <i>septenary</i>, or the
+Number <i>seven</i>, and have no Ground or Reason, in
+the Nature of the Thing, for that particular Number.
+I cannot easily believe, I say, that they are
+either accidental or humoursome, without Design
+or Signification; but that they are typical, or representative
+of some <i>Septenary</i> State, that does
+eminently deserve and bear that Character. <i>Moses</i>,
+in the History of the Creation, makes six Days
+Work, and then a Sabbath: Then, after six Years,
+he makes a <i>Sabbath-Year</i>; and after a Sabbath of
+Years, a Year of Jubilee, <i><abbr title='Leviticus'>Levit.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-five'>xxv.</abbr></i> All these
+lesser Revolutions seem to me to point at the
+grand Revolution, the great <i>Sabbath</i> or <i>Jubilee</i>,
+after six Millenaries; which, as it answers the
+Type in point of Time, so likewise in the Nature
+and Contents of it; being a State of Rest from
+all Labour, and Trouble, and Servitude; a State
+of Joy and Triumph, and a State of <i>Renovation</i>,
+when Things are to return to their first Condition
+and pristine Order. So much for the <i>Jews</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Heathen Philosophers, both <i>Greeks</i> and
+<i>Barbarians</i>, had the same Doctrine of the
+<i>Renovation</i> of the <i>World</i> current amongst
+them, and that under several Names and
+Phrases; as of the <i>Great Year</i>, the <i>Restauration</i>,
+the <i>Mundane Periods</i>, and such-like.
+They suppos’d stated and fix’d Periods of Time,
+upon Expiration whereof there would always
+follow some great Revolution of the World,
+and the Face of Nature would be renewed:
+particularly after the Conflagration, the <i>Stoicks</i>
+always suppos’d a new World to succeed, or
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>another Frame of Nature to be erected in the
+Room of that which was destroyed. And they
+use the same Words and Phrases upon this Occasion
+that Scripture useth. <i>Chrysippis</i> calls it <i>Apocatastasis</i>
+(<i>Lact.</i> <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 7. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 23.) as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> does,
+<i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21. <i>Marcus Antonius</i> in his <i>Meditations</i>,
+several times calls it <i>Palingenesia</i>, as our
+Saviour does, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28. And <i>Numenius</i> hath
+two Scripture words, <i>Resurrection</i> and <i>Restitution</i>,
+(<i>Euseb. præp. Ev.</i> <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 7. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 23.) to express this Renovation
+of the World. Then as to the <i>Platonicks</i>,
+that Revolution of all Things hath commonly
+been call’d the <i>Platonick</i> Year, as if <i>Plato</i>
+had been the first Author of that Opinion; but
+that’s a great Mistake; he receiv’d it from the
+<i>Barbarick</i> Philosophers, and particularly from the
+<i>Ægyptian</i> Priests, amongst whom he liv’d several
+Years, to be instructed in their Learning.
+But I do not take <i>Plato</i> neither to be the
+first that brought this Doctrine into <i>Greece</i>:
+For, besides that the <i>Sibylls</i>, whose Antiquity
+we do not well know, sung this Song of old,
+as we see it copy’d from them by <i>Virgil</i> in his
+fourth Eclogue; <i>Pythagoras</i> taught it before
+<i>Plato</i>, and <i>Orpheus</i> before them both; and that’s
+as high as the <i>Greek</i> Philosophy reaches.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Barbarick</i> Philosophers were more antient;
+namely, the <i>Ægyptians</i>, <i>Persians</i>, <i>Chaldeans</i>,
+<i>Indian Brackmans</i>, and other Eastern
+Nations. Their Monuments indeed are in a
+great measure lost; yet from the Remains of
+them which the <i>Greeks</i> have transcribed, and
+so preserv’d in their Writings, we see plainly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>they all had this Doctrine of the <i>future Renovation</i>.
+And to this Day the Posterity of the <i>Brackmans</i>
+in the <i>East-Indies</i> retain the same Notion,
+<i>that</i> the World will be renew’d after the last Fire.
+You may see the Citations, if you please, for all
+these <i>Notions</i>, in the <i>Latin</i> Treatise, <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr>
+which I thought would be too dry and tedious to
+be render’d into <i>English</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To these Testimonies of the Philosophers of all
+Ages, for the future Renovation of the World,
+we might add the Testimonies of the Christian
+Fathers, <i>Greek</i> and <i>Latin</i>, antient and modern.
+I will only give you a bare List of them, and refer
+you to the <i>Latin</i> Treatise (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr>) for the
+Words or the Places. Amongst the <i>Greek</i> Fathers,
+<i>Justin Martyr</i>, <i>Irenæus</i>, <i>Origen</i>: The Fathers
+of the <i>Council of Nice</i>, <i>Eusebius</i>; <i>Basil</i>;
+the two <i>Cyrils</i>, of <i>Jerusalem</i> and <i>Alexandria</i>:
+The two <i>Gregories</i>, <i>Nazianzen</i> and <i>Nyssen</i>;
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Chrysostom</i>, <i>Zacharias Mitylenensis</i>; and of
+later Date, <i>Damascen</i>, <i>Oecumenius</i>, <i>Euthymius</i>,
+and others. These have all set their Hands and
+Seals to this Doctrine. Of the <i>Latin</i> Fathers,
+<i>Tertullian</i>, <i>Lactantius</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Hillary</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Ambrose</i>,
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i>; and many later Ecclesiastical
+Authors. These, with the Philosophers before-mention’d,
+I count good Authority, sacred
+and prophane; which I place here as an Out-guard
+upon Scripture, where our principal Force
+lies. These three united, and acting in Conjunction,
+will be sufficient to prove this first Post, and
+to prove our first Proposition, which is this;
+<i>That after the Conflagration of this World,</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span><i>there will be new Heavens and a new Earth; and
+that Earth will be inhabited.</i> (Propos. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr>)</p>
+<h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The Proof of a</i> Millennium, <i>or of a blessed Age
+to come, from Scripture. A View of the</i> Apocalypse,
+<i>and of the Prophecies of</i> Daniel, <i>in reference
+to this Kingdom of Christ and of his
+Saints.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We have given fair Presumptions, if not
+Proofs, in the precedent Chapter, that
+the Sons of the first Resurrection will be the Persons
+that shall inhabit the <i>new Earth</i>, or the World
+to come. But to make that Proof complete and
+unexceptionable, I told you, it would be necessary
+to take a larger Compass in our Discourse, and
+to examine what is meant by <i>that Reign with
+Christ a thousand Years</i>, which is promis’d to the
+Sons of the <i>first Resurrection</i>, by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> in the
+<i>Apocalypse</i>; and in other places of Scripture is
+usually call’d the <i>Kingdom of Christ</i>, and the
+Reign of the Saints: And by Ecclesiastical Authors,
+in Imitation of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, it is commonly
+styled, the <i>Millennium</i>. We shall indifferently use
+any of these Words or Phrases; and examine,
+first, the Truth of the Notion and Opinion,
+whether, in Scripture, there be any such an
+happy State promised to the Saints under the
+Conduct of Christ; and then we will proceed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>to examine the Nature, Characters, Place and
+Time of it. And I am in hopes when these Things
+are duly discuss’d and stated, you will be satisfied
+that we have found out the true Inhabitants of the
+<i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>; and the true Mystery
+of that State which is called the <i>Millennium</i>,
+or the Reign of Christ and of his Saints.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We begin with <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, whose Words in the
+<abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> Chapter of the <i>Apocalypse</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 1, 2, 4, 5, 6.
+are express, both as to the first Resurrection, and
+as to the Reign of those Saints that rise with Christ
+for a Thousand Years; Satan in the mean Time
+being bound, or disabled from doing Mischief, and
+seducing Mankind. The Words of the Prophet
+are these; <i>And I saw an Angel come down from
+Heaven, having the Key of the bottomless Pit,
+and a great Chain in his Hand. And he laid hold
+on the Dragon, that old Serpent, which is the
+Devil and Satan, and bound him a Thousand
+Years. And I saw Thrones, and they sat upon
+them, and Judgment was given unto them; And
+I saw the Souls of them that were beheaded for
+the Witness of Jesus, and for the Word of God, and
+which had not worshipped the Beast, neither his
+Image, neither had received his Mark upon their
+Foreheads, or in their Hands; and they lived and
+reigned with Christ a thousand Years. But the rest
+of the Dead lived not again until the thousand Years
+were finished. This is the first Resurrection. Blessed
+and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection;
+on such the second Death hath no Power,
+but they shall be Priests of God, and of Christ, and
+shall reign with him a thousand Years</i>. These
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>Words do fully express a Resurrection, and a
+Reign with Christ a thousand Years. As for that
+particular Space of Time, of a <i>Thousand Years</i>,
+it is not much material to our present Purpose:
+but the Resurrection here spoken of, and the
+Reign with Christ, make the Substance of the
+Controversy, and in effect prove all that we enquire
+after at present. This Resurrection, you
+see, is call’d the <i>first Resurrection</i>, by way of
+Distinction from the second and general Resurrection;
+which is to be placed a Thousand Years
+after the first. And both this first Resurrection,
+and the Reign of Christ, seem to be appropriated
+to the Martyrs in this Place: For the Prophet
+says, <i>The Souls of those that were beheaded for
+the Witness of Jesus, &#38;c. they lived and reigned
+with Christ a Thousand Years</i>. From which
+Words, if you please, we will raise this Doctrine;
+that <i>those that have suffer’d for the Sake of Christ,
+and a good Conscience, shall be raised from the
+Dead a Thousand Years before the general Resurrection,
+and reign with Christ in an happy State</i>.
+This Proposition seems to be plainly included in
+the Words of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and to be the intended
+Sense of this Vision; but you must have Patience
+a little as to your Enquiry into Particulars, till, in
+the Progress of our Discourse, we have brought all
+the Parts of this Conclusion into a fuller Light.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the mean time there is but one Way, that
+I know of, to evade the Force of these Words,
+and of the Conclusion drawn from them; and
+that is, by supposing that the <i>first Resurrection</i>
+here mention’d, is not to be understood in a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>literal Sense, but is allegorical and mystical, signifying
+only a Resurrection from Sin to a spiritual
+Life: As we are said to be <i>dead in Sin</i>, and
+to be <i>risen with Christ</i>, by Faith and Regeneration.
+This is a manner of Speech which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>
+does sometimes use, as <i><abbr title='Ephesians'>Eph.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 6. and <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 14,
+and <i><abbr title='Colossians'>Col.</abbr></i> 3. 1. But how can this be applied to
+the present Case? Were the Martyrs dead in Sin?
+’Tis they that are here rais’d from the Dead: Or,
+after they were beheaded for the Witness of
+Jesus, naturally dead and laid in their Graves,
+were they then regenerate by Faith? There is no
+Congruity in Allegories so apply’d. Besides, why
+should they be said to be regenerate a Thousand
+Years before the Day of Judgment? or to reign
+with Christ, after this Spiritual Resurrection, such
+a limited Time, a Thousand Years? Why not so
+to Eternity? For in this allegorical Sense of <i>rising</i>
+and <i>reigning</i>, they will reign with him for everlasting.
+Then, after a Thousand Years, must all
+the Wicked be regenerate, and rise into a Spiritual
+Life? ’Tis said here, <i>the rest of the Dead
+lived not again, until the Thousand Years were
+finished, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 5. That implies, that at the End
+of these Thousand Years, the rest of the Dead did
+live again; which, according to the Allegory, must
+be, that, after a Thousand Years, all the Wicked
+will be regenerate, and rais’d into Spiritual Life.
+These Absurdities arise upon an allegorical Exposition
+of this Resurrection, if apply’d to single
+Persons.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>But Dr. <i>Hammond</i>, a learned and worthy Divine,
+(but one that loves to contract and cramp
+the Sense of Prophecies) making this first Resurrection
+allegorical, applies it not to single Persons,
+but to the State of the Church in general:
+The Christian Church, he says, shall have a Resurrection
+for a Thousand Years; that is, shall
+rise out of Persecution, be in a prosperous Condition,
+and an undisturbed Profession of the true
+Religion, for so long a Time. But this agrees
+with the Prophecy as little as the former; if it
+be a State of the Church in general, and of the
+Church then in being, why is this Resurrection
+apply’d to the Martyrs? Why are they said to
+rise; seeing the State they liv’d in, was a troublesome
+State of the Church, and it would be no
+Happiness to have that reviv’d again? Then as to
+the Time of this Resurrection of the Church,
+where will you fix it? The Prophet <i>Daniel</i>
+places this Reign of Christ, at, or after the
+Dissolution of the fourth Monarchy; and Saint
+<i>John</i> places it a Thousand Years before the
+last Day of Judgment. How will you adjust
+the allegorical Resurrection of the Church to
+these Limits? Or if, in point of Time, you
+was free, as to Prophecy, yet how would you
+adjust it to History? Where will you take
+these Thousand Years of Happiness and Prosperity
+to the Church? These Authors suppose
+them past, and therefore must begin them either
+from the first Times of the Gospel, or from
+the Time of <i>Constantine</i>. Under the first Ages
+of the Gospel, were, you know, the great Persecutions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>by the <i>Heathen</i> Emperors; could those be
+call’d the Reign of Christ and of his Saints? Was
+Satan then bound? Or was this <i>Epocha</i> but a thousand
+Years before the Day of Judgment? And if
+you begin this Resurrection of the Church from
+the Days of <i>Constantine</i>, when the Empire became
+Christian, how will you reckon a thousand
+Years from that Time, for the Continuance of
+the Church in <i>Peace</i> and <i>Purity</i>? For the Reign
+of Christ and of his Saints must necessarily imply
+both those Characters. Besides, who are the <i>rest
+of the Dead</i>, (<abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 5.) that lived after the Expiration
+of those thousand Years, if they began at
+<i>Constantine</i>? And why is not the second Resurrection
+and the Day of Judgment yet come?
+Lastly, you ought to be tender of interpreting the
+first Resurrection in an allegorical Sense, lest you
+expose the second Resurrection to be made an
+Allegory also.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To conclude; The Words of the Text are plain
+and express for a literal Resurrection, as to the
+first, as well as the second; and there is no allegorical
+Interpretation that I know of, that will
+hold through all the Particulars of the Text, consistently
+with it self and with History. And when
+we shall have proved this future Kingdom of
+Christ from other Places of the <i>Apocalypse</i>, and
+of Holy Writ, you will the more easily admit
+the literal Sense of this Place; which, you know,
+according to the receiv’d Rule of Interpreters,
+is never to be quitted or forsaken, without
+Necessity: But when I speak of confirming
+this Doctrine from other Passages of Scripture, I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>do not mean as to that definite Time of a <i>Thousand
+Years</i>, for that is no where else mention’d in
+the <i>Apocalypse</i>, or in Scripture, that I know of;
+and seems to be mention’d here, in this Close of
+all Things, to mind us of that Type that was propos’d
+in the Beginning of all Things, <i>of six Days
+and a Sabbath</i>; whereof each Day comprehends
+a Thousand Years, and the <i>Sabbath</i>, which is
+the <i>Millennial State</i>, hath its Thousand; according
+to the known Prophecy of <i>Elias</i>, Book <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr>
+<abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> which, as I told you before, was not only
+receiv’d among the <i>Jews</i>, but also own’d by very
+many of the Christian Fathers.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To proceed therefore to other Parts of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John’s</i>
+Prophecies, that set forth this Kingdom of Christ;
+the Vision of the <i>Seven Trumpets</i> is one of the
+most remarkable in the <i>Apocalypse</i>; and the Seventh
+Trumpet, which plainly reaches to the End
+of the World, and the Resurrection of the Dead,
+opens the Scene to the <i>Millennium</i>; hear the Sound
+of it, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 15, 16, 17, 18. <i>The seventh Angel
+sounded, and there were great Voices in Heaven,
+saying, The Kingdoms of this World are become
+the Kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ, and
+he shall reign for ever and ever. And the four
+and twenty Elders, which sat before God on
+their Seats, fell upon their Faces, and worshipped
+God; saying, we give thee Thanks, O Lord
+God Almighty, which art, and wast, and art to
+come; because thou hast taken to thee thy great
+Power, and hast reigned. And the Nations
+were angry, and thy Wrath is come, and the
+Time of the Dead, that they should be judged,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>and that thou shouldest give Reward unto thy Servants
+the Prophets, and to the Saints, and them
+that fear thy Name, small and great, and shouldest
+destroy them that destroy the Earth</i>, &#38;c. This
+is manifestly the Kingdom of Christ; and with
+this is joined the Resurrection of the Dead, and
+the rewarding of the suffering Prophets and Saints,
+as in the <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <i>Chapter</i>. This is that <i>Mystery of
+God that was to be finished in the Days of the
+Voice of the seventh Angel</i>, as is said in the <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr>
+<abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 7. <i>As he hath declared to his Servants
+the Prophets</i>; namely, the Mystery of this Kingdom,
+which was foretold by the Prophets of the
+<i>Old Testament</i>, and more especially by <i>Daniel</i>,
+as we shall see hereafter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>new Jerusalem</i> (as it is set down, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i>
+<abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.) is another Instance or Image
+of this Kingdom of Christ. And the <i>Palm-bearing
+Company</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9, <i>&#38;c.</i> are some of the
+Martyrs that shall enjoy it. They are plainly describ’d
+there as Christian Martyrs; (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 14.) and
+their Reward, or the State of Happiness they are
+to enjoy, (<abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 15, 16, 17.) is the same with that
+of the Inhabitants of the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr>
+2, 3, 4, <i>&#38;c.</i> as, upon comparing those two Places,
+will easily appear. Farthermore, at the Opening
+of the <i>Seals</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> which is another principal
+Vision, and reaches to the End of the World,
+there is a Prospect given us of this Kingdom of
+Christ, and of that Reward of his Saints. For when
+they sing the new Song to the Lamb, (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 9,
+10.) they say, <i>Thou art worthy to take the
+Book, and to open the Seals thereof; for thou
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>wast slain and hast redeemed us to God, by thy
+Blood; and hast made us into our God Kings and
+Priests, and we shall reign on the Earth.</i> This
+must be the same State, and the same Thousand-Years-Reign
+mention’d in the <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> where
+’tis said, (<i>Ver.</i> 6.) the Partakers of it <i>shall be
+Priests of God, and of Christ, and shall reign
+with him a Thousand Years</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Another completory Vision, that extends it
+self to the End of the World, is that of the <i>Seven
+Vials</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> and <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> And as at the Opening
+of the Seals, so at the pouring out the Vials, a
+triumphal Song is sung, and ’tis call’d the <i>Song of
+Moses and of the Lamb</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 3. ’Tis plainly
+a Song of Thanksgiving for a Deliverance, but I do
+not look upon this Deliverance as already wrought,
+before the pouring out of the Vials, tho’ it be
+plac’d before them; as often the grand Design and
+Issue of a Vision is plac’d at the Beginning: It is
+wrought by the Vials themselves, and by their
+Effusion, and therefore upon the pouring out of
+the last Vial, the Voice came out of the Temple
+of Heaven, from the Throne, saying, <i>Consummatum
+est</i>; <i>It is done</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 17. Now the Deliverance
+is wrought, now the Work is at an End; or,
+<i>the Mystery of God is finished</i>, as the Phrase was
+before, concerning the <abbr title='seventh'>7th</abbr> Trumpet, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 7.
+You see therefore this terminates upon the same
+Time, and consequently upon the same State,
+of the <i>Millennium</i>; and that they are the
+same Persons that triumph here, and reign
+there, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> you may see by the same Characters
+given to both of them, <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 2. Here,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>those that triumph, are said <i>to have gotten the
+Victory</i> over the Beast, and over his Image, <i>and
+over his Mark, and over the Number of his Name</i>,
+<abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 4. And there, those that reign with Christ,
+are said to be those <i>that had not worshiped the Beast,
+neither his Image, neither had received his Mark
+upon their Foreheads, or in their Hands</i>. These are
+the same Persons therefore, triumphing over the
+same Enemies, and enjoying the same Reward.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And you shall seldom find any <i>Doxology</i> or
+<i>Hallelujah</i> in the <i>Apocalypse</i>, but ’tis in Prospect
+of the Kingdom of Christ, and the Millennial
+State: This is still the Burthen of the
+sacred Song, the Complement of every grand
+Vision, and the Life and Strength of the whole
+System of Prophecies in that Book: Even those
+<i>Hallelujahs</i> that are sung at the Destruction
+of <i>Babylon</i>, in the <abbr title='nineteenth'>xixth</abbr> Chapter, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 6, 7. are
+rais’d upon the succeeding State, <i>the Reign of
+Christ</i>. For the Text says, <i>And I heard as it
+were a Voice of a great Multitude, and as the
+Voice of many Waters, and as the Voice of
+mighty Thunders, saying, Hallelujah</i>: <span class='sc'>For the
+Lord God Omnipotent reigneth</span>. <i>Let us be
+glad and rejoyce, and give Honour to him</i>: <span class='sc'>For
+the Marriage of the Lamb is come, and his
+Wife hath made her self ready</span>. This appears
+plainly to be the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, if you consult
+the 21st <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 2. And I </i>John<i> saw the
+Holy City, new </i>Jerusalem,<i> coming down from
+God out of Heaven</i>, <span class='sc'>prepared as a Bride
+adorned for her Husband</span>. ’Tis, no doubt,
+the same Bride and Bridegroom, in both Places;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>the same Marriage or Preparations for Marriage,
+which are compleated in the Millennial Bliss, in
+the Kingdom of Christ and of his Saints.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I must beg your patience a little longer, in
+pursuing this Argument throughout the <i>Apocalypse</i>;
+As towards the latter End of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>’s Revelation,
+this Kingdom of Christ shines out in a more full
+Glory; so there are the Dawnings of it in the very
+Beginning and Entrance into his Prophecies. As
+at the Beginning of a Poem, we have commonly,
+in a few Words, the Design of the Work, in like
+Manner <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 5, 6. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> makes this Preface
+to his Prophecies, <i>From Jesus Christ, who is
+the faithful Witness, the first begotten of the
+Dead, and the Prince of the Kings of the Earth;
+unto him that loved us, and washed us from our
+Sins in his own Blood; and hath made us Kings
+and Priests unto God and his Father; to him be
+Glory and Dominion for ever and ever, Amen.
+Behold, he cometh in the Clouds, &#38;c.</i> In this
+Prologue the grand Argument is pointed at, and
+that happy Catastrophe and last Scene, which is to
+crown the Work, the Reign of Christ and of his
+Saints at his second Coming. He hath <i>made us
+Kings and Priests unto God</i>; this is always the
+Characteristick of those that are to enjoy the
+Millennial Happiness, as you may see at the
+Opening of the Seals, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 10. and in the Sons
+of the <i>first Resurrection</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 6. And this being
+joined to the Coming of our Saviour, puts it
+still more out of Doubt. That Expression also,
+of being <i>washed from our Sins in his Blood</i>, is repeated
+again both at the Opening of the Seals,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span><i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 9.</i> and in the <i>Palm-bearing</i> Company,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 14.</i> both which Places we have cited
+before, as referring to the Millennial State.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Give me Leave to add farther, that as in this
+general Preface, so also in the introductory Visions
+of the <i>seven Churches</i>, there are, covertly or
+expresly, in the Conclusion of each, glances upon
+the <i>Millennium</i>; as in the first to <i>Ephesus</i>, the Prophet
+concludes, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 7.</i> <i>He that hath an Ear,
+let him hear, what the Spirit says to the Churches</i>:
+<span class='sc'>To him that overcometh, will I give to
+eat of the Tree of Life, which is in the
+midst of the Paradise of God.</span> This is the
+Millennial Happiness which is promised to the
+Conqueror; as we noted before concerning that
+Phrase. In like manner in the second to <i>Smyrna</i>,
+he concludes, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 11.</i> <i>He that overcometh,
+shall not be hurt of the second Death.</i> This implies,
+he shall be Partaker of the <i>first Resurrection</i>,
+for that’s the Thing understood; as you may see
+plainly by their being joyn’d in the <i><abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> Chapter
+<abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 6.</i> <i>Blessed and holy is he that hath Part in
+the first Resurrection; on such the second Death
+hath no Power, but they shall be Priests of God
+and of Christ, and shall reign with him a thousand
+Years.</i> In the third to <i>Pergamus</i>, the Promise is,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 7.</i> <i>To eat of the hidden Manna, to have
+a white Stone, and a new Name written in it</i>:
+But seeing the Prophet adds, <i>which no Man knoweth,
+saving he that receiveth it</i>, we will not presume
+to interpret that new State, whatsoever it is,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 26, 27.</i> In <i>Thyatira</i>, the Reward is, <i>To
+have Power over the Nations</i>, and to have the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>Morning Star; which is to reign with Christ,
+who is the Morning Star, in his Millennial Empire:
+Both these Phrases being us’d in that Sense in
+the Close of this Book, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 5. In Sardis the
+Promise is, <i>To be cloathed in white Raiment, and
+not to be blotted out of the Book of Life</i>. And
+you see afterwards the <i>Palme bearing</i> Company
+are cloathed in <i>white Robes</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9, 14. and
+those that are admitted into the <i>new Jerusalem</i>,
+<abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12. are such as are <i>written in the Lamb’s
+Book of Life</i>, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 27. Then as to Philadelphia,
+the Reward promised there does openly
+mark the Millennial State, by the <i>City of God</i>;
+<i>new Jerusalem which cometh down out of Heaven
+from God</i>, compar’d with <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 2. Lastly,
+to the Church of <i>Laodicea</i> is said, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21. <i>To
+him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me
+in my Throne.</i> And that is the usual Phrase to
+express the Dignity of those that reign with Christ,
+in his Millennial Kingdom; as you may see, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr>
+<abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 4.</i> <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28.</i> <i><abbr title='Daniel'>Dan.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9, 13, 14.</i> So all
+these Promises to the Churches aim at one and the
+same thing, and terminate upon the same Point:
+’Tis the same Reward express’d in different Ways;
+and seeing it is still fix’d upon a Victory, and appropriated
+to those that overcome, it does the more
+easily carry our Thoughts to the <i>Millennium</i>, which
+is the proper Reward of Victors, that is, of Martyrs
+and Confessors.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus you see how this Notion and Mystery of
+the Millennial Kingdom of Christ, does both begin
+and End the <i>Apocalypse</i>, and run thorough
+all its Parts, as the Soul of that Body of Prophecies;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>a Spirit or Ferment that actuates the whole
+Mass. And if we could thoroughly understand
+that illustrious Scene, at the Opening of this Apocalyptical
+Theatre in the ivth and vth <i>Chapter</i>,
+I do not doubt but we should find it a Representation
+of the Majesty of our Saviour in the Glory
+of his future Kingdom; but I dare not venture
+upon the Explication of it, there are so many
+Things of Difficulty, and dubious Interpretation,
+coucht under those Schemes. Wherefore having
+made these Observations upon the Prophecies of
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, we will now add to them some Reflections
+upon the Prophecies of <i>Daniel</i>: that by the
+Agreement and Concurrence of these two great
+Witnesses, the Conclusion we pretend to prove,
+may be fully established.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the Prophecies of <i>Daniel</i> there are two grand
+Visions, that of the <i>Statue</i> or Image, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr></i> and
+that of the four Beasts, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr></i> and both these
+Visions terminate upon the <i>Millennium</i>, or the
+Kingdom of Christ. In the Vision of the Statue,
+representing to us the four great Monarchies of
+the World successively, whereof by the general
+Consent of Interpreters, the <i>Roman</i> is the fourth
+and last, after the Dissolution of the last of them,
+a fifth Monarchy, the Kingdom of Christ, is
+openly introduc’d, in these Words: <i>And in the
+Days of these Kingdoms, shall the God of Heaven
+set up a Kingdom, which shall never be destroyed;
+and the Kingdom shall not be left to other
+People, but it shall break in Pieces, and consume
+all those Kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever,
+<abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 44.</i> This may be verified, in some
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>measure, by the first coming of our Saviour in
+the Days of the fourth Kingdom, when his Religion,
+from small Beginnings, in a short Time
+over-spread the greatest Part of the known World.
+As the <i>Stone cut out without Hands</i>, became a
+great <i>Mountain, and filled the whole Earth, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr>
+34, 35.</i> but the full and final Accomplishment
+of this Prophecy cannot be till the second
+coming of our Saviour. For not till then will
+he, <i>Ver. 35</i>, <i>break in pieces and consume all those
+Kingdoms; and that in such a manner, that
+they shall become like the Chaff of the Summer-threshing
+Floor, carried away by the Wind; so as
+no Place shall be found for them</i>. This, I say, will
+not be done, nor an everlasting Kingdom erected
+in their place, over all the Nations of the Earth,
+till his second coming, and his Millennial Reign.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But this Reign is declared more expresly, in the
+Vision of the four Beasts, <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 13.</i> For after
+the Destruction of the fourth Beast, the Prophet
+says, <i>I saw in the Night Visions, and behold
+one like the Son of Man, came with the Clouds of
+Heaven, and came to the Antient of Days, and
+they brought him near before him: And there was
+given him Dominion, and Glory, and a Kingdom,
+that all People, Nations and Languages should
+serve him; his Dominion is an everlasting Dominion,
+which shall not pass away; and his
+Kingdom that which shall not be destroyed</i>. Accordingly,
+he says, <i>Ver. 21, 22.</i> <i>The last Beast,
+and the little Horn, made war against the Saints,
+until the Antient of Days came, and Judgment
+was given to the Saints of the most High; and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>the Time came that the Saints possessed the Kingdom</i>.
+And lastly, in Pursuit still of the same Argument,
+he concludes to the same Effect in fuller
+Words, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 26, 27. <i>But the Judgment shall
+sit, and they shall take away his Dominion, to
+consume and to destroy it unto the End. And
+the Kingdom and Dominion, and the Greatness
+of the Kingdom under the whole Heaven,
+shall be given to the People of the Saints of
+the most High; whose Kingdom is an everlasting
+Kingdom, and all Dominions shall serve and
+obey him.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Here is the End of the Matter</i>, says the Prophet,
+<abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 28. <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 13. Here
+is the Upshot and Result of all; here terminate
+both the Prophecies of <i>Daniel</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and
+all the Affairs of the terrestrial World. <i>Daniel</i>
+brings in this Kingdom of Christ, in the Conclusion
+of two or three Visions; but <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> hath
+interwoven it every where with his Prophecies,
+from first to last: And you may as well open a
+Lock without a Key, as interpret the <i>Apocalypse</i>
+without the <i>Millennium</i>. But after these two
+great Witnesses, the one for the <i>Old Testament</i>,
+the other for the <i>New</i>, we must look into the
+rest of the sacred Writers; for tho’ every single
+Author there, is an Oracle, yet the Concurrence
+of Oracles is still a farther Demonstration,
+and takes away all Remains of Doubt or
+Incredulity.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>CHAP. <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>A View of other Places of Scripture concerning
+the</i> Millennium <i>or future Kingdom of Christ.
+In what Sense all the Prophets have borne
+Testimony concerning it.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>The Wife of <i>Zebedee</i> came to our Saviour,
+and begg’d of him, like a fond Mother,
+that her two Sons might sit, one at his Right
+Hand, the other at his Left, when he came into
+his Kingdom, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 21. Our Saviour does
+not deny the Supposition, or general Ground of
+her Request, that <i>he was to have a Kingdom</i>;
+but tells her, the Honours of that Kingdom were
+not then in his Disposal. He had not drunk
+his Cup, nor been baptiz’d with his last Baptism;
+which were Conditions, both to him and others,
+of entring into that Kingdom. Yet, in another
+place, (<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28.) our Saviour is so well
+assur’d of his Interest and Authority there, by the
+Good-will of his Father, that he promises to his
+Disciples and Followers, that for the Losses they
+should sustain here, upon his Account, and for the
+Sake of his Gospel, they should receive there an
+hundred-fold, and sit upon Thrones with him,
+judging the Tribes of <i>Israel</i>. The Words are
+these: <i>And Jesus said unto them, Verily I say
+unto you, that ye which have followed me</i>, in
+the Regeneration or Renovation, <i>when the Son
+of Man shall sit in the Throne of his Glory,
+ye also shall sit upon twelve Thrones, judging
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>the twelve Tribes of</i> Israel. These Thrones, in
+all Reason, must be understood to be the same
+with those, which we mention’d in the foregoing
+Chapter out of <i>Daniel</i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 9. and <i>Apocal.</i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 4.
+and therefore mark the same Time, and the same
+State. And seeing, in those Places, they plainly
+signify the Millennial State, or the Kingdom of
+Christ and of his Saints, they must here signify
+the same, in this Promise of our Saviour to his
+suffering Followers. And as to the Word <i>Palingenesia</i>,
+which is here translated <i>Regeneration</i>,
+’tis very well known, that both the <i>Greek</i> Philosophers,
+and <i>Greek</i> Fathers, use that very Word
+for the <i>Renovation of the World</i>; which is to
+be, as we shall hereafter make appear, at or before
+the Millennial State.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Our Saviour also, in his Divine Sermon upon
+the Mount, makes this one of his <i>Beatitudes</i>,
+<i>Blessed are the Meek, for they shall inherit
+the Earth</i>: But <i>how</i>, I pray, or <i>where</i>, or
+<i>when</i>, do the Meek inherit the Earth? Neither
+at present, I am sure, nor in any past Ages.
+’Tis the great ones of the World, ambitious
+Princes and Tyrants, that slice the Earth amongst
+them; and those that can flatter them best, or
+serve them in their Interests or Pleasures, have
+the next best Shares: But a meek, modest and
+humble Spirit, is the most unqualified Person
+that can be, for a Court, or a Camp; to scramble
+for Preferment, or Plunder. Both he, and
+his self denying Notions, are ridicul’d, as Things
+of no Use, and proceeding from Meanness and
+Poorness of Spirit. <i>David</i>, who was a Person
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>of an admirable Devotion, but of an unequal
+Spirit; subject to great Dejections, as well as
+Elevations of Mind; was so much affected with
+the Prosperity of the Wicked in this World,
+that he could scarce forbear charging Providence
+with Injustice. You may see several Touches of
+a repining Spirit in his <i>Psalms</i>, and in the <abbr title='seventy-third'>lxxiiid</abbr>
+<i>Psalm</i>, compos’d upon that Subject, you have
+both the Wound and the Cure. Now this Beatitude
+pronounc’d here by our Saviour, was
+spoken before by <i>David</i>, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-seven'>xxxvii.</abbr> 11. the
+same <i>David</i>, that was always so sensible of the
+hard Usage of the Just in this Life. Our Saviour
+also, and his Apostles, preach’d the Doctrine
+of the Cross every where, and foretell the Sufferings
+that shall attend the Righteous in this
+World. Therefore neither <i>David</i>, nor our
+Saviour, could understand this <i>Inheritance of
+the Earth</i>, otherwise than of some future State,
+or of a State yet to come. But as it must be
+a future State, so it must be a terrestrial State;
+for it could not be call’d the <i>Inheritance of the
+Earth</i>, if it was not so. And ’tis to be a State
+of <i>Peace</i>, as well as <i>Plenty</i>, according to the
+Words of the <i>Psalmist</i>, <i>But the Meek shall inherit
+the Earth, and shall delight themselves
+in the abundance of Peace</i>. It follows therefore
+from these Premisses, that both our Saviour,
+and <i>David</i>, must understand some future
+State of the Earth, wherein the <i>Meek</i> will
+enjoy both Peace and Plenty; and this will
+appear to be the future Kingdom of Christ,
+when, upon a fuller Description, we shall
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>have given you the Marks and Characters of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the mean time, why should we not suppose
+this Earth, which the Meek are to inherit, to be
+that <i>habitable Earth to come</i>, which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>
+mentions (<i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 6.) and represents as subject
+to our Saviour in a peculiar Manner, at his Disposal,
+and under his Government, as his Kingdom?
+Why should not that Earth be the Subject
+of this Beatitude, the promis’d Land, the Lot of
+the Righteous? This I am sure of, that both this
+Text and the former deserve our serious Thoughts;
+and tho’ they do not expresly, and in Terms,
+prove the future Kingdom of our Saviour, yet
+upon the fairest Interpretations they imply such a
+State. And it would be very uneasy to give a
+satisfactory Account, either of the <i>Regeneration</i>
+or <i>Renovation</i>, when our Saviour and his Disciples
+shall sit upon Thrones; or of that <i>Earth</i>
+which the <i>Meek shall inherit</i>: Or, lastly, of
+that <i>habitable World</i>, which is peculiarly subject
+to the Dominion of Jesus Christ, without supposing,
+on this side Heaven, some other Reign of
+Christ and his Saints, than what we see, or what
+they enjoy, at present.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to proceed in this Argument, it will be
+necessary, as I told you, to set down some Notes
+and Characters of the Reign of Christ and of his
+Saints, whereby it may be distinguish’d from the
+present State and present Kingdoms of the World:
+And these Characters are chiefly three, <i>Justice</i>,
+<i>Peace</i>, and <i>Divine Presence</i> or Conduct, which
+uses to be called <i>Theocracy</i>. By these Characters
+it is sufficiently distinguish’d from the Kingdoms
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>of this World; which are generally unjust in their
+Titles or Exercise, stain’d with Blood, and so far
+from being under a particular Divine Conduct,
+that Human Passions and Human Vices are the
+Springs that commonly give Motion to their greatest
+Designs: But more particularly and restrainedly,
+the Government of Christ is oppos’d to the
+Kingdom and Government of Antichrist, whose
+Characters arc diametrically opposite to these,
+being <i>Injustice</i>, <i>Cruelty</i>, and <i>human or diabolical
+Artifices</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Upon this short View of the Kingdom of
+Christ, let us make Enquiry after it amongst
+the Prophets of the <i>Old Testament</i>; and we
+shall find, upon Examination, that there is
+scarce any of them, greater or lesser, but take
+notice of this mystical Kingdom, either expresly,
+or under the Types of <i>Israel</i>, <i>Sion</i>, <i>Jerusalem</i>,
+and such-like. And therefore I am
+apt to think, that when <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, in his Sermon
+to the <i>Jews</i>, <i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> says, all the holy
+Prophets spoke of <i>the Restitution of all Things</i>,
+he does not mean the Renovation of the World
+separately from the Kingdom of Christ, but
+complexly, as it may imply both. For there
+are not many of the old Prophets that have
+spoken of the Renovation of the <i>natural</i>
+World, but a great many have spoken of the
+Renovation of the <i>moral</i>, in the Kingdom of
+Christ. These are <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Words, <i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+19, 20, 21. <i>Repent ye therefore, and be converted,
+that your Sins may be blotted out, when
+the Times of refreshing shall come from the Presence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>of the Lord. And he shall send Jesus Christ
+which before was preached unto you; whom the
+Heavens must receive until the Times of RESTITUTION
+OF ALL THINGS.</i> The Apostle
+here mentions three Things, the <i>Times of refreshing</i>,
+the <i>second coming</i> of our Saviour, and the
+<i>Times of Restitution of all Things</i>: And to the
+last of these he immediately subjoins, <i>which God
+hath spoken by the Mouth of all his holy Prophets,
+since the World began</i>. This <i>Restitution of all
+Things</i>, I say, must not be understood abstractly
+from the Reign of Christ, but as in Conjunction
+with it; and in that Sense, and no other, it is
+the general Subject of the Prophets.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To enter therefore into the Schools of the
+Prophets, and enquire their Sense concerning this
+Mystery, let us first address our selves to the Prophet
+<i>Isaiah</i>, and the royal Prophet <i>David</i>; who
+seem to have had many noble Thoughts or Inspirations
+upon this Subject. <i>Isaiah</i>, in the <abbr title='sixty-fifth'>lxvth</abbr>
+Chapter, from the <abbr title='seventeenth'>xviith</abbr> Verse to the End, treats
+upon this Argument; and joins together the Renovation
+of the natural and moral World, as
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, in the Place fore-mentioned, seems to
+do: And accordingly the Prophet, having set
+down several natural Characters of that State, as
+Indolency and Joy, Longevity, Ease, and Plenty,
+from <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 18. to the 24th, he there begins the
+moral Characters of Divine Favour, and such a particular
+Protection, that they are heard and answer’d
+before they pray. And lastly, he represents it as a
+State of universal Peace and Innocency, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 23.
+<i>The Wolf and the Lamb shall feed together</i>, &#38;c.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>This last Character, which comprehends <i>Peace</i>,
+<i>Justice</i> and <i>Innocency</i>, is more fully display’d by
+the same Prophet, in the xith Chapter, where
+he treats also of the Kingdom of Christ. Give
+me leave to set down his Words, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 4, 5, 6,
+7, 8, 9. <i>But with Righteousness shall he judge
+the Poor, and reprove with Equity, for the Meek
+of the Earth: and he shall smite the Earth with
+the Rod of his Mouth, and with the Breath of
+his Lips shall he slay the Wicked. And Righteousness
+shall be the Girdle of his Loins, and Faithfulness
+the Girdle of his Reins. The Wolf also
+shall dwell with the Lamb, and the Leopard shall
+lie down with the Kid; and the Calf and the
+young Lyon, and the Fatling together, and a little
+Child shall lead them. And the Cow and the
+Bear shall feed, and their young Ones shall lie
+down together; and the Lyon shall eat Straw like
+the Ox. And the sucking Child shall play on the
+Hole of the Asp, and the weaned Child shall put
+his Hand on the Cockatrice-Den. They shall not
+hurt nor destroy in all my holy Mountain; for the
+Earth shall be full of the Knowledge of the Lord,
+as the Waters cover the Sea.</i> Thus far the Prophet.
+Now if we join this to what we noted before,
+from his <abbr title='sixty-fifth'>lxvth</abbr> Chapter, concerning the same State,
+’twill be impossible to understand it of any Order
+of Things, that is now, or hath been hitherto in the
+World; And consequently it must be the Idea of
+some State to come, and particularly of that which
+we call the future Kingdom of Christ.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The same pacifick Temper, Innocency and
+Justice, are celebrated by this Prophet, when
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>the <i>Mountain of the Lord shall be established in
+the Top of the Mountains</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 2, 4. <i>And
+he shall judge amongst the Nations, and shall rebuke
+many People; and they shall beat their
+Swords into Plow-shares, and their Spears into
+Pruning-hooks. Nation shall not lift up Sword
+against Nation, neither shall they learn War any
+more.</i> And as to Righteousness, he says, in the
+<abbr title='twenty-third'>xxiiid</abbr> Chapter, <i>Behold a King shall reign in Righteousness,
+and Princes shall rule in Judgment</i>, &#38;c.
+These Places, I know, usually are apply’d to the
+first coming of our Saviour; the Peaceableness
+of his Doctrine, and the Propagation of it thro’
+all the World. I willingly allow this to be a
+true Sense, so far as it will go: But ’tis one thing
+to be a true Sense to such a Degree, and another
+thing to be the final Sense and Accomplishment
+of a Prophecy. The Affairs of the first and second
+coming of our Saviour are often mingled
+together in the Prophecies of the <i>Old Testament</i>;
+but in that Mixture there are some Characters
+whereby you may distinguish what belongs
+to his first, and what to his second
+coming; what to the Time when he came
+to suffer, and what to the Time when he shall
+come to reign. For Instance, in these Prophecies
+recited, though there are many Things
+very applicable to his first coming, yet that
+<i>Regality</i> which is often spoken of, and that
+universal Peace and Innocency that will accompany
+it, cannot be verified of his coming in
+the Flesh, seeing it is plain, that in his State
+of Humiliation he did not come as a King, to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>rule over the Nations of the Earth, (<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 21.
+<i>Luke</i> <abbr title='twenty-three'>xxiii.</abbr> 42.) And he says himself expresly,
+<i>That his Kingdom is not of this World</i>, John <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr>
+36. And the Prayer of <i>Salome</i>, and of the good
+Thief upon the Cross, suppose it not then present,
+but to come. Then as to the Establishment
+of <i>Peace</i> in his Kingdom, it does not at all appear
+to me that there is more Peace in the World
+now, than there was before our Saviour came
+into it; or that the Christian Parts of the World
+are more peaceable than the Unchristian. Therefore
+these great Promises of a <i>pacifick Kingdom</i>,
+which are express’d in Terms as high and emphatical
+as can be imagin’d, must belong to some
+other Days, and some other Ages, than what we
+have seen hitherto.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You’ll say, it may be, ’Tis not the Fault of the
+Gospel that the World is not peaceable, but of
+those that profess it, and do not practice it. This
+is true, but it does not answer the Prophecy; for
+that makes no Exception, and by such a Reserve
+as this, you may elude any Prophecy. So the
+<i>Jews</i> say, their <i>Messiah</i> defers his coming beyond
+the Time appointed by Prophecy, because
+of their Sins; but we do not allow this for a
+good Reason. The <i>Israelites</i> had their promised
+<i>Canaan</i>, tho’ they had render’d themselves unworthy
+of it; and by this Method of interpreting
+Prophecies, all the Happiness and Glory promised
+in the Millennial Kingdom of Christ may come
+to nothing, upon a pretended Forfeiture. Threatnings
+indeed may have a tacit Condition;
+God may be better than his Word, and, upon
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>Repentance, divert his Judgments; but he cannot
+be worse than his Word, or fail of Performance,
+when, without any Condition express’d, he promises
+or prophecies good Things to come: This
+would destroy all Assurance of Hope or Faith.
+Lastly, this Prophecy concerning pacifick Times
+or a <i>pacifick Kingdom</i>, is in the lxvth Chapter of
+<i>Isaiah</i>, subjoin’d to the <i>Renovation of the Heavens
+and the Earth</i>, and several Marks of a Change in
+the natural World; which Things we know did
+not come to pass at the first coming of our Saviour;
+there was no Change of Nature then, nor has been
+ever since: And therefore this happy Change, both
+in the natural and moral World, is yet to come.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But, as we said before, we do not speak this
+exclusively of the first coming of our Saviour, as
+to other Parts of these Prophecies; for no doubt
+that was one great Design of them. And in the
+Prophecies of the Old Testament, there are often
+three Gradations, or gradual Accomplishments;
+the first, in some King of <i>Israel</i>, or some Person
+or Affair relating to <i>Israel</i>, as National
+only: The second, in the Messiah at his first
+coming: And the last, in the Messiah, and his
+Kingdom at his second coming. And that which
+we affirm and contend for, is, that the Prophecies
+fore-mentioned have not a final and total Accomplishment,
+either in the Nation of the <i>Jews</i>, or
+at the first coming of our Saviour; and this we
+abide by.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The next Prophet that we mention’d as a
+Witness of the future Kingdom of Christ, is
+<i>David</i>; who, in his <i>Psalms</i>, seems to be pleas’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>with this Subject above all others: And when he
+is most exalted in his Thoughts and prophetical
+Raptures, the Spirit carries him into the Kingdom
+of the Messiah, to contemplate its Glory,
+to sing Praises to its King, and triumph over his
+Enemies, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='sixty-eight'>lxviii.</abbr> <i>Let God arise, let his
+Enemies be scattered; Let them also that hate
+him flee before him: As Smoak is driven away,
+so drive them away; at Wax melteth before the
+Fire, so let the Wicked perish at the Presence of
+God: But let the Righteous be glad</i>, &#38;c. The
+plain Ground he goes upon in this <i>Psalm</i>, is the
+Deliverance out of <i>Ægypt</i>, and bringing the
+<i>Israelites</i> into the Land of <i>Canaan</i>; but when
+he is once upon the Wing, he soars to an higher
+Pitch (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 18.) from the Type to the Antitype;
+to the Days of the Messiah, the Ascension of
+our Saviour; and, at length, to his Kingdom
+and Dominion over all the Earth, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 32, <i>&#38;c.</i>
+The <abbr title='forty-fifth'>xlvth</abbr> <i>Psalm</i> is an <i>Epithalamium</i> to Christ
+and the Church, or to the <i>Lamb</i> and his <i>Spouse</i>.
+And when that will be, and in what State, we
+may learn from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i>, <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 7, 8. and
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 2, 9. Namely, after the Destruction
+of <i>Babylon</i>, in the <i>New Jerusalem</i>’s Glory.
+The Words and Matter of the two Prophets,
+answer to one another. Here, in this <i>Psalm</i>,
+there is a Fight and Victory celebrated as well
+as a Marriage; and so there is in that xixth
+Chapter of Saint <i>John</i>. Here the Prophet
+says, <i>Gird thy Sword upon thy Thigh, O most
+Mighty, with thy Glory and thy Majesty.
+And in thy Majesty ride prosperously because of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>Truth and Meekness and Righteousness; and thy
+right Hand shall teach thee terrible Things. Thy
+Throne, O God, is for ever and ever: The Scepter
+of thy Kingdom is a right Scepter</i>, &#38;c. <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='forty-five'>xlv.</abbr>
+3, 4, 6. There <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says, having describ’d
+a Conqueror on a white Horse, <i>Out of his Mouth
+goeth a sharp Sword, that with it he should smite
+the Nations, and he shall rule them with a Rod
+of Iron; and he treadeth the Wine-press of the
+Fierceness and Wrath of Almighty God: And he
+hath on his Vesture, and on his Thigh a Name
+written, KING of KINGS, and LORD
+of LORDS</i>, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 15, 16. This is the same
+glorious Conqueror and Bridegroom in both Places;
+and this Victory is not gain’d, nor these Nuptials
+compleated, till the second Coming of our Saviour.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In many other <i>Psalms</i> there are Reflections
+upon this happy Kingdom, and the Triumph
+of Christ over his Enemies, as <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr>
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> and <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> and <abbr title='forty-seven'>xlvii.</abbr> and
+<abbr title='eighty-five'>lxxxv.</abbr> and <abbr title='a hundred and ten'>cx.</abbr> and others. In these, and such-like
+<i>Psalms</i>, there are Lineaments and Colours of a
+fairer State than any we have yet seen upon Earth.
+Not but that in their first Instances and Grounds
+they may sometimes respect the State of <i>Israel</i>,
+or the Evangelical State; but the Eye of the Prophet
+goes farther; this does not terminate his
+Sight: His Divine Enthusiasm reaches into another
+World; a World of <i>Peace</i>, and <i>Justice</i>, and <i>Holiness</i>;
+of Joy, and Victory, and Triumph over
+all the Wicked; and consequently such a World,
+as neither we nor our Fathers, have yet seen.
+This is an Account of two Prophets <i>David</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>and <i>Isaiah</i>; and of what they have more openly
+declar’d concerning the future Kingdom of
+Christ. But to verify <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Words, in
+that fore-mention’d Place, <i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21. <i>viz.</i>
+That all of the <i>Holy Prophets since the World
+began</i>, have spoken of the Restauration of all
+Things at the second coming of Christ. I say,
+to verify this Assertion of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, we must
+suppose, that, where the Prophets speak of the
+Restauration and future Glory of <i>Judah</i> and
+<i>Jerusalem</i>, they do, under those Types, represent
+to us the Glory and Happiness of the
+Church in the future Kingdom of Christ:
+And most of the Prophets, in this Sense, and
+under these Forms, have spoken of this Kingdom;
+in foretelling the Restauration of <i>Jerusalem</i>
+and <i>Sion</i>; and happy Days, Peace, Plenty,
+and Prosperity to the People of <i>Israel</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Most of the Prophets, I say, from <i>Moses</i> to
+<i>Malachi</i>, have spoken of this <i>Restauration</i>. <i>Moses</i>,
+in the <abbr title='thirtieth'>xxxth</abbr> of <i><abbr title='Deuteronomy'>Deut.</abbr></i> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 4, 5, 9. <i>David</i> also
+in many of those <i>Psalms</i> we have cited: <i>Isaiah</i>,
+besides the Places fore-mentioned, treats amply
+of this Subject, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr> and in several other
+Places. So likewise the Prophets <i>Ezekiel</i>,
+<i>Daniel</i>, <i>Hosea</i>, <i>Joel</i>, <i>Amos</i>, <i>Obadiah</i>, <i>Micah</i>,
+<i>Zephaniah</i>, <i>Haggai</i>, <i>Zachary</i>, <i>Malachi</i>:
+All these have, either expresly, or under the
+Types of <i>Jerusalem</i> and <i>Sion</i>, foretold happy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>Days, and a glorious Triumph to the Church of
+God. And seeing in the New Testament, and
+in the Prophecies of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, the Christian
+Church is still represented, as under Persecution
+and Distress, till the Fall of Anti-christ, and
+the millennial Kingdom; ’tis then, and not
+till then, that we must expect the full Accomplishment
+of these Prophecies; the <i>Restauration</i>
+that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> says was spoken of, by <i>all the
+Prophets</i>; and the <i>Mystery</i>, which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says
+(<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 7.) was <i>declared by his Servants the
+Prophets, and</i> would be finish’d under the <i>seventh
+Trumpet</i>, which ushers in the Kingdom
+of Christ.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>It would be too long to examine all these Places
+in the Prophets, which you may consult at
+Leisure. However, it cannot seem strange that
+<i>Jerusalem</i> should be us’d in a typical or allegorical
+Sense, seeing we often find such Applications
+of it in the New Testament; as <i><abbr title='Galatians'>Gal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 26.
+<i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 22. <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12. And ’tis very natural
+that <i>Jerusalem restor’d</i>, should signify the same
+thing as <i>new Jerusalem</i>; and therefore that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>John</i>, by his <i>new Jerusalem</i>, intended the same
+thing, or the same State, that the antient Prophets
+did by their Restauration of <i>Jerusalem</i>.
+And it neither can be understood in a literal
+Sense, which, I believe, you will not contend
+for, they must both be interpreted of the future
+Happiness and Glory of the Church in the
+Kingdom of Christ.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to conclude this Point wholly as to Scripture;
+if we make Reflection upon all the Passages
+alledged in this and the foregoing Chapter,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>whether out of the Old or New Testament, we
+must at least acknowledge thus much, that
+there are happy Days, at one time or other:
+Days of Peace and Righteousness; of Joy and
+Triumph, of external Prosperity, and internal
+Sanctity; when Virtue and Innocency shall be
+in the Throne, and Vice and vicious Men out of
+Power or Credit. That there are such happy Days
+prophesied of in Scripture, and promised to the
+Church of God. Whether you call this the
+<i>Reign of Christ</i> and of his Saints or by any other
+Name, it is not material at present to determine;
+let the Title be what you will, as to
+the Substance it cannot be denied to be a general
+Doctrine of prophetical Scripture. And
+we must not imagine, that the Prophets wrote
+like the Poets; feigned an Idea of a romantick
+State, that never was, nor ever will be,
+only to please their own Fancies, or the credulous
+People. Neither is it the State of Heaven
+and eternal Life that is here meant or intended:
+For, besides that they had little or
+no Light concerning those Notions, in the
+Old Testament, the Prophets generally, in
+their Description of this Happiness, either express
+the Earth, or at least give plain Marks
+of a terrestrial State. Wherefore, the only
+Question that remains, is this, <i>Whether</i> these
+happy Days are past already, or to come?
+Whether this blessed State of the Church is
+behind us, or before us? Whether our Predecessors
+have enjoyed it, or our Posterity is to
+expect it? For we are very sure that it is not
+present. The World is full of Wars, and Rumours
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>of Wars; of Vice and Knavery, of Oppression
+and Persecution: and these are things
+directly contrary to the Genius and Characters
+of the State which we look after.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And if we look for it in Times past, we can
+go no farther back than the beginning of Christianity.
+For <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, the last of the Apostles,
+prophesied of these Times, as to come; and
+plac’d them at the End of his System of Prophecies;
+whereby one might conclude, that they are
+not only within the Compass of the Christian
+Ages, but far advanc’d into them. But however,
+not to insist upon that at present, where will you
+find a thousand Years, from the Birth of Christianity
+to this present Age, that deserves the
+Name, or answers to the Characters of this <i>pure</i>
+and <i>pacifick</i> State of the Church? The first Ages
+of Christianity, as they were the most pure, so
+likewise were they the least peaceable; continually,
+more or less, under the Persecution of the
+Heathen Emperors; and so far from being the
+Reign and Empire of Christ and his Saints over
+the Nations, that Christians were then, every
+where, in Subjection or Slavery; a poor, feeble,
+helpless People, thrust into Prisons, or thrown
+to the Lions, at the Pleasure of their Princes or
+Rulers. ’Tis true, when the Empire became
+Christian under <i>Constantine</i>, in the fourth Century,
+there was, for a time, Peace and Prosperity
+in the Church, and a good Degree of Purity
+and Piety; but that Peace was soon disturb’d,
+and that Piety soon corrupted. The
+growing Pride and Ambition of the Ecclesiasticks,
+and their easiness to admit or introduce
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>superstitious Practices, destroy’d the Purity
+of the Church. And as to the Peace of
+it, their Contests about Opinions and Doctrines,
+tore the Christians themselves into
+Pieces; and, soon after, an Inundation of
+barbarous People fell into Christendom, and
+put it all into Flames and Confusion. After
+this Eruption of the <i>Northern</i> Nations, <i>Mahometanism</i>
+rose in the <i>East</i>; and swarms of
+<i>Saracens</i>, like Armies of Locusts, invaded,
+conquer’d, and planted their Religion in several
+Parts of the <i>Roman</i> Empire, and of the
+Christianiz’d World. And can we call such
+Times the Reign of Christ, or the Imprisonment
+of Satan? In the following Ages, the
+<i>Turks</i> overran the <i>Eastern</i> Empire and the
+<i>Greek</i> Church, and still hold that miserable
+People in Slavery. Providence seems to have
+so order’d Affairs, that the Christian World
+should be never without a WOE upon it,
+lest it should fancy it self already in those
+happy Days of Peace and Prosperity, which
+are reserv’d for future Times. Lastly, whosoever
+is sensible of the Corruptions and Persecutions
+of the Church of <i>Rome</i>, since she
+came to her Greatness; whosoever allows her
+to be <i>Mystical Babylon</i>, which must fall before
+the Kingdom of Christ comes on, will
+think that Kingdom duly plac’d by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>
+at the End of his Prophecies, concerning the
+Christian Church; and that there still <i>remains,
+according</i> to the Words of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>,
+(<abbr title='Hebrews'>Heb.</abbr> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 9.) <i>a Sabbatism to the People of
+God</i>.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr></span></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>The Sense and Testimony of the Primitive Church
+concerning the</i> Millennium, <i>or future Kingdom
+of Christ; from the Times of the Apostles
+to the</i> Nicene <i>Council. The second Proposition
+laid down. When, by what Means,
+and for what Reasons, that Doctrine was
+afterwards neglected or discountenanc’d.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>You have heard the Voice of the <i>Prophets</i>
+and <i>Apostles</i>, declaring the future Kingdom
+of Christ: Next to these, the <i>Primitive
+Fathers</i> are accounted of good Authority; let
+us therefore now enquire into their Sense concerning
+this Doctrine, that we may give Satisfaction
+to all Parties; and both those that are
+guided by Scripture alone, and those that have
+a Veneration for Antiquity, may find Proofs
+suitable to their Inclinations and Judgment.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And to make few Words of it, we will lay
+down this Conclusion; <i>That the millennial
+Kingdom of Christ was the general Doctrine
+of the Primitive Church, from the Times of
+the Apostles to the</i> Nicene <i>Council</i>, inclusively.
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> out-liv’d all the rest of the Apostles,
+and towards the latter end of his Life, being
+banish’d into the Isle of <i>Pathmos</i>, he wrote his
+<i>Apocalypse</i>; wherein he hath given us a more
+full and distinct Account of the millennial Kingdom
+of Christ, than any of the Prophets or Apostles
+before him. <i>Papias</i>, Bishop of <i>Hierapolis</i>,
+and Martyr, one of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>’s Auditors, as <i>Ireneus</i>
+testifies, <i>Iren. Lib 5. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 33.</i> taught the same
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>Doctrine after <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>. He was the familiar
+Friend of <i>Polycarp</i>, another of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>’s Disciples;
+and either from him, or immediately
+from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>’s Mouth, he might receive this
+Doctrine. That he taught it in the Church, is
+agreed on by all Hands; both by those that are
+his Followers, as <i>Irenæus</i>; and those that are
+not Well-wishers to this Doctrine, as <i>Eusebius</i>
+and <i>Jerome</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There is also another Channel wherein this
+Doctrine is traditionally deriv’d from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>,
+namely, by the Clergy of <i>Asia</i>; as <i>Irenæus</i>
+tells us in the same Chapter. For, arguing the
+Point, he shews that the Blessing promis’d to
+<i>Jacob</i> from his Father <i>Isaac</i>, was not made
+good to him in this Life, and therefore he says,
+<i>without doubt those Words had a farther Aim
+and Prospect upon the Times of the Kingdom:</i>
+(so they us’d to call the millennial State) <i>when
+the Just rising from the Dead, shall reign; and
+when Nature renew’d and set at Liberty, shall
+yield Plenty and Abundance of all things; being
+blest with the Dew of Heaven, and a great
+Fertility of the Earth according as has been
+related by those Ecclesiaticks or Clergy, who saw
+S.</i> John, <i>the Disciple of Christ; and heard of him
+WHAT OUR LORD HAD TAUGHT
+CONCERNING THOSE TIMES</i>. This
+you see, goes to the Fountain Head: The Christian
+Clergy receive it from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>John</i> relates it from the Mouth of our Saviour.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the original Authority of this
+Doctrine, as a Tradition; that it was from
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and by him from Christ. And as to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>the Propagation and prevailing of it in the Primitive
+Church, we can bring a Witness beyond
+all exception, <i>Justin Martyr</i>, cotemporary
+with <i>Irenæus</i>, and his Senior. He says, <i>that
+himself, and all the Orthodox Christians of his
+Time, did acknowledge the Resurrection of the
+Flesh</i> (suppose the first Resurrection) <i>and a
+thousand Years reign in</i> Jerusalem <i>restor’d</i>, or in the
+new Jerusalem, <i>Dial. with</i> Tryphon <i>the Jew</i>.
+<i>According as the Prophets</i> Ezekiel, <i>and</i> Isaiah,
+<i>and others, attest with common Consent</i>. As
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> had said before, <i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21. <i>That all
+the Prophets had spoken of it.</i> Then he quotes
+the <abbr title='sixty-fifth'>lxvth</abbr> <i>Chapter</i> of <i>Isaiah</i>, which is a Bulwark
+for this Doctrine, that never can be broken.
+And to shew the <i>Jew</i>, with whom he had
+this Discourse, that it was the Sense of our
+Prophets, as well as of theirs, he tells him,
+that <i>a certain Man amongst us Christians, by
+Name</i> John, <i>one of the Apostles of Christ, in a
+Revelation made to him did prophesy, that the
+faithful Believers in Christ should live a thousand
+Years in the</i> New Jerusalem; <i>and after
+that should be the general Resurrection and Day
+of Judgment</i>. Thus you have the Thoughts
+and Sentiments of <i>Justin Martyr</i>, as to himself;
+as to all the reputed Orthodox of his
+Time; as to the Sense of the Prophets in the
+Old Testament, and as to the Sense of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>
+in the <i>Apocalypse</i>; all conspiring in Confirmation
+of the millennary Doctrine.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To these three Witnesses, <i>Papias</i>, <i>Irenæus</i>
+and <i>Justin Martyr</i>, we may add two more
+within the second Age of the Church; <i>Melito</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>Bishop of <i>Sardis</i>, and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Barnabas</i>, or whosoever
+was the Author of the Epistle under his
+Name. This <i>Melito</i>, by some, is thought
+to be the Angel of the Church of <i>Sardis</i>, to
+whom <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> directs the Epistle to that
+Church, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 1. but I do not take him
+to be so ancient; however, he was Bishop of
+that Place, at least in the second Century,
+and a Person of great Sanctity and Learning:
+He wrote many Books, as you may see in
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i>; and, as he notes out of <i>Tertullian</i>,
+<i>was by most Christians reputed a Prophet</i>
+(<i>De Script. Eccles. Dogm. Eccl.</i> <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> <abbr title='fifty-five'>lv.</abbr>)
+He was also a declar’d <i>Millennary</i>, and is recorded
+as such, both by <i>Jerome</i> and <i>Gennadius</i>.
+As to the Epistle of <i>Barnabas</i>, which
+we mention’d, it must be very ancient, whosoever
+is the Author of it, and before the third
+Century; seeing it is often cited by <i>Clemens
+Alexandrinus</i>, who was himself within the
+second Century: The Genius of it is very
+much <i>Millennarian</i>, in the Interpretation of the
+<i>Sabbath</i>, the <i>promis’d Land</i>, a <i>Day</i> for a <i>thousand
+Years</i>, and concerning the <i>Renovation of
+the World</i>. In all which, he follows the Footsteps
+of the Orthodox of those Times; that is,
+of the <i>Millennarians</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the first and second Centuries
+of the Church. By which short Account it
+appears, that the millennary Doctrine was <i>Orthodox</i>
+and <i>Catholick</i> in those early Days; for
+these Authors do not set it down as a private
+Opinion of their own, but as a <i>Christian Doctrine</i>,
+or an <i>Apostolical Tradition</i>. ’Tis remarkable
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>what <i>Papias</i> says of himself, and
+his way of Learning, in his Book call’d, <i>The
+Explanation of the Words of the Lord</i>, as
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> gives an Account of it: (<i>De
+Script. Eccles.</i>) He says in his Preface, <i>He did
+not follow various Opinions, but had the Apostles
+for his Authors: And that he consider’d
+what</i> Andrew, <i>and what</i> Peter <i>said;
+what</i> Philip, <i>what</i> Thomas, <i>and other Disciples
+of the Lord; as also what</i> Aristion,
+<i>and</i> John <i>the Senior, Disciples of the Lord,
+what they spoke. And that he did not profit
+so much by reading Books, as by the living
+Voice of these Persons, which resounded
+from them to that Day.</i> This hath very much
+the Air of Truth and Sincerity, and of a Man
+that, in good earnest, sought after the Christian
+Doctrine, from those that were the most
+authentick Teachers of it. I know <i>Eusebius</i>,
+in his <i>Ecclesiastical History</i>, gives a double
+Character of this <i>Papias</i>; in one Place he calls
+him, <i>A very eloquent Man in all Things, and
+skilful in Scripture</i>; and in another, he makes
+him a Man of a <i>small Understanding</i>, (<i>Vid.</i> Hieron.
+<i>Epist.</i> 28. <i>ad</i> Lucinium.) But what Reason
+there is to suspect <i>Eusebius</i> of Partiality in
+this Point of the <i>Millennium</i>, we shall make appear
+hereafter. However, we do not depend
+upon the Learning of <i>Papias</i>, or the Depth of
+his Understanding; allow him but to be an honest
+Man and a fair Witness, and ’tis all we
+desire. And we have little reason to question
+his Testimony in this Point, seeing it is back’d
+by others of good Credit; and all because
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>there is no Counter-Evidence, nor any Witness
+that appears against him: For there is
+not extant, either the Writing, Name, or
+Memory, of any Person that contested this
+Doctrine in the first or second Century: I say,
+that call’d in question this millennary Doctrine,
+propos’d after a Christian Manner, unless such
+Hereticks as denied the Resurrection wholly,
+or such Christians as deny’d the Divine Authority
+of the <i>Apocalypse</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We proceed now to the third Century;
+where you find <i>Tertullian</i>, <i>Origen</i>, <i>Victorinus</i>,
+Bishop and Martyr; <i>Nepos Ægyptius</i>, <i>Cyprian</i>,
+and, at the End of it, <i>Lactantius</i>; all
+openly professing, or implicitly favouring, the
+millennary Doctrine. We do not mention
+<i>Clemens Alexandrinus</i>, contemporary with
+<i>Tertullian</i>, because he hath not any thing,
+that I know of, expresly either for, or against
+the <i>Millennium</i>: But he takes notice that the
+<i>Seventh Day</i> hath been accounted <i>Sacred</i>, both
+by the <i>Hebrews</i> and <i>Greeks</i>, because of the
+<i>Revolution</i> of the <i>World</i>, and the <i>Renovation
+of all Things</i>. And giving this as a Reason
+why they kept that Day <i>holy</i>, seeing there is
+not a Revolution of the World, every seven
+Days, it can be in no other Sense than as the
+<i>Seventh Day</i> represents the <i>seventh Millennary</i>,
+in which the Renovation of the World and the
+Kingdom of Christ, is to be. As to <i>Tertullian</i>,
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> reckons him, in the first place, amongst
+the <i>Latin Millennaries</i>. And tho’ his
+Book, about the <i>Hope</i> of the <i>Faithful</i>, as also
+that about <i>Paradise</i>, which should have given
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>us the greatest Light in this Affair, be both
+lost or suppress’d; yet there are sufficient Indications
+of his millennary Opinion in his Tracts
+against <i>Marcion</i>, and against <i>Hermogenes</i>.
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Cyprian</i> was <i>Tertullian</i>’s Admirer, and inclines
+to the same Opinion, so far as one can
+judge, in this particular; for his Period of
+<i>six thousand Years</i>, and making the <i>seventh
+Millennary</i> the consummation of all, is wholly
+according to the Analogy of the millennary
+Doctrine. As to the two Bishops, <i>Victorinus</i>
+and <i>Nepos</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> vouches for them:
+The Writings of the one are lost, and of the
+other so chang’d, that the Sense of the Author
+does not appear there now. But <i>Lactantius</i>,
+whom we nam’d in the last Place, does openly
+and profusely teach this Doctrine, in his
+<i>Divine Institutions</i>, (Book <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr>) and with the
+same Assurance that he does other Parts of the
+Christian Doctrine; for he concludes thus,
+speaking of the <i>Millennium</i>, <i>This is the Doctrine
+of the holy Prophets, which we Christians
+follow; this is our Wisdom</i>, &#38;c. Yet he acknowledges
+there, that it was kept as a Mystery
+or Secret amongst the Christians, lest
+the Heathens should make any perverse or
+odious Interpretation of it. And for the same
+or like Reason, I believe, the Book of the
+<i>Apocalypse</i> was kept out of the Hands of the
+Vulgar for some time, and not read publickly,
+lest it should be found to have spoken too openly
+of the Fate of the <i>Roman</i> Empire, or of this
+millennial State.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the first, second, and third
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>Centuries of the Church: But by our Conclusion,
+we engag’d to make out this Proof as
+far as the <i>Nicene Council</i>, inclusively. The <i>Nicene
+Council</i> was about the Year of Christ 325.
+and we may reasonably suppose <i>Lactantius</i> was
+then living; at least he came within the Time of
+<i>Constantine</i>’s Empire. But however, the Fathers
+of that Council are themselves our Witnesses in
+this Point; for in their <i>Ecclesiastical Forms</i> or
+<i>Constitutions</i>, in the Chapter <i>about the Providence
+of God</i>, and <i>about the World</i>, they speak
+thus: <i>The World was made meaner, or less perfect,
+providentially; for God foresaw that Man
+would Sin: Wherefore we expect new Heavens
+and a new Earth, according to the holy Scriptures,
+at the Appearance and Kingdom of the great
+God, and our Saviour Jesus Christ.</i> And then,
+as <i>Daniel</i> says (<abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 18.) <i>The Saints of
+the most High shall take the Kingdom, and
+the Earth shall be pure, holy, the Land of the
+Living, not of the Dead.</i> <i>Which</i> David <i>foreseeing
+by the Eye of Faith</i>, cries out, (<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-seven'>xxvii.</abbr>
+13.) <i>I believe to see the good Things of the
+Lord, in the Land of the Living. Our Saviour
+says, happy are the Meek, for they shall inherit
+the Earth</i>, <abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 5. <i>And the Prophet</i>
+Isaiah <i>says</i>, (<abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-six'>xxvi.</abbr> 6.) <i>the Feet of the meek
+and lowly shall tread upon it</i>. So you see, according
+to the Judgment of these Fathers, there
+will be a Kingdom of Christ upon Earth; and
+moreover, that it will be in the <i>new Heavens</i>
+and the <i>new Earth</i>: And, in both these
+Points, they cite the Prophets, and our Saviour
+in Confirmation of them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>Thus we have discharg’d our Promise, and
+given you an account of the Doctrine of the
+<i>Millennium</i>, or future Kingdom of Christ,
+throughout the three first Ages of the Church,
+before any considerable Corruptions were
+crept into the Christian Religion. And those
+Authorities of single and successive Fathers,
+we have seal’d up all together, with the Declaration
+of the <i>Nicene</i> Fathers, in a Body. Those
+that think Tradition a Rule of Faith, or a
+considerable Motive to it, will find it hard
+to turn off the Force of these Testimonies:
+And those that do not go so far, but yet have
+a Reverence for Antiquity and the Primitive
+Church, will not easily produce better Authorities,
+more early, more numerous, or more
+uncontradicted, for any Article that is not
+fundamental: Yet these are but Seconds to
+the Prophets and Apostles, who are truly the
+Principals in this Cause. I will leave them
+all together, to be examin’d and weigh’d by the
+impartial Reader. And because they seem to
+me to make a full and undeniable Proof, I will
+now, at the Foot of the Account, set down our
+second Proposition, which is this, <i>That there
+is a millennial State, or a future Kingdom of
+Christ and his Saints, prophesied of and promised,
+in the Old and New Testament; and
+receiv’d by the Primitive Church as a Christian
+and Catholick Doctrin.</i> (Propos. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr>)</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Having dispatch’d this main Point;
+to conclude the Chapter and this Head
+of our Discourse, it will be some Satisfaction
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>possibly to see, <i>How</i> a Doctrine so generally
+receiv’d and approv’d came to decay, and almost
+wear out of the Church, in following
+Ages. The Christian millennary Doctrine
+was not call’d into Question, so far as appears
+from History, before the middle of the third
+Century; when <i>Dionysius Alexandrinus</i> wrote
+against <i>Nepos</i>, an <i>Ægyptian</i> Bishop, who had
+declar’d himself upon that Subject. But we
+do not find that this Book had any great Effect;
+for the Declaration or Constitution of
+the <i>Nicene Fathers</i> was after; and in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i>’s
+Time, who wrote towards the End of
+the fourth Century, this Doctrine had so
+much Credit, that he, who was its greatest
+Adversary, yet durst not condemn it, as he
+says himself; <i>Quæ licet non sequamur, tamen
+damnare non possumus; quia multi Ecclesiasticorum
+virorum &#38; martyres ista dixerunt: Which
+Things or Doctrines</i>, speaking of the Millennium,
+<i>tho’ we do not follow, yet we cannot
+condemn; because many of our Churchmen,
+and Martyrs have affirmed these things</i>. And
+when <i>Apollinarius</i> reply’d to that Book of
+<i>Dionysius</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> says, that, <i>not only
+those of his own Sect, but a great Multitude
+of other Christians did agree with</i> Apollinarius
+<i>in that particular: Ut presagâ mente jam
+cernam, quantorum in me rabies concitanda
+sit; That now I foresee, how many will be enrag’d
+against me, for what I have spoken against
+the millennary Doctrine</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We may therefore conclude that in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i>’s
+Time the Millennaries made the greater
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>Party in the Church; for a little Matter would
+not have frighted him from censuring their
+Opinions. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> was a rough and rugged
+Saint, and an unfair Adversary, that usually
+run down with Heat and Violence, what
+stood in his Way. As to his Unfairness, he
+shews it sufficiently in this very Cause, for he
+generally represents the millennary Doctrine
+after a <i>Judaical</i>, rather than a <i>Christian</i> Manner.
+And in reckoning up the chief Patrons
+of it, he always skips <i>Justin Martyr</i>; who
+was not a Man so obscure as to be over-look’d:
+And he was a Man that had declar’d himself
+sufficiently upon this Point; for he says, <i>Both
+himself and all the Orthodox of his time, were
+of that Judgment</i>, and applies both the <i>Apocalypse</i>
+of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and the <abbr title='sixty-fifth'>lxvth</abbr> Chapter of
+<i>Isaiah</i>, for the Proof of it; as we noted before.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> was an open Enemy to this
+Doctrine, so <i>Eusebius</i> was a back Friend to it;
+and represented every thing to its Disadvantage,
+so far as was tolerably consistent with the
+Fairness of an Historian. He gives a slight
+Character of <i>Papias</i>, without any Authority
+for it; and brings in one <i>Gaius</i>, that makes
+<i>Cerinthus</i> to be the Author of the <i>Apocalypse</i>
+and of the <i>Millennium</i> (<i>Eccles. Hist.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 32.)
+and calls the Visions there, Τερετολογίας, <i>monstrous
+Stories</i>. He himself is willing to shuffle
+off that Book from <i>John</i> the <i>Evangelist</i> to another
+<i>John</i> a <i>Presbyter</i>; and to shew his Skill
+in the Interpretation of it, (<i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> 3. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 32. <i>de vit.
+Constan.</i>) he makes the <i>new Jerusalem</i> in the
+<abbr title='twenty-first'>xxith</abbr> Chapter to be <i>Constantine’s Jerusalem</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>when he turn’d the Heathen Temples there
+into Christian: A wonderful Invention. As
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> by his Flouts, so <i>Eusebius</i>, by sinister
+Insinuations, endeavour’d to lessen the
+Reputation of this Doctrine; and the Art they
+both us’d was, to misrepresent it as <i>Judaical</i>.
+But we must not cast off every Doctrine which
+the <i>Jews</i> believ’d, only for that Reason; for
+we have the same Oracles which they had,
+and the same Prophets; and they have collected
+from them the same general Doctrine
+that we have, namely, that <i>there will be an
+happy and pacifick State of the Church, in future
+Times</i>. But as to the Circumstances of
+this State we differ very much: They suppose
+the <i>Mosaical</i> Law will be restor’d, with all its
+Pomp, Rites, and Ceremonies: whereas we
+suppose the Christian Worship, or something
+more perfect, will then take Place. Yet
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> has the Confidence, even there
+where he speaks of the many Christian Clergy
+and Martyrs that held this Doctrine; has the
+Confidence, I say, to represent it, as if they
+held that <i>Circumcision</i>, <i>Sacrifices</i>, and all the
+<i>Judaical</i> Rites, should then be restor’d. Which
+seems to me to be a great Slander, and a great
+Instance how far Mens Passions will carry them,
+in misrepresenting an Opinion, which they
+have a Mind to disgrace.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But as we have Reason to blame the Partiality
+of those that opposed this Doctrine; so,
+on the other Hand, we cannot excuse the Patrons
+of it from all Indiscretions. I believe
+they might partly themselves make it obnoxious;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>by mixing some things with it, from
+pretended Traditions, or the Books of the
+<i>Sybills</i>, or other private Authorities, that had
+so sufficient warrant from Scripture; and
+things, sometimes, that Nature would not
+easily bear. Besides, in latter Ages, they seem
+to have dropt one half of the Doctrine, namely,
+the <i>Renovation of Nature</i>, which <i>Irenæus</i>,
+<i>Justin Martyr</i>, and the Antients, join inseparably
+with the <i>Millennium</i>: And by this Omission,
+the Doctrine hath been made less intelligible,
+and one Part of it inconsistent with
+another. And when their Pretensions were
+to reign upon this present Earth, and in this
+present State of Nature, it gave a Jealousy
+to temporal Princes, and gave occasion likewise
+to many of Fanatical Spirits, under the
+Notion of Saints, to aspire to Dominion,
+after a violent and tumultuary Manner. This
+I reckon as one great Cause that brought the
+Doctrine into Discredit. But I hope by reducing
+of it to the true State, we shall cure this
+and other Abuses for the future.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, It never pleas’d the Church of <i>Rome</i>;
+and so far as the Influence and Authority of
+that would go, you may be sure it would be
+depress’d and discountenanced. I never yet
+met with a Popish Doctor that held the <i>Millennium</i>;
+and <i>Baronius</i> would have it to pass
+for an Heresy, and <i>Papias</i> for the Inventor of
+it; whereas, if <i>Irenæus</i> may be credited, it
+was receiv’d from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and by him from
+the Mouth of our Saviour. And neither <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>Jerome</i>, nor his friend Pope <i>Damasus</i>, durst
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>ever condemn it for an <i>Heresy</i>. It was always
+indeed uneasy, and gave Offence to
+the Church of <i>Rome</i>; because it does not suit
+to that Scheme of Christianity, which they
+have drawn. They suppose Christ reigns already,
+by his Vicar, the Pope; and treads
+upon the Necks of Emperors and Kings: And
+if they could but suppress the <i>Northern Heresy</i>,
+as they call it, they do not know what a
+<i>Millennium</i> would signify, or how the Church
+could be in an happier Condition than she is.
+The <i>Apocalyse</i> of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> does suppose
+the true Church under hardship and Persecution,
+more or less, for the greatest Part of the Christian
+Ages; namely, for 1260 Years, while
+the Witnesses are in sack-cloth. But the
+Church of <i>Rome</i> hath been in prosperity and
+Greatness, and the commanding Church in
+Christendom, for so long, or longer, and hath
+rul’d the Nations with a Rod of Iron; so as
+that Mark of the true Church does not favour
+her at all. And the <i>Millennium</i> being properly
+a Reward and Triumph for those that come
+out of Persecution, such as have liv’d always
+in Pomp and Prosperity, can pretend to no
+Share in it, or Benefit by it. This has made
+the Church of <i>Rome</i> have always an ill Eye
+upon this Doctrine, because it seem’d to have
+an ill Eye upon her; And as she grew in
+Splendor and Greatness, she eclips’d and obscur’d
+it more and more; so that it would
+have been lost out of the World as an obsolete
+Error, it it had not been revived by
+some of the Reformation.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr></span></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>The true State of the Millennium, according
+to Characters taken from Scripture; some
+Mistakes concerning it examin’d.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We have made sufficient Proof of a millennial
+State, from Scripture and Antiquity;
+and upon that firm Basis have settled
+our second Proposition. We should now determine
+the <i>Time</i> and <i>Place</i> of this future
+Kingdom of Christ: not whether it is to be
+in Heaven, or upon Earth; for that we suppose
+determin’d already; but whether it is to
+be in the present Earth, and under the present
+Constitution of Nature, or in the <i>new Heavens</i>,
+and <i>new Earth</i>, which are promis’d
+after the <i>Conflagration</i>: This is to make our
+<i>third Proposition</i>: And I should have proceeded
+immediately to the Examination of it, but
+that I imagine it will give us some Light in
+this Affair, if we enquire farther into the true
+State of the <i>Millennium</i>, before we determine
+its Time and Place.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have already noted some <i>moral</i> Characters
+of the millennial State; and the great <i>natural</i>
+Character of it is this in general, that
+it will be <i>Paradisaical</i>; free from all Inconveniencies,
+either of external Nature, or of our
+own Bodies. For my part, I do not understand,
+how there can be any considerable Degree
+of Happiness without <i>Indolency</i>; nor
+how there can be <i>Indolency</i>, while we have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>such Bodies as we have now, and such an external
+Constitution of Nature. And as there
+must be <i>Indolency</i>, where there is Happiness;
+so there must not be <i>Indigency</i>, or want of any
+due Comforts of Life: For where there is
+<i>Indigency</i>, there is Solicitude, and Distraction,
+and Uneasiness, and Fear; Passions that do as
+naturally disquiet the Soul, as Pain does the
+Body. Therefore Indolency and Plenty seem
+to be two essential Ingredients of every happy
+State; and these two, in Conjunction, make
+that State we call <i>Paradisaical</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now the Scripture seems plainly to exempt
+the Sons of the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, or of the <i>Millennium</i>,
+from all <i>Pain</i> or <i>Want</i>, in those Words,
+<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 4. <i>And God shall wipe away all
+Tears from their Eyes: And there shall be no
+more Death, neither Sorrow, nor crying; neither
+shall there be any more Pain: For the former
+Things are passed away.</i> And the Lord of that
+Kingdom, <i>He that sat upon the Throne</i>, said,
+<i>Behold I make all Things new</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 5. This
+Renovation is a Restauration to some former
+State; and I hope, not that State of Indigency
+and Misery, and Diseasedness, which we languish
+under at present; but to that pristine
+<i>Paradisaical</i> State, which was the Blessing of
+the first Heavens and the first Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As Health and Plenty are the Blessings of
+Nature; so, in Civil Affairs, <i>Peace</i> is the greatest
+Blessing: And this is inseparably annex’d
+to the <i>Millennium</i>; an indelible Character of
+the Kingdom of Christ. And by <i>Peace</i>, we
+understand not only Freedom from Persecution
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>upon religious Accounts, but that <i>Nation
+shall not rise up against Nation</i>, upon any
+Account whatsoever. That bloody Monster,
+<i>War</i>, that hath devoured so many Millions of
+the Sons of <i>Adam</i>, is now at length to be
+chain’d up; and the Furies, that run throughout
+the Earth, with their Snakes and Torches,
+shall be thrown into the Abyss, to sting and
+prey upon one another: All evil and mischievous
+Passions shall be extinguished; and that
+not in Men only, but even in brute Creatures,
+according to the Prophets. <i>The Lamb and the
+Lion shall lie down together, and the sucking
+Child shall play with the Basilisk.</i> Happy
+Days, when not only the Temple of <i>Janus</i>
+shall be shut up for a thousand Years, and the
+<i>Nations shall beat their Swords into Plowshares</i>;
+but all Enmities and Antipathies shall
+cease, all Acts of Hostility, throughout all
+Nature. And this universal Peace is a Demonstration
+also of the former Character, <i>universal
+Plenty</i>; for where there is a Want
+and Necessitousness, there will be quarrelling.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Fourthly, ’Tis a Kingdom of Righteousness,
+as well as of Peace: these also must go together:
+For unrighteous Persons will not live
+long in Peace, no more than indigent Persons.
+The <i>Psalmist</i> therefore joins them together;
+and <i>Plenty</i>, also, as their necessary Preservative,
+in his Description of the Kingdom of
+Christ, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighty-five'>lxxxv.</abbr> 10, 11, 12. <i>Mercy and Truth
+are met together: Righteousness and Peace
+have kissed each other. Truth shall spring out
+of the Earth, and Righteousness shall look down
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>from Heaven. Yea, the Lord shall give good,
+and our Land shall yield her Increase.</i> This
+will not be a Medley-State, as the present
+World is, good and bad mingled together; but
+<i>a chosen Generation</i>, <i>a royal Priesthood</i>, <i>an holy
+Nation</i>, <i>a peculiar People</i>. Those that have
+a Part in the first Resurrection, the Scripture
+pronounceth them <i>Holy</i> and <i>Blessed</i>; and says,
+<i>The second Death shall have no Power over
+them.</i> Satan is also bound and shut up in the
+bottomless Pit, and has no Liberty of tempting
+or seducing this People, for a thousand Years:
+but at the End of that Time, he will meet
+with a degenerate Crew, separate and Aliens
+to the holy City, that will make War against
+it, and perish in the Attempt. In a word, those
+that are to enjoy this State, are always distinguish’d
+from the Multitude, as People redeemed
+from the Earth, (<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 9.) that have
+wash’d their Robes, and made them white in the
+Blood of the Lamb; and are represented as Victors
+over the World; with such other Characters
+as are incompatible to any but the Righteous,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 14. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 3, 4. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 27.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Fifthly, This will be a State under a peculiar
+divine Presence and Conduct. It is not easy
+indeed to determine the Manner of this Presence;
+but the Scripture plainly implies some
+extraordinary divine Presence to enlighten and
+enliven that State. When the <i>new Jerusalem</i>
+was come down, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 3.
+<i>And I heard a great voice out of Heaven,
+saying, behold the Tabernacle of God is with
+Men; and he will dwell with them, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>they shall be his People; and God himself shall be
+with them, and be their God.</i> And the like is promis’d
+to the Palm-bearing Company, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 19.
+where they are admitted to the Privileges of the
+<i>new Jerusalem</i>. When our Saviour was incarnate,
+and vouchsafed to dwell amongst the Children
+of Men, the same Phrase is us’d by this same
+Author, ἐσχήνωσε. <i><abbr title='John'>Joh.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 14. <i>The Word was made
+Flesh, and tabernacled amongst us; and we beheld
+his Glory</i>, &#38;c. We read it, <i>He dwelt amongst
+us</i>, but render’d more closely, it is, <i>He</i>
+set his <i>Tabernacle amongst us</i>. And that which
+the <i>Hebrews</i> call the שכינה <i>Shekinah</i>, or <i>divine
+Presence</i>, <i>Maimon. Mor. Nev. par.</i> 1. <i>c.</i> 25
+comes from a Word of the like Signification
+and Sound with the <i>Greek</i> Word here us’d.
+Therefore there will be a <i>Shekinah</i> in that Kingdom
+of Christ; but as to the Mode of it, I am
+very willing to confess my Ignorance.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The last Character that belongs to this State,
+or rather to those that enjoy it, is, that they are
+<i>Kings and Priests unto God</i>. This is a Character
+often repeated in Scripture, and therefore
+the more to be regarded. It occurs thrice in
+the <i>Apocalypse</i> in formal Terms, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 6. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr>
+10. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 6. And as to the Regal Dignity
+apart, that is farther exprest, either by the <i>Donation
+of a Kingdom</i>, as in <i>Daniel</i>’s Phrase,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 18, 22, 27. Or by <i>placing upon
+Thrones</i>, with a judicial Power; which is the
+New Testament Style, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28. <i>Luke</i> <abbr title='twenty-two'>xxii.</abbr>
+29, 30. <i>Rev.</i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 4. These two Titles, no doubt,
+are intended to comprehend the highest Honours
+that we are capable of; these being the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>highest Dignities in every Kingdom; and such
+as were by the Antients, both in the <i>East</i> and
+in the <i>West</i>, commonly united in one and the
+same Person; Their Kings being Priests, like
+<i>Melchisedeck</i>, or, as the <i>Roman</i> Emperor was,
+<i>Pontifex Maximus</i>. But as to the sacerdotal
+Character, that seems chiefly to respect the
+Temper of the Mind; to signify a People dedicated
+to God and his Service, separate from the
+World, and from secular Affairs, spending their
+time in Devotion and Contemplation, which
+will be the great Employments of that happy
+State. For where there is Ease, Peace, and Plenty
+of all Things, refin’d Bodies, and purified Minds,
+there will be more Inclination to intellectual
+Exercises and Entertainments; which they may
+attend upon, without any Distraction, having
+neither Want, Pain, nor worldly Business.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Title of <i>King</i> implies a Confluence of
+all Things that constitute temporal Happiness.
+’Tis the highest thing we can wish any in this
+World, to be a King; So as the <i>Regal</i> Dignity
+seems to comprehend all the Goods of Fortune,
+or external Felicity, and the <i>Sacerdotal</i>, the
+Goods of the Mind, or internal; both which
+concur in the Constitution of true Happiness.
+There is also a further Force and Emphasis in
+this Notion <i>of the Saints being made Kings</i>, if
+we consider it <i>comparatively</i>, with respect to
+what they were before in this World; where
+they were not only mean and despicable, in
+Subjection and Servility, but often under Persecution,
+abus’d and trampled upon by the Secular
+and Ecclesiastical Powers. But now the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>Scene is chang’d, and you see the reverse of
+Providence, according as <i>Abraham</i> said to the
+Rich-Man; <i>Son, remember that thou in thy
+Life time receivedst thy good things, and likewise</i>
+Lazarus <i>evil things: But now he is comforted,
+and thou art tormented.</i> Now they are
+set upon Thrones and Tribunals, who were before
+arraigned as Criminals, and brought before
+tyrannical Judicatures: They are now Laws
+and Law-givers to themselves, in a true State
+of Royal Liberty, neither under the Domination
+of evil Men, nor of their own evil Passions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Some possibly may think, that this high
+Character of <i>being made Priests</i> and <i>Kings
+to God</i>, is not general to all that enjoy the <i>Millennium</i>;
+but a Prerogative belonging to the Apostles
+and some of the chief Martyrs, who are
+eminently rewarded for their eminent Services.
+But Scripture as far as I perceive, applies it to
+all that inherit that Kingdom. <i>The redeemed
+out of every Kindred, and Tongue, and People,
+and Nation</i>, are made <i>Kings and Priests to God,
+and shall reign on the Earth</i>, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 9, 10,
+And in the <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 6. all the Sons of the
+first Resurrection are made <i>Priests of God, and
+shall reign with him a thousand Years</i>. Here is
+no Distinction or Discrimination thus far: Not
+that we suppose an unversal Equality of Conditions
+in the millennial State; but as to all
+these Characters which we have given of it, I
+do not perceive that they are restrain’d or confin’d
+by Scripture to single Persons, but make
+the general Happiness of that State, and are the
+Portion of every one that is admitted into the
+<i>new Jerusalem</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>Others possibly may think that this Privilege
+of the <i>first Resurrection</i> is not common
+to all that enjoy the millennial State. For
+tho’ <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, who is the only Person that hath
+made express mention of the <i>first Resurrection</i>,
+and of the <i>thousand Years Reign of</i> Christ,
+does join these two as the same thing, and
+common to the same Persons; yet I know there
+are some that would distinguish them as things
+of a different Extent, and also of a different
+Nature. They suppose the Martyrs only will
+rise from the Dead, and will be immediately
+translated into Heaven, and there pass their
+<i>Millennium</i> in celestial Glory; while the Church
+is still here below, in her <i>Millennium</i>, such as
+it is: A State indeed better than ordinary, and
+free from Persecution, but obnoxious to all the
+Inconveniences of our present mortal Life, and
+a Medley of good and bad People, without Separation.
+This is such an Idea of the <i>Millennium</i>,
+as, to my Eye, hath neither Beauty in it, nor
+Foundation in Scripture. That the Citizens
+of the <i>new Jerusalem</i> are not a miscellaneous
+Company, but a Community of righteous
+Persons, we have noted before, and that the
+State of Nature will be better than it is at
+present. But, besides this, what Warrant have
+they for this Ascension of the Martyrs into
+Heaven at that Time? Where do we read of
+that in Scripture? And in those things that are
+not Matters of natural Order, but of divine
+Oeconomy, we ought to be very careful how
+we add to Scripture.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Scripture speaks only of the Resurrection
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>of the Martyrs, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 45. but not a
+Word concerning their Ascension into Heaven.
+Will that be visible? We read of our Saviour’s
+Resurrection and Ascension, and therefore we
+have Reason to affirm them both. We read
+also of the Resurrection and Ascension of the
+<i>Witnesses</i>, (<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr>) in a figurative Sense; and
+in that Sense we may assert them upon good
+Grounds. But as to the Martyrs, we read of
+their Resurrection only, without any thing exprest
+or imply’d about their Ascension. By
+what Authority then shall we add this new
+Notion to the History or Scheme of the <i>Millennium</i>?
+The Scripture, on the contrary,
+makes mention of the Descent of the <i>new
+Jerusalem</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 2. making the Earth the
+Theatre of all that Affair: And the Camp
+of the Saints is upon the Earth, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 9. and
+these Saints are the same Persons, so far as can
+be collected from the Text, that rose <i>from the
+Dead, and reign’d with Christ</i>, and were <i>Priests
+to God</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 4, 5, 6. Neither is there any Distinction
+made, that I find, by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, of two
+sorts of Saints in the <i>Millennium</i>, the one in
+Heaven, and the other upon Earth. Lastly,
+the four and twenty Elders, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 10. tho’
+they were <i>Kings</i> and <i>Priests unto God</i>, were
+content to reign upon Earth. Now who can
+you suppose of a superior Order to these four
+and twenty Elders? Whether they represent
+the twelve Patriarchs and twelve Apostles, or
+whomsoever they represent, they are plac’d
+next to him that sits upon the Throne, and
+they have Crowns of Gold upon their Heads,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span><i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 4. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 16. There can be no Marks
+of Honour and Dignity greater than these are;
+and therefore seeing these highest Dignitaries in
+the Millennium or future Kingdom of Christ,
+are to reign upon Earth, there is no Ground
+to suppose the Assumption of any other into
+Heaven, upon that Account, or upon that
+Occasion.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is a short and general Draught of the
+millennial State, or future Reign of the Saints,
+according to Scripture. Wherein I have endeavour’d
+to rectify some Mistakes or Misconceptions
+about it; that viewing it in its true
+Nature, we may be the better able to judge,
+when and where it will obtain: which is the
+next Thing to be consider’d.</p>
+<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='eight'>VIII.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The third Proposition laid down, concerning
+the Time and Place of the</i> Millennium:
+<i>Several Arguments us’d, to prove, that
+it cannot be till after the Conflagration;
+and that the new Heavens and the new
+Earth are the true Seat of the blessed</i>
+Millennium.</p>
+<p class='c004'>We now come to the third and last Head
+of our Discourse; to determine the
+<i>Time</i> and <i>Place</i> of the <i>Millennium</i>. And seeing
+it is indifferent, whether the Proofs lead or
+follow the Conclusion, we will lay down the
+Conclusion in the first Place, that our Business
+may be more in View; and back it with Proofs
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>in the following Part of the Chapter. Our
+third and last Proposition therefore is this,
+<i>That the blessed Millennium, Propos. 3.</i> (properly
+so called) <i>according as it is describ’d in
+Scripture, cannot obtain in the present Earth,
+nor under the present Constitution of Nature
+and Providence; but it is to be celebrated in the
+new Heavens and new Earth, after the Conflagration.</i>
+This Proposition it may be, will
+seem a Paradox or Singularity to many, even
+of those that believe a <i>Millennium</i>: We will
+therefore make it the Business of this Chapter,
+to state it, and prove it, by such Arguments as
+are manifestly founded in Scripture and in
+Reason.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And to prevent Mistakes, we must premise
+this in the first Place; that tho’ the blessed <i>Millennium</i>
+will not be in this Earth; yet we
+allow that the State of the Church here, will
+grow much better than it is at present. There
+will be a better Idea of Christianity, and according
+to the Prophecies, a full <i>Resurrection
+of the Witnesses</i>, and an <i>Ascension</i> into Power,
+and the tenth Part of the City will fall;
+which things imply ease from Persecution,
+the Conversion of some Part of the Christian
+World to the reformed Faith, and a considerable
+Diminution of the Power of Antichrist.
+But this still comes short of the Happiness and
+Glory wherein the future Kingdom of Christ
+is represented; which cannot come to pass
+till the <i>Man of Sin</i> be destroyed, with a total
+Destruction. After the Resurrection of the
+Witnesses, there is a third <i>WOE</i> yet to come;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>and how long that will last, does not appear.
+If it bear proportion with the preceeding
+<i>WOES</i>, it may last some hundreds of Years.
+And we cannot imagine the <i>Millennium</i> to begin
+till that <i>WOE</i> be finished: As neither till
+the <i>Vials</i> be pour’d out, in the <abbr title='fifteenth'>xvth</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> which
+cannot be all pour’d out till after the Resurrection
+of the Witnesses; those <i>Vials</i> being the
+last Plagues that compleat the Destruction of
+Antichrist. Wherefore allowing that the
+Church, upon the Resurrection and Ascension
+of the Witnesses, will be advanc’d into a better
+Condition, yet that Condition cannot be
+the millennial State; where the Beast is utterly
+destroy’d, and Satan bound, and cast into
+the bottomless Pit.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This being premis’d, let us now examine
+what Grounds there are for the Translation of
+that blessed State into the <i>new Heavens</i> and
+<i>new Earth</i>; seeing that Thought, it may be,
+to many Persons, will appear new and extraordinary.
+In the first Place, we suppose it
+out of Dispute, that there will be <i>new Heavens</i>
+and a <i>new Earth</i> after the Conflagration.
+This was our first Proposition, and we depend
+upon it, as sufficiently prov’d both from Scripture
+and Antiquity. This being admitted,
+how will you flock this <i>new Earth</i>? What
+use will you put it to? ’Twill be a much nobler
+Earth, and better built than the present; and
+’tis a pity it should only float about, empty and
+useless in the wild Air. If you will not make
+it the Seat and Habitation of the Just in the
+blessed <i>Millennium</i>, what will you make it?
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>How will it turn to Account? What hath Providence
+design’d it for? We must not suppose
+new Worlds made without Counsel or Design.
+And as, on the one Hand, you cannot tell what
+to do with this new Creation, if it be not
+thus employ’d; so, on the other Hand, it is
+every way fitted and suited to be an happy
+and <i>paradisaical</i> Habitation, and answers all
+the natural Characters of the millennial State;
+which is a great Presumption that it is design’d
+for it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to argue this more closely upon Scripture-grounds:
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> says, the Righteous
+shall inhabit the new Heavens and the new
+Earth: 2 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 13. <i>Nevertheless, according to
+his Promise, we look for new Heavens and new
+Earth</i>, <span class='sc'>Wherein Dwelleth Righteousness</span>:
+that is, a righteous People,
+as we have shewn before. But who are these
+righteous People? That’s the great Question.
+If you compare <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s new Heavens and
+new Earth with <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>’s <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1, 2. it
+will go far towards the Resolution of this Question:
+For <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> seems plainly to make the
+Inhabitants of the <i>new Jerusalem</i> to be in this
+<i>new Earth</i>. <i>I saw</i>, says he, <i>new Heavens
+and a new Earth</i>, and the <i>new Jerusalem
+descending from God out of Heaven</i>; therefore
+descending into this <i>new Earth</i>, which he had
+mention’d immediately before. And there <i>the
+Tabernacle of God was with Men</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 3. and
+there he that sat upon the Throne, said, <i>Behold
+I make all Things new.</i> Referring still to the
+new Heavens and new Earth, as the Theatre
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>where all these Things are acted, or all these
+Scenes exhibited; from the first Verse to the
+eighth: Now the <i>new Jerusalem</i> State being
+the same with the Millennial, if the one be in
+the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>, the other
+is there also. And this Interpretation of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>John</i>’s Word is confirm’d and fully assur’d to us
+by the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>; who also placeth the
+Joy and Rejoicing of the <i>new Jerusalem</i> in the
+new Heavens and new Earth, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr>
+17, 18. <i>For behold I create new Heavens and a
+new Earth; and the former shall not be remembred:
+but be you glad and rejoice for ever in
+that which I create; for behold, I create</i> Jerusalem
+<i>a Rejoicing, and her People a Joy</i>:
+Namely, in that new Heavens and new Earth;
+which answers to <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>’s Vision of the new
+<i>Jerusalem</i> being let down upon the new Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To these Reasons, and Deductions from Scripture,
+we might add the Testimony of several
+of the Fathers; I mean of those that were Millennaries:
+For we are speaking now to such as
+believe the <i>Millennium</i>, but place it in the
+present Earth before the Renovation; whereas
+the antient <i>Millennaries</i> suppos’d the Regeneration
+and Renovation of the World before the
+Kingdom of Christ came: As you may see in
+<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c013'><sup>[1]</sup></a><i>Irenæus</i>, <a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c013'><sup>[2]</sup></a><i>Justin Martyr</i>, <a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c013'><sup>[3]</sup></a><i>Tertullian</i>,
+<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c013'><sup>[4]</sup></a><i>Lactantius</i>, and <a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c013'><sup>[5]</sup></a>the Author <i>ad Orthodoxos</i>.
+And the Neglect of this, I look upon as one
+Reason, as we noted before, that brought that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>Doctrine into Discredit and Decay. For when
+they plac’d the Kingdom of the Saints upon
+this Earth, it became more capable of being
+abus’d, by fanatical Spirits, to the Disturbance
+of the World, and the Invasion of the Rights
+of the Magistrates, Civil or Ecclesiastical, under
+that Notion of Saints; and made them
+also dream of sensual Pleasures, such as they
+see in this Life: Or at least gave an Occasion
+and Opportunity to those, that had a Mind to
+make the Doctrine odious, of charging it with
+these Consequences. All these Abuses are cut
+off, and these Scandals prevented, by placing
+the Millennium aright: Namely, not in this
+present Life, or on this present Earth, but in
+the new Creation, where Peace and Righteousness
+will dwell. And this is our first Argument
+why we place the Millennium in the new Heavens
+and new Earth; and ’tis taken partly, you
+see, from the Reason of the Thing itself, the
+Difficulty of assigning any other use of the new
+Earth, and its fitness for this; and partly from
+Scripture-evidence, and partly from Antiquity.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The second Argument for our Opinion, is
+this; the present Constitution of Nature will
+not bear that Happiness, that is promis’d in the
+Millennium, or is not consistent with it. The
+Diseases of our Bodies, the Disorders of our Passions,
+the Incommodiousness of external Nature;
+Indigency, Servility, and the Unpeaceableness
+of the World; these are things inconsistent
+with the Happiness that is promis’d
+in the Kingdom of Christ. But these are constant
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>Attendants upon this Life, and inseparable
+from the present State of Nature. Suppose
+the Millennium was to begin nine or ten
+Years hence, as some pretend it will; how
+shall this World, all of a sudden, be metamorphos’d
+into that happy State? <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 4.
+No more <i>Sorrow, nor crying, nor Pain, nor
+Death</i>, says <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>: <i>All former Things are
+past away.</i> But how past away? Shall we
+not have the same Bodies; and the same external
+Nature; and the same Corruptions of the
+Air; and the same Excesses and Intemperature
+of Seasons? Will there not be the same Barrenness
+of the Ground, the same Number of
+People to be fed; and must they not get their
+living by the Sweat of their Brows, with
+servile Labour and Drudgery? How then are
+all former Evils past away? And as to publick
+Affairs, while there are the same Necessities
+of human Life, and a Distinction of
+Nations, those Nations sometimes will have
+contrary Interests, will clash and interfere one
+with another; whence Differences, and Contests,
+and Wars will arise, and the <i>thousand
+Years Truce</i>, I am afraid, will be often broken.
+We might add also, that if our Bodies be not
+chang’d, we shall be subject to the same Appetites,
+and the same Passions; and upon
+those Vices will grow, as bad Fruit upon a
+bad Tree: To conclude, so long as our Bodies
+are the same, external Nature the same,
+the Necessities of human Life the same;
+which things are the Roots of Evil; you may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>call it a <i>Millennium</i>, or what you please, but
+there will be still Diseases, Vices, Wars, Tears
+and Cries, Pain and Sorrow in this <i>Millennium</i>;
+and if so, ’tis a <i>Millennium</i> of your own
+making, for that which the Prophets describe,
+is quite another thing.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Farthermore, if you suppose the Millennium
+will be upon this Earth, and begin, it may be,
+ten or twenty Years hence, how will it be introduc’d?
+How shall we know when we are
+in it, or when we enter upon it? If we continue
+the same, and all Nature continue the
+same, we shall not discern when we slip into
+the Millennium. And as to the moral State
+of it, shall we all, on a sudden, <i>become Kings
+and Priests to God</i>? Wherein will that Change
+consist, and how will it be wrought? <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>
+makes the <i>first Resurrection</i> introduce the
+Millennium; and that’s a conspicuous Mark
+and Boundary: But as to the modern or vulgar
+Millennium, I know not how ’tis usher’d
+in. Whether they suppose a visible Resurrection
+of the Martyrs, and a visible Ascension;
+and that to be a Signal to all the World
+that the Jubilee is beginning; or whether ’tis
+gradual, and creeps upon us insensibly; or the
+Fall of the Beast marks it: These things need
+both Explication and Proof: for to me they
+seem either arbitrary or unintelligible.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to pursue our Design and Subject:
+That which gives me the greatest Scandal in
+this Doctrine of the vulgar Millennium, is
+their joining Things together that are really
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>inconsistent; a natural World of one Colour,
+and a moral World of another. They will
+make us happy in spight of Nature; as the <i>Stoicks</i>
+would make a Man happy in <i>Phalaris his
+Bull</i>; so must the Saints be in full Bliss in the
+Millennium, tho’ they be under a Fit of the
+Gout, or the Stone. For my part, I could
+never reconcile Pain to Happiness; it seems to
+me to destroy and drown all Pleasure, as a
+loud Noise does a still Voice: It affects the
+Nerves with Violence, and over-bears all other
+Motions. But if, according to this modern
+Supposition, they have the same Bodies,
+and breath the same Air in the Millennium,
+as we do now, there will be both private and
+epidemical Distempers, in the same Manner
+as now. Suppose then a Plague comes and
+sweeps away half an hundred thousand Saints
+in the Millennium, is this no Prejudice or
+Dishonour to the State? Or a War makes a
+Nation desolate; or, in single Persons, a lingring
+Disease makes Life a Burthen; or a burning
+Fever, or a violent Cholick tortures them
+to Death; where such Evils as these reign, christen
+the thing what you will, it can be no better
+than a Mock-Millennium. Nor shall I ever
+be persuaded that such a State as our present
+Life, where an aking Tooth, or an aking
+Head, does so discompose the Soul, as to make
+her unfit for Business, Study, Devotion, or any
+useful Employment; and that all the Powers
+of the Mind, all its Virtue, and all its Wisdom,
+are not able to stop these little Motions,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>or to support them with Tranquillity: I can
+never persuade my self, I say, that such a State
+was design’d by God or Nature, for a State of
+Happiness.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Our third Argument is this; the future Kingdom
+of Christ will not take place, till the
+Kingdom of Antichrist be wholly destroy’d:
+But that will not be wholly destroy’d till the
+End of the World, and the appearing of our
+Saviour; therefore the Millennium will not
+be till then. Christ and Antichrist cannot
+reign upon Earth together; their Kingdoms
+are opposite, as Light and Darkness: Besides,
+the Kingdom of Christ is universal, extends
+to all the Nations, and leaves no room for
+other Kingdoms at that time. Thus it is describ’d
+in <i>Daniel</i>, in the Place mention’d before,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 13, 14. <i>I saw in the Night
+Visions, and behold, one like the Son of Man,
+came with the Clouds of Heaven, and came to
+the Ancient of Days; and there was given him
+Dominion and Glory, and a Kingdom; that all
+People, Nations, and Languages, should serve
+him.</i> And again <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 27. <i>And the Kingdom
+and Dominion, and the Greatness of the Kingdom
+under the whole Heaven, shall be given to
+the People of the Saints of the most High;
+whose Kingdom is an everlasting Kingdom, and
+all Dominion shall serve and obey him.</i> The
+same Character of Universality is given to the
+Kingdom of Christ by <i>David</i>, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> and
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seventy-two'>lxxii.</abbr> <i>Isaiah</i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 2. and other Prophets.
+But the most direct Proof of this, is from the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span><i>Apocalypse</i>, where the <i>Beast</i> and <i>false Prophet</i>
+are thrown into the Lake of Fire and Brimstone,
+(<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 20.) before the Millennium
+comes on, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> This, <i>being cast into
+a Lake of Fire burning with Brimstone</i>,
+must needs signify utter Destruction: Not a
+Diminution of Power only, but a total Perdition
+and Consumption. And that this was
+before the Millennium, of the Beast and false
+Prophets being in the Lake of Fire, as of a
+Thing past, and formerly transacted. For when
+Satan, at length, is thrown into the same Lake
+’tis said, he is thrown into the Lake of Fire and
+Brimstone, <i>where the Beast and the false Prophets
+are</i>, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 10. They were there before,
+it seems; namely, at the beginning of
+the Millennium; and now at the Conclusion
+of it, the Devil is thrown in to them: Besides,
+the Ligation of Satan proves this Point
+effectually; for so long as Antichrist reigns,
+Satan cannot be said to be bound; but he
+is bound at the Beginning of the Millennium,
+therefore Antichrist’s Reign was then totally
+expir’d. Lastly, the Destruction of <i>Babylon</i>,
+and the Destruction of Antichrist go together;
+but you see <i>Babylon</i> utterly and finally destroy’d,
+(<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> and <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr>) before the Millennium
+comes on: I say, <i>utterly and finally
+destroy’d</i>. For she is not only said to be made
+an utter Desolation, but to be consum’d by
+Fire; and absorpt as a Millstone thrown into
+the Sea; and that he shall be found no
+more at all, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 21. Nothing can express
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>a total and universal Destruction more
+effectually, or more emphatically. And this
+is before the Millennium begins; as you may
+see both by the Order of the Prophesies, and
+particularly, in that upon this Destruction, the
+<i>Hallelujah</i>’s are sung, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> and concluded
+thus, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 6, 7. <i>Hallelujah, for the God omnipotent
+reigneth. Let us be glad and rejoice,
+and give Honour to him; for the Marriage of
+the Lamb is come, and his Wife hath made
+her self ready.</i> This, I suppose, every one
+allows to be the millennial State, which now
+approaches, and is making ready, upon the
+Destruction of <i>Babylon</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for the first Part of our Argument,
+that the Kingdom of Christ will not
+take place, till the Kingdom of Antichrist be
+wholly destroy’d. We are now to prove the
+second Part, that the Kingdom of Antichrist
+will not be wholly destroy’d till the End of
+the World, and the coming of our Saviour.
+This, one would think, is sufficiently prov’d
+from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>’s Words alone, <i>2 Thess.</i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8.
+<i>The Lord shall consume the Man of Sin</i>, who is
+suppos’d the same with Antichrist, <i>with the
+Spirit of his Mouth, and shall destroy him with
+the Brightness of his coming</i>. He will not then
+be destroyed before the coming of our Saviour;
+and that will not be till the End of the World.
+For <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> says, <i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21. <i>The Heaven
+must receive him</i>, speaking of Christ, <i>until the
+Times of Restitution of all things</i>; that is, the
+Renovation of the World. And if we consider
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>that our Saviour’s coming will be in <i>Flames
+of Fire</i>, as the same Apostle <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> tells us,
+<i>2 Thess.</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7, 8. ’tis plain, that his coming will
+not be till the Conflagration; in which last
+Flames Antichrist will be universally destroy’d.
+This Manner of Destruction agrees also with
+the <i>Apocalypse</i> and with <i>Daniel</i>, and the Prophets
+of the Old Testament. As to the <i>Apocalypse</i>,
+<i>Babylon</i>, the Seat of Antichrist, is represented
+there as destroy’d by Fire, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 8,
+18. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='fourteen'>xiv.</abbr> 11. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 3, 20. And in <i>Daniel</i>,
+when the Beast is destroy’d, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 11. <i>His
+Body was given to the burning Flame.</i> Then
+as to the other Prophets, they do not, you
+know, speak of Antichrist or the Beast in
+Terms, but under the Types of <i>Babylon</i>, <i>Tyre</i>,
+and such-like; and these Places or Princes are
+represented by them as to be destroy’d by Fire,
+<i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> 19. <i>Jer.</i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 25. <i>Ezek.</i> <abbr title='twenty-eight'>xxviii.</abbr> 18.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for this third Argument; the fourth
+Argument is this; the future Kingdom of
+Christ will not be till the Day of Judgment
+and the Resurrection; but that will not be till
+the End of the World: Therefore, neither
+the Kingdom of Christ. By the Day of Judgment
+here, I do not mean the final and universal
+Judgment; nor by the Resurrection,
+the final and universal Resurrection; for these
+will not be till after the Millennium. But
+we understand here the first Day of Judgment
+and the first Resurrection, which will be at the
+End of this present World; according as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>John</i> does distinguish them, in the <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i>
+of the <i>Apocalypse</i>. Now that the Millennium
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>will not be till the Day of Judgment in this
+Sense, we have both the Testimonies of <i>Daniel</i>
+and of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>. <i>Daniel</i>, in <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i>
+9, <i>&#38;c.</i> <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 26, <i>&#38;c.</i> supposes the Beast to rule
+<i>till Judgment shall sit</i>, and then <i>they shall take
+away his Dominion</i>, and it shall be given to
+the People of the Saints of the most High.
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> makes an explicit Declaration of
+both these, in his <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> of the <i>Apocalypse</i>,
+which is the great Directory in this point
+of the Millennium; he says there were Thrones
+set, as for a Judicature, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 4. Then there
+was a Resurrection from the Dead, and those
+that rise, reigned with Christ a thousand Years:
+Here’s a judicial Session, a Resurrection, and
+the Reign of Christ joined together. There
+is also another Passage in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> that joins
+the Judgment of the Dead with the Kingdom
+of Christ; ’tis in the <abbr title='eleventh'>xith</abbr> Chapter, under the
+seventh Trumpet; the Words are these, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr>
+15. <i>And the seventh Angel sounded, and
+there were great Voices in Heaven, saying,
+the Kingdoms of this World are become the
+Kingdoms of our Lord and of his Christ; and
+he shall reign for ever and ever, And the four
+and twenty Elders, &#38;c. And the Nations
+were angry, and thy Wrath is come, and the
+time of the Dead, that they should be judged,
+and that thou shouldst give Reward unto thy
+Servants the Prophets, and to the Saints, and
+them that fear thy Name.</i> Here are two things
+plainly express’d and link’d together, <i>The
+judging of the Dead</i>, and the <i>Kingdom of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>Christ</i>; wherein the Prophets and Saints are
+rewarded. Now as the <i>judging of the Dead</i>
+is not in this Life, so neither is the Reward
+of the Prophets and Saints in this Life; as we
+are taught sufficiently in the Gospel, and by
+the Apostles, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28. <i>1 Thess.</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7. 2
+<i>Tim.</i> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 8. 1 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7. and <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 4. Therefore
+the Reign and Kingdom of Christ, which is
+joined with these two, cannot be in this Life,
+or before the End of the World: And as
+a farther Testimony and Confirmation of this,
+we may observe that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> to <i>Timothy</i> hath
+joined together these three things; the <i>Appearance
+of Christ</i>, the <i>Reign of Christ</i>, and
+the <i>judging of the Dead. I charge thee therefore
+before God and the Lord Jesus Christ,
+who shall judge the quick and the dead, at his
+appearing, and his Kingdom</i>, 2 Tim. <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 1.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This might also be prov’d from the Order,
+Extent and Progress of the Prophesies of the
+<i>Apocalypse</i>; whereof some are such as reach
+to the End of the World, and yet must be accomplish’d
+before the Millennium begins, as
+the Vials. Others are so far already advanc’d
+towards the End of the World, as to leave no
+room for a thousand Years Reign; as the
+Trumpets. But because every one hath his
+own Interpretation of these Prophesies, and it
+would be tedious here to prove any single Hypothesis
+in Contradistinction to all the rest, we
+will therefore leave this Remark, to have more
+or less Effect, according to the Minds it falls
+upon; and proceed to our fifth Argument.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>Fifthly, The <i>new Jerusalem</i> State is the
+same with the millennial State; but the <i>new
+Jerusalem</i> State will not be till the End of the
+World, or till after the Conflagration; therefore
+neither the Millennium: That the <i>new
+Jerusalem</i> State is the same with the Millennium,
+is agreed upon, I think, by all Millennaries,
+ancient and modern: <i>Justin Martyr</i>,
+<i>Irenæus</i> and <i>Tertullian</i>, speak of it in that
+Sense; and so do the latter Authors, so far as
+I have observed. And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> seems to give
+them good Authority for it; in the <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i>
+of the <i>Apocalypse</i>, he says, the <i>Camp of the
+Saints</i>, and <i>the beloved City</i> were besieg’d by
+Satan and his gigantick Crew at the End of
+the Millennium: That <i>beloved City</i> is the
+<i>new Jerusalem</i>, and you see it is the same
+with the Camp of the Saints, or, at least, contemporary
+with it. Besides, the Marriage
+of the Lamb was in, or at the Appearance
+of the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, for that was the <i>Spouse
+of the Lamb</i>, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 2. Now this Spouse
+was ready, and this Marriage was said to be
+come, at the Destruction of <i>Babylon</i>, which
+was the Beginning of the Millennium, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i>
+<abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 7. Therefore the <i>new Jerusalem</i> run
+all along with the Millennium, and was
+indeed the same thing under another Name.
+Lastly, what is this <i>new Jerusalem</i>, if it be
+not the same with the millennial State? It
+is promis’d a Reward to the Sufferers for Christ
+<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12. and you see its wonderful Privileges,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 3, 4. and yet it is not Heaven
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>and eternal Life; for it is said to come down
+from God out of Heaven, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 2. and <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 12.
+It can therefore be nothing but the glorious
+Kingdom of Christ upon Earth, where the
+Saints shall reign with him a thousand Years.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now as to the second Part of our Argument,
+that the <i>new Jerusalem</i> will not come down
+from Heaven till the End of the World; of
+this <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> seems to give us a plain Proof or
+Demonstration; for he places the <i>new Jerusalem</i>
+in the <i>new Heaven</i> and <i>new Earth</i>,
+which cannot be till after the Conflagration.
+Let us hear his Words, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1, 2. <i>And
+I saw a new Heaven and a new Earth, for
+the first Heaven and the first Earth were passed
+away, and there was no more Sea. And
+I John saw the holy City, new Jerusalem,
+coming down from God out of Heaven; prepared
+as a Bride adorned for her Husband.</i>
+When the new Earth was made, he sees the
+<i>new Jerusalem</i> coming down upon it; and
+this Renovation of the Earth not being till the
+Conflagration, the <i>new Jerusalem</i> could not be
+till then neither. The Prophet <i>Isaiah</i> had long
+before said the same thing, though not in
+terms so express; he first says, <i>Behold I create
+new Heavens and a new Earth, wherein you
+shall rejoice</i>: Then subjoins immediately, <i>Behold,
+I create Jerusalem a rejoicing</i>, <abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr> <abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr>
+17, 18. This rejoicing is still in the same Place;
+in the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>, or in
+the <i>new Jerusalem</i>. And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, in a like
+Method, first sets down the <i>new Earth</i>, then
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>the <i>new Jerusalem</i>; and expresses the Mind
+of the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i> more distinctly.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This leads me to a sixth Argument to confirm
+our Conclusion: The Time of the <i>Restitution</i>
+or <i>Restauration of all Things</i>, spoken
+of by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> and the Prophets, is the same
+with the Millennium; but that Restauration
+will not be till the coming of Christ, and the
+End of the World; therefore neither the Millennium.
+That this Restitution of all things
+will not be till the coming of our Saviour,
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> declares in his Sermon, <i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 21.
+and that the coming of our Saviour will not
+be till the End of the World, or till the Conflagration,
+both <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> signify
+to us, <i>1 Thess.</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 7, 8. <i>2 Pet.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 10. therefore
+it remains only to prove, that this Restitution
+of all Things spoken of here by the
+Apostle, is the same with the Millennium. I
+know that which it does directly and immediately
+signify, is the Renovation of the World:
+but it must include the moral World as well
+as the Natural; otherwise it cannot be truly
+said, as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> does there, that all the Prophets
+have spoken of it. And what is the
+Renovation of the natural and moral World,
+but the <i>new Jerusalem</i> or the <i>Millennium</i>?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Arguments, taken together, have, to
+me, an irresistible Evidence for the Proof of
+our Conclusion; that the blessed Millennium
+cannot obtain in the present Earth, or before
+the Conflagration; but when Nature is renew’d,
+and the Saints and Martyrs rais’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>from the Dead, then they shall reign together
+with Christ, in the <i>new Heavens</i> and
+<i>new Earth</i>, or in the <i>new Jerusalem</i>; Satan
+being bound for a thousand Years.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='nine'>IX.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c011'><i>The chief Employment of the Millennium,
+<span class='sc'>Devotion</span> and <span class='sc'>Contemplation</span>.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>We have now done with the Substance
+of our Discourse; which is comprehended
+in these three Propositions:</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><abbr title='one'>I.</abbr> <i>After the Conflagration of this World,
+there will be new Heavens and a new
+Earth, and that Earth will be inhabited.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='two'>II.</abbr> <i>That there is an happy millennial-State,
+or a future Kingdom of Christ and his
+Saints, prophesied of and promis’d in
+the Old and New Testament; and receiv’d
+by the Primitive Church, as a
+Christian and Catholick Doctrine.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='three'>III.</abbr> <i>That this blessed millennial-State, according
+as it is describ’d in Scripture,
+cannot take place in the present Earth,
+nor under the present Constitution of
+Nature and Providence; But is to be
+celebrated in the new Heavens and new
+Earth, after the Conflagration.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c012'>These three Propositions support this Work,
+and if any of them be broken, I confess
+my Design is broken, and this Treatise is of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>no Effect: But what remains to be spoken
+to in these last Chapters, is more circumstantial
+or modal; and an Error or Mistake in
+such things, does not wound any vital Part of
+the Argument. You must not therefore lay
+aside your Severity and rigorous Censures; we
+are very happy, if, in this Life, we can attain
+to the Substance of Truth; and make rational
+Conjectures concerning Modes and Circumstances,
+where every one hath Right to offer
+his Sense, with Modesty and Submission. Revelations
+made to us from Heaven in this present
+State, are often incompleat, and do not
+tell us all; as if it was on purpose to set our
+Thoughts a-work to supply the rest; which
+we may lawfully do, provided it be according
+to the Analogy of Scripture and Reason.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To proceed therefore; we suppose, as you
+see, the <i>new Heavens</i> and the <i>new Earth</i> to
+be the Seat of the <i>Millennium</i>, and that new
+Creation to be <i>Paradisiacal</i>: Its Inhabitants
+also to be righteous Persons, the Saints of the
+most High. And seeing the ordinary Employments
+of our present Life will then be
+needless and superseded, as Military-Affairs,
+Sea-Affairs, most Trades and Manufactures,
+Law, Physick, and the laborious part of Agriculture;
+it may be wonder’d, how this happy
+People will bestow their Time; what Entertainment
+they will find in a State of so much
+Ease, and so little Action. To this one might
+answer in short, by another Question, <i>How</i>
+would they have entertain’d themselves in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>Paradise, if Man had continued in Innocency?
+This is a Revolution of the same State, and
+therefore they may pass Time as well now as
+they could have done then. But to answer
+more particularly, besides all innocent Diversions,
+ingenuous Conversations, and Entertainments
+of Friendship, the greatest part of their
+Time will be spent in <i>Devotion</i> and <i>Contemplation</i>.
+O happy Employment, and next to
+that of Heaven it self! What do the Saints
+Above, but sing Praises unto God, and contemplate
+his Perfections! And how mean and
+despicable, for the most part, are the Employments
+of this present Life, if compar’d with
+those intellectual Actions! If Mankind was
+divided into ten Parts, nine of those ten employ
+their Time to get Bread to their Belly,
+and Cloaths to their Back; and what Impertinences
+are these to a reasonable Soul, if she
+was free from the Clog of a mortal Body, or
+if that could be provided for, without Trouble
+or lots of Time? Corporeal Labour is from
+Need and Necessity, but intellectual Exercises
+are matter of Choice, that please and perfect at
+the same Time.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Devotion warms and opens the Soul, and disposes
+it to receive divine Influences. It sometimes
+raises the Mind into an heavenly Ecstasy,
+and fills it with a Joy that is not to be express’d.
+When it is pure, it leaves a strong Impression
+upon the Heart, of Love to God; and inspires
+us with a Contempt of this World, having
+tasted the Pleasures of the World to come. In
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>the State which we speak of, seeing the <i>Tabernacle
+of God will be with Men</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 3</i>. we
+may reasonably suppose that there will be greater
+Effusions and Irradiations of the Holy Spirit,
+than we have or can expect in this Region of
+Darkness; and consequently, all the Strength and
+Comfort that can arise from private Devotion.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And as to their publick Devotions, all Beauties
+of Holiness, all Perfection of divine Worship,
+will shine in their Assemblies. Whatsoever
+<i>David</i> says of <i>Sion</i> and <i>Jerusalem</i>, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr>
+lxxxiv.</i> are but Shadows of this <i>New Jerusalem</i>,
+and of the Glory that will be in those Solemnities,
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='eighty-seven'>lxxxvii.</abbr></i> Imagine what a Congregation
+will be there of Patriarchs, Prophets,
+Apostles, Christian Martyrs, and Saints of the
+first Rank, throughout all Ages: And these all
+known to one another by their Names and
+History. This very meeting together of such
+Persons, must needs create a Joy unspeakable:
+But when they unite in their Praises to God
+and to the Lamb, with pure Hearts full of divine
+Love; when they sing their Hallelujahs to
+him that sits upon the Throne, that hath wash’d
+them in his Blood, and redeem’d them out of
+every Kingdom, and Tongue, and People,
+and Nation: When, with their Palms in their
+Hands, they triumph over Sin and Death, and
+Hell, and all the Powers of Darkness; can there
+be any thing, on this side Heaven, and a Choir
+of Angels, more glorious or more joyful?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But why did I except Angels? Why may
+not they be thought to be present at these Assemblies?
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>In a Society of Saints and purified
+Spirits, why should we think their Converse
+impossible? In the Golden Age, the Gods were
+always represented, as having freer Intercourse
+with Men; and before the Flood, we may reasonably
+believe it so. I cannot think, <i>Enoch</i>
+was translated into Heaven without any Converse
+with its Inhabitants before he went thither:
+And seeing the Angels vouchsafed often,
+in former Ages, to visit the Patriarchs upon
+Earth, we may with Reason judge, that they
+will much more converse with the same Patriarchs
+and holy Prophets, now they are risen
+from the Dead, and cleans’d from their Sins, and
+seated in the <i>New Jerusalem</i>. I cannot but call
+to mind, upon this Occasion, that Representation
+which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> makes to us, of a glorious
+State and a glorious Assembly, too high for this
+present Earth: ’Tis, (<i><abbr title='Hebrews'>Hebr.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 22</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i>) in
+these Words: <i>But you are come unto Mount
+Sion, and unto the City of the living God, the
+heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable
+Company of Angels; to the general Assembly
+and Church of the First-born, which are written
+in Heaven; and to God the Judge of all,
+and to the Spirits of just Men made perfect.</i>
+This, I know, several apply to the Times and
+State of the Gospel, in Opposition to that of
+the Law; and it is introduc’d in that manner;
+but here are several Expressions too high for
+any present State of Things; they must respect
+a future State, either of Heaven, or of the
+Millennial Kingdom of Christ: And to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>latter of these Expressions agree, and have a
+peculiar Fitness and Applicability to it. And
+what follows in the Context, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 26, 27, 28</i>.
+<i>About shaking the Heavens and the Earth once
+more</i>; removing the former Scenes, and bringing
+on a new Kingdom that cannot be shaken:
+All this, I say, answers to the Kingdom of
+Christ, which is to be establish’d in the new
+Heavens and new Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to proceed in their publick Devotions;
+Suppose this August Assembly, inflam’d with
+all divine Passions, met together to celebrate
+the Name of God, with Angels intermixt, to
+bear a Part in this holy Exercise: And let this
+Concourse be, not in any Temple made with
+Hands, but under the great Roof Heaven, (the
+true Temple of the most High,) so as all the
+Air may be fill’d with the chearful Harmony of
+their Hymns and Hallelujahs: Then, in the
+height of their Devotion, as they sing Praises
+to the Lamb, and to him that sits upon the
+Throne, suppose the Heavens to open, and the
+Son of God to appear in his Glory, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 11.</i>
+with thousands and ten thousands of Angels
+round about him; that their Eyes may see him,
+who, for their Sakes was crucified upon Earth,
+now encircled with Light and Majesty. This will
+raise them into as great Transports as human
+Nature can bear: They will wish to be dissolv’d,
+they will strive to fly up to him in the Clouds,
+or to breathe out their Souls in repeated Doxologies
+of <i>Blessing, <abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 13. and Honour, and
+Glory, and Power, to him that sits upon the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>Throne, and to the Lamb, for ever and ever</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But we cannot live always in the Flames of
+Devotion; the Weakness of our Nature will not
+suffer us to continue long under such strong Passions,
+and such Intenseness of Mind. The Question
+is therefore, What will be the ordinary
+Employment of that Life? How will they entertain
+their Thoughts, or spend their Time?
+For we suppose they will not have that multiplicity
+of frivolous Business that we have now;
+about our Bodies, about our Children; in
+Trades and Mechanicks; in Traffick and Navigation;
+or Wars by Sea or Land. These
+things being swept away wholly, or in a great
+Measure, what will come in their Place? How
+will they find Work or Entertainment for a
+long Life? If we consider, who they are that
+will have a Part in this first Resurrection, and
+be Inhabitants of that World that is to come,
+we may easily believe that the most constant
+Employment of their Life will be <span class='sc'>Contemplation</span>.
+Not that I exclude any innocent
+Diversions, as I said before; the Entertainments
+of Friendship, or ingenuous Conversation;
+but the great Business and Design of that
+Life is Contemplation, as preparatory to Heaven
+and eternal Glory. <i>Ut paulatim assueseant
+capere Deum, <abbr class='spell'>L.</abbr> 5. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 32.</i> as <i>Irenæus</i> says,
+that they may, by Degrees, enlarge their Capacities,
+fit and <i>accustom themselves to receive
+God</i>. Or, as he says in another Place, <i>That
+they may become capable of the Glory of the
+Father</i>; that is, capable of bearing the Glory
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>and Presence of God; capable of the highest
+Enjoyment of him, which is usually call’d the
+<i>Beatifical Vision</i>; and is the Condition of the
+Blessed in Heaven.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>It cannot be deny’d, that in such a Millennial
+State, where we shall be freed from all
+the Incumbrances of this Life, and provided
+of better Bodies and greater Light of Mind:
+It cannot be doubted, I say, but that we shall
+then be in a Disposition to make greater Proficiency
+in the Knowledge of all Things, divine
+and intellectual; and consequently of
+making happy Preparations for our entring
+upon a further State of Glory: For there is
+nothing certainly does more prepare the Mind
+of Man for the highest Perfections, than Contemplation,
+with that Devotion which naturally
+flows from it, as Heat follows Light. And
+this Contemplation hath always a greater or
+less Effect upon the Mind according to the
+Perfection of its Object; so as the Contemplation
+of the divine Nature is, of all others,
+the most perfective in it self, and to us, according
+to our Capacities and Decree of Abstraction.
+An <i>immense Being</i> does strangely
+fill the Soul; and Omnipotency, Omnisciency,
+and infinite Goodness, do enlarge and dilate
+the Spirit, while it fixily looks upon them.
+They raise strong Passions of Love and Admiration,
+which melt our Nature, and transform
+it into the Mould and Image of that
+which we contemplate: What the Scripture
+says of our <i>Transformation</i> into the divine
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>Likeness; what <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> and the <i>Platonists</i>
+say of our <i>Union</i> with God; and whatever is
+not cant in the <i>mystical Theology</i>, when they tell
+us of being deified; all this must spring from
+these Sources of Devotion and Contemplation:
+They will change and raise us from Perfection
+to Perfection, as from Glory to Glory,
+into a greater Similitude and nearer Station
+to the divine Nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Contemplation of God and his Works
+comprehends all Things; for the one makes
+the uncreated World, and the other the created:
+And as the divine Essence and Attributes
+are the greatest Objects that the Mind of Man
+can set before it self; so next to that are the
+Effects and Emanations of the Divinity, or
+the Works of the divine Goodness, Wisdom
+and Power in the created World. This hath
+a vast Extent and Variety, and would be sufficient
+to entertain their Time, in that happy
+State, much longer than a thousand Years; as
+you will easily grant, if you allow me but to
+point at the several Heads of those Speculations.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Contemplation of the <i>created World</i> divides
+it self into three Parts; that of the <i>intellectual</i>
+World; that of the <i>corporeal</i>; and the Government
+and Administration of both, which
+is usually call’d <i>Providence</i>. These three, drawn
+into one Thought, with the Reasons and Proportions
+that result from them, compose that
+<span class='sc'>Grand Idea</span>, which is the Treasury and Comprehension
+of all Knowledge; whereof we
+have spoken more largely in the last Chapter
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>of the second Book of this <i>Theory</i>, under the
+Name of the <i>Mundane Idea</i>. But at present
+we shall only mention such Particulars, as may
+be thought proper Subjects for the Meditations
+and Enquiries of those who shall enjoy that
+happy State which we now treat of.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the intellectual World, excepting our
+own Souls, we know little, in this Region of
+Darkness where we are at present, more than
+bare Names: We hear of Angels and Archangels,
+of Cherubins and Seraphins, of Principalities
+and Powers, and Thrones, and Dominions:
+We hear the Sound of these Words
+with Admiration, but we know little of their
+Natures; wherein their general Notion, and
+wherein their Distinction consists; what peculiar
+Excellencies they have, what Offices
+and Employments, of all this we are ignorant;
+only in general, we cannot but suppose
+that there are more Orders and Degrees of
+intellectual Beings, betwixt us and the Almighty,
+than there are Kinds or Species of living
+Creatures upon the Face of the Earth;
+betwixt Man their Lord and Master, and the
+least Worm that creeps upon the Ground;
+nay, than there are Stars in Heaven, or Sands
+upon the Sea-shore. For there is an infinite
+Distance and Interval betwixt us and God
+Almighty, and all that is fill’d with created Beings
+of different Degrees of Perfection, still approaching
+nearer and nearer to their Maker.
+And when this invisible World shall be open’d
+to us, when the Curtain is drawn, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>the Celestial Hierarchy set in order before our
+Eyes, we shall despise our selves, and all the
+petty Glories of a mortal Life, as the Dirt under
+our Feet.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the corporeal Universe, we have some
+Share already in the Contemplation and Knowledge
+of that; though little in Comparison of
+what will be then discover’d. The Doctrine
+of the Heavens, fixed Stars, Planets and
+Comets, both as to their Matter, Motion and
+Form, will be then clearly demonstrated; and
+what are Mysteries to us now, will become
+matter of ordinary Conversation: We shall
+be better acquainted with our neighbouring
+Worlds, and make new Discoveries as to the
+State of their Affairs. The Sun especially,
+the great Monarch of the planetary Worlds;
+whose Dominion reaches from Pole to Pole,
+and the Greatness of his Kingdom is under the
+whole Heaven: Who sends his bright Messengers
+every Day through all the Regions of
+his vast Empire; throwing his Beams of
+Light round about him, swifter and farther
+than a Thought can follow: This noble Creature,
+I say, will make a good part of their
+Study in the succeeding World. <i>Eudoxus</i>, the
+Philosopher, wish’d he might dye like <i>Phaeton</i>,
+in approaching too near to the Sun, provided
+he could fly so near it, and endure it so long,
+till he had discover’d its Beauty and Perfection.
+Who can blame his Curiosity? Who
+would not venture far to see the Court of so
+great a Prince, who hath more Worlds under
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>his Command than the Emperors of the Earth
+have Provinces or Principalities? Neither
+does he make his Subjects Slaves to his Pleasure,
+or Tributaries to serve and supply his Wants:
+On the contrary, they live upon him, he nourishes
+and preserves them; gives them Fruits
+every Year, Corn, and Wine, and all the Comforts
+of Life: This glorious Body, which now
+we can only gaze upon and admire, will be
+then better understood. A Mass of Light and
+Flame, and ethereal Matter, ten thousand
+times bigger than this Earth; enlightning
+and enlivening an Orb that exceeds the Bulk
+of our Globe, as much as that does the least
+Sand upon the Sea-shore, may reasonably be
+presum’d to have some great Being at the
+Centre of it; but what that is we must leave
+to the Enquiries of another Life.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Theory of the Earth</i> will be a common
+Lesson there; carried through all its Vicissitudes
+and Periods from first to last, till its
+entire Revolution be accomplish’d. I told
+you in the Preface, the <i>Revolution of the World</i>
+was one of the greatest Speculations that we
+are capable of in this Life; and this little
+World where we are, will be the first and easiest
+Instance of it, seeing we have Records,
+Historical, or Prophetical, that reach from the
+Chaos to the End of the new Heavens and new
+Earth; which course of Time makes up the
+greatest part of the Circle or Revolution.
+And as what was before the Chaos, was but, in
+my Opinion, the first Remove from a fixed Star,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>so what is after the thousand Years Renovation,
+is but the last Step to it again.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The <i>Theory of human Nature</i> is also an useful
+and necessary Speculation, and will be carried
+on to Perfection in that State. Having
+fix’d the true Distinction betwixt Matter and
+Spirit, betwixt the Soul and the Body, and
+the true Nature and Laws of their Union, the
+original Contract, and the Terms ratified by
+Providence at their first Conjunction, it will
+not be hard to discover the Springs of Action
+and Passion; how the Thoughts of our Mind
+and the Motions of our Body act in dependance
+one upon another. What are the primary Differences
+of Genius’s and Complexions, and
+how our Intellectuals or Morals depend upon
+them? What is the Root of Fatality, and how
+far it extends? By these Lights they will see
+into their own and every Man’s Breast, and
+trace the Foot-steps of the divine Wisdom in
+that strange Composition of Soul and Body.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This indeed is a mix’d Speculation, as most
+others are, and takes in something of both
+Worlds, intellectual and corporeal; and may
+also belong in part to the third Head we mention’d,
+<i>Providence</i>: But there is no need of
+distinguishing these Heads so nicely, provided
+we take in, under some or other of them,
+what may be thought best to deserve our
+Knowledge now, or in another World. As to
+<i>Providence</i>, what we intend chiefly by it here,
+is the general Oeconomy of our Religion, and
+what is reveal’d to us in Scripture, concerning
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>God, Angels, and Mankind. These Revelations,
+as most in Sacred Writ, are short
+and incompleat; as being design’d for Practice
+more than for Speculation, or to awaken and
+excite our Thoughts rather than to satisfy them.
+Accordingly, we read in Scripture of a Triune
+Deity; of God made Flesh in the Womb of a
+Virgin; barbarously crucified by the <i>Jews</i>; descending
+into Hell; rising again from the Dead;
+visibly ascending into Heaven; and sitting at the
+Right Hand of God the Father, above Angels
+and Archangels. These great things are imperfectly
+revealed to us in this Life; which we
+are to believe so far as they are revealed, in
+hopes these Mysteries will be made more intelligible
+in that happy State to come, where
+Prophets, Apostles and Angels, will meet in
+Conversation together.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In like manner, how little is it we understand
+concerning the <i>Holy Ghost</i>? that he descended
+like a <i>Dove</i> upon our Saviour, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 16.</i>
+Like cloven Tongues of Fire upon the Apostles
+the Place being fill’d with a rushing mighty
+Wind, <i>Acts <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr></i> That he over shadow’d the
+blessed Virgin, and begot the Holy Infant, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr>
+<abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 18.</i> That he made the Apostles speak all
+sorts of Tongues and Languages <i>ex tempore</i>,
+and pour’d out strange Virtues and miraculous
+Gifts upon the Primitive Christians, <i>Luke
+<abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 35.</i> These things we know as bare Matter
+of Fact, but the Method of these Operations
+we do not at all understand. Who can tell
+us now, what that is which we call <span class='sc'>Inspiration</span>?
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>What Change is wrought in the Brain,
+and what in the Soul, and how the Effect follows?
+Who will give us the just Definition
+of a <i>Miracle</i>? What the proximate Agent is
+above Man, and whether they are all from
+the same Power? How the Manner and Process
+of those miraculous Changes in Matter
+may be conceiv’d? These Things we see darkly,
+and hope they will be set in a clearer
+Light, and the Doctrines of our Religion more
+fully expounded to us, in that future World.
+For as several things obscurely express’d in the
+Old Testament, are more clearly reveal’d in
+the New; so the same Mysteries, in a succeeding
+State, may still receive a farther Explication.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The History of the Angels, good or bad,
+makes another Part of this providential System.
+Christian Religion gives us some Notices
+of both Kinds, but very imperfect; what
+Interest the good Angels have in the Government
+of the World, and in ordering the Affairs
+of this Earth and Mankind? What Subjection
+they have to our Saviour? And what
+Part in his Ministry? Whether they are Guardians
+to particular Persons, to Kingdoms, to
+Empires? All that we know at present, concerning
+these Things, is but conjectural. And
+as to the bad Angels, who will give us an
+Account of their Fall and of their former
+Condition? I had rather know the History of
+<i>Lucifer</i>, than of all the <i>Babylonian</i> and <i>Persian</i>
+Kings; nay, than of all the Kings of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>Earth. What the Birth-right was of that
+mighty Prince? What his Dominions? Where
+his Imperial Court and Residence? How he
+was depos’d? For what Crime, and by what
+Power? How he still wages War against Heaven,
+in his Exile? What Confederates he
+hath? What is his Power over Mankind, and
+how limited? What Change or Damage he
+suffer’d by the Coming of Christ, and how
+it alter’d the Posture of his Affairs? Where
+he will be imprison’d in the <i>Millennium</i>; and
+what will be his last Fate and final Doom?
+whether he may ever hope for a Revolution
+or Restauration? These things lie hid in the
+secret Records of Providence, which then, I
+hope, will be open’d to us.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>With the Revolution of <i>Worlds</i>, we mention’d
+before the Revolution of <i>Souls</i>; which
+is another great Circle of Providence, to be
+studied hereafter: We know little here, either
+of the Pre-existence or Post-existence of our
+Souls. We know not what they will be, till
+the loud Trump awakes us, and calls us again
+into the corporeal World. Who knows how
+many Turns he shall take upon this Stage of the
+Earth, and how many Trials he shall have, before
+his Doom will be finally concluded? Who
+knows where, or what, is the State of Hell?
+Where the Souls of the Wicked are said to
+be for ever? What is the true State of Heaven?
+What our celestial Bodies? and, what
+that sovereign Happiness that is call’d the <i>Beatifical
+Vision</i>? Our Knowledge and Conceptions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>of these things are, at present, very general
+and superficial; but in the future Kingdom
+of Christ, which is introductory to Heaven
+it self, these Imperfections, in a great
+measure, will be done away; and such Preparations
+wrought, both in the Will and Understanding,
+as may fit us for the Life of Angels,
+and the Enjoyment of God in eternal Glory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus you see in general, what will be the
+Employment of the Saints in the blessed <i>Millennium</i>:
+And tho’ they have few of the
+trifling Businesses of this Life, they will not
+want the best and noblest of Diversions. ’Tis
+an happy thing when a Man’s Pleasure is also
+his Perfection; for most Men’s Pleasures are
+such as debase their Nature. We commonly
+gratify our lower Faculties, our Passions, and
+our Appetites; and these do not improve, but
+depress the Mind; and besides they are so
+gross that the finest Tempers are surfeited
+in a little time. There is no lasting Pleasure
+but <i>Contemplation</i>; all others grow flat and
+insipid upon frequent Use; and when a Man
+hath run thorow a Set of Vanities, in the Declension
+of his Age he knows not what to do
+with himself, if he cannot Think; he saunters
+about, from one dull Business to another
+to wear out time; and hath no Reason to value
+Life, but because he is afraid of Death:
+But Contemplation is a continual Spring of
+fresh Pleasures. Truth is inexhausted, and
+when once you are in the right Way, the farther
+you go, the greater Discoveries you make,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>and with the greater Joy. We are sometimes
+highly pleased, and even transported, with
+little inventions in Mathematicks, or Mechanicks,
+or natural Philosophy; all these things
+will make part of their Diversion and Entertainment
+in that State, all the Doctrine of
+Sounds and Harmony, of Light, Colours, and
+Perspective, will be known in Perfection: But
+these I call Diversions, in comparison of their
+higher and more serious Speculations, which
+will be the Business and Happiness of that Life.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Do but imagine, that they will have the
+Scheme of all humane Affairs lying before
+them, from the Chaos to the last Period; the
+universal History and Order of Times; the
+whole Oeconomy of the Christian Religion,
+and of all the Religions in the World; the
+Plan of the Undertaking of the Messiah, with
+all other Parts and Ingredients of the Providence
+of this Earth: Do but imagine this,
+I say, and you will easily allow, that when
+they contemplate the Beauty, Wisdom and
+Goodness of the whole Design, it must needs
+raise great and noble Passions, and a far richer
+Joy than either the Pleasures or Speculations
+of this Life can exite in us; and this being
+the last Act and Close of all human Affairs,
+it ought to be the more exquisite and elaborate,
+that it may crown the Work, satisfy the
+Spectators, and end in a general Applause;
+the whole Theatre resounding with the Praises
+of the great Dramatist, and the wonderful Art
+and Order of the Composition.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='ten'>X.</abbr></span></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c011'><i>Objections against the Millennium, answer’d.
+With some Conjectures concerning the State
+of Things after the Millennium; and what
+will be the final Consummation of this World.</i></p>
+<p class='c004'>You see how Nature and Providence have
+conspir’d, to make the <i>Millennium</i> as
+happy a State, as any terrestrial State can be:
+For, besides Health and Plenty, Peace, Truth,
+and Righteousness will flourish there, and all
+the Evils of this Life stand excluded. There
+will be no ambitious Princes, studying Mischief
+one against another, or contriving Methods
+to bring their own Subjects into Slavery;
+no mercenary Statesmen to assist and intrigue
+with them, no Oppression from the Powerful,
+no Snares or Traps laid for the Innocent,
+no treacherous Friends, no malicious Enemies,
+no Knaves, Cheats, Hypocrites; the Vermin
+of this Earth, that swarm every where. There
+will be nothing but Truth, Candor, Sincerity
+and Ingenuity; as in a Society or Commonwealth
+of Saints and Philosophers: In a Word,
+’twill be <i>Paradise restor’d</i>, both as to Innocency
+of Temper, and the Beauties of Nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I believe you will be apt to say, if this be
+not true, ’tis pity but it should be true: For
+’tis a very desirable State, where all good
+People would find themselves mightily at ease.
+What is it that hinders it then? It must be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>some ill <i>Genius</i>; for Nature tends to such a
+Renovation, as we suppose; and Scripture
+speaks loudly of an happy State to be some
+time or other on this side Heaven: And
+what is there, pray, in this present World,
+Natural and Moral, if I may ask with Reverence,
+that could make it worth the while
+for God to create it, if it never was better, nor
+ever will be better? Is there not more Misery
+than Happiness? Is there not more Vice
+than Virtue in this World? As if it had
+been made by a <i>Manichean</i> God. The Earth
+barren, the Heavens inconstant; Men wicked
+and God offended: This is the Posture of
+our Affairs, such hath our World been hitherto,
+with Wars and Bloodshed, Sickness,
+and Diseases, Poverty, Servitude and perpetual
+Drudgery for the Necessaries of a mortal
+Life. We may therefore reasonably hope,
+from a God infinitely good and powerful, for
+better Times and a better State, before the
+last Period and Consummation of all Things.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But it will be objected, it may be, that, according
+to Scripture, the Vices and Wickedness
+of Men will continue to the End of the
+World; and so there will be no room for such
+an happy State, as we hope for, <i><abbr title='Luke'>Luk.</abbr> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 8</i>.
+Our Saviour says, <i>When the Son of Man cometh,
+shall he find Faith upon the Earth?</i> They shall
+<i>eat and drink and play</i>, as before the Destruction
+of the <i>old World</i>, or of <i>Sodom</i>, (<i>Luke <abbr title='seventeen'>xvii.</abbr> 26</i>,
+<i>&#38;c.</i>) and the Wickedness of those Men, you
+know, continued to the last. This Objection
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>may pinch those that suppose the Millennium
+to be in the present Earth, and a thousand
+Years before the coming of our Saviour; for
+his Words seem to imply that the World will
+be in a State of Wickedness even till his coming.
+Accordingly Antichrist or the <i>Man of Sin</i>, is
+not said to be destroy’d till the coming of our
+Saviour, <i>2 Thess. <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8</i>. and till he be destroy’d,
+we cannot hope for a Millennium. Lastly,
+The coming of our Saviour is always represented
+in Scripture as sudden, surprizing and unexpected;
+as <i>Lightning</i> breaking suddenly
+out of the Clouds, (<i>Luke <abbr title='seventeen'>xvii.</abbr> 24.</i> and <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr>
+34, 35</i>.) or as a <i>Thief in the Night</i>, <i>1 Thess. <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr>
+2, 3, 4.</i> <i>2 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 10.</i> <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> 15.</i> But if
+there be such a Fore-runner of it as the millennial
+State, whose Bounds we know, according
+as that expires and draws to an End,
+Men will be certainly advertis’d of the approaching
+of our Saviour: But this Objection,
+as I told you, does not affect our Hypothesis,
+for we suppose the Millennium will not be till
+after the coming of our Saviour, and the Conflagration.
+And also that his coming will be
+sudden and surprising; and that Antichrist will
+continue in being, tho’ not in the same degree
+of Power, till that time: So that they that
+place the Millennium in the present Earth, are
+chiefly concern’d to answer this first Objection.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But you will object, it may be, in the second
+Place, that this Millennium, wheresoever it
+is, would degenerate at length into Sensuality,
+and a <i>Mahometan Paradise:</i> For where there
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>are earthly Pleasures and earthly Appetites,
+they will not be kept always in order without
+any Excess or Luxuriancy; especially as to the
+Senses to Touch and Taste. I am apt to think
+this is true, if the Soul have no more Power
+over the Body than she hath at present, and our
+Senses, Passions, and Appetites be as strong
+as they are now: But according to our Explication
+of the Millennium, we have great
+Reason to hope, that the Soul will have a
+greater Dominion over the Resurrection-Body,
+than she hath over this; and you know we
+suppose that none will truly inherit the Millennium,
+but those that rise from the Dead:
+Nor do we admit any Propagation there, nor
+the Trouble or Weakness of Infants. But that
+all rise in a perfect Age, and never die; being
+translated, at the final Judgment, to meet our
+Saviour in the Clouds, and to be with him for
+ever: Thus we easily avoid the Force of this
+Objection. But those that place the Millennium
+in this Life, and to be enjoy’d in these
+Bodies, must find out some new Preservatives
+against Vice, otherwise they will be continually
+subject to Degeneracy.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Another Objection may be taken from the
+personal Reign of Christ upon Earth, which
+is a thing incongruous, and yet asserted by
+many modern Millennaries; that Christ should
+leave that Right-Hand of his Father, to come
+and pass a thousand Years here below, living
+upon Earth in an heavenly Body: This, I confess,
+is a thing I never could digest, and therefore
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>I am not concern’d in this Objection;
+not thinking it necessary that Christ should be
+personally present and resident upon Earth in
+the Millennium. I am apt to believe that there
+will be then a celestial Presence of Christ, or
+a <i>Shekinah</i>, as we noted before; as the Sun is
+present to the Earth, yet never leaves its Place
+in the Firmament; so Christ may be visibly
+conspicuous in his heavenly Throne, as he was
+to <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Stephen</i>, <i>Acts <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 55, 56</i>. and yet never
+leave the Right Hand of his Father. And this
+would be a more glorious and illustrious Presence,
+than if he should descend, and converse
+amongst Men in a personal Shape: But these
+things not being distinctly reveal’d to us, we
+ought not to determine any thing concerning
+them, but with Modesty and Submission.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have thus far pretty well escap’d, and
+kept our selves out of the reach of the ordinary
+Objections against the Millennium: But
+there remains one, concerning a <i>double Resurrection</i>,
+which must fall upon every Hypothesis,
+and ’tis this. The Scripture, they say,
+speaks but of one Resurrection; whereas the
+Doctrine of the Millennium supposes two; one
+at the Beginning of the Millennium, for the
+Martyrs, and those that enjoy that happy State,
+and the other at the End of it; which is universal
+and final, in the last Day of Judgment.
+’Tis true, Scripture generally speaks of the Resurrection
+in gross; without distinguishing first
+and second; and so it speaks of the <i>Coming</i> of
+our Saviour, without Distinction of first or second
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>yet it does not follow from that, that
+there is but one coming of our Saviour, so neither
+that there is but one Resurrection. And
+seeing there is one place of Scripture that speaks
+distinctly of two Resurrections, namely, the
+<i><abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> <abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> of the <i>Apocalypse</i>, that is to us a
+sufficient Warrant for asserting two; as there
+are some things in one Evangelist that are not
+in another, yet we think them authentick if
+they be but in one: There are also some things
+in <i>Daniel</i>, concerning the <i>Messiah</i>, and concerning
+the <i>Resurrection</i>, that are not in the
+rest of the Prophets; yet we look upon his
+single Testimony as good Authority. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>
+wrote the last of all the Apostles, and as the
+whole Series of his Prophecies is new, reaching
+through the latter Times to the Consummation
+of all Things; so we cannot wonder if he had
+something more particular reveal’d to him concerning
+the Resurrection: That which was
+spoken of before in general, being distinguish’d
+now into <i>first</i> and <i>second</i>, or particular and
+universal, in this last Prophet. <i>See Mr. Mede.</i>
+Some think <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> means no less, when he
+makes an <i>Order</i> in the Resurrection; some
+rising sooner, some later, <i>1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 23, 24</i>,
+<i>1 Thess.. <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 14, 15</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i> but whether that be so
+or no, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> might have a more distinct
+Revelation concerning it, than <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> had,
+or any one before him.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After these Objections, a great many Queries
+and Difficulties might be propos’d relating
+to the Millennium: But that’s no more than
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>what is found in all other Matters, remote from
+our Knowledge. Who can answer all the
+Queries that may be made concerning <i>Heaven</i>,
+or <i>Hell</i>, or <i>Paradise</i>? When we know a Thing
+as to the Substance, we are not to let go our
+Hold, tho’ there remain some Difficulties unresolv’d;
+otherwise we should be eternally sceptical
+in most Matters of Knowledge. Therefore,
+tho’ we cannot, for Example, give a full Account
+of the Distinction of Habitations and Inhabitants
+in the <i>future Earth</i>; or, of the Order
+of the <i>first Resurrection</i>, whether it be perform’d
+by degrees and successively, or all the Inhabitants
+of the <i>new Jerusalem</i> rise at once, and
+continue throughout the whole Millennium:
+I say, tho’ we cannot give a distinct Account of
+these, or such like Particulars, we ought not
+therefore to deny or doubt whether there will be
+a <i>new Earth</i>, or a <i>first Resurrection</i>. For the Revelation
+goes clearly so far, and the Obscurity is
+only in the Consequences and Dependences of
+it; which Providence thought fit, without farther
+Light, to leave to our Search and Disquisition.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Scripture mentions one Thing, at the End of
+the Millennium, which is a common Difficulty
+to all; and every one must contribute their
+best Thoughts and Conjectures towards the Solution
+of it: ’Tis the strange Doctrine of <i>Gog</i>
+and <i>Magog</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 8, 9</i>. which are to rise
+up in Rebellion against the Saints, and besiege
+the holy City, and the holy Camp:
+And this is to be upon the Expiration of the
+thousand Years, when Satan is loosen’d; for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>no sooner will his Chains be knock’d off, but
+he will put himself in the Head of this Army
+of Giants, or Sons of the Earth, and attack
+Heaven, and the Saints of the most High:
+But with ill Success, for there will come down
+Fire and Lightning from Heaven, and consume
+them. This, methinks, hath a great Affinity
+with the History of the Giants, rebelling and
+assaulting Heaven, and struck down by Thunder-Bolts:
+But that of setting Mountains upon
+Mountains, or tossing them into the Sky,
+that’s the poetical Part, and we must not expect
+to find it in the Prophecy. The Poets
+told their Fable, as of a thing past, and so it
+was a Fable; but the Prophets speak of it,
+as of a Thing to come, and so it will be a Reality:
+But how and in what Sense it is to be
+understood and explain’d, every one has the
+Liberty to make the best Judgment he can.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Ezekiel</i> mentions <i>Gog</i> and <i>Magog</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr>
+and xxxix. which I take to be only Types and
+Shadows of these which we are now speaking
+of, and not yet exemplify’d, no more than his
+Temple. And seeing this People is to be at the
+End of the <i>Millennium</i>, and in the same Earth
+with it, we must, according to our Hypothesis,
+plant them in the future Earth, and therefore
+all former Conjectures about the <i>Turks</i>, or <i>Scythians</i>,
+or other <i>Barbarians</i>, are out of Doors
+with us, seeing the Scene of this Action does
+not lie in the present Earth: They are also
+represented by the Prophet, as a People distinct
+and separate from the Saints, not in their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>Manners only, but also in their Seats and
+Habitations; for (<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 8, 9.</i>) they are
+said to come up from the four Corners of
+the Earth, upon the Breadth of the Earth, and
+there to besiege the <i>Camp of the Saints and
+the beloved City</i>: This makes it seem probable
+to me, that there will be a double Race
+of Mankind in that <i>future Earth</i>; very different
+one from another, both as to their
+Temper and Disposition, and as to their Origin:
+The one born from Heaven, Sons of
+God, and of the Resurrection, who are the
+true Saints and Heirs of the <i>Millennium</i>. The
+other born of the Earth, Sons of the Earth,
+generated from the Slime of the Ground, and
+the Heat of the Sun, as brute Creatures were
+at first: This second Progeny or Generation of
+Men in the future Earth, I understand to be
+signified by the Prophet under these borrowed
+or feigned Names of <i>Gog</i> and <i>Magog</i>: And
+this Earth-born Race, increasing and multiplying
+after the Manner of Men, by carnal
+Propagation, after a thousand Years, grew numerous,
+as the Sand by the Sea; and thereupon
+made an Irruption or Inundation upon
+the Face of the Earth, and upon the Habitations
+of the Saints; as the barbarous Nations did
+formerly upon Christendom; or as the Giants
+are said to have made War against the Gods:
+But they were soon confounded in their impious
+and sacrilegious Design, being struck
+and consum’d by Fire from Heaven.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>Some will think, it may be, that there was
+such a double Race of Mankind in the first
+World also: <i>The Sons of Adam, and the
+Sons of God</i>; because it is said, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr></i> <i>When
+Men began to multiply upon the Face of the
+Earth</i>, that <i>the <span class='sc'>Sons of God saw the
+Daughters of Men</span>, that they were fair,
+and they took them Wives of all that they
+lik’d.</i> And it is added, presently, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 4.</i> <i>There
+were Giants in the Earth in those Days;
+and also after that, when the Sons of God
+came in unto the Daughters of Men, and they
+bare Children to them; the same became mighty
+Men, which were of old, Men of Renown.</i>
+Here seem to be two or three Orders or Races
+in this Ante-diluvian World. <i>The Sons of
+God; the Sons and Daughters of Adam</i>; and
+a third Sort arising from the Mixture and Copulation
+of these, which are call’d <i>Mighty
+Men of old</i>, or Heroes. Besides, here are
+Giants mention’d, and to which they are to
+be reduc’d, it does not certainly appear.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Mixture of these two Races, whatsoever
+they were, gave, it seems, so great Offence
+to God, that he destroy’d that World
+upon it, in a Deluge of Water. It hath been
+matter of great Difficulty to determine, who
+these <i>Sons of God</i> were, that fell in Love with
+and married the Daughters of Men. There
+are two Conjectures that prevail most; one,
+that they were Angels; and another, that they
+were of the Posterity of <i>Seth</i>, and distinguished
+from the rest, by their Piety, and the Worship
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>of the true God; so that it was a great
+Crime for them to mingle with the rest of
+Mankind, who are suppos’d to have been Idolaters:
+Neither of these Opinions is to me
+satisfactory. For as to Angels, good Angels
+neither <i>marry, nor are given in Marriage</i>, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr>
+<abbr title='twenty-two'>xxii.</abbr> 30.</i> and bad Angels are not called the
+<i>Sons of God</i>. Besides, if Angels were capable
+of those mean Pleasures, we ought in
+Reason to suppose, that there are Female Angels,
+as well as Male; for surely those Capacities
+are not in vain through a whole <i>Species</i>
+of Beings. And if there be Female Angels,
+we cannot imagine, but that they must
+be of a far more charming Beauty than the
+dowdy Daughters of Men. Then as to the
+Line of <i>Seth</i>, it does not appear that there was
+any such Distinction of Idolaters and true
+Worshipers before the Flood, or that there
+was any such thing as Idolatry at that time,
+nor for some Ages after. Besides, it is not
+said, that the Sons of God fell in Love with
+the Daughters of <i>Cain</i>, or of any degenerate
+Race, but with the Daughters of <i>Adam</i>; which
+may be the Daughters of <i>Seth</i>, as well as of
+any other: These Conjectures therefore seem
+to be shallow and ill-grounded. But what the
+Distinction was of those two Orders, remains
+yet very uncertain.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> to the <i>Galatians</i>, (<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 21, 22</i>,
+<i>&#38;c.</i>) makes a Distinction also of a double Progeny;
+that of <i>Sarah</i>, and that of <i>Hagar</i>: One
+was born according to the Flesh, after a natural
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>Manner; and the other by the divine
+Power, or in virtue of the divine Promise.
+This Distinction of a natural and supernatural
+Origin, and of a double Progeny; the one born
+to Servitude, the other to Liberty, represents
+very well either the Manner of our present
+Birth, and of our future, at the Resurrection;
+or that double Progeny and double manner of
+Birth, which we suppose in the <i>future Earth</i>.
+’Tis true, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> applies this to the Law and
+the Gospel; but typical Things, you know,
+have different Aspects and Complexions, which
+are not exclusive of one another; and so it
+may be here. But however, this double Race
+of Mankind in the future Earth, to explain
+the Doctrine of <i>Gog</i> and <i>Magog</i>, is but a Conjecture;
+and does not pretend to be otherwise
+considered.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The last Thing that remains to be considered
+and accounted for, is the Upshot and Conclusion
+of all; namely, what will become of
+the Earth after the thousand Years expir’d?
+Or after the Day of Judgment past, and the
+Saints translated into Heaven, what will be
+the Face of Things here below? There being
+nothing expresly reveal’d concerning this, we
+must not expect a positive Resolution of it:
+And the Difficulty is not peculiar to our Hypothesis;
+for though the <i>Millennium</i>, and the
+final Judgment, were concluded in the present
+Earth, the Quære would still remain, <i>What</i>
+would become of this Earth after the last Day?
+So that all Parties are equally concern’d, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>equally free, to give their Opinion, <i>What</i>
+will be the <i>last State and Consummation</i> of
+this Earth: Scripture, I told you, hath not
+defin’d this Point; and the Philosophers say
+very little concerning it. The Stoicks indeed
+speak of the final Resolution of all things into
+<i>Fire</i>, or into <i>Ether</i>: which is the purest
+and subtlest sort of Fire: So that the whole
+Globe or Mass of the Earth, and all particular
+Bodies, will, according to them, be at last dissolv’d
+into a liquid Flame. Neither was this
+Doctrine first invented by the Stoicks; <i>Heraclitus</i>
+taught it long before them, and I take
+it to be as ancient as <i>Orpheus</i> himself; who
+was the first Philosopher amongst the <i>Greeks</i>:
+And he deriving his Notions from the <i>Barbarick</i>
+Philosophers, or the Sages of the <i>East</i>,
+that School of Wisdom may be look’d upon
+as the true Seminary of this Doctrine, as it
+was of most other natural Knowledge.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But this Dissolution of the Earth into Fire,
+may be understood two Ways; either that it
+will be dissolv’d into a loose Flame, and so
+dissipated and lost as Lightning in the Air,
+and vanish into nothing; or that it will be
+dissolv’d into a fix’d Flame, such as the Sun
+is, or a fix’d Star. And I am of Opinion, that
+the Earth after the last Day of Judgment, will
+be chang’d into the Nature of a Sun, or of a
+fix’d Star, and shine like them in the Firmament:
+Being all melted down into a Mass of
+æthereal Matter, and enlightning a Sphere or
+Orb round about it. I have no direct and demonstrative
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>Proof of this I confess, but if Planets
+were once fixed Stars, as I believe they
+were, their Revolution to the same State again,
+in a great Circle of Time, seems to be
+according to the Methods of Providence, which
+loves to recover what was lost or decay’d, after
+certain Periods, and what was originally
+good and happy, to make it so again, all
+Nature, at last, being transform’d into a like
+Glory with the Sons of God, (<i>Rom.</i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 21.)</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I will not tell you what Foundation there
+is in Nature, for this Change or Transformation
+from the interiour Constitution of the
+Earth, and the Instances we have seen of new
+Stars appearing in the Heavens. I should lead
+the <i>English</i> Reader too far out of his Way,
+to discourse of these things: But if there be any
+Passages or Expressions in Scripture, that countenance
+such a State of things after the Day of
+Judgment, it will not be improper to take
+Notice of them. That radiant and illustrious
+<i>Jerusalem</i>, describ’d by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr>
+<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 10, 11, 12, &#38;c. compos’d all of Gemms
+and bright Materials, clear and sparkling, as
+a Star in the Firmament: Who can give an
+Account what that is? Its Foundations, Walls,
+Gates, Streets, all the Body of it, resplendent
+as Light or Fire? What is there in Nature, or
+in this Universe, that bears any Resemblance
+with such a Phænomenon as this, unless it
+be a Sun or a fix’d Star? Especially if we add
+and consider what follows, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 23. That <i>the
+City had no need of the Sun, nor of the Moon
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>to shine in it</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 25</i>. And that <i>there was no
+Night there</i>. This can be no terrestrial Body;
+it must be a Substance luminous in it self,
+and a Fountain of Light, as a fix’d Star: And
+upon such a Change of the Earth, or Transformation,
+as this, would <i>be brought to pass
+the Saying that is written</i>, <span class='sc'>Death is Swallowed
+up in Victory</span>. Which indeed <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>Paul</i> seems to apply to our Bodies in particular,
+<i>1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr> 54</i>. But in the eighth <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr>
+to the <i>Romans</i> he extends it to all Nature,
+<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 21</i>. <i>The Creation it self also shall be deliver’d
+from the Bondage of Corruption, into
+the glorious Liberty of the Sons of God.</i> And
+accordingly <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, speaking of the same
+Time with <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> in that Place to the <i>Corinthians</i>,
+namely, of the general Resurrection
+and Day of Judgement, says, <i>Death</i> and
+<i>Hades</i>, which we render Hell, <i>were cast into
+the Lake of Fire, <abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 14.</i> This is
+their being <i>swallowed up in Victory</i>, which
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> speaks of; when <i>Death</i> and <i>Hades</i>,
+that is, all the Region of Mortality, the Earth
+and all its Dependences, are absorpt into a
+Mass of Fire; and converted, by a glorious
+Victory over the Powers of Darkness, into a
+luminous Body and a Region of Light.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This great Issue and Period of the Earth,
+and of all human Affairs, tho’ it seem to be
+founded in Nature, and supported by several
+Expressions of Scripture; yet we cannot, for
+want of full Instruction, propose it otherwise
+than as a fair Conjecture: The Heavens and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>the Earth shall flie away at the Day of Judgment,
+says the Text, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 11</i>. <i>And their
+Place shall not be found.</i> This must be understood
+of our Heavens and our Earth; and their
+<i>flying away</i> must be their removing to some
+other Part of the Universe, so as their Place
+or Residence shall not be found any more
+here below. This is the easy and natural Sense
+of the Words; and this Translation of the
+Earth will not be without some Change preceeding,
+that makes it leave its Place, and,
+with a lofty Flight, takes its Seat amongst the
+Stars.——There we leave it; having conducted
+it for the Space of seven thousand Years
+thro’ various Changes, from a <i>dark Chaos to
+a bright Star</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>FINIS.</i></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span><span class='xxlarge'><b>A REVIEW Of the <span class='sc'>Sacred</span> Theory of the Earth,</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>And of its</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>PROOFS:</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>Especially in Reference to</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'><b>SCRIPTURE.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><i>LONDON</i>:</div>
+ <div>Printed for <span class='sc'>J. Hooke</span> in <i>Fleet-street</i>.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>
+ <h2 class='c007'>A Review.</h2>
+</div>
+<p class='c016'>To take a <i>Review</i> of this <i>Theory</i> of
+the <i>Earth</i>, which we have now
+finish’d, we must consider, first,
+the Extent of it, and then the
+principal Parts whereof it consists:
+It reaches, as you see, from one End of the
+World to the other; from the first Chaos to
+the last Day, and the Consummation of all
+Things. This probably, will run the length
+of seven thousand Years; which is a good
+competent Space of Time to exercise our
+Thoughts upon, and to observe the several
+Scenes which Nature and Providence bring into
+View within the Compass of so many Ages.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>The Matter and principal Parts of this
+<i>Theory</i> are such things as are recorded in
+Scripture: We do not feign a Subject, and
+then discant upon it, for Diversion; but endeavour
+to give an intelligible and rational
+Account of such Matters of Fact, past or future,
+as are there specified and declared.
+What it hath seem’d good to the Holy Ghost
+to communicate to us, by History or Prophecy,
+concerning the several States and general
+Changes of this Earth, makes the Argument
+of our Discourse: Therefore the Things themselves
+must be taken for granted, in one Sense
+or other, seeing, besides all other Proofs, they
+have the Authority of a Revelation; and our
+Business is only to give such an Explication of
+them, as shall approve it self to the Faculties
+of Man, and be conformable to Scripture.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We will therefore first set down the Things
+themselves, that make the subject Matter of
+this <i>Theory</i>; and remind you of our Explication
+of them: Then recollect the general
+Proofs of that Explication, from Reason and
+Nature; but more fully and particularly shew
+how it is grounded upon Scripture. The
+primary <i>Phænomena</i> whereof we are to give
+an Account, are these five or six.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><abbr title='one'>I.</abbr> <i>The Original of the Earth from a Chaos.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='two'>II.</abbr> <i>The State of Paradise, and the antediluvian
+World.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='three'>III.</abbr> <i>The universal Deluge.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr> <i>The universal Conflagration.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span><abbr title='five'>V.</abbr> <i>The Renovation of the World, or the
+new Heavens and new Earth.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='six'>VI.</abbr> <i>The Consummation of all Things.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c012'>These are unquestionably in Scripture; and
+these all relate, as you see, to the several
+Forms, States and Revolutions of this Earth.
+We are therefore oblig’d to give a clear and
+coherent Account of these <i>Phænomena</i>, in that
+Order and Consecution wherein they stand to
+one another.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are also in Scripture some other
+Things, relating to the same Subjects, that may
+be call’d the secondary Ingredients of this <i>Theory</i>,
+and are to be referr’d to their respective
+primary Heads. Such are, for Instance,</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><abbr title='one'>I.</abbr> <i>The Longevity of the Ante-diluvians.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='two'>II.</abbr> <i>The Rupture of the great Abyss, at the
+Deluge.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><abbr title='three'>III.</abbr> <i>The appearing of the Rainbow after the
+Deluge, as a Sign that there never
+should be a second Flood.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c012'>These things Scripture hath also left upon
+Record, as Directions and Indications how to
+understand the ante-diluvian State, and the
+Deluge it self. Whosoever therefore shall undertake
+to write the <i>Theory</i> of the <i>Earth</i>, must
+think himself bound to give us a just Explication
+of these secondary <i>Phænomena</i>, as well as
+of the primary; and that in such a Dependance
+and Connexion, as to make them give
+and receive Light from one another.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>The former Part of the Task is concerning
+the World behind us, Times and Things past,
+that are already come to Light: The latter
+is concerning the World before us, Times and
+Things to come; that lie yet in the Bosom of
+Providence, and in the Seeds of Nature. And
+these are chiefly the <i>Conflagration</i> of the World,
+and the <i>Renovation</i> of it. When these are
+over and expir’d, then <i>comes the End</i>, as
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> says, <i>1 <abbr title='Corinthians'>Cor.</abbr> <abbr title='fifteen'>xv.</abbr></i> Then the <i>Heavens
+and the Earth fly away</i>, as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says,
+<i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr></i> Then is the <i>Consummation</i> of all
+Things, and the last Period of this sublunary
+World, whatsoever it is: Thus far the Theorist
+must go, and pursue the Motions of Nature,
+till all Things are brought to Rest and
+Silence: And in this latter Part of the <i>Theory</i>,
+there is also a collateral Phænomenon,
+the <i>Millennium</i>, or thousand Years Reign of
+Christ and his Saints upon Earth, to be consider’d.
+For this, according as it is reported
+in Scripture, does imply a Change in the
+natural World, as well as in the Morals and
+therefore must be accounted for in the <i>Theory</i>
+of the <i>Earth</i>: At least it must be there determin’d,
+whether that State of the World, which
+is singular and extraordinary, will be before
+or after the Conflagration.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These are the Principals and Incidents of
+this <i>Theory</i> of the <i>Earth</i>, as to the Matter
+and Subject of it; which, you see, is both important,
+and wholly taken out of Scripture:
+As to our Explication of these Points, that is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>sufficiently known, being set down at large
+in four Books of this Theory; Therefore it
+remains only, having seen the Matter of the
+Theory, to examine the Form of it, and the
+Proofs of it; for from these two things it
+must receive its Censure. As to the Form, the
+Characters of a regular Theory seem to be
+these three; <i>Few and easy Postulatums; Union
+of Parts</i>; and <i>a Fitness to answer, fully and
+clearly, all the Phænomena to which it is to
+be apply’d</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We think our Hypothesis does not want any
+of these Characters: As to the first, we take
+but one single <i>Postulatum</i> for the whole Theory,
+and that an easy one, warranted both by
+Scripture and Antiquity; namely, <i>That this
+Earth rise, at first, from a Chaos</i>: As to the
+second, <i>Union of Parts</i>, the whole Theory
+is but one Series of Causes and Effects from
+that first Chaos. Besides, you can scarce admit
+any one Part of it, first, last, or intermediate,
+but you must, in Consequence of that,
+admit all the rest. Grant me but that the
+Deluge is truly explain’d, and I’ll desire no
+more Proof for all the Theory: Or, if you
+begin at the other End, and grant the <i>new
+Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i> after the Conflagration,
+you will be led back again to the first
+Heavens and first Earth that were before the
+Flood. For <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> says, that <i>new Earth</i>
+was without a <i>Sea</i>, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1</i>. And it was
+a <i>Renovation</i>, or <i>Restitution</i> to some former
+State of Things: There was therefore some
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>former Earth without a Sea; which not being
+the present Earth, it must be the ante-diluvian.
+Besides, both <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>, and the Prophet <i>Esaias</i>,
+have represented the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new
+Earth</i>, as <i>paradisiacal</i>, according as it proved,
+<i>Book <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr> <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> 2</i>. And having told us
+the Form of the new-future-Earth, that it
+will have <i>no Sea</i>, it is a reasonable Inference
+that there was no Sea in the <i>paradisiacal
+Earth</i>. However, from the Form of this future
+Earth, which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> represents to us,
+we may at least conclude, that an <i>Earth without
+a Sea</i> is no Chimæra, or Impossibility;
+but rather a fit Seat and Habitation for the
+Just and the Innocent.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus you see the Parts of the Theory link
+and hold fast one another, according to the
+Second Character: And as to the third, of
+being <i>suited to the Phænomena</i>, we must refer
+that to the next Head of <i>Proofs</i>. It may be
+truly said, that bare Coherence and Union of
+Parts is not a sufficient Proof; the Parts of a
+Fable or Romance may hang aptly together,
+and yet have no Truth in them: This is
+enough indeed to give the Title of a just Composition
+to any Work, but not of a true
+one; till it appear that the Conclusions and
+Explications are grounded upon good natural
+Evidence, or upon good Divine Authority.
+We must therefore proceed now to the third
+thing to be consider’d in a Theory, <i>What</i> its
+Proofs are? Or the Grounds upon which it
+stands, whether Sacred or Natural?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>According to natural Evidence, things are
+proved from their Causes or their Effects; and
+we think we have this double Order of Proofs
+for the Truth of our Hypothesis: As to the
+Method of Causes, we proceed from what
+is more simple, to what is more compound,
+and build all upon one Foundation. Go but
+to the Head of the Theory, and you will see
+the Causes lying in a Train before you, from
+first to last; and tho’ you did not know the
+natural History of the World, past or future,
+you might, by Intuition, foretel it, as to the
+grand Revolutions and successive Faces of Nature,
+through a long Series of Ages. If we
+have given a true Account of the Motions
+of the Chaos, we have also truly form’d the
+first habitable Earth; and if that be truly form’d
+we have thereby given a true Account of the
+State of <i>Paradise</i>, and of all that depends upon
+it; and not of that only, but also of the
+universal Deluge. Both these we have shewn
+in their Causes; The one from the Form of
+that Earth, and the other from the Fall of it
+into the Abyss: And tho’ we had not been
+made acquainted with these things by Antiquity,
+we might, in Contemplation of the
+Causes, have truly conceiv’d them as Properties
+or Incidents to the first Earth. But as to
+the Deluge, I do not say, that we might have
+calculated the Time, Manner, and other Circumstances
+of it: These things were regulated
+by Providence, in subordination to the moral
+World; but that there would be, at one Time
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>or other, a Disruption of that Earth, or of
+the great Abyss, and in Consequence of it,
+an universal Deluge; so far, I think, the Light
+of a Theory might carry us.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Farthermore, in Consequence of this Disruption
+of the primæval Earth, at the Deluge,
+the present Earth was made hollow and cavernous,
+[<i>Theor. Book <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> <abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> 7, and 8.</i>]
+and by that means, (due Preparations being
+used) capable of <i>Combustion</i>, or of perishing
+by an universal Fire: Yet, to speak ingenuously,
+this is as hard a Step to be made, in virtue
+of natural Causes, as any in the whole <i>Theory</i>.
+But in Recompence of that Defect, the Conflagration
+is so plainly and literally taught us in
+Scripture, and avow’d by Antiquity, that it can
+fall under no dispute, as to the Thing it self;
+and as to a Capacity or Disposition to it in the
+present Earth, that I think is sufficiently made
+out.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then, the Conflagration admitted, in that
+way it is explain’d in the third Book; the Earth,
+you see, is, by that Fire, reduc’d to a second
+Chaos. A Chaos truly so call’d; and from that,
+as from the first, arises another Creation, or
+<i>new Heavens</i> and a <i>new Earth</i>; by the same
+Causes, and in the same Form, with the <i>paradisiacal</i>.
+This is the <i>Renovation</i> of the
+World; the <i>Restitution</i> of all Things mention’d
+both by Scripture and Antiquity; and by
+the Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>,
+call’d the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>: With
+this, as the last Period, and most glorious Scene
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>of all human Affairs, our <i>Theory</i> concludes,
+as to this Method of Causes, whereof we are
+now speaking.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I say, here it Ends as to the <i>Method of Causes</i>:
+For tho’ we pursue the Earth still farther,
+even to its last Dissolution, which is call’d the
+Consummation of all Things; yet all that we
+have superadded upon that Occasion, is but problematical,
+and may, without Prejudice to the
+<i>Theory</i>, be argued and disputed on either Hand.
+I do not know, but that our Conjectures there
+may be well grounded; but however, not
+springing so directly from the same Root, or,
+at least, not by Ways so clear and visible, I
+leave that Part undecided: Especially seeing
+we pretend to write no more than the <i>Theory
+of the Earth</i>, and therefore as we begin no
+higher than the <i>Chaos</i>, so we are not oblig’d
+to go any farther than to the last State of a
+terrestrial Consistency; which is that of the
+new Heavens and the new Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is the first natural Proof, from the Order
+of Causes: The second is from the Consideration
+of Effects; namely, of such Effects as
+are already in being: And therefore this Proof
+can extend only to that Part of the <i>Theory</i>, that
+explains the present and past Form and Phænomena
+of the Earth. What is future, must be
+left to a farther Trial, when the Thing comes
+to pass, and present themselves to be examin’d
+and compar’d with the Hypothesis. As to the
+present Form of the Earth, we call all Nature
+to Witness for us; the Rocks and the Mountains,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>the Hills and the Valleys, the deep and
+wide Sea, and the Caverns of the Ground:
+Let these speak, and tell their Origin: How
+the Body of the Earth came to be thus torn
+and mangled? If this strange and irregular
+Structure was not the Effect of a Ruin; and
+of such a Ruin as was universal over the Face
+of the whole Globe. But we have given such
+a full Explication of this, in the first Part of
+the Theory, from <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr></i> to the End of that
+Treatise, that we dare stand to the Judgment
+of any that reads those four Chapters to determine
+if the Hypothesis does not answer to
+all those Phænomena, easy and adequately.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The next Phænomenon to be consider’d, is
+the <i>Deluge</i>, with its Adjuncts: This also is
+fully explain’d by our Hypothesis, in the <abbr title='second'>iid</abbr>,
+<abbr title='third'>iiid</abbr>, and <abbr title='sixth'>vith</abbr> Chapters of the first Book: Where
+it is shewn, that the <i>Mosaical Deluge</i>, that is,
+an universal Inundation of the whole Earth,
+above the Tops of the highest Mountains,
+made by a breaking open of the great Abyss,
+(for thus far <i>Moses</i> leads us) is fully explain’d
+by this Hypothesis, and cannot be conceiv’d in
+any other Method hitherto propos’d. There
+are no Sources or Stores of Water sufficient
+for such an Effect, that may be drawn upon
+the Earth, and drawn off again, but by supposing
+such an Abyss, and such a Disruption of
+it, as the Theory represents.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, As to the Phænomena of <i>Paradise</i>,
+and the ante-diluvian World, we have set them
+down in Order in the second Book; and apply’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>to each of them its proper Explication,
+from the same Hypothesis. We have also given
+an Account of that Character which Antiquity
+always assign’d to the first Age of the
+World, or the Golden Age, as they call’d it;
+namely, <i>Equality of Seasons</i> throughout the
+Year, or a perpetual Equinox. We have also
+taken in all the Adjuncts or Concomitants of
+these States, as they are mention’d in Scripture.
+<i>The Longevity</i> of the Ante-diluvians, and
+the Declension or their Age by degrees, after
+the Flood: As also that wonderful Phænomenon,
+the <i>Rainbow</i>; which appear’d to <i>Noah</i>
+for a Sign, that the Earth should never undergo
+a second Deluge. And we have shewn
+[<i>Theor.</i> <i>Book <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> 5.</i>] wherein the Force and
+Propriety of that Sign consisted, for confirming
+<i>Noah</i>’s Faith in the Promise and in the Divine
+Veracity.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus far we have explain’d the past Phænomena
+of the natural World: The rest are Futurities,
+which still lie hid in their Causes; and
+we cannot properly prove a Theory from Effects
+that are not yet in Being: But so far as
+they are foretold in Scripture, both as to Substance
+and Circumstance, in Prosecution of the
+same Principles we have ante-dated their Birth,
+and shew’d how they will come to pass. We
+may therefore, I think, reasonably conclude,
+that this Theory has perform’d its Task and
+answer’d its Title; having given an Account
+of all the general Changes of the natural World
+as far as either Sacred History looks backwards,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>or Sacred Prophecy looks forwards; so far as
+the one tells us what is past in Nature, and
+the other what is to come; And if all this be
+nothing but an Appearance of Truth, ’tis a
+kind of Fatality upon us to be deceiv’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for natural Evidence, from the
+Causes or Effects: We now proceed to
+Scripture, which will make the greatest Part
+of this Review. The Sacred Basis upon which
+the whole Theory stands, is the Doctrine of
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, deliver’d in his <i>second Epistle</i> and
+<i>third Chapter</i>, concerning the <i>triple Order</i> and
+Succession of the Heavens and the Earth; that
+comprehends the whole Extent of our Theory;
+which indeed is but a large Commentary upon
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Text. The Apostle sets out a
+three-fold State of the Heavens and Earth, with
+some general Properties of each, taken from
+their different Constitution and different Fate.
+The Theory takes the same three-fold State of
+the Heavens and the Earth; and explains more
+particularly, wherein their different Constitution
+consists; and how, under the Conduct of
+Providence, their different Fate depends upon
+it. Let us set down the Apostle’s Words, with
+the Occasion of them; and their plain Sense,
+according to the most easy and natural Explication.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>2 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 3. Knowing this first, that
+there shall come in the last Days Scoffers, walking
+after their own Lusts.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>4. <i>And saying, where is the Promise of his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>coming? For since the Fathers fell asleep, all
+Things continue as they were from the Beginning
+of the Creation.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>5. <i>For this they willingly are ignorant of,
+that by the Word of God, the Heavens were of
+old, and the Earth consisting of Water and by
+Water.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>6. <i>Whereby the World that then was, being
+overflowed with Water, perished.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>7. <i>But the Heavens and the Earth that are
+now, by the same Word, are kept in Store, reserved
+unto Fire against the Day of Judgment,
+and Perdition of ungodly Men.</i>—</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>10. <i>The Day of the Lord will come as a Thief
+in the Night, in which the Heavens shall pass
+away with a great Noise, and the Elements
+shall melt with fervent Heat; the Earth also
+and the Works that are therein shall be burnt up.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>13. <i>Nevertheless we, according to his Promise,
+look for new Heavens and a new Earth,
+wherein dwelleth Righteousness.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c012'>This is the whole Discourse so far as relates
+to our Subject: <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, you see, had met with
+some that scoff’d at the future Destruction of the
+World, and the coming of our Saviour; and
+they were Men, it seems, that pretended to Philosophy
+and Argument; and they use this Argument
+for their Opinion, <i>Seeing there has been
+no Change in Nature, or in the World, from the
+Beginning to this Time, why should we think
+there will be any Change for the future?</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Apostle answers to this, that they willingly
+forget, or are ignorant, that there were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>Heavens of old, and an Earth, so and so constituted;
+consisting of Water and by Water; by
+reason whereof that World, or those Heavens
+and that Earth, perish’d in a Deluge of Water.
+But, saith he, the Heavens and the Earth, that
+are now, are of another Constitution, fitted and
+reserved to another Fate; namely to perish by
+Fire: And after these are perish’d, there will be
+new Heavens and a new Earth, according to
+God’s Promise.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is an easy Paraphrase, and the plain and
+genuine Sense of the Apostle’s Discourse; and
+no Body, I think, would ever look after any other
+Sense, if this did not carry them out of their
+usual Road, and point to Conclusions which
+they did not fancy. The Sense, you see, hits the
+Objection directly, or the Cavil which these
+Scoffers made; and tells them, that they vainly
+pretend that there hath been no change in the
+World since the Beginning; for there was one
+sort of Heavens and Earth before the Flood, and
+another Sort now, the first having been destroy’d
+at the Deluge. So that the Apostle’s Argument
+stands upon this Foundation, that there is a Diversity
+betwixt the present Heavens and Earth,
+and the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth; take
+away that, and you take away all the Force of
+his Answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then as to his <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new
+Earth</i> after the Conflagration, they must be
+material and natural, in the same Sense and
+Signification with the former Heavens and
+Earth; unless you will offer open Violence to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>the Text. So that this Triplicity of the Heavens
+and the Earth, is the first, obvious, plain
+Sense of the Apostle’s Discourse; which every
+one would readily accept, if it did not draw
+after it a long Train of Consequences, and lead
+them into other Worlds than they ever thought
+of before, or are willing to enter upon now.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But we shall have Occasion by and by, to
+examine this Text more fully in all its Circumstances:
+Give me leave in the mean time to
+observe, that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> also implies that <i>triple
+Creation</i> which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> expresses. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i>,
+I say, in the <abbr title='eighth'>viiith</abbr> Chapter to the <i>Romans</i>,
+<abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 20, 21. tells us of a <i>Creation</i> that will be
+<i>redeem’d from Vanity</i>, which are the new Heavens
+and new Earth to come. A <i>Creation in
+Subjection to Vanity</i>; which is the present State
+of the World; and a <i>Creation</i> that was subjected
+to Vanity, in hopes of being restored,
+which was the first <i>Paradisiacal</i> Creation: And
+these are the three States of the natural World,
+which make the Subject of our Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To these two Places of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>Paul</i>, I might add that third in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i>,
+concerning the new Heavens and new Earth,
+with that distinguishing Character, that the
+Earth was <i>without a Sea</i>: As this distinguisheth
+it from the present Earth, so, being a <i>Restitution</i>
+or <i>Restauration</i>, as we noted before,
+it must be the same with some former Earth;
+and consequently it implies, that there was
+another precedent State of the natural World,
+to which this is a Restitution. These three
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>Places I alledge, as comprehending and confirming
+the Theory in its full Extent; But we
+do not suppose them all of the same Force and
+Clearness; <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> leads the Way, and gives
+Light and Strength to the other two: When a
+Point is prov’d by one clear Text, we allow
+others, as Auxiliaries, that are not of the same
+Clearness; but being open’d, receive Light
+from the primary Text, and reflect it upon the
+Argument.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Theory in general: We
+will now take one or two principal Heads of
+it, which virtually contain all the rest, and
+examine them more strictly and particularly,
+in reference to their Agreement with Scripture.
+The two Heads we pitch upon, shall be our
+Explication of the Deluge, and our Explication
+of the new Heavens and new Earth:
+We told you before, these two were as the
+Hinges, upon which all the Theory moves,
+and which hold the Parts of it in firm Union
+one with another. As to the Deluge, if I
+have explain’d that aright, by the Disruption
+of the great Abyss, and the Dissolution of the
+Earth that cover’d it, all the rest follows in
+such a Chain of Consequences as cannot be
+broken. Wherefore, in order to the Proof of
+that Explication, and of all that depends upon
+it, I will make bold to lay down this Proposition,
+<i>That our Hypothesis concerning the universal
+Deluge, is not only more agreeable to
+Reason and Philosophy, than any other yet propos’d
+to the World, but is also more agreeable
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>to Scripture</i>: Namely, to such Places of Scripture
+as reflect upon the <i>Deluge</i>, the <i>Abyss</i>,
+and the Form of the <i>first Earth</i>: And particularly
+to the <i>History of Noah’s Flood, as recorded
+by Moses</i>. If I can make this good,
+it will, doubtless, give Satisfaction to all that
+are free and intelligent; and I desire their
+Patience, if I proceed slowly and by several
+Steps. We will divide our Task into Parts,
+and examine them separately; first, by Scripture
+in general, and then by <i>Moses</i> his History
+and Description of the Flood.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Our Hypothesis of the Deluge consists of
+three principal Heads, or differs remarkably
+in three Things from the common Explication.
+First, in that we suppose the ante-diluvian
+Earth to have been of another Form and Constitution
+from the present Earth; with the
+Abyss placed under it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Secondly, In that we suppose the Deluge
+to have been made, not by any Inundation of
+the Sea, or overflowing of Fountains and Rivers;
+nor (principally) by an Excess of Rains;
+but by a real Dissolution of the exteriour Earth,
+and Disruption of the Abyss which it cover’d:
+These are the two principal Points; to which
+may be added, as a Corollary,</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thirdly, That the Deluge was not in the
+nature of a standing Pool; the Waters lying
+every where level, of an equal Depth, and
+with an uniform Surface; but was made by
+a Fluctuation and Commotion of the Abyss
+upon the Disruption: Which Commotion being
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>over, the Waters retired into their Channels,
+and let the dry Land appear.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These are the most material and fundamental
+Parts of our Hypothesis; and these being
+prov’d consonant to Scripture, there can be
+no doubt of the rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We begin with the first: That the ante-diluvian
+Earth was of another Form and Constitution
+from the present Earth, with the
+Abyss placed under it: This is confirm’d in
+Scripture, both by such Places as assert a Diversity
+in general; and by other Places that
+intimate to us, wherein that Diversity consisted,
+and what was the form of the first
+Earth. That Discourse of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s, which
+we have set before you concerning the past,
+present and future Heavens and Earth, is so
+full a Proof of this Diversity in general, that
+you must either allow it, or make the Apostle’s
+Argumentation of no Effect: He speaks plainly
+of the natural World, <i>The Heavens and
+the Earth</i>; and he makes a plain Distinction,
+or rather Opposition, betwixt those before and
+after the Flood. So that the least we can conclude
+from his Words, is a Diversity betwixt
+them; in answer to that Identity or Immutability
+of Nature, which the Scoffers pretended
+to have been ever since the Beginning.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But tho’ the Apostle, to me, speaks plainly
+of the <i>natural World</i>, and distinguishes that
+which was before the Flood, from the present;
+yet there are some that will allow neither of
+these to be contain’d in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Words;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>and by that means would make this whole Discourse
+of little or no Effect, as to our Purpose:
+And seeing we, on the contrary, have made
+it the chief Scripture-Basis of the whole Theory
+of the Earth, we are oblig’d to free it from
+those false Glosses or Mis-interpretations, that
+lessen the Force of its Testimony, or make
+it wholly ineffectual.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Interpreters say, that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> meant
+no more than to mind these Scoffers, that the
+World was once destroy’d by a Deluge of Water;
+meaning the <i>Animate World</i>, Mankind
+and living Creatures: And that it shall be destroyed
+again by another Element, namely, by
+Fire. So as there is no Opposition or Diversity
+betwixt the two natural Worlds, taught or intended
+by the Apostle; but only in reference to
+their different Fate or Manner of perishing, and
+not of their different Nature or Constitution.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Here are two main Points, you see, wherein
+our Interpretations of this Discourse of the Apostle’s
+differ. First, in that they make the Apostle
+(in that <i>sixth verse</i>) to understand only
+the World <i>Animate</i>, or Men in brute Creatures:
+That these were indeed destroy’d, but
+not the natural World, or the Form and Constitution
+of the then Earth and Heavens. Secondly,
+that there is no Diversity or Opposition
+made by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> betwixt the antient Heavens
+and Earth, and the present, as to their
+Form and Constitution. We pretend that these
+are Mis-apprehensions or Mis-representations
+of the Sense of the Apostle in both respects, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>offer these Reasons to prove them to be so.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>For the first Point; That the Apostle speaks
+here of the natural World, particularly in the
+6th verse; and that it perished, as well as the
+animate, these Considerations seem to prove.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>First, because the Argument or Ground these
+Scoffers went upon, was taken from the natural
+World, its Constancy and Permanency in
+the same State from the Beginning; therefore
+if the Apostle answers <i>ad idem</i>, and takes away
+their Argument, he must understand the same
+natural World, and shew that it hath been
+chang’d, or hath perish’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You will say, it may be, the Apostle doth not
+deny, nor take away the Ground they went upon,
+but denies the Consequence they made
+from it; that <i>therefore there would be no Change
+because there had been none</i>. No, neither doth
+he do this, if by the <i>World</i> in the 6th verse, he
+understands Mankind only; for their Ground
+was this, <i>There hath been no Change in the
+natural World</i>; their Consequence this, <i>Therefore
+there will be none</i>, nor any Conflagration.
+Now the Apostle’s Answer according to you,
+is this, <i>You forget that Mankind hath been destroy’d
+in a Deluge.</i> And what then? What’s
+this to the natural World, whereof they were
+speaking? This takes away neither Antecedent
+nor Consequent, neither Ground nor Inference
+nor any way toucheth their Argument, which
+proceeded from the natural World, to the natural
+World. Therefore you must either suppose
+that the Apostle takes away their Ground, or
+he takes away nothing.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>Secondly, What is it that the Apostle tells
+these Scoffers they were ignorant of? That
+there was a Deluge that destroy’d Mankind?
+They could not be ignorant of that, nor pretend
+to be so: It was therefore the Constitution
+of those old Heavens and Earth, and the
+Change or Destruction of them at the Deluge,
+that they were ignorant of, or did not attend
+to; and of this the Apostle minds them. These
+Scoffers appear to have been <i>Jews</i> by the
+Phrase they use, <i>Since the Fathers fell asleep</i>,
+which in both Parts of it is a <i>Judaical</i> Expression;
+and does <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> tell the <i>Jews</i>
+that had <i>Moses</i> read to them every Sabbath,
+that <i>they were ignorant that Mankind was once
+destroyed with a Deluge in the Days of Noah</i>?
+Or could they pretend to be ignorant of that
+without making themselves ridiculous both to
+<i>Jews</i> and Christians<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c013'><sup>[6]</sup></a>? Besides, these do
+not seem to have been of the Vulgar amongst
+them, for they bring a Philosophical Argument
+for their Opinion; and also in their
+very Argument they refer to the History of
+the Old Testament, in saying, <i>Since the Fathers
+fell asleep</i>, amongst which Fathers, <i>Noah</i>
+was one of the most remarkable.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span><i>Thirdly</i>, The Design of the Apostle is to
+prove to them, or to dispose them to the Belief
+of the Conflagration, or future destruction of
+the World; which I suppose you will not deny
+to be a Destruction of the natural World;
+therefore to prove or persuade this, he must
+use an Argument taken from a precedent Destruction
+of the natural World; for to give
+an instance of the perishing of Mankind only,
+would not reach home to his Purpose. And
+you are to observe here, that the Apostle
+does not proceed against them barely by Authority;
+for what would that have booted?
+If these Scoffers would have submitted to Authority,
+they had already the Authority of the
+Prophets and Apostles in this Point: but he
+deals with them at their own Weapon, and
+opposes Reasons to Reasons; What hath
+been done may be done, and if the natural
+World hath been once destroyed, ’tis not hard,
+nor unreasonable to suppose those Prophecies
+to be true, that say, it shall be destroyed
+again.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Fourthly</i>, Unless we understand here the
+natural World, we make the Apostle both
+redundant in his Discourse, and also very obscure
+in an easy Argument: If his Design was
+only to tell them that Mankind was once destroy’d
+in a Deluge, what’s that to the Heavens
+and the Earth? The 5th verse would be
+superfluous; which yet he seems to make the
+foundation of his Discourse. He might have
+told them how Mankind had perished before
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>with a Deluge, and aggravated that Destruction
+as much as he pleas’d, without telling them
+how the Heavens and the Earth were constituted
+then; what was that to the Purpose, if
+it had no Dependence or Connection with
+the other? In the precedent Chapter, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 5.</i>
+when he speaks only of the Floods destroying
+Mankind, he mentions nothing of the Heavens
+or the Earth; and if you make him to intend no
+more here, what he says more is superfluous.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I also add, that you make the Apostle very
+obscure and operose in a very easy Argument:
+How easy had it been for him, without this <i>Apparatus</i>,
+to have told them, as he did before,
+that God brought a Flood upon the World of
+the ungodly; and not given us so much Difficulty
+to understand his Sense, or such a Suspicion
+and Appearance, that he intended something
+more? For that there is at least a great Appearance
+and Tendency to a farther Sense, I think
+none can deny; And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>, <i>Didymus Alex.
+Bede</i>, as we shall see hereafter, understood it
+plainly of the natural World; also modern Expositors
+and Criticks; as <i>Cajetan</i>, <i>Estius</i>, <i>Drusius</i>,
+<i>Heinsius</i>, have extended it to the natural
+World, more or less, tho’ they had no Theory
+to mislead them, nor so much as an Hypothesis
+to support them; but attended only to the Tenor
+of the Apostle’s Discourse, which constrained
+them to that Sense, in whole or in Part.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Fifthly, The Opposition carries it upon the
+natural World: The Opposition lies betwixt
+the οἱ ἔκπαλαι οὐρανοὶ καὶ γῆ and οἱ νῦν οὐρανοὶ καὶ γῆ
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>the Heavens that were of old, and the Earth,
+and the present Heavens and Earth, or the two
+natural Worlds: And if they will not allow
+them to be oppos’d in their Natures (which
+yet we shall prove by and by) at least they must
+be oppos’d in their Fate; and as this is to perish
+by Fire, so that perished by Water; and
+if it perish’d by Water, it perish’d; which is
+all we contend for at present.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, If we would be as easily govern’d in
+the Exposition of this Place, as we are of other
+Places of Scripture, it would be enough to suggest,
+that in Reason and Fairness of Interpretation,
+the same World is destroy’d in the 6th
+<i>verse</i>, that was describ’d in the foregoing <i>verse</i>;
+but it is the natural World that is describ’d there,
+the Heavens and the Earth, so and so constituted;
+and therefore in Fairness of Interpretation
+they ought to be understood here; that
+World being the Subject that went immediately
+before, and there being nothing in the Words
+that restrains them to the animate World or
+to Mankind. In the <abbr title='second'>iid</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 5.</i> the Apostle
+does restrain the Word κόσμος by adding
+ἀσεβῶν, <i>the World of the ungodly</i>; but here
+’tis not only illimited, but, according to the
+Context, both preceding and following, to be
+extended to the natural World. I say by the following
+Context too; for so it answers to the
+World that is to perish by Fire; which will
+reach the Frame of Nature as well as Mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>For a Conclusion of this first Point, I will set
+down <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>’s Judgment in this Case; who
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>in several Parts of his Works hath interpreted
+this Place of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, <i>of the natural World</i>.
+As to the Heavens, he hath these Words in his
+Expositian upon <i>Genesis</i>, <i>Hos etiam aërios
+cœlos quondam periisse Diluvio, in quâdam earum,
+quæ Canonica appellantur, Epistolâ legimus.
+We read in one of the Epistles called Canonical</i>,
+meaning this of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s, <i>that the aërial
+Heavens perished in the Deluge</i>. And he concerns
+himself there to let you know that it was
+not the starry Heavens that were destroy’d; the
+Waters could not reach so high, but the Regions
+of our Air. Then afterwards he hath
+these Words, <i>Faciliùs eos (cœlos) secundum illius
+Epistolæ authoritatem credimus periisse, &#38;
+alios, sicut ibi scribitur repositos. We do more
+easily believe, according to the Authority of that
+Epistle, those Heavens to have perished; and
+others, as it is there written, substituted in their
+Place</i>. In like manner, and to the same Sense,
+he hath these Words upon <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='a hundred and one'>ci.</abbr></i> <i>Aerii utique
+cœli perierunt ut propinqui Terris, secundum
+quod dicuntur volucres cœli; sunt autem &#38; cœli
+cœlorum, superiores in Firmamento, sed utrùm
+&#38; ipsi perituri sint igne, an hi soli, qui etiam
+diluvio perierunt, disceptatio est aliquanto scrupulosior
+inter doctos.</i> And in his Book <i>de Civ.
+Dei</i>, he hath several Passages to the same purpose,
+<i>Quemadmodum in Apostolicâ illâ Epistolâ
+à toto Pars accipitur, quod diluvio periisse
+dictus est mundus, quamvis sola ejus cum suis
+cœlis pars ima perierit.</i> These being to the
+same Effect with the first Citation, I need not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>make them English; and this last Place refers
+to the Earth as well as the Heavens, as several
+other places in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i> do, whereof we
+shall give you an Account, when we come to
+shew his Judgment concerning the second
+Point, <i>the diversity of the ante-diluvian and
+post-diluvian World</i>: This being but a Foretaste
+of his good Will and Inclinations towards
+this Doctrine.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Considerations alledg’d, so far as I can
+judge, are full and unanswerable Proofs, that
+this Discourse of the Apostle’s comprehends
+and refers to the natural World; and consequently
+they warrant our Interpretation in this
+Particular, and destroy the contrary. We have
+but one Step more to make good, <i>That there
+was a Change made in this natural World at
+the Deluge</i>, according to the Apostle; and
+this is to confute the second Part of their Interpretation,
+which supposeth that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>
+makes no Distinction or Opposition betwixt
+the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth, and the
+present Heavens and Earth, in that respect.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This second Difference betwixt us, methinks
+is still harsher than the first; and contrary to
+the very Form, as well as to the Matter of the
+Apostle’s Discourse. For there is a plain Antithesis,
+or Opposition made betwixt the Heavens
+and the Earth of old (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> the 5th</i>) and
+the Heavens and the Earth that are now (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr>
+the 7th</i>) οἱ ἔκπαλαι οῦρανοὶ καὶ ἡ γῆ, and οἱ νῦν οῦρανοὶ
+καὶ ἡ γῆ, and the adversitive Particle, δὲ <i>but</i>,
+you see marks the Opposition; so that it is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>full and plain according to Grammar and Logick.
+And that the Parts or Members of this
+Opposition differ in Nature from one another,
+is certain from this, because otherwise the Apostle’s
+Argument or Discourse is of no Effect,
+concludes nothing to the Purpose; he makes
+no Answer to the Objection, nor proves any
+thing against the Scoffers, unless you admit that
+Diversity. For they said, <i>All Things had been
+the same from the Beginning in the natural
+World</i>; and unless he say, as he manifestly does,
+that there hath been a Change in Nature, and
+that the Heavens and Earth that are now,
+are different from the ancient Heavens and
+Earth which perish’d at the Flood, he says nothing
+to destroy their Argument, nor to confirm
+the prophetical Doctrine of the future
+Destruction of the natural World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This, I think, would be enough to satisfy any
+clear and free Mind concerning the Meaning
+of the Apostle; but because I desire to give
+as full a Light to this Place as I can, and to
+put the Sense of it out of Controversy, if possible,
+for the future, I will make some farther
+Remarks to confirm this Exposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And we may observe that several of those
+Reasons which we have given to prove, that
+the <i>natural World</i> is understood by <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>,
+are double Reasons; and do also prove the
+other Point in Question, a <i>Diversity betwixt
+the two natural Worlds</i>, the ante-diluvian and
+the present. As for Instance, unless you admit
+this Diversity betwixt the two natural
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>Worlds, you make the <abbr title='fifth'>5th</abbr> <i>verse</i> in this <i>Chapter</i>
+superfluous and useless; and you must suppose
+the Apostle to make an Inference here
+without Premises. In the <i><abbr title='sixth'>vith</abbr> verse</i> he makes
+an Inference, <a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c013'><sup>[7]</sup></a><i>Whereby</i> the World, that then
+was perish’d in a Deluge; What does this
+<i>whereby</i> relate to? <i>by Reason</i> of what? Sure
+of the particular Constitution of the Heavens
+and the Earth immediately before describ’d.
+Neither would it have signified any thing to
+the Scoffers, for the Apostle to have told
+them how the ante-diluvian Heavens and
+Earth were constituted, if they were constituted
+just in the same Manner as the present.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Besides, what is it, as I ask’d before, that
+the Apostle tells these Scoffers they were ignorant
+of? does he not say formally and expresly
+(<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 5.</i>) that they were ignorant that the Heavens
+and the Earth were constituted so and so,
+before the Flood? But if they were constituted
+as these present Heavens and Earth are, they
+were not ignorant of their Constitution? Nor
+did pretend to be ignorant, for their own
+(mistaken) Argument supposeth it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But before we proceed any further, give
+me leave to note the Impropriety of our Translation,
+in the <i>5th verse</i>, or latter Part of it;
+Ἐξ ὕδατος καὶ δὶ ὕδατων (vel δὶ ὔδατος) συνισῶτα.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>This we translate <i>standing in the Water, and
+out of the Water</i>, which is done manifestly
+in compliance with the present Form of the
+Earth, and the Notions of the Translators, and
+not according to the natural Force and Sense
+of the <i>Greek</i> Words. If one met with this
+Sentence<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c013'><sup>[8]</sup></a> in a <i>Greek</i> Author, who would
+ever render it <i>standing in the Water, and out
+of the Water</i>? Nor do I know any <i>Latin</i>
+Translator that hath ventur’d to render them
+in that Sense, nor any <i>Latin</i> Father; <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>
+and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i> I’m sure do not, but <i>Consistens
+ex aquâ</i>, or <i>de aquâ, &#38; per aquam</i>;
+for that later Phrase also συνεσάναι δὶ ὕδατος,
+does not with so good Propriety signify <i>to
+stand in the Water</i>, as to consist or subsist by
+Water, or by the Help of Water, <i>Tanquam
+per causam sustinentem</i>, as <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i> and <i>Jerome</i>
+render it. Neither does that Instance they
+give from <i>1 Pet. <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 20.</i> prove any thing to
+the contrary, for the Ark was sustain’d by the
+Waters, and the <i>English</i> does render it accordingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Translation being thus rectified, you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>see the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth consisted
+of Water, and by Water; which makes
+Way for a second Observation to prove our
+Sense of the Text; for if you admit no Diversity
+betwixt those Heavens and Earth, and
+the present, shew us pray, how the present
+Heavens and Earth consist of Water, and by
+Water? What watry Constitution have they?
+The Apostle implies rather, that <i>the new Heavens
+and Earth</i> have a fiery Constitution.
+We have now Meteors of all Sorts in the Air,
+Winds, Hail, Snow, Lightning, Thunder, and
+all Things engender’d of fiery Exhalations, as
+well as we have Rain; but according to our
+Theory, <i>Book <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 5.</i> the ante-diluvian Heavens,
+of all these Meteors had none but Dews
+and Vapours, or watry Meteors only; and therefore
+might very aptly be said by the Apostle
+to be <i>constituted of Water</i>, or to have a watry
+σίζασις. Then the Earth was said to <i>consist by
+Water</i>, because it was built upon it, and at first
+was sustain’d by it. And when such a Key as
+this is put into our Hands, that does so easily
+unlock this hard Passage, and makes it intelligible,
+according to the just Force of the
+Words, why should we pertinaciously adhere
+to an<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c013'><sup>[9]</sup></a> Interpretation, that neither agrees
+with the Words, nor makes any Sense that
+is considerable.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>Thirdly, If the Apostle had made the ante-diluvian
+Heavens and Earth the same with the
+present, his Apodosis in the 7th verse, should
+not have been οἱ δε νῦν οῦρανοι, but καὶ οἱ αὐτοὶ καὶ ἡ
+γῆ τεθησαυρισμένοι εἰσί, &#38;c. I say, it would not
+have been by way of Antithesis, but of Identity
+or Continuation; <i>And the same Heavens
+and Earth are kept in store reserv’d unto Fire</i>,
+&#38;c. Accordingly we see the Apostle speaks
+thus, as to the <i>Logos</i>, or the <i>Word of God,
+<abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 7.</i> τῷ αὐτῷ λόγῳ, <i>by the same Word of God</i>;
+where the Thing is the same, he expresseth
+it as the same; and if it had been the same
+Heavens and Earth, as well as the same Word
+of God, why should he use a Mark of Opposition
+for the one, and of Identity for the
+other? To this I do not see what can be fairly
+answer’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Fourthly, The ante-diluvian Heavens and
+Earth were different from the present, because,
+as the Apostle intimates, they were such, and so
+constituted, as made them obnoxious to a Deluge;
+whereas ours are of such a Form, as makes
+them incapable of a Deluge, and obnoxious to
+a Conflagration; the just contrary Fate, <i>Theor.</i>
+<i>Book <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 2.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>If you say there was nothing of natural Tendency
+or Disposition in either World to their
+respective Fate, but the first might as well have
+perished by Fire as Water, and this by Water
+as by Fire, you unhinge all Nature and natural
+Providence in that Method, and contradict
+one main Scope of the Apostle in this Discourse.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>His first Scope is to assert, and mind
+them of that Diversity there was betwixt the
+antient Heavens and Earth, and the present; and
+from that, to prove against those Scoffers, that
+there had been a Change and Revolution in
+Nature: And his second Scope seems to be
+this, to shew that Diversity to be such, as, under
+the divine Conduct, leads to a different Fate,
+and expos’d that World to a Deluge; for when
+he had describ’d the Constitution of the first
+Heavens and Earth, he subjoins, δὶ ὧν ὅ τοτε
+κόσμος ὑδατι κατακλυοθεὶς ἀπόλετο. <i>Quia talis
+erat</i>, saith <i>Grotius</i>, <i>qualem diximus, constitutio
+&#38; Terræ &#38; Cœli.</i> <i>WHEREBY the then
+World perish’d in a Flood of Water.</i> This <i>whereby</i>
+notes some kind of casual Dependance, and
+must relate to some Means or Conditions precedent.
+It cannot relate to <i>Logos</i>, or <i>the Word
+of God</i>, Grammar will not permit that; therefore
+it must relate to the State of the ante-diluvian
+Heavens and Earth immediately premis’d:
+And to what purpose indeed should he
+premise the Description of those Heavens and
+Earth, if it was not to lay a Ground for this
+Inference?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Having given these Reasons for the Necessity
+of this interpretation: in the last place,
+let us consider <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>’s Judgment and
+his Sense upon this Place, as to the Point in
+Question; as also the Reflections that some
+other of the Ancients have made upon this
+Doctrine of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s. <i>Didymus Alexandrinus</i>,
+who was for some time <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Jerome</i>’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>Master, made such a severe Reflection upon
+it, that he said this Epistle was corrupted, and
+should not be admitted into the Canon, because
+it taught the Doctrine of a <i>triple</i> or <i>triform
+World</i> in this third Chapter; as you may see in
+his <i>Enarr. in Epist. Canonicas</i>. Now this three-fold
+World is first that in the <i>6th</i> verse, <i>The
+World that then was</i>. In the <i>7th</i> verse,
+<i>The Heavens and the Earth that are now</i>. And
+in the <i>13th</i> verse, <i>We expect new Heavens and
+a new Earth, according to his Promise.</i> This
+seems to be a fair Account that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> taught
+the Doctrine of a triple World; and I quote
+this Testimony, to shew what <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Words
+do naturally import, even in the Judgment of
+one that was not of his Mind; and a Man is
+not prone to make an Exposition against his own
+Opinion, unless he thinks the Words very
+pregnant and express.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i> owns the Authority of this Epistle,
+and of this Doctrine, as deriv’d from it,
+taking notice of this Text of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s in several
+Parts of his Works. We have noted three
+or four Places already to this purpose, and we
+may further take notice of several Passages in
+his Treatise, <i>de Civ. Dei</i>, which confirm our
+Exposition. In his <abbr title='twentieth'>xxth</abbr> Book, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> he Disputes
+against <i>Porphyry</i>, who had the same Principles
+with these Eternalists in the Text; or, if I
+may so call them Incorruptarians; and thought
+the World never had, nor ever would undergo
+any Change, especially, as to the Heavens. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>Austin</i> could not urge <i>Porphyry</i> with the Authority
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, for he had no Veneration
+for the Christian Oracles, but it seems he had
+some for the <i>Jewish</i>; and arguing against him,
+upon that Text in the Psalms, <i>Cœli peribunt</i>, he
+shews, upon Occasion, how he understands <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>Peter</i>’s Destruction of the old World. <i>Legitur
+Cœlum &#38; Terra transibunt, Mundus transit, sed
+puto quod præterit transit, transibunt aliquantò
+mitius dicta sunt quam peribunt. In Epistolà
+quoque Petri Apostoli, ubi aquâ inundatus, qui
+tum erat, periisse dictus est Mundus, satis clarum
+est quæ pars mundi a toto significata est, &#38;
+quatenus periisse dicta sit, &#38; qui Cœli repositi igni
+reservandi.</i> This he explains more fully afterwards
+by subjoining a Caution (which we
+cited before) that we must not understand
+this Passion of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s concerning the Destruction
+of the ante-diluvian World, to take
+in the whole Universe, and the highest Heavens,
+but only the aerial Heavens, and the
+sublunary World. <i>In Apostolicâ illâ Epistola
+a toto pars accipitur, quod Diluvio periisse dictus
+est Mundus quamvis sola ejus, cum suis
+Cœlis pars ima perierit. In that Apostolical
+Epistle, a part is signified by the whole, when
+the World is said to have perished in the Deluge,
+although the lower part of it only, with
+the Heavens belonging to it, perished</i>; that is,
+the Earth with the Regions of the Air that belong
+to it. And consonant to this, in his Exposition
+of that ci. <i>Psalm</i>, upon those Words,
+<i>The Heavens are the work of thy Hands; they
+shall perish, but thou shalt endure.</i> This perishing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>of the Heavens, he says, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> tells us,
+hath been once done already, namely, at
+the Deluge: <i>Apertè dixit hoc Apostolus
+Petrus, Cœli erant olim &#38; Terra, de aquâ
+&#38; per aquam constituti, Dei verbo; per
+quod qui factus est mundus, aquâ inundatus
+deperiit; Terra autem &#38; Cœli qui nunc sunt,
+igni reservantur. Jam ergo dixit periisse Cœlos
+per Diluvium.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Places shew us, that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i> understood
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Discourse to aim at the natural
+World, and his <i>periit</i> or <i>periisse</i> (<abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 6) to be of
+the same Force as <i>peribunt</i> in the <i>Psalms</i>, when
+’tis said the Heavens <i>shall perish</i>; and consequently
+that the Heavens and the Earth, in this
+Father’s Opinion, were as really changed and
+transformed at the Time of the Flood, as they
+will be at the Conflagration. But we must
+not expect from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>, or any of the Antients,
+a distinct Account of this Apostolical
+Doctrine, as if they knew and acknowledg’d
+the Theory of the first World; that does not
+at all appear, but what they said was either
+from broken Tradition, or extorted from them
+by the Force of the Apostle’s Words and their
+own Sincerity.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are yet other Places in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>
+worthy our Consideration upon this Subject;
+especially his Exposition of this <abbr title='third'>iiid</abbr> Chapter of
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, as we find it in the same Treatise,
+<i>de Civ. Dei</i>, <i>cap.</i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> There he compares
+again, the Destruction of that World at the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>Deluge, with that which shall be at the Conflagration,
+and supposeth both the Heavens
+and Earth to have perish’d: <i>Apostolus commemorans
+factum ante Diluvium, videtur admonuisse
+quodammodo quatenùs in fine hujus
+seculi mundum istum periturum esse credamus.
+Nam &#38; illo tempore periisse dixit, qui tunc
+erat, mundum; nec solum orbem terræ, verum
+etiam cœlos.</i> Then giving his usual Caution,
+that the Stars and starry Heavens should
+not be comprehended in that mundane Destruction,
+he goes on, <i>Atque hoc modo</i> (penè
+totus aër) <i>cum terra perierat; cujus Terræ
+utique prior facies</i> (nempe ante-diluviana)
+<i>fuerat deleta Diluvia. Qui autem nunc sunt
+cœli &#38; terra eodem verba repositi sunt igni reservandi;
+Proinde qui Cœli &#38; quæ Terra id
+est, qui mundus, pro eo mundo qui Diluvio periit,
+ex eádem aquâ repositus est, ipse igni novissimo
+reservatur.</i> Here you see <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>’s
+Sense upon the whole Matter; which is this,
+that the natural World, the Earth with the
+Heavens about it, was destroyed and chang’d
+at the Deluge into the present Heavens and
+Earth; which shall again, in like Manner, be
+destroyed and chang’d by the last Fire. Accordingly,
+in another place, to add no more,
+he saith, the Figure of the (sublunary) World
+shall be changed at the Conflagration, as it
+was chang’d at the Deluge: <i>Tunc figura hujus
+mundi</i>, &#38;c. <i>cap.</i> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus you see, we have <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i> on our
+side, in both Parts of our Interpretation; that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span><abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Discourse is to be referr’d to the
+natural inanimate World, and that the present
+natural World is distinct and different from that
+which was before the Deluge. And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>
+having applied this expresly to <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Doctrine
+by way of Commentary, it will free us
+from any Crime or Affectation of Singularity
+in the Exposition we have given of that Place.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Venerable <i>Bede</i> hath followed <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i>’s
+Footsteps in this Doctrine; for, interpreting
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s <i>original World</i> (Αρχαῖος Κόσμος)
+2 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 5. he refers both that and this
+(<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 6.) to the natural inanimate World,
+which he supposeth to have undergone a
+Change at the Deluge. His Words are these,
+<i>Idem ipse mundus est</i> (nempe quoad materiam)
+<i>in quo nunc humanum genus habitat, quem inhabitaverunt
+hi qui ante diluvium fuerunt, sed
+tamen rectè Originalis Mundus, quasi alius dicitur;
+quia sicut in consequentibus hujus Epistolæ
+scriptum continetur, Ille tunc mundus
+aquâ inundatus periit. Cælis videlicet qui
+erant prius, id est, cunctis aëris hujus turbulenti
+spatiis, aquarum accrescentiun altitudine consumptis,
+ac Terrâ in alteram faciem, excedentibus
+aquis, immutatâ. Nam etsi montes
+aliqui atque convalles ab initio facti creduntur,
+non tamen tanti quanti nunc in orbe cernuntur
+universo. ’Tis the same World</i> (namely, as
+to the Matter and Substance of it) <i>which
+Mankind lives in now, and did live in before
+the Flood, but yet that is truly called the
+ORIGINAL WORLD, being as it were another
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>from the present. For it is said in the
+Sequel of this Epistle, that the World that was
+then, perished in the Deluge; namely, the Regions
+of the Air were consumed by the Height
+and Excess of the Water; and by the same Waters
+the Earth was changed into another Form
+or Face. For although some Mountains and
+Valleys are thought to have been made from
+the Beginning, yet not such great ones as now
+we see throughout the whole Earth.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You see this Author does not only own a
+Change made at the Deluge, but offers at a
+farther Explication wherein that Change consisted,
+<i>viz.</i> That the Mountains and Inequalities
+of the Earth were made greater than
+they were before the Flood; and so he makes
+the Change, or the Difference betwixt the
+two Worlds gradual, rather than specifical, if
+I may so term it. But we cannot wonder at
+that, if he had no Principles to carry it farther,
+or to make any other Sort of Change intelligible
+to him. <i>Bede</i> [<i>De 6 dier. creat.</i>]
+also pursues the same Sense and Notion in his
+Interpretation of that <i>Fountain</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 5. that
+watered the Face of the Earth before the Flood.
+And many other Transcribers of Antiquity
+have recorded this Tradition concerning a
+Difference, gradual or specifical, both in the
+ante-diluvian Heavens (<i>Gloss. Ordin. <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr>
+<i>de Iride. Lyran. ibid. Hist. Scholast.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 35.
+Rab. Maurus &#38; Gloss. Inter. <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 5, 6.
+<i>Alcuin. Quæst. in <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> inter.</i> 135.) and in
+the ante-diluvian Earth, as the same Authors
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>witness in other Places: As <i>Hist. Schol. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 34.
+Gloss. Ord. in <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> <i>Alcuin. Inter. 118, &#38;c.</i>
+Not to Instance those that tell us the Properties
+of the ante-diluvian World under the
+Name and Notion of <i>Paradise</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much concerning this remarkable
+Place in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, and the true Exposition
+of it; which I have the more largely insisted
+upon, because I look upon this Place as
+the chief Repository of that great natural
+Mystery, which in Scripture is communicated
+to us concerning the triple State or Revolution
+of the World. And of those Men that
+are so scrupulous to admit the Theory we
+have propos’d, I would willingly know, whether
+they believe the Apostle in what he says
+concerning the <i>new Heavens</i> and the <i>new
+Earth to come</i>? <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 13. and if they do,
+why they should not believe him as much concerning
+the <i>old Heavens</i> and the <i>old Earth</i>
+past? <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 5, and 6. which he mentions as formally,
+and describes more distinctly than the
+other. But if they believe neither past nor to
+come, in a natural Sense, but an unchangeable
+State of Nature from the Creation to its
+Annihilation, I leave them then to their Fellow-Eternalists
+in the Text, and to the Character
+or Censure the Apostle gives them,
+Κατὰ τὰς ἴδιας αὐτῶν ἐπιθυμίας πορευόμενοι, Men
+that go by their own private Humour and Passions,
+and prefer that to all other Evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>They deserve this Censure, I am sure, if
+they do not only disbelieve, but also scoff, at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>this Prophetick and Apostolick Doctrine concerning
+the Vicissitudes of Nature and a
+triple World. The Apostle in this Discourse
+does formally distinguish three Worlds (for
+’tis well known that the <i>Hebrews</i> have no
+Word to signify the natural World, but use
+that Periphrasis, <i>the Heavens</i> and <i>the Earth</i>)
+and upon each of them engraves a Name and
+Title that bears a Note of Distinction in it:
+He calls them the <i>old Heavens and Earth</i>,
+the <i>present Heavens and Earth</i>, and the <i>new
+Heavens and Earth</i>. ’Tis true, these three
+are one, as to Matter and Substance; but they
+must differ as to Form and Properties; otherwise
+what is the Ground of this Distinction
+and of these three different Appellations? Suppose
+the <i>Jews</i> had expected <i>Ezekiel</i>’s Temple
+for the third, and last, and most perfect; and
+that in the Time of the second Temple they
+had spoke of them with this Distinction, or
+under these different Names, the <i>old Temple</i>,
+the <i>present Temple</i>, and the <i>new Temple</i>
+we expect; would any have understood those
+three of one and the same Temple; never
+demolish’d, never chang’d, never rebuilt; always
+the same, both as to Materials and Form?
+No, doubtless, but of three several Temples
+succeeding one another. And have we not
+the same Reason to understand this Temple of
+the World, whereof <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> speaks, to be
+three-fold in Succession; seeing he does as
+plainly distinguish it into the <i>old</i> Heavens and
+Earth, the <i>present</i> Heavens and Earth? and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>the <i>new</i> Heavens and Earth. And I do the
+more willingly use this Comparison of the
+Temple, because it hath been thought an Emblem
+of the outward World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I know we are naturally averse to entertain
+any Thing that is inconsistent with the general
+Frame and Texture of our own Thoughts;
+that’s to begin the World again; and we often
+reject such things without Examination. Neither
+do I wonder that the generality of Interpreters
+beat down the Apostle’s Words and Sense
+to their own Notions; they had no other
+Grounds to go upon, and Men are not willing,
+especially in natural and comprehensible things,
+to put such a Meaning upon Scripture, as is unintelligible
+to themselves; they rather venture
+to offer a little Violence to the Words,
+that they may pitch the Sense at such a convenient
+Height, as their Principles will reach to:
+And therefore though some of our modern
+Interpreters, whom I mention’d before, have
+been sensible of the natural Tendency of this
+Discourse of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s, and have much ado
+to bear off the Force of the Words, so as not
+to acknowledge that they import a real Diversity
+betwixt the two Worlds spoken of; yet
+having no Principles to guide or support them
+in following that Tract, they are forc’d to
+stop or divert another way. ’Tis like entring
+into the Mouth of a Cave, we are not willing
+to venture farther than the Light goes: Nor
+are they much to blame for this, the Fault is
+only in those Persons that continue wilfully
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>in their Darkness; and when they cannot otherwise
+resist the Light, shut their Eyes against it,
+or turn their Head another Way.—But I am
+afraid I have staid too long upon this Argument;
+not for my own sake, but to satisfy others.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You may please to remember that all that I
+have said hitherto, belongs only to the first
+Head: To prove a <i>Diversity in general</i> betwixt
+the ante-diluvian Heavens and Earth, and the
+present; not expressing what their particular
+Form was. And this general Diversity may
+be argued also by Observations taken from
+<i>Moses</i> his History of the World, before and
+after the Flood: From the Longevity of the
+Ante-diluvians; the Rainbow appearing after
+the Deluge; and the breaking open an
+Abyss capable to overflow the Earth. The
+Heavens that had no Rain-bow, and under
+whose benign and steady Influence, Men liv’d
+seven, eight, nine hundred Years and upwards,
+[See <i>Theor. Book</i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> 5.] must have
+been of a different Aspect and Constitution
+from the present Heavens: And that Earth that
+had such an Abyss, that the Disruption of it
+made an universal Deluge, must have been of
+another Form than the present Earth; and those
+that will not admit a Diversity in the two
+Worlds, are bound to give us an intelligible
+Account of these Phænomena: How they
+could possibly be in Heavens and Earth, like
+the present? Or if they were there once, why
+they do not continue so still, if Nature be the
+same?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>We need say no more, as to the ante-diluvian
+Heavens; but as to the Earth, we must
+now, according to the second part of the first
+Head, enquire, if that <i>particular Form</i>, which
+we have assign’d it before the Flood, be agreeable
+to Scripture. You know how we have
+described the Form and Situation of that Earth;
+namely, that it was built over the Abyss, as a
+regular Orb, covering and incompassing the
+Waters round about, and founded, as it were,
+upon them. There are many Passages of Scripture
+that favour this Description; some more
+expresly, others upon a due Explication. To
+this purpose there are two express Texts in the
+<i>Psalms</i>; as <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 1, 2. <i>The Earth is the
+Lord’s, and the Fulness thereof; the habitable
+World, and they that dwell therein. FOR he
+has founded it upon the<a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c013'><sup>[10]</sup></a> Sea, and established it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>upon the Floods</i>. An Earth founded upon the
+Seas, and establish’d upon the Waters, is not this
+Earth we have describ’d? The first Earth, as
+it came from the Hands of its Maker? Where
+can we now find in Nature such an Earth, as the
+Seas and the Water for its Foundation? Neither
+is this Text without a second, as a Fellow
+Witness to confirm the same Truth; for in
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='a hundred and thirty-six'>cxxxvi.</abbr> <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 4, 5, 6. we read to the same
+Effect, in these Words, <i>To him who alone does
+great Wonders; to him that by Wisdom made the
+Heavens; to him that stretched out the Earth
+above the Waters</i>. We can hardly express that
+Form of the ante-diluvian Earth, in Words
+more determinate than these are: Let us then,
+in the same Simplicity of Heart, follow the
+Words of Scripture; seeing this literal Sense
+is not repugnant to Nature, but, on the contrary,
+agreeable to it upon the strictest Examination.
+And we cannot, without some
+Violence, turn the Words to any other Sense.
+What tolerable Interpretation can these admit
+of, if we do not allow the Earth once to have
+encompass’d and over-spread the Face of the
+Waters? To be <i>founded</i> upon the Waters, to
+be <i>establish’d</i> upon the Waters, to be <i>extended</i>
+upon the Waters, what rational or satisfactory
+Account can be given of these Phrases and Expressions
+from any thing we find in the present
+Situation of the Earth? Or how can they be
+verified concerning it? Consult Interpreters,
+antient or modern, upon these two Places; see
+if they answer your Expectation, or answer the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>natural Importance of the Words, unless they
+acknowledge another Form of the Earth, than
+the present. Because a Rock hangs its Nose over
+the Sea, must the Body of the Earth be said
+to be <i>stretched over the Waters</i>? Or, because
+there are Waters in some subterraneous Cavities,
+is the Earth therefore <i>founded upon the Seas</i>?
+Yet such lame Explications as these you will
+meet with; and while we have no better Light,
+we must content our selves with them; but
+when an Explication is offer’d, that answers the
+Propriety, Force and Extent of the Words, to
+reject it, only because it is not fitted to our
+former Opinions, or because we did not first
+think of it, is to take an ill Method in expounding
+Scripture. This <i>Foundation</i> or <i>Establishment</i>
+of the Earth upon the Seas, this <i>Extention</i>
+of it above the Waters, relates plainly
+to the Body, or whole Circuit of the
+Earth, not to Parcels and Particles of it; as
+appears from the Occasion, and its being join’d
+with the Heavens, the other Part of the
+World. Besides, <i>David</i> is speaking of the
+Origin of the World, and of the divine Power
+and Wisdom in the Constitution and Situation
+of our Earth; and these Attributes
+do not appear from the Holes of the Earth,
+and broken Rocks, which have rather the Face
+of a Ruin, than of Wisdom; but in that
+wonderful Libration and Expansion of the
+first Earth over the Face of the Waters, sustained
+by its own Proportions, and the Hand
+of his Providence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>These two Places in the <i>Psalms</i> being
+duly consider’d, we shall more easily understand
+a third Place, to the same effect, in
+the <i>Proverbs</i>; delivered by <i>WISDOM</i>,
+concerning the Origin of the World, and
+the Form of the first Earth, in these Words,
+<i>Chapter</i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 27. <i>When he prepared the Heavens
+I was there, when HE SET an Orb
+or Sphere upon the Face of the Abyss.</i> We
+render it, when we set a Compass upon the
+Face of the Abyss; but if we have rightly
+interpreted the Prophet <i>David</i>, ’tis plain
+enough what Compass is here to be understood;
+not an imaginary Circle, (for why
+should that be thought one of the wonderful
+Works of God?) but that exterior Orb
+of the Earth that was set upon the Waters:
+That was the Master-piece of the divine Art
+in framing of the first Earth, and therefore
+very fit to be taken Notice of by <i>Wisdom</i>.
+And upon this Occasion, I desire you to reflect
+upon <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Expression, concerning
+the first Earth, and to compare it with
+<i>Solomon</i>’s, to see if they do not answer one
+another. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> calls it, γῆ καθεστῶσα δὶ
+ὕδάτων, <i>an Earth consisting, standing</i>, or <i>sustained
+by the Waters</i>. And <i>Solomon</i> calls it
+חונ על בני תהום <i>An Orb drawn upon the
+Face of the Abyss.</i> And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> says, that was
+done τῷ λόγῳ τοῦ Θεοῦ, by the <i>Wisdom of God</i>;
+which is the same Λόγος or <i>Wisdom</i>, that here
+declares her self to have been present at this
+Work. Add now to these two Places, the two
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>foremention’d out of the <i>Psalmist</i>; <i>An Earth
+founded upon the Sea</i>, (<abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 2.) and an
+<i>Earth stretched out above the Waters</i>; (<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i>
+<abbr title='a hundred and thirty-six'>cxxxvi.</abbr> 6.) Can any Body doubt or question;
+but all these four Texts refer to the same
+Thing? And seeing <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Description
+refers certainly to the ante-diluvian Earth, they
+must all refer to it; and do all as certainly and
+evidently agree with our Theory concerning
+the Form and Situation of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The pendulous Form and Posture of that
+first Earth being prov’d from these four Places,
+’tis more easy and emphatical to interpret in
+this Sense that Passage in <i>Job <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-six'>xxvi.</abbr> 7. <i>He
+stretcheth out the North over the Tohu</i>, (for
+so it is in the Original) <i>and hangeth the Earth
+upon nothing.</i> And this strange Foundation or
+no Foundation of the exterior Earth seems to
+be the Ground of those noble Questions propos’d
+to <i>Job</i> by God Almighty, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr>
+<i>Where wast thou, when I laid the Foundations of
+the Earth? Declare if thou hast understanding,
+whereupon are the Foundations thereof
+fastned, and who laid the Corner-Stone?</i> There
+was neither Foundation, nor Corner-Stone, in
+that piece of Architecture; and that was it which
+made the Art and Wonder of it. But I have
+spoken more largely to these Places in the
+Theory it self, <i>Book</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 119. And if the
+four Texts before mention’d be consider’d without
+Prejudice, I think there are few Matters
+of natural Speculation that can be so well
+prov’d out of Scripture, as the Form which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>we have given to the ante-diluvian Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But yet it may be thought a just, if not a
+necessary Appendix to this Discourse, concerning
+the Form of the ante-diluvian Earth,
+to give an Account also of the <i>ante-diluvian
+Abyss</i>, and the Situation of it according to
+Scripture; for the Relation which these two
+have to one another, will be a farther Means
+to discover, if we have rightly determined
+the Form of that Earth. The <i>Abyss</i> or <i>Tehom
+Rabbah</i> is a Scripture Notion, and the
+Word is not us’d, that I know of, in that
+distinct and peculiar Sense in Heathen Authors.
+’Tis plain that in Scripture it is not
+always taken for the Sea (as <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 2. and
+<abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 11. and <abbr title='forty-nine'>xlix.</abbr> 25. <i><abbr title='Deuteronomy'>Deut.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 13. <i>Job</i>
+<abbr title='twenty-eight'>xxviii.</abbr> 14. and <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> 16. <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 7. and
+<abbr title='seventy-one'>lxxi.</abbr> 20. and <abbr title='seventy-eight'>lxxviii.</abbr> 15. and <abbr title='a hundred and thirty-five'>cxxxv.</abbr> 6. <i>Apoc</i>.
+<abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 1, 3.) but for some other Mass of Waters,
+or subterraneous Store-house. And this
+being observ’d, we may easily discover the
+Nature, and set down the History of the Scripture-Abyss.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Mother-Abyss is no doubt that in the
+Beginning of <i>Genesis</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>v.</abbr></i> 2. which had nothing
+but Darkness upon the Face of it, or a thick caliginous
+Air. The next News we hear of this
+Abyss is at the Deluge, (<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 11.) where
+’tis said to be broke open, and the Waters of it
+to have drowned the World. It seems then,
+this Abyss was clos’d up some Time betwixt
+the Creation and the Deluge, and had got
+another Cover than that of Darkness. And
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>if we will believe <i>Wisdom</i>, (<i><abbr title='Proverbs'>Prov.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 27.)
+who was there present at the Formation of
+the Earth, an <i>Orb was set upon the Face of
+the Abyss</i>, at the Beginning of the World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>That these three Places refer to the same
+Abyss, I think, cannot be questioned by any
+that will compare them and consider them.
+That of the Deluge, <i>Moses</i> calls there <i>Tehom-Rabbah</i>,
+the great <i>Abyss</i>; and can there be
+any greater than the forementioned Mother-Abyss?
+And <i>WISDOM</i>, in that Place in the
+<i>Proverbs</i>, useth the same Phrase and Words
+with <i>Moses</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 2. על פני תהום <i>upon
+the Face of the Deep</i>, or of the <i>Abyss</i>; changing
+<i>Darkness</i> for that <i>Orb</i> of the exterior
+Earth, which was made afterwards to inclose it.
+And in this Sort it lay, and under this Cover,
+when the <i>Psalmist</i> speaks of it in these Words,
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 7. <i>He gathereth the Waters of
+the Sea, as in a<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c013'><sup>[11]</sup></a> Bag; he layeth up the Abyss
+in Store-houses.</i> Lastly, we may observe, that
+’twas this Mother-Abyss, whose Womb was
+burst at the Deluge, when the Sea was born,
+and broke forth as if it had issued out of a
+Womb; as God expresseth it to <i>Job</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr>
+8. in which Place the <i>Chaldee</i> Paraphrase
+reads it, when it broke forth, <i>coming out of
+the Abyss</i>. Which Disruption at the Deluge
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>seems also to be alluded to <i>Job</i> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 14, 15.
+and more plainly, <i>Prov.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 20. <i>by his Knowledge
+the Abysses are broken up</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus you have already a three-fold State of
+the Abyss, which makes a short History of it;
+first, <i>open</i>, at the Beginning; then <i>covered</i>
+till the Deluge; then <i>broke open</i> again, as it
+is at present. And we pursue the History of
+it no farther; but we are told, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 3.
+That it shall be shut up again, and the great
+Dragon in it, for a thousand Years. In the
+mean time we may observe from this Form
+and Posture of the ante-diluvian Abyss, how
+suitable it is and coherent with that Form of
+the ante-diluvian Earth which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> and
+the <i>Psalmist</i> had described, <i>sustained by the
+Waters</i>; <i>founded upon the Waters</i>; <i>stretched
+above the Waters</i>; for if it was the Cover of
+this Abyss (and it had some Cover that was
+broke at the Deluge) it was spread as a Crust
+of Ice upon the Face of those Waters, and
+so made an <i>Orbis Terrarum</i>, an habitable
+Sphere of Earth about the Abyss.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Form of the ante-diluvian
+Earth and Abyss; which as they aptly correspond
+to one another, so, you see, our
+Theory answers, and is adjusted to both; and,
+I think, so fitly, that we have no reason hitherto
+to be displeased with the Success we have
+had in the Examination of it, according to
+Scripture. We have dispatch’d the two main
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>Points in Question, first, to prove a Diversity
+in general betwixt the two natural Worlds,
+or betwixt the Heavens and the Earth before
+and after the Flood. Secondly, to prove wherein
+this Diversity consisted; or that the particular
+Form of the ante-diluvian Heavens and
+Earth was such according to Scripture, as
+we have describ’d it in the Theory. You’ll
+say, then the Work is done; what needs more,
+all the rest follows of Course? For if the ante-diluvian
+Earth had such a Form as we have
+propos’d and prov’d it to have had, there could
+be no Deluge in it but by a Dissolution of its
+Parts and exterior Frame: And a Deluge
+so made, would not be in the Nature of a
+Standing-Pool, but of a violent Agitation and
+Commotion of the Waters. This is true;
+these Parts of the Theory are so cemented,
+that you must grant all, if you grant any.
+However we will try, if even these two Particulars
+also may be prov’d out of Scripture;
+that is, if there be any Marks or Memorandums
+left there by the Spirit of God, of
+such a Fraction or Dissolution of the Earth
+at the Deluge; and also such Characters of
+the Deluge it self, as shew it to have been by
+a Fluctuation and impetuous Commotion of
+the Waters.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To proceed then; that there was a Fraction
+or Dissolution of the Earth at the Deluge,
+the History of it by <i>Moses</i> gives us the
+first Account, seeing he tells us, as the principal
+Cause of the Flood, that the Fountains of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>the <i>great Abyss</i> were <i>cloven</i> or <i>burst asunder</i>;
+and upon this Disruption the Waters gush’d
+out from the Bowels of the Earth, as from
+the widen’d Mouths of so many Fountains.
+I do not take <i>Fountains</i> there to signify
+any more than Sources or Stores of Water; noting
+also this Manner of their Eruption from
+below, or out of the Ground, as Fountains
+do. Accordingly in the <i>Proverbs</i>, (<i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+20.) ’tis only said, the <i>Abysses were broken
+open</i>. I do not doubt, but this refers to the
+Deluge, as <i>Bede</i>, and others understand it;
+the very Word being us’d here, both in the
+<i>Hebrew</i> and Septuagint, נבקעו ἐῤῤάγησαν that
+express the Disruption of the Abyss at the
+Deluge.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And this breaking up of the Earth at that
+Time, is elegantly exprest in <i>Job</i>, by the bursting
+of the Womb of Nature, when the Sea
+was first brought to Light; <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> when
+after many Pangs and Throws and Dilacerations
+of her Body, Nature was delivered of a
+Burthen, which she had born in her Womb sixteen
+hundred Years.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These three Places I take to be Memorials
+and Proofs of the Disruption of the Earth,
+or of the Abyss, at the universal Deluge.
+And to these we may add more out of the
+Prophets, <i>Job</i>, and the <i>Psalms</i>, by Way of
+Allusion commonly to the State of Nature
+at that Time. The Prophet <i>Isaiah</i>, in describing
+the future Destruction of the World, <i><abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr></i>
+<abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 18, 19. seems plainly to allude and have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>respect to the past Destruction of it at the Deluge;
+as appears by that leading Expression,
+<i>the Windows from on high are open</i>,
+ארבות סמיום נפתחו θυρίδες ἐκ τῷ οὐρανῶ ἠνεώχθησαν,
+taken manifestly from <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 11. Then
+see how the Description goes on; <i>the Windows
+from on high are open, and the Foundations of
+the Earth do shake, the Earth is utterly broken
+down, the Earth is quite dissolved, the Earth
+is exceedingly moved</i>. Here are Concussions,
+and Fractions, and Dissolutions, as there
+were in the mundane Earthquake and Deluge;
+which we had exprest before only
+by <i>breaking open the Abyss</i>. By the Foundations
+of the Earth here and elsewhere, I perceive
+many understand the Center; so by
+<i>moving</i> or <i>shaking</i> the Foundations, or putting
+them out of Course, must be understood a
+displacing of the Center; which was really
+done at the deluge, as we have shewn in
+its proper Place, <i>Theor.</i> <i>Book</i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> 3.
+If we therefore remember, that there was both
+a Dislocation, as I may so say, and a Fraction
+in the Body of the Earth, by that great Fall;
+a Dislocation as to the Center, and a Fraction
+as to the Surface and exterior Region, it will
+truly answer to all those Expressions in the
+Prophet, that seem so strange and extraordinary.
+’Tis true, this Place of the Prophet respects
+also and foretels the future Destruction
+of the World; but that being by Fire, when
+the <i>Elements shall melt with fervent Heat, and
+the Earth with the Works therein shall be burnt
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>up</i>, these Expressions of <i>Fractions and Concussions</i>,
+seem to be taken originally from the
+Manner of the World’s first distruction, and
+to be transferr’d, by way of Application, to
+represent and signify the second Destruction
+of it, though, it may be, not with the same
+Exactness and Propriety.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are several other Places that refer to
+the Dissolution and Subversion of the Earth at
+the Deluge, <i>Amos</i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 5, 6. <i>The Lord of Hosts
+is he, that toucheth the Earth, and it shall melt,
+or be dissolv’d.——and it shall rise up wholly
+like a Flood, and shall be drowned as by the
+Flood of Ægypt.</i> By <i>this</i> and by <i>the next
+verse</i> the Prophet seems to allude to the Deluge,
+and to the Dissolution of the Earth that
+was then. This in <i>Job</i> seems to be called
+<i>breaking down the Earth, and overturning the
+Earth</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 14, 15. <i>Behold he breaketh
+down and it cannot be built again, He shutteth
+upon Man, and there can be no opening. Behold,
+he with-holdeth the Waters, and they
+dry up; also he sendeth them out, and they
+overturn the Earth:</i> Which Place you may
+see paraphras’d, <i>Theo.</i> <i>Book</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 124, 125.
+We have already cited, and shall hereafter
+cite, other Places out of <i>Job</i>; and as that
+ancient Author (who is thought to have liv’d
+before the <i>Judaical</i> Oeconomy, and nearer
+to <i>Noah</i> than <i>Moses</i>) seems to have had the
+<i>Præcepta Noachidarum</i>, so also he seems to
+have had the <i>Dogmata Noachidarum</i>; which
+were deliver’d by <i>Noah</i> to his Children and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>Posterity, concerning the Mysteries of natural
+Providence, the Origin and Fate of the
+World, the Deluge and ante-diluvian State,
+<i>&#38;c.</i> and accordingly we find many Strictures
+of these Doctrines in the Book of <i>Job</i>. Lastly,
+In the <i>Psalms</i> there are Texts that mention
+the <i>shaking of the Earth</i>, and the <i>Foundations</i>
+of the World, in reference to the Flood,
+if we judge aright; whereof we will speak
+under the next Head, <i>concerning</i> the raging of
+the Waters in the Deluge.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Places of Scripture may be noted,
+as left us to be Remembrancers of that general
+Ruin and Disruption of the Earth at
+the Time of the Deluge. But I know it
+will be said of them, that they are not strict
+Proofs, but Allusions only: Be it so; yet
+what is the Ground of those Allusions?
+Something must be alluded, and something
+that hath past in Nature, and that is recorded
+in Sacred History; and what is that,
+unless it be the universal Deluge, and that
+Change and Disturbance that was then in
+all Nature? If others say, that these and
+such like Places are to be understood morally
+and allegorically, I do not envy them
+their Interpretation; but when Nature and
+Reason will bear a literal Sense, the Rule
+is, that we should not recede from the Letter.
+But I leave these Things to every one’s
+Thoughts; which the more calm they
+are, and the more impartial, the more easily
+they will feel the Impressions of Truth:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>In the mean Time, I proceed to the last
+particular mention’d, <i>The Form of the Deluge
+it self</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This we suppose to have been, not in the
+Way of a standing Pool, the Waters making
+an equal Surface, and an equal Height every
+where; but that the extream Height of the
+Waters was made by the extream Agitation
+of them; caus’d by the Weight and Force of
+great Masses or Regions of Earth falling at
+once into the Abyss; by which Means, as the
+Waters in some Places were press’d out, and
+thrown at an excessive Height into the Air,
+so they would also in certain Places gape, and
+lay bare even the Bottom of the Abyss; which
+would look as an open Grave ready to swallow
+up the Earth, and all it bore. Whilst the Ark,
+in the mean time, falling and rising by these
+Gulphs and Precipices, sometimes above Water,
+and sometimes under, was a true Type of the
+State of the Church in this World: And to
+this Time and State <i>David</i> alludes in the
+Name of the Church, <i>Psalm.</i> <abbr title='forty-two'>xlii.</abbr> 7. <i>Abyss calls
+unto Abyss at the Noise of thy Cataracts or
+Water-Spouts; all thy Water and Billows
+have gone over me.</i> And again, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='forty-six'>xlvi.</abbr> 2,
+3. in the Name of the Church, <i>Therefore will
+not we fear tho’ the Earth be removed, and
+tho’ the Mountains be carried into the midst of
+the Seas. The Waters thereof roar and are
+troubled, the Mountains shake with the swelling
+thereof.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>But there is no Description more remarkable
+or more eloquent, than of that Scene of
+Things represented, <i>Psalm.</i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 7, 8, 9, <i>&#38;c.</i>
+which still alludes, in my Opinion, to the Deluge-Scene,
+and in the Name of the Church.
+We will set down the Words at large.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'>Ver. 6. <i>In my distress I called upon the
+Lord, and cryed unto my God; He heard my
+Voice out of his Temple, and my Cry came before
+him into his Ears.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>7. <i>Then the Earth shook and trembled, the
+Foundations also of the Hills moved and were
+shaken, because he was wroth.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>8. <i>There went up a Smoak from his Nostrils,
+and Fire out of his Mouth devoured; Coals
+were kindled by it.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>9. <i>He bowed the Heavens also and came
+down, and Darkness was under his Feet.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>10. <i>And he rode upon a Cherub and did fly,
+he did fly upon the Wings of the Wind.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>11. <i>He made Darkness his secret Place; his
+Pavilion round about him was dark Waters
+and thick Clouds of the Sky.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>12. <i>At the Brightness before him the thick
+Clouds passed, Hail and Coals of Fire.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>13. <i>The Lord also thunder’d in the Heavens,
+and the Highest gave his Voice, Hail
+and Coals of Fire.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>14. <i>Yea, he sent out his Arrows, and scattered
+them; and he shot out Lightnings and
+discomfited them.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>15. <i>Then the Channels of Waters were seen,
+and the Foundations of the World were discovered;
+at thy rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of
+the Breath of thy Nostrils.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c015'><i>He sent from above, he took me; he drew
+me out of great Waters.</i> מים רבים</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>This is a rough, I think, Draught of the Face
+of the Heavens and the Earth at the Deluge, as
+the last Verses do intimate; and ’tis apply’d
+to express the Dangers and Deliverances of
+the Church: The Expressions are so far too
+high to be apply’d to <i>David</i> in his Person, and
+to his Deliverance from <i>Saul</i>; no such Agonies
+or Disorders of Nature as are here instanc’d,
+were made in <i>David</i>’s Time, or upon his Account;
+but ’tis a Scheme of the Church, and
+of her Fate, particularly, as represented by
+the Ark, in that dismal Distress, when all
+Nature was in Confusion. And though there
+may be some Things here intermixt to make
+up the Scene, that are not so close to the Subject
+as the rest, or that they may be refer’d to
+the future Destruction of the World; yet that
+is not unusual, nor amiss, in such Descriptions,
+if the great Strokes be fit and rightly placed.
+That there was Smoak, and Fire, and Water,
+and Thunder, and Darkness, and Winds,
+and Earthquakes, at the Deluge, we cannot
+doubt, if we consider the Circumstances of it:
+Waters dash’d and broken made a Smoak and
+Darkness, and no Hurricane could be so violent
+as the Motions of the Air at that Time:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>Then the Earth was torn in pieces, and its
+Foundations shaken. And as to Thunder and
+Lightning, the Encounters and Collisions of
+the mighty Waves, and the Cracks of a falling
+World, would make Flashes and Noises,
+far greater and more terrible, than any that
+can come from Vapours and Clouds. There
+was an universal<a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c013'><sup>[12]</sup></a> Tempest, a Conflict and
+Clashing of all the Elements; and <i>David</i>
+seems to have represented it so; with God Almighty
+in the midst of it, ruling them all.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But I am apt to think, some will say, all
+this is Poetical in the Prophet, and these are
+hyperbolical and figurative Expressions, from
+which we cannot make any Inference, as to
+the Deluge and the natural World: ’Tis true,
+those that have no Idea of the Deluge, that
+will answer to such a Scene of things, as is
+here represented, must give such a slight
+Account of this <i>Psalm</i>. But on the other
+hand, if we have already an Idea of the Deluge,
+that is rational, and also consonant to
+Scripture upon other Proofs, and the Description
+here made by the Prophet answer to that
+Idea, whether then is it not more reasonable to
+think, that it stands upon that Ground, than
+to think it a mere Fancy and poetical Scene of
+Things? This is the true State of the Case,
+and that which we must judge of. Methinks
+’tis very harsh to suppose all this a bare Fiction,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>grounded upon no matter of Fact, upon
+no sacred Story, upon no Appearance of God
+in Nature. If you say it hath a moral Signification,
+so let it have, we do not destroy
+that: It hath reference, no doubt, to the Dangers
+and Deliverances of the Church; but the
+Question is, whether the Words and natural
+Sense be a Fancy only, a Bundle of random
+Hyperboles? or, whether they relate to the
+History of the Deluge, and the State of the
+Ark there representing the Church? This
+makes the Sense doubly rich, Historically and
+Morally; and grounds it upon Scripture and
+Reason, as well as upon Fancy.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>That violent Eruption of the Sea out of the
+Womb of the Earth, which <i>Job</i> speaks of, is,
+in my Judgment, another Description of the
+Deluge; ’tis <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> 8, 9, 10, 11. <i>Who shut
+up the Sea with Doors, when it broke forth,
+as if it had issued out of a womb; when I
+made the Cloud the Garment thereof, and thick
+Darkness a swadling Band for it. And broke
+up for it my decreed Place.——Hitherto shalt
+thou come</i>, &#38;c. Here you may see the Birth and
+Nativity of the Sea, or of <i>Oceanus</i>, describ’d<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c013'><sup>[13]</sup></a>,
+how he broke out of the Womb, and what his
+first Garment and Swadling-Cloaths were;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>namely, Clouds and thick Darkness. This
+cannot refer to any thing, that I know of,
+but to the Face of Nature at the Deluge; when
+the Sea was born, and wrapt up in Clouds
+and broken Waves, and a dark impenetrable
+Mist round the Body of the Earth. And this
+seems to be the very same, that <i>David</i> had
+express’d in his Description of the Deluge,
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eighteen'>xviii.</abbr> 11. <i>He made Darkness his secret
+Place, his Pavilion round about him were dark
+Waters and thick Clouds of the Skies.</i> For this
+was truly the Face of the World in the Time
+of the Flood, tho’ we little reflect upon it. And
+this dark Confusion every where, above and
+below, arose from the violent and confus’d
+Motion of the Abyss; which was dash’d in
+pieces by the falling Earth; and flew into the
+Air in misty Drops, as Dust flies up in a great
+Ruin. [See <i>Theor.</i> <i>Book</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 136.]</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But I am afraid, we have stay’d too long
+upon this Particular, <i>The Form of the Deluge</i>;
+seeing ’tis but a Corollary from the precedent
+Article about the Dissolution of the Earth.
+However, Time is not ill spent about any thing
+that relates to natural Providence, whereof
+the two most signal Instances in our sacred
+Writings, are, the <i>Deluge</i> and the <i>Conflagration</i>.
+And seeing <i>Job</i> and <i>David</i> do often
+reflect upon the Works of God in the external
+Creation, and upon the Administrations of
+Providence, it cannot be imagin’d, that they
+should never reflect upon the Deluge; the
+most remarkable Change of Nature that ever
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>hath been, and the most remarkable Judgment
+upon Mankind. And if they have reflected
+upon it any where, ’tis, I think, in
+those Places and those Instances, which I have
+noted; and if those Places do relate to the
+Deluge, they are not capable, in my Judgment,
+of any fairer or more natural Interpretation,
+than that which we have given them; which
+you see, how much it favours and confirms
+our Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I have now finished the Heads I undertook
+to prove, that I might shew our Theory to
+agree with Scripture in these three principal
+Points; first, in that it supposeth a Diversity
+and Difference betwixt the ante-diluvian Heavens
+and Earth, and the present Heavens and
+Earth: Secondly, in assigning the particular
+Form of the ante-diluvian Earth and Abyss;
+Thirdly, in explaining the Deluge by a Dissolution
+of that Earth, and an Eruption of
+the Abyss. How far I have succeeded in
+this Attempt, as to others, I cannot tell; but
+I am sure I have convinced my self, and am
+satisfied that my Thoughts, in that Theory,
+have run in the same Tract with the Holy
+Writings, with the true Intent and Spirit
+of them. There are some Persons that are
+wilfully ignorant in certain things, and others
+that are willing to be ignorant, as the Apostle
+phraseth it; speaking of those Eternalists that
+denied the Doctrine of the Change and Revolutions
+of the natural World: And ’tis not to
+be expected but there are many still of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>same Humour, and therefore may be called <i>willingly
+ignorant</i>; that is, they will not use that
+Pains and Attention that is necessary for the
+Examination of such a Doctrine, nor Impartiality
+in judging after Examination; they greedily
+lay hold on all Evidence on one side, and
+willingly forget, or slightly pass over, all Evidence
+for the other. This, I think, is the Character
+of those that are <i>willingly ignorant</i>; for
+I do not take it to be so deep as a downright wilful
+Ignorance, where they are plainly conscious
+to themselves of that Wilfulness: but where
+an insensible Mixture of human Passions inclines
+them one Way, and makes them averse
+to the other; and in that Method draws on all
+the Consequences of a willing <i>Ignorance</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There remains still, as I remember, one
+Proposition that I am bound to make good;
+I said, at first, that our Hypothesis concerning
+the Deluge was more agreeable not only to
+Scripture in general, but also to the particular
+History of the Flood left us by <i>Moses</i>; I
+say, more agreeable to it than any other Hypothesis,
+that hath yet been propos’d. This may
+be made good in a few Words; for in <i>Moses</i>’s
+History of the Deluge, there are two principal
+Points, the Extent of the Deluge, and
+the Causes of it; and in both these we do
+fully agree with that sacred Author. <i>As to the
+Extent of it</i>, he makes the Deluge universal;
+<i>All the high Hills under the whole Heaven
+were cover’d fifteen Cubits upwards.</i> We
+also make it universal, over the Face of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>whole Earth; and in such a Manner as must
+needs raise the Waters above the Top of the
+highest Hills every where. As <i>to the Causes
+of it</i>, <i>Moses</i> makes them to be the Disruption
+of the <i>Abyss</i>, and the <i>Rains</i>, and no more;
+and in this also we exactly agree with him;
+we know no other Causes, nor pretend to any
+other but those two. Distinguishing therefore
+<i>Moses</i> his Narration as to the Substance
+and Circumstances of it, it must be allowed
+that these two Points make the Substance of
+it, and that an Hypothesis that differs from it
+in either of these two, differs from it more
+than ours; which, at the worst, can but differ in
+Matter of Circumstance. Now seeing the great
+Difficulty about the Deluge is the Quantity of
+Water required for it, there have been two
+Explications proposed, besides ours, to remove
+or satisfy this Difficulty; one whereof makes
+the Deluge not to have been universal, or to
+have reach’d only <i>Judea</i> and some neighbouring
+Countries, and therefore less Water would
+suffice; the other owning the Deluge to be
+universal, supplies it self with Water from the
+divine Omnipotency, and says <i>new</i> Waters
+were created then for the nonce, and again
+annihilated, when the Deluge was to cease.
+Both these Explications, you see, (and I know
+no more of Note that are not obnoxious to
+the same Exceptions) differ from <i>Moses</i> in the
+Substance, or in one of the two substantial
+Points, and consequently more than ours doth.
+The first changeth the Flood into a kind of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>National Inundation; and the second assigns
+other Causes of it than <i>Moses</i> had assign’d;
+And as they both differ apparently from the
+<i>Mosaical</i> History, so you may see them refuted
+upon other Grounds also, in the third
+Chapter of the first Book of the <i>Theory</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This may be sufficient as to the History of
+the Flood by <i>Moses</i>: But possibly it may be
+said, the principal Objection will arise from
+<i>Moses</i> his six Days Creation in the first Chapter
+of <i>Genesis</i>; where another sort of Earth,
+than what we have form’d from the Chaos, is
+represented to us; namely, a terraqueous Globe
+such as our Earth is at present. ’Tis indeed
+very apparent, that <i>Moses</i> hath accommodated
+his six Days Creation to the present Form of
+the Earth, or to that which was before the
+Eyes of the People, when he wrote. But it is
+a great Question whether that was ever intended
+for a true Physical Account of the Origin
+of the Earth; or whether <i>Moses</i> did either Philosophize
+or Astronomize in that Description.
+The antient fathers, when they answer the
+Heathens, and the Adversaries of Christianity,
+do generally deny it; as I am ready to make
+good upon another Occasion. And the Thing
+it self bears in it evident Marks of an Accommodation
+and Condescension to the vulgar Notions
+concerning the Form of the World:
+Those that think otherwise, and would make
+it literally and physically true in all the Parts
+of it, I desire them, without entring upon the
+strict Merits of the Cause, to determine these
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>Preliminaries. First, whether the whole Universe
+rise from a terrestrial Chaos? Secondly,
+what System of a World this six Days Creation
+proceeds upon; whether it supposes the
+Earth, or the Sun, for the Center? Thirdly,
+whether the Sun and fix’d Stars are of a later
+Date, and a later Birth, than this Globe of
+Earth? And lastly, where is the Region of
+the Super-celestial Waters? When they have
+determin’d these Fundamentals, we will proceed
+to other Observations upon the six Days
+Work, which will farther assure us, that ’tis
+a Narration suited to the Capacity of the People,
+and not to the strict and physical Nature
+of Things. Besides, we are to remember, that
+<i>Moses</i> must be so interpreted in the first Chapter
+of <i>Genesis</i>, as not to interfere with himself
+in other Parts of his History; nor to interfere
+with <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, or the Prophet <i>David</i>,
+or any other sacred Authors, when they treat
+of the same Matter. Nor lastly, so, as to be
+repugnant to clear and uncontested Science.
+For, in things that concern the natural World,
+that must always be consulted.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>With these Precautions, let them try if they
+can reduce that Narrative of the Origin of
+the World, to physical Truth; so as to be consistent,
+both with Nature, and with Divine
+Revelation every where. It is easily reconcileable
+to both, if we suppose it wrote in a vulgar
+Style, and to the Conceptions of the People;
+and we cannot deny that a vulgar Style is
+often made use of in the holy Writings. How
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>freely and unconcernedly does Scripture speak
+of God Almighty, according to the Opinions
+of the Vulgar? Of his <i>Passions</i>, <i>local Motions</i>,
+<i>Parts and Members of his Body</i>: Which all
+are things that do not belong, or are not compatible
+with the Divine Nature, according to
+Truth and Science. And if this Liberty be
+taken, as to God himself, much more may it
+be taken as to his Works. And accordingly
+we see, what Motion the Scripture gives to
+the Sun; what Figure to the Earth; what Figure
+to the Heavens: All according to the Appearance
+of Sense and popular Credulity without
+any Remorse for having transgressed the
+Rules of intellectual Truth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This vulgar Style of Scripture, in describing
+the Nature of Things, hath been often mistaken
+for the real Sense, and so become a Stumbling-Block
+in the Way of Truth. Thus the
+<i>Anthropomorphites</i> of old contended for the
+human Shape of God, from the Letter of Scripture,
+and brought many express Texts for their
+purpose; but sound Reason, at length, got the
+upper hand of literal Authority. Then several
+of the Christian Fathers contended, that
+there were no <i>Antipodes</i>; and made that
+Doctrine irreconcilable to Scripture; But this
+also, after a while, went off, and yeilded to Reason
+and Experience. Then, the Motion of the
+Earth must by no means be allow’d, as being
+contrary to Scripture; for so it is indeed, according
+to the Letter and vulgar Style. But all
+intelligent Persons see thorough this Argument,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>and depend upon it no more in this Case, than
+in the former. Lastly, the Original of the
+Earth from a Chaos, drawn according to the
+Rules of Phisiology, will not be admitted; because
+it does not agree with the Scheme of the
+six Days Creation. But why may not this be
+wrote in a vulgar Style, as well as the rest? Certainly
+there can be nothing more like a vulgar
+Style, than to set God to <i>work by the Day</i>, and
+in six Days to finish his Task; as he is there represented.
+We may therefore probably hope
+that all these Disguises of Truth will at length
+fall off, and that we shall see God and his
+Works in a pure and naked Light.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus I have finished what I had to say in
+Confirmation of this Theory from Scripture;
+I mean of the former Part of it, which depends
+chiefly upon the Deluge, and the ante-diluvian
+Earth. When you have collated the
+Places of Scripture, on either side, and laid
+them in the Balance, to be weigh’d one against
+another; if you do but find them equal,
+or near to an equal Poise, you know in whether
+Scale the natural Reasons are to be laid;
+and of what Weight they ought to be in an
+Argument of this kind. There is a great Difference
+betwixt Scripture with Philosophy on
+its side, and Scripture with Philosophy against
+it, when the Question is concerning the natural
+World: And this is our Case; which I
+now leave to the Consideration of the unprejudic’d
+Reader, and proceed to the Proof
+of the second Part of the Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>The latter Part consists of the <i>Conflagration
+of the World</i>, and the <i>new
+Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>; and seeing there
+is no Dispute concerning the former of these
+two, our Task will now lie in a little Compass;
+being only this, to prove that there will be
+new Heavens, and a new Earth, after the
+Conflagration. This, to my Mind, is sufficiently
+done already, in the first, second and
+third Chapters of the <abbr title='fourth'>ivth</abbr> book, both from
+Scripture and Antiquity, whether Sacred or
+Prophane; and therefore, at present, we will
+only make a short and easy Review of Scripture-Testimonies,
+with design chiefly to obviate
+and disappoint the Evasions of such, as
+would beat down solid Texts into thin Metaphors
+and Allegories.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Testimonies of Scripture concerning
+the <i>Renovation of the World</i>, are either express,
+or implicit: Those I call express, that
+mention the new Heavens and new Earth;
+and those implicit, that signify the same
+Thing, but not in express Terms. So when
+our Saviour speaks of a <i>Palingenesia</i>, or Regeneration;
+(<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 28, 29.) or St <i>Peter</i>,
+of an <i>Apocatastasis</i> or Restitution; (<i>Acts</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+21.) these being Words used by all Authors,
+Prophane or Ecclesiastical, for the <i>Renovation</i>
+of the World, ought, in reason, to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>be interpreted in the same Sense in the Holy
+Writings. And in like Manner, when
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Paul</i> speaks of his <i>future Earth</i>, or an
+<i>habitable World to come</i>, <abbr title='Hebrews'>Hebr.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 5. ἡ οἰκουμένη
+ἡ μέλλουσα or of a <i>Redemption</i> or Melioration
+of the present State of Nature, <i>Rom.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+21, 22. these lead us again, in other
+Terms, to the same <i>Renovation</i> of the World.
+But there are also some Places of Scripture,
+that set the <i>new Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>
+in such a full and open View, that we
+must shut our Eyes not to see them. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
+<i>John</i> says, he saw them, and observed the
+Form of the new Earth, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 1.
+<i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='sixty-five'>lxv.</abbr> 17. The Seer <i>Isaiah</i> spoke of them
+in express Words, many hundred Years before.
+And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> marks the Time when
+they are to be introduc’d, namely, after the
+Conflagration, or after the Dissolution of
+the present Heavens and Earth, 2 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+12, 13.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These later Texts of Scripture being so
+express, there is but one Way left to elude the
+Force of them; and that is, by turning the
+<i>Renovation of the World</i> into an Allegory;
+and making the new Heavens and new
+Earth to be allegorical Heavens and Earth,
+not real and material, as ours are. This is a
+bold Attempt of some modern Authors, who
+chuse rather to strain the Word of God, than
+their own Notions. There are Allegories,
+no doubt, in Scripture, but we are not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>to allegorize Scripture without some Warrant;
+either from an Apostolical Interpretation,
+or from the Necessity of the Matter; and
+I do not know how they can pretend to either
+of these, in this Case. However, that
+they may have all fair Play, we will lay
+aside, at present, all the other Texts of
+Scripture, and confine our selves wholly to
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Words; to see and examine whether
+they are, or can be turn’d into an Allegory,
+according to the best Rules of Interpretation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Words are these, 2 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr>
+11, 12, 13. <i>Seeing then all these Things
+shall be dissolved, what manner of Persons
+ought ye to be in all holy Conversation and
+Godliness? Looking for, and hasting the
+Coming of the Day of God; wherein the
+Heavens being on Fire shall be dissolved,
+and the Elements shall melt with fervent
+Heat. Nevertheless we, according to his
+Promise, look for new Heavens and a new
+Earth; wherein Righteousness shall dwell.</i>
+The Question is concerning this last Verse,
+<i>Whether the new Heavens and Earth</i> here
+promis’d, are to be real and material Heavens
+and Earth, or only figurative and allegorical.
+The Words, you see, are clear;
+and the general Rule of Interpretation is
+this, <i>That</i> we are not to recede from the
+Letter, or the literal Sense, unless there be
+a Necessity from the Subject-matter; such
+a Necessity, as makes a literal Interpretation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>absurd. But where is that Necessity in this
+Case? Cannot God make new Heavens
+and a new Earth, as easily as he made
+the old ones? Is his Strength decayed since
+that Time, or is Matter grown more disobedient?
+Nay, does not Nature offer her
+self voluntarily to raise a new World from
+the second Chaos, as well as from the
+first; and, under the Conduct of Providence,
+to make it as convenient an Habitation as
+the primæval Earth? Therefore no Necessity
+can be pretended of leaving the litteral
+Sense, upon an Incapacity of the Subject-matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The second Rule to determine an Interpretation
+to be literal or allegorical, is
+the use of the same Words or Phrase in
+the Context, and the Signification of them
+there: Let’s then examine our Case according
+to this Rule. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> had us’d the
+same Phrase of <i>Heavens and Earth</i> twice
+before in the same Chapter. The <i>old Heavens
+and Earth</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 5. The <i>present Heavens
+and Earth</i>, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 7. and now he uses
+it again, <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 13. the <i>new Heavens and
+Earth.</i> Have we not then Reason to suppose,
+that he takes it here in the same
+Sense, that he had done twice before, for
+real and material Heavens and Earth?
+There is no Mark set of a new Signification,
+nor why we should alter the Sense
+of the Words. That he used them always
+before for the material Heavens and Earth,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>I think none will question; and therefore,
+unless they can give us a sufficient Reason,
+why we should change the Signification of
+the Words, we are bound by this second
+Rule also, to understand them in a litteral
+Sense.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, The very Form of the Words,
+and the Manner of their Dependence upon
+the Context, leads us to a litteral Sense,
+and to material Heavens and Earth. <i>Nevertheless</i>,
+says the Apostle, <i>we expect new
+Heavens, &#38;c.</i> Why <i>Nevertheless!</i> that is,
+notwithstanding the Dissolution of the present
+Heavens and Earth. The Apostle foresaw,
+what he had said might raise a Doubt in
+their Minds, whether all Things would not
+be at an End; nothing more of Heavens
+and Earth, or of any habitable World, after
+the Conflagration: And to obviate this, he
+tells them, <i>Notwithstanding</i> that wonderful
+Desolation that I have describ’d, we do, accordding
+to God’s Promises, expect new Heavens
+and a new Earth, to be an Habitation for the
+Righteous.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You see then the new Heavens and new
+Earth, which the Apostle speaks of, are
+substituted in the Place of those that were
+destroyed at the Conflagration; and would
+you substitute allegorical Heavens and Earth
+in the Place of Material? Shadow for a
+Substance? What an Equivocation would it
+be in the Apostle, when the Doubt was
+about the material Heavens and Earth, to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>make an Answer about allegorical. Lastly,
+The timing of the Thing determines the
+Sense: When shall this new World appear?
+after the Conflagration, the Apostle says:
+Therefore it cannot be understood of any
+moral Renovation, to be made at, or in the
+Times of the Gospel, as these Allegorists
+pretend. We must therefore, upon all Accounts,
+conclude that the Apostle intended a
+literal Sense; real and material Heavens, to
+succeed these after the Conflagration; which
+was the Thing to be prov’d. And I know
+not what Bars the Spirit of God can set, to
+keep us within the Compass of a literal Sense,
+if these be not sufficient.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for the Explication of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s
+Doctrine concerning the new Heavens
+and new Earth; which secures the second
+Part of our Theory: For the Theory stands
+upon two Pillars, or two Pedestals, the ante-diluvian
+Earth and the future Earth; or
+in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>’s Phrase, the old Heavens and
+Earth, and the new Heavens and Earth;
+and it cannot be shaken, so long as these
+two continue firm and immoveable. We
+might now put an End to this Review, but
+it may be expected possibly that we should
+say something concerning the <i>Millennium</i>?
+which we have, contrary to the general Sentiment
+of the modern <i>Millennaries</i>, plac’d in
+the <i>future</i> Earth. Our Opinion hath this Advantage
+above others, that all fanatical Pretensions
+to Power and Empire in this World,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>are, by these Means, blown away, as Chaff
+before the Wind. Princes need not fear to
+be dethroned, to make way to the Saints;
+nor Governments unhinged, that they may
+rule the World with a Rod of Iron. These
+are the Effects of the wild Enthusiasm; seeing
+the very State which they aim at, is not to be
+upon this Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But that our Sense may not be mistaken or
+misapprehended in this Particular, as if we
+thought the Christian Church would never,
+upon this Earth, be in a better and happier
+Posture than it is in at present: We must distinguish
+betwixt a <i>Melioration</i> of the World,
+if you will allow that Word; and a <i>Millennium</i>.
+We do not deny a Reformation and
+Improvement of the Church, both as to Peace,
+Purity, and Piety: That Knowledge may increase,
+Mens Minds be enlarged, and Christian
+Religion better understood: That the Power
+of Antichrist shall be diminish’d, Persecution
+cease, Liberty of Conscience allow’d amongst
+the Reformed; and a greater Union and Harmony
+established: That Princes will mind the
+publick Good, more than they do now; and
+be themselves better Examples of Virtue and
+true Piety. All this may be, and I hope will
+be e’er long. But the <i>apocalyptical Millennium</i>,
+or the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, is still another
+Matter: It differs not in Degree only from the
+present State, but in a new Order of Things;
+both in the moral World and in the natural;
+and that cannot be till we come into the <i>new
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>Heavens</i> and <i>new Earth</i>. Suppose what Reformation
+you can in this World, there will
+still remain many Things inconsistent with the
+true millennial State; Antichrist, tho’ weakned,
+will not be finally destroyed till the coming
+of our Saviour, nor Satan bound. And
+there will be always Poverty, Wars, Diseases,
+Knaves and Hypocrites, in this World, which
+are not consistent with the <i>new Jerusalem</i>, as
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>John</i> describes it, <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> 2, 3, 4, <i>&#38;c.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You see now what our Notion is of the Millennium,
+as we deny this Earth to be the Seat
+of it: ’Tis the State that succeeds the first
+Resurrection, when Satan is lock’d up in the
+bottomless Pit: The State when the Martyrs
+are to return into Life, and wherein they are
+to have the first Lot and chief Share: A State
+which is to last a thousand Years. <i>And Blessed
+and Holy is he, that hath a Part in it;
+on such the second Death hath no Power; but
+they shall be Priests of God and Christ, and
+shall reign with him a thousand Years.</i> If you
+would see more particular Reasons of our Judgment
+in this Case, why such a Millennium is
+not to be expected in this World; they are set
+down in the <i>8th</i> <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> of the <i>4th</i> Book, and
+we do not think it necessary that they should
+be here repeated.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to that Dissertion that follows the Millennium,
+and reaches to the Consummation of
+all Things seeing it is but problematical, we
+leave it to stand or fall by the Evidence already
+given; and should be very glad to see the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>Conjectures of others more learned, in Speculations
+so abstruse and remote from common
+Knowledge. They cannot surely be thought
+unworthy or unfit for our Meditations, seeing
+they are suggested to us by Scripture it self:
+And to what end were they propos’d to us
+there, if it was not intended, that they should
+be understood, sooner or later?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I have done with this Review; and shall
+only add one or two Reflections upon the
+whole Discourse, and so conclude. You have
+seen the State of the Theory of the Earth, as
+to the <i>Matters</i>, <i>Form</i>, and <i>Proofs</i> of it, both
+natural and sacred: If any one will substitute
+a better in its Place, I shall think my self more
+obliged to him, than if he had shewed me
+the Quadrature of the Circle. But it is not
+enough to pick Quarrels here and there; that
+may be done by any Writing, especially when
+it is of so great Extent and Comprehension:
+They must build up, as well as pull down;
+and give us another Theory instead of this,
+fitted to the same natural History of the Earth,
+according as it is set down in Scripture; and
+then let the World take their Choice. He
+that cuts down a Tree, is bound in Reason
+to plant two; because there is an Hazard in
+their Growth and Thriving.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then as to those that are such rigorous Scripturists,
+as to require plainly demonstrative and
+irresistible Texts for every thing they entertain
+or believe; they would do well to reflect
+and consider, whether, for every Article in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>three Creeds (which have no Support from
+natural Reason) they can bring such Texts of
+Scripture as they require of others; or a fairer
+and juster Evidence, all things consider’d,
+than we have done for the Substance of this
+Theory. We have not indeed said all that
+might be said, as to Antiquity; that making
+no part in this Review, and being capable still
+of great Additions. But as to Scripture and
+Reason I have no more to add: Those that
+are not satisfied with the Proofs already produc’d
+upon these two Heads, are under a Fate,
+good or bad, which is not in my Power to
+overcome.
+<i>FINIS.</i></p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span><span class='xxlarge'><b>AN ANSWER TO THE EXCEPTIONS MADE BY <i>Mr.</i> <span class='sc'>Erasmus Warren</span>,</b></span></div>
+ <div><span class='xxlarge'><b>Against the <span class='sc'>Sacred</span> THEORY OF THE EARTH.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b><span class='sc'>The Fourth Edition.</span></b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><i>LONDON</i>:</div>
+ <div class='c000'>Printed for <span class='sc'><abbr class='spell'>J.</abbr> Hooke</span>, at the <i>Flower de Luce</i> in</div>
+ <div><i>Fleetstreet</i>, <abbr class='spell'>MDCCXXVI.</abbr></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>
+ <h2 class='c007'>AN ANSWER TO THE EXCEPTIONS MADE BY <i>Mr.</i> <span class='sc'>Erasmus Warren</span>, AGAINST THE <i>THEORY</i> of the <i>EARTH</i>.</h2>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>If it be Civility to return a speedy Answer
+to a Demand or Message, I will not
+fail to pay that Respect to the late Author
+of the <i>Exceptions against the Theory of the
+Earth</i>. I know, short Follies, and short
+Quarrels, are the best: And to offer Satisfaction
+at the first Opportunity, is the fairest Way to put
+an End to Controversies. Besides, such personal Altercations
+as these, are but <i>Res perituræ</i>, which do not deserve
+much Time or Study; but, like Repartees, are best
+made off hand, and never thought on more. I only
+desire that Friendliness, that some Allowance may be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>made as to Unaccuracy of Style: Which is always allow’d
+in hasty Dispatches.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I shall make no Excursions from the Subject, nor use
+any other Method than to follow the learned <i>Exceptor</i>
+from Chapter to Chapter, and observe his Steps and Motions,
+so far as they are contrary to the Theory. But if
+he divert out of his Way, for his Pleasure, or other Reasons
+best known to himself, I may take notice of it perhaps,
+but shall not follow him any farther than my Business
+leads me; having no design to abridge his Liberty,
+but to defend my own Writings where they are attack’d.
+Give me leave therefore, without any other Preface or
+Ceremony, to fall to our Work.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='one'>I.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is only an Introduction, and treats of
+other Things, without any particular Opposition to
+the Theory. And therefore I shall only give you the Conclusion
+of it, in the Author’s own Words: <i>So much for
+the first Chapter; which may be reckoned as an Introduction
+to the following Discourse. Which if any shall look upon as
+a Collection of Notes, somewhat confusedly put together, rather
+than a formal, well digested Treatise, they will entertain
+the best or truest Idea of it.</i> A severe Censure: But
+every Man best understands his own Works.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='two'>II.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>Here he begins to enter upon particular Exceptions:
+And his first Head is against the <i>Formation of
+the Earth</i>, <i>pag.</i> 45. as explained by the Theory. To this
+he gives but one Exception in this Chapter: Namely,
+That <i>it would have taken up too much Time; the World
+being made in six Days</i>. Whereas many Separations of
+the Chaos, and of the Elements, were to be made, according
+to the Theory, which could not be dispatch’d in
+so short a Time. To this Exception, the general Answer
+may be this; either you take the Hypothesis of an
+ordinary Providence, or of an extraordinary, as to the
+Time allowed for the Formation of the Earth: If you
+proceed according to an ordinary Providence, the Formation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>of the Earth would require much more Time than
+six Days: But if according to an extraordinary, you may
+suppose it made in six Minutes, if you please. ’Twas
+plain Work, and a simple Process, according to the Theory;
+consisting only of such and such Separations, and a
+Concretion: And either of these might be accelerated, and
+dispatch’d in a longer or shorter Time, as Providence
+thought fit.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>However, this Objection does not come well from the
+Hands of this Author, who makes all the Mountains of
+the Earth (the most operose Part of it, as one would
+think) to be rais’d in a small Parcel of a Day by the
+Heat and Action of the Sun; as we shall find in the
+tenth Chapter, hereafter. He seems to proceed by natural
+Causes; for such are the Heat and Action of the Sun:
+And if so, he will find himself as much straiten’d for
+Time, as the Theorist can be. But if he say, the Work
+of Nature and of the Sun was accelerated by an extra-ordinary
+Power, he must allow us to say the same Thing
+of the Separations of the Chaos, and the first Concretion
+of the Earth. For he cannot reasonably debar us that
+Liberty which he takes himself, unless we have debarr’d
+and excluded our selves. Now ’tis plain, the Theorist
+never excluded an extraordinary Providence in the Formation
+and Construction of the Earth; as appears, and is
+openly express’d in many Parts of the Theory, <i>Eng. Theor.
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 88. See, if you please, the Conclusion of the <i>fifth
+Chapter</i>, which treats about the Formation of the Earth.
+The last Paragraph is this: <i>Give me leave only, before we
+proceed any farther, to annex here a short Advertisement,
+concerning the Causes of this wonderful Structure of the
+first Earth: ’Tis true, we have propos’d the natural Causes
+of it, and I do not know wherein our Explication is false or
+defective; but in Things of this Kind we may easily be too
+credulous: And this Structure is so marvellous, that it ought
+rather to be consider’d as a particular Effect of the Divine
+Art, than as the Work of Nature. The whole Globe of the
+Water vaulted over, and the exterior Earth hanging above
+the Deep, sustain’d by nothing but its own Measures and
+Manner of Construction: A Building without Foundation or
+Corner-stone. This seems to be a Piece of Divine Geometry
+or Architecture; and to this, I think, is to be referr’d
+that magnificent Challenge which God Almighty made to</i>
+Job; Where wast thou, when I laid the Foundations
+of the Earth? Declare, <i>&#38;c.</i> Moses <i>also, when be had describ’d
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>the Chaos, saith</i>, The Spirit of God mov’d upon,
+<i>or sat brooding upon</i>, the Face of the Waters; <i>without all
+doubt, to produce some Effects there</i>. <i>And <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr></i> Peter, <i>when
+he speaks of the Form of the Anti-deluvian Earth, how it
+stood, in reference to the Waters, adds</i>, By the Word of
+God, <i>or by the Wisdom of God</i>, it was made so. <i>And this
+same Wisdom of God, in the</i> Proverbs, <i>as we observed before,
+takes notice of this very Piece of Work in the Formation
+of the Earth</i>: When he set an Orb over the Face
+of the Deep, I was there. <i>Wherefore to the great Architect,
+who made the boundless Universe out of nothing, and
+form’d the Earth out of a Chaos, let the Praise of the whole
+Work, and particularly, of this Master-piece, for ever, with
+all Honour, be given.</i> In like Manner, there is a larger Account
+of Providence, both ordinary and extraordinary,
+as to the Revolutions of the natural World, in the last
+Paragraph of the eighth Chapter; and like Reflections
+are made in other Places, when Occasion is offer’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have not, therefore, any where excluded the Influence
+and Benefit of superior Causes, where the Case requires
+it: Especially, when ’tis only to modify the Effect,
+as to Time and Dispatch. And in that Case, none
+will have more need of it than himself; as we shall find
+in the Examination of his tenth Chapter, about the Origin
+of Mountains.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The rest of this second Chapter is spent in three Excursions.
+One in justifying the <i>Cartesian</i> Way of forming
+Light and the Sun, as agreeable to <i>Moses</i>. The second
+about the <i>Jewish Cabala</i>, and <i>Cabalistical Interpretations</i>.
+And the third about <i>mystical Numbers</i>. But the
+Theory not being concern’d in these Things, I leave them
+to the Author, and his Readers, to enjoy the Pleasure and
+Profit of them. And proceed to the third Chapter.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>In this Chapter a second Exception against the Formation
+of the Earth, as propos’d in the Theory, is alledg’d:
+And ’tis this; The Fluctuation of the Chaos, or
+of that first watery Globe, would hinder, he says, any
+Concretion of Earth upon its Surface. Not that there
+were Winds or Storms then, to agitate those Waters; neither
+would the Motion of the Earth, or the Rotation of
+that Globe, disturb them, as he allows there; but the Disturbance
+would have Rise from Tides, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 74. <i>lin.</i> 18, 19.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>or the Ebbings and Flowings of that great Ocean, which,
+he says, must have been then, as well as now; And the
+Reason he gives, is this; because the Flux and Reflux of
+the Sea depend upon the Moon; and the Moon was then
+present, as he says, in our Heavens, or in our Vortex:
+And therefore, would have the same Effect then, upon
+that Body of Waters which lay under it, that it hath now
+upon the Sea.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>That the Moon was in the Heavens, and in our Neighbourhood,
+when the Earth was form’d, he proves from
+the six Days Creation: and spends two or three Pages in
+Wit and Scolding upon this Subject, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 77, 78, 79. But,
+with his leave, when all is done, his Argument will be
+of no Force, unless he can prove, that the <i>fourth Day’s
+Creation was before the third</i>. I confess, I have heard of
+a Wager that was lost upon a like Case, namely, Whether
+<i>Henry</i> <abbr title='the eighth'>VIII.</abbr> was before <i>Henry</i> <abbr title='the seventh'>VII</abbr>? But that was
+done by Complot in the Company, to whom it was referr’d
+to decide the Question. We have no Plot here, but
+appeal fairly to that Judge the Exceptor hath chosen,
+namely, to Scripture, which tells us, that the Moon was
+made the fourth Day, and the Earth was form’d the third.
+Therefore, unless the fourth Day was before the third,
+the Moon could not hinder the Formation of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But I hope, say you, this is a Misrepresentation. The
+Animadverter sure would not put the Matter upon this
+Issue. Yes, he does. For when he had oppos’d to our
+Formation of the Earth, the Fluctuation of the Waters,
+caus’d, as he phrases it, by the <i>bulky Presence</i> of the
+Moon, he concludes with these Words, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 77. <i>Parag.</i> 3.)
+<i>But in reference to this Matter, there is a Doubt made by
+the Theorist, which must be consider’d and removed; otherwise
+most of what hath been said, touching the Instability
+and Fluctuation of these Waters, will be vain and groundless:
+The Doubt is, Whether the Moon were then in our
+Neighbourhood.</i> You see that Matter is put upon this Issue,
+Whether the Moon was in the Neighbourhood of
+the Earth, at the Time of its Formation. We say she was
+not; and prove it by this plain Argument, If she was not
+in Being at that Time, she was not in our Neighbourhood:
+But unless the <i>fourth</i> Day was before the <i>third</i>, she was
+not in Being. <i>Ergo.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But after all, if the Moon had been present then, and
+there had been Tides, or any other Fluctuation towards
+the Poles, we have no Reason to believe, according to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>the Experiences we have now, that that would have hinder’d
+the Formation of the Earth, upon the Surface of
+the Chaos. For why should they have hinder’d that more,
+than they do the Formation of Ice upon the Surface of
+the Sea? We know, in cold Regions, the Seas are frozen,
+notwithstanding their Tides; and in the Mouths of Rivers,
+where there is both the Current and Stream of the
+River on one hand, and the Counter-Current of the
+Tides on the other; these, together, cannot hinder the
+Concretion that is made on the Surface of the Water:
+And our Water is a Substance more thin, and easily broken,
+than that tenacious Film was, that cover’d the Chaos.
+<span class='sc'>Wherefore</span>, upon all Suppositions, we have Reason
+to conclude, that no Fluctuations of the Chaos could hinder
+the Formation of the first Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, The Observator opposes the Reasons that are
+given by the Theorist, <i>why the Presence of the Moon</i> was
+less needful in the first World. Namely, <i>because there
+were no long Winter Nights; nor the great Pool of the
+Sea to move or govern</i>. As to the second Reason, ’tis only
+hypothetical; and if the Hypothesis be true, <i>That</i> there
+was no open Sea at that Time, (which must be elsewhere
+examin’d,) the Consequence is certainly true. But as to
+the first Reason, he will not allow the Consequence, tho’
+the Hypothesis be admitted. For he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 79. <i>As there
+were no long Winter Nights then, so there were no short
+Summer ones neither: So that set but the one against the other,
+and the Presence of the Moon may seem to have been as
+needful then, in regard of the Length of Nights, as she is
+now.</i> This looks like a witty Observation, but it does
+not reach the Point. Is there as much need of the Moon
+in <i>Spain</i>, as in <i>Lapland</i>, or the Northern Countries?
+There is as much Night in one Place as another, within
+the Compass of a Year, but the great Inconvenience is,
+when the Night falls upon the Hours of Travel, or the
+Hours of Work and Business; for if it fall only upon
+Hours of Sleep, or of Rest and Retirement, as it does
+certainly more in <i>Spain</i>, and in those Climates that approach
+nearer to an Equinox; the Moon is there less necessary
+in that Respect: We can sleep without Moonshine,
+or without Light, but we cannot travel, or do Business
+abroad, without Hazard and great Inconvenience, if
+there be no Light. So that the Reason of the Theorist
+holds good, <i>viz.</i> That there would be more Necessity of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>Moon-shine in long Winter Nights, than in a perpetual
+Equinox.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We proceed now to the rest of this Chapter, which is
+made up of some secondary Charges against this Part of
+the Theory, concerning the Chaos and the Formation of
+the first Earth. As, First, That it is, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 80, 81. <i>Precarious:</i>
+Secondly, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 83. <i>Unphilosophical</i>: And, Thirdly,
+<i>Antiscriptural</i>; which we shall answer in order. He
+seems to offer at three or four Instances of <i>Precariousness</i>,
+as to the Ingredients of the Chaos, their Proportions
+and Separations; but his Quarrel is chiefly with the oily
+Particles: These he will scarce allow at all; nor that they
+could separate themselves in due Time to receive the
+terrestrial, at least in due Proportions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>First, He would have no oily Particles in the Chaos.
+But why so, I pray? What Proof or just Exception is
+there against them? Why may not there be original oily
+Particles, as well as original salt Particles? Such as your
+great Master <i>Des Cartes</i> supposes, <i>Prin. ph.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> 4. §. 84.
+<i>Meteor.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 1. §. 8. He who considers that vast Quantity
+of oleaginous Matter that is dispers’d every where, in
+Vegetables, in Animals, and in many sorts of Earths,
+and that this must have been from the Beginning, or as
+soon as the Earth had any Furniture; will see Reason to
+believe that such Particles must be thought original and
+primeval; not forg’d below the Abyss, and extracted
+from the inferior Regions of the Earth: For that would
+require a Process of many Ages; whereas, these being
+the Principles of Fertility, it is reasonable to suppose, that
+a new World abounds with them more than an old one.
+Lastly, If we suppose oily Particles to be tenuious and
+branchy, as your Philosopher does, too gross to be Air,
+and too light for Water; why should we imagine that in
+that vast Mass and Variety of Particles, whereof the Chaos
+consisted, there should not be any of this Figure, as well
+as of others? Or, what Reason is there to suppose, that
+there are none of that Figure, but what are brought from
+the inferior Regions of the Earth? For, of all others,
+these seem to be the most unlikely, if not incapable, of
+being extracted from thence. And if there be only a gradual
+Difference, in Magnitude and Mobility, betwixt the
+Particles of Air and Oil, as that Philosopher seems to suppose,
+<i>Prin. phil.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> 4. §. 76. why must we exclude these
+Degrees, and yet admit the higher and lower?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>The second Thing which he charges with <i>Precariousness</i>,
+is the Separation of this oily Matter, in due time, so
+as to make a Mixture and Concretion with the terrestrial
+Particles that fell from above. This Objection was both
+made and answered by the Theorist; <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 79.
+which the Observator might have vouchsaf’d to have taken
+notice of; and either confuted the Answer, or spar’d
+himself the Pains of repeating the Objection.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The third <i>Precariousness</i> is, concerning the Quantity
+and Proportion of these Particles: And the fourth, concerning
+the Quantity and Proportion of the Water. The
+Exceptor, it seems, would have had the Theorist to have
+gauged these Liquors, and told him the just Measure and
+Proportion of each; but, in what Theory or Hypothesis
+is that done? Has his great Philosopher, in his Hypothesis
+of <i>Three Elements</i>, (which the Exceptor makes use of,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 52.) or in his several Regions of the unform’d Earth,
+the <i>Fourth Book of his Principles</i>, defin’d the Quantity
+and Dimensions of each? Or in the mineral Particles and
+Juices, which he draws from the lower Regions, does he
+determine the Quantity of them? And yet these, by their
+Excess, or Defect, might be of great Inconvenience to
+the World: Neither do I censure him for these Things,
+as <i>precarious</i>. For, when the Nature of a Thing admits
+a Latitude, the original Quantity of it is left to be determin’d
+by the Effects; and the Hypothesis stands good, if
+neither any Thing antecedent, nor any present <i>Phænomena</i>,
+can be alledged against it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But if these Examples, from his great Philosopher be
+not sufficient, I will give him one from an Author beyond
+all Exceptions; And that is from himself. Does
+the Animadverter, in his new Hypothesis concerning the
+Deluge, <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr></i> 15. give us the just Proportions of his Rock-Water,
+and the just Proportions of his Rain-Water, that
+concurred to make the Deluge? I find no Calculations
+there, but general Expressions, that the one was far greater
+than the other; and that may be easily presumed, concerning
+the oily Substance, and the watery Chaos: What
+Scruples therefore, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 80, 81. he raises, in reference to the
+Chaos, against the Theorist, for not having demonstrated
+the Proportions of the Liquors of the Abyss, fall upon
+his own Hypothesis; for the same or greater Reasons.
+And you know what the old Verse says,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Turpe est Doctori, cum culpa redurguit ipsum.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>But, however, he will have such Exceptions, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 81. to
+stand good against the Theorist, though they are not good
+against other Persons; because the Theorist stands upon
+Terms<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c013'><sup>[14]</sup></a> of Certainty, and in one Place of his Book, has
+this Sentence, <i>Ego quidem</i>, &#38;c. These Words, I think,
+are very exceptionable, if they be taken with the Context:
+For this Evidence and Certainty, which the Theorist
+speaks of, is brought in there in Opposition to such uncertain
+Arguments, as are taken from the Interpretation
+of <i>Fables</i> and <i>Symbols</i>; or from <i>Etymologies</i> and <i>Grammatical
+Criticisms</i>, which are expresly mention’d in the
+preceding Discourse: And yet this Sentence, because it
+might be taken in too great an Extent, is left out in the
+second Edition of the Theory, and therefore, none had
+Reason to insist upon it. But I see the Exceptor puts himself
+into a State of War, and thinks there is no foul Play
+against an Enemy.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for his Charge of <i>Precariousness</i>. We now
+come to the second, which is call’d <i>Unphilosophicalness</i>.
+And, why is the Theorist, in this Case, unphilosophical?
+Because, says the Exceptor, he supposes terrestrial Particles
+to be dispers’d through the whole Sphere of the
+Chaos, as high as the Moon: And why not, pray, if it
+be a mere Chaos? Where, antecedently to Separations,
+all Things are mix’d and blended without Distinction of
+Gravity or Levity; otherwise it is not a mere Chaos:
+And when Separations begin to be made, and Distinction
+of Parts and Regions, so far it is ceasing to be a mere
+Chaos. But then, says the Observator, why did not the
+Moon come down, as well as these terrestrial Particles?
+I answer by another Question, Why does not the Moon
+come down now? Seeing she is still in our Vortex, and
+at the same Distance; and so the same Reason which keeps
+her up now, kept her up then: Which Reason he will not
+be at a loss to understand, if he understand the Principles
+of his great Philosopher.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>We come now to the last Charge: That the Theory,
+in this Part of it, is <i>antiscriptural</i>. And why so? Because
+it supposes the Chaos <i>dark</i>, whereas the Scripture
+says, there was Light the first Day. Well, but does the
+Scripture say, that the Chaos was throughly illuminated
+the first Day? The Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 52. as I remember, makes
+the primigenial Light to have been the Rudiment of a Sun;
+and calls it there, <i>lin.</i> 17. a <i>faint Light</i>, and a <i>feeble
+Light</i>; and in this Place, <i>lin.</i> 27. a <i>faint Glimmering</i>. If
+then the Sun, in all its Strength and Glory, cannot sometimes
+dispel a Mist out of the Air, what could this <i>faint,
+feeble Glimmering</i> do, towards the Dissipation of such a
+gross caliginous Opacity, as that was? This Light might
+be sufficient to make some Distinction of Day and Night
+in the Skies; and we do not find any other Mark of its
+Strength in Scripture, nor any other Use made of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So we have done with this Chapter. Give me leave
+only, without Offence, to observe the Style of the Exceptor,
+in reference to Scripture, and the Theory. He is
+apt to call every Thing <i>antiscriptural</i>, that suits not
+his Sense; neither is that enough, but he must also call it,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 78. a <i>bold Affront</i> to Scripture. He confesses, he hath
+made, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 299. <i>pen.</i> a <i>little bold</i> with Scripture himself, in
+his new Hypothesis; how much that <i>little</i> will prove,
+we shall see hereafter. But however, as to that hard
+Word, <i>Affront</i>, a discreet Man, as he is not apt to give
+an Affront, so neither is he forward to call every cross
+Word, an Affront: Both those Humours are Extreams,
+and breed Quarrels. Suppose a Man should say boldly,
+God Almighty <i>hath no Right Hand</i>. Oh, might the Animadverter
+cry, <i>That’s a bold Affront to Scripture</i>: For I
+can shew you many and plain Texts of Scripture, both in
+the <i>Old Testament</i>, and in the <i>New Testament</i>, where
+express Mention is made of God’s <i>Right Hand</i>. And
+will you offer to oppose <i>Reason</i> and <i>Philosophy</i> to express
+Words of Scripture, often repeated, and in both Testaments?
+<i>O Tempora, O Mores!</i> So far as my Observation
+reaches, weak Reasons commonly produce strong Passions.
+When a Man hath clear Reasons, they satisfy and
+quiet the Mind; and he is not much concern’d, whether
+others receive his Notions, or no: But when we have a
+strong Aversion to an Opinion, from other Motives and
+Considerations, and find our Reasons doubtful or insufficient;
+then, according to the Course of human Nature,
+the Passions rise for a farther Assistance; and what is wanting,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>in point of Argument, is made up by Invectives and
+Aggravations.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='four'>IV.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is chiefly concerning the <i>Central Fire</i>,
+and the <i>Origin</i> of the <i>Chaos</i>; of both which, the
+Theorist had declared he would not treat: And ’tis an
+unreasonable Violence to force an Author to treat of what
+Things we please, and not allow him to prescribe Bounds
+to his own Discourse. As to the first of these, see what
+the Theorist hath said, <i>Engl. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 451, and 86, 67.
+By which Passages it is evident, that he did not meddle
+with the central Parts of the Earth; nor thought it necessary
+for his Hypothesis: As is also more fully express’d
+in the <i>Latin Theory</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 45. For, do but allow him a
+Chaos from the Bottom of the Abyss, upwards to the
+Moon, and he desires no more for the Formation of an
+habitable Earth: Neither is it the Part of Wisdom, to
+load a new Subject with unnecessary Curiosities.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then as to the Origin of the Chaos, see how the Theorist
+bounds his Discourse as to that, <a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c013'><sup>[15]</sup></a><i>Engl. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 451.
+<i>I did not think it necessary to carry the Story and Original
+of the Earth, higher than the Chaos, as</i> Zoroaster <i>and</i>
+Orpheus <i>seem to have done; but taking that for our Foundation
+which Antiquity, sacred and profane, does suppose,
+and natural Reason approve and confirm, we have form’d
+the Earth from it</i>. To form an habitable Earth from a
+Chaos given, and to shew all the great Periods and general
+Changes of that Earth, throughout the whole Course
+of its Duration, or while it remain’d an Earth, was the
+adequate Design of the Theorist. And was this Design
+so short or shallow, that it could not satisfy the great
+Soul of the Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 88. but it must be a <i>Flaw</i> in the
+Hypothesis, that it did go higher than the Chaos? We
+content our selves with these Bounds at present. And
+when a Man declares, that he will write only the <i>Roman</i>
+History, will you say his Work’s imperfect, because it does
+not take in the <i>Persian</i> and <i>Assyrian</i>?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>These Things consider’d, to speak freely of this Chapter,
+it seems to me, in a great Measure, impertinent; unless
+it was design’d to shew the Learning of the Observator,
+who loves, I perceive, to dabble in Philosophy, though
+little to the Purpose: For, as far as I see, his Disquistions
+generally end in Scepticism; he disputes first one way,
+then another; and, at last determines nothing. He rambles
+betwixt <i>Des Cartes</i> and <i>Moses</i>, the <i>Rabbies</i>, the <i>Septuagint</i>,
+the <i>Platonists</i>, <i>Magnetisme</i>, <i>striate Particles</i>, and
+<i>Præ-existence of Souls</i>: And ends in nothing, as to the Formation
+of the Earth, which was to be the Subject of the
+Chapter. We proceed therefore to the next, in hopes to
+meet with closer Reasoning.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>From the manner of the Earth’s Formation, the
+Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 106. now proceeds to the <i>Form</i> of it,
+if compleated. And his first Exception is, That it would
+want <i>Waters</i>, or Rivers to water it. He says, there would
+either be no Rivers at all, or none, at least, in due time.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Theorist hath replenish’d that Earth with Rivers,
+flowing from the extreme Parts of it, towards the middle,
+in continual Streams; and watering, as a Garden, all
+the intermediate Climates. And this constant Supply of
+Water was made from the Heavens, by an uninterrupted
+Stream of Vapours, which had their Course through the
+Air, from the middle Parts of the Earth towards the extreme;
+and falling in Rains, return’d again upon the Surface
+of the Earth, from the extreme Parts to the middle:
+For that Earth being of an oval or something oblong Figure,
+there would be a Declivity all along, or Descent,
+from the Polar Parts towards the Equinoctial; which gave
+Course and Motion to these Waters. And the Vapours
+above never falling in their Course, the Rivers would never
+fail below; but a perpetual Circulation would be establish’d,
+betwixt the Waters of the Heavens and of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is a short Account of the State of the Waters in
+the primeval Earth. Which you may see represented and
+explain’d more at large, in the <i>second Book of the Theory</i>,
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> 5. And this, I believe, is an Idea more easily conceiv’d,
+than any we could form concerning the Waters
+and Rivers of the present Earth, if we had not Experience
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>of them. Suppose a Stranger, that had never seen this
+terraqueous Globe, where we live at present, but was
+told the general Form of it; how the Sea lies, how the
+Land, and what was the Constitution of the Heavens: If
+this Stranger was asked his Opinion, whether such an
+Earth was habitable; and particularly, whether they could
+have Waters commodiously in such an Earth, and how the
+inland Countries would be supplied? I am apt to think,
+he would find it more difficult (upon an Idea only, without
+Experience) to provide Waters for such an Earth, as
+ours is at present, than for such an one as the primeval
+Earth was. ’Tis true, he would easily find Rains, possible
+and natural, but with no Constancy or Regularity;
+and these, he might imagine, would only make transient
+Torrents, not any fix’d and permanent Rivers. But as
+for Fountains deriv’d from the Sea, and breaking out in
+higher Grounds, I am apt to believe, all his Philosophy
+would not be able to make a clear Discovery of them:
+But Things that are familiar to us by Experience, we think
+easy in Speculation, or never enquire into the Causes of
+them. Whereas, other Things, that never fall under our
+Experience, though more simple and intelligible in themselves,
+we reject often as Paradoxes or Romances. Let
+this be applied to the present Case, and we proceed to answer
+the Exceptions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Let us take that Exception first, as most material, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 114.
+that pretends there would have been no Rivers at all in
+the primeval Earth, if it was of such a Form as the
+Theorist had describ’d. And for this, he gives one grand
+Reason, Because the Regions towards the Poles, where
+the Rains are suppos’d to fall, and the Rivers to rise,
+would have been all frozen and congeal’d; and consequently,
+no fit Sources of Water for the rest of the Earth.
+Why we should think those Regions would be frozen, and
+the Rains that fell in them, he gives two Reasons, the
+Distance, and the Obliquity of the Sun. As also the Experience
+we have now, of the Coldness and Frozenness
+of those Parts of the Earth. But as to the Distance of
+the Sun, He confesses, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 118. that is not the Thing <i>that
+does only or chiefly</i> make a Climate cold. He might have
+added, <i>particularly in that Earth, where the Sun was never
+at a greater Distance than the Equator</i>. Then, as to
+the Obliquity of the Sun, neither was that so great, nor so
+considerable, in the first Earth, as in the present. Because
+the Body of that lay in a direct Position to the Sun;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>whereas the present Earth lies in an oblique. And though
+the Polar Circles or Circumpolar Parts of that Earth, did
+not lie so perpendicular to the Sun as the Equinoctial, and
+consequently were cooler, yet there was no Danger of
+their being frozen or congeal’d. It was more the Moisture
+and excessive Rains of those Parts that made them
+uninhabitable, than the extreme Coldness of the Climate,
+of it self. And if the Exceptor had well consider’d the
+Differences betwixt the present and primitive Earth, as
+to Obliquity of Position, and that which follows from it,
+the Length of Nights, he would have found no Reason
+to have charg’d that Earth with <i>nipping and freezing Cold</i>;
+where there was not, I believe, one Morsel of Ice, from
+one Pole to another: But that will better appear, if we
+consider the Causes of Cold.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There are three general Causes of Cold: The Distance
+of the Sun, his Obliquity, and his total Absence; I mean
+in the Nights. As to Distance, that alone must be of little
+Effect, seeing there are many Planets (which must not
+be look’d upon as mere Lumps of Ice) at a far greater
+Distance from the Sun, than ours: And as to Obliquity,
+you see it was much less considerable in the respective
+Parts of the Primitive Earth, than of the present. Wherefore,
+these are to be consider’d but as secondary Causes of
+Cold, in respect of the third, the total Absence of the
+Sun in the Night Time: And where this happens to be
+long and tedious, there you must expect Excess of Cold.
+Now, in the primitive Earth there was no such Thing as
+long Winter Nights, but every where a perpetual Equinox,
+or a perpetual Day. And consequently, there was
+no Room or Cause of excessive Cold in any Part of it.
+But on the contrary, the Case is very different in the present
+Earth; for in our Climate, we have not the Presence
+of the Sun, in the Depth of Winter, half as long as he is
+absent; and towards the Poles they have Nights that last
+several Weeks or Months together: And then ’tis that
+the Cold rages, binds up the Ground, freezes the Ocean,
+and makes those Parts more or less uninhabitable. But
+where no such Causes are, you need not fear any such
+Effects.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much to shew that there might be Rains, Waters,
+and Rivers, in the primigenial Earth, and towards
+the extreme Parts of it, without any Danger of freezing.
+But however, says the other Part of the Exception, <i>These
+Rivers would not be made in due Time.</i> That’s wholly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>according to the Process you take; if you take a mere
+natural Process, the Rivers could not flow throughout
+the Earth, all on a sudden; but you may accelerate that
+Process, as much as you please, by a Divine Hand. As
+to this Particular indeed of the Rivers, one would think
+there should be no Occasion for their sudden flowing
+through the Earth, because Mankind could not be suddenly
+propagated throughout the Earth: And if they did but
+lead the Way, and prepare the Ground in every Country,
+before Mankind arrived there, that seems to be all that
+would be necessary upon their Account: Neither can it be
+imagined, but that the Rivers would flow faster than Mankind
+could follow; for it is probable, in the first hundred
+Years, Men did not reach an hundred Miles from
+Home, or from their first Habitations: And we cannot
+suppose the Defluxion of Water, upon any Declivity, to
+be half so slow. As to the Channels of these Rivers,
+the Manner of their Progress, and other Circumstances,
+those Things are set down fully enough in the fifth Chapter
+of the second <i>Book</i> of the <i>English Theory</i>, and it would
+be needless to repeat them here.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But the Anti-Theorist says, this slow Production and
+Propagation of Rivers is contrary to Scripture; both because
+of the Rivers of Paradise, and also, because Fishes
+were made the sixth Day. As to that of the Fishes, he
+must first prove that those were River-Fishes; for the Scripture,
+<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 21. and 22. makes them Sea-Fish, and instances
+in great Whales. But he says (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 113, 114.) it
+will <i>appear in the Sequel of his Discourse</i>, that the Abyss
+could be no Receptacle of Fishes. To that Sequel of
+his Discourse therefore we must refer the Examination of
+this Particular. Then as to Paradise, that was but one
+single Spot of Ground, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> according to the ordinary
+Hypothesis; which he seems to adhere to: And Rivers
+might be there as soon as he pleases, seeing its Seat is not
+yet determin’d. But as for the Lands which they are said
+to traverse or encompass, that they might be the Work of
+Time, when their Channels and Courses were extended
+and settled; as they would be, doubtless, long before the
+Time that <i>Moses</i> writ that Description: But as to the <i>Rivers
+of Paradise</i>, it would be a long Story to handle that
+Dispute here. And ’tis fit the Authors should first agree
+amongst themselves, before we determine the Original
+of its River, or Rivers.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>
+ <h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='six'>VI.</abbr></span></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>We come now to the Deluge, where the great Exception
+is this, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 121. That according to the Theory,
+the Deluge would have come to pass, whether Mankind
+had been degenerate, or no.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We know Mankind did degenerate, and ’tis a dangerous
+Thing to argue upon false Suppositions; and to tell
+what would have come to pass, in case such a Thing had
+not come to pass: Suppose <i>Adam</i> had not sinn’d, what
+would have become of the <i>Messiah</i>? <i><abbr title='Ephesians'>Eph.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 4. 1 <i>Pet.</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr>
+20. <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> 8. and the Dispensation of the Gospel,
+which yet is said to have been determin’d more early than
+the Deluge? Let the Anti-Theorist answer himself this
+Question, and he may answer his own.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to take a gentler Instance, suppose <i>Adam</i> had not
+eaten the forbidden Fruit, how could he and all his Posterity
+have liv’d in Paradise? A few Generations would
+have fill’d that Place; and should the rest have been turn’d
+out into the wide World, without any sin or Fault of
+theirs? You suppose the Ante-diluvian Heavens and
+Earth to have been the same with the present, and, consequently,
+subject to the same Accidents and Inconveniences.
+The Action of the Sun would have been the same
+then as now, according to your Hypothesis: The same
+Excesses of Heat and Cold, in the several Regions and
+Climates; the same Vapours and Exhalations extracted
+out of the Earth; the same Impurities and Corruptions
+in the Air: And in Consequence of these, the same external
+Disposition to epidemical Distempers. Besides, there
+would be the same Storms and Tempests at Sea, the same
+Earthquakes, and other Desolations at Land. So that <i>had
+all the Sons and Daughters of Men</i>, to use the Exceptor’s
+elegant Style, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 122. <i>been as pure and bright as they
+could possibly have dropt out of the Mint of Creation, they
+should still</i> have been subject to all these Inconveniences
+and Calamities. If Mankind had continued spotless and
+undegenerate ’till the Deluge, or for sixteen hundred Years,
+they might as well have continued so for sixteen hundred
+more. And in a far less Time, according to their Fruitfulness
+and Multiplication, the whole Face of the Earth
+would have been thick covered with Inhabitants: Every
+Continent and every Island, every Mountain and every
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>Desert, and all the Climates from Pole to Pole. But
+could naked Innocency have liv’d happy in the frozen
+Zones, where Bears and Foxes can scarce subsist? in
+the midst of Snows and Ice, thick Fogs, and more than
+<i>Ægyptian</i> Darkness, for some Months together? Would
+all this have been a <i>Paradise</i>, or a paradisaical State, to
+these virtuous Creatures? I think it would be more advisable
+for the Exceptor, not to enter into such Disputes,
+grounded only upon Suppositions. God’s Prescience is
+infallible, as his Counsels are immutable.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But the Exceptor further suggests, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 121. that the
+Theory does not allow a judicial and extraordinary Providence
+in bringing on the Deluge, as a Punishment upon
+Mankind. Which, I must needs say, is an untrue and
+uncharitable Suggestion, as any one may see, both in
+the <i>Latin</i> Theory <a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c013'><sup>[16]</sup></a> <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> 6. and in the <i>English</i>, in several
+Places. So at the Entrance upon the Explication of
+the Deluge (<i>Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 92.) are these Words, <i>Let us then
+suppose, that at a Time appointed by Divine Providence,
+and from Causes made ready to do that great Execution upon
+a sinful World, that this Abyss was open’d, and the Frame of
+the Earth broke,</i> &#38;c. And accordingly in the Conclusion
+of that Discourse about the Deluge, are these Words,
+(Theor. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 144.) <i>In the mean time I do not know any
+more to be added in this Part, unless it be to conclude with
+an Advertisement to prevent any Mistake or Misconstruction,
+as if this Theory, by explaining the Deluge in a natural
+Way, or by natural Causes, did detract from the Power of
+God, by which that GREAT JUDGMENT WAS
+BROUGHT UPON THE WORLD, IN A PROVIDENTIAL
+AND MIRACULOUS MANNER.</i> And
+in the three following Paragraphs (<i>Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 144, 145,
+146.) which conclude that Chapter, there is a full Account
+given both of an ordinary and extraordinary Providence,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>in reference to the Deluge, and other great Revolutions
+of the natural World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But it is a Weakness however to think, that, when a
+Train is laid in Nature, and Methods concerted, for the
+execution of a Divine Judgment, therefore it is not <i>providential</i>.
+God is the Author and Governor of the natural World,
+as well as of the Moral: And he sees thorough
+the Futuritions of both, and hath so dispos’d the
+one, as to serve him in his just Judgments upon the other.
+Which Method, as it is more to the Honour of his Wisdom,
+so it is in no way to the Prejudice of his Power or
+Justice. And what the Exceptor suggests concerning Atheists,
+and their presum’d Cavils at such an Explication of
+the Deluge, is a Thing only said at random and without
+Grounds. On the contrary, so to represent the Sense of
+Scripture, in natural Things, as to make it unintelligible,
+and inconsistent with Science and Philosophick Truth, is
+one great Cause, in my Opinion, that breeds and nourishes
+Atheism.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is about the Places of Scripture, alledg’d
+in Confirmation of the Theory: And chiefly
+concerning that remarkable Discourse in <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, 2 <i>Epist.</i>
+iii. which treats of the Difference of the Ante-diluvian
+World, and the present World. That Discourse is
+so fully explain’d in the <i>Review of the Theory</i>, that I think
+it is plac’d beyond all Exception. And the Animadverter
+here makes his Exception only against the first Words,
+<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 5. Λανσθάνει γὰρ αὐτοῦς τοῦτο θέλοντας, which we thus
+render, <i>For this they willingly are ignorant of.</i> But he generally
+renders it, <i>wilfully ignorant of</i>, and lays a great
+Stress upon that word <i>wilfully</i>. But if he quarrel with
+the <i>English</i> Translation, in this particular, he must also
+fault the <i>Vulgate</i>, and <i>Beza</i>, and all others that I have yet
+met withal. And it had been very proper for him, in this
+Case, to have given us some Instances or Proofs, out of
+Scripture or <i>Greek</i> Authors, where this Phrase signifies a
+<i>wilful and obstinate Ignorance</i>. He says it must have been
+a wilful Ignorance, otherwise it was not blameable:
+Whereas <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> gives it a sharp Reproof. I answer,
+There are many Kinds and Degrees of blameable Ignorance;
+a contented Ignorance, an Ignorance from Prejudices, from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>Non-attendance, and want of due Examination. These
+are all blameable in some Degree, and all deserve some
+Reproof; but it was not their Ignorance that <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>
+chiefly reproves, but their deriding and <i>scoffing</i> at the Doctrine
+of the coming of our Saviour, and the Conflagration
+of the World. And therefore he calls them, <i>Scoffers,
+walking after their own Lusts</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But the Exceptor seems at length inclinable to render
+the forementioned Words thus, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 137. <i>They are willingly
+mindless or forgetful.</i> And I believe the Translation
+would be proper enough. And what gentler Reproof
+can one give, than to say, you are <i>willing to forget</i>
+such an Argument, or such a Consideration; which implies
+little more than Non-attention, or an Inclination of
+the Will towards the contrary Opinion? We cannot tell
+what Evidence, or what Traditions they might have then
+concerning the Deluge, but we know they had the History
+of it by <i>Moses</i>, and all the Marks in Nature, that we
+have now, of such a Dissolution. And they, that pretended
+to philosophize upon the Works of Nature, and
+the Immutability of them, might very well deserve that
+modest Rebuke, that they were <i>willing to forget</i> the first
+Heavens and first Earth, and the Destruction of them at
+the Deluge, when they talk’d of an immutable State of
+Nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Neither is there any Thing in all this, contrary to what
+the Theorist had said, <i>Theor.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 1. concerning the ancient
+Philosophers: That none of them ever invented or demonstrated
+from the Causes, the true State of the first
+Earth. This must be granted; but it is one Thing to demonstrate
+from the Causes, or by way of Theory, and
+another Thing to know at large: Whether by Scripture,
+Tradition, or Collection from Effects. The Mutability
+and Changes of the World, which these Pseudo-Christians
+would not allow of, was a knowable Thing, taking all
+the Means which they might and ought to have attended
+to: At least, before they should have proceeded so far as
+to reject the Christian Doctrine concerning the future
+Changes of the World, with Scorn and Derision. Which
+is the very Thing the Apostle so much censor’d them for.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for what is said by the Exceptor concerning
+this place of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>. To all the rest he gives an easy
+Answer, (in the Contents of this Chapter) <i>viz.</i>, That
+they are <i>figurative, and so not argumentative</i>. The Places
+of Scripture upon which the Theory depends, are fixed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>distinctly and in order, in the <span class='sc'>Review</span>: And, to avoid
+Repetitions, we must sometimes refer to that, <i>Review</i>,
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 371, 372. particularly, as to two remarkable Places,
+<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 2. and <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='a hundred and thirty-six'>cxxxvi.</abbr> 6. concerning the <i>Foundation
+and Extension of the Earth upon the Seas</i>. Which the
+Exceptor quickly dispatches by the Help of a <i>Particle</i> and
+a <i>Figure</i>. על.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The next he proceeds to, is, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 7. <i>He gathereth
+the Waters of the Sea, as in a Bag: He layeth up the
+Abyss in Store-Houses.</i> But, he says, it should be render’d,
+as <i>on an Heap</i>: Which is the <i>English</i> Translation. Whether
+the Authorities produced, in this case, by the Theorist,
+<i>Eng. Theor.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 117. or by the Exceptor, are more
+considerable, I leave the Reader to judge. But, however,
+he cites another place, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seventy-eight'>lxxviii.</abbr> 13. where the same
+Word is us’d and apply’d to the Red Sea, which could
+not be enclos’d as in a Bag. Take whether Translation
+you please for this second place; it is no Prejudice to the
+Theory, if you render it <i>on an Heap</i>: For it was a Thing
+done by Miracle. But the other Place speaks of the ordinary
+Posture and Constitution of the Waters, which is
+not <i>on an Heap</i>, but in a Level or spherical Convexity with
+the rest of the Earth. This Reason the Animadverter was
+not pleas’d to take notice of, tho’ it be intimated in that
+same Place of the Theory which he quotes, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 86. But
+that which I might complain of most, is his unfair Citation
+of the next Paragraph of the Theory, <i>Excep.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 140.
+which he applies peculiarly to this Text of <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 7.
+whereas it belongs to all the Texts alledg’d out of the
+<i>Psalms</i>, and is a modest Reflection upon the Explication
+of them, as the Reader may plainly see, if he please to
+look the Theory, and compare it with his Citation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The next Place he attacks, is, <i>Job</i> <abbr title='twenty-six'>xxvi.</abbr> 7. <i>He stretches
+the North over the Tohu</i>, or, as we render it, <i>over the
+empty Places: And hangeth the Earth upon nothing</i>. Here
+he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 141. <i>Job</i> did either accommodate himself to the
+Vulgar, or else was a perfect <i>Platonist.</i> Methinks <i>Plato</i>
+should rather be a <i>Jobist</i>, if you would have them to
+imitate one another. Then he makes an Objection, and
+answers it himself: concluding, however, that <i>Job</i> could
+not but mean this of the present Earth, because in the
+next Verse he mentions <i>Clouds</i>. But how does it appear,
+that every Thing that <i>Job</i> mentions in that Chapter, refers
+to the same time?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>The next Place, is, <i>Job</i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> 4, 5, 6. <i>Where wast
+thou when I laid the Foundations of the Earth?</i> &#38;c. These
+eloquent Expostulations of the Almighty, he applies all
+to the present Form of the Earth: Where he says, there
+are the <i>Embossings of Mountains, the Enamelling of lesser
+Seas, the open Work of the vast Ocean, and the fret Work of
+Rocks</i>, &#38;c. These make a great Noise, but they might all
+be apply’d to the Ruins of an old Bridge, fallen into the
+Water. Then he makes a large Harangue in Commendation
+of Mountains, and of the present Form of the Earth:
+Which, if you please, you may compare with the tenth
+<i>Chapter</i> of the <i>Latin Theory</i>, and then make your Judgment
+upon both.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But it is not enough for the Exceptor to admire the
+Beauty of Mountains, but he, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 146. will make the Theorist
+to do so too, because he hath exprest himself much
+pleas’d with the Sight of them. Can we be pleas’d with
+nothing in an Object but the Beauty of it? Does not the
+Theorist say there, in the very Words cited by the Exceptor,
+<i>Sæpe loci ipsius insolentia &#38; spectaculorum novitas delectat
+magis quam venustas in rebus notis &#38; communibus.</i>
+We are pleas’d in looking upon the Ruins of a <i>Roman</i>
+Amphitheatre, or a triumphal Arch, tho’ time have defac’d
+its Beauty. A Man may be pleas’d in looking upon
+a Monster, will you conclude therefore that he takes it
+for a Beauty? There are many Things in Objects, besides
+Beauty, that may please; but he that hath not Sense and
+Judgment enough to see the Difference of those Cases, and
+whence the Pleasures arise, it would be very tedious to
+beat it into him by Multitude of Words.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After his Commendation of Mountains, he falls upon
+the Commendation of Rain: Making those Countries,
+that enjoy it, to be better water’d than by Rivers;
+and consequently the present Earth better than that paradisaical
+Earth describ’d by the Theorist. And in this he
+says, he follows the Rule of Scripture, for these are his
+Words, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 148, <i>And that these Rules, whereby we measure
+the Usefulness of this Earth, and shew it to be more excellent
+than that of the Theory, are the most true and proper
+Rules, is manifest from God’s making use of the same,
+in a Case not unlike: For he, comparing</i> Ægypt <i>and</i> Palestine,
+<i>prefers the latter before the former; because in</i> Ægypt <i>the
+Seed sown was</i> watered with the Foot, as a Garden of
+Herbs; <i>but Palestine was</i> a Land of Hills and Valleys,
+and drank Water of the Rain of Heaven, <i>Deut.</i> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 10, 11.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>Let this rest a while: In the mean time let us take notice
+how unluckily it falls out for the Observator, that a
+Country that had no Rain, should be compared in Scripture,
+or join’d in Privilege, with Paradise it self, and
+the Garden of God. For so is this very <i>Ægypt</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr>
+10, tho’ it had no Rain, but was water’d by Rivers. The
+Words of Scripture are these. <i>And Lot lifted up his Eyes,
+and beheld all the Plain of Jordan, that it was well-watered
+every where (before the Lord destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah)
+even as the Garden of the Lord, like the Land of Ægypt.</i>
+The Plain of <i>Jordan</i> you see is commended for its
+Fruitfulness, and being well watered: And as the height
+of its Commendation, it is compar’d with <i>Ægypt</i>, and
+with the <i>Paradise of God</i>. Now in <i>Ægypt</i> we know
+there was little or no Rain: And we read of none in
+Paradise: But they were both water’d by Rivers. Therefore
+the greatest Commendation of a Land, for Pleasure
+and Fertility, according to Scripture, is its being well
+water’d with Rivers: Which makes it like a Paradise.
+Surely then you cannot blame the Theorist, having this
+Authority besides all other Reasons, for making the <i>paradisaical
+Earth</i> to have been thus water’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now let the Exceptor consider how he will interpret
+and apply his place in <i>Deuteronomy</i>, and make it consistent
+with this <i>Genesis</i>. Till I see a better Interpretation, I
+like this very well, tho’ quite contrary to his: Namely,
+<i>That</i> they were not to expect such a Land as <i>Ægypt</i>, that
+was a Plain naturally fruitful, as being well water’d;
+but the Land they were to possess, depended upon the
+Benediction of Heaven: And therefore they might expect
+more or less Fertility, according as they kept God’s Commandments.
+And so much for those two Texts of
+Scripture.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, The Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 149. in the Conclusion of his
+Discourse about that place in <i>Job</i>, makes a Reflection upon
+the Impropriety of those Expressions made in <i>Job</i>, about
+<i>Foundations</i> and <i>Corner-stones</i>, if they be apply’d to the
+first Earth describ’d by the Theorist. But this seems to me
+an Elegancy in that Discourse, which he makes a Fault:
+Whether it be understood as an Allusion only to our manner
+of Building, by deep Foundations, and strong Corner-stones:
+Or an ironical Interrogation, as it seems to me;
+implying, that there was no Foundation (strictly so call’d)
+nor Corner-stone, in that great Work, tho’ we cannot
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>build a Cottage or little Bridge, without such Preparations.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He proceeds then to the following Verses in that thirty-eighth
+Chapter. <i>Who shut up the Sea with Doors, when it broke
+forth as if it had issued out of a Womb?</i> This the Theorist
+understands of the <i>Disruption</i> of the <i>Abyss</i> at the Deluge,
+when the Sea broke forth out of the Womb of the Earth:
+Or out of that subterraneous Cavity, where it was enclosed
+as in a Womb. ’Tis plainly imply’d in the Words
+of the Text, that the Sea was shut up in some <i>Womb</i>, before
+it broke forth. I desire therefore to know in what
+<i>Womb</i> that was. You will find Interpreters much at a
+loss to give a fair Answer to that Question: What was
+that enclos’d State of the Sea? And what Place, or Part
+of Nature, was that Receptacle where it lay? But the Exceptor
+hath found out a new Answer. He says, it was that
+<i>Womb</i> of Non-entity. These are his Words, <i>It just then</i>
+(at its Creation) <i>gushed out of the Womb of Nothing, into
+Existence</i>. This is a subtle and far-fetch’d Notion. Methinks
+the <i>Womb of Nothing</i>, is much-what the same as <i>no
+Womb</i>. And so this is no Answer. But however let us
+consider how far it would suit this Case, if it was admitted.
+If you understand the <i>Womb of Non-entity</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 2.
+the Sea broke out of that Womb the first Day, and had
+no Bars or Doors set to it, but flow’d over all the Earth
+without Check or Control. Therefore that could not
+be the Time or State here spoken of. And to refer that
+Restraint, or those Bars and Doors, to another Time, which
+are spoken of here in the same Verse, would be very inexcusable
+in the Exceptor: <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 150. seeing he will not allow
+the Theorist to suppose those Things that are spoken
+of in different Verses, to be understood of different Times.
+To conclude, this metaphysical Notion of the <i>Womb of
+Nothing</i>, is altogether impertinent, at least in this Case:
+For the Text is plainly speaking of Things local and corporeal,
+and this Prison of the Sea must be understood as
+such.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He proceeds now to the last Place alleg’d, <i>Prov.</i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr>
+27, 28. <i>When he prepared the Heavens, I was there:
+When he set a Compass upon the Face of the Deep.</i> The
+word חוג which we tender <i>Compass</i>, he says, signifies no
+more than the Rotundity or spherical Figure of the Abyss.
+And so the Sense will run thus, <i>When God set a Rotundity</i>,
+or <i>spherical Figure, upon the Face of the Abyss</i>. But whereas
+the Word may as well signify a <i>Sphere</i> or <i>Orb</i>, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>Theorist thinks it more reasonable that it should be so
+translated: And so the Sentence would run thus, <i>When
+God set an Orb upon the Face of the Deep.</i> And this Discourse
+of <i>Solomon</i>’s, referring to the Beginning of the
+World, he thinks it rational to understand it of the <i>first
+habitable Earth</i>: Which is really an <i>Orb set over the Face
+of the Deep</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>One cannot swear for the Signification of a Word in
+every particular Place, where it occurs: But when there
+are two Senses whereof it is capable, and the one is much
+more important than the other, it is a fair Presumption to
+take it in the more important Sense; especially in such a
+Place, and upon such an Occasion, where the great Works
+of the Divine Wisdom and Power are celebrated: As
+they are here by <i>Solomon</i>. And it cannot be deny’d, that
+our Sense of the Words is more important than the other:
+For of what Consequence is it to say, <i>God made the Body
+of the Abyss</i> round. Every one knows, that Fluids of their
+own accord run into that Figure. So as that would be a
+small Remark upon a great Occasion.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Construction of this Orb we speak of, minds me
+of an Injustice which the Exceptor hath done the Theory,
+in the precedent Part of this Chapter, by a false Accusation.
+For he says, the Theory makes the Construction of
+the first Earth to have been <i>merely mechanical</i>. At least,
+his Words seem to signify as much, which are these, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 143.
+<i>And so its Formation</i>, speaking of the first Earth, <i>had been
+merely mechanical, as the Theory makes it</i>. That the Construction
+was not merely mechanical, in the Opinion of
+the Theorist, you may see, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 88. which,
+because we have cited it before, we will not here repeat.
+The Theorist might also complain, that the Exceptor cites
+the first Edition of the Theory for such Things as are left
+out in the second: Which yet was printed a Twelvemonth
+before his Animadversions. And therefore in Fairness he
+ought always to have consulted the last Edition, and last
+Sense of the Author, before he had censured him, or his
+Work. But this unfair Method, it seems, pleas’d his Humour
+better: <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 81. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 100, last Part, as you may see in this
+Chapter, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 154. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 227, 228. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 244. and in several other
+Places; where Passages are cited and insisted upon, that
+are no where to be found in the second Edition. Not to
+mention his defective Citations, omitting that Part that
+qualifies the Sentence, as <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 99. last Citation, and elsewhere,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 279, 280. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 288. I make this Note, that the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>Reader may judge, how well this answers that <i>Sincerity</i>,
+with which he profest he would examine this Work: <i>Only
+as a Friend and Servant to Truth. And therefore with
+such Candor, Meekness, and Modesty, as becomes one who assumes
+and glories in so fair a Character</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 43.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The rest of this Chapter is a general Censure of Citations
+out of Scripture, that are only tropical or figurative
+Schemes of Speech. These must be made so indeed, if
+our Sense of them be not allow’d. But what Necessity is
+there of a figurative interpretation of all these Texts?
+The Rule we go by, and I think all good Interpreters, is
+this, that we are not to leave the literal Sense, unless there
+be a Necessity, from the Subject-Matter. And there is no
+such Necessity in this Case, upon our Hypothesis: For it
+suits with the literal Sense. And ’tis to beg the Question,
+to say, the literal Sense is not to be admitted, because
+it complies too much with the Theory. But as for that
+Text of his own, which he instances in, <i>The Pillars of the
+Earth tremble</i>, that cannot be understood (by the same
+Rule) of Pillars <i>literally</i>; because there are no such Pillars
+of the Earth, upon any Hypothesis.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='eight'>VIII.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is concerning that grand Property of
+the ante-diluvian Earth, <i>a perpetual Equinox</i>, or a
+right Position to the Sun. This perpetual Equinox the
+Exceptor will by no means admit. But I’m afraid he
+mistakes the Notion: For as he explains it in the two first
+Sections of this Chapter, he seems to have a false Idea of
+the whole Matter. He thinks, I perceive, that when the
+Earth chang’d its Situation, it was translated from the
+Equator into the Ecliptick: And that before that Change
+in the ante-diluvian State, it moved directly under the
+Equator. For these are his Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 158. So <i>that in
+her annual Motion about the Sun</i>, namely, the Earth, before
+that Change, <i>she was carried directly under the Equinoctial,
+without any Manner of Obliquity in her Site, or Declination
+towards either of the Tropicks in her Course; and
+therefore could never cut the Equinoctial, by passing (as now
+she is presumed to do) from one Tropick to the other</i>. By
+which Words, you see, he imagines that the Earth mov’d
+perpetually under the Equator, when it had a perpetual
+Equinox. And when it came out of that State, into this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>wherein it is now, it did not only change its Position, and
+the Posture of its Axis, but was also really translated
+from one Part of the Heavens into another, namely, from
+under the Equator to the Ecliptick, and so took another
+Road in its annual Course about the Sun. This is a great
+Mistake: And I cannot blame him, if he was so averse to
+admit this Change, seeing it lay so cross in his Imagination.
+For what Pullies or Leavers should we employ to remove
+the Earth out of the Equator into the Ecliptick? <i>Archimedes</i>
+pretended, if he had Ground to plant his Engines
+upon, that he would move the Earth out of its Place; but
+that it was done before, I never knew, nor heard of: And
+if the Exceptor had consider’d what is said in the Theory
+upon that Occasion, <i>Lat. Theor. <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr></i> 2. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 4. he might easily
+have prevented his Mistake. But we shall meet with
+the same Error again in another Place. Let us consider
+now, what Arguments he uses against this Change.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 159. <i>If there had been such a Change</i>, either
+Providence, or Mankind, would have preserv’d the Memory
+of it. How far the Memory of it hath been preserv’d,
+we shall see hereafter. In the mean Time, we will give
+him Instances of other Things to reflect upon, that are lost
+out of Memory, unless he be the happy Man that shall
+retrieve them. The <i>Age of the World</i> hath been preserv’d,
+either by the Memory of Man, or by the Care of Providence.
+And was not that both a Thing of Importance, and
+of easy Preservation? <i>Noah</i> could not but know the Age
+of the World, for he was contemporary with five or six
+Generations, that were contemporary with <i>Adam</i>. And
+knowing the Age of the World himself, he could not easily
+forbear, one would think, to tell it to his Sons and
+Posterity. But, to this Day, we do not know what the
+true Age of the World is. There are three Bibles, if I
+may so say, or three <i>Pentateuchs</i>, the <i>Hebrew</i>, <i>Samaritan</i>,
+and <i>Greek:</i> Which do all differ very considerably in their
+Accounts, concerning the Age of the World: And the
+most learned Men are not yet able to determine with
+Certainty, which of the three Accounts is most authentick.
+Then, what think you of the Place of <i>Paradise</i>?
+How well is the Memory or Knowledge of that preserv’d?
+Could <i>Noah</i> be ignorant of it? And was it not a fit Subject
+to discourse of, and entertain his Sons and Nephews,
+and by them to communicate it to Posterity? Yet we seek
+it still in vain. The <i>Jews</i> were as much at a Loss as we
+are: <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 263, 264, 265. and the Christian Fathers, you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>think, were out in their Opinions, both about the Place
+and Conditions of it: Neither do you venture to determine
+them your self: So that Paradise is lost in a Manner
+out of the World. What Wonder then if this single
+Property of it be lost? If the Exceptor had well consider’d
+(<i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 400, 401.) what the Theorist has said
+concerning the providential Conduct of Knowledge in
+the World, this Doubt or Objection might have been
+spar’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After a long Excursion, little to the Purpose, but to
+shew his Reading, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 166. he tells us next, that Scripture
+does not favour this Notion of a perpetual Equinox before
+the Flood: And cites <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 22. which the Theorist
+had cited as a Place that did suggest to us that Vicissitude of
+Seasons that was established after the Flood. The Words
+indeed are not so determinate in themselves, but that they
+may be understood, either of the Restoration of a former
+Order in the Seasons of the Year, or of the Establishment
+of a new one. And in whether Sense they are to be taken,
+is to be determin’d by collateral Reasons and Considerations.
+Such the Theorist had set down, to make it
+probable, that they ought to be understood as a Declaration
+of such an Order of the Seasons of the Year, as was
+brought in at that Time, and was to continue to the End of
+the World. The Exceptor hath not thought fit to take
+notice of, or refute those Reasons, and therefore they
+stand good, as formerly. Besides, the Exceptor must remember,
+that this Text stands betwixt two remarkable
+Phænomena, the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians in the old
+World, and the Appearance of the Rainbow in the new.
+Both which were Marks of a different State of Nature in
+the two Worlds.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He further excepts, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 168. against that perpetual Equinox
+before the Flood, for another Scripture-reason: <i>viz.</i>
+Because the Earth was curst before that Time, and consequently,
+he says, had not a perpetual Equinox. But if
+that Curse was supernatural, it might have its Effect in any
+Position of the Earth. For God can make a Land barren,
+if he think fit, in spite of the Course of Nature. And so
+he also must suppose it to have been in this Case. For,
+upon all Suppositions, whether of a perpetual Equinox,
+or no, the Earth is granted to have been very fruitful at
+first: And so would have continued, if that Curse had not
+interven’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>Lastly, He makes that an Argument, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 169. that the
+Air was cold and intemperate in Paradise, and consequently
+no constant Equinox, <i>because</i> Adam <i>and</i> Eve <i>made
+themselves Aprons to cover their Nakedness</i>. So, he confesses,
+Interpreters generally understand, that it was to <i>cover
+their Nakedness</i>. But he will not allow that to be the true
+Sense, but says those Fig-Leaves were to keep them warm.
+And the other Interpretation of <i>covering their Nakedness</i>,
+he will not admit, for three Reasons: First, because the
+Scripture, as he pretends, does not declare it so. See,
+pray, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 7. Secondly, <i>What Shame</i>, says he, <i>need
+there have been betwixt Husband and Wife</i>? Thirdly, <i>If it
+was Modesty; when they were innocent, they should have
+been more modest.</i> Some Arguments answer themselves,
+and I do not think these deserve a Confutation. But, he
+says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 170. however God made them <i>Coats of Skins</i> afterwards,
+and that was to be a <i>Defence against Cold.</i> He
+must tell us in what Climate he supposes Paradise to have
+stood: And which way, and how far <i>Adam</i> and <i>Eve</i> were
+banish’d from it. When those Things are determin’d, we
+shall know what to judge of this Argument, and of <i>Coats
+of Skins</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After <i>Lastly</i>, I expected no more: But he hath two or
+three Reasons after the <i>Last</i>. As first, he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 171.
+upon our Hypothesis, one Hemisphere of the Globe must
+have been unpeopled: Because the torrid Zone was unpassable.
+And was not the Ocean as unpassable, upon
+your Hypothesis? How got they into <i>America</i>? And
+not only into <i>America</i>, but into all the Islands of the
+Earth, that are remote from Continents? Will you not
+allow us one Miracle, for your many? I’m sure the Theorist
+never excluded the Ministry of Angels; and they
+could as easily carry them thorough the torrid Zone, as
+over the Ocean. But secondly, he says, There could be
+no Rains to make the Flood, if there was a perpetual
+Equinox. Were not those Rains, that made the Flood,
+extraordinary, and out of the Course of Nature? You
+would give one angry Words that should deny it. Besides,
+the <i>Flood-Gates of Heaven</i> were open’d when the
+<i>great Deep</i> was broken up, (<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 11.) and no Wonder
+the Disruption of the Earth should cause some extraordinary
+Commotions in the Air, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 135. and either
+compress the Vapours, or stop their usual Course towards
+the Poles, and draw them down in Streams upon
+several Parts of the Earth. But the Exceptor says, this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>could not be, because the Theorist makes the Rains fall
+before the Disruption of the Abyss. But he does not suppose
+the <i>Cataracts of Heaven</i> to have been open’d before,
+which made the grand Rains. And how unfairly that
+Passage of the Theory is represented, we shall see hereafter
+in the fourteenth Chapter.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, He concludes all with this Remark, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 176.
+That all sorts of Authors have disputed in what Season
+of the Year the Deluge came, and in what Season of the
+Year the World began: Therefore they thought there were
+then different Seasons of the Year. These Disputes, he
+confesses, did <i>manifestly proceed from Inadvertency</i>, or
+something worse: Because there could not be any one
+Season throughout all the Earth at once. He might have
+added, unless upon the Supposition of the Theory, which
+makes an universal Equinox at that Time. And why may
+not that have given Occasion to the general Belief, <i>That
+the World begun in the Spring</i>? And when the true Reason
+of the Tradition was lost, they fell into those impertinent
+Questions, <i>In what Season of the Year the World began</i>.
+But however, we do not depend upon the Belief,
+either of the Antients or the Moderns, as to the Generality:
+For we know they had other Notions of these Things
+than what the Theory proposes; otherwise it would have
+been a needless Work. But notwithstanding the general
+Error, that Providence did preserve some Traditions and
+Testimonies, concerning that ancient Truth, we shall see
+in the next following Discourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for Scripture and Reasons. He now comes
+to examine Authorities: Namely, such Testimonies as
+are alledg’d by the Theorist, to shew that there was a
+Tradition among the Antients, of <i>a Change that had been,
+as to the Position of the Earth</i>: And consequently, as to
+the Form and Seasons of the Year. The first Testimony
+that he excepts against, is, that of <i>Diogenes</i> and <i>Anaxagoras</i>;
+who witness plainly, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 177. That there had been
+an <i>Inclination</i> of the Earth, or a Change of Posture, since
+it was form’d and inhabited. But the Exceptor says, they
+have not assign’d a true <i>final Cause</i>, nor such as agrees
+with the Theory. The second Testimony, is, that of <i>Empedocles</i>,
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 178. which he excepts against, because he hath
+not given a good <i>efficient Cause</i> of that Change. The
+third Witness is <i>Leucippus</i>; against whom he makes the
+same Exception, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 179. that he doth not assign the Causes
+a-right. The fourth Witness, is <i>Democritus</i>; whom he,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span><i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 180. quarrels with upon the same Account. But is
+this a fair hearing of Witnesses? Or are these just and legal
+Grounds of rejecting their Testimony, as to matter
+of Fact, because they are unskilful in giving the Causes
+and Reasons of that matter of Fact? That is not requir’d
+in Witnesses: And they are often impertinent when they
+attempt to do it. The Theorist does not cite these Authors
+to learn of them the Causes, either efficient or final,
+of that <i>Inclination</i>, or Change of Posture in the Earth, but
+only matter of Fact: To let you see, that according to
+their Testimony, there was a Tradition in that Time,
+which they took for true, concerning a Change made in
+the Posture of the Earth. And this is all we require from
+them. If you pretend to invalidate their Testimony, because
+they do not philosophize well about that Change;
+that’s as if you should deny that there was such a War as
+the <i>Peloponnesian</i> War, because the Historian hath not assigned
+the true Causes and Reasons of it: Or as if a
+Man should give you the History of a Comet, that appear’d
+in such a Year, was of such a Form, and took such a
+Course in the Heavens; and you should deny there was any
+such Comet, because the same Author had not given a good
+Account of the Generation of that Comet, nor of the Causes
+of its Form and Motion. The Exceptions made against
+the Testimonies of these Philosophers, seem to me to be
+no less injudicious.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After these Testimonies, he <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 181. makes three or four
+Remarks or Reflections upon them. But they all concern,
+either the Time of this Change, or the Causes of it. Neither
+of which the Theorist either engag’d or intended to
+prove from these Witnesses.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There is still one Testimony behind, which the Exceptor
+hath separated from the rest, that he might encounter it
+singly. ’Tis another Passage from <i>Anaxagoras</i>, which
+both notes this <i>Inclination</i>, and the Posture of the Heavens
+and Earth before that Inclination. But here the Exceptor
+quarrels, first, with the word θολοειδῶς: Because <i>Ambrosius</i>
+the Monk, would have it to be θολερπῶς, but without the
+Authority of any Manuscript: And, as <i>Casaubon</i> says,
+<i>malè</i>. Then, he says, <i>Aldobrandinus</i> translates it <i>turbulentè</i>,
+but gives no Reason for that Translation, in his Notes.
+Therefore he cannot rest in this, but in the third Place, he
+gives another Sense to Φορὰ Θολοειδής. And if that will not
+please you, he hath still a fourth Answer in reserve. I do
+not like when a Man shifts Answer so often; ’tis a sign he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>has no great Confidence in any one. But let us have his
+fourth Answer. ’Tis this, That <i>Anaxagoras</i> was a kind
+of heterodox Philosopher, and what he says is not much
+to be heeded. These are the Words of the Exceptor,
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 184. <i>If this will not satisfy, I have one Thing more to
+offer. Grant that</i> Anaxagoras <i>should mean that very Declination,
+which the Theory would have him, yet this truly
+would contribute little towards the Proof of the Thing. For
+he was a Man as like to be heterodox; as like to broach
+and maintain false and groundless Opinions, as any of the
+learned Antients.</i> Had he made this Exception against
+this Witness at first, it might have sav’d both himself and
+us a great deal of Pains. For we do allow, if you can
+prove a Witness to be <i>persona infamis</i>, or <i>non compos mentis</i>,
+’tis sufficient to invalidate his Testimony.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But this is a rude and groundless Censure; shall that
+famous <i>Anaxagoras</i>, that was call’d <i>MENS</i>, κατὶ ἐοχὴν,
+not be thought so much as <i>mentis compos</i>; nor have
+Credit enough for an honest Witness? I am apt to think,
+from those Sentences, and those Remains we have left
+of him, that there was not a more considerable Man amongst
+the Antients, for Nobleness of Mind and natural
+Knowledge. I could bring the Testimonies of many antient
+Authors, and of many Christian Fathers, to clear
+his Reputation, and place it above Envy. ’Tis generally
+acknowledg’d, that he first introduc’d an intellectual Principle,
+in the Formation of the Universe, to dispose and
+order confus’d Matter. And accordingly <i>Eusebius</i> gives
+him this fair Character, <i>Præp. Evan. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> 10. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> ult. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 504.
+<i><abbr title='Colossians'>Col.</abbr></i> δὴ πρῶτος διήρθρωσε, &#38;c. <i>He first rectified the
+Doctrine of Principles: For he did not only discourse about
+the Matter or Substance of the Universe, as other Philosophers:
+But also of the Cause and Principle of its Motion.</i>
+And the same Author, in his fourteenth Book, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> 14. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 750.
+repeats and enlarges this Character.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I wonder the Exceptor, of all Men, should lessen the
+Name of <i>Anaxagoras</i>. For, besides his Orthodoxy as to
+the intellectual World; he was one that establish’d the
+Notion of <i>Vortices</i>, in the Corporeal. As you may see
+in <i>Clem. Alexandrinus</i>, <i>Strom.</i> 2. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 364. and in <i>Plato’s
+Phædo Phæd.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 99. And tho’ the <i>Father</i>, and <i>Socrates</i>,
+(who never was a Friend to natural Philosophy) both
+blame him for it, yet the Exceptor, who is deservedly
+pleas’d with that system of <i>Vortices</i>, ought to have shew’d
+him some Favour and Esteem, for the Sake of this Doctrine.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>Lastly, as to his moral Temper, his Contempt of
+the World, and his Love of Contemplation; you may
+have many Instances of it in the short Story of his Life in
+<i>Laertius</i>. And I shall always remember that excellent
+Saying of his in <i>Clemens Alexandrinus</i>, <i>Strom. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 416.
+Τὴν θεωρίαν τοῦ βίου τέλος εἶναι, καὶ τὴν ἀπὸ ταύτης ἐλευθερίαν.
+<i>That the End of Life is Contemplation; and that Liberty,
+that accompanies it, or flows from it.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But we are not to imagine, that all the Opinions of the
+ancient Philosophers, are truly convey’d or represented to
+us. Neither can we, in Reason or Justice, believe that
+they could be guilty of such absurd Notions, as are sometimes
+fathered upon them. The Exceptor instances in an
+extravagant Assertion, (as the Story is told to us) ascrib’d
+to <i>Anaxagoras</i>, of a <i>Stone that fell from the Sun</i>. This
+cannot be literally true, nor literally the Opinion of
+<i>Anaxagoras</i>, if he believed <i>Vortice</i>; therefore methinks so
+witty a Man as the Exceptor, and so well versed in the
+modern Philosophy, should rather interpret this of the Incrustation
+of a fix’d Star, and its Descent into the lower
+World: That a Star fell from the etherial Regions, and
+became an opake and terrestrial Body: Especially seeing
+<i>Diogenes</i>, as he says, supposes it a Star. Some Things were
+ænigmatically spoken at first: And some Things afterwards
+so much corrupted, in passing through unskilful
+Hands, that we should be very injurious to the Memory
+of those great Men, if we should suppose every Thing to
+have come so crudely from them, as it is now delivered
+to us. And as to this Philosopher in particular; as the
+<i>Ionick</i> Physiology, in my Opinion, was the most considerable
+amongst the Antients; so there was none, of that
+Order, more considerable than <i>Anaxagoras</i>. Whom, tho’
+you should suppose extravagant, <i>quoad hoc</i>, that it would
+not invalidate his Testimony in other Things.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Upon the whole Matter, let us now sum up the Evidence,
+and see what it will amount to. Here are five or
+six Testimonies of considerable Philosophers: <i>Anaxagoras</i>,
+<i>Diogenes</i>, <i>Empedocles</i>, <i>Leucippus</i> and <i>Democritus</i>. To
+which he might have added <i>Plato</i>, both in his <i>Politicus</i> and
+<i>Phædo</i>, <i>Li.</i> 2. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 10. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 274. if he had pleased to have
+look’d into the second Edition of the <i>Latin</i> Theory.
+These Philosophers do all make mention of a Change
+that hath been in the Posture of the Earth and the Heavens.
+And tho’ they differ in assigning Causes, or other
+Circumstances, yet they all agree as to Matter of Fact;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>that there was such a Thing, or, at least, a Tradition of
+such a Thing. And this is all that the Defendant desir’d
+or intended to prove from them, as Witnesses in this
+Cause.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To these <i>Philosophers</i>, he might have added the Testimonies
+of the <i>Poets</i>, who may be admitted as Witnesses
+of a Tradition, though it be further questioned, whether
+that Tradition be true or false. These Poets, when they
+speak of a <i>Golden Age</i>, or the <i>Reign of Saturn</i>, tell us of
+a <i>perpetual Spring</i>, or a Year without Change of Seasons.
+This is expresly said by <i>Ovid</i>, <i>Ver erat æternum</i>, &#38;c. And
+upon the Expiration of the Golden Age, he says;</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Jupiter Antiqui contraxit tempora Veris,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Perque Hyemes, Æstusque, &#38; inæquales Autumnos,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Et breve Ver, spatiis exegit quatuer annum.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'><i>Ovid</i> liv’d in the Time of our Saviour. And the Tradition,
+it seems, was then a-foot, and very express too.
+<i>Plato</i>, who was much more antient, hath said the same
+Thing in his <i>Politicus</i>, concerning the <i>Reign of Saturn</i>.
+And if we may have any Regard to <i>Mythology</i>, (vid. <i>Theor.
+Lat.</i> <i>li.</i> 2. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 10. <i>in fine</i>.) and make <i>Janus</i> the same with
+<i>Noah</i>, which is now an Opinion generally received, that
+Power, that is given him by the Antients, of <i>changing
+Times and Seasons</i>, cannot be better expounded, than by
+that great Change of Time, and of the Seasons of the Year,
+that happened in the Days of <i>Noah</i>. Neither must we
+count it a mere Fable, what is said by the Antients, concerning
+the Inhabitability of the <i>Torrid Zone</i>: And yet that
+never was, if the Earth was never in any other Posture,
+than what it is in now.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, as the Philosophers and Poets are Witnesses of
+this Tradition, so many of the Christian Fathers have
+given such a Character of <i>Paradice</i>, as cannot be understood
+upon any other Supposition, than of a <i>perpetual Equinox</i>.
+This <i>Card. Bellarmine</i><a id='r17'></a><a href='#f17' class='c013'><sup>[17]</sup></a> hath noted to our Hands;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>and also observ’d, that there could not be a perpetual Equinox
+in the Countries of <i>Asia</i>, nor indeed in any topical
+Paradise, (unless it stood in the middle of the Torrid Zone)
+<i>nisi alius tunc fuerit cursus solis, quam nunc est</i>; <i>unless the
+Course of the Sun</i>, or, which is all one, the Posture of the
+Earth, <i>was otherwise at that Time than what it is now</i>:
+Which is a true Observation. The <i>Jewish</i> Doctors also, as
+well as the Christian, seem to go upon the same Supposition,
+when they place Paradise under the Equinoctial;
+see <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 351. Because they suppos’d it certain,
+as <i>Eben Ezra</i> tells us, that the Days and Nights were always
+equal in Paradise.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have now done with the Examination of Witnesses:
+<i>Philosophers</i>, <i>Poets</i>, <i>Jews</i>, and <i>Christians</i>. From
+all these we collect, that there was an Opinion, or Tradition,
+amongst the Antients, of a Change made in the
+State of the natural World, as to the Diversity of Seasons
+in the Year: And that this did arise from the Change
+of the Posture of the Earth. Whether this Opinion, or
+this Tradition, was <i>de jure</i>, as well as <i>de facto</i>, is a Question
+of another Nature, that did not lie before us at present.
+But the Thing that was only in Debate in this Chapter,
+was matter of Fact, which I think we have sufficiently
+prov’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the Close of this Chapter, the Exceptor makes two
+Queries: Still by way of Objection to the ante-diluvian
+Equinox. The first is this, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 185. <i>Supposing an Equinox
+in the Beginning of the World, would it (in Likelyhood)
+have continued to the Flood.</i> If you grant the first Part, I
+believe few will scruple the second. For why should we
+suppose a Change before there appear any Cause for it?
+He says, the Waters might possibly have weigh’d more towards
+one Pole, than towards another. But why the
+Waters more than the Air? The Waters were not more
+rarified towards one Pole than towards another, no more
+than the Air was: For which the Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 180. had
+justly blam’d <i>Leucippus</i> before. But however, <i>says he</i>,
+that Earth would be very unstable, because, in Process of
+Time, there would be an empty Space betwixt the exterior
+Region of the Earth, and the Abyss below. But that
+empty Space would be fill’d with such gross Vapours, that
+it would be little purer than Water: And would stick to
+the Earth much closer than its Atmosphere that is carried
+about with it. We have no Reason to change the Posture
+of the Earth, till we see some antecedent Change that may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>be a Cause of it. And we see not any till the Earth broke.
+But then indeed, whether its Posture depended barely upon
+its <i>Æquilibrium</i>, or upon its <i>Magnetism</i>, either, or both
+of them, when its Parts were thrown into another Situation,
+might be changed. For the Parts of a Ruin seldom
+lie in the same Libration the Fabrick stood in. And as to
+the Magnetism of the Earth, that would change, according
+as the Parts and Regions of the Earth changed their
+Situation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The second Query is this, granting there was such an
+Equinox in the first World, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 187. <i>Would not the natural
+World, towards the latter End of that World, have
+been longer, than in the former Periods of the same?</i> Suppose
+this was true, which yet we have no Reason to believe,
+that the Days were longer towards the Flood, than
+towards the beginning of the World; why is this contrary
+to Scripture? He tells you how, in these Words,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 188. <i>That the Days just before the Flood were of no unusual
+Length, is evident in the very Story of the Flood; the
+Duration of which we find computed by Months, consisting
+of thirty Days a-piece.</i> Whereas <i>had Days been grown
+longer, fewer of them would have made a Month</i>. This is
+a mere Paralogism, or a mere Blunder. For if thirty Days were
+to go to a Month, whether the Days were
+longer or shorter, there must be thirty of them; and the
+Scripture does not determine the Length of the Days. If
+thirty Circumgyrations of the Earth makes a Month, whether
+these Circumgyrations are slow or swift, thirty are
+still thirty. But I suppose that which he would have said
+and which he had confusedly in his Mind, was this, that
+the <i>Month</i> would have been longer at the Flood than it
+was before. <i>Longer</i>, I say, as to extent of Time, or Duration
+in general, but not as to number of Days. And you
+could not cut off a slip of one Day, and tack it to the
+next, through the intermediate Night, to make an Abridgment
+for the Whole. Therefore this Objection is grounded
+upon a Mistake, and ill Reasoning, which is now sufficiently
+detected.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='nine'>IX.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is against the <i>oval Figure of the first Earth</i>,
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 189. which the Theorist had asserted, and grounded
+upon a general Motion of the Waters, forc’d from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>the Equinoctial Parts towards the Polar. But before we
+proceed to his Objections against this Explication, we
+must rectify one Principle. The Exceptor seems to suppose,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 190. that terrestrial Bodies have a <i>Nitency inwards
+or downwards, towards their central Point</i>. Whereas the
+Theorist supposes, that all Bodies moving round, have,
+more or less, a Nitency from the Centre of their Motion:
+And that ’tis by an external Force that they are prest down,
+against their first Inclination or Nitency.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This being premised, we proceed to his Exceptions:
+Where his first and grand Quarrel is about the Use of a
+Word; whether the Motion of the Water from the middle
+of the Earth towards the Poles, can be call’d <i>defluxus</i>;
+seeing those polar Parts, in this supposed Case, were as
+high, or higher than the Equinoctial. I think we do
+not scruple to say <i>undæ defluunt ad littora</i>: Tho’ the
+Shores be as high, or higher than the Surface of the Sea.
+For we often respect, as the Theorist did, the <i>middle</i> and
+the <i>sides</i>, in the use of that Word; And so, <i>defluere è
+medio ad latera</i>, is no more than <i>prolabi ad latera</i>. But
+’tis not worth the while to contest about a Word; especially
+seeing ’tis explained in the second Edition of the
+Theory, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 186, by adding <i>detrusione</i>: But it would have
+spoil’d all this Pedantry, and all his little Triumphs, if he
+had taken notice of that Explication.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Wherefore setting aside the <i>Word</i>, let us consider his
+<i>Reasons</i> against this Motion of the Waters towards the
+Poles; which, he says, could not be, because it would
+have been an Ascent, not a Descent. We allow and suppose
+that. But may not Waters ascend by Force and Detrusion;
+when it is the easiest way they can take to free
+themselves from that Force, and persevere in their Motion?
+And this is the Case we are speaking to. They were
+impell’d to ascend, or recede from the Centre, and it was
+easier for them to ascend laterally, than to ascend directly:
+Upon an inclined Plain, than upon a perpendicular
+one. Why then should we not suppose that they took
+that Course? Methinks the Observator, who seems to be
+much conversant in the <i>Cartesian</i> Philosophy, might have
+conceived this Detrusion of the Waters towards the Poles
+by the Resistance of the superambient Air, as well as their
+flowing towards, and upon the Shores, by the Pressure of
+the Air under the Moon. And if the Moon continued
+always in the same Place, or over the middle of the Sea,
+that Posture of the Waters would be always the same:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>Though it be an Ascent, both upon the Land and into
+the Rivers. And this, methinks, is neither Contradiction,
+nor Absurdity. But an Enemy, that is little us’d to Victory,
+makes a great Noise upon a small Advantage.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He proceeds now to shew, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 195. that it was improbable
+that the Figure of the first Earth should be oval, upon
+other Considerations. As first, because of its Position;
+which would be cross to the Stream of the Air, that
+turns it round, or carries it about the Sun: As a Ship, he
+says, that stands side-ways against a Stream, cannot sail.
+But if that Ship was to turn round upon her Axis, as a
+Mill-Wheel, and as the Earth does, what Posture more
+likely to have such an Effect, than to stand cross to the
+Stream that turns it? And the Stream would take more hold
+of an oblong Body, than of a round. Then, as to its annual
+Course, which he mentions, that’s nothing, but so many
+Circumvolutions: For in turning round it is also progressive,
+as a Cylinder in rowling a Garden: And three hundred
+sixty five Circumgyrations compleat its annual Course.
+So that this Argument turns wholly against him, and does
+rather confirm the oval Figure of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>His second Argument against the oval Figure of the first
+Earth, is the spherical Figure of the present Earth. And
+how does he prove that? First from Authorities, <i>Anaximander</i>,
+<i>Pythagoras</i>, and <i>Perminedes</i> thought so. But
+how does he prove that their asserting the Earth to be
+<i>round</i>, was not meant in Opposition to its being <i>plain</i>;
+as the <i>Epicureans</i> and the Vulgar would have it? That
+was the Question <i>Socrates</i> promis’d himself to be resolv’d
+in by <i>Anaxagoras</i>, <i>Plat. in Phæd.</i> πότερεν ἡ γῆ πλατεῖα ἔπις,
+ἢ αρογγύλη. <i>Whether the Earth was flat or round.</i> And
+’tis likely the Dispute was generally understood in that
+Sense. However the Theorist hath alledg’d many more
+Authorities than these, in favour of the oval Figure of the
+Earth. For besides <i>Empedocles</i> in particular, and those
+whom <i>Plutarch</i> mentions in general, the Philosophy of
+<i>Orpheus</i>, the <i>Phœnician</i>, <i>Ægyptian</i>, and <i>Persian Philosophers</i>,
+did all compare the Earth to an Egg; with respect
+to its oval external Form, as well as internal Composition.
+These you may see fully set down in the <i>Theory:
+Lat. Theor. <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr> 2. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 10</i>. And it had been fair in the
+Exceptor to have taken some notice of them, if he
+would contend in that way of Authorities. But he has
+thought fit rather to pass them over wholly in Silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>His Reasons, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 197. to prove the Figure of the present
+Earth to be spherical, and not oval, are taken first from
+the Conical Figure of the Shadow of the Earth, cast upon
+the Moon. But that cannot make a Difference sensible
+to us at this Distance, whether the Body that cast the
+Shadow was exactly spherical or oval. His second Reason
+is <i>from the Place of the Waters</i>; which, he says, would
+all retire from the Poles to the Equator, if the polar
+Parts were higher. But this has been answer’d before.
+The same Cause that drives the Waters thither, would make
+them keep there: As we should have a perpetual Flood,
+if the Moon was always in our Meridian: And whereas
+he suggests, that by this Means the Sea should be shallowest
+under the Poles; which, he says, is against Experience:
+We tell him just the contrary, That, according to our
+Hypothesis, the Sea should be deepest towards the Poles;
+which agrees with Experience. That the Sea should be
+deepest under the Poles, if it was of an oval Form,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 186. he may see plainly by his own Scheme, or by the
+Theory Scheme: <i>Theor. Lat. <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr> 2. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 5</i>. So that if his
+Observation be true, of an extraordinary Depth of the
+Ocean in those Parts, it confirms our Suspicion, that the
+Sea continues still oval. Lastly, he urges, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 198. If this
+Earth was oval, Navigation towards the Poles would be
+extremely difficult, if not impossible, because upon an
+Ascent. But if there be a continual Draught of Waters
+from the Equator towards the Poles, this will ballance
+the Difficulty, and be equivalent to a gentle Tide, that carries
+Ships into the Mouth of a River, though upon a gradual
+Ascent.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much we have said in Complacency to the Exceptor.
+For the Theorist was not oblig’d to say any Thing
+in Defence of the oval Form of the present Earth, seeing
+he had no where asserted it: It not being possible, as to
+what Evidence we have yet, to determine in what Order
+the Earth fell, and in what Posture the Ruins lay after their
+Fall. But however, to speak my Mind freely upon this
+Occasion, I am inclinable to believe, that the Earth is
+still oval or oblong. What Things the Anti-theorist hath
+suggested, will not decide the Controversy; nor, it may
+be, any natural History, nor any of those Observations
+that we have already. The Surface of the Sea lies more
+regular than that of the Land, and therefore I should think
+that Observations made there would have the best Effect.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span>I should particularly recommend these two: First, That
+they would observe toward the Poles, whether the Sun
+rise and set, according to the Rules of a true Globe, or
+of a Body exactly spherical. Secondly, That they would
+observe whether the Degrees of Latitude are of equal
+Extent in all the Parts of a Meridian; that is, if the
+Quantity of Sea or Land that answers to a Degree in the
+Heavens, be of equal Extent towards the Equator as towards
+the Poles. These two Observations would go the
+nearest of any I know, to determine whether the Figure
+of the Earth be truly spherical or oblong.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='ten'>X.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is concerning the <i>original Mountains</i>,
+and that they were before the Flood, or from the Beginning;
+which the Exceptor endeavours to prove from
+Scripture; not directly, but because Mention is made of
+them in the same Places where the Beginning of the Earth is
+mentioned, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 291. as <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='ninety'>xc.</abbr> 1, 2. and <i>Prov.</i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 25.
+therefore they must be co-eval and contemporary. We
+have, I think, noted before, that Things are not always
+Synchronal that are mentioned together in Scripture. The
+Style of Scripture is not so accurate, as not to speak of
+Things in the same Place, that are to be referr’d to different
+Times. Otherwise we must suppose the Destruction of
+<i>Jerusalem</i>, and of the <i>World</i>, to have been intended for
+the same Time; seeing our Saviour joins them in the same
+Discourse, (<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr>) without any Distinction of Time;
+or with such a Distinction, as rather signifies an immediate
+Succession, (<i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 29.) than so great a Distance as we
+now find to be betwixt the Destruction of <i>Jerusalem</i> and
+the End of the World. Greater than that, betwixt the
+Beginning and the Flood: So in the Prophets sometimes,
+in the same Discourse, one Part is to be referr’d
+to the first Coming of our Saviour, and another Part
+to the second. <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 6, 7. <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 1. &#38;c. <i>Luke</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 31,
+32, 33. without making any Distinction of Time, but
+what is to be gather’d from the Sense. Neither is there
+any Incongruity in the Sense, or in the Tenor of the
+Words, if those Expressions in the Psalmist be referr’d
+to different Times. God existed <i>before the Mountains
+were brought forth, and the Earth and the World were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_441'>441</span>made</i>. This is certainly true, whether you take it of the
+same or different Times. And if you take it of different
+Times, ’tis a way of Speaking we often use. As suppose
+a Man should say, concerning the Antiquity of <i>Troy</i>,
+that it existed before <i>Rome</i> and <i>Carthage</i>; that does not necessarily
+imply, that <i>Rome</i> and <i>Carthage</i> were built at the
+same Time; but only that <i>Troy</i> was before them both. And
+so this of the Psalmist may be very well thus exprest, by a
+Gradation from a lower Epocha to an higher. Then as for
+that Place, <i>Prov.</i> <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> it would be very hard to reduce all
+those Things that are mentioned there, (from <i><abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr></i> 22. to
+30.) to the same Time of Existence; and there is no Necessity
+from the Words that they should be so understood.
+The Design and Intention of the Holy Ghost is plain
+in both these Places: In the one to set out the Eternity
+of God, and in the other, of the <i>Logos</i> in particular. And
+this is done by shewing their Præ-existence to this Earth,
+and to all its greatest and most remarkable Parts.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He mentions also, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 202. <i>Deut.</i> xxxiii. 15. where the
+Hills are call’d <i>Lasting</i>, and the Mountains <i>Antient</i>. And
+<i>therefore they were before the Flood</i>. This is a hard Consequence.
+The River <i>Kishon</i> is call’d the <i>antient</i> River,
+<i>Judg.</i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 21. but I do not therefore think it necessary, that
+that Brook should have been before the Flood. Things
+may very well deserve that Character of <i>lasting</i> or <i>antient</i>,
+though they be of less Antiquity than the Deluge. If one
+should say the <i>lasting Pyramids</i>, and <i>antient Babylon</i>, none
+could blame the Expression, nor yet think that they were
+therefore from the Beginning of the World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After these Allegations from Scripture, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 205. he descends
+to a natural Argument taken from the <i>Mountains
+in the Moon</i>; which, he says, are much higher than the
+Mountains upon the Earth: And therefore, seeing her
+Body is less, they could not be made by a Dissolution of
+that Planet, as these of the Earth are said to have been.
+Though we are not bound to answer for the Mountains
+in the Moon, yet however, ’tis easy to see that this is no
+good Argument: For, besides that the Orb there might
+be more thick, all Ruins do not fall alike. They may
+fall double, or in Ridges and Arches, or in steep Piles,
+some more than others, and so stand at a greater Height.
+And we have Reason to believe that those in the Moon fell
+otherwise than those of the Earth; because we do not see
+her turn round: Nor can we ever get a Sight of her Backside,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_442'>442</span>that we might better judge of the Shapes of her whole
+Body.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>From this natural Argument, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 206. he proceeds to an
+historical Argument, taken from the <i>Talmudists</i> and <i>Josephus</i>.
+The <i>Talmudists</i> say, that <i>many Giants sav’d themselves
+from the Flood upon Mount Sion</i>. But this, the Exceptor
+confesses, <i>is wholly fabulous</i>. What need it then be
+mentioned as an Argument? Then he says, <i>Josephus</i> reports,
+that <i>many sav’d themselves from the Flood upon the
+Mountain</i> Baris <i>in</i> Armenia. But this also, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 207. he
+says, is <i>false in the Gross</i>, and a <i>formal Fiction</i>. Why then,
+say I, is it brought in as an Argument? Lastly, he quotes
+a Passage out of <i>Plato</i>, who says, when the <i>Gods shall
+drown the Earth, the Herdsmen and Shepherds shall save
+themselves upon Mountains</i>. And this (<i>ibid.</i>) the Exceptor
+calls a <i>Piece of confus’d Forgery</i>. Why then, say I still,
+is it alledged as an Argument against the Theory? But
+however, says the Exceptor, these Things argue that many
+thought there were Mountains before the Flood. But did
+the Theorist ever deny, that it was the vulgar and common
+Opinion? Therefore such Allegations as these may
+be of some Use to shew Reading, but of no Effect at all
+to confute the Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Yet the Exceptor is not content with these Stories, but
+he must needs add a Fourth; which, he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 208. is a
+<i>plain Intimation that there were Mountains in the Beginning
+of the World</i>. Take his own Words for the Story, and
+the Application of it. <i>I will only add that traditional
+Story which is told of</i> Adam; <i>namely, how that after his
+Fall, and when he repented of his Sin, he bewailed it for
+several hundred of Years, upon the Mountains of</i> India. <i>Another
+plain Intimation that THERE WERE MOUNTAINS</i>
+in the Beginning of the World. This is a plain
+Intimation indeed, that those that made this Fable, thought
+there were Mountains then: But is it a Proof that there
+really was so? As you seem to infer. Does the Exceptor
+really believe, that <i>Adam</i> wander’d an hundred Years upon
+the Mountains of <i>India</i>? If the Matter of Fact be false,
+the Supposition it proceeds upon may as well be false. And
+he does not so much as cite an Author here, for the one
+or the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We are now come to the main Point, a new Hypothesis
+concerning the <i>Original of Mountains</i>, which the
+Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 208, 209, <i>&#38;c.</i> hath vouchsafed to make for
+us: And, in short, it is this. When the Waters were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_443'>443</span>drain’d off the Land on the third Day, while it was moist
+and full of Vapours, the <i>Sun</i>, by his Heat, made the Earth
+heave and rise up in many Places, which thereupon became
+Mountains. But lest we mistake or misrepresent
+the Author’s Sense, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 209. we will give it in his own
+Words. <i>Now the Earth, by this Collection of the Waters
+into one Place, being freed from the Load and Pressure of
+them, and laid open to the Sun, the Moisture within, by
+the Heat of his Beams, might quickly be turn’d into Vapours.
+And these Vapours being still increased by the continued rarifying
+Warmth from above, at length they wanted Space
+wherein to expand or dilate themselves. And at last, not
+enduring the Confinement they felt, by Degrees heaved up
+the Earth above; somewhat after the Manner that Leaven
+does Dough, when it is laid by a Fire; but much more forcibly
+and unevenly. And lifting it up thus in numberless
+Places, and in several Quantities, and in various Figures,
+Mountains were made of all Shapes and Sizes</i>; whose Origin
+and Properties, he says, upon this Hypothesis, <i>will be obvious,
+or at least intelligible, to thinking and philosophick Minds</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I must confess I am none of those <i>thinking and philosophick
+Minds</i>, to whom this is either obvious or intelligible:
+For there seem to me to be a great many palpable
+Defects or Oversights in this new Hypothesis: Whereof
+this is one of the grossest, that he supposes the Sun, by
+his Heat, the third Day to have raised these Mountains
+upon the Earth; whereas the Sun was not created till the
+fourth Day, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 51. <i>the fourth Day was the first Day of the
+Sun’s Existence</i>: So that it had this powerful Effect, it
+seems, one Day before it came into Being.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But suppose the Sun had then existed: This is a prodigious
+Effect for the Sun to perform, in so short a Time, and with
+so little Force. The greatest Part of that Day was spent
+in draining the Waters from off the Land; which had a
+long Way to go, from some inland Countries, to reach
+the Sea, or their common Receptacle. And he says,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 209, without an extraordinary Power, <i>perhaps they could
+not have been drained off the Earth in one Day</i>. Let us
+then allow, at least, half a Day for clearing the Ground;
+for the Sun might begin his Work about Noon; and before
+Night he had rais’d all the Mountains of one Hemisphere.
+It will require a strong philosophick Faith, to
+believe this could be all done by the Action of the Sun,
+an in so short a Time. Besides, we must consider, that
+the Sun, by Noon, had past all the Eastern Countries,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_444'>444</span>yet covered with Water, or not well drain’d: So that after
+they were dried, he could only look back upon them
+with faint and declining Rays. Yet the Mountains of the
+East are as great and considerable as elsewhere. But
+there is still another great Difficulty in the Case, as to the
+Northern and Southern Mountains of the Earth; for
+they lie quite out of the Road of the Sun; being far remov’d
+towards either Pole; where, by reason of his Distance
+and Obliquity, his Beams have little Force. How
+would he heave up the <i>Riphæan</i> Mountains, those vast
+Heaps of Stone and Earth, that lie so far to the North?
+You see what Observations the Exceptor hath made(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 119,
+120.) concerning the Cold of those Countries: And it
+falls out very untowardly for this new Hypothesis, that
+the Northern Parts of the Earth, as <i>Norway</i>, <i>Swedeland</i>,
+<i>Iseland</i>, <i>Scythia</i>, <i>Sarmatia</i>, &#38;c. should be such mountainous
+and rocky Countries; where he had before declar’d
+the Sun had so little Force. And, indeed, according to
+his Scheme, all the great Mountains of the Earth should
+have been under the Equator, or, at least, betwixt the
+Tropicks.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to examine a little the Manner and Method of this
+great Action, and what kind of Bodies these new Mountains
+would be; either the Sun drew up only the Surface and
+outward Skin of the Earth, as Cupping-Glasses raise Blisters;
+or his Beams penetrated deep into the Earth, and
+heaved up the Substance of it, as Moles cast up Mole-Hills.
+If you take the first Method, these superficial Mountains
+would be nothing but so many Bags of Wind; and not
+at all answerable to those huge Masses of Earth and Stone,
+whereof our Mountains consist. And if you take the second
+Method, and suppose them push’d out of the solid
+Earth, and thrown up into the Air, imagine then how
+deep these Rays of the Sun must have penetrated in a few
+Hours Time, and what Strength they must have had, to
+agitate the Vapours to that Degree, that they should be
+able to do such Prodigies as these. Several Mountains,
+upon a moderate Computation, are a Mile high from the
+Level of the Earth. So that it was necessary that the Beams
+of the Sun should penetrate at least a Mile deep, in so
+short a Time; and there loosen and rarify the Vapours, and
+then tear up by the Roots vast Loads and Extents of
+Ground, and heave them a Mile high into the open Air:
+And all this in less than half a Day. Such Things surely
+are beyond all imagination, and so extravagant, that one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_445'>445</span>cannot, in Conscience, offer them to the Belief of a Man.
+Can we think that the Sun, who is two or three Hours in
+licking up the Dew from the Grass in a <i>May</i> Morning,
+should be able, in as many more Hours, to suck the <i>Alps</i>
+and <i>Pyreneans</i> out of the Bowels of the Earth; and not
+to spend all his Force upon them neither? For he would
+have as much Work in other Countries. To raise up
+<i>Taurus</i>, for instance, and <i>Imaus</i>, and frozen <i>Caucasus</i> in
+<i>Asia</i>; and the mighty <i>Atlas</i>, and the <i>Mountains</i> of the
+<i>Moon</i> in <i>Africk</i>; besides the <i>Andes</i> in <i>America</i>, which,
+they say, far exceed all the Mountains of our Continent.
+One would be apt to think, that this Gentleman never saw
+the Face of a mountainous Country; for he writes of
+them, as if he had taken his Idea of Mountains, and the
+great Ridges of Mountains, upon the Earth, from the
+<i>Devil’s Ditch</i>, and <i>Hogmagog Hills</i>: And he raises them
+faster than Mushrooms out of the Ground. If the newborn
+Sun, at his first Appearance, could make such great
+Havock, and so great Changes upon the Face of the
+Earth, what hath he been doing ever since? We never
+heard nor read of a Mountain, since the Memory of
+Man, rais’d by the Heat of the Sun. We may therefore
+enquire, in the last Place,</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Why have we no Mountains made now by the same
+Causes? We have no Reason to believe that the Heat or
+Strength of the Sun is lessen’d since that Time; why then
+does it not produce like Effects? But I imagine he hath
+an Answer for this: Namely, that the Moisture of the
+first Earth, when it was new drain’d and marshy, contributed
+much to this Effect; which now its Dryness hinders.
+But besides, that the Dryness of the Earth should rather
+give an Advantage, by the Collection of Vapours within
+its Cavities: However, we might expect, according to this
+Reason, that all our drain’d Fens and marshy Grounds,
+should presently be rais’d into Mountains; whereas we
+see them all to continue arrand Plains, as they were before.
+But if you think these are too little Spots of
+Ground to receive a strong Influence from the Sun, take
+<i>Ægypt</i> for an Instance: That’s capacious enough, and ’tis
+overflow’d every Year, and by that Means made soft and
+moist to your Mind, as the new Earth when it rises from
+under the Abyss. Why then is not <i>Ægypt</i> converted into
+Mountains, after the Inundation and Retirement of <i>Nile</i>?
+I do not see any Qualification wanting, according to the
+Exceptor’s Hypothesis: <i>Ægypt</i> hath a moist Soil, and a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_446'>446</span>strong Sun, much stronger than the <i>Alps</i> or <i>Pyreneans</i>
+have; and yet it continues one of the plainest Countries
+upon the Earth. But there is still a greater Instance behind
+against this Hypothesis, than any of the former; and that
+is, of the whole Earth after the Deluge: When it had
+been overflow’d a second Time by the Abyss, upon the
+Retirement of those Waters it would be much what in the
+same Condition, as to Moisture, that it was in the third Day,
+when it first became dry Land. Why then should not the
+same Effect follow again, by the Heat of the Sun; and
+as many new Mountains be rais’d upon this second Draining
+of the Earth, as upon the first? These are plain and
+obvious Instances, and as plainly unanswerable. And
+the whole Hypothesis which this Virtuoso hath propos’d
+concerning the <i>Origin</i> of Mountains, is such an Heap of
+Incredibilities, and Things inconsistent one with another,
+that I’m afraid I shall be thought to have spent too much
+Time in Confutation of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the Conclusion of this Chapter, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 215. he hath an
+Attempt to prove that there were Mountains before the
+Flood, <i>because there were Metals</i>; which are commonly
+found about the Roots of Mountains. But the Theorist,
+he says, <i>to shun this great Inconvenience, fairly consents to
+the abolishing of Metals out of the first State of Nature</i>.
+Yet he is hard put to it, to prove that the Theorist hath any
+where asserted, whatsoever he thought, that there were no
+Metals then. The first Citation he produces, only recites
+the Opinion of others, and says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 216. he <i>thinks they do
+not want their Reasons</i>. Of the two other Citations out
+of the Preface, the first does not reach home, making no
+mention of Metals. And the second is wholly misconstrued,
+and perverted to a Sense quite contrary to what
+the Author intended, or the Context will bear. But however
+the Theorist appears doubtful, whether there were
+Metals or no in in the first World: And, upon this Doubt,
+the Exceptor lays this heavy Charge, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 215. <i>li.</i> 24. <i>Thus
+the Fidelity of</i> Moses<i> is assaulted, and another intolerable
+Affront put upon the HOLY GHOST: For do not both
+inform us, that the City</i> Enoch <i>was built, and the Ark prepared,
+before the Flood? But how could either be done without
+Iron-Tools?</i> But does either <i>Moses</i>, or the Holy Ghost tell
+us, that there were Iron-Tools in building that City, or the
+Ark? If they do not, we only affront the Consequence,
+which the Exceptor draws from the Words, and not the
+Authors of them. By what divine Authority does the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_447'>447</span>Animadverter assert, that there was Iron, or Iron-Tools, in
+Building this City, or that Ark? I’m sure Scripture does
+not mention either, upon those Occasions. And seeing
+it mentions only <i>Gopher Wood</i> and <i>Pitch</i> for the Building
+of the Ark, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 14. ’tis a Presumption rather, that
+there were no other Materials us’d. And as to the City,
+’tis true, if he fancy the City which <i>Enoch</i> built, to have
+been like <i>Paris</i>, or <i>London</i>, he has Reason to imagine,
+that they had Iron-Tools to make it. But suppose it was a
+Number of Cottages, made of Branches of Trees, of
+Osiers and Bulrushes, (and what needed they any other
+House, when the Air was so temperate?) or, if you will,
+of Mud-Walls, and a Roof of Straw, with a Fence
+about it to keep out Beasts, there would be no such Necessity
+of Iron-Tools. Consider, pray, how long the
+World was without knowing the Use of Iron, in several
+Parts of it, as in the North, and in <i>America</i>: And yet
+they had Houses and Cities after their Fashion. For the
+Northern Countries you may see <i>Olaus Magnus</i>, <i>li.</i> 12.
+<i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 13. For <i>America</i>, <i>Pet. Martyr. Dec. 1.</i> But the Exceptor
+will save you your Pains, as to the <i>Indians</i>, for he
+says himself, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 250. in another Place, that they had no
+Instruments of Iron, when the <i>Spaniards</i> came amongst
+them. And if in those late Ages of the World, they
+were still without the Use of Iron, or Iron-Tools, we have
+less Reason to believe that the Children of <i>Cain</i> had them
+four or five thousand Years before.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>It is also worthy our Consideration, how many Things
+must have been done, before they could come at these
+Iron-Tools. How came the Children of <i>Cain</i> to dig into
+the Earth, I know not to what Depth, to seek for a Thing
+they had never heard of before, when it was so difficult
+to dig into the Earth without such Tools? More difficult,
+methinks, than to build an House without them. But
+suppose they did this, we know not how; and, amongst
+many other Stones, or Earths, found that which we call
+Iron-Ore: How did they know the Nature and Use of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_448'>448</span>it? Or, if they guess’d at that, how did they know the
+Way and Manner of preparing it, by Furnaces, Wind-Forges,
+and Smelting-mills? These would be as hard to
+make or build, without Iron Tools, as dwelling Houses.
+And when they had got a Lump of Iron, till they knew
+how to temper it, they could not make Tools of it still.
+Unless <i>Cain</i>’s Children had an Inspiration from Heaven, I
+do not see how they could discover all these Things, in so
+short a Time. And this is only to make good what the
+Theorist said, that such an Hypothesis <i>does not want its
+Reasons</i>. And as to <i>Tubal-Cain</i>, let those that positively
+assert that there was no Iron in the first World, tell us in
+what Sense that Place is to be understood. For, I believe,
+Iron or Brass is not once mention’d in all the
+Theory.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='eleven'>XI.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is to prove that the <i>Sea was open</i> before
+the Deluge. ’Tis something barren of philosophical
+Arguments, but we will begin with such as it has, which
+are taken from this Topick, <i>That the Fishes could not
+live in our Abyss</i>: <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 224. and that for three Reasons. First,
+because it was too dark. Secondly, too close; and
+thirdly, too cold. As for Coldness, methinks he might
+have left that out, unless he suppose that there are no Fish
+in the frozen Seas, towards the North and South; which
+is against all Sense and Experience: For cold Countries
+abound most in Fish. And according to Reason, there
+would be more Danger of too much Warmth, in those
+subterraneous Waters, than of too much Cold, in respect
+of the Fishes.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then as to Darkness and Closeness, this minds me of the
+Saying of <i>Maimonides</i>: <i>That no Man</i> ever would believe,
+that a Child could live so many Months, shut up in its Mother’s
+Belly, if he had never seen the Experience of it.
+There’s Closeness and Darkness, in the Highest Degree.
+And in Animals, that, as soon as born, cannot live without
+Respiration. Whereas Fishes, of all Creatures, have
+the least need of Respiration, if they have any. And as
+for <i>Darkness</i>, how many subterraneous Lakes have we
+still, wherein Fishes live? And we can scarce suppose the
+main and fathomless Ocean to have Light to the Bottom;
+at least when it is troubled or tempestuous. How the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_449'>449</span>Eyes of Fish are, or might be, form’d or conform’d, we
+cannot tell, but we see they feed and prey on the Night
+Time, and take Baits as greedily as on the Day. But it is
+likely they were less active and agile in that Abyss, than
+they are now; their Life was more sluggish then, and their
+Motions more slow, <i>Job</i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> 8. as being still in that
+<i>Womb</i> of Nature that was broke up at the Deluge. And
+as to Air, they would have enough for their imperfect way
+of breathing in that State. But if they have a more perfect
+now, which is still a Question, they might have
+some Passages in their Body open’d, (at the Disruption of
+the Abyss) when they were born into the Light and free
+Air, which were not open’d before. As we see in Infants,
+upon their Birth, a new Passage is made into their
+Lungs, and a new Circulation of the Blood, which before
+took another Course.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for pretended Reasons and Philosophy. The
+rest of this long Chapter is spent either in Consequences
+made from Scripture, or in a prolix Discourse about Rain.
+As to Scripture, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 219, 220. he makes this the first Objection,
+that, whereas <i>Adam</i> had a Dominion given him
+over the Fish of the Sea, it could have no Effect, if they
+were inclosed in the Abyss. <i>Adam</i> had no more Dominion
+given him over the Fish of the Sea, than over the
+Fowls of the Air; which he could not come at, or seize
+at his Pleasure, unless he could fly into the Air after them.
+<i>Adam</i> was made Lord of all Animals upon this Earth,
+and had a Right to use them for his Conveniency, when
+they came into his Power: But I do not believe that
+<i>Adam</i> was made stronger than a Lyon, nor could master
+the Leviathan, or command him to the Shore. He had
+a Right, however, and his Posterity, to dispose of all Creatures
+for their Use and Service, whensoever, upon Occasion
+offered, they fell into their Power.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Next he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 225, 226. The Waters were gather’d
+into one Place, and a Firmament was made to divide the
+Waters from the Waters. Well, allow this, tell us then
+what was that Firmament? For it is said there, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 17.
+that God set the Sun, Moon, and Stars, in the Firmament.
+Therefore you can argue nothing from this, unless
+you suppose supercelestial Waters: Which, when you
+have prov’d, we will give you an Account of the subcelestial,
+and of the subterraneous. And here the Exceptor
+cites some Things from the Theory, that are not in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_450'>450</span>the second Edition, and therefore the Theorist is not concern’d
+to answer them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, The Exceptor comes to his long Harangue in
+Commendation of the <i>Clouds</i> and of <i>Rain</i>: Which takes
+up a great Part of this Chapter. In his <i>Exordium</i> he makes
+this Compliment to the Clouds, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 234. <i>Sometimes they
+mount up and fly aloft, as if they forgat, or disdain’d the
+Meanness of their Origin. Sometimes again they sink and
+stoop so low, as if they repented of their former proud Aspirings,
+and did remorseful humble Penance for their high
+Presumption. And though I may not say they weep to expiate
+their Arrogance, or kiss the Earth with bedewed Cheeks,
+in Token of their Penitence, yet they often prostrate in the
+Dust, and sweep the lowest Grounds of all, with their misty
+foggy Trains. One while they</i>, &#38;c. This Harangue about
+the Clouds and Rain, is pursued for fourteen or fifteen
+Pages, and, with Submission to better Judgments, I take
+it to be a Country Sermon, about the <i>Usefulness of Rain</i>:
+And, I believe, whosoever reads it, will, both from its
+Matter and Form, be of the same Opinion. I do not
+speak this in Derogation to his Sermon, but he would
+have done better, methinks, to have printed it in a
+Pamphlet by it self; there being no Occasion for it in this
+Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Towards the Conclusion of the Chapter, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 246. he
+answers an Objection made by the Theorist against the
+supposed Islands and Continents in the first Earth. Namely,
+<i>That it would render the Propagation of Mankind difficult,
+into those broken Parts of the World</i>. And the many
+imperfect shifting Answers which the Exceptor gives, or
+conjectures without Authority, do but confirm the Objection
+of the Theorist, or make his Words true, <i>quod Res
+esset difficilis explicatu</i>. Which is all that the Theorist
+said upon that Subject.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='twelve'>XII.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This is a short Chapter, and will be soon dispatch’d.
+’Tis to prove that the <i>Rainbow was before the Flood</i>.
+And notwithstanding that, a good Sign that there should
+never be a Flood again. This is to me a Paradox, but he
+confirms it by a greater Paradox: For he says, God might
+as well (as to Significancy, or Authenticalness) <i>have appointed
+the Sun, as the Rainbow, for a Sign that there never
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_451'>451</span>should have been another Flood</i>. So that if God had said to
+<i>Noah</i>, I do assure thee there shall never be a second Deluge,
+and for a Sign of this, <i>Behold I set the Sun in the
+Firmament</i>: This would have done as well, he says, as the
+Rainbow. That is, in my Judgment, it would have done nothing
+at all more than the bare Promise. And if it had done no
+more than the bare Promise, it was superfluous. Therefore
+if the Rainbow was no more than the Sun would have
+been, it was a superfluous Sign. They to whom these
+two Signs are of equal Significancy and Effect, lie without
+the Reach of all Conviction, and I am very willing
+to indulge them in their own Opinions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 257. <i>God sometimes has made things to be
+Signs, that are common and usual. Thus the Fruit of a Tree
+growing in Paradise, was made a Sign of Man’s Immortality.</i>
+But how does it appear that this was a common
+Tree; or that it was given to <i>Adam</i> as a Sign that he
+should be immortal? Neither of these appear from Scripture.
+Secondly, he says, 2 <i>Kings</i> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> 17. <i>Shooting with
+Bow and Arrows upon the Ground, was made a Sign to</i>
+Joash <i>of his prevailing against the</i> Syrians. This was only
+a Command to make war against <i>Syria</i>, and a Prophecy
+of Success; both deliver’d in a symbolical or hieroglyphical
+Way. The Command was signify’d by bidding the
+King shoot an Arrow, which was the Sign of War. And
+the Sign of Victory or of divine Assistance, was the Prophet’s
+strengthening the King’s Hands to draw the Bow.
+This is nothing as to a Sign given in Nature, or from the
+natural World, in Confirmation of a divine Promise:
+Which is the thing we are only to consider.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>All the rest of this Chapter is lax Discourse without
+Proof. And as to the Significancy of the Rainbow, upon
+Supposition that it was a new Appearance; and its Insignificancy
+upon Supposition that it was an old Appearance,
+we have spoken so fully in the Theory it self, <i>Eng. Theor.</i>
+<i>Book</i> 2. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> 5. that it would be needless here to make any
+longer Stay upon this Argument.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='thirteen'>XIII.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is concerning <i>Paradise</i>; but our Author
+fairly baulks all the Difficulties in that Doctrine,
+and contents himself with a few Generals, which
+every body knows. The Doctrine of Paradise consists
+chiefly of two Parts; the Site or Place of it; and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_452'>452</span>State or Properties of it. As to the first, if the Exceptor
+would have confuted the Theory, he should have let down
+the Conclusions that are advanc’d by the Theory, (<i>Eng.
+Theor.</i> <i>Book.</i> 2. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 7.) concerning the Place of Paradise,
+which are these; first, the Place of Paradise cannot be determin’d
+by Scripture only. Neither the Word <i>Mekeddem</i>,
+(<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8.) nor the four Rivers mentioned there,
+make the Place of it defineable. Secondly, The Place
+of Paradise cannot be determin’d by the Theory. Seeing
+then neither Scripture, nor Reason determine the Place of
+Paradise, if we will determine it, it must be by Antiquity.
+And if we appeal to Antiquity in this Case, we shall find,
+First, That it was not in <i>Mesopotamia</i>. Secondly, That
+according to the Plurality of Votes, both amongst the
+Heathen and Christian Authors, it was plac’d in the other
+Hemisphere. And this is all the Theory says upon that
+Point. As you may see, <i>Eng. Theor</i> <i>Book</i> 2. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> 7. and
+<i>Lat. Theor.</i> <i>Edit.</i> 2. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 194. and <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 214, 215. Wherefore
+if the Animadverter would undertake to confute the Theory
+in this Point, he should have confuted those four Particulars.
+But he slips over these, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 265. and gives us only
+a Paraphrase upon Verses in the second and third
+<i>Chapters</i> of <i>Genesis</i>, which says little to this Purpose, and
+yet more than it proves.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the second Place, as to the State and Properties of
+Paradise, or the ante-diluvian World; <i>the Longevity of
+the Ante-diluvians</i> is the Thing he insists upon. But this
+he handles so loosely, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 273. that in the Conclusion of
+his Discourse, one cannot tell whether he affirms it, or
+denies it. This sceptical Humour of the Exceptor hath
+been taken notice of before, and ’tis continued in this
+Chapter, where there is little or nothing positively determin’d.
+The Theorist, on the contrary, expressly affirms
+the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians, and gives these Reasons
+for his Assertion. First, Because all the Lives, and
+all the Generations recorded in Scripture, before the Flood,
+from Father to Son, in a Line of sixteen hundred Years,
+are longeval: Of six, seven, eight, nine hundred Years
+a-piece. Secondly, Antiquity, both <i>Greek</i> and <i>Barbarian</i>
+have attested the same thing, and recorded the Tradition;
+see the Table of both. Thirdly, The Generations recorded
+in Scripture after the Flood, as they exceed the Term
+of succeeding Ages, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 204. so they decline
+by degrees from the ante-diluvian Longevity. Lastly,
+<i>Jacob</i> complains of the Shortness of his Life, and lowness
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_453'>453</span>of his Days, in Comparison of his Forefathers, when
+he had liv’d one hundred and thirty Years; <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='forty-seven'>xlvii.</abbr> 9.
+which had been a groundless Complaint, if his Ancestors
+had not lived much longer.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These two last Reasons the Exceptor has not thought
+fit to take notice of. And, in Answer to the two former,
+he hath only the usual Subterfuges: As, that the
+long Lives of the ante-diluvian Patriarchs was a Thing extraordinary
+and providential, confin’d to their Persons; not
+of a general Extent, nor according to the Course of Nature.
+But how does this appear? It must be made out,
+either by Scripture or Reason. Scripture makes no Distinction,
+nor Exception of Persons in this Case; all,
+whereof it hath left any Account, as to Term of Life, are
+declar’d to have liv’d several hundred of Years. And
+why should we not conclude the same Thing concerning
+the rest? Then as to Reason, you cannot suppose Longevity,
+in that World, against Reason or Nature, unless you
+first suppose the Form and Constitution of that World to
+have been the same with the present: Which is to beg the
+Question. Admitting that Form and Constitution of the
+first Heavens and Earth, which the Theory hath given,
+Longevity will be a natural Consequence of it. <i>Theor.</i>
+<i>Book</i> 2. <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> 3, <i>&#38;</i> 4. And having such a Course of
+Nature laid before us, as agrees with the Reports of Scripture,
+and with general Tradition, why should we quit
+that, to comply with an imaginary Presumption; that
+these were miraculously preserv’d, and all the rest were
+short-liv’d? I know he pretends, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 277. we may as well
+conclude all Men were Giants in those Days, because
+<i>Moses</i> says, <i>There were Giants upon the Earth in those
+Days</i>, <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 4. as conclude that all Men were long
+liv’d in those Days, because <i>Moses</i> mentions some that
+were so. There had been some Pretence for this, if <i>Moses</i>
+had made a Distinction of two Races of Men in the
+first World, long Livers and short Livers; as he hath
+distinguish’d the Giant from the common Race of Mankind:
+Or, as he hath said in one Case, <i>There were Giants
+on the Earth in those Days</i>; so if he had said in the other,
+<i>There were long Livers upon the Earth in those Days</i>, and
+upon that, had given us a List of the long-liv’d Patriarchs:
+This indeed would have made the Cases pretty
+parallel. But, on the contrary, <i>Moses</i> makes no such Distinction
+of long-living and short-living Races, before
+the Flood; nor yet notes it as a Mark of divine Favour,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_454'>454</span>or extraordinary Benediction upon those Persons that liv’d
+so long. Therefore, not to suppose it general to Mankind
+at that Time, is a groundless Restriction, which is
+neither founded upon Scripture nor Reason.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the second Argument for ante-diluvian Longevity,
+taken from Tradition and the Testimony of the Antients,
+he objects, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 276, 277. that <i>Josephus</i> does not
+seem to be firm in that Opinion himself. But what then?
+The Theorist lays no Stress upon <i>Josephus</i>’s single Opinion,
+but refers to the Testimonies of those Authors, whether
+<i>Greeks</i>, or such as have given on Account of the
+<i>Ægyptian</i>, <i>Chaldean</i>, and <i>Phœnician</i> Antiquities: Which
+are call’d in by <i>Josephus</i>, as Witnesses of this Truth or
+Tradition, concerning the long Lives of the first Men.
+And at last, the Exceptor seems content, this Tradition
+should be admitted, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 278. seeing the <i>Authors are too many,
+or too considerable, to have their Testimonies question’d
+or rejected</i>. But then he will make a further Question,
+<i>Why</i> there should not also be a Tradition concerning the
+<i>perpetual Equinox</i>, or <i>perpetual Spring</i>, upon which this
+Longevity depended? But this Question is fully answer’d,
+and the Tradition fully made out before, in the eighth
+Chapter, which I need not here repeat. In like manner,
+all the secondary Questions, which he then mentions, depending
+upon, and being included in this first, receive
+their Resolution from it. For when a perpetual Equinox
+is once truly stated, there is no Difficulty concerning
+the rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After these Contests about Traditions, he hath one or
+two <i>Reasons</i> against this <i>ante-diluvian Longevity</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 279,
+280. First, because the Earth, by this Means, would
+have been over-stock’d with People before the Time of
+the Deluge. Secondly, They should all have been of the
+same Longevity before the Flood. Neither of these, me-thinks,
+have any Strength in them. As to the first, That
+Earth was much more capacious than this is, where the
+Sea takes away half of its Surface, and renders it uninhabitable.
+And whereas he suggests, as a Recompence,
+<i>ibid.</i> <i>That Mountains</i> have more Surface and Capacity
+than Plains; that’s true, but they are also less habitable,
+by Reason of their Barrenness and Ruggedness. Who
+can believe that there are as many People in <i>Wales</i>, as in
+other Parts of <i>England</i>, upon the same Compass of level
+Ground? Or no more in <i>Holland</i>, than upon a like Number
+of Acres upon the <i>Alps</i> or <i>Pyreneans</i>? There would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_455'>455</span>be room enough for twice as many People as there are in the
+World, and twice as many Animals, if there was Food
+enough to nourish them. But here I have two things to
+complain of, as foul Play: First, the Exceptor cites the
+Theory partially. Secondly, he does not mark the Place
+whence he takes that Citation; as if it was on purpose to
+hide his Partiality. The Words he cites are these: <i>If we
+allow the first Couple, at the end of one hundred Years, or
+of the first Century, to have left ten Pair of Breeders, which
+is an easy Supposition, there would arise from these in fifteen
+hundred Years, a greater Number than the Earth was capable
+of; allowing every Pair to multiply in the same decuple
+Proportion the first Pair did</i>, Eng. Theor. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 32. Here
+the Exceptor stops, and makes this Inference; that upon
+an <i>easy Supposition</i>, which the Theorist makes and allows,
+the Earth would have been over-stock’d in fifteen hundred
+Years. This is an <i>easy Supposition</i> for the <i>first Century</i>,
+as the Theorist put it; but it would be a very uneasy one
+for the following Centuries, when they came to be at any
+considerable Distance from the Beginning. And therefore
+the Theorist tells you, in that very Page, <i>The same Measure
+cannot run equally through all the Ages.</i> And in his
+Calculation you see, after the first Century, he hath taken
+only a <i>quadruple Proportion for the Increase of Mankind</i>.
+As judging that a <i>moderate and reasonable Measure betwixt
+the highest and the lowest</i>. This the Exceptor might easily
+have observ’d, <i>ibid.</i> and as easily avoided this Misapplication
+of the Words of the Theorist.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>His second Reason against the ante-diluvian Longevity
+is slighter than the first, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 280. For he pretends that all
+Ante-diluvians, upon that Supposition, should have been
+equally long-liv’d. You may as well say, that all
+the Children of the same Parents, and that live in the
+same Place, should now be equally long-liv’d; the external
+World being the same to them all. But, besides
+Accidents, their <i>Stamina</i> and Constitutions might then be
+of a different Strength, as well as now; tho’ they were
+born of the same Parents, and liv’d in the same Air. Lastly,
+he moves a Difficulty about the Multiplication of Animals
+in the first World, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 281. that they would have been
+too numerous before the Flood. I can say nothing to
+that, nor he neither, upon good Grounds: Unless we
+knew what Species of Animals were then made, and in
+what Degrees they multiplied. The Theorist always supposes
+a divine Providence to superintend, proportion, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_456'>456</span>determine, both the Number and Food of Animals upon
+the Earth; suitably to the Constitution and Circumstances
+of every World. And seeing that Earth was no
+less under the Care and Direction of Providence, than
+the present, we may conclude that due Measures were
+taken for adjusting the Numbers and Food of Animals
+in such manner, as neither to be a Burden to one another,
+nor to Man.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='fourteen'>XIV.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is against the Explication of the Deluge
+by the <i>Dissolution of the Earth</i>. That Dissolution, as
+is pretended, being unfit or insufficient to produce such an
+Effect. And to prove this, the Ante-theorist gives us five
+Arguments, whereof the first is this; <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 285. <i>Moses</i> having
+left us an accurate Description of Paradise, <i>according to the
+proper Rules of Topography</i>, such a Description would have
+been improper and insufficient to determine the Place of
+Paradise, and consequently useless, if the Earth had been
+dissolv’d; and by that means the Bounds of those Countries,
+and the Channels of those Rivers, broken and chang’d.
+This Objection, I’m afraid, will fall heavier upon <i>Moses</i>,
+or upon the Exceptor himself, than upon the Theorist.
+However, one would have expected that the Exceptor
+should have determin’d here the Place of Paradise in virtue
+of that Description. So learned and sagacious a Person,
+having before him an exact Draught of Paradise, <i>according
+to the proper Rules of Topography</i>, could not fail to lay his
+Finger upon the very Spot of Ground where it stood. Yet
+I do not find that he has ventur’d to determine the Place
+of Paradise, either in this Chapter, or in the preceding:
+Which gives me a great Suspicion, that he was not satisfy’d
+where it stood, notwithstanding the <i>Mosaical</i> Topography.
+Now if it cannot be understood or determin’d by that
+Topography, one of these two things must be allow’d, either
+that the Description was insufficient and ineffectual;
+or that there has been some great Change in the Earth,
+whereby the Marks of it are destroy’d; namely, the Bounds
+of Countries, and the Courses of the the Rivers. If he take
+the second of these Answers, he joins with the Theorist.
+If the first, he reflects, according to his way of arguing,
+upon the Honour of <i>Moses</i>, or confutes himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But here is still a further Charge, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 286. <i>Moses</i>’s Description
+of Paradise would have been <i>told</i> (which he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_457'>457</span>notes for <i>horrid Blasphemy</i>) if the Earth was broken at
+the Deluge: For then those Rivers, by which <i>Moses</i> describes
+Paradise, could not have been before the Flood.
+But why so, I pray? The Theorist supposes Rivers before
+the Flood, in great Plenty; and why not like to these?
+And if their Channels were very much chang’d by the
+Flood, that’s no more than what good Interpreters suppose.
+Being unable, upon any other Submission, to give
+an Account why it is so hard (notwithstanding <i>Moses</i>’s
+Description) to determine the Place of Paradise. Now
+where is the <i>Blasphemy</i> of this? <i>Ibid.</i> <i>Horrid Blasphemy
+against the Holy Ghost?</i> A rude and injudicious Defence of
+Scripture, by Railing and ill Language, is the true Way to
+lessen and disparage it: Especially when we make our
+own Consequences to be of the same Authority with the
+Word of God; and whatsoever is against them, must be
+charg’d with Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost. Is it not
+a strange Thing, that the Dissolution of the Earth should be
+made Blasphemy, when the Prophets and inspir’d Authors
+speak so often of the <i>Disruptions</i>, <i>Fractions</i>, <i>Concussions</i>,
+and <i>Subversions</i> of the Earth? See <i>Review</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 380, <i>&#38;c.</i> And
+that very Expression, that the <i>Earth is dissolv’d</i>, is a Scripture
+Expression, (<i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seventy-five'>lxxv.</abbr> 3. <i>Isai.</i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 19. <i>Amos</i> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 5)
+which, methinks, might have been enough to have protected
+it from the Imputation of Blasphemy. But there is nothing
+safe against blind Zeal, and opinionative Ignorance;
+which, by how much they find themselves weaker in Reasons,
+by so much they become more violent in Passions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to return to the Objection; upon the whole Matter,
+he casts the Burden of the Charge upon <i>Moses</i> himself,
+as we noted before: For take whether Hypothesis
+you will, that the Earth was, or was not broken, the Question
+still returns, if the Mosaical Topography was exact
+and sufficient, why can we not yet find out the Situation
+of Paradise? ’Tis now above three thousand Years since
+<i>Moses</i> died, and Men have been curious and very inquisitive
+in all Ages, to find out the Place of Paradise; but
+it is not found out to this Day to any Satisfaction: So
+that, methinks, upon the whole, the Theory, which supposeth
+the Earth very much chang’d, makes the fairest Apology
+both for <i>Moses</i> and Mankind, in this Particular. But
+to proceed to his second Argument.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Secondly, says the Exceptor, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 288. <i>The Dissolution of
+the Earth could not be the Cause of the general Flood, because
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_458'>458</span>it would have utterly destroy’d</i> Noah<i>’s Ark, and all that
+were in it</i>. I thought the Theorist had effectually prevented
+this Objection, by putting the Ark under the Conduct of
+its Guardian Angels, and of a miraculous Providence;
+<i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 147. These are his Words: <i>I think it had
+been impossible for the Ark to have liv’d upon the raging Abyss,
+or for</i> Noah <i>and his Family to have been preserv’d, if
+there had not been a miraculous Hand of Providence to take
+Care of them.</i> Now, either the Exceptor did not take
+notice of this Passage in the Theory, or he does not allow
+that a miraculous Hand was sufficient to preserve the
+Ark; or thirdly, he made an Objection, which he knew
+himself to be impertinent. And, I confess, I am inclinable
+to think the last is true: For as to the first, he confesses
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 354.) that the <i>Theory represents the Ark, with its
+Guardian Angels about it, in the Extremity of the Flood</i>.
+And as to the second, he himself makes use of a miraculous
+Power to preserve the Ark upon his Hypothesis;
+in Answer to the eighth Objection, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 351, 352, <i>&#38;c.</i>
+Why then may not we make use of the same Power, and
+with the same Effect? It remains therefore, that he was
+conscious to himself that he made this Objection to no
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But that is not all: He has also us’d foul Play in his
+Citation: For whereas the great Danger of the Ark would
+be at the first Fall of the Earth, or the Disruption of the
+Abyss; the Theorist, he says, to prevent this, makes the
+Ark to be a-float by the Rains, before the Abyss was broken.
+But is that all the Theorist says in that Place?
+Does he not assign another Way how the Ark might be
+a-float? Namely, in a River, or in a Dock. These are
+the Words of the Theory, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 133, 134. <i>So as the Ark, if
+it could not float upon these Rain-Waters, at least taking the
+Advantage of a River, or of a Dock or Cistern made to receive
+them, it might be a-float before the Abyss was broken
+open.</i> And these Words being in the same Place whence
+he makes his Citation, it must be a wilful Dissimulation
+not to take notice of them. But he saw they would have
+taken off the Edge of his Objection, and therefore thought
+fit not to touch upon them. But after all, there is no
+Necessity that the Ark should be a-float before the Earth
+broke: Those Things, were premis’d in the Theory, only
+to soften the Way to Men that are of hard Belief in such
+extraordinary Matters: For the Angels (whose Ministry
+we openly own, upon these grand Occasions) could as easily
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_459'>459</span>have held the Ark a-float, in the Air, as on the Water.
+And the Ark, being an Emblem of the Church,
+God certainly did <i>give his Angels Charge over it; that they
+should bear it up in their Hands, that it might not be dash’d
+against a Stone</i>. And this having been more than once
+profess’d by the Theorist, we must again conclude this Objection
+superfluous and useless.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The third Objection is this. If the Earth had been thus
+dissolv’d, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 289. <i>The present Earth would have been, in
+likelihood of another Figure, than what now it bears.</i> These
+are his Words; but I suppose he means, that it would have
+been of another Form, as to Sea and Land. And the
+Reason he gives is this: Because, says he, it would have
+broke first in the Equator, and consequently that Part falling
+down first, would have been swallowed up by the
+Waters, and become all Sea. Whereas we find, that under
+the Equator that then was (which he supposeth (<i>ibid.</i>)
+the present Ecliptick) <i>the dry Ground is of most spacious
+Extent and Continuity</i>. We need not examine his Account
+of Sea and Land, because it proceeds upon a false
+Supposition, (<i>See</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 27. <i>before</i>.) He relapses here into his
+former astronomical Error, or to his first adds a second;
+<i>viz.</i> That the Earth, when it chang’d its Situation, chang’d
+its Poles and Circles. This is a great Mistake; the Change
+of Position in Respect of the Heavens, did not change
+the Places of its Circles in Respect to its own Globe. As
+when you change a Sphere or a Globe out of a <i>right Situation</i>
+into an <i>oblique</i>, the Circles do not change their
+Places, as to that Sphere or Globe; but have only another
+Position to the Heavens. The Earth’s Ecliptick runs
+thorough the same Places it did before; and the equinoctial
+Regions of that Earth were the same with the equinoctial
+Regions of this, only bear another Posture to the
+Heavens and the Sun. These Circles have not chang’d
+Places with one another, as he imagines; and which is
+worse, would father this imagination upon the Theory,
+in these Words, <i>Under the Ecliptick (which, in the present
+Situation of the Earth, (ACCORDING TO THE
+THEORY) was its Equinoctial, and divided the Globe
+into two Hemispheres, as the Equator does now) the dry
+Ground</i>, &#38;c. He that affirms this, with Respect to the
+Earth, neither understands the <i>Theory, nor the Doctrine of
+the Sphere</i>. But let’s press no further upon a Mistake.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The fourth Objection is this; <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 290. That such a Dissolution
+of the Earth, would have caus’d great Barrenness
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_460'>460</span>after the Flood: Partly by turning up some dry and unfruitful
+Parts of the Earth; and partly by the Soil and
+Filth that would be left upon its Surface. As to the first,
+I willingly allow, that some of the interior and barren
+Parts of the Earth might be turn’d up; as we now see in
+mountainous and wild Countries; but this rather confirms
+the Theory, than weakens it. But as to the second, that
+the Filth and Soil would have made the Earth more barren,
+I cannot allow that. For good Husbandmen overflow
+their Grounds, to make their Crop more rich. And
+’tis generally suppos’d, that the Inundation of <i>Nile</i>, and
+the Mud it leaves behind it, makes <i>Ægypt</i> more fruitful.
+Besides, this Part of the Objection lies against the common
+Explication of the Deluge, as well as against that
+which is given by the Theory. For if you suppose an
+universal Deluge, let it come from what Causes you please,
+it must overflow all the Earth, and leave Mud and Slime
+and Filth upon the Surface of it: And consequently
+cause Barrenness, according to this Argumentation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He adds another Consideration under this Head, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 292.
+namely, that if the Earth had been dissolv’d in this manner,
+<i>All the Buildings erected before the Flood, would have
+been shaken down, or else overwhelm’d. Yet we read of
+some that outstood the Flood, and were not demolish’d.
+Such were the Pillars of</i> Seth, <i>and the Cities</i> Henochia
+<i>and</i> Joppa. As to <i>Seth</i>’s Pillars, they are generally accounted
+fabulous; and I perceive the Exceptor will not
+vouch for them: For he concludes, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 295) <i>I know the
+very Being is question’d of</i> Seth<i>’s Pillars</i>, &#38;c. If he will
+not defend them, why should I take the Pains to confute
+them? I do not love to play with a Man, that will put
+nothing to the Stake; that will have his Chance to win,
+but can lose nothing, because he stakes nothing. Then
+as to the City <i>Henochia</i>, it hath no Authority, but that of
+<i>Annius Viterbiensis</i>, and his <i>Berosus</i>: A Book generally
+exploded, as fictitious. Lastly, As to <i>Joppa</i>, the Authority
+indeed is better, tho’ still uncertain. But however,
+suppose the Ruins of one Town remain’d after the Flood,
+does this prove that the Earth was not dissolv’d? I do not
+doubt, but there were several Tracts of the Earth, much
+greater than that Town, that were not broken all to Pieces
+by their Fall. But you and your <i>English</i> Historian, are
+mistaken, if you suppose the Altars and Inscriptions mention’d
+by <i>Mela</i>, to have been ante-diluvian Altars and Inscriptions:
+Unless you will make the Fable of <i>Perseus</i>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_461'>461</span>and <i>Andromeda</i>, and the <i>Sea-Monster</i>, to have been
+an ante-diluvian Fable. Neither hath your Historian been
+lucky in translating those Words of <i>Mela</i>, <i>cum religione
+plurima, with the Grounds and Principles of their Religion</i>,
+which signify only, <i>with a religious Care of Superstition</i>.
+But to leave Fables, and proceed:</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>His last Argument against the Dissolution is this, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 296.
+Had the Dissolution of the Earth been the Cause of the
+Deluge, <i>It would have made God’s Covenant with</i> Noah,
+<i>a very vain and trifling Thing</i>. So much is true, That
+the Deluge, in the course of Nature, will not return
+again in the same Way. But unless God prevent it, it
+both may, and will return in another Way. That is, if
+the World continue long enough, the Mountains will
+wear and sink, and the Waters in Proportion rise, and
+overflow the whole Earth; as is plainly shewn, by a
+parallel Case, in the <i>first Book</i> of the <i>Theory</i>, <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> Besides,
+God might, when he pleas’d, by an extraordinary Power,
+and for the Sins of Men, bring another Deluge upon the
+World. And that is the Thing which <i>Noah</i> seems to have
+fear’d, and which God, by his Covenant, secur’d him
+against. For, as the Exceptor hath said himself, in answering
+an harder Objection, (<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 152.) <i>When God assigned to
+the Waters the Place of their Abode, he did not intend to
+fortify them in it against his own Omnipotence, or to divest
+himself of his Soveraign Prerogative of calling them forth
+when he pleased.</i> This being allowed, with what we said
+before, that Covenant was not vain nor trifling, either in
+Respect of an ordinary or extraordinary Providence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus we have done with all the Exceptions against the
+Theory: For the two next Chapters are concerning a
+new Hypothesis of his own; and the last of all excepts
+not against the Truth of the Theory, but the Certainty of
+it. In Reflection upon this whole Matter, give me leave to
+declare two Things: First, That I have not knowingly
+omitted any Objection that I thought of moment: Secondly,
+That I have not, from these Exceptions, found
+Reason to change any Part of the Theory, nor to alter
+my Opinion, as to any Particular in it. No doubt there
+are several Texts of Scripture, which, understood according
+to the Letter in a vulgar Way, stand cross, both
+to this, and other natural Theories. And a Child, that
+had read the first Chapters of <i>Genesis</i>, might have observ’d
+this as well as the Exceptor; but could not have loaded
+his Charge with so much Bitterness. Some Men, they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_462'>462</span>say, though of no great Valour, yet will fight excellently
+well behind a Wall. The Exceptor, behind a Text of
+Scripture, is very fierce and rugged: But in the open
+Field of Reason and Philosophy, he’s gentle and tractable.
+<i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i>Book</i> 2. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 9. <i>at the End.</i> The Theorist had
+declar’d his Intentions, and oblig’d himself, to give a
+full Account of <i>Moses</i> his <i>Cosmopœia</i>, or <i>six Day’s Creation</i>;
+but did not think it proper to be done in the vulgar
+Language, nor before the whole Theory was compleated.
+This might have spared much of the Exceptor’s Pains;
+but till that Account be given, if the Exceptor thinks fit
+to continue his Animadversions, and go through the two
+last Books, as he hath done the two first, it will not be
+unacceptable to the Theorist; provided it be done with Sincerity,
+in reciting the Words, and representing the Sense
+of the Author.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='fifteen'>XV.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>In this Chapter the Ante-theorist lays down a new Hypothesis
+for the Explication of the Deluge, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 299. And
+the War is chang’d, on his Side, from offensive, to defensive.
+’Tis but fair that he should lie down in his Turn;
+and if some Blows smart a little, he must not complain,
+because he begun the Sport. But let’s try his Hypothesis,
+without any further Ceremony, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 299, 300. The first
+Proposition laid down for the establishing of it, is this:
+<i>That the Flood was but fifteen Cubits high, above the ordinary
+Level of the Earth.</i> This is an unmerciful Paradox,
+and a very unlucky Beginning; for under what Notion
+must this Proportion be received? As a <i>Postulatum</i>, or as
+a <i>Conclusion</i>? If it be a <i>Postulatum</i>, it must be clear from
+its own Light, or acknowledg’d by general Consent. It
+cannot pretend to be clear from its own Light, because
+it is matter of Fact, which is not known, but by Testimony.
+Neither is it generally acknowleg’d; for the
+general Opinion is, that the Waters covered the Tops of
+the Mountains; nay, that they were fifteen Cubits higher
+than the Tops of the Mountains. And this he confesses
+himself, in these Words, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 300. <i>We shall find there is
+a great Mistake in the common Hypothesis, touching their
+Depth</i>: Namely, of the Waters. <i>For whereas they have
+been supposed to be fifteen Cubits higher than the highest
+Mountains: They were indeed but fifteen Cubits high in all,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_463'>463</span>above the Surface of the Earth.</i> And this Opinion, or Doctrine,
+he calls, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 329. <i>lin.</i> 19. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 31. <i>The general standing
+Hypothesis: The usual Hypothesis</i>: <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 339. <i>lin.</i> 18. <i>The
+usual Sense they have put upon the Sacred Story.</i> It must not
+therefore be made a <i>Postulatum</i>, that such an Hypothesis is
+false, but the Falsity of it must be demonstrated by good
+Proofs. Now I do not find that this new Hypothesis, of
+a <i>fifteen Cubit Deluge</i>, offers at any more than one single
+Proof, namely, from <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 20. But before we proceed
+to the Examination of that, give me leave to note
+one or two Things, wherein the new Theorist seems to be
+inconsistent with himself, or with good Sense.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>At his Entrance upon this new Hypothesis, he hath
+these Words, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 300.) <i>Not that I will be bound to defend
+what I say, as true and real</i>, &#38;c. But why then does he
+trouble himself or the World, with an Hypothesis, which
+he does not believe to be <i>true</i> and <i>real</i>? Or, if he
+does believe it to be so, why will he not defend it?
+For we ought to defend Truth. But he says moreover,
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 302. <i>lin.</i> 19.) <i>Our Supposition stands supported by Divine
+Authority; as being founded upon Scripture. Which
+tells us, as plainly as it can speak, that the Waters prevailed
+but fifteen Cubits upon the Earth.</i> If his Hypothesis be
+founded upon Scripture; and upon Scripture, <i>as plainly
+as it can speak</i>, why will not he defend it as <i>true</i> and
+<i>real</i>? For to be supported by Scripture, and by plain
+Scripture, is as much as we can alledge for the Articles
+of our Faith; which every one surely is bound to defend.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But this is not all the Difficulty we meet with. The
+whole Period which we quoted, runs thus: <i>Not that I
+will be bound to defend what I say, as true or real; any
+more than to believe (what I cannot well endure to speak)
+that the Church of God has ever gone on in an irrational
+way of explaining the Deluge: Which yet the must needs
+have done, if there be no other rational Method of explaining
+it, and no other intelligible Causes of it, than what the
+Theory has propos’d.</i> Now for the Word <i>Theory</i>, put the
+Word <i>Exceptor</i>, or <i>Exceptor’s Hypothesis</i>, and see if this
+Charge, <i>that the Church of God has ever gone on in an irrational
+way of explaining the Deluge</i>, does not fall as
+much upon the Exceptor’s new Hypothesis, as upon the
+Theory. If the Church Hypothesis was rational, what
+need he have invented a new one? Why does he not propose
+that Hypothesis, and defend it? I’m afraid it will be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_464'>464</span>found that he does not only contradict the Church Hypothesis,
+but reject it as mistaken and irrational. For what
+is the Church Hypothesis, but the <i>common Hypothesis</i>?
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 300. <i>l.</i> 24.) The <i>general standing</i> Hypothesis; the <i>usual</i>
+Hypothesis; the <i>usual Sense they put upon the sacred
+Story</i>; all these he rejects and disputes against, as you
+may see in the Places fore-cited: And also he calls them,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 312. <i>ult.</i> such <i>Inventions</i>, as <i>have been</i>, and <i>justly may be
+disgustful, not only to nice and squeamish, but to the best and
+soundest philosophick Judgments</i>. And <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 319. he says, by his
+Hypothesis, <i>We are excused from running to those Causes or
+Methods, which seem unreasonable to some, and unintelligible
+to others, and unsatisfactory to most.</i> And to name no more,
+he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 330. the ordinary Supposition, that the Mountains
+were cover’d with Water in the Deluge, brings on a
+<i>Necessity of setting up a new Hypothesis for explaining the
+Flood</i>. Now, whose Methods, Inventions, and Suppositions
+are these, which he reflects upon? Are they not
+the commonly receiv’d Methods and Suppositions? ’Tis
+plain, most of those which he mentions, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 310, 311,
+313, 314, 318.) are not the Theorist’s: For the Theorist
+had rejected before, (<i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr></i> 2, and 3.) those very
+Methods and Inventions, which the Exceptor rejects
+now; and so far he justifies the Theory<a id='r18'></a><a href='#f18' class='c013'><sup>[18]</sup></a>: These Reflections
+therefore must fall upon some other Hypothesis; and
+what Hypothesis is that, if it be not the Church Hypothesis?
+To conclude, I argue thus, in short, to shew the Exceptor
+inconsistent with himself in this Particular. The
+Church Way of explaining the Deluge, is either <i>rational</i>,
+or <i>irrational</i>. If he say it is <i>rational</i>, why does he desert
+it, and invent a new one? And if he says it is <i>irrational</i>,
+then that dreadful Thing, which <i>he cannot well endure to
+speak, that the Church of God has ever gone on in an irrational
+Way of explaining the Deluge</i>, falls flat upon himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much in general, for his Introduction. We proceed
+now to examine particularly his new Hypothesis:
+Which, as we told you before, consists chiefly in this,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_465'>465</span><i>That the Waters of the Deluge were but fifteen Cubits
+higher than the common unmountainous Surface of the
+Earth.</i> <i>This</i>, which seems so odd and extravagant, he
+says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 301. is the <i>Foundation</i> of the Hypothesis. And,
+which is still more surprizing, he says this Depth, or rather
+Shallowness of the Waters of the Deluge, is told us by
+Scripture, <i>as plainly as it can speak</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 302. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 23. This
+must needs raise our Curiosity, to see that Place of Scripture,
+which has been overlook’d by all the Learned hitherto.
+Well, ’tis <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 20. in these words, <i>Fifteen
+Cubits upwards did the Waters prevail.</i> This, methinks,
+is somewhat general; for the Basis of these <i>fifteen Cubits</i>
+not express’d in these Words. But why does our Author
+stop in the middle of a Verse? Why does he not transcribe
+the whole Verse; for the last Part of it is as good
+Scripture as the first? And that says plainly, that the <i>Mountains
+were cover’d with the Waters</i>. The whole Verse
+runs thus: <i>Fifteen Cubits upwards did the Waters prevail;
+AND THE MOUNTAINS WERE COVERED.</i>
+Now, if the Basis of these fifteen Cubits was the
+common Surface, or plain Level of the Earth, as this
+new Hypothesis will have it; how could fifteen Cubits,
+from that Basis, reach to the Tops of the Mountains?
+Are the highest Mountains but fifteen Cubits higher than
+the common Surface of the Earth? 1 <i>Sam.</i> <abbr title='seventeen'>xvii.</abbr> 4. <i>Goliah</i>
+was six Cubits and a Span high; so <i>Pic Tenariff</i> would
+not be thrice as high as <i>Goliah</i>: Yet <i>David</i> flung a Stone
+up to his Forehead. Take what Cubit you please, sacred
+or common, it does not amount to two Foot. So the
+Height of the greatest Mountains, from Bottom to Top,
+must not be thirty Foot, or ten Paces, according to this
+new Hypothesis. Who ever measured Mountains at this
+Rate? The modern Mathematicians allow for their Height
+a Mile perpendicular, upon a moderate Computation;
+and that makes three thousand Foot: How then could
+Waters that were not thirty Foot high, cover Mountains
+that were three thousand Foot high? That the highest
+Mountains of the Earth were cover’d with the Waters,
+you may see express’d more fully in the precedent Verse,
+<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 19. <i>And the Waters prevailed exceedingly upon
+the Earth. And all the high Hills that were under the
+whole Heavens were cover’d.</i> There can scarce be Words
+more plain and comprehensive. The Exceptor says, the
+Scripture tells us, as <i>plainly as it can speak</i>, that the Waters
+were but fifteen Cubits high from the common Surface
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_466'>466</span>of the Earth: And I say, the Scripture tells us as <i>plainly
+as it can speak</i>, That <i>all the high Hills under the whole
+Heaven were covered with Water</i>. And it must be a
+strange sort of Geometry, that makes fifteen Cubits of
+Water reach to the Top of the highest Hills. Lastly,
+the same History of <i>Moses</i> says, the Tops of the Mountains
+were discover’d, when the Waters begun to decrease,
+<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 5. Is not that a plain Demonstration that they
+were cover’d before, and cover’d with those Waters?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We may therefore safely conclude two Things: First,
+that this new Hypothesis, besides all other Faults, is contrary
+to the general Exposition of the Text of <i>Moses</i><a id='r19'></a><a href='#f19' class='c013'><sup>[19]</sup></a>.
+Secondly, that it is contrary to the general receiv’d Doctrine
+of the Deluge. And if he has deliver’d a Doctrine,
+contrary to the two, methinks it should be hard for him
+to maintain his Ground, and not pronounce, at the same
+Time, what he dreads so much to speak, <i>That the Church
+of God has ever gone on in an irrational Way of explaining
+the Deluge</i>. But let’s reflect a little upon this fifteen-cubit
+Deluge; to see what Figure it would make, or what
+Execution it would do upon Mankind, and upon other
+Creatures. If you will not believe <i>Moses</i> as to the overflowing
+of the Mountains, at least I hope you will believe
+him, as to the universal Destruction made by the Deluge.
+Hear his Words, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 21, 22, 23. we’ll take only
+the last Verse, which is this, <i>And every living Substance
+was destroyed, which was upon the Face of the Ground,
+both Man and Cattle, and creeping Things, and the Fowl
+of the Heavens; and they were destroyed from the Earth;
+and</i> Noah <i>only remained alive, and they that were with
+him in the Ark</i>. Now I would gladly know, how this
+could be verified in a fifteen-cubit Deluge? The Birds
+would naturally fly to the Tops of Trees, when the
+Ground was wet; and the Beasts would retire, by Degrees,
+to the Mountains and higher Parts of the Earth,
+as the lower begun to be overflow’d: And if no Waters
+could reach them there, how were they all destroy’d,
+while they had so many Sanctuaries and Places of Refuge?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_467'>467</span>Or if you suppose some of these Creatures had not
+Wit enough to save themselves, (though their Wit and
+Instincts lie chiefly in that) at least Mankind would not
+be so stupid; when Men see the Waters begin to rise,
+they could not fail to retire into Mountains: And tho’
+the upper Stories of their Houses might be sufficient to
+save them from fifteen Cubits of Water; yet if Fear
+made them think themselves not secure there, whither
+could it drive them, but still into higher Places? And an
+House seated upon an Eminency, or a Castle upon a
+Rock, would be always a safe Retreat from this diminutive
+Deluge. I speak all this upon the Suppositions of the
+Exceptor, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 215, 216, 292, <i>&#38;c.</i> who allows, not only
+Mountains and Rocks, but also Castles and Cities before
+the Deluge, built of good Timber, and Stone, and Iron,
+and such substantial Materials. But how, in such a Case,
+and in such a State of Things, all Mankind (except <i>Noah</i>
+and his Family) should be destroy’d by fifteen Cubits of
+Water, is a Lump of Incredibilities, too hard and big for
+me to swallow.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But there is still another Difficulty, that we have not
+mention’d: As those that were upon the Land might easily
+save themselves from Ruin, so those that were upon
+the Sea in Ships, would never come in Danger. For
+what would it signify to them, if the Sea was made a
+few Fathoms deeper, by these new Waters? It would
+bear their Vessels as well as it did before, and would be
+no more to them than a Spring-Tide. And lastly, how
+shall we justify the Divine Wisdom, which gave such
+punctual Orders, for the Building of an Ark, to save
+<i>Noah</i>, and a Set of Creatures for a new World, when
+there were so many more easy and obvious Ways to preserve
+them without that Trouble?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Objections, in my Opinion, are so plain and full,
+that it is not needful to add any more: Nor to answer
+such Evasions as the new Theorist attempts to make to
+some of them. As, for Instance, to that plain Objection
+from <i>Moses</i>’s Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 330. that <i>the Mountains were covered
+with the Waters</i>; he says, first, that it is a <i>Synecdoche</i>,
+where the Whole is put for a Part: Or, secondly, ’tis an
+<i>Hyperbole</i>, where more is said than understood: Or, thirdly,
+’tis a <i>poetical History:</i> Or, lastly, if none of these will
+do, by the <i>Tops</i> of the Mountains is to be understood the
+<i>Bottoms</i> of the Mountains, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 331, 333. and that cures
+all. The Truth is, he has taken a great deal of Pains in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_468'>468</span>the next Chapter, to cure an incurable Hypothesis. We
+will give you but one Instance more: ’Tis about the <i>Appearance
+of the Tops of the Mountains at the Decrease of the
+Deluge</i>; which argue strongly that they were cover’d in
+the Deluge. But take it in his own Words, with the
+Answer, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 337. <i>It is recorded</i>, <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 5. <i>that the Waters
+decreased continually until the tenth Month, and on the
+first Day of the Month WERE THE TOPS OF THE
+MOUNTAINS SEEN. Now if the Mountains had not been
+quite under Water, and so invisible for the Time they
+were overwhelmed, how could they be said to become visible
+again, or to be seen upon the Floods going off?</i> This is a
+plain and bold Objection: And after two Answers to it,
+which he seems to distrust, his third and last is this, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 339.
+<i>If these two Considerations will not satisfy, we must carry
+on the Enquiry a little farther, and seek for a third. And
+truly some one or other must needs be found out.—Thirdly,
+therefore we consider, that the Tops of the Mountains
+may be said to be seen at the Time mentioned, upon account
+of their EMERGENCY OUT OF DARKNESS, NOT
+OUT OF WATERS.</i> This is his final Answer. The Tops
+of the Mountains, at the Decrease of the Deluge, were seen;
+not that they were covered before with Water, says he, but
+with Darkness. Where finds he this Account: ’Tis neither
+in the Text, nor in Reason. If it was always so dark,
+and the Tops of the Mountains and Rocks naked and
+prominent every where, how could the Ark avoid them
+in that Darkness? Moreover, if the Deluge was made in
+that gentle way that he supposes, I see no Reason to imagine
+that there would be Darkness, after the forty Days
+Rain. For these Rains being fallen, and all the Vapours
+and Clouds of the Air discharg’d, methinks there should
+have ensued an extraordinary Clearness of the Air, as we
+often see after rainy Seasons. Well, ’tis true: But the
+Rains he supposes were no sooner fallen, but the Sun retracted
+them again in Vapours, with that Force and Swiftness,
+that it kept the Air in perpetual Darkness. Thus he
+says afterwards, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 341. He’s mightily beholden to the
+Sun, upon many Accounts; and the Sun is no less beholden
+to him; for he gave him a miraculous Power to
+raise Mountains, and draw up Waters. ’Tis well the
+Sun did not presently fall to his old Work again, of raising
+Mountains out of this moist Earth, as the Exceptor says
+he did, when the Earth was first drain’d. <i>See <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> 10. That
+he contented himself to suck up the Waters only, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_469'>469</span>let the Earth alone: We are not a little beholden to him
+for this. For he seems to have had the same Power and
+Opportunity, at the Decrease of the Deluge, of making
+new Ravages upon the Earth, that he had before when it
+was first drain’d. But let’s see <i>how</i>, or <i>when</i>, these Waters
+were suck’d up, or resolv’d into Vapours.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Upon the Expiration of the forty Days Rain, whether
+was the Air purg’d of Vapours and clear, or no? Yes,
+it was purg’d, he says, (<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 343.) <i>The Atmosphere was
+never so exhausted of Vapours, and never so thin, as when
+the Waters were newly come down.</i> Then, in that clear
+Air the Tops of the Mountains might have been seen,
+if they lay above Water. But <i>Moses</i> says, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 5.
+it was in the <i>tenth Month</i> that they begun to be seen,
+when the Waters were decreas’d; ’twas therefore the
+Waters, not the gross Air, that hinder’d the Sight of them
+before. And according to this Method of the Exceptor,
+after the first forty Days, the Deluge begun to decrease.
+For the Sun forthwith set his Engines a-work, and resolv’d
+the Waters into Vapours and Exhalations at such
+a Rate, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 341. that he presently made the Atmosphere
+dark with thick Mists and Clouds; and, in Proportion,
+lessen’d the Waters of the Deluge. But we do not read
+in <i>Moses</i>, of any Abatement in the Deluge, till the End
+of one hundred and fifty Days; (<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 3.) which is
+four Months after this Term. The Truth is, the whole Notion
+of <i>spending the Waters of the Deluge by Evaporation</i>,
+is no better than what the Exceptor suspected it would be
+thought, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 343. <i>A mere Fancy, a whimsical groundless Figment.</i>
+For what could the Sun do, in the Northern and
+Southern Parts of the World, towards the exhaling of
+these Waters? And in the temperate Climates, why should
+they not fall again in Rains, (if he had a Power to exhale
+them) as they do now? Was not the Earth in the same
+Position, and the Sun of the same force? Besides, where
+does he find this Notion in Scripture, that the Waters of
+the Deluge were consum’d by Evaporation? <i>Moses</i> says,
+the <i>Waters returned from off the Earth, in going and returning</i>,
+<abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 3, 5. That is, after frequent Reciprocations,
+they settled at length in their Channels; where
+<i>Bounds were set them, that they might not pass over; that
+they return not again to cover the Earth</i>. Seeing therefore
+this Notion hath no Foundation, either in Scripture or
+Reason, ’tis rightly enough stil’d, in the Exceptor’s Words,
+a <i>mere Fancy</i>, and <i>groundless Figment</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_470'>470</span>But I think we have had enough of these Shifts and Evasions.
+Let us now proceed to the second Part of his
+new Hypothesis, which is this, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 303. That the <i>Abyss</i>, or
+<i>Tehom-Rabbah</i>, which was broken open at the Deluge, and
+(together with the Rains) made the Flood, was nothing
+but the Holes and Caverns of Rocks and Mountains;
+which open’d their Mouths at that Time, and pour’d out
+a great Quantity of Water. To support this new Notion
+of <i>Tehom-Rabbah</i>, he alledgeth but one single Text of
+Scripture, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seventy-eight'>lxxviii.</abbr> 15. <i>He clave the Rocks in the Wilderness,
+and gave them Drink, as out of the great Depths</i>;
+that is, copiously and abundantly, as if it were out of
+the great Deep. So the next Verse implies, and so it is
+generally understood: As you may see both by Interpreters,
+and also by the <i>Septuagint</i> and <i>Vulgate</i> Translations,
+and those of the <i>Chaldee Paraphrase</i>, and the <i>Syriack</i>.
+But the Exceptor, by all Means, will have these Holes
+in the Rocks to be the same with the <i>Mosaical Abyss</i>, or
+great Deep, that was broken open at the Deluge: So the
+<i>great Deep</i> was not one Thing, or one continued Cavity,
+as <i>Moses</i> represents it, but ten thousand Holes, separate
+and distant one from another. Neither must the great
+Deep, according to him, signify a <i>low Place</i>, but an <i>high
+Place</i>: For he confesses these Caverns were higher than
+the common Level of the Earth<a id='r20'></a><a href='#f20' class='c013'><sup>[20]</sup></a>. But I do not see
+how, with any tolerable Propriety, or good Sense,
+that which is higher than the Surface of the Earth can be
+called the <i>great Deep</i>. An Abyss in the Earth, or in the
+Water, is certainly <i>downwards</i>, in respect of their common
+Surface, as much as a Pit is <i>downwards</i>; and what is
+downwards from us, we cannot suppose to be above us,
+without confounding all Dimensions, and all Names of
+Things; calling that low which is high, a Mountain
+a Valley, or a Garret a Cellar.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Neither is there any Thing in this Text, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> lxxviii. 15.
+that can justly induce us to believe the <i>great Abyss</i> to be
+the same Thing with Caverns in Rocks. For whether you
+suppose it to be noted here as a miraculous Thing, that
+God should give them Water <i>out of a Rock, or out of a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_471'>471</span>Flint</i><a id='r21'></a><a href='#f21' class='c013'><sup>[21]</sup></a>, as plentifully as if it had been out of the great
+Abyss; or whether you understand the Original of Fountains
+to be noted here, which are said in Scripture to come
+from the Sea, or the great Abyss; neither of these Senses
+make any Thing to the Purpose of the new Hypothesis, and
+yet they are the fairest and easiest Sense that can be put
+upon the Words; and that which agrees best with other
+Places of Scripture, where the same Matter of Fact, or
+the same History is related: And therefore there can be
+no Necessity, from this Text, of changing the general
+Notion and Signification of <i>Deep</i>, or <i>Abyss</i>; both from
+that which it hath in common Use, and that which it hath
+in Scripture Use.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I say, as in the common Use of Words, <i>Deep</i>, or <i>Abyss</i>,
+signifies some low or inferior Place; so the general Use
+of it in Scripture is, in the same Sense, either to signify
+the Sea, or some subterraneous Place. <i>Who shall descend
+into the</i> (Abyss, or) <i>Deep</i>? says the Apostle, <i>Rom.</i> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 7. Is
+that as much as if he had said, Who shall <i>ascend</i> into the
+Holes of the Rocks? And when <i>Jacob</i> speaks of the Blessings
+of the Abyss, or of the Deep, he calls them the Blessings
+of the <i>Deep that lyeth under</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 25. In like
+Manner, <i>Moses</i> himself calls it the <i>Deep that couched beneath</i>,
+<i>Deut.</i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 13. And I know no Reason why we
+should not understand the same <i>Deep</i> there, that he mentioned
+before in the History of the Deluge; which therefore
+was subterraneous, as this is. Then, as for the other
+Use of the Word, namely, for the Sea, or any Part
+of the Sea, (whose Bottom is always lower than the Level
+of the Earth,) that is the most common Use of it in
+Scripture. And I need not give you Instances which are
+every where obvious.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>One must needs think it strange, therefore, that any Man
+of Judgement should break thorough both the common
+Use of a Word, and so many plain Texts of Scripture,
+that show the Signification of it, for the sake of one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_472'>472</span>Text, which, at most, is but dubious; and then lay such
+Stress upon that new Signification, as to found a new
+Doctrine upon it: And a Doctrine that is neither supported
+by Reason, nor agrees with the History of the Deluge.
+For, as we noted before, at the Decrease of the
+Deluge, the Waters are said to <i>return from off the Earth,
+<abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 3</i>. Did they not return to the Places
+from whence they came? But if those Places were the Caverns
+in the Rocks, whose Mouths lay higher than the Surface
+of the Deluge, as he says they did, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 303, 305</i>. I see
+no Possibility of the Waters returning into them. But the
+Exceptor hath found out a marvellous Invention to invade
+this Argument. He will have the <i>returning</i> of the Waters
+to be understood of their returning into their Principles,
+(that is, into Vapours,) not to their Places: In
+good Time: So the Dove’s <i>returning</i> was her returning
+into her Principles; that is, into an Egg, not into the
+Ark. Subtleties ill-founded, argue two Things, Wit and
+Want of Judgment. <i>Moses</i> speaks as plainly of the local
+Return of the Waters, <i>in going and returning</i>; as of the
+local going and returning of the Raven and Dove. See
+<i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 3, and 5</i>. compar’d with Verse seventh and
+ninth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, That we end this Discourse; the whole Notion
+of these Water-Pots in the Tops of Mountains, and
+of the broaching of them at the Deluge, is a groundless
+Imagination. What Reason have we to believe, that there
+were such Vessels then, more than now, if there was no
+Fraction of the Earth at the Deluge, to destroy them?
+And he ought to have gag’d these Casks, (according to his
+own Rule, <i><abbr title='Chapter'>Ch.</abbr> 3.</i>) and told us the Number and Capacity
+of them, that we might have made some Judgment of the
+Effect. Besides, if the opening the Abyss at the Deluge
+had been the opening of Rocks, why did not <i>Moses</i> express
+it so; and tell us, that the <i>Rocks were cloven, and the
+Waters gushed out</i>, and so made the Deluge? This would
+have been as intelligible, if it had been true, as to tell us
+that the <i>Tehom-Rabbah</i> was broken open. But there is not
+one Word of <i>Rocks</i>, or the <i>cleaving of Rocks</i>, in the History
+of the Flood. Upon all Accounts, therefore, we
+must conclude, that this Virtuoso might have as well suspected,
+that his whole Theory of the Deluge, as one Part
+of it, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 343.</i> would be accounted <i>a mere Fancy</i>, and
+<i>groundless Figment</i>.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_473'>473</span>
+ <h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='sixteen'>XVI.</abbr></span></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>This Chapter is made up of eight Objections, against
+his own Hypothesis. And those that have a
+mind to see them, may read them in the Author. I have
+taken as much Notice of them as I thought necessary, in
+the precedent Chapter; and therefore leave the Exceptor
+now to deal with them all together. I omitted one Objection
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 311.) concerning the shutting up of the Abyss,
+and the Fountains of the Abyss, because it was answer`d
+before in the <i>English</i> Theory, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 143. namely, there were
+Fountains in the Abyss, as much as Windows in Heaven;
+and those were shut up, as well as these; that is, ceas’d
+to act, and were put into a Condition to continue the Deluge
+no longer.</p>
+<h3 class='c009'><span class='sc'>Chap. <abbr title='seventeen'>XVII.</abbr></span></h3>
+<p class='c004'>There is nothing in this Chapter against the Truth
+of the Theory; but the Author is blam’d for believing
+it to be true: I think it had been more blame-worthy,
+if he had troubled the World with a Theory which he did
+not believe to be true, and taken so much Pains to compose
+what he thought himself no better than a Romance.
+As to what the Theorist has said in Reference to his Assurance
+or Belief of the Theory, which the Exceptor calls
+<i>Positiveness</i>, upon Examination, I cannot find any Thing
+amiss in his Conduct, as to that Particular. For, first, he
+imposes his Sentiments upon no Man; he leaves every one
+their full Liberty of dissenting. <i>Preface to the Reader</i> at
+the End. <i>Lastly, in Things purely speculative, as these are,
+and no Ingredients of our Faith, it is free to differ from one
+another in our Opinions and Sentiments; and so I remember
+<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr></i> Austin <i>hath observed upon this very Subject of Paradise.
+Wherefore, as we desire to give no Offence our selves, so
+neither shall we take any at the Difference of Judgment in
+others; provided this Liberty be mutual, and that we all
+agree to study PEACE, TRUTH, and a GOOD LIFE.</i>
+And as the Theorist imposes his Sentiments upon no
+Man; so, as to Matter of Certainty, he distinguisheth
+always betwixt the <i>Substance</i> of the Theory, and <i>Particularities</i>.
+So, at the latter End of the <i>first Book</i>, this Profession
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_474'>474</span>is made, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 207. <i>I mean this only</i>,
+speaking about Certainty, <i>as to the general Parts of the
+Theory. For as to Particularities, I look upon them only as
+problematical; and accordingly I affirm nothing therein, but
+with a Power of Revocation, and a Liberty to change my
+Opinion when I shall be better inform’d.</i> And accordingly
+he says in another Place, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 12. <i>I know how
+subject we are to Mistakes, in these great and remote Things,
+when we descend to Particularities. But I am willing to
+expose the Theory to a full Trial, and to shew the Way for
+any to examine it, provided they do it with Equity and Sincerity.
+I have no other Design than to contribute my Endeavours
+to find out Truth</i>, &#38;c. Lastly, to cite no more
+Places, he says, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 402. <i>There are many particular
+Explications that are to be consider’d with more Liberty
+and Latitude; and may, perhaps, upon better Thoughts,
+and better Observations, be corrected</i>, &#38;c. The Theorist
+having thus stated and bounded his Belief or Assurance,
+and given Liberty of dissenting to all others, according
+to their particular Judgments or Inclinations, I see nothing
+unfair or undecent in this Conduct. How could the Observator
+have made it more unexceptionable? Would he
+have had the Theorist to have profess’d Scepticism, and declar’d
+that he believ’d his own Theorist no more than a
+Romance or fantastical Idea? that had been both to bely
+his own Conscience, and to mock the World. I remember
+I have heard a good Author once with, that there
+were an <i>Act of Parliament</i>, that whoever printed a Book,
+should, when he took a License, swear, that he thought
+the <i>Contents of his Book to be true</i>, as to Substance: And
+I think such a Method would keep off a great many Impertinencies.
+We ought not to trouble the World with
+our roving Thoughts, merely out of an Itch of Scripturiency,
+when we do not believe our selves what we write.
+I must always profess my Assent to the Substance of that
+Theory; and am the more confirm’d in it by the Weakness
+and Inefficacy of these Exceptions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We need not take Notice of the particular Citations
+he makes use of, to prove this <i>Positiveness</i> of the Theorist;
+for they only affirm what we still own: That the
+Theory is more than an <i>Idea</i>, or that it is not an <i>imaginary
+Idea</i>, or that it is a <i>Reality</i>: And, together with its
+Proofs from Scripture, especially from <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>, hath
+more than the Certainty of a <i>bare Hypothesis</i>, or a <i>moral
+Certainty</i>. These are the Expressions he cites, and we
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_475'>475</span>own all, that, in fair Construction, they amount to; and
+find no Reason, either from the Nature of the Thing, or
+from his Objections, to change our Opinion, or make any
+Apology for too much Positiveness.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I wish the Exceptor had not more to answer for, as to
+his <i>Partiality</i>, than the Theorist hath, for his <i>Positiveness</i>.
+And now, that we draw to a Conclusion, it will not be
+amiss to observe, how well the Exceptor hath answered
+that Character, which he gave himself at the Beginning of
+his Work. These are his Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 43. <i>This I will endeavour
+to do</i>, namely, To examine the Theory, <i>with all
+Sincerity; and that only as a Friend and Servant to Truth:
+And therefore, with such Candor, Meekness, and Modesty,
+as becomes one who assumes and glories in so fair a Character:
+And also with such Respect to the Virtuoso who wrote
+the Theory, as may testify to the World, that I esteem his
+Learning, while I question his Opinion.</i> ’Tis of little Consequence
+what Opinion he has of the <i>Virtuoso</i>, as he calls
+him: But let us see with what <i>Sincerity</i> and <i>Meekness</i>, he
+has examin’d his Work. As to his Sincerity, we have
+given you some Proofs of it before, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 26.) both in his defective
+and partial Citations; and also, in his never taking
+Notice of the last Edition of the Theory; where several
+Citations he has made use of, are not extant. Now, by
+his own Rule, he ought to have had regard to this; for he
+says, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 356.) he will there take Notice only of the <i>English</i>
+Edition, <i>as coming out after the other; and so with more
+Deliberation and mature Thoughts of Things</i>. By the same
+Reason, say I, he ought to have taken Notice of the last
+Edition of the Theory, as being the last Product, and the
+most <i>deliberate and mature Thoughts</i> of the Author. But
+this, it seems, was not for his Purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for his Sincerity: Now for his <i>Meekness</i>.
+So impatient he is to fall upon his Adversary, that he
+begins his Charge in the Preface, and a very fierce one
+it is, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 3.) <i>The Theorist hath assaulted Religion, and that
+in the very Foundation of it.</i> Here I expected to have
+found two or three Articles of the Creed assaulted or
+knock’d down by the Theory. But that is not the Case,
+it seems, he understands something more general, namely,
+our contradicting Scripture: For so he explains himself
+in the next Page. <i>In several Things (as will appear
+by our Discourse) it contradicts Scripture; and by too positive
+asserting the Truth of its Theorems, makes that to
+be false, upon which our Religion is founded.</i> Let us remember,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_476'>476</span>that this contracting Scripture here pretended,
+is only in natural Things; and also observe, how far the
+Exceptor himself, in such Things, hath contradicted Scripture.
+As for other Reproofs which he gives us, those that
+are more gentle, I easily pass over; but somewhere he
+makes our Assertions, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 78. <i>too bold an Affront to Scripture</i>.
+And in another Place represents them, as (either
+directly, or consequentially) <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 286. <i>Blasphemy against the
+Holy Ghost</i>, which is the unpardonable Sin, <i><abbr title='Matthew'>Matt.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twelve'>xii.</abbr> 31.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>There is no Pleasure in repeating such Expressions, and
+dreadful Sentences. Let us rather observe, if the Exceptor
+hath not made himself obnoxious to them. But first, we
+must state the Case truly, that so the Blame may not fall
+upon the Innocent. The Case therefore is this, <i>Whether</i>,
+to go contrary to the Letter of Scripture, in Things
+that relate to the natural World, be <i>destroying the Foundations
+of Religion</i>, <i>affronting Scripture</i>, and <i>blaspheming
+the Holy Ghost</i>? In the Case propos’d, <i>We</i> take the <i>Negative</i>,
+and stand upon that Plea. But the Exceptor hath
+taken the <i>Affirmative</i>; and therefore, all those heavy Charges
+must fall upon himself, if he go contrary to the literal
+Sense of Scripture, in his philosophical Opinions or Assertions.
+And that he hath done so, we will give you
+some Instances, out of this Treatise of his; <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 314. He
+says, <i>It it most absurd to think, that the Earth is the Center
+of the World.</i> Then the Sun stands still, and the Earth
+moves, according to his Doctrine. But this is expressly
+contrary to Scripture, in many Places. The <i>Sun rejoices,
+as a strong Man, to run his Race</i>, says <i>David</i> <abbr title='Psalm'>Ps.</abbr> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> 5, 6.
+<i>His going forth is from the End of the Heaven, and his
+Circuit unto the Ends of it</i>, <i>Josh.</i> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> 12, 13. 2 <i>Kings</i> <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr>
+10, 11. <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='thirty-eight'>xxxviii.</abbr> 8. No such Thing, says the Exceptor;
+the Sun hath no Race to run; he is fix’d in his
+Seat, without any progressive Motion. He hath no Course
+from one End of the Heavens to the other. In like manner,
+<i>Sun, stand thou still upon</i> Gibeon, says the sacred Author,
+<i>and the Sun stood still</i>. No, says the Exceptor, ’twas
+the Earth stood still, upon that Miracle; for the Sun always
+stood still. And ’tis <i>absurd</i>, yea, <i>most absurd</i>,
+to think otherwise, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 157. And he blames <i>Tycho Brahe</i> for
+following Scripture in this Particular. Now, is not this,
+in the Language of the Exceptor, to <i>destroy the Foundations
+of Religion</i>, to <i>affront Scripture</i>, and <i>blaspheme against
+the Holy Ghost</i>? But this is not all: The Exceptor says,
+(<i>Chap.</i> 10.) the Sun rais’d up the Mountains on the third
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_477'>477</span>Day; and the Sun was not in being till the fourth Day,
+according to Scripture, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> 14. The Moon also,
+which, according to Scripture, was not created till the
+fourth Day, he says, would hinder the Formation of the Earth,
+which was done the third Day. Lastly, in this new
+Hypothesis, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i>74. he makes the Waters of the Deluge to
+be but fifteen Cubits higher than the Plain, or common
+Surface of the Earth; which Scripture affirms expressly
+to have cover’d the Tops of the highest Hills, or Mountains,
+under Heaven, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>vii.</abbr> 19, 20. These two Things
+are manifestly inconsistent. The Scripture says, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 5.
+they cover’d the Tops of the highest Mountains: And the
+Exceptor says they reached but fifteen Cubits about, or
+upon the Skirts of them. This, I think, is truly to contradict
+Scripture; or, according to his Talent of loading
+Things with great Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 216. <i>This is not only flatly, but
+loudly contradictory to the most express Word of the infallible
+God.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Observations, I know, are of small Use, unless,
+perhaps, to the Exceptor himself. But, if you please,
+upon this Occasion, let us reflect a little upon the literal
+Style of Scripture; and the different Authority of that
+Style, according to the Matter that it treats of. The
+Subject Matter of Scripture is either such as lies without
+the Cognizance and Comprehension of human Reason,
+or such as lies within it: If it be the former of these,
+’tis what we call properly and purely <i>Revelation</i>; and
+there we must adhere to the literal Style, because we have
+nothing to guide us but that. Such is the Doctrine of
+the Trinity, and the Incarnation; wherein we have nothing
+to authorize our Deviation from the Letter and
+Words of Scripture: And therefore the School-Divines,
+who have spun those Doctrines into a Multitude of Niceties
+and Subtleties, had no Warrant for what they did,
+and their Conclusions are of no Authority.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The second Matter or Subject of Scripture is such as
+falls under the View and Comprehension of Reason,
+more or less; and, in the same Proportion, gives us a Liberty
+to examine the literal Sense; how far it is consistent
+with Reason. and the Faculties of our Mind. Of this
+Nature there are several Things in the holy Writings,
+both moral, theological, and natural, wherein we recede
+from the Letter, when it is manifestly contrary to the
+Dictates of Reason. I will give some Instances in every
+kind: First, as to moral Things. Our Saviour says,
+<i><abbr title='Matthew'>Mat.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>v.</abbr> 29, 30. <i>If thy right Eye offend thee, pluck it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_478'>478</span>out: If thy Right Hand offend thee, cut it off.</i> There is
+no Man that thinks himself obliged to the literal Practice
+of this Doctrine; and yet it is plainly delivered, you see,
+in these Terms in the Gospel. Nay, which is more,
+our Saviour backs and enforces the Letter of this Doctrine
+with a <i>Reason</i>: <i>For it is profitable for thee that one of
+thy Members should perish, and not that thy whole Body
+should be cast into Hell</i>: As if he had intended, that his Precept
+should have been really executed according to the
+Letter. In like manner our Saviour says, <i>If any Man
+wilt sue thee at Law, and take away thy Coat, let him have
+thy Cloak also.</i> And yet there is no Christian so good-natur’d
+as to practice this, nor any Casuist so rigid as to
+enjoy it, according to the Letter. Other Instances you
+may see in our Saviour’s Sermon upon the Mount, where
+we do not scruple to lay aside the Letter, when it is judg’d
+contrary to the Light of Nature, or impracticable in human
+Society.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In all other Things also, that lie within the Sphere of
+human Reason, we are allowed to examine their <i>Practicability</i>,
+or their <i>Credibility</i>. To instance in something
+theological, the Words of <i>Consecration</i> in the Sacrament.
+Our Saviour, when he instituted the last Supper,
+us’d these Words: <i>This is my Body</i>, taking the Bread
+into his Hand; which Words, join’d with that Action,
+are very formal and expressive; yet we do not scruple
+to forsake the literal Sense, and take the Words in another
+Way: But upon what Warrant do we this? because the
+literal Sense contains an Absurdity; because it contradicts
+the Light of Nature; because it is inconsistent with the
+Idea of a Body, and so destroys it self. In like Manner,
+upon the Idea of the Divine Nature, we dispute absolute
+Reprobation, and Eternity of Torments, against the Letter
+of Scripture. And, lastly, whether the Resurrection
+Body consists of the same individual Parcels and Particles,
+whereof the mortal Body consisted, before it was
+putrefied or dispers’d? And, <i>Phil.</i> <abbr title='four'>iv.</abbr> 3. <i><abbr title='Apocalypse'>Apoc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>iii.</abbr> 5 and
+<abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 12. whether the <i>Books of Life</i> are to be understood in
+a literal Sense?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The last Head is of such Things as belong to the natural
+World. And to this may be reduced innumerable
+Instances, where we leave the literal Sense, if inconsistent
+with Science or Experience. And the Truth is,
+if we should follow the vulgar Style and literal Sense of
+Scripture, we should all be <i>Anthropomorphites</i>, as to the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_479'>479</span>Nature of God: And as to the Nature of his Works in
+the external Creation, we must renounce Philosophy and
+natural Experience, if the Descriptions and Accounts
+given in Scripture, concerning the <i>Heavens</i>, the <i>Earth</i>,
+the <i>Sea</i>, and other Parts of the World, be received as
+accurate and just Representations of the State and Properties
+of those Bodies. Neither is there any Danger, lest
+this should affect or impeach the Divine Veracity; for
+Scripture never undertook, nor was ever designed to teach
+us Philosophy, or the Arts and Sciences: And whatsoever
+the Light of Nature can reach and comprehend, is
+improperly the Subject of Revelation. But some Men,
+out of Love to their own Ease, and in Defence of their
+Ignorance, are not only for a Scripture Divinity, but also
+for a Scripture Philosophy. ’Tis a cheap and compendious
+Way, and saves them the Trouble of farther Study
+or Examination.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Upon the whole, you see, it is no Fault to recede
+from the literal Sense of Scripture; but the Fault is, when
+we leave it without a just Cause: As it is no Fault for a
+Man to separate from a Church, or for a Prince to make
+War against his Neighbour, but to do the one or the other,
+without a just Cause, is a real Fault. We all leave the
+literal Sense in certain Cases, and therefore that alone
+is no sufficient Charge against any Man. But he that
+makes a Separation, if I may so call it, without good
+Reasons, he is truly obnoxious to Censure. The great
+Result of all, therefore, is this, to have some common
+Rule to direct us, when every one ought to follow, and
+when to leave, the literal Sense. And that Rule which
+is generally agreed upon by good Interpreters, is this, <i>Not</i>
+to leave the literal Sense, when the Subject-Matter will
+bear it, without Absurdity or Incongruity. This Rule I
+have always proposed to my self, and always endeavoured
+to keep close to it. But some inconsiderate Minds
+make every Departure from the Letter, let the Matter or
+Cause be what it will, to be an Affront to Scripture:
+And there, where we have the greatest Liberty, I mean
+in Things that relate to the natural World, they have no
+more Indulgence or Moderation, than if it was an Intrenchment
+upon the Articles of Faith. In this Particular
+I cannot excuse the present Animadverter; yet, I
+must needs say, he is a very Saint in Comparison of another
+Animadverter, who hath writ upon the same Subject;
+but neither like a Gentleman, nor like a Christian,
+nor like a Scholar. And such Writings answer themselves.</p>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_480'>480</span>
+ <h2 class='c007'>A SHORT CONSIDERATION OF <i>Mr.</i> <span class='sc'>Erasmus Warren’s</span> DEFENCE OF HIS EXCEPTIONS AGAINST THE <i>THEORY</i> of the <i>EARTH</i>.</h2>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'><i>In a</i> <span class='sc'>Letter</span> <i>to a Friend</i>.</p>
+<p class='c004'><i>SIR</i>,</p>
+<p class='c004'>I have read over Mr. <i>Erasmus Warren’s</i>
+Defence of his Exceptions against <i>the Theory
+of the Earth</i>; which, it may be, few will do
+after me; as not having Curiosity or Patience
+enough to read such a long Pamphlet, of
+private or little Use. Such Altercations as these, are to
+you, I believe, as they are to me, a sort of Folly; but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_481'>481</span>the Aggressor must answer for that, who makes the Trouble
+unavoidable to the Defendant. And ’tis an unpleasant
+Exercise, a kind of Wild-goose-chase; where he that
+leads must be followed, through all his Extravagancies.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Author of this Defence must pardon me, if I have
+less Apprehensions both of his Judgment and Temper,
+than I had before: For, as he is too verbose and long-winded
+ever so make a close Reasoner; so it was unexpected
+to me to find his Style so captious and angry, as
+it is in this last Paper. And the same Strain continuing
+to the End, I was sorry to see that his Blood had been
+kept upon the Fret, for so many Months together, as the
+Pamphlet was a making.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He might have made his Work much shorter, without
+any Loss to the Sense. If he had left out his popular
+Enlargements, juvenile Excursions, Stories and Strains of
+Country-Rhetorick, (whereof we shall give you some
+Instances hereafter) his Book would have been reduc’d to
+half the Compass: And if from that reduc’d half, you
+takeaway again trifling Altercations and pedantick Repartees,
+the Remainder would fall into the Compass of a
+few Pages. For my part, I am always apt to suspect a
+Man that makes me a long Answer; for the precise Point
+to be spoken to, in a multitude of Words, is easily lost,
+and Words are often multiplied for that very Purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>However, if his Humour be verbose, it might have been,
+at least, more easy and inoffensive; there having been no
+Provocation given him in that kind. But let us guess, if
+you please, as well as we can, what it was in the late
+Answer, that so much discomposed the Exceptor and altered
+his Style: Either it must be the Words and Language
+of that Answer, or the Sense of it, without Respect
+to the Language. As to the Words, ’tis true, he
+gives some instances of Expressions offensive to him; yet
+they are but three or four, and those, methinks, not very
+high, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 31. tho’ he calls them the <i>Brats of Passion</i>; they
+are these, <i>indiscreet</i>, <i>rude</i>, <i>injudicious</i> and <i>uncharitable</i>.
+These Characters, it seems, are applied to the Exceptor,
+in some part of the Answer, upon Occasion offer’d; and
+whether those Occasions were just or no, I dare appeal to
+your Judgment. As to the Word <i>rude</i>, which seems the
+most harsh, I had said indeed, that he was <i>rude</i> to <i>Anaxagoras</i>;
+and so he was, not to allow him to be a competent
+Witness in matter of Fact, whom all Antiquity, sacred
+and prophane, hath represented to us as one of the greatest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_482'>482</span>Men amongst the Antients. I had also said in another
+Place, that <i>a rude</i>, and <i>injudicious Defence of Scripture</i>,
+by <i>Railing and ill Language</i>, is the <i>true way to lessen and
+disparage it</i>. This I still justify as true; and if he apply it
+to himself, much good may it do him. I do not remember
+that it is any where said, that he was <i>rude</i> to the
+Theorist; if it be, ’tis possibly upon his charging him with
+<i>Blasphemy, horrid Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost</i>, for
+saying, <i>the Earth was dissolv’d at the Deluge</i>. And I appeal
+to any Man, whether this is not an <i>uncharitable</i>, and
+a <i>rude</i> Charge. If a Man had cursed God, or call’d our
+Saviour an Impostor, what could he have been charg’d
+with more, than <i>Blasphemy, horrid Blasphemy</i>? And if the
+same things be charg’d upon a Man, for saying, the Earth
+was dissolv’d at the Deluge, either all Crimes and Errors
+must be equal, or the Charge must be rude. But however
+it must be rude in the Opinion of the Theorist, who thinks
+this neither Crime nor Error.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>What says the <i>Defence</i> of the Exceptions to this;
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 153. it makes use of Distinctions for Mitigation of the
+Censure; and says, it will <i>indirectly</i>, <i>consequentially</i>, or
+<i>reductively be of blasphemous Importance</i>. Here Blasphemy
+is changed into <i>blasphemous Importance</i>, and <i>horrid
+Blasphemy</i> into <i>consequential</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i> But taking all these Mitigations,
+it seems however, according to his Theology,
+all Errors in Religion are <i>Blasphemy</i> or of <i>blasphemous
+Importance</i>. For all Errors in Religion must be against
+Scripture one way or other; at least consequentially, indirectly,
+or reductively; and all that are so, according to
+the Doctrine of this Author, must be <i>Blasphemy</i>, or of
+<i>blasphemous Importance</i>. This is crude Divinity, and the
+Answerer had Reason to subjoin what he cited before,
+that a rude and injudicious Defence of Scripture, is the
+true way to lessen and disparage it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for <i>rude</i> and <i>uncharitable</i>; as for the other
+two Words, <i>indiscreet</i> and <i>injudicious</i>, I cannot easily be
+induc’d to make any Apology for them. On the contrary,
+I’m afraid I shall have Occasion to repeat these Characters
+again, especially the latter of them, in the Perusal
+of this Pamphlet. However, they do not look like
+<i>Brats of Passion</i>, as he calls them; but rather as cool and
+quiet Judgments, made upon Reasons and Premisses. I
+had forgot one Expression more: The Answer, it seems,
+somewhere calls the Exceptor a <i>Dabler</i> in <i>Philosophy</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_483'>483</span>which he takes ill: But that he is a Dabler, both in Philosophy
+and Astronomy, I believe will evidently appear
+upon this second Examination of the same Passages upon
+which that Character was grounded. We will therefore
+leave that to the Trial, when we come to those Passages
+again, in the following Discourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These, <i>Sir</i>, as far as I remember, are the Words and
+Expressions which he hath taken Notice of, as offensive
+to him, and Effects of Passion. But, methinks, these
+cannot be of Force sufficient to put him so much out of
+Humour, and change his Style so much, as we find it to
+be in this last Pamphlet: And therefore I am inclinable
+to believe, that ’tis the Sense, rather than the Words, or
+Language of the Answer, that hath had this Effect upon
+him; and that some unhappy Passages, that have expos’d
+his Mistakes, were the true Causes of these Resentments.
+Such Passages I will guess at, as well as I can, and note
+them to you as they occur to my Memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But give me leave, first, upon this occasion of his new
+way of Writing, to distinguish and mind you of three sorts
+of arguing, which you may call <i>reasoning</i>, <i>wrangling</i>, and
+<i>scolding</i>. In fair reasoning, Regard is had to Truth only,
+not to Victory, let it fall on whether side it will. But
+in wrangling and scolding, ’tis Victory that is pursued
+and aim’d at in the first Place, with little Regard to Truth.
+And if the Contention be managed in civil terms, ’tis but
+wrangling; if in uncivil, ’tis scolding. I will not so far
+anticipate your Judgment, as to rank this Arguer in any of
+the three Orders: It you have Patience to read over his
+Pamphlet, you will best see how and where to set him in
+his proper Place.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We now proceed to those Passages in the Answer,
+which probably have most exasperated the Author of the
+Exceptions and the Defence, <i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 77, <i>&#38;c.</i> In his Exceptions
+he had said, the Moon being present, or in her
+present Place in the Firmament, at the time of the Chaos,
+she would certainly trouble and discompose it, as she does
+now the Waters of the Sea; and, by that Means, hinder
+the Formation of the Earth. To this we answer’d, that
+the <i>Moon that was made the fourth Day, could not hinder
+the formation of the Earth, which was made the third Day</i>.
+This was a plain intelligible Answer, and at the same time
+discover’d such a manifest Blunder in the Objection, as
+could not but give an uneasy Thought to him that made it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_484'>484</span>However we must not deny, but that he makes some
+Attempt to silence it off in his Reply; for he says, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 12.
+<i>The Earth formed the third Day was</i> Moses’s <i>Earth, which
+the Exceptor contends for; but the Earth he disputes against
+is the Theorist’s, which could not be formed the third
+Day</i>. He should have added, and therefore <i>would be hinder’d
+by the Moon</i>, otherwise this takes off nothing. And
+now the Question comes to a clear State; for when the
+Exceptor says, the Moon would have hinder’d the Formation
+of the Earth, either he speaks upon <i>Moses</i>’s Hypothesis,
+or upon the Theorist’s Hypothesis. Not upon the Theorist’s
+Hypothesis, for the Theorist does not suppose the Moon
+present then; <i>Eccl.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 77, 78. <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 73. <i>l.</i> 12, 13. And
+if he speaks upon <i>Moses</i>’s Hypothesis, the Moon that was
+made the fourth Day, must have hinder’d the Formation
+of the Earth the third Day. So that the Objection is a
+Blunder upon either Hypothesis.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Furthermore, whereas he suggests that the Answerer
+makes use of <i>Moses</i>’s Hypothesis to confute his Adversary,
+but does not follow it himself: ’Tis so far true, that
+the Theorist never said that <i>Moses</i>’s six Days Creation
+was to be understood literally; but however it is justly
+urged against those that understand it literally, and they
+must not contradict that Interpretation, which they own
+and defend.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Moon, and this first Passage, which I
+suppose was troublesome to our Author. But he makes
+the same Blunder in another Place, as to the <i>Sun</i>: Both
+the Luminaries, it seems, stood in his Way. In the tenth
+Chapter of his Exceptions, he gives us a new Hypothesis
+about the <i>Origin of Mountains</i>, which, in short, is this;
+that they were drawn or suck’d out of the Earth by the
+Influence and Instrumentality of the Sun: Whereas the
+Sun was not made, according to <i>Moses</i>, till the fourth
+Day, and the Earth was form’d the third Day. ’Tis an
+unhappy Thing to split twice upon the same Rock, and
+upon a Rock so visible. He that can but reckon to
+four, can tell whether the third Day, or fourth Day
+came sooner.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To cure this Hypothesis about the <i>Origin of Mountains</i>,
+he takes great pains in his <i>Defence</i>, <i>pag.</i> 97, 98, 99, 100,
+101. and attempts to do it by help of a Distinction, dividing
+Mountains into <i>Maritime</i> and <i>Inland</i>. Now ’tis
+true, says he, <i>These maritime Mountains, and such as were
+made with the Hollow of the Sea, must rise when that was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_485'>485</span>sunk or deprest</i>; namely, the third Day. Yet inland ones,
+he says, might be raised some earlier, and some later,
+and by the Influence of the Sun. This is a weak and
+vain Attempt to defend his Notion; for, betides that this
+Distinction of <i>maritime</i> and <i>inland Mountains</i>, as arising
+from different Causes, and at different Times, is without
+any Ground, either in Scripture or Reason, if their different
+Origin was admitted, the Sun’s extracting these inland
+Mountains out of the Earth, would still be absurd and
+incongruous upon other Accounts.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Scripture, I say, makes no such Distinction of Mountains,
+made at different Times, and from different Causes.
+This is plain, seeing <i>Moses</i> does not mention Mountains
+at all in his six Days Creation, nor any where else,
+till the Deluge: What Authority have we then to make
+this Distinction; or to suppose that all the great Mountains
+of the Earth were not made together? Besides, what
+length of Time would you require, for the Production of
+these inland Mountains? Were they not all made within
+the six Days Creation? Hear what <i>Moses</i> says at the end
+of the sixth Day. <i>Thus the Heavens and the Earth were
+finished, and all the Host of them</i>, <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> <abbr title='twenty-one'>xxi.</abbr> <i>And on the
+seventh Day, God ended his Work which he had made.</i> Now
+if the Exceptor says, that the Mountains were all made
+within these six Days, we will not stand with him for a
+Day or two; for that would make little Difference as to
+the Action of the Sun. But if he will not confine their
+Production to <i>Moses</i>’s six Days, how does he keep to the
+<i>Mosaical</i> Hypothesis? Or how shall we know where he
+will stop in his own Way? For if they were not made
+within the six Days, for any thing he knows, they might
+not be made till the Deluge; seeing Scripture no where
+mentions Mountains before the Flood.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And as Scripture makes no Distinction of <i>maritime
+and inland Mountain</i>, so neither hath this Distinction any
+Foundation in Nature or Reason: For there is no apparent
+or discernable Difference betwixt maritime and inland
+Mountains, nor any Reason why they should be thought
+to proceed from different Causes, or to be rais’d at different
+Times. The maritime Mountains are as rocky, as
+ruderous, and as irregular and various in their Shape and
+Posture, as the inland Mountains. They have no distinctive
+Characters, nor any different Properties, internal or
+external, in their Matter, Form, or Composition, that can
+give us any Ground to believe, that they came from a different
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_486'>486</span>Original. So that this Distinction is merely precarious,
+neither founded in Scripture nor Reason, but made
+for the nonce to serve a Turn.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Besides, what Bounds will you give to these maritime
+Mountains? Are they distinguished from inland Mountains
+barely by their Distance from the Sea, or by some
+other Character? If barely by Distance, tell us then how
+far from the Sea do the maritime Mountains reach, and
+where do the inland begin, and how shall we know the <i>Terminalis
+Lapis</i>? Especially in a continued Chain of Mountains,
+that reach from the Sea many hundreds of Miles,
+inland; as the <i>Alps</i> from the Ocean to <i>Pontus Euxinus</i>,
+and <i>Taurus</i>, as he says, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 143. fifteen hundred Miles
+in length, from the <i>Chinese</i> Ocean to the Sea of <i>Pamphylia</i>.
+In such an uninterrupted Ridge of Mountains, where
+do the Land-Mountains end, and Sea-Mountains begin?
+Or what Mark is there, whereby we may know that they
+are not all of the same Race, or do not all spring from
+the same Original? Such obvious Enquiries as these, shew
+sufficiently, that the Distinction is merely arbitrary and
+ficticious.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But suppose this Distinction was admitted, and the maritime
+Mountains made the third Day, but inland Mountains
+I know not when: The great Difficulty still remains,
+<i>How</i> the Sun rear’d up these inland Mountain’s afterward?
+Or if his Power be sufficient for such Effects, why have
+we not Mountains made still to this Day? Seeing our
+Mountain-maker, the Sun, is still in the Firmament, and
+seems to be as busy at Work as ever. The <i>Defender</i> hath
+made some Answer to this Question, in these Words,
+<i>Def. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 99. <i>The Question is put, why have we no Mountains
+made now? It might as well have been ask’d</i>, says he, <i>Why
+does not the Fire make a Dough-bak’d Loaf swell and puff up?</i>
+And, he says, <i>this Answer must be satisfactory to the Question
+propounded</i>. It must be, that is, for want of a better;
+for otherwise this Dough-comparison is unsatisfactory
+upon many Accounts. First, there was no Ferment in
+the Earth, as in this Dough-cake: at least it is not prov’d,
+or made appear, that there was any. Nay,
+when this Hypothesis was propos’d, there was no
+Mention at all made of any Ferment or Leaven in the
+Earth; but the Effect was wholly imputed to <i>Venus</i> and
+the <i>Sun</i>. But to supply their Defects, he now ventures to
+add the Word, <i>fermentive</i>, as he calls it. A
+<i>fermentive, flatulent Principle</i>, which heav’d up the Earth,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_487'>487</span>as Leaven does Dough. But, besides, that this is a mere
+groundless and gross <i>Postulatum</i>, to suppose any such
+Leaven in the Earth; if there had been such a Principle,
+it would have swollen the whole Mass uniformly, heav’d
+up the exterior Region of the Earth every where, and so
+not made Mountains, but a swollen bloated Globe.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This, Sir, is a second Passage, which I thought might
+make the Defender uneasy. We proceed now to a third
+and fourth in his Geography and Astronomy. In the 14th
+Chapter of his Exceptions, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 289. speaking of the Change
+of the Situation of the Earth, from a right Posture to an
+oblique, he says, <i>according to the Theory, the Ecliptick in
+the primitive Earth, was its Equinoctial now</i>. This, he
+is told by the Answer, is a great Mistake; namely, to
+think that the <i>Earth, when it chang’d its Situation, chang’d
+its Poles and Circles</i>. What is now reply’d to this? <i>He
+speaks against a Change</i>, says the Defence, <i>in the Poles and
+Circles of the Earth; a needless Trouble, and occasioned by
+his own Oversight. For had he but looked into the Errata’s,
+he might have seen there, that these Parentheses, upon which
+he grounded what he says, should have been left out.</i> So
+this is acknowledg’d an <i>Erratum</i> it seems, but an <i>Erratum
+Typographicum</i>; not in the Sense, but only in the
+<i>Parentheses</i>, which, he says, should have been left out.
+Let us then lay aside the Parentheses, and the Sentence
+stands thus: <i>For under the Ecliptick, which in the primitive
+Situation of the Earth, according to the Theory</i>, was its <i>Equinoctial,
+and divided the Globe into two Hemispheres, as the
+Equator does now. The dry Ground, &#38;c.</i> How does this
+alter or mend the Sense? Is it not still as plainly affirm’d,
+as before, that according to the Theory, the Ecliptick in
+the primitive Earth was equinoctial? And the same thing is
+suppos’d throughout all this Paragraph, <i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 289, 290.
+And if he will own the Truth, and give Things their proper
+Name, ’tis downright Ignorance, or gross Mistake in
+the <i>Doctrine of the Sphere</i>, which he would first father
+upon the <i>Theory</i>, and then upon the <i>Parentheses</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And this leads me to a fourth Passage, much-what of
+the same Nature, where he would have the Earth to have
+been translated out of the Æquator into the Ecliptick, and
+to have chang’d the Line of its Motion about the Sun,
+when it chang’d its Situation. His Words are these,
+<i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 158, 159. <i>So that in her annual Motion about the
+Sun, she</i>, namely the Earth, before her Change of Situation,
+<i>was carried directly under the Equinoctial</i>. This is his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_488'>488</span>Mistake; the Earth mov’d in the Ecliptick, both before
+and after her Change of Situation; for the Change was
+not made in the Circle of her Motion about the Sun, but in
+her Posture or Inclination in the same Circle: Whereas
+he supposes that she <i>shifted both Posture, and also her
+Circuit about the Sun</i>, Ibid. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 159. as his Words are in
+the next Paragraph. But we shall have Occasion to reflect
+upon this again in its proper Place. We proceed
+now to another astronomical Mistake.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>A fifth Passage, which probably might disquiet him, is
+his false Argumentation at the end of the eighth Chapter
+concerning <i>Days</i> and <i>Months</i>, <i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 187. He says there,
+if the natural Days were longer towards the Flood than
+at first, (which no body however affirms) fewer than
+thirty would have made a Month; whereas the Duration
+of the Flood is computed by Months, consisting of thirty
+Days a-piece; <i>Therefore</i>, says he, <i>they were no longer than
+ordinary</i>. This Argumentation the <i>Answer</i> told him, <i>was
+a mere Paralogism, or a mere Blunder</i>: For thirty Days
+are thirty Days, whether they are longer or shorter; and
+Scripture does not determine the Length of the Days.
+There are several Pages spent in the <i>Defence</i>, to get off
+the Blunder: Let’s hear how he begins, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 78, 79, 80, 81.
+<i>Tho’ Scripture does not limit or account for the Length of
+Days expresly, yet it does it implicitly, and withal very
+plainly and intelligibly.</i> This is deny’d: And if he makes
+this out, that Scripture does very <i>plainly</i> and <i>intelligibly</i>
+determine the Length of Days at the Deluge, and makes
+them equal with ours at present, then, I acknowledge, he
+hath remov’d the Blunder; otherwise it stands the same,
+unmov’d and unmended. Now observe how he makes
+this out: <i>For</i>, says he, <i>Scripture gives us to understand,
+that Days before the Flood, were of the same Length, that
+they are of now, BY INFORMING US, that Months
+and Years, which were of the same Length then that they
+are of at present, were made up of the same Number of
+Days</i>. Here the Blunder is still continued, or, at best,
+it is but transferr’d from Days to Months, or from
+Months to Years. He says, <i>Scripture informs us that
+Months and Years were of the same Length then, that they
+are of at present</i>. If he mean by the <i>same Length</i>, the
+same <i>Number of</i> Days, he relapses into the old Blunder,
+and we still require the Length of those Days. But if
+Scripture informs us that the Months and Years at the
+Flood, were of the same Length that they are of now,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_489'>489</span>according to any absolute and known Measure, distinct
+from the <i>Number of Days</i>, then the Blunder is sav’d. Let’s
+see therefore by whether of these two Ways he proves it
+in the next Words, which are these: <i>For how could there
+be just twelve Months in the Year, at the time of the Deluge;
+and thirty Days in each of those Months, if the Days
+then had not consisted, as they do now, of twenty four Hours
+a-piece?</i> We allow a Day might then consist of twenty
+four Hours, if the Distinction of Hours was so ancient.
+But what then? the Question returns concerning the Length
+of those <i>Hours</i>, as it was before concerning the Length of
+the <i>Days</i>; and this is either <i>idem per idem</i>, or the same Error
+in another Instance. If you put but <i>Hours</i> in the place
+of <i>Days</i>, the Words of the <i>Answer</i> have still the same
+Force: <i>Twenty four Hours were to go to a Day, whether
+the Hours were longer or shorter, and Scripture does not determine
+the Length of the Hours.</i> This, you see, is still
+the same Case, and the same Paralogism hangs upon both
+Instances.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But he goes on still in this false Tract, in these Words:
+<i>And as Providence hath so ordered Nature, that Days (that
+depend upon its diurnal Motion) should be measur’d by Circumgyrations
+of the Earth——So it hath taken Care that
+each of these Circumrotations should be performed in twenty
+four Hours; and consequently that every Day should be just
+so long, that thirty of them (in way of round reckoning) might
+complete a Month.</i> Admit all this, that thirty Days complete
+a Month; still if Scripture hath not determin’d the
+Length of those Days, nor the Slowness or Swiftness of
+the Circumgyrations that make them, it hath not determin’d
+the Length of those Months, nor of the Years that
+depend upon them. This one would take to be very intelligible;
+yet he goes on in the same Maze, thus: <i>But now
+had the Circumgyrations of the Earth grown more slow towards
+the Deluge (by such Causes as the Exceptor suggested)
+so as every Day had consisted of thirty Hours</i>, &#38;c. But
+how so, I pray? This is a wild Step; why thirty Hours?
+Where does Scripture say so, or where does the <i>Theorist</i>
+say so? We say the Day consisted then, as now, of twenty
+four Hours, whether the Hours were longer or shorter;
+and that Scripture hath not determin’d the Length of those
+Hours, nor consequently of those Months, nor consequently
+of those Years. So after all this ado, we are
+just where we were at first, namely, that Scripture not
+having determin’d the absolute Length of any one, you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_490'>490</span>cannot by that determine the Length of any other. And
+by his shifting and multiplying Instances, he does but <i>absurda
+absurdis accumulare, ne perpluant</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We offer’d before, in our Answer, to give the Exceptor
+some Light into his Mistake, by distinguishing in
+these Things, what is <i>absolute</i> from what is <i>relative</i>: The
+former whereof cannot, under these or any such like Circumstances,
+be determin’d by the latter. For Instance:
+A Man hath ten Children, and he will not say absolutely
+and determinatively what Portion he will give with any
+one of them; but he says, I will give my eldest Child a
+tenth Part more than my second; and my second a ninth
+Part more than my third; and my third an eighth Part
+more than my fourth; and so downwards, in proportion to
+the youngest: Not telling you, in any absolute Sum,
+what Money he will give the youngest, or any other; you
+cannot, by this, tell what Portion the Man will give with
+any of his Children. I leave you to apply this, and proceed
+to a nearer Instance, by comparing the Measures of
+<i>Time</i> and <i>Longitude</i>. If you know how many Inches
+make a Foot, how many Feet a Pace, how many Paces a
+Mile, <i>&#38;c.</i> you cannot by these Numbers determine the
+absolute Quantity of any one of the aforesaid Measures,
+but only their relative Quantity as to one another. So if
+Scripture had determin’d, of how many Hours a Day consisted;
+of how many Days a Month; of how many
+Months a Year; you could not by this alone determine
+the absolute Duration or Quantity of any one of these, nor
+whether they were longer or shorter than our present
+Hours, Days, Months, or Years. And therefore, I say
+still, as I said at first, thirty Days are thirty Days, whether
+they are longer or shorter; and thirty Circumgyrations of
+the Earth are thirty, whether they be slower or swifter:
+And that no Scripture-Proof can be made from this, either
+directly or consequentially, that the Days before the Flood
+were, or were not, longer than they are at present. But
+we have been too long upon this Head.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We proceed now from his Astronomy to his Philosophy.
+’Twas observ’d in the <i>Answer</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 38. that the Exceptor
+in the Beginning of the ninth Chapter, suppos’d
+terrestrial Bodies to have <i>Nitency inwards, or downwards,
+towards the Center</i>. This was noted as a false Principle
+in Philosophy, and to rectify his Mistake, he now replies,
+<i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 82. That he understood that Expression only of
+<i>self-central</i> and <i>quiescent Bodies</i>: Whereas, in truth, the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_491'>491</span>Question he was speaking to, was about a fluid Body
+turning upon its Axis. But however, let us admit his
+new Sense, his Principle, I’m afraid, will still need Rectification;
+namely, he affirms now, that <i>quiescent earthly
+Bodies</i> are <i>impregnated with a Nitency inward, or downward
+towards the Center</i>. I deny also this reform’d Principle;
+if Bodies be turn’d round, they have a Nitency upwards,
+or from the Center of their Motion. If they be
+not turn’d round, nor mov’d, but quiescent, they have no
+Nitency at all, neither upwards nor downwards, but are
+indifferent to all Lines of Motion, according as an external
+Impulse shall carry them, this Way or that Way. So
+that his <i>Impregnation with a Nitency downwards</i>, is an occult
+and fictitious Quality, which is not in the Nature of
+Bodies, whether in Motion or in Rest. The Truth is,
+the Author of the Exceptions makes a great Flutter about
+the <i>Cartesian Philosophy</i>, and the <i>Copernican System</i>, but
+the frequent Mistakes he commits in both, give a just
+Suspicion that he understands neither.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, we come to the grand Discovery of a <i>fifteen-cubit
+Deluge</i>, which, it may be, was as uneasy to him
+upon second Thoughts, as any of the rest; at least one
+would guess so, by the Changes he hath made in his Hypothesis.
+For he hath now, in this <i>Defence</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 181, 182.
+reduc’d the Deluge to a Destruction of the World by
+<i>Famine</i>, rather than by <i>Drowning</i>. I do not remember
+in Scripture any Mention made of <i>Famine</i> in that great
+Judgment of Water brought upon Mankind; but he
+thinks he hath found out something that favours his Opinion;
+namely, <i>that a good Part of Mankind at the Deluge,
+were not drown’d, but starv’d for want of Victuals</i>.
+And the Argument is this, because in the Story of the Deluge,
+Men are not said to be <i>drown’d</i>, but to <i>perish</i>, <i>die</i>,
+or be <i>destroy’d</i>. But are they said any where in the Story
+of the Deluge, to have been <i>famish’d</i>? And when God
+says to <i>Noah</i>, <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 17. <i>I will bring a Flood of Waters
+upon the Earth, to destroy all Flesh</i>; does it not plainly
+signify, that that Destruction should be by <i>drowning</i>? But
+however, let us hear our Author; when he had been making
+use of this new Hypothesis of <i>starving</i>, to take off
+some Arguments urged against his fifteen-cubit Deluge,
+(particularly, that it would not be sufficient to destroy all
+Mankind) he adds these Words by way of Proof: <i>Def.</i>
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 182. <i>And methinks there is one Thing which seems to insinuate,
+that a good Part of the animal World might perhaps
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_492'>492</span>came to an End thus; by being driven to such Straights by
+the overflowing Waters, as to be FAMISH’D or STARV’D
+to Death. The Thing is this, in the Story of the Deluge,
+it is no where said of Men and living Creatures, that they
+were drown’d, but they died, or were destroyed.</i> Those
+that are <i>drown’d</i> are <i>destroy’d</i>, I imagine, as well as those
+that are <i>starv’d</i>; so this proves nothing. But that the Destruction
+here spoken of, was by drowning, seems plain
+enough, both from God’s Word to <i>Noah</i> before the
+Flood, and by his Words after the Flood, when he makes
+his Covenant with <i>Noah</i>, in this Manner: <i>I will establish
+my Covenant with you, neither shall all Flesh be cut off any
+more by the Waters of a Flood</i>, <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 11. Now, to be
+cut off, or destroy’d by the Waters of a Flood, is, methinks,
+to be drown’d; And I take <i>all Flesh</i> to comprehend
+the animal World, or, at least, all Mankind. Accordingly
+our Saviour says, <i>Matth.</i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 39. in <i>Noah</i>’s
+Time, <i>the Flood came and took them all away</i>; namely, all
+Mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is one Expedient our Author hath found out, to
+help to bear off the Inconveniencies that attend his fifteen-cubit
+Deluge; namely, by converting a good Part of it
+into a <i>Famine</i>. But he hath another Expedient to join to
+this, by increasing the Waters; and that is done by making
+the <i>common Surface</i> of the Earth, or the <i>highest Parts</i> of
+it, as he calls them, <i>Def.</i> 165 and 180, to signify ambiguously,
+or any Height that pleases him; and consequently
+fifteen Cubits above that, signifies also what Height he
+thinks fit. But in reality, there is no Surface common
+to the Earth, but either the <i>exterior Surface</i>, whether it be
+high or low; or the <i>ordinary Level</i> of the Earth, as it is
+a Globe or Convex Body. If by his <i>common Surface</i> he
+mean the <i>exterior Surface</i>, that takes in Mountains as well
+as Lowlands, or any other superficial Parts of the Earth.
+And therefore, if the Deluge was fifteen Cubits above this
+common Surface, it was fifteen Cubits above the highest
+Mountains, as we say it was. But, if by the common
+Surface he mean the common Level of the Earth, as it is
+a Globular or Convex Body, then we gave it a right Name,
+when we call’d it the <i>ordinary Level</i> of the Earth; namely,
+that Level or Surface that lies in an equal Convexity
+with the Surface of the Sea: And his fifteen Cubits of
+Water from that Level, would never drown the World.
+Lastly, if by the common Surface of the Earth, he understand
+a third Surface, different from both these, he must
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_493'>493</span>define it, and define the Height of it; that we may know
+how far this fifteen-cubit Deluge rise, from some known
+Basis. One known Basis is the Surface of the Sea, and
+that Surface of the Land that ties in an equal Convexity
+with it: Tell us then, if the Waters of the Deluge were
+but fifteen Cubits higher than the Surface of the Sea, that
+we may know their Height by some certain and determinate
+Measure; and upon that examine the Hypothesis:
+But tell us they were fifteen Cubits above, not the Mountains
+or the Hills, but the Highlands, or the <i>highest Parts
+of the common Surface of the Earth</i>, and not to tell us the
+Height of these highest Parts from any known Basis; nor
+how they are distinguish’d from Hills and Mountains,
+which incur our Senses, and are the Measures given us
+by <i>Moses</i>: This, I say, is but to cover his Hypothesis with
+Ambiguities, when he had made it without Grounds, and
+to leave room to set his Water-Mark higher or lower, as
+he should see Occasion or Necessity. And of this indeed
+we have an Instance in his last Pamphlet; for he has rais’d
+his Water-Mark there, more than an hundred Cubits higher
+than it was before. In his <i>Exceptions</i>, he said, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 300. <i>not
+that the Waters were no where higher than just fifteen Cubits</i>
+above the Ground, they might in most Places be <i>thirty</i>,
+<i>forty</i>, or <i>fifty Cubits higher</i>. But, in his <i>Defence</i>, he says,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 180. the Waters might be an <i>hundred</i> or <i>two hundred
+Cubits higher</i> than the <i>general ordinary Plain</i> of the Earth.
+Now what Security have we, but that, in the next Pamphlet
+they may be five hundred or a thousand Cubits
+higher than the ordinary Surface of the Earth?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is his second Expedient, raising his Water-Mark
+indefinitely. But if these two Methods be not sufficient
+to destroy Mankind, and the animate World, he hath yet
+a third, which cannot fail; and that is, <i>destroying them by
+evil Angels</i>, Def. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 90. <i>Flectere si nequeo</i>—This is his last
+Refuge; to which Purpose he hath these Words, <i>When
+Heaven was pleas’d to give Satan leave, he caus’d the Fire
+to consume</i> Job<i>’s Sheep, and caused the Wind to destroy his
+Children. And how easily could these Spirits, that are Ministers
+of God’s Vengeance, have made the Waters of the
+Flood fatal to those Creatures that might have escaped them,
+if any could have done it?</i> As suppose an Eagle, or a
+Faulcon; the Devil and his Crew catch them all, and held
+their Noses under Water: However, methinks, this is
+not fair Play to deny the Theorist the Liberty to make
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_494'>494</span>use of the Ministry of <i>good Angels</i>, when he himself makes
+use of <i>evil Spirits</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These, Sir, and such like Passages, where the Notions
+of the Exceptor have been exposed, were the Causes, I
+imagine, of his angry Reply. Some Creatures, you know,
+are more fierce after they are wounded; and some, upon a
+gentle Chase, will fly from you; but if you press them, and
+put them to Extremities, they turn, and fly in your face.
+I see, by our Author’s Example, how easily, in these personal
+Altercations, Reasoning degenerates into Wrangling,
+and Wrangling into Scolding. However, if I may judge
+from these two Hypotheses which he hath made, about
+the <i>Rise of Mountains</i>, and a <i>fifteen-Cubit Deluge</i>, of all
+Trades, I should never advise him to turn <i>Hypothesis-Maker</i>.
+It does not seem at all to lie to his Hand; and
+Things never thrive that are undertaken, <i>Diis iratis, Genioque
+sinistro</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But as we have given you some Account of this Author’s
+philosophical Notions, so it may be you will expect
+that we should entertain you with some Pieces of
+his Wit and Eloquence. The Truth is, he seems to delight
+and value himself upon a certain kind of Country-Wit
+and popular Eloquence, and I will not grudge you
+the Pleasure of enjoying them both, in such Instances as
+I remember. Speaking in Contempt of the Theory and
+the Answer, (which is one great Subject of his Wit) he
+expresses himself thus, <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 48. <i>But if Arguments be
+so weak, that they will fall with a Phillip, why should
+greater Force be used to beat them down? To draw a Rapier
+to stab a Fly, or to charge a Pistol to kill a Spider, I think
+would be preposterous.</i> I think so too; in this we are agreed.
+In another Place, being angry with the Theorist,
+that he would not acknowledge his Errors to him, he hath
+these Words, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 128. <i>’Tis unlucky for one to rest his Head
+against a Post; but when he hath done, if he will say he did
+not do it, and stand in, and defend what he says, ’tis a
+Sign he is as senseless as he was unfortunate, and is fitter to
+be pitied than confuted.</i> This Wit, it may be, you’ll say
+is downright Clownery. The Truth is, when I observ’d,
+in reading his Pamphlet, the Coarseness of his Repartees,
+and of that sort of Wit wherein he deals most, and pleases
+himself, it often rais’d in my Mind, whether I would or
+no, the Idea of a <i>Pedant</i>, of one that had seen little of
+the World, and thought himself much wittier and wiser
+than others would take him to be: I will give you but one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_495'>495</span>Instance more of his rustical Wit. Telling the Theorist
+of an Itch of Writing, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 214. <i>Methinks</i>, says he, <i>he might
+have laid that prurient Humour, by scratching himself with
+the Briars of a more innocent Controversy, or by SCRUBBING
+SOUNDLY against something else than the Holy
+Scripture.</i> He speaks very sensibly, as if he understood
+the Disease, and the Way of dealing with it: But I think
+<i>Holy Scripture</i> does not come in well upon that Occasion.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>All this is nothing, Sir, in comparison of his popular
+Eloquence: See with what Alacrity he runs it off-hand,
+in a Similitude betwixt <i>Adam</i> and a Lord Lieutenant of a
+County, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 113. <i>When the King makes a Gentleman
+Lord Lieutenant of a County, by virtue of his Commission
+is he presently the strongest Man that is in it? Does it enable
+him to encounter whole Regiments of Soldiers in his
+single Person? Does it impower him to carry a Cannon
+upon his Neck? Or when the great Gun is fired off, to catch
+the Bullet as it flies, and put it up in his Pocket? So when
+God gave</i> Adam <i>Dominion over the Fowls, did he mean that
+he should dive like a Duck, or soar like a Falcon? That he
+should swim as naturally as the Swan, and hunt the Kite or
+Hobby, as Boys do the Wren? Did he mean that he should
+hang up Ostriches in a Cage, as People do Linnets, or fetch
+down the Eagles to feed with his Pullen, and make them
+perch with his Chickens in the Henroost?</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for the Fowls; now for the Fish. <i>Ibid.</i> When
+God <i>gave</i> Adam <i>Dominion over the Sea, was he to be able
+to dwell at the Bottom, or to walk on the Top of it? To
+drain it as a Ditch, or to take all its Fry at once in a
+Drag-Net? Was he to snare the Shark, as we do young
+Pickarels; or to bridle the Sea-Horse, and ride him for a
+Pad; or to put a Slip upon the Crocodile’s Neck, and play
+with him as with a Dog?</i> &#38;c. Sir, I leave it to you, as
+a more competent Judge, to set a just Value upon his
+Gifts and Elocution. For my Part, to speak freely, dull
+Sense, in a phantastick Style, is to me doubly nauseous.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But lest I should cloy you with these luscious Harangues,
+I will give you but one more; and ’tis a Miscellany of
+several Pieces of Wit together. <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 68. <i>Should twenty
+Mariners</i>, says he, <i>confidently affirm that they sailed in a
+Ship from</i> Dover <i>to</i> Calais, <i>by a brisk Gale out of a Pair of
+Bellows? Or if forty Engineers should positively swear, that
+the Powder-Mill near</i> London <i>was late blown up, by a
+Mine then sprung at</i> Great Waradin <i>in</i> Hungary, <i>must
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_496'>496</span>they not be grievously perjur’d Persons?——Or if the
+Historian that writes the</i> Peloponnesian <i>War, had told that
+the Soldiers who fell in it, fought only with Sun-beams, and
+single Currants which grew thereabouts, and that hundreds
+and thousands were stabb’d with the one, and knocked on the
+Head with the other; who would believe that ever there
+were such Weapons in that War, that ever there was such
+a fatal War in that Country? Even so</i>, &#38;c. These, Sir,
+are Flights and Reaches of his Pen, which I dare not
+censure, but leave them to your Judgment.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much is to give you a Taste only of his Wit and
+Eloquence; and if you like it, you may find more of the
+same Strain, here and there, in his Writings. I have only
+one Thing to mind him of, <i>that</i> he was desired by the
+Theorist, <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 401. to <i>write in Latin (if he
+was a Scholar) as being more proper for a Subject of this Nature</i>.
+If he had own’d and follow’d that Character, I’m apt to
+think it would have prevented a great many Impertinences:
+His Tongue, probably, would not have been so
+flippant in popular Excursions and Declamations, as we
+now find it. Neither is this any great Presumption or
+Rashness of Judgment, if we may guess at his Skill in
+that Language by his Translations here and there: <i>Except,</i>
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 293. <i>Cum plurima Religione</i> is rendered <i>with the Principle
+of their Religion</i>. And if he say he followed Sir
+<i><abbr class='spell'>W.</abbr> Rawleigh</i> in his Translation, he that follows a bad
+Translator, without Correction or Notice, is suppos’d to
+know no better himself: And this will appear the more
+probable, if we consider another of his Translations, in
+this present Work. <i>Rei Personam</i> he translates <i>the Representation
+of the Thing</i>, instead of the <i>Person of the Guilty</i>,
+or the Person of him that is <i>Reus</i> not <i>Actor</i>: And in this,
+I dare say, he was seduc’d by no Example. But lest we
+should be thought to misrepresent him, take his own
+Words, such as they are, <i>Def.</i> 168, 169. <i>Yea, tho’ it
+was spoken never so positively, it was but to set forth
+REI PERSONAM, to make the more full and lively Representation
+of the supposed Thing.</i> Here, you see, he hath
+made a double Blunder; first, in jumbling together <i>Person</i>
+and <i>Thing</i>; then, if they could be jumbled together, <i>Rei
+Persona</i> would not signify the <i>full and lively Representation
+of the Thing</i>, but rather a Disguise or personated Representation
+of the Thing. However, I am satisfied from these
+Instances, that he had good Reason, notwithstanding the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_497'>497</span>Caution or Desire of the Theorist to the contrary, to
+write his Books in his Mother’s Tongue.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus we have done with the first Part, which was to
+mark out such Passages, as we thought might probably
+have enflam’d the Author’s Style in this Reply: When
+Men are resolved not to own their Faults, you know
+there is nothing more uneasy and vexatious to them,
+than to see them plainly discovered and expos’d. We
+must now give you some Account of the Contents of
+his Chapters, so far as they relate to our Subject. <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr>
+<i>Nothing.</i> <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>II.</abbr> is against <i>extraordinary Providence</i>;
+or that the Theorist should not be permitted to have
+Recourse to it upon any Occasion. This Recourse to
+extraordinary Providence being frequently objected in
+other Places, and of use to be distinctly understood; we
+will speak of it apart at the latter end of the Letter.
+<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='three'>III.</abbr> is about the <i>Moon’s hindring the Formation of the
+Earth before she was formed herself, or in our Neighbourhood</i>,
+as we have noted before. Another Thing in this
+Chapter, is, his urging <i>oily</i> or <i>oleaginous</i> Particles not to
+have been in the <i>Chaos</i>, but made since: I’ll give a short
+Answer to this; either there was or was not <i>oleaginous</i>
+Matter in the new-made Earth, (I mean in its superficial
+Region,) when it came first out of a <i>Chaos</i>? If there
+was, there was also in the <i>Chaos</i>, out of which that Earth was
+immediately made: And if there was no oleaginous
+Matter in the new-made Earth, how came the Soil to be
+so fertile, so fat, so unctuous? I say not only <i>fertile</i>, but
+particularly <i>fat</i> and <i>unctuous</i>: For he uses these very
+Words frequently in the Description of that Soil, <i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i>
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 211. <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 69, and <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 98. And all fat and unctuous
+Liquors are <i>oleaginous</i>; and accordingly we have used
+those Words promiscuously, in the Description of that
+Region: (<i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr>) understanding only such
+unctuous Liquors as are lighter than Water, and swim
+above it, and consequently would stop and entangle the
+terrestrial Particles in their Fall or Descent: And seeing
+such unctuous and oleaginous Particles were in the new-made
+Earth, they must certainly have been in the Matter
+out of which it was immediately formed, namely, in the
+<i>Chaos</i>. All the rest of this Chapter we are willing to
+leave in its full Force; apprehending the Theory, or the
+Answer, to be in no Danger from such Argumentations
+or Reflections.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_498'>498</span>The fourth Chapter is very short, and hath nothing argumentative.
+The fifth Chapter is concerning the Cold in
+the circumpolar Parts, which was spoken to in the Answer
+sufficiently, and we stand to that: What is added
+about extraordinary Providence, will be treated of in its
+proper Place. The sixth Chapter is also short, against
+this Particular, <i>that it is not safe to argue upon Suppositions
+actually false</i>. And I think there needs no more to prove
+it, than what was said in the Answer. <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr> is chiefly
+about Texts of Scripture, concerning which I see no Occasion
+of saying any more than what is said in the <i>Review
+of the Theory</i>. He says, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 49.) that the Theorist catches
+himself in a Trap, by allowing that <i>Ps.</i> <abbr title='thirty-three'>xxxiii.</abbr> 7. is to be
+understood of the ordinary Posture of the Waters, and yet
+applying it to their extraordinary Posture under the Vault
+of the Earth: But that was not an extraordinary Posture
+according to the Theorist, but their natural Posture
+in the first Earth: Yet I allow the Expression might have
+been better thus, in <i>a level or spherical Convexity, as the
+Earth</i>. He interprets גן יהוה (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 53.) which we render
+<i>the Garden of the Lord</i>, <abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='thirteen'>xiii.</abbr> <abbr title='ten'>x.</abbr> not to be Paradise,
+but any pleasant Garden; yet gives us no Authority
+either of ancient Commentator or Version, for this novel
+and paradoxical Interpretation. The Septuagint
+render it παράδεισος τοῦ θεοῦ: The <i>Vulgate</i>, <i>Paradisus Domini</i>,
+and all ancient Versions that I have seen, render it
+to the same Sense. Does he expect then that his single
+Word and Authority should countervail all the ancient
+Translators and Interpreters? To the last Place alledged by
+the Theorist, <i>Prov.</i> <abbr title='eight'>viii.</abbr> 28. he says, the Answerer charges
+him unjustly, that he understands by that Word חון no
+more than the <i>Rotundity</i> or <i>spherical Figure</i> of the Abyss;
+which, he says, is a <i>Point of Nonsense</i>: I did not think
+the Charge had been so high however, seeing some Interpreters
+understand in so: But if he understand by תונ
+the <i>Banks</i> or <i>Shores</i> of the sea, then he should have told
+us how those Banks or Shores are על פבי תהום <i>super faciem
+Abissi</i>, as it is in the Text.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Page</i> 59. He says the Exceptor does not misrepresent
+the Theorist when he makes him to affirm the Construction
+of the first Earth to have been merely mechanical; and
+he cites to this purpose two Places, which only prove, that
+the Theorist made use of no other Causes, nor see any
+Defect in them; but never affirm’d that these were the
+only Causes. You may see his Words to this purpose expressly,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_499'>499</span><i>Eng. Theor. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 88. whereof the Exceptor was
+minded in the <i>Answer</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 3. In the last Paragraph of
+this Chapter, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 60. if he affirms any Thing, he will have
+<i>the Pillars of the Earth</i> to be understood <i>literally</i>. Where
+then, pray, do these Pillars stand that bear up the Earth?
+Or if they bear up the Earth, what bears them up? What
+are their Pedestals, or their Foundations? But he says Hypotheses
+must not regulate Scripture, though in natural
+Things, but be regulated by it, and the by the Letter of it: I
+would gladly know then, how his Hypothesis of the Motion
+of the Earth, is regulated by Scripture, and by the
+Letter of it? And he unhappily gives an Instance, just
+contrary to himself, namely, of the Anthropomorphites;
+for they regulate natural Reason and Philosophy, by the
+Letter or literal Sense of Scripture, and therein fall into
+a gross Error: Yet we must not call the Author <i>injudicious</i>,
+for fear of giving Offence.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The eighth Chapter, <i>ibid.</i> begins with the Earth’s <i>being
+carried directly under the Equinoctial</i>, before its Change of
+Situation; <i>without any manner of Obliquity in her Site,
+or Declination towards either of the Tropicks in HER
+COURSE.</i> Here you see, when the Earth changed its
+Situation, it chang’d according to his Astronomy, two
+Things; its <i>Site</i>, and its <i>Course</i>; its Site upon its Axis,
+and its Course in the Heavens: and so he says again in
+the next Paragraph, <i>Put the Case the Earth shift her Posture,
+and also her Circuit about the Sun, in which the persisted
+till the Deluge</i>. Here is plainly the same Notion repeated;
+that the Earth changed not only its <i>Site</i>, but also its <i>Road</i>
+or <i>Course</i> about the Sun: And in consequence of this, he
+supposes its Course formerly to have been under the Equinoctial,
+and now under the Ecliptick; it being translated
+out of the one into the other, at its Change. Yet he
+seems now to be sensible of the Absurdity of this Doctrine,
+and therefore will not own it to have been his Sense;
+and as an Argument that he meant otherwise, he alledges,
+that he declared before, that by the Earth’s right Situation
+to the Sun, <i>is meant that the Axis of the Earth was always
+kept in a Parallelism to that of the Ecliptick</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 61. But
+what’s this to the Purpose? This speaks only of the <i>Site</i>
+of the Earth, whereas his Error was is supposing its <i>Course</i>
+or <i>Annual Orbit</i> about the Sun, as well as its Site upon its
+own Axis, to have been different, and changed at the Deluge;
+as his Words already produced against him, plainly
+testify.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_500'>500</span>What follows in this Chapter, is concerning the perpetual
+Equinox: And as to the reasoning Part of what he
+says in Defence of his Exceptions, we do not grudge him
+the Benefit of it, let it do him what Service it can. And
+as to the historical Part, he will not allow a Witness to
+be a good Witness, as to Matter of Fact, if he did not assign
+true Causes of that Matter of Fact. To which I
+only reply, tho’ <i>Tiverton</i> Steeple was not the Cause of
+<i>Goodwin Sands</i>, as the <i>Kentish</i> Men thought, yet their
+Testimony was so far good, that there were such Sands,
+and such a Steeple. He also commits an Error as to the
+Nature of <i>Tradition:</i> When a Tradition is to be made out,
+it is not expected that it should be made appear that none
+were ignorant of that Tradition in former Ages; or that
+all that mentioned it, understood the true Grounds and
+Extent of it; but is is enough to shew the plain Footsteps
+of it in Antiquity, as a Conclusion, tho’ they did not
+know the Reasons and Premisses upon which it depended.
+For Instance, the Conflagration of the World is a Doctrine
+of Antiquity, traditionally deliver’d from Age to
+Age; but the <i>Causes</i> and <i>Manner</i> of the Conflagration,
+they either did not know, or have nor deliver’d to us.
+In like manner, the first Age and State of the World
+was without Change of Seasons, or under a perpetual
+Equinox: Of this we see many Footsteps in <i>Antiquity</i>,
+amongst the Jews, Christians, Heathens, Poets, Philosophers;
+but the Theory of this perpetual Equinox, the
+Causes and Manner of it, we neither find, nor can reasonably
+expect, from the Antients: So much for the
+Equinox.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Chapter, as it begun with an Error, so it unhappily
+ends with a Paralogism; namely, that, <i>because
+thirty Days made a Month at the Deluge, therefore those
+Days were neither longer nor shorter than ours are at
+present</i>. Tho’ we have sufficiently exposed this before,
+yet one thing more may be added, in answer to his
+confident Conclusion, in these Words: But to talk, <i>as
+the Answerer does, that the Month should be lengthened by
+the Days being so, is a fearful Blunder indeed: For let the
+Days (by slackening the Earth’s diurnal Motion) have been
+never so long, yet (its Annual Motion continuing the same)
+the Month must needs have kept its usual Length, only
+fewer Days would have made it up</i>. ’Tis not usual for a
+Man to persevere so confidently in the same Error, as if
+the Intervals of Time, Hours, Days, Months, Years,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_501'>501</span>could not be proportionably increas’d, so as to contain
+one another in the same Proportion they did before, and
+yet be every one increas’d as to absolute Duration. Take
+a Clock, for Instance, that goes too slow; the Circuit
+of the Dial-plate is twelve Hours, let these represent the
+twelve Signs in his Zodiack, and the Hand to be the Earth
+that goes through them all; and consequently, the whole
+Circuit of the Dial-plate represents the Year. Suppose,
+as we said, this Clock to go too slow, this will not hinder,
+but still fifteen Minutes make a Quarter in this Clock,
+four Quarters make an Hour, and twelve Hours the whole
+Circuit of the Dial-plate: But every one of these Intervals
+will contain more Time than it did before, according
+to absolute Duration, or according to the Measures
+of another Clock that does not go too slow: This is the
+very Case which he cannot or will not comprehend, but
+concludes thus in Effect, that because the Hour consists
+still of four Quarters in this Clock, therefore it is no
+longer than ordinary.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The ninth Chapter also begins with a false Notion, that
+<i>Bodies quiescent</i> (as he hath now alter’d the Case) <i>have a
+Nitency downwards:</i> Which Mistake we rectified before,
+if he please. Then he proceeds to the <i>oval</i> Figure of
+the Earth, and many Flourishes and Harangues are made
+here to little purpose; for he goes on upon a false Supposition,
+that the Waters of the Chaos were made oval by
+the Weight or Gravitation of the Air; a Thing that never
+came into the Words or Thoughts of the Theorist. Yet
+upon this Supposition he runs into the <i>Deserts of Bilebulgerid</i>,
+Def. <i><abbr title='pages'>p.</abbr> 85, 86.</i> and the Waters of <i>Mare del Zur</i>;
+Words that make a great Noise, but to no Effect. If he had
+pleas’d he might have seen the Theorist made no Use of the
+Weight of the Air upon this Occasion, by the Instance he
+gave of the Pressure of the Moon, and the Flux of the
+Waters by that Pressure: Which is no more done by
+the Gravitation of the Air, than the Banks are prest in a
+swift Current and narrow Channel, by the Gravitation of
+the Water. But he says, rarified Air makes less Resistance
+than gross Air; and rarified Water in an Æolipile,
+it may be he thinks, presses with less Force than unrarified.
+Air possibly may be rarified to that Degree as to
+lessen its Resistance; but we speak of Air moderately
+agitated, so as to be made only more brisk and active.
+Moreover, he says, the Waters that lay under the Poles
+must have risen perpendicularly, and why might they not,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_502'>502</span>as well have done so under the Equator? The Waters
+that lay naturally and originally under the Poles, did not
+rise at all; but the Waters became more deep there, by
+those that were thrust thither from the middle Parts of
+the Globe. Upon the whole, I do not perceive that he
+hath weaken’d any one of the Propositions upon which
+the Formation of an oval Earth depended; which were
+these: <i>First</i>, That the Tendency of the Waters from the
+Centre of this Motion, would be greater and stronger in
+the Equinoctial Parts, than in the Polar, or in those
+Parts where they moved in greater Circles; and consequently
+swifter, than in those where they were moved in
+lesser Circles and slower. <i>Secondly</i>, Agitated Air hath
+more Force to repel what presses against it than stagnant
+Air; and that the Air was more agitated and rarified under
+the Equinoctial Parts, than under the Poles. <i>Thirdly</i>,
+Waters hinder’d and repell’d in their primary Tendency,
+take the easiest way they can to free themselves from that
+Force, so as to persevere in their Motion. <i>Lastly</i>, To
+flow laterally upon a Plain, or to ascend upon an inclin’d
+Plain, is easier than to rise perpendicularly. These are
+the Propositions upon which that Discourse depended, and
+I do not find that he hath disprov’d any one of them.
+And this, Sir, is a short Account of a long Chapter, Impertinences
+omitted.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Chapter</i> <abbr title='ten'>X.</abbr> Is concerning the Original and Causes of
+Mountains, which the Exceptor unhappily imputes to the
+Heat and Influence of the Sun. Whether his Hypothesis
+be effectually confuted or not, I am very willing to stand
+to the Judgment of any unconcern’d Person, that will
+have the Patience to compare the <i>Exceptions</i> and the <i>Answer</i>,
+in this Chapter. Then, as to his <i>Historical</i> Arguments,
+as he calls them, to prove there were Mountains
+before the Flood, from <i>Giants that saved themselves from
+the Flood upon Mount Sion, and Adam’s wandering several
+hundred of Years upon the Mountains of India</i>: These,
+and such like, which he brought to prove that there were
+Mountains before the Flood, he now thinks fit to renounce,
+<i>Def. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 97.</i> and says he had done so before by an
+<i>anticipative</i> Sentence: But if they were condemn’d before
+by an <i>anticipative</i> Sentence, as Fables and Forgeries,
+why were they stuff’d into his Book, and us’d as
+traditional Evidence against the Theory?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Lastly</i>, He contends in this Chapter for <i>Iron</i> and <i>Iron
+Tools</i> before the Flood, and as early as the Time of <i>Cain</i>;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_503'>503</span>because he <i>built a City</i>, which, he says, could not be
+built without Iron and Iron-Tools: To which it was answer’d,
+<i>Ans. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 49, 50.</i> that, <i>if he fancied that City of
+Cain</i>’s, like <i>Paris</i> or <i>London</i>, <i>he</i> had Reason to believe
+that they had <i>Iron-tools</i> to make it: But suppose it was a
+Number of Cottages, made of Branches of Trees, of
+Osiers and Bulrushes; or, if you will, of Mud-Walls,
+and a Roof of Straw, with a Fence about it to keep
+out Beasts, there would be no such Necessity of Iron-Tools.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Consider, pray, how long the World was without
+knowing the Use of Iron, in several Parts of it, as in
+the Northern Countries and <i>America</i>, and yet they had
+Houses and Cities after their Fashion. And to come
+nearer Home, consider what Towns and Cities our Ancestors,
+the <i>Britains</i>, had in <i>Cæsar</i>’s Time, more than two
+thousand Years after the Time of <i>Cain: Com. <abbr title='fifty-one'>li.</abbr> 5. Oppidum
+Britanni vacant, cum Sylvam impeditam vallo atque
+fossa munierant; quo incarsionis hostium nitandæ causa,
+convenire consueverunt</i>: Why might not <i>Henochia</i>, <i>Cain</i>’s
+City, be such a City as this?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And as to the Ark, which he also would make a Proof
+that there were Iron and Iron-Tools before the Flood,
+<i>Ibid.</i> ’twas answer’d, that Scripture does not mention
+Iron or Iron-Tools in building of the Ark; but only
+<i>Gopher-Wood</i> and Pitch: To which re replies, <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 103.
+<i>If Scripture’s Silence concerning Things be a Ground of Presumption
+that they were not, what then shall we think of
+an oval and unmountainous Earth, an inclosed Abyss, a
+paradisaical World, and the like, which the Scripture makes
+no mention of?</i> I cannot easily forbear calling this an <i>injudicious</i>
+Reflection, tho’ I know he hath been angry with
+that Word, and makes it a <i>Brat of Passion’s</i>. But I do
+assure him, I call it so coolly and calmly. When a Thing
+is deduc’d by natural Arguments and Reason, the Silence
+of Scripture is enough: if he can prove the <i>Motion of the
+Earth</i> by natural Arguments, and that Scripture is silent
+in that Point, we desire no better Proof. Now in all
+those Things which he mentions, an oval and unmountainous
+Earth, an inclosed Abyss, a paradisaical World,
+Scripture is at least silent; and therefore ’tis natural Arguments
+must determine these Cases: And this ill reasoning
+he is often guilty of, in making no Distinction betwixt
+Things that are, or that are not prov’d by natural
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_504'>504</span>Arguments, when he appeals to the Interpretation of
+Scripture.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Chap. <abbr title='eleven'>XI.</abbr></i> Is to prove an open Sea (such as we have
+now) before the Flood: All his Exceptions were answered
+before, <i>Answ. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 11. and I am content to stand to that
+Answer, reserving only what is to be said hereafter concerning
+the literal Sense of Scripture. However, he is too
+lavish in some Expressions here, as when he says, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 115.</i>)
+That <i>Adam</i> died <i>before so much as one Fish appeared in the
+World:</i> And a little before he had said, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 114.</i> <i>For Fishes,
+if his Hypothesis be believed, were never upon this Earth
+in Adam’s Time.</i> These Expressions, I say, cannot be justified
+upon any Hypothesis: For why might not the Rivers
+of that Earth have Fish in them, as well as the Rivers
+of this Earth, or as our Rivers now? I’m sure the
+<i>Theory</i>, or the <i>Hypothesis</i> he mentions, never said any
+Thing to the contrary, but rather suppos’d the Waters
+fruitful, as the Ground was. But as to an <i>open Sea</i>, whether
+Side soever you take, that there was, or was not any
+before the Flood; I believe, however, <i>Adam</i>, to his dying
+Day, never saw either Sea or Sea-fish, nor ever exercis’d
+any Dominion over either.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='twelve'>XII.</abbr></i> Is concerning the Rainbow, and hath no
+new Argument in it, nor Reinforcement: But a Question
+is moved, whether <i>as well</i> necessarily signifies <i>as much</i>.
+The real Question to be consider’d here, setting aside Pedantry,
+is this <i>whether</i> that Thing (Sun or Rainbow, or
+any other) could have any Significancy as a Sign, which
+signified no more than the bare Promise would have done
+without a Sign: This is more material to be consider’d
+and resolved, than whether <i>as well</i> and <i>as much</i> signify
+the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='thirteen'>XIII.</abbr></i> Is concerning Paradise, and to justify or
+excuse himself why he baulked all the Difficulties, and
+said nothing new or instructive upon that Subject: But he
+would make the Theorist inconsistent with himself in that
+he had said, <i>Def. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 125.</i> that <i>neither Scripture nor Reason
+determine the Place of Paradise; and yet determines it by
+the Judgment of Christian Fathers</i>. Where’s the Inconsistency
+of this? The Theory, as a Theory, is not concerned
+in a <i>Topical</i> Paradise; and says moreover that neither
+Scripture, nor Reason, have determin’d the Place of
+it; but if we refer our selves to the Judgment and Tradition
+of the Fathers, and stand to the Majority of their
+Votes, (when Scripture and Reason are silent,) they have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_505'>505</span>so far detetmin’d it, as to place it in the other Hemisphere,
+rather than in this, and so exclude that shallow
+Opinion of some Moderns, that would place it in <i>Mesopotamia</i>:
+And to baffle that Opinion was the Design of
+the Theorist, (as) this Author also seems to take notice,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 131.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After this, and an undervaluing of the Testimonies of
+the Fathers, he undertakes to determine the Place of Paradise
+by Scripture, and particularly that it was in <i>Mesopotamia</i>,
+or some Region thereabouts. And his Argument
+is this, because in the last Verse of the third Chapter
+of <i>Genesis</i>, the <i>Cherubims</i> and <i>flaming Sword</i> are said to be
+plac’d מקדם לגן עדן, which he says is, <i>to the East of the
+Garden of Eden</i>. But the Septuagint (upon whom he
+must chiefly depend for the Interpretation of the Word
+מקדם in the first Place, <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 8.</i>) read it here ἀπέναντι
+τοῦ παραδεῖσου τῆς τρυφῆς; And the <i>Vulgate</i> renders it, <i>Ante
+Paradisum voluptatis</i>; and according to the <i>Samaritan</i>
+Pentateuch, ’tis render’d <i>ex adverso</i>. Now, what better
+Authorities can he bring us for his Translation? I do not
+find that he gives any, as his usual Way is, but his own
+Authority. And as for the Word מקדם in the second
+<i>Chapter</i> and eighth <i>Verse</i>, which is the principal Place,
+’tis well known, that except the <i>Septuagint</i>, all the antient
+Versions, <i>Greek</i> and <i>Latin</i>, (besides others) render it
+to another Sense: And there is a like Uncertainty of
+Translation in the Word עדן as we have noted elsewhere.
+Lastly, the Rivers of Paradise, and the Countries
+that are said to run through or encompass, are differently
+understood by different Authors, without any Agreement
+or certain Conclusion: But these are all beaten Subjects,
+which you may find in every Treatise of Paradise, and
+therefore ’tis not worth the Time to pursue them here.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then he proceeds to the <i>Longevity of the Ante-Deluvians</i>,
+which, so far as I can understand him to affirm any Thing,
+he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 139.</i> was not <i>general</i>; but the Lives of some
+few were <i>extraordinary, lengthen’d by a special Blessing;
+the Elongation being a Work of Providence, not of Nature</i>.
+This is a cheap and vulgar Account, (and so are all the
+Contents of this Chapter) prov’d neither by Scripture, nor
+Reason, and calculated for the Humour and Capacity of
+those that love their Ease more than a diligent Enquiry
+after Truth. He hath indeed a bold Assertion afterwards,
+that <i>Moses</i> does distinguish as much, or more, betwixt
+<i>two Races of Men before the Flood</i>; the one <i>Long-Livers</i>,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_506'>506</span>and the other <i>Short-Livers</i>; as he hath distinguish’d the
+Giants before the Flood, from the common Race of
+Mankind. These are his Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 141.</i> <i>Is not his Distinction
+equally plain in both Cases?</i> Speaking of this fore-mentioned
+Distinction: Or, <i>if there be any Difference, does
+he not distinguish better betwixt Long-Livers, and Short-Livers,
+than he does betwixt Men of gigantick and of usual
+Proportion?</i> Let’s see the Truth of this; <i>Moses</i> plainly made
+mention, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr> <abbr title='six'>vi.</abbr> 4.</i> of two Races of Mankind: The ordinary
+Race, and those of a gigantick Race, or <i>Giants</i>. Now,
+tell me where he plainly makes mention of <i>Short-Livers</i>
+before the Flood: And if he no where makes mention of
+<i>Short-Livers</i>, but of <i>Long-Livers</i> only, how does he distinguish
+as plainly of these two Races, as he did of the other
+two; for in the other he mentioned plainly and severally
+both the Parts or Members of the Distinction, and here
+he mentions but one, and makes no Distinction.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then he comes to the Testimonies cited by <i>Josephus</i>
+for the Longevity of the <i>Ante-Diluvians</i>, or first Inhabitants
+of the Earth: And these he roundly pronounces to
+be <i>utterly false</i>. This Gentleman does not seem to be
+much skill’d in Antiquity, either sacred or prophane;
+and yet he boldly rejects these Testimonies (as he did
+those of the Fathers before) as <i>utterly false</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 142.</i> which
+<i>Josephus</i> had alledged in Vindication of the History of
+<i>Moses</i>. The only Reason he gives is, because these Testimonies
+say, they liv’d a <i>thousand Years</i>; whereas <i>Moses</i>
+does not raise them altogether so high. But the Question
+was not so much concerning the precise Number of their
+Years, as about the Excess of them beyond the present
+Lives of Men, and a round Number in such Cases is
+often taken instead of a broken Number. Besides, seeing,
+according to the Account of <i>Moses</i>, the greater Part of
+them liv’d above nine hundred Years, at least he should
+not have said these Testimonies in <i>Josephus</i> were <i>utterly
+false</i>, but false in part, or not precisely true.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now, he comes to his Reasons against the ante-diluvian
+Longevity, which have all had their Answers before,
+and those we stand to. But I wonder he should think it
+reasonable, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 144, 145.</i> that Mankind throughout all
+Ages, should increase in the same Proportion as in the first
+Age: And, if a decuple Proportion of Increase was reasonable
+at first, the same should be continued all along;
+and the Product of Mankind, after sixteen hundred Years,
+should be taken upon that Supposition. I should not grudge
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_507'>507</span>to admit that the first Pair of Breeders might leave ten Pair;
+but that every Pair of these ten should also leave ten Pair,
+without any Failure: and every Pair in their Children
+should again leave ten Pair; and this to be continued, without
+Diminution or Interruption, for sixteen hundred Years,
+is not only a hard Supposition, but utterly incredible. For
+still the greater the Number was, the more Room there
+would be for Accidents of all Sorts; and every Failure
+towards the Beginning, and proportionably in other Parts,
+would cut off Thousands in the last Product.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='fourteen'>XIV.</abbr> Is against the Dissolution of the Earth, and
+the Disruption of the Abyss at the Deluge, such as the
+Theory represents. Here is nothing of new Argument,
+but some Strokes of railing Wit, after his Way: He had
+said in his <i>Exceptions</i>, that the <i>Dissolution of the Earth was
+horrid Blasphemy</i>: Now he makes it <i>reductive Blasphemy</i>,
+as being <i>indirectly</i>, <i>consequentially</i>, or <i>reductively</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 153,
+154. contrary to Scripture. By this Rule, we told him,
+all Errors in Religion would be Blasphemy; and if he extend
+this to Errors in Philosophy also, ’tis still more harsh
+and injudicious. I wonder how he thinks the Doctrine
+which he owns, about the Motion of the Earth, should
+escape the Charge of <i>Blasphemy</i>; that being not only
+indirectly, but directly and plainly contrary to Scripture.
+We thought that Expression, <i>the Earth is dissolved</i>, being
+a Scripture Expression, would thereby have been protected
+from the Imputation of <i>Blasphemy</i>, and we alledged to
+that Purpose, (besides <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seventy-five'>lxxv.</abbr> 3.) <i><abbr title='Isaiah'>Isa.</abbr></i> <abbr title='twenty-four'>xxiv.</abbr> 19. <i>Amos</i>
+<abbr title='nine'>ix.</abbr> 5. He would have done well to have proved
+these Places in the Prophets <i>Isaiah</i> and <i>Amos</i>, to have been
+<i>figurative</i> and <i>tropological</i>, as he calls it; for we take them
+both to relate to the Dissolution of the Earth, which literally
+came to pass at the Deluge: And he not having proved
+the contrary, we are in Hopes still that the <i>Dissolution
+of the Earth</i> may not be <i>horrid Blasphemy</i>, nor of <i>blasphemous
+Importance</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then having quarrell’d with the Guard of Angels, which
+the <i>Theorist</i> had assign’d for the Preservation of the Ark,
+in the Time of the Deluge, he falls next into his Blunder,
+that the <i>Equator</i> and <i>Ecliptick</i> of the Earth were interchang’d,
+when the Situation of the Earth was chang’d.
+This Error in the Earth is <i>Cousin-German</i> to his former
+Error in the Heavens, <i>viz.</i> that the Earth chang’d its
+Tract about the Sun, and leap’d out of the <i>Equator</i> into
+the <i>Ecliptick</i>, when it chang’d its Situation. The Truth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_508'>508</span>is, this <i>Copernican System</i> seems to lie cross in his Imagination:
+I think he would do better to let it alone. However,
+tho’ at other Times he is generally verbose and long-winded,
+he hath the Sense to pass this by in a few Words;
+laying the Blame upon certain <i>Parentheses</i> or <i>Semicircles</i>,
+whose Innocency not withstanding we have fully clear’d,
+and shew’d the Poison to be spread throughout the whole
+Paragraph, which is too great to be made an <i>Erratum
+Typographicum</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then after, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 160, 161.</i> <i>Hermus, Caister, Menander
+and Caius; Nile and its Mud, Piscenius Niger, who contended
+with Septimus Severus for the Empire, and reprimanded
+his Soldiers for hankering after Wine; Du Val, an
+ingenious French Writer, and Cleopatra and her admired
+Anthony</i>: He concludes, that the Waters of the Deluge
+raged amongst the Fragments, with <i>lasting</i>, <i>incessant</i>, and
+<i>unimaginable Turbulence</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>And so he comes to an Argument against the Dissolution
+of the Earth, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 162.</i> That, <i>all the Buildings erected
+before the Flood, would have been shaken down at that Time,
+or else overwhelmed</i>. He instanc’d in his <i>Exceptions</i> in
+<i>Seth’s Pillars; Henochia, Cain’s City; and Joppa</i>: These
+he suppos’d such Buildings as were made before, and
+stood after the Flood. But now, <i>Seth</i>’s Pillars and <i>Henochia</i>
+being dismiss’d, he insists upon <i>Joppa</i> only, and says,
+this must have consisted of <i>such Materials, as could never
+be prepared, formed and set up, without Iron-Tools</i>. Tho’
+I do not much believe that <i>Joppa</i> was an ante-diluvian
+Town, yet whatever they had in <i>Cain</i>’s Time, they might,
+before the Deluge, have Mortar and Brick, which, as they
+are the first stony Materials, that we read of, for Building;
+so the Ruins of them might stand after the Deluge.
+And that they had no other Materials is the more probable,
+because after the Flood, at the Building of <i>Babel</i>,
+<i>Moses</i> plainly intimates that they had no other Materials
+than those. For the Text says, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eleven'>xi.</abbr> 3. <i>They said one
+to another, Go to, let us make Brick and burn them thoroughly;
+and they made Brick for Stone, and Slime had they for
+Mortar.</i> But now this Argument, methinks, may be retorted
+upon the Exceptor with Advantage: For, if there
+were no Dissolutions, Concussions, or Absorptions, at
+the Deluge, instead of the Ruins of <i>Joppa</i>, methinks we
+might have had the Ruins of an hundred ante-diluvian
+Cities; especially, if, according to his Hypothesis, they
+had good Stone, and good Iron, and all other Materials,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_509'>509</span>fit for strong and lasting Building: And, which is also to
+be consider’d, that it was but a fifteen-cubit Deluge; so
+that Towns built upon Eminences or high Lands, would
+be in little Danger of being ruin’d, much less of being
+abolish’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>His last Argument, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 163.</i>) proves, if it prove any
+Thing, that God’s Promise, that <i>the World</i> should not be
+<i>drown’d</i> again, was a <i>vain and trifling Thing</i> to us, who
+know it must be burn’d: And consequently, if <i>Noah</i> understood
+the Conflagration of the World, he makes it a
+<i>vain and trifling Thing</i> to <i>Noah</i> also. If the Exceptor delight
+in such Conclusions, let him enjoy them, but they
+are not at all to the Mind of the Theorist.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Chapter</i> <abbr title='fifteen'>XV.</abbr> Now we come to his new Hypothesis of
+a <i>fifteen-cubit Deluge</i>; and what Shifts he hath made to
+destroy the World with such a diminutive Flood, we
+have noted before: First, by raising his Water-Mark, and
+making it uncertain: Then by converting the Deluge, in
+a great Measure into a <i>Famine</i>: And, Lastly, by destroying
+Mankind and other Animals, with <i>evil Angels</i>. We
+shall now take notice of some other Incongruities in his
+Hypothesis. When he made <i>Moses</i>’s Deluge but <i>fifteen
+Cubits deep</i>, we said that was an <i>unmerciful Paradox</i>, and
+ask’d whether he would have it receiv’d as a <i>Postulatum</i>,
+or as a <i>Conclusion</i>. All he answers to this, is, that the
+same Question may be ask’d concerning several Parts of
+the Theory; <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 166.</i> Particularly, that the primitive Earth
+had no <i>open Sea</i>. Whether is that, says he, to be receiv’d
+as a <i>Postulatum</i>, or as a <i>Conclusion</i>? The Answer is ready,
+as a <i>Conclusion</i>, deduced from Premisses, and a Series of
+antecedent Reasons. Now, can he make this Answer
+for his fifteen-cubit Deluge? Must not that still be a
+<i>Postulatum</i>, and an unmerciful one? As to the Theory,
+there is but one <i>Postulatum</i> in all, <i>viz.</i> that the <i>Earth rise
+from a Chaos</i>. All the other Propositions are deduc’d from
+Premisses, and that one <i>Postulatum</i> also is prov’d by
+Scripture and Antiquity. We had noted further in the
+Answer, that the Author had said in his Exceptions, that
+he would not defend his Hypotheses as <i>true</i> and <i>real</i>; and
+we demanded thereupon, <i>Why</i> then did he trouble himself
+or the World with what he did not think <i>true</i> and
+<i>real</i>? To this he replies, <i>Many have written ingenious and
+useful Things, which they never believ’d to be true and
+real</i>. Romances suppose, and poetical Fictions: Will you
+have your fifteen-cubit Deluge pass for such? But then
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_510'>510</span>the Mischief is, where there is neither Truth of Fact,
+nor Ingenuity of Invention, such a Composition will
+hardly pass for a Romance, or a good Fiction. But there
+is still a greater Difficulty behind. The Exceptor hath unhappily
+said, <i>Exc. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 302. Our Supposition stands supported
+by Divine Authority, as being founded upon Scripture;
+which tells us as plainly as it can speak, that the Waters prevailed
+but fifteen Cubits upon the Earth</i>. Upon which
+Words the Answerer made this Remark, <i>Ans. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 67. If
+his Hypothesis be founded upon Scripture, and upon Scripture
+as plainly as it can speak, why will he not defend it as
+TRUE and REAL? For to be supported by Scripture, and
+by plain Scripture, is as much as we can alledge for the
+Articles of our Faith</i>. To this he replies now, <i>Def. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 168.</i>
+that he <i>begg’d Allowance at first, to make bold with Scripture
+a little</i>: This is a bold Excuse, and he especially, one
+would think, should take heed how he makes bold with
+Scripture, lest, according to his own Notion, he fall into
+<i>Blasphemy</i>, or something of <i>blasphemous Importance,
+indirectly, consequentially,</i> or <i>reductively</i>, at least: However,
+this Excuse, if it was a good one, would take no
+Place here; for to understand and apply Scripture, in that
+Sense that it speaks <i>as plainly as it can speak</i>, is not to
+make bold with it, but modestly to follow its Dictates
+and plain Sense.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He feels this Load to lie heavy upon him, and struggles
+again to shake it off with a Distinction. When he
+said his fifteen-cubit Deluge was <i>supported by Divine Authority</i>,
+&#38;c. this, he says, <i>ibid.</i> was spoken <i>by him, in an
+hypothetick or suppositious Way, and that it cannot possibly
+be understood otherwise by Men of Sense</i>. Here are two
+hard Words: Let us first understand what they signify, and
+then we shall better judge how Men of Sense would understand
+his Words. His <i>hypothetick</i> or <i>suppositious Way</i>,
+so far as I understand it, is the same Thing as by <i>way of
+Supposition</i>: Then his Meaning is, he <i>supposes</i> his fifteen-cubit
+Deluge is <i>supported by Divine Authority</i>; and he
+<i>supposes</i> it is <i>founded upon Scripture, as plainly as it can
+speak</i>: But this is to suppose the Question, and no Man of
+Sense would make or grant such a Supposition; so that I
+do not see what he gains by this <i>hypothetick</i> and <i>suppositious
+Way</i>. But to draw him out of this Mist of Words, either
+he affirms this, that his <i>Hypothesis is supported by Divine
+Authority, and founded upon Scripture as plainly as it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_511'>511</span>can speak</i>, or he denies it, or he doubts of it: If he affirm
+it, then all his Excuses and Diminutions are to no purpose,
+he must stand to his Cause, and shew us those plain
+Texts of Scripture; if he deny it, he gives up his Cause,
+and all that Divine Authority he pretended to; if he
+doubt of it, then he should have express’d himself doubtfully:
+As, <i>Scripture may admit of that Sense, or may be
+thought to intimate such a thing</i>, but he says with a Plerophory,
+<i>Scripture speaks it as plainly as it can speak</i>: And
+to mend the Matter, he unluckily subjoins in the following
+Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 168, 169. <i>Yea, tho’ it was spoken never so
+positively, it was but to set forth REI PERSONAM:
+To make a more full and lively Representation of the supposed
+thing.</i> He does well to tell us what he means by
+<i>Rei Personam</i>; for otherwise no Man of Sense, as his
+Phrase is, would ever have made that Translation of those
+Words. But the Truth is, he is so perfectly at a Loss
+how to bring himself off, as to this Particular, that in
+his Confusion, he neither makes good Sense nor good
+<i>Latin</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now he comes to another Inconsistency which was
+charg’d upon him by the <i>Answerer</i>: Namely, that he rejects
+the <i>Church Hypothesis</i> concerning the Deluge, and
+yet had said before, <i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 300. <i>I cannot believe (which
+I cannot well endure to speak) that the Church hath ever
+gone on in an irrational Way of explaining the Deluge</i>:
+That he does reject this Church Hypothesis, was plainly
+made out from his own Words, because he rejects the
+<i>common Hypothesis</i>; (<i>see the Citation in the Answer</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 68.)
+the <i>general standing Hypothesis</i>; the <i>usual Hypothesis</i>; the
+<i>usual Sense they put upon Sacred Story</i>, &#38;c. These Citations
+he does not think fit to take Notice of in his Reply;
+but puts all upon this general Issue, which the <i>Answerer</i>
+concludes with: <i>The Church Way of explaining the Deluge,
+is either rational or irrational: If he say it is rational,
+why does he desert it, and invent a new one: And
+if he say it is irrational, then that dreadful thing, which
+he cannot well endure to speak, that the Church of God
+hath ever gone on in an irrational Way of explaining the
+Deluge, falls flat upon himself.</i> Let’s hear his Answer to
+this Dilemma. <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 170. <i>We say</i>, says he, <i>that the Church
+Way of explaining the Deluge</i>, (by creating and annihilating
+Waters for the Nonce) <i>is very rational</i>. Then say I still,
+why do you desert it, or why do you trouble us with a
+new one? Either his Hypothesis is more rational than
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_512'>512</span>the Church Hypothesis, or less rational: If less rational,
+why does he take us off from a better, to amuse
+us with a worse? But if he say, his Hypothesis is more
+rational than that of the Church: Then Woe be to
+him, in his own Words, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 171. that so <i>black a Blemish
+should be fasten’d upon the wisest and noblest Society in the
+World</i>, as to make himself more wise than they, and his
+Hypothesis more rational than theirs. The Truth is,
+this Gentleman hath a mind to appear a <i>Virtuoso</i>, for the
+new Philosophy, and the <i>Copernican</i> System; and yet
+would be a Zealot for Orthodoxy, and the Church-Way
+of explaining Things: Which two Designs do not well
+agree, as to the natural World; and betwixt two Stools
+he falls to the Ground, and proves neither good Churchman,
+nor good Philosopher.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But he will not still be convinc’d that he deserts the
+Church Hypothesis, and continues to deny the Desertion
+in these Words. <i>Ibid.</i> <i>We say we do not desert or reject
+the Church-Way of explaining the Deluge.</i> Now, to discover
+whether these Words are true or false; let us observe,
+<i>First</i>, What he acknowledges to have said against
+the Church Hypothesis: <i>Secondly</i>, What he hath said more
+than what he acknowledges here. He acknowledges, that
+he said, the Church Hypothesis <i>might be disgustful to the
+best and soundest philosophick Judgments</i>; and this is no
+good Character. Yet this is not all, for he hath fairly
+dropp’d a principal Word in his Sentence, namely, <i>justly</i>,
+<i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 312. His Words in his <i>Exceptions</i>, were these,
+<i>such Inventions</i> (which he applies to the Church Hypothesis)
+<i>as have been, and JUSTLY may be disgustful, not
+only to nice and squeamish, but to the best and soundest
+philosophick Judgments</i>. Now judge, whether he cited this
+Sentence before, truly and fairly, and whether in these
+Words, truly cited, he does not disparage the Church
+Hypothesis, and justify those that are disgusted at it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He farthermore acknowledges, that the usual Ways of
+explaining the Deluge <i>seem unreasonable to some, and unintelligible
+to others, and unsatisfactory to the most</i>: But, it
+seems, he will neither be of these, <i>some</i>, <i>others</i>, or <i>most</i>.
+Lastly, He acknowledges that he said, <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 171. <i>The
+ordinary Supposition, that the Mountains were covered with
+Waters in the Deluge, brings on a Necessity of setting up a
+new Hypothesis for explaining the Flood.</i> If so, what was
+this <i>ordinary Supposition</i>? was it not the Supposition of the
+Church? And was that such, as made it necessary to set
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_513'>513</span>up a new Hypothesis for explaining the Flood? then the
+old Hypothesis was insufficient or irrational.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much he acknowledges; but he omits what we
+noted before, his rejecting or disapproving the <i>common
+Hypothesis</i>, the <i>general standing Hypothesis</i>, the <i>usual Sense
+they put upon the Sacred Story</i>, &#38;c. And do not all these
+Phrases denote the Church Hypothesis? He farther omits,
+that he confess’d, (<i>Excep.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 325.) <i>he had expounded a
+Text or two of Scripture about the Deluge, so as none ever
+did; and, deserting the common receiv’d Sense, puts an unusual
+Gloss upon them</i>. And is not that <i>common receiv’d
+Sense</i> the Sense of the Church, and his <i>unusual Gloss</i> contrary
+to it? Lastly, he says, by his Hypothesis, we need not
+fly to a <i>new Creation of Waters</i>, and gives his Reasons at
+large against that Opinion; which you may see, <i>Except.</i>
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 313. Now, those Reasons he thought either to be <i>good</i>
+Reasons or <i>bad</i> Reasons; if <i>bad</i>, why did he set them
+down, or why did he not confuse them? If good, they
+stand good against the Hypothesis of the Church; for he
+makes that <i>new Creation</i> and <i>Annihilation</i> of Waters at
+the Deluge to be the Hypothesis of the Church, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 170.
+I fear I have spent too much Time in shewing him utterly
+inconsistent with himself in this Particular. And I wonder
+he should be so sollicitous to justify the Hypothesis
+of the Church in this Point, seeing he openly dissents from
+it in a greater; I mean in that of the <i>System of the World</i>.
+Hear his Words, if you please, to this Purpose, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 136.
+<i>And what does the famous</i> Aristotelian <i>Hypothesis seem to be
+now, but a Mass of Errors; where such a System was contriv’d
+for the Heavens, and such a Situation assign’d to the
+Earth, as neither Reason can approve, nor Nature allow.
+Yet so prosperous and prevailing was this Hypothesis, that it
+was generally receiv’d, and successfully propagated for many
+Ages.</i> This prosperous prevailing Error, or Mass of Errors,
+was it not espoused and supported by the Church?
+And to break from the Church in greater Points, and
+scruple it in less, is not this to strain at Gnats, and swallow
+Camels?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for his Inconsistency with himself: The rest
+of this Chapter in the <i>Answer</i>, shews his Inconsistency
+with <i>Moses</i>, both as to the Waters covering the Tops of
+the Mountains, which <i>Moses</i> affirms, and the Exceptor
+denies; and as to the Decrease of the Deluge, which
+<i>Moses</i> makes to be by the Waters retiring into their
+Chanels, after frequent Reciprocations, <i>going</i> and <i>coming</i>.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_514'>514</span>But the Exceptor says, the Sun suck’d up the Waters from
+the Earth, just as he had before suck’d the Mountains out
+of the Earth: These Things are so groundless, or so gross,
+that it would be tedious to insist longer upon them. And
+whereas it is not reasonable to expect that any others
+should be idle enough, as we must be, to collate three or
+four Tracts, to discern where the Advantage lies in these
+small Altercations; I desire only, if they be so dispos’d,
+that they would collate the <i>Exceptions</i>, <i>Answer</i>, and <i>Defence</i>
+in this one Chapter, which is our Author’s Master-Piece:
+And from this I am willing they should take their
+Measures, and make a Judgment of his good or bad Success
+in other Parts.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>What Shifts he hath us’d to make his <i>fifteen-cubit Deluge</i>
+sufficient to destroy all Mankind, and all Animals,
+we have noted before; and here it is (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 181, 182.) that
+he reduces them to <i>Famine</i>. And after that he comes
+to a long Excursion of seven or eight Pages, about the
+Imperfection of <i>Shipping</i> after the Flood, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 183,
+185, <i>&#38;c.</i> a good Argument for the Theorist, that they
+had not an open Sea, Iron-Tools, and Materials for Shipping
+before the Flood: For what should make them so
+inexpert in Navigation for many Years and Ages after
+the Flood, if they had the Practice and Experience of it
+before the Flood: And what could hinder their having
+that Practice and Experience, if they had an open Sea,
+and all Iron and other Materials, for that Use and
+Purpose?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, he comes to his Notion of the <i>great Deep</i>, or
+<i>Tehom-Rabbah</i>, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 191. which he had made before,
+in express Words, to be the Holes and Caverns in the
+Rocks; I say, in express Words, such as these, <i><abbr title='Exceptions'>Exc.</abbr></i>
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 312. <i>Now supposing that the Caverns in the Mountains
+were this great Deep</i>, speaking of <i>Moses’s great Deep</i>,
+according to this new Hypothesis. He says farther, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 105.)
+<i>In case it be urg’d, that Caverns, especially Caverns so high
+situate, cannot properly he called the great Deep.</i> Where
+you see his own Objection supposes that he made those
+Caverns the <i>great Deep</i>. And in the same Page, speaking
+of the Psalmist’s <i>great Deeps</i>, (in his own Sense of making
+them Holes in Rocks,) and <i>Moses</i>’s <i>great Deep</i>, he
+says, <i>the same Thing might be meant by both</i>. By all these
+Expressions one would think it plain, that by his <i>great Deep</i>
+he meant his <i>Caverns</i> in Rocks; yet now, upon Objections
+urged against it, he seems desirous to fly off from that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_515'>515</span>Notion, but does not yet tell us plainly what must be
+meant by <i>Moses</i>’s <i>great Deep</i>: If he, upon second Thoughts,
+would have the Sea to be understood by it, why does he
+not answer the Objections that are made by the Theorist
+against that Interpretation? <i>Engl. Theor.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 110, <i>&#38;c.</i>
+Nay, why does he not answer what he himself had objected
+before (<i>Except.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 310.) against that Supposition?
+He seems to unsay now, what he said before, and yet
+substitutes nothing in the Place of it, to be understood by
+<i>Moses’s Tehom. Rabbah</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='sixteen'>XVI.</abbr> is a few Words concerning these Expressions
+of <i>shutting the Windows of Heaven</i>, and the <i>Fountains
+of the Abyss</i>, after the Deluge: And these were both
+shut alike, and both of them no less than the <i>Caverns</i> in
+the Mountains.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seventeen'>XVII.</abbr> hath nothing of Argumentation or Philosophy,
+but runs on in a popular declamatory Way, and
+(if I may use that forbidden Word) injudicious. All
+amounts to this, <i>whether</i> we may not go contrary to the
+Letter of Scripture, in natural Things, when that goes contrary
+to plain Reason. This we affirm, and this every one
+must affirm, that believes the <i>Motion of the Earth</i>, as our
+Virtuoso pretends to do: Then he concludes all with an
+harmonious Close, that he follows the great Example of
+a Reverend Prelate, <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 215. and <i>militates under that
+Episcopal Banner</i>. I am willing to believe that he wrote at
+first, in hopes to curry Favour with certain Persons, by
+his great Zeal for Orthodoxy; but he hath made such an
+Hotch-potch of new Philosophy and Divinity, that I believe
+it will scarce please the Party he would cajole; nor
+so much as his Reverend Patron. I was so civil to him in
+the Answer, as to make him a Saint in comparison of
+the former Animadverter; but, by the Stile and Spirit of
+this last Pamphlet, he hath forfeited with me all his Saint-ship,
+both absolute and comparative.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for his Chapters; and as to his Reflections
+upon the <i>Review of the Theory</i>, they are so superficial and
+inconsiderable, that I believe he never expected that they
+should be regarded: I wonder however, that he should decline
+an Examination of the second Part of the <i>Theory</i>:
+It cannot be for want of good Will to confute it; he hath
+shewn that to the Height, whatsoever his Power was:
+Neither can it be for want of Difference or Disagreement
+in Opinion, as to the Contents of this latter Part; for he
+hath reckon’d the <i>Millennium</i> amongst the Errors of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_516'>516</span>antient <i>Fathers</i>, (<i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 136) and the <i>Renovation of the
+World</i> he makes <i>Allegorical</i>, (<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 214, <i>&#38;c.</i>) It must therefore
+be for want of some third Thing, which he best
+knows.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But before we conclude, Sir, we must remember that
+we promised to speak apart to two Things, which are
+often objected to the Theorist by this Writer, and to little
+Purpose; namely, his flying to <i>extraordinary Providence</i>,
+and his flying from the <i>literal Sense</i> of Scripture. As to
+extraordinary Providence, is the Theorist alone debarr’d
+from recourse to it, or would he have all Men debarr’d,
+as well as the Theorist? If so, why doth he use it so
+much himself? And if it be allow’d to others, there is no
+Reason it should be deny’d the Theorist, unless he have
+disown’d it, and so debarr’d himself that common Privilege:
+But the contrary is manifest, in a multitude of Places,
+both of the first and second Part of the <i>Theory</i>, Eng. Theor.
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 144, <i>&#38;c.</i> For, besides a Discourse on Purpose upon
+that Subject, in the eighth <i>Chapter</i> of the first Book,
+in the last Chapter, and last Words of the same Book
+(<i>Latin</i>) he does openly avow, both Providence (Natural
+and Moral) and Miracles; in these Words, <i>Denique
+cum certissimum sit à divina Providentia pendere res omnes,
+cujuscunque ordinis, &#38; ab eâdem vera miracula edita
+esse</i>, &#38;c. And as to the second Part of the <i>Theory</i>,
+the Ministry of Angels is there acknowledg’d frequently,
+both as to natural and moral Administrations. From all
+which Instances it is manifest, that the Theorist did not
+debar himself, by denying either <i>Miracles</i>, <i>angelical Ministry</i>,
+or <i>extraordinary Providence</i>: But, if the Exceptor
+be so injudicious (pardon me that bold Word) as to confound
+all extraordinary Providence with the <i>Acts of Omnipotency</i>,
+he must blame himself for that, not the Theorist.
+The <i>Creation</i> and <i>Annihilation</i> of Waters is an Act of
+pure Omnipotency: This the Theorist did not admit of
+at the Deluge; and if this be his Fault, as it is frequently
+objected to him, (<i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 9, 66, 170, <i>&#38;c.</i>) he perseveres
+in it still, and in the Reasons he gave for his Opinion, which
+are no where confuted: <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 25, 26. But as
+for Acts of angelical Power, he does every where acknowledge
+them in the great Revolutions, even of the natural
+World: <i>Theor. Lat.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 73. <i>Engl.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 146, 147. If the Exceptor
+would make the Divine Omnipotency as cheap as
+the Ministry of Angels, and have recourse as freely and
+as frequently to that, as to this; if he would make all
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_517'>517</span>extraordinary Providence the same, and all Miracles, and
+set all at the Pitch of infinite Power, this may be an Effect
+of his Ignorance or Inadvertency, but is no way imputable
+to the Theorist.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the next Place it may be observ’d, that the Theorist
+hath no where asserted, that <i>Moses</i>’s <i>Cosmopœia</i> (which
+does not proceed according to ordinary Providence) is to
+be literally understood; and therefore what is urg’d against
+him from the Letter of that <i>Cosmopœia</i>, is improperly urg’d
+and without Ground. There are as good Reasons, and
+better Authorities, that <i>Moses</i>’s <i>six Days Creation</i> should
+not be literally understood, than there are, why those Texts
+of Scripture that speak about the <i>Motion of the Sun</i>, should
+not be literally understood: And as to the Theorist, he
+had often intimated his Sense of that <i>Cosmopœia</i>, that it
+was express’d <i>more humano, &#38; ad captum populi</i>, as appears
+in several Passages in the <i>Latin</i> Theory: Speaking of the
+<i>Mosaical Cosmogonia</i>, he hath these Words, <i>Theor.</i> <i>lib.</i> 2.
+<i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 8. <i>Constat hæc Cosmopœia duabus parcibus quarum prima,
+massas generales atque rerum inconditarum statum exbibet;
+seqniturque eadem principia, &#38; eundem ordinem,
+quem Antiqui usque retinuerunt. Atque in hoc nobiscium conveniunt
+omnes fere interpretes Christiani; nempe</i>, Tohu
+Bohu <i>Mosaicum idem esse ac Chaos Antiquorum</i>. <i>Tenebras
+Mosaicas</i>, &#38;c. <i>bucusque convenit Mosi cum anfiquis Philosophis,——methodium
+autem illam Philosophicam hic abrumpit,
+aliamque orditur, bumanam, aut, si mavis, Theologicam;
+quo, motibus Chaos, secundum leges natura, &#38;
+divini amoris actionem, plane neglectis, &#38; successivis ipsius
+mutationibus in varias regiones, &#38; elementa: His inquam
+posthabitis, popularem narrationem de ortu rerum hoc modo
+instituit: Res omnes visibiles in sex classes</i>, &#38;c. This is a
+plain Indication how the Theorist understood that <i>Cosmopœia</i>:
+And accordingly in the <i>English Theory</i> the Author
+says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i>402. &#38;c. <i>I have not mention’d</i> Moses<i>’s</i> Cosmopœia,
+<i>because I thought it deliver’d by him as a Law-giver,
+not as a Philosopher; which I intend to shew at large in
+another Treatise, not thinking that Discussion proper for the
+vulgar Tongue</i>. The Exceptor was also minded of this
+in the Answer, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 66. Now, ’tis much that he, who hath
+search’d all the Corners, both of the <i>English</i> and <i>Latin</i>
+Theory, to pick Quarrels, should never observe such obvious
+Passages as these, but still make Objections from
+the Letter of the <i>Mosaical Cosmopœia</i>, which affect the
+Theorist no more than those Places of Scripture that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_518'>518</span>speak of the Motion of the Sun, or the Pillars of the
+Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In the last Place, the Theorist distinguish’d two Methods
+for explaining the natural World, that of an <i>ordinary</i>,
+and that of an <i>extraordinary Providence</i>: And those
+that take the second Way, he said, might dispatch their
+Task as soon as they pleas’d, if they engag’d Omnipotency
+in the Work. But the other Method would require
+Time, it must proceed by distinct Steps, and leisurely Motions,
+such as Nature can admit; and, in that Respect, it
+might not suit with the busy Lives, or impatient Studies
+of most Men, whom he left notwithstanding to their Liberty,
+to take what Method they pleas’d, provided they
+were not troublesome in forcing their hasty Thoughts
+upon all others. Thus the Theorist hath express’d himself
+at the End of the first Book, <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 12. <i>Interea cum non
+omnes a natura ita compositi simus, ut Philosophia studiis
+delectemur: Neque etiam liceat multis, propter occupationes
+vitæ, iisdem vacare, quibus per ingenium licuisset; iis jure
+permittendum est, compendiario sapere, &#38; relictis viis naturæ
+&#38; causarum secundarum, quæ sæpe longiusculæ sunt,
+per cansas superiores philosophari; idque potissimum, cum ex
+piis affectivus hoc quandoque fieri possit; quibus, vel male
+fundatis, aliquid dandum esse existimo, modo non sint turbulenti.</i>
+Thus the Theorist, you see, sets two Ways before
+them; and ’tis indifferent to him whether they take, if they
+will go on their Way peaceably. And he does now, moreover,
+particularly declare, That he hath no Ambition, either
+to make the <i>Exceptor</i>, or any other of the same Dispositions
+of Will, and the same Elevation of Understanding,
+Proselytes to his Theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus much for <i>Providence</i>: As to the <i>literal Sense</i> of
+Scripture, I find, if what was noted before in the <i>Answer</i>,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 82, 83, <i>&#38;c.</i> had been duly consider’d, there would be
+little need of Additions upon that Subject. The Matter
+was stated freely and distinctly, and the Remarks or Reflections
+which the Exceptor hath made in his <i>Defence</i>
+upon this Doctrine, are both shallow and partial. I say
+<i>partial</i>, in perverting the Sense, and separating such Things
+as manifestly depend upon one another. Thus the Exceptor
+falls upon that Expression in the <i>Answer</i>, <i>Def.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 202.
+<i>Let us remember that this contradicting Scripture, here pretended,
+is only in natural Things</i>, where he should have
+added the other Part of the Sentence, <i>and also observe how
+for the Exceptor himself, in such Things, hath contradicted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_519'>519</span>Scripture</i>. Here he makes an odious Declamation, as if
+the Answerer had confess’d that he <i>contradicted Scripture
+in natural Things</i>; whereas the Words are contradicting
+Scripture, <i>here pretended</i>; and ’tis plain by all the Discourse,
+that ’tis the literal Sense of Scripture that is here
+spoken of, which the Exceptor is also said to contradict.
+Such an unmanly Captiousness shews the Temper and
+Measure of that Spirit, which, rather than say nothing, will
+misrepresent the plain Sense of an Author. In like manner,
+when he comes to those Words in the Answer,
+The Case therefore is this, whether <i>to go contrary to the
+Letter of Scripture in Things that relate to the natural World,
+be destroying the Foundation of Religion, affronting Scripture,
+and blaspheming the Holy Ghost. Def. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 206. He says,
+This is not to state the Case truly, for it is not, says he,
+<i>going contrary to the Letter of Scripture that draws such
+evil Consequences after it, but going contrary to the Letter
+of Scripture, where it is understood</i>: And <i>this the Theorist
+does</i>, he says, and the <i>Exceptor does not</i>. But who says
+so besides himself? This is fairly to beg the Question;
+and can he suppose the Theorist so easy as to grant this
+without Proof? It must be the Subject Matter that determines,
+what is, and what is not, to be literally understood.
+However, he goes on, begging still the Question
+in his own behalf, and says, Those Texts of Scripture,
+that speak of the Motion and Course of the Sun, are not
+to be understood literally. But why not? Because the literal
+Sense is not to his Mind? Of four Texts of Scripture
+which the Theorist alledg’d against him, for the Motion
+of the Sun, he answers but one, and that very superficially,
+to say no worse. ’Tis <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='nineteen'>xix.</abbr> where the
+Sun at his rising is said to be as a <i>Bridegroom coming out
+of his Chamber, and to rejoice as a strong Man to run his
+Race: And his going forth is from the end of the Heaven,
+and his Circuit to the end of it</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 207. which he answers
+with this vain Flourish: <i>Then the Sun must be a Man, and
+must be upon his Marriage, and must be dress’d in fine
+Clothes, as a Bridegroom is: Then he must come out of a
+Chamber, and must give no more Light, and cast no more
+Heat, than a Bridegroom does</i>, &#38;c. If a Man should ridicule
+at this rate, the Discourse of our Saviour concerning
+<i>Lazarus</i> in <i>Abraham</i>’s Bosom, and <i>Dives</i> in Hell,
+with a great Gulph betwixt them, yet talking audibly to
+one another; <i><abbr title='Luke'>Luk.</abbr></i> <abbr title='sixteen'>xvi.</abbr> and that <i>Lazarus</i> should be sent
+so far, as from Heaven to Hell, only to <i>dip the Tip of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_520'>520</span>his Finger in Water</i>, and cool <i>Dives</i>’s Tongue. He that
+should go about thus to expose our Saviour’s Parable,
+would have a thankless Office, and effect nothing: For
+the Substance of it would stand good still; namely, that
+Mens Souls live after Death, and that good Souls are in
+a State of Ease and Comfort, and bad Souls in a State of
+Misery. In like manner, his ridiculing some Circumstances
+in the Comparison made by the Psalmist, does not at
+all destroy the Substance of that Discourse; namely, that
+the Sun moves in the Firmament, with great Swiftness
+and Lustre, and hath the Circuit of its Motion round
+the Earth. This is the Substance of what the Psalmist declares,
+and the rest is but a Similitude, which need not
+be literally just in all Particulars.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After this, he would fain persuade the Theorist, that he
+hath excused the Exceptor for his receding from the literal
+Sense, as to the Motion of the Earth; <i>Def.</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 208. Because
+he hath granted, that in certain Cases, we may and
+must recede from the literal Sense. But where, pray, hath
+he granted, that the Motion of the Earth was one of
+those Cases? Yet suppose it be so, may not the Theorist
+then enjoy this Privilege of receding from the literal
+Sense upon occasion, as well as the Exceptor? If he will
+give, as well as take this Liberty, let us mutually enjoy
+it; but he can have no Pretence to deny it to others, and
+take it himself. It uses to be a Rule in Writing, that a
+Man must not <i>stultum fingere Lectorem</i>. You must suppose
+your Reader to have common Sense. But he that accuses
+another of <i>Blasphemy</i> for receding from the literal
+Sense of Scripture in natural Things, and does himself
+at the same Time, recede from the literal Sense of Scripture,
+in natural Things; one would think, <i>quo ad hoc</i>, either
+had not, or would not exercise common Sense, in a
+literal Way.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Lastly, he comes to the common known Rule, assign’d
+to direct us, when every one ought to follow, or
+leave the literal Sense; which is, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 215. not to leave the
+literal Sense, when the Subject Matter will bear it, without
+Absurdity or Incongruity</i>. This he repeats in the next Page
+thus. The Rule is, <i>when no kind of Absurdities or Incongruities
+accrue to any Texts, from the literal Sense</i>. If this
+be <i>his</i> Rule, to what Text does there accrue any Absurdity
+or Incongruity, by supposing the Sun to move? For
+Scripture always speaks upon that Supposition, and not
+one Word for the Motion of the Earth. Thus he states
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_521'>521</span>the Rule; but the <i>Answerer</i> supposed, that the Absurdity
+or Incongruity might arise from the <i>Subject Matter</i>. And
+accordingly he still maintains, that there are as just Reasons,
+(from the Subject Matter,) and better Authorities, for
+receding from the literal Sense in the Narrative of the
+six Days Creation, than in those Texts of Scripture, that
+speak of the Motions and Course of the Sun: And to affirm
+the <i>Earth to be mov’d</i>, is as much <i>Blasphemy</i>, and
+more contrary to Scripture, than to affirm it to have been
+<i>dissolv’d</i>, as the Theorist hath done.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Sir, I beg your Excuse for this long letter, and leave
+it to you to judge whether the Occasion was just or no.
+I know such Jarrings as these must needs make bad Musick
+to your Ears: ’Tis like hearing two Instruments play,
+that are not in Tune, in Concert with one another: But
+you know Self-Defence, and to repel an Assailant, is always
+allow’d; and he that begins the Quarrel, must answer
+for the Consequences. However, Sir, to make
+amends for this I trouble, I am ready to receive your
+Commands upon more acceptable Subjects.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Your most humble Servant</i>, &#38;c.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>FINIS.</p>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_522'>522</span>
+ <h2 class='c007'>REFLECTIONS UPON THE THEORY OF THE EARTH</h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='xxlarge'><b>REFLECTIONS UPON THE THEORY OF THE EARTH,</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b>Occasion’d by a</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b><i>Late</i> <span class='sc'>Examination</span> <i>of it</i>.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><span class='large'><b><i>In a</i> <span class='sc'>Letter</span> <i>to a</i> FRIEND.</b></span></div>
+ <div class='c000'><i>LONDON:</i></div>
+ <div class='c000'>Printed for <span class='sc'><abbr class='spell'>J.</abbr> Hooke</span>, at the <i>Flower-de-Luce</i> in</div>
+ <div><i>Fleet-Street</i>. <span class='fss'><abbr class='spell'>M.DCC.XXVI.</abbr></span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_523'>523</span>
+ <h3 class='c010'>Advertisement of the Bookseller.</h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'><i>The following Tract hath been much enquired
+after by some curious Persons, but was so scarce,
+that a Copy could not be procured at the Time of the
+Printing the former Edition of the Theory. Since that,
+an intimate Friend of Dr. Burnet’s hath favoured me
+with a Copy; so that the Reader may be assured, it
+it genuine, and was wrote by Dr. Burnet; and it is
+apprehended, it may very well deserve a Place in his
+Works.</i></p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_524'>524</span>
+ <h3 class='c009'>REFLECTIONS, <i>&#38;c.</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>Sir,</p>
+<p class='c004'>I Receiv’d the Honour of your Letter, with the
+Book you was pleas’d to send me, containing
+an Examination of <i>the Theory of
+the Earth:</i> And, according as you desire, I
+shall give you my Thoughts of it, in as narrow
+a Compass as I can. The Author of
+the <i>Theory</i>, you know, hath set down in three Propositions,
+the Foundation of the whole Work; and so long as
+those Propositions stand firm, the Substance of the <i>Theory</i>
+is safe, whatsoever becomes of particular Modes of Explication
+in some Parts; which are as Problems, and
+may be explained several Ways, without prejudice to the
+Principles upon which the <i>Theory</i> stands.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Theorist takes but one single Postulatum, <i>viz.</i> That
+the <i>Earth rose from a Chaos:</i> This is not call’d into Question;
+and this being granted, he lays down three Propositions
+consecutively. First, <i>That the primitive or ante-diluvian
+Earth was of a different Form and Construction from
+the present Earth</i>. Secondly, <i>That the Face of that Earth,
+as it rose from a Chaos, was smooth, regular and uniform;
+without Mountains or Rocks, and without an open Sea</i>.
+Thirdly, <i>That the Disruption of the Abyss, or Dissolution
+of that primeval Earth, and its Fall into the Abyss, was the
+Cause of the universal Deluge, and of the Destruction of the
+old World</i>: As also of the irregular Form of the present
+Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These are the three Fundamental Propositions laid down
+in the fourth, fifth and sixth Chapters of the <i>Theory</i>. And
+for a farther Proof and Confirmation of them, especially
+of the last, another Proposition is added (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='seven'>VII.</abbr>)
+in these Words, <i>The present Form and Structure of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_525'>525</span>Earth, both as to the Surface, and as to the interior Parts
+of it, so far as they are accessible and known to us, do
+exactly answer to the foregoing Theory, concerning the
+Form and Dissolution of the first Earth, and is not so justly
+explained to any other Hypothesis yet known.</i> This is offer’d
+as a Proof <i>à Posteriori</i>, as they call it, or from the
+Effects; to shew the Consent and Agreement of the Parts
+and Construction of the present Earth, to that Supposition
+of its being a sort of Ruin, or the Effect and Remains of
+a Disruption or Dissolution. And to make this good, the
+Theorist draws a short Scheme of the general Form of
+the present Earth, and its Irregularity: Then shews more
+particularly the Marks or Signatures of Ruin or Disruption
+in several Parts of it; as in Mountains and Rocks,
+in the great Chanel of the Sea, and in subterraneous Cavities,
+and other broken and disfigur’d Parts of the Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Conclusions, with their Arguments, are the Sum
+and principal Contents of the first Book; but I must also
+mind you of a Corollary in the second Book, drawn from
+these primary Propositions, which concerns the Situation
+of the primitive Earth: For the Theorist supposes, that the
+Posture of that Earth, or of its Axis, was not oblique to to
+the Axis of the Sun, or of the Ecliptick, as it is now,
+but lay parallel with the Axis of the Sun, and perpendicular
+to the Plane of the Ecliptick; by reason of which
+Position, there was a perpetual Spring, or perpetual Equinox,
+in that primitive Earth. This, tho’ a Consequence
+only from the first Propositions, I thought fit to mind you
+of, as being one of the peculiar and distinguishing Characters
+of this <i>Theory</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This being the State of the <i>Theory</i>, or of those Parts of
+it that support the rest, and wherein its Strength consists,
+he that will attack it to purpose, must throw down, in the
+first Place, these leading Propositions. If the Examiner
+had taken this Method, and confuted the Proofs that are
+brought in Confirmation of each of them, he needed have
+done no more; for the Foundation being destroyed, the
+Superstructure would fall of its own accord. But if, instead
+of this, you only pick out a loose Stone here or
+there, or strike off a Pinacle, this will not weaken the
+Foundation, nor have any considerable Effect upon the
+whole Building. Let us therefore consider, in the first
+Place, what this Examiner hath said against these fundamental
+Propositions, and accordingly you will better judge of
+the rest of his Work.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>His first Chapter is to shew, that the Deluge might be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_526'>526</span>made by a Miracle: But whoever denied that? No doubt
+God by his Omnipotency may do whatsoever he pleases,
+to the utmost Extent of Possibilities. But he does not tell
+us wherein this Miracle consisted? Doth he suppose that
+the Deluge could be made without any Increase of Waters
+upon the Earth? If there was an Increase of Waters,
+either they were created a-new, or brought thither from
+some other Part of the Universe: So far is plain; and if
+he supposes a new Creation of Waters for this Purpose,
+and an Annihilation of them again at the end of the Flood,
+it had been fair to have answered the Arguments that are
+given against that Hypothesis, in the third Chapter of the
+<i>English Theory</i>. And seeing there is no mention made of
+any such thing in the sacred History, if he asserts it, he
+must bring some Proof of his Assertion; for we are not
+upon such Terms, as to trust upon bare Word. On the
+other Hand, if he proceed upon such Waters as were already
+in being, and for his purpose either bring down supercelestial
+Water, or bring subterraneous, he must tell
+us what those Waters are, and must answer such Objections
+as are brought against either sort in the second and
+third Chapters of the <i>Theory</i>; we must have some fix’d
+Point, some Mark to aim at, if the Case be argued. Upon
+the whole, I think this his first Chapter might have been
+spar’d, as either affirming nothing particularly, or giving
+no Proof of what is affirm’d.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In his next Chapter about the <i>Chaos</i>, I was in hopes to
+have found something more considerable, but (besides his
+long <i>excerpta</i> out of the <i>Theory</i>, both here and elsewhere,
+which make a good part of his Book) I find nothing but
+two small Objections against the Formation of the first
+Earth, as it is describ’d by the Theorist. This Examiner
+says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 37, 38.</i> That the little earthy Particles of the
+Chaos would not swim upon the Surface of Oil, or any
+such unctuous Liquor; for how little soever, yet being
+earthy, and Earth being heavier than Oil, they must descend
+through it. But he grants that Dust will swim upon
+Oil; and I willingly allow, if these descending Parts
+were <i>huge Lumps of solid Matter</i>, such as we shall meet
+with in his next Chapter, they would easily break through
+both the Oil and the Water under it; but that little tenuious
+Particles or small Dust should swim upon Oil, I think is
+no wonder: And he is so kind as to note an Instance of
+this himself; and to subjoin his Reasons for it. We see
+Dust, saith he, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 38, 39.</i> though specifically heavier than
+Oil, yet not to sink when cast upon it. And the Reason
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_527'>527</span>is, because all terrestrial Bodies, tho’ fluid in their kind
+yet in some degree resist Separation; and consequently, I
+add, viscous Liquors which have some sort of Entanglement
+amongst themselves, resist Separation more than others.
+Then he remarks farther, that according as Bodies
+are less, they have more Surface in Proportion to their
+Bulk, and consequently, that <i>small Bodies, whose Weight
+or Force to separate the Parts of the Fluid is but very little,
+may have a Surface so large, that they cannot overcome the
+Resistance of the Fluid: That is, they cannot make Way for
+their Descent through the Fluid, and therefore must swim
+upon the Surface of it</i>. Be it so, then the Particles here
+mentioned by the Theorist, being little, and of large Surfaces
+in Proportion to their Bulk, would swim upon the
+Surface of the Fluid, or mix with it, which is all the
+Theorist affirms or supposes: And as this tender Film grew
+into a Crust, and that into a solid Arch, the Parts of it would
+mutually support one another; the Concave Superficies of
+the Orb overspreading and leaning upon the Waters: And
+this also shews that his Instance of a solid Globe sinking in
+a Fluid, is little to the Purpose in this Case.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But he hath a second objection behind, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 40. or another
+Consideration to prove that those little Particles would
+pierce and pass through this oily Liquid. This Consideration
+is, the great Height of the Place from which they
+descended; whereby, he thinks, they would acquire such
+a Celerity and Force in their Descent, that they must needs
+break through this Orb of oily Liquors when they came
+at it. But this is to suppose that they descended without
+Interruption, or without having their Course stopp’d, and
+their Force broken in several Parts of their journey.
+This is an arbitrary and groundless Supposition: For these
+floating Particles did not fall like a Stone, or a ponderous
+Body, in one continued Line, but rather like Fleaks of
+Snow, hovering and playing in the Air, their Course being
+often interrupted and diverted, and their force broken
+again and again, before they came to the end of their
+Journey; so that this Suggestion can be of no Force or
+Effect in the present Case. However, if that will gratify
+him, we can allow that thousands and millions of these
+little Particles might slip or creep through this clammy
+Liquor, yet there would enough of them entangled
+there to make it, first, a gross Liquid, then a sort of Concretion,
+so as to stop the succeeding Particles from passing
+through it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I have done with all that is argumentative in this Chapter:
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_528'>528</span>But this Writer is pleased to go sometimes out of his
+way of Philosophising, to make Reflections of another
+kind. Accordingly, here and elsewhere he makes Insinuations
+and Suggestions, as if the Theorist did not own the
+Hand of Providence, or of a particular and extraordinary
+Providence in the Formation of the Earth; or as if all
+Things in the great Revolutions of the natural World were
+carried on solely by material and mechanical Causes. This
+Suggestion ought to be taken Notice of, as being contrary
+to the Sense of the Theorist, as it is express’d in several
+Places. In speaking of the Motions of the Chaos, the Theorist
+makes the <i>steady Hand of Providence which keeps all
+Things in Weight and Measure, to be the invisible Guide of
+all its Motions</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 45. And in concluding his Discourse
+about the Formation of the Earth (<i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='five'>V.</abbr> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 45.) the
+Theorist says, <i>This Structure is so marvellous, that it ought
+rather to be consider’d, as a particular Effect of the Divine
+Art, than as the Work of Nature</i>; with many other Remarks
+there to the same purpose. Then as to the Dissolution
+of the Earth, and the Conduct of the Deluge, ’tis made
+miraculous also by the Theorist<a id='r22'></a><a href='#f22' class='c013'><sup>[22]</sup></a>: And upon that Occasion
+an Account is given of Providence, both ordinary and extraordinary,
+in reference to the Government of Nature;
+and that not only as to the formation and Dissolution of
+the Earth, but also as to its Conflagration and Renovation:
+For the Theorist always puts those great Revolutions under
+the particular Conduct and Moderation of Providence.
+Lastly, As to the whole Universe, he is far from making
+that the Product either of <i>Chance</i> or <i>Necessity</i>, or of any
+purely material or mechanical Causes; as you may see at
+large in the two last Chapters of the <i>Theory</i>, <i>Book</i> II. So
+that what this Author hath said (rudely enough, according
+to his Way) of <i>Mr. Wotton</i>, <i>Introd.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 15. that <i>he
+either understands no Geometry, or else that he never read</i>
+<abbr class='spell'>D.C.</abbr> <i>his Principles</i>, may with a little Change be apply’d
+to himself in this Case, that either he never read over,
+or does not remember, or, which is still worse, does
+wilfully misrepresent what the Theorist hath wrote upon
+this Subject. The Sum of all is this, <i>Deus non deficit in
+necessariis, nec redundat in superfluis</i>: God is the God
+of Nature; and the Laws of Nature are his Laws: These we
+are to follow so far as they will go, and where they fall
+short, we must rise to higher Principles; but we ought not
+to introduce a needless Exercise of the divine Power, for
+a Cover to our Ignorance.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_529'>529</span>To conclude this Chapter, I will leave one Advertisement
+with the Examiner concerning the Chaos. When
+he speaks of the World’s rising from the <i>Mosaick</i> Chaos,
+if by <i>World</i> he understand the whole Universe, as he seems
+to do; not this inferior World only, but the fix’d Stars
+also, and all the Heavens: If that, I say, be his Meaning
+and Opinion, he will meet with other Opponents besides
+the Theorist, that will contest that Point with him.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We come now to the third Chapter, concerning the
+<i>Mountains</i> of the Earth, which is a subject indeed that deserves
+Consideration, seeing it reaches to the three fundamental
+Propositions before mentioned, and the Form of
+the ante-diluvian Earth; which Form the Examiner would
+have to be the same with that of the present Earth, to have
+had Mountains and Rocks, an open Chanel of the Sea,
+with all the Cavities and Irregularities within or without
+the Surface of it, as at present. If he can prove this, he
+needs go no farther; he may spare his Pains for the rest:
+I’ll undertake that the Theorist shall make no farther Defence
+of his Theory, if the Examiner can make good
+Proof of this one Conclusion. But, on the other Hand,
+the Examiner ought to be so ingenuous as to acknowledge
+that all that he hath said besides, till this be prov’d,
+can be of little or no Effect, as to the Substance of the
+Theory. Let us then consider how he raises Mountains
+and Rocks, and gives us an Account of all the other Inequalities
+that we find in the present Form of the Earth,
+by an immediate Formation or Deduction from the Chaos.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>To shew this, he supposes, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 49, 51. that the Chaos had
+Mountains and Rocks swimming in it, or, according to
+his Expression, <i>huge Lumps of solid Matter</i>. These are
+Things, I confess, which I never heard of before in a Chaos;
+which hath been always describ’d and suppos’d a Mass of
+fluid Matter all over. But this Author confidently says,
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 48. <i>We must conclude THEREFORE, that the Chaos
+was not so fluid a Mass, &#38;c.</i> This <i>therefore</i> refers us to
+an antecedent Reason, which is this; he says, <i>ibid.</i> to
+make the Chaos an entirely fluid Mass is hard to be granted,
+<i>since the greatest Parts of Bodies we have in the Earth,
+at least so far as we can discern, are hard and solid, and
+there is not such a Quantity of Water in the Earth, as would be
+requisite to soften and liquify them all; besides a great part of
+them, as Stones and Metals, are uncapable of being liquified
+by Water</i>. Very good, what is this to the <i>Theory</i>? Does
+the Theorist any where affirm or suppose that there were
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_530'>530</span>Stones or Metals in the Chaos; or that they were liquified
+by Water? This must refer to some Hypothesis of his
+own, or to some other Author’s Hypothesis that ran in
+his Mind: The Theorist owns no such Doctrine or Supposition.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>However, let’s consider how this new Idea of a Chaos
+is consistent with the Laws of Nature: What made these
+<i>huge Lumps of solid Matter</i>, whether Stone or Metal, to
+swim in the fluid Mass? This is against all Rules of Gravity,
+and of Staticks, as he seems to acknowledge, and
+urged it when he thought it to his Purpose. In the precedent
+Chapter (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 42.) when he speaks of Stones and Minerals,
+he says, <i>’Tis certain that these great heavy Bodies
+must have sunk to the Bottom, if they were left to themselves</i>:
+And he that will not allow Dust or little earthy Particles,
+to float upon an oily Liquor, I wonder how he will make,
+not little Particles, but these huge solid Lumps of Stone,
+Metals, or Minerals, to float in the Chaos.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He seems to own and be sensible of this Inconvenience,
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 50) and thereupon finds an Expedient or Evasion
+which a lesser Wit would not have thought on. He supposes,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 51 that these <i>huge</i> firm solid Lumps were hollow,
+like empty Bottles, and that would keep them from
+sinking. But who told him they were hollow? Is not this
+precarious? Or, if one would use such Terms as he does,
+is not this <i>chymerical and ridiculous</i>? What made those solid
+firm Lumps hollow? When, or where, or how were
+their inward Parts scrap’d out of them? Nor would this
+Hollowness, however they came by it, make them swim,
+unless there was a mere Vacuum in each of them. If they
+were filled with the liquid Matter of the Chaos, they would
+indeed be lighter than if wholly solid; but they would
+still be heavier than any equal Bulk of the fluid Chaos, and
+consequently would sink in it; the Preponderancy that
+would arise from the Shell or solid Part still remaining.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now let’s consider how such Mountains, or long Ridges
+of Mountains as we have upon the Earth, were formed
+and settled by these floating Lumps. He says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 50, 51.
+<i>Part of these Lumps or Masses standing out, or being higher
+than the Fluid, would compose a Mountain</i>, as there are
+<i>Mountains of Ice that float upon the Northern Seas</i>. But
+are not Mountains of Rock and Stone, such as ours commonly
+are, heavier than Mountains of Ice, that is specifically
+lighter than Water? This might have been consider’d
+by the Examiner in drawing the Parallel: And still I’m at
+a Loss what <i>Fluid</i> it is he means, when he says, These
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_531'>531</span>Lumps or Masses <i>standing out, or being higher than the
+Fluid</i>. Does he mean by this Fluid the Whole Chaos? Did
+these Mountains stand at the Top of the Chaos, partly
+within, and partly above it? Then what drew them down
+below, if they stood equally pois’d there in their Fluid, and
+as high as the Moon, if the Chaos reach’d so high. This,
+one would think, could not be his Meaning, ’tis so extravagant;
+and yet there was no other Fluid than the general
+Chaos, till that was divided and distinguish’d into several
+Masses. Then, indeed, there was an Abyss, or Region
+of Waters that covered the interior Earth, and was separate
+from the Air above. Let us then suppose this Abyss
+to be the Waters or Fluid this Author means, upon which
+his Mountains stood; then the rest of the Earth, as it came
+to be form’d, must be continu’d and join’d with these Mountains,
+and in like Manner laid over the Waters; so as in
+this Method, you see, we should have an Orb of Earth built
+over the Abyss. This is a very favourable Stroke for the
+Theorist, and grants him in Effect his principal Conclusion,
+<i>viz.</i> That the <i>first ante diluvian Earth was built over
+the Abyss</i>: This being admitted, there could be no universal
+Deluge without a Disruption of that Earth, and an Eruption
+of the Abyss, which is a main Point gain’d. And
+’tis plain we make no false Logick in collecting this from
+his Principles and Concessions: For, as we said before, if
+these Mountains were founded upon the Abyss, they must
+have a Continuity and Conjunction with the rest of the
+Surface of the Earth, if they were such as our Mountains
+are now, and so all the habitable Earth must be spread upon
+the Abyss.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But still he hath another Difficulty to encounter, how
+the great Chanel of the Sea was made upon this Supposition:
+Why was not that Part of the Globe fill’d up by the
+Descent of the earthy Particles of the Chaos as well as
+the rest? The Chanel of the Ocean is commonly suppos’d
+to take up half of the Globe, how came this gaping
+Gulph to remain unfill’d, seeing it was encompass’d with
+the Chaos as well as any other Parts? Was the Motion
+of the Particles suspended from descending upon that Part
+of the Globe; or were they fill’d up at first, and afterwards
+thrown out again to make room for the Sea? This
+may deserve his Consideration, as well as the Mountains:
+And how dextrous soever this Author may be in other
+Things I know not, but, in my Mind, he hath no good
+Hand in making Mountains; and I’m afraid he would have
+no better Success in forming the Chanel of the Sea, which
+he is wisely pleased to take no Notice of.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_532'>532</span>And indeed the Examiner seems to be sensible himself
+that he hath no good Luck in assigning the <i>efficient Causes</i>
+of Mountains from the Chaos, and therefore he is willing
+to bear off from that Point, and to lay the whole
+Stress upon their <i>final Causes</i>, without any regard to their
+Origin, or how they came first into being. His Words are
+these, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 52. <i>But supposing the efficient Causes of Mountains
+unknown, or impossible to be assign’d, yet still there remain
+the final Causes to be enquir’d into, which will do as
+well for our Purpose</i>, with what follows there concerning
+those Authors that exclude final Causes. If there be such
+Authors, let them answer for themselves, the Theorist is
+not concern’d. Grant the first Point, that Mountains
+could not arise from any known efficient Causes in the
+first Concretion of the Chaos, or in the first habitable Earth
+that rose from it, the Theorist readily allows (as appears
+fully in the two last Chapters of the second Book of the <i>Eng.
+Theor.</i>) the Use of final Causes in the Contemplation of
+Nature, as being great Arguments of the Wisdom and
+Goodness of God. But this ought not to exclude the efficient
+Causes in a <i>Theory</i>, otherwise it would be no <i>Theory</i>,
+but a Work of another Nature. Though a Man knew
+the final Cause of a Watch or Clock, namely, to tell him
+the Hour of the Day, yet, if he did not know the Construction
+of its Parts, what was the Spring of Motion,
+what the Order of the Wheels, and how they mov’d the
+Hand of the Dial, he could not be said to understand that
+little Machine; or at least not to understand it so well as
+he that knew the Construction and Dependence of all its
+Parts, in virtue whereof that Effect was brought to pass.
+In many Cases we do not understand the final Causes,
+and in many we do not understand the efficient; but, notwithstanding,
+we must endeavour, so far as we are able,
+to join and understand them both; the End and the Means
+to it: For by the one, as well as the other, the divine
+Power and Wisdom are illustrated; and seeing every Effect
+hath its efficient Cause, if we cannot reach it, we must
+acknowledge our Speculations to be so far imperfect.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After this Excursion about final Causes, he concludes,
+<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 54. <i>That it is impossible to subsist or live without Rocks
+or Mountains</i>; consequently no Earth is habitable without
+Rocks and Mountains. But how can he tell this?
+Hath he been all over the Universe to make his Observations?
+or hath he had a Revelation to tell him that there
+is no one habitable Planet throughout all the Works of
+God, but what is of the same Form with our Earth as to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_533'>533</span>Rocks and Mountains. Who hath ever observ’d Mountains
+and Rocks in <i>Jupiter</i>, or in the Remains of <i>Saturn</i>?
+I should think such a general Assertion as he makes, a bold
+and unwarrantable Limitation of the divine Omniscience
+and Omnipotency. Who dares conclude that the infinite
+Wisdom and Power of God is confin’d to one single
+Mode or Fabrick of an habitable World? We know there
+are many Planets about our Sun besides this Earth, and of
+different Positions and Constructions: Neither do we
+know but there may be as many about other Suns, or fix’d
+Stars: Must we suppose that they are all cast in the same
+Mold? that they are all formed after the Model of our
+Earth, with Mountains and Rocks, and Gulphs and Caverns?</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c006'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Urbem, quam dicunt Romam, Melibœe, putavi</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Stultus ego, huic nostræ similem.</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>This was the Judgment of the Shepherd, who could
+imagine nothing different, or nothing better than his own
+Town or Village; those may imitate him that please.
+’Tis true, <i>Suum cuique pulchrum</i>, is an usual Saying, but
+we think that to proceed from Fondness rather, and Self-Conceit,
+than from a true and impartial Judgment of
+Things. In contemplating the Works of God, we ought
+to have Respect to his Almighty and Infinite Wisdom,
+τῆν πολυπαίκιλον σοφίαν, <i>multiformem sapientiam Dei</i>, rather
+than to the Measures of our own Experience and Understanding.
+We may remember how an<a id='r23'></a><a href='#f23' class='c013'><sup>[23]</sup></a> Heathen hath upbraided
+and derided that Narrowness of Spirit, <i>Quæ tantæ
+sunt animi angustiæ, ut si Seryphi natus esses, nec unquam
+egrossus ex Insulá, in quâ Lepusculos Vulpeculasque sæpe
+vidisses, non crederes Leones &#38; Pantheras esse, cúm tibi
+quales essent diceretur: Si verò de Elephanto quis diceret,
+etiam rideri te putares.</i> We may as well say, that there
+can be no Animals of another Form from those we have
+upon this Earth, as that there can be no Worlds, or habitable
+Earths of another Form and Structure from the present
+Earth. <i>An quicquam tam puerile dici potest</i>, says the
+same Author, <i>quám si ea genera belluarum quæ in Rubro
+mari, Indiâve gignantur, nulla esse dicamus? Atqui ne curiosissimi
+quidem homines exquirendo andire tam multa possunt,
+quam sunt multa quæ Terræ, Mari, Paludibus, Fluminibus
+existunt; quæ negemus esse quia nunquam vidimus?</i>
+I mention such Instances to shew, that ’tis Rashness or
+Folly, to confine the Varieties of Providence and Nature,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_534'>534</span>to the narrow Compass of what we have seen, or of what
+falls under our Imagination. This is a more <i>strange and
+assuming Boldness</i>, as he terms it, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 54 than what he ascribes
+to the Theorist for saying, We can observe no Order
+in the Situation of Mountains, nor Regularity in their
+Form and Shape. If the Examiner knows any, why
+does he not tell us what it is, and wherein it consists? Is it
+necessary that Mountains should be exact Pyramids or
+Cones, or any of the regular Bodies? or rang’d upon the
+Earth in Rank and File, or in a quincuncial Order, or like
+pretty Garden-Knots? If they had been design’d for Beauty,
+this might have done well; but Providence seems on
+Purpose to have left these Irregularities in their Figure and
+Site, as Marks and Signatures to us, that they are the Effects
+of a Ruin.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to shew farther and more particularly the Necessity
+of Mountains, the Examiner says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 55. and 61. Without
+them ’tis impossible there should be Rivers, or without
+Rivers an habitable World. Neither of these Propositions
+seems to me to be sure; they run still upon Impossibilities,
+which is a nice Topick, and lies much out of our Reach.
+I think Vapours may be condens’d other Ways than by
+Mountains, and an Earth might be so fram’d, as to give
+a Course to Rivers, though there were no particular Mountains,
+if the general Figure of it was higher in one Part
+than another. Then as to the absolute Necessity of Rivers,
+to make an Earth habitable, that is questionable too. We
+are told by good Authors, of some Countries or Islands
+that have no Rivers or Springs, and yet are habitable and
+fruitful, being water’d by Dews. This may give us an
+Advertisement, from a Part to the Whole, that an Earth
+may be made habitable without Rivers. If at first Vapours
+ascended, and fell down in Dews, so as to <i>water the whole
+Face of the Earth</i>, <i><abbr title='Genesis'>Gen.</abbr></i> <abbr title='two'>ii.</abbr> 6. God might, if he had pleas’d,
+have continued the same Course of Nature. And it is the
+Opinion of many Interpreters, and seems to have been an
+antient Tradition, that there was no Rain till the Deluge.
+If there was no Rainbow in the first Earth, (which I think
+the Theorist hath undeniably prov’d, <i>Theor.</i> <i>Book</i> <abbr title='two'>II.</abbr> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 5.)
+it will be hard to prove that there were then any watery
+Clouds in the habitable Parts of the Earth. And our best<a id='r24'></a><a href='#f24' class='c013'><sup>[24]</sup></a>
+Observators will allow no Clouds or Rains in the Moon,
+(and some of them no Rivers,) yet will not suppose the
+Moon unhabitable. To conclude, ’tis a great Vanity to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_535'>535</span>say no worse, for short-sighted Creatures, and of narrow
+Understandings, to prescribe to Providence what is necessary
+and indispensable to the Frame and Order of an habitable
+World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We proceed to his fourth Chapter; which is to shew
+the Inconveniencies that would fall upon the Inhabitants
+of the Earth, in case it had such a Posture as the Theorist
+hath assign’d to the ante-diluvian Earth: Namely, that its
+Axis was parallel to the Axis of the Ecliptick, or perpendicular
+to its Plane, and not oblique as it stands now. But
+will this Author vouch, that there are no habitable Planets
+in the Universe, or even about our Sun, that have this Posture
+which he blames so much? <i>Jupiter</i> is known to have
+a perpetual Equinox, and his Axis parallel to the Axis of
+the Ecliptick; and <i>Mars</i> hath little or no Obliquity that is
+observable. And must this be a Reflection upon Providence?
+Or must we suppose, that these Planets have no Inhabitants,
+or that their Habitations are very bad and incommodious?
+<i>Jupiter</i> is the noblest Planet we have in
+our Heaven, whether you consider its Magnitude, or the
+Number of its Attendants. If then a Planet of that Order
+and Dignity, have such a Position and Aspect to the
+Sun, why might not our Earth have had the same, proper
+to that State, and agreeable to the Divine Wisdom? Yet
+he is so bold as to say, or suppose, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 66. That <i>this cannot
+well agree with the infinite Wisdom of its Maker</i>; as if he
+was able to make a Measure or Standard for all the Works
+of God. ’Tis a crude and injudicious Thing, from a few
+Particulars, the rest unknown, to make an universal Conclution,
+which forward Wits are apt to do. Πρὸς ὀλίγα
+ἐπιθλεψάμενετ.—<i>Ad pauca respiciens, facile pronuncias</i>, was
+<i>Aristotle</i>’s Observation of old, and it holds in all Ages.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Examiner, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 76. censures the Theorist very rudely,
+for making use of <i>physical Causes</i>, and not arguing from
+<i>final Causes</i>, which, he says, <i>are the true Principles of natural
+Philosophy</i>. But, if this be the Use he makes of final Causes,
+to tell God Almighty what is best to be done, in this or
+that World, I had rather content myself with <i>physical
+Causes</i>, to know what God hath done, and conclude it to
+be the best, and that we should judge it so, if we had the
+same Extent of Thought and Prospect its Maker had.
+There are indeed some <i>final Causes</i> that are so manifest,
+that I should think it Sottishness or Obstinacy for a Man
+to deny them; but I should also think that Man presumptuous,
+that should pretend to draw the Scheme and Plan
+of every World, from his Idea of <i>final Causes</i>. There
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_536'>536</span>are some Men that mightily cry out against <i>Reason</i>, yet
+none more fond of it than they are, when they can get
+it on their Side: So some Men inveigh against <i>physical
+Causes</i>, when others make use of them, and yet as gladly
+as any make use of them themselves, when they can make
+them serve their Purpose; and when they cannot reach
+them, then they despise them, and are all for <i>final Causes</i>.
+This Author says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 63. God always <i>chuses such Constitutions
+and Positions of Things, as bring with them the greatest
+Good and Utility to the Universe</i>. Very true, to the <i>Universe</i>?
+but who made him judge what is best to the Universe?
+Does he look upon this Earth as the Universe,
+whereof it is but a small Particle, or an Atom in comparison?
+Must there be no Variety in the numberless
+Worlds which God hath made? Must they all be one and
+the same Thing repeated again and again? That I’m sure does
+not <i>well agree with the infinite Wisdom and Power of God</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But suppose we did confine our Thoughts to this Earth,
+we may be assur’d that it hath undergone and will undergo,
+within the Compass of its Duration, very different
+States, and yet all accommodate to Providence. Those
+that suppose the Heavens and the Earth never to have had
+any other Constitution and Construction than what they
+have now, or that there hath never been any great Change
+and Revolution in our natural World, follow the very
+Doctrine which <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> opposes and confutes in his <i>second
+Epistle</i>, <abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr> 3. I mean the Doctrine of those <i>Scoffers</i>,
+as he calls them, who said, <i>All Things</i>, the Heavens
+and the Earth, <i>have remained in the same State they are in
+now, from the Beginning</i>, or from the Creation, and are to
+continue so. In Confutation of this Opinion, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i>
+there minds them of the Change made at the Deluge, and
+of the different Constitution and Construction of the Heavens
+and the Earth, before and after the Deluge, whereby
+they were dispos’d to undergo a different Fate, one by
+Water, and the other by Fire. And he tells us in the
+same Place, that after the Conflagration, there will be
+<i>new Heaven</i>; and a <i>new Earth</i>: So that there is no one
+fix’d and permanent State even of this Earth, according
+to the Will and Wisdom of Providence. But enough hath
+been said by the Theorist upon this Subject (<i>Theor. Lat.</i>
+<i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> 1. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 1 &#38; 2. <i>Review</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 160. <i>&#38;c.</i> <i>Archæol.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr></i> 2. <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 3, 5, 6.)
+And if they will not consider the Arguments propos’d
+there, ’twould be in vain to repeat them here.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Things premis’d, let’s consider what Inconveniencies
+are alledged, or what Arguments against that Equality
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_537'>537</span>of Seasons, or the grand Cause of them, the Parallelism
+of the Axis of the Earth, with the Axis of the Sun.
+He says, upon this Supposition, there is more Heat now in
+the Climates of the Earth, than could have been then. And
+what if there be? Whether his Computation (which is
+aim’d against another Author) be true or false, ’tis little
+to the <i>Theory</i>: If the Heat was equal and moderate in
+the temperate and habitable Climates, who would desire
+the extreme Heats of Summer? But he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 66. That
+Heat would not be sufficient for the Generation of Vegetables.
+How does that appear? supposing that Heat constant
+throughout the whole Year. Does he think there are
+no Vegetables in <i>Jupiter</i>, which hath still the same Position
+the Theorist gave to the ante-diluvian Earth. And as
+to Heat, that Planet is at vastly a greater Distance from
+the Sun than our Earth, and consequently hath so much
+less Heat; yet I cannot believe that great Planet to be only
+a huge Lump of bald and barren Earth. As to our ante-diluvian
+Earth, ’tis probable that the Constitution of
+Plants and Animals, was different then from what it is
+now, as their Longevity was different, to which any
+Excesses of Heat or Cold are noxious; and the Frequency
+and Multiplicity of Generations and Corruptions in the
+present Earth, is Part of that Vanity to which it was subjected.
+But this Examiner says moreover, If the first
+Earth had that Position, the greatest Part of it would not
+be habitable. But how much less habitable would it be
+than the present Earth? where the open Sea, which was
+not then, takes up half of its Surface, and makes it unhabitable.
+’Tis likely the torrid Zone was unhabitable in
+that Earth; but ’tis probable the Poles or Polar Parts were
+more habitable than they are now, seeing they would
+have the Sun, or rather Half-Sun perpetually in their Horizon:
+And as to the temperate Climates, as we call them,
+they would be under such a gentle and constant Warmth,
+as would be more grateful to the Inhabitants, and more
+proper and effectual for a continual Verdure and Vegetation,
+than any Region of the present Earth is now.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But this Objector does not consider, on the other hand,
+what an hard Life they would lead in those Days, at least
+in many Parts of the Earth, if the Seasons of the Year
+were the same they are now, and they confin’d to Herbs,
+Fruits, and Water; for that was the Diet of Mankind till
+the Deluge. Should we not think it an unmerciful Imposition
+now, to be interdicted the Use of Flesh-Meat all the
+Year long? Or rather is it possible that the Life of Man
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_538'>538</span>could be supported by Herbs and Fruits, and Water in the
+colder Climates, where the Winters are so long and barren,
+and the Cold so vehement? But, if you suppose a perpetual
+Spring throughout the Earth, the Heavens mild, and the
+Juices of Fruits and Plants more nutritive, that Objection
+would cease, and their Longevity be more intelligible.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We come now to the Causes of the Change in the Posture
+of the Earth, where the Theorist hath set down his
+Conjectures, what he thought the most probable to be
+the Occasion of it: Namely, either some Inequality in
+the Libration of the Earth, after it was dissolved and broken;
+or a Change in the Magnetism of its Body, consequent
+upon its Dissolution, and the different Situation of
+its Parts. But this Examiner will neither allow any Change
+to have been made in the Position of the Earth since the
+Beginning of the World; nor, if there was a Change, that
+it could be made from such Causes. The first of these
+Points you see is Matter of Fact; and so it must be prov’d,
+partly by History, and partly by Reason. Some Things are
+noted before, which argue that the ante-diluvian Earth was
+different from the present, in its Frame and Constitution,
+as also in reference to the Heavens; and the Places are
+referred to, where the Matter is treated more largely by
+the Theorist. If it be granted, that there was a permanent
+Change made in the State of Nature at the Deluge, or any
+other Time, but deny’d that it was made by a Change of
+the Situation of the Earth, and the Consequences of it,
+then this Writer must assign some other Change made,
+which would have the same Effects; that is, which will
+answer and agree with the Phænomena of the first Earth,
+and also of the present. When this is done, if it be clear
+and convictive, we must acquiesce in it: But I do not see
+that it is so much as attempted by this Author.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This suppos’d Change, I say, is Matter of Fact, and
+therefore we must consult History and Reason for the
+Proof or Disproof of it. As to History, the Theorist hath
+cited to this Purpose <i>Leucippus</i>, <i>Anaxagoras</i>, <i>Democritus</i>,
+<i>Empedocles</i>, <i>Plato</i> and <i>Diogenes</i>. These were the most renowned
+Philosophers amongst the Antients; and all these
+speak of an Inclination of the Earth or the Poles, which
+hath been made in former Ages. These, one would think,
+might be allow’d as good Witnesses of a former Tradition
+concerning a Change in the Situation of the Earth, when
+nothing is brought against them. And this Change is particularly
+call’d by <i>Plato</i> ἀναρμοσία or ἀνωμαλία, a Disharmony
+or Disconcerting of the Motions of the Heavens, which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_539'>539</span>he makes the Source and Origin of the present Evils and
+Inconveniencies of Nature. Besides, he dates this Change
+from the Expiration of the Reign of <i>Saturn</i>, or when <i>Jupiter</i>
+came to take the Government upon him: And this, you
+know, in the Style of those Times, signifies the End of the
+Golden Age. Thus far <i>Plato</i> carries the Tradition: Now,
+the Poets tell us expressly that there was a <i>perpetual Spring</i>,
+or a perpetual Equinox in the Time of <i>Saturn</i>, and that the
+Inequality of the Year, or the Diversity of Seasons was
+first introduc’d by <i>Jupiter</i>. The Authors and Places are
+known and noted by the Theorist; I need not repeat
+them here. You see what this Evidence amounts to, both
+that there hath been a Change, and such a Change, as alter’d
+the Course of the Year, and brought in a Vicissitude
+of Seasons; and this according to the Doctrines or Traditions
+remaining amongst the Heathens. The <i>Jews</i> and
+<i>Christians</i> say the same Thing, but in another Manner: They
+do not speak of the Golden Age, nor of the Reign of <i>Saturn</i>
+or <i>Jupiter</i>, but of the State of Paradise, or <i>Gan-Eden</i>;
+and concerning that, they say the same Things, which the
+Heathen Authors say, in different Words. The <i>Jews</i>
+make a perpetual Equinox in Paradise, the <i>Christians</i> a perpetual
+Serenity, a perpetual Spring; and this cannot be
+without a different Situation of the Earth from what it hath
+now. He may see the Citations if he please, in the <i>Theory</i>,
+or <i>Archæologia</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>It were to be wish’d, that this Examiner would look a
+little into Antiquity, when he hath Time: It may be, that
+would awaken him into new Thoughts, and a more favourable
+Opinion of the Theory as to this Particular. Give
+me leave to mind him in his own Way, what some antient
+Astronomers have said relating to this Subject. <i>Baptista
+Mantuanus</i>, speaking of the Longevity of the Ante-Diluvians,
+says, <i>Erant illis, ut Astronomia &#38; Experimento
+constat, Cœli propitiores; volunt namque Astronomi</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i>
+This he explains by an uniform and concentrical Motion
+of the Heavens and the Earth, at that Time; to which he
+imputes the great Virtue of their Herbs and Fruit, and the
+long Lives of their Animals. <i>Petrus Aponensis</i>, who liv’d
+above an Age before <i>Mantuan</i>, give us much what the
+same Account: For making an Answer to this Question,
+<i>utrum natura humania sit debilitata ab eo quod antiquitus,
+necne?</i> He says, <i>Cum capita Zodiaci mobilis &#38; immobilis
+ordinati &#38; directè concurrebant, tunc virtus perfectiori modò
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_540'>540</span>à primo principio per medias causastaliter ordinatas fortiori
+modo imprimebatur in ista inferiora, cum causæ tunc sib
+invicem correspondeant——Propter quod concludendum est,
+tunc naturam humanam illo tempore, ut sic fortiorem &#38;
+longæviorem extitisse.</i> I give it in his own Words as they
+are in his <i>Conciliator. Differ. 9.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Georgius Pictorius</i>, or an Author under his Name,
+unto the same Question about the Longevity of the Ante-diluvians,
+gives a like Answer from the same Astronomer,
+in these Words: <i>Petrus Aponensis adsert rationem, &#38; pro
+vario cursu &#38; dispositione coelorum modo vitam humanam breviari,
+modo produci seribit. Ex Astronomiá argumentum colligens,
+cùm ait duos Zodiacos, unum in noná sphærâ, alterum in
+octava (quam Firmamentum vocani) in initio rerum &#38; temporum,
+sic à Deo fuisse dispositos, ut Aries Arieti, Taurus Tauro,
+Geminis Gemini jungerentur: &#38; amborum cocuntibus in unum
+viribus fortior in Terras fieret fluxus. Unde herbas tunc
+salubriores &#38; fructus terræ meliores, &#38; longiores vitas animantium
+fuisse affirmat. Sed dennò illá syderali dissolutá ab
+invicem per motum societate, totum ait inferiorem mundum
+ægrotare, atque per decrementum claudicare cæpisse.</i> This,
+you see, is Astronomy in an old-fashion’d Dress; but you
+can easily take off the Disguise, and apply it to the true
+System of the Heavens. The same Author refers you, for
+a more full Explication of that Matter, to his <i>Lectiones succisivæ,
+Dial. prim.</i> which Book I have not yet had an Opportunity
+to see. I believe it is in his <i>Opera Philologica</i>, printed
+in <i>Octavo</i> at <i>Basil</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But since the first writing of the Theory, there have been
+<i>Æthiopick</i> Antiquities produc’d from an Abyssine Philosopher,
+and transmitted to us by <i>Francisco Patricio</i> in his Dialogues.
+If that Account he gives of the <i>Æthiopian Archæologia</i>
+be true and genuine, they exceed all other upon this
+Subject: for they do not only mention this Particular, of
+the Unity of Seasons in the primitive Earth, but the other
+principal Parts of the Theory: As the Concussion and
+Fraction of the Earth; that the Face of it before was smooth
+and uniform, and upon that Disruption it came into another
+Form, with Mountains, Rocks, Sea and Islands.
+These and other such Characters are mentioned there,
+whereof the Examiner may see an Account, if he please,
+in the last Edition of the <i>English Theory</i>, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 189. The Story
+indeed is surprizing, which way soever you take it, whether it
+was the Invention of that Abyssine Philosopher, or a real
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_541'>541</span>Tradition deriv’d from the <i>Æthiopian</i> Gymnosophists.
+However that be, there are otherwise such conspicuous
+Footsteps in philosophick History, and in what may be
+call’d Ecclesiastick, amongst the <i>Jews</i> and <i>Christians</i>, of
+some Revolution in the System of the World, as must
+give occasion to any thinking Man to suppose, that there
+hath been a Change made in the Situation of the Earth.
+This, by some of the forementioned Authors, is ascrib’d expresly
+to the Earth; and what by others (according to their
+Hypothesis) is ascrib’d to the higher Heavens, we know
+upon a just Interpretation belongs to the Earth. Those
+also that ascribe such Phænomena to Paradise, or the Golden
+Age, as are not intelligible upon any other Supposition,
+must also be referr’d to this Change of the Site or Posture
+of the Earth: So that upon all Accounts (mediately
+or immediately) the Matter of Fact, that the Earth hath
+undergone such a Change, is testified by History, Antiquity
+and Tradition. It deserves also to be observ’d, that
+there was a general Tradition amongst the Antients, concerning
+the Inhabitability of the Torrid Zone; which may
+be an Argument or Confirmation, that there was a State
+of Nature at one time or other, when this was true, and
+that such a general Opinion could not arise, and be continued
+so long without some Foundation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>So much for History to determine Matter of Fact: Now
+as to Reason (which we mentioned as the other Head, to
+prove or disprove this Conclusion.) That the Form of
+the primitive Earth which is assign’d by the Theorist, being
+suppos’d, namely, that it was regular, uniform, and
+had an equal Libration, it would naturally take an even
+and parallel Position with the Axis of its Orbit, or of the
+Ecliptick, as is set down more at large in the Theory:
+Nor can any Reason be alledg’d to the contrary. ’Tis
+true, this Examiner, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 83.</i> notwithstanding any Uniformity
+and Equilibration of that Earth, pretends it would be
+indifferent to any Position, or <i>retain any Position given, as
+a Sphere will do, put in a Fluid</i>. This might be, if that
+Sphere or Globe was resting; but if it was turn’d about its
+Axis, and the Axis of the Fluid (which is the present Case)
+it would certainly take a Position parallel to the Axis of its
+Fluid, if there was no other Impediment.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Matter of Fact being settled with the Cause of it,
+what the Causes of the Change were, is more problematical.
+The Philosophers forecited gave their Reason; <i>Aristarchus
+Samius</i> gives another, and a <i>Comet</i> by some is
+made the occasion of it: The Theorist thinks that the Dissolution
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_542'>542</span>of the Earth was the fundamental Cause, and that
+the Change came to pass at that time, as many Indications
+and Arguments shew. And as to the immediate Cause or
+Causes of it, I know none more probable than what the
+Theorist hath proposed; <i>Eng. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 267.</i> Either the
+Change of its Center of Gravity, or of its Magnetism;
+the Line of Direction to those magnetick Particles, and
+their passing through the Earth being so alter’d, as to turn
+the Earth into another Posture, and hold it there. As to
+those Expressions that he seems to quarrel with, of the
+Inclination of the Earth, or the Pole, towards the Sun,
+’tis the Expression of the antient Philosophers, tho’ I think
+it might more properly be called an Obliquation. Then
+that the former State is called <i>situs rectus</i>, is another Expression
+which he finds fault with; though every one sees
+that a <i>right Situation</i> in such Places, is opposed to an <i>oblique</i>,
+or inclined Position to the Axis of the Sun or Ecliptick,
+and had been called <i>parallel</i> in several other Places;
+and which he himself, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 71.</i> sometimes, as well as other
+Authors, call a right Position. This is but trifling about
+Words: If he grants that the primitive Earth being uniform,
+and consequently equally pois’d, its Axis would be
+parallel (which for shortness, is sometimes call’d <i>right</i>) to
+the Axis of its Orbit, and is now in a different and oblique
+Posture, this is all the Theorist desires, as to Matter of
+Fact. I conceive the whole Matter thus: When the Earth
+was in that even and parallel Posture with the Axis of the
+Sun, it had a perpetual Equinox and Unity of Seasons,
+the Equator and Ecliptick being coincident: And as to the
+Heavens, they with the fix’d Stars mov’d or seem’d to
+move uniformly and concentrically with the Earth. But
+when the Earth chang’d its Posture to that which it hath
+now, the Year became unequal, and the Equator and Ecliptick
+became distinct Circles, or, if you will, a new
+Circle arose from the Distinction. The Earth in the mean
+time continuing its annual Course in the Ecliptick, had
+the Position of its Axis chang’d to a Parallelism with the
+Axis of the Equator, which it holds throughout the whole
+Year. As to the Heavens, they seem’d to turn upon another
+Axis, or other Poles than they did before, and different
+from those of the Sun or the Earth: And this fundamental
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_543'>543</span>Change in the Site of the Earth, had a farther Chain
+of Consequences, as is noted by the Theorist, in reference
+to the State both of the animate and inanimate World,
+This is, in short, the State of the Case, which is sometimes
+express’d in different Terms, especially by the Antients,
+who generally followed another System of the Heavens
+and the Earth, and were not always accurate in their Expressions.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This Author would square and conform all the Planets
+to the Model of the present Earth: Whereas there is <i>Diversity
+of Administrations</i> in the natural World, as well
+as spiritual, yet the same Providence every where. The
+Axes of the Planets are not all parallel to that of the Sun,
+nor all oblique; and those that are so, have not all the
+same Degrees of Obliquity, yet we have Reason to think
+them all habitable. In some there are no different Seasons
+of the Year, and in some they differ in another manner
+than ours; and the Periods of their Years are very different.
+In like manner, as to the Days, in some they are
+longer, in others shorter: In the <i>Moon</i> a Day lasts fourteen
+or fifteen of our Days, and their Nights are proportionably
+longer than our Nights. In <i>Jupiter</i>, the Days
+are but of five Hours, and so the Nights; that Planet being
+turned in ten Hours about his Axis. In <i>Mercury</i> we know
+little what the Seasons or Days are, but its Year must be
+much shorter than ours; as also is that of <i>Venus</i>; and
+their Heat from the Sun, must be much greater. <i>Jupiter</i>
+and <i>Saturn</i> are at vast Distances from the Sun, and must
+proportionably have less Heat; and <i>Saturn</i> must have a greater
+Difference of Summer and Winter than we have, by
+reason of his greater Obliquity to the Sun. These and
+such like Observations, show what Vanity it is to make
+an universal Standard from the State of our Earth: Or to
+say, this is best, and to make Things otherwise, would
+be inconsistent with the <i>infinite Wisdom of their Maker</i>,
+as this Examiner, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 66.</i> pretends to do.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to return to his Objections: This he suggests, <i>ibid.</i> as
+one, that in case of a perpetual Equinox, the annual Motion
+of the Earth about the Sun would be to no Purpose.
+Of this we are no competent Judges, no more than of
+the other Differences foremention’d in the Conditions of
+the Planets. Yet, in that Case, a Distinction and Computation
+of Time might be made, by their Aspect to the different
+Signs of the Zodiack. There may be, (for any
+Thing we know,) in the Extent of the Universe, Planets,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_544'>544</span>or great opaque Bodies, that have no Course about their
+Suns, for Reasons best known to their Maker; and others
+that have no diurnal Motion about their Axes: Nor ought
+such States, tho’ very different from ours, to be concluded
+incongruous. If this Objection of his were of any Force,
+it would lie against <i>Jupiter</i> as well as against the ante-diluvian
+Earth. And this minds me of his Objection
+taken from <i>Saturn</i> and <i>Jupiter</i>, whose Axes, he says, are
+Inclined to the Axis of the Ecliptick; and yet, according
+to the Theorist, they have suffer’d no Deluge. This is an
+unhappy Argument, for I think it hath two Errors in it:
+But let us set down his Words, that there may be no Mistake
+or Misrepresentation, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 76.</i> <i>Another Argument
+which may be brought to convince the Theorist that the Axis
+of the Earth was at first inclined to the Plane of the Ecliptick
+is, that it is certain by Observation, that Saturn and
+Jupiter (whom the Theorist will allow to have suffered no
+Deluge as yet) have their Axes not perpendicular, but inclined
+to the Planets of their Orbits; and the Position is true
+of all the other Planets, as far as they can be observ’d. And
+therefore, &#38;c.</i> First, as to <i>Saturn</i>, I’m sure the Theorist
+never thought that Planet to be now in its original Form,
+but to be broken, and to have already suffer’d a Dissolution,
+as you may see in both Theories, <i>English</i> and <i>Latin</i><a id='r25'></a><a href='#f25' class='c013'><sup>[25]</sup></a>.
+Then as to the Position of <i>Jupiter</i>, I know not whence
+he has this <i>certain</i> Observation, that its Axis is oblique to
+the Plane of its Orbit: For<a id='r26'></a><a href='#f26' class='c013'><sup>[26]</sup></a> <i>Hugenius</i> tells us just the contrary,
+and that it hath a perpetual Equinox. Let these
+Things be examin’d, and hereafter let us be cautious how
+we take Things upon the Examiner’s Word, if he be found
+to have committed two Faults in one Objection.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Farthermore, he intimates, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 94.</i>) that the Theorist hath
+no Mind to the Notion of <i>Attraction</i>; I believe so too,
+nor in Philosophy to any other Notion that is unconceivable.
+He must tell us how this <i>Attraction</i> differs from an
+<i>occult Quality</i>, whether it is a mechanical Principle or no;
+and if not, from what Principle it arises. When he hath
+told us this, we shall be better able to judge of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>After all, to conclude this Chapter, the one grand Question
+with the Theorist (whatsoever there may be with
+other Authors) is this, <i>whether</i> the Earth has chang’d its
+Situation since the Beginning of the World: And that it
+has done so, the Theorist does still positively maintain.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Having insisted more largely upon these four first Chapters,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_545'>545</span>as being most fundamental in the Controversy, we
+shall dispatch more readily this fifth and the seventh, leaving
+the sixth Chapter to a more particular Disquisition in
+the last Place.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This fifth Chapter is designed against the Rivers of the
+primitive Earth, according to that Origin and Derivation
+that is given them by the Theorist. But it is to be noted in
+the first Place, that supposing they had any other Origin or
+Course than what is there assign’d (excepting only an Origin
+from Mountains,) the <i>Theory</i> continues still in Force.
+For this Point about the Waters of the first Earth, and
+the Explication of them, is one of those Explications that
+admit of Latitude and Variety; and therefore as to the
+<i>Theory</i>, the Question is only this, <i>Whether</i> an habitable
+Earth may have Rivers without Mountains. For if any
+Earth may have them without Mountains, why not the
+primitive Earth? Now it will be hard for the Examiner, or
+any other, to prove, that in every World, where there are
+Waters and Rivers, there are Mountains. We intimated
+before, that the general Frame of an Earth might be such
+as would give a Course to Waters without particular
+Mountains. But we will leave that at present to a farther
+Consideration, and observe now what his Proofs are, that
+there could be no Rivers in the primitive Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>First he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 87.</i> <i>According to the Theorist’s Own Hypothesis,
+there could be no Rivers for a long Time after the
+Formation of the Earth</i>. Where is this said by the Theorist?
+His Hypothesis supposes, that the soft and moist Earth
+could not but afford Store of Vapours at first, as this Author
+in another Place hath noted for the Sense of the Theorist,
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 86.</i>) and now he says the quite contrary: The
+Chanels of the Rivers indeed would not be so deep and
+hollow at first as they are now, their Cavities being wrought
+by Degrees; but still there would not want Vapours to
+supply them.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 88.</i> when that first Moisture of the
+Earth was lessened, there could be no Supply of Vapours
+from the Abyss; seeing the Heat of the Sun could not
+reach so far, nor raise Vapours from it, or at least not in
+a sufficient Quantity, as he pretends to prove hereafter:
+But in the mean Time he speaks of great Cracks or Pits,
+whose Dimensions and Capacities he examines at Pleasure,
+and by these he makes the Theorist to suppose the Vapours
+to ascend. Now I do not find that the Theorist makes
+any Mention of these Pits, nor any Use of those Cracks for
+that Purpose. The only Question is, whether the Heat of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_546'>546</span>the Sun in that Earth would reach so low as the Abyss,
+when the Earth was more dried, a»d its Pores enlarg’d:
+So that this Objection, as he states it, seems to refer to some
+other Author.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But now supposing the Vapours rais’d, he considers what
+Course they would take, or which Way they would move
+in the open Air. But before that be examin’d, we must
+take Notice how unfairly he deals with the Theorist, when
+he seems to make him suppose, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 94, 95.</i> that Mountains
+<i>make way for the Motion and Dilatation of the Vapours</i>;
+which he never suppos’d, nor is it possible he should suppose
+it in the first Earth, where there were no Mountains.
+Neither does the Theorist suppose, as this Author would
+insinuate, that Mountains or Cold dilate Vapours, but on
+the contrary, that they <i>stop</i> and <i>compress them</i>, as the
+Words are cited, even by the Examiner a little before, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 86.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Then as to the Course of the Vapours, when they are
+rais’d, the Theorist supposes that would be towards the
+Poles and the coldest Climates. But this Author says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 97.</i>
+they would all move Westward, or from East to West;
+<i>there being a continual Wind blowing from the East to West,
+according to the Motion of the Sun</i>. Whether that Wind
+come from the Motion of the Sun, or of the Earth, (which
+is contrary,) is another Question; but however, let them
+move at first to the West, the Question here is, <i>Where
+they would be condens’d</i>, or where they would fall. And
+there is little Probability that their Condensation would be
+under the Equator, where they are most agitated, but rather
+by an Impulse of new Vapours, they would soon divert
+towards the Poles, and losing their Agitation there,
+would fall in Dews or Rains. Which Condensation being
+made, and a Passage open’d that Way for new ones to
+supply their Places, there would be a continual Draught
+of Vapours, from the hotter to the colder Parts of the
+Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We proceed now to the seventh Chapter, which is in a
+good Measure upon the same or a like Subject with this,
+namely, concerning the Penetration of the Heat of the
+Sun into the Body of the Earth. This, he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 148.</i>
+cannot be to any considerable Depth; nor could it pass
+the exterior Orb of the first Earth, and affect the Abyss, or
+raise Vapours from it. To prove this, he supposes that exterior
+Earth divided into so many Surfaces as he pleases,
+then supposing the Heat diminished in every Surface, he
+concludes it could not possibly pass through so many. Thus
+you may divide an Inch into an hundred or a thousand Surfaces,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_547'>547</span>and prove from thence, that no Heat of the Sun
+could pierce through an Inch of Earth. We must rather
+consider Pores than Surfaces in this Case; and whether
+those Pores were straight or oblique, the Motion would pass
+however, though not the Light: And the Heat of the Sun
+might have its Effect, by a direct or indirect Motion, to a
+great Depth within the Earth, notwithstanding the Multitude
+of Surfaces that he imagines. Those that think a
+Comet, upon its nearer Approach to the Sun, would be
+pierc’d with its Heat through and through; and to such a
+Degree, as to become much hotter than red hot Iron, will
+not think it strange, that at our Distance from the Sun, its
+Heat should have some proportionable Effect upon the inward
+Parts of the Earth. And all those imaginary solid Surfaces
+do not hinder, you see, the magnetick Particles from
+running through the Body of the Earth, and making the
+Globe one great Magnet.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But let those Considerations have what Effect they can,
+this Supposition however is nothing peculiar to the Theorist.
+I know some learned Men think the Heat of the
+Sun does penetrate deep into the Bowels of the Earth; others
+think it does not, and either of them have their Arguments.
+These alledge the equal Temper of Vaults and
+Mines at different Seasons of the Year: The other say, ’tis
+true, subterraneous Places keep their Equality of Temper
+much better than the external Air, and those Differences
+that appear to us, are in a great Measure by comparison
+with the Temper of our Bodies. Then for their own Opinion,
+they take an Argument from the Generation of
+Metals and Minerals in the Bowels of the Earth, and other
+subterraneous Fossiles. These, we see, are ripen’d by degrees
+in several Ages, and cannot, as they think, be brought
+to Maturity, and raised into the exterior Earth, without the
+Heat and Influence of the Sun: Of the same Sun that actuates
+all the vegetable World, that quickens Seeds, and
+raises Juices into the Roots of our deepest, and Tops of our
+highest Oaks and Cedars.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But let this remain a Problem; I will instance in another
+remarkable Phænomenon, which is most for the present
+Purpose, I mean Earthquakes. Let us consider the Causes
+of them, and the Depths of them: I think all agree, that
+Earthquakes arise from the Rarefaction of Vapours and Exhalations,
+and that this Rarefaction must be made by
+some Heat; and no other is yet proved to us by this Author
+than that of the Sun. Then as to the Depth of Earthquakes,
+we find they are deeper than the Bottom of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_548'>548</span>Sea: For, besides that they communicate with different
+Countries divided by the Sea, they are found sometimes to
+arise within the Sea, and from the Bottom of it, at great
+Depths. This seems to prove, that there may be a strong
+Rarefaction of Vapours and Exhalations far within the
+Bowels of the Earth; and the Theorist desires no more. If
+in the present Constitution of the Earth, there may be such
+Concussions and Subversions for a great Extent, we have
+no Reason to believe, but there might be (at a Time appointed
+by Providence) an universal Disruption, as that Earth
+was constituted. Finally, whatsoever the Causes of this
+Disruption and Dissolution were, ’tis certain there was a
+<i>Disruption of the Abyss</i>, and that Disruption universal as
+the Deluge was; which answers sufficiently the Design of
+the <i>Theory</i>. However, if he have a mind to see, how this
+agrees with History, both sacred and prophane, he may
+consult, if he pleases, what the Theorist hath noted upon
+that Argument, <i>Archæol. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 2. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 4.</i> besides other Places.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But this Author says farther, That supposing such a Disruption
+of the Abyss, and Dissolution of the exterior Earth,
+no universal Deluge however could follow upon it; because
+there could not be Water enough left in the Abyss
+to make or occasion such a Deluge: For the Rivers of the
+Earth being then supply’d from the Abyss, by such a Time,
+or before the Time of the Deluge, he says, there would be
+no Water left in it. Thus he goes from one Extreme to
+another: Before he said, the Power of the Sun could not
+reach or affect the Abyss to draw out any Vapours from it;
+now he would make the Evaporation so excessive, that it
+would have emptied the great Abyss before the Deluge.
+This is a great Undertaking, and to make it good he takes
+a great Compass: He pretends to shew us, what Quantity
+of Water all the Rivers of the Earth throw into the Sea
+every Day; and beginning with the River <i>Po</i>, and taking
+his Measure from that, he supposes there are such a certain
+Number of equivalent Rivers upon the Face of the
+whole Earth; and if the <i>Po</i> casts so much Water into the
+Sea, the rest will cast so much more, and in Conclusion
+so much as would empty the Abyss.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>You will easily believe, <i>Sir</i>, there must be great Uncertainties
+in this Computation: But, if that was certain, as it
+is far from it, still he goes upon Suppositions that are not
+allow’d by the Theorist. For, first, he supposes the Waters
+of the present Sea to be equal to the Waters of the
+great Abyss: Whereas, supposing them of the same Depth,
+there would be near twice as much Water in the <i>great
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_549'>549</span>Deep</i>, as is now in the Ocean; seeing the Abyss was extended
+under the whole Earth, and the Sea reaches but to
+half of it. Secondly, He should prove that the Rivers of
+the ante-diluvian Earth were as many, and as great, as we
+have now. The Torrid Zone then had none, and much
+less would serve the temperate Climates than is requisite
+now for the Earth. Besides, the Rivers of that Earth
+were not supplied by Vapours only from the Abyss, but
+also from all the Earth, and all the Waters upon the
+Earth: And when the Rivers were partly lost and spent in
+the Torrid Zone, they were in a great Measure exhal’d
+there, and drawn into the Air by the Heat of the Sun, and
+would fall again in another Place, to make new Rains and
+a new Supply to the Rivers. So, in like manner, when
+he supposes, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 158.</i> the Rivers that were upon the Earth,
+at the Time of the Disruption or the great Deep, to have
+thrown themselves off the Land, as if they were lost; and
+makes a Computation how much Water all the Rivers
+of the Earth amount to: This, I say, is a needless Computation
+as to the present Purpose. For whatsoever Mass
+of Waters they amounted to, it would not be lost: If
+they fell down and joined with the Abyss, they would increase
+its Store, and be thrown up again by the Fall of the
+Fragments, making so much a greater Mass to overflow
+the Earth; So that nothing is gain’d by this Supposition.
+The Effect would be the same as to the Deluge: Whether
+the Waters above the Earth, and those under the
+Earth met together sooner or later, when their Forces
+were joined, they would still have the same Effect, as we
+said before of the Vapours. And to conclude that Point,
+the whole Sum of Waters, or Vapours convertible into
+Waters, that were from the Beginning, or at any Time,
+would still be preserv’d above Ground, or under Ground:
+And that would turn to the same Account, as to the
+Flood.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Waters and Vapours all collected, the Theorist
+supposes sufficient, upon a Dissolution of the Earth, to
+make the Deluge: Not indeed in the Nature of a Standing
+Pool, as it is usually conceiv’d; a quiet Pool, I say,
+overtopping and standing calm over the Heads of the
+highest Mountains; but as a rushing Sea, overflowing and
+sweeping them with its raging Waves and impetuous Fluctuations,
+when it was violently forc’d out of all its Chanels,
+and the Vapours condensed into Rain. Such an Inundation
+as this, would be sufficient to destroy both Man
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_550'>550</span>and Beast, and other Creatures, those few excepted, that
+were miraculously preserv’d in the Ark. This is the Theorist’s
+Explication of the Deluge, and I see nothing in this
+Argument, that will destroy or weaken it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now, this being the State of the Deluge, according to
+the Theorist, what this Author says in the next Paragraph
+(<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 167.</i>) is either a Misrepresentation, or an Equivocation.
+For the eight Oceans requir’d by the Theorist, is the
+Quantity of Water necessary for a Deluge in the Way of a
+Standing Pool: Whereas this Author represents it, as if
+the Theorist required so much Water to make a Deluge
+upon his Hypothesis. This, I suppose, upon Reflection,
+the Author cannot but see to be a Mistake, or a wilful
+Misrepresentation.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This is the Sum of his seventh Chapter: There are besides
+some Suggestions made, which it may be were intended
+for Objections by the Author: As when he says, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 151.</i>)
+that the Heat of the Sun would be intolerable upon the
+Surface of the Earth, if it could pierce and operate upon
+the Abyss. We allow, that its Heat was intolerable in
+the Torrid Zone, which thereby became unhabitable; and
+there only the Sun was in its full Strength, and had its
+greatest Effect upon the Abyss. But in the other Climates,
+the Heat would be moderate enough; nay, so moderate,
+that this Author says in another Place, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 66, 69</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i> it
+would not be sufficient to ripen Fruits, and in the Whole,
+of less Force than it is now in the present Constitution of
+the Earth. So apt is Contention to carry one out of one
+Extreme into another.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>His last Objection is about the Duration of the Flood,
+that it could not last in its Force a hundred and fifty Days, if
+it had been made by a Dissolution of the Earth, and an Eruption
+of the Abyss. But as this is affirm’d by him without
+Proof, so the contrary is sufficiently explain’d and made
+out, both in the <i>Latin</i> and <i>English</i> Theory, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 52, 56.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I had forgot to tell him, that he ought not to suppose,
+as he seems to do, when he is emptying the Abyss, (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 165.</i>)
+that after the Torrid Zone was soak’d with Waters by the
+Issues of the Rivers, no more Waters or Vapours were
+drawn from it then, than were before, or consequently no
+less from the Abyss. For when the middle Parts of the
+Earth had drunk in those Waters, the Force of the Sun
+would be less upon the Abyss through those Parts, and the
+Vapours would be more and greater from them, than before
+when they were drier, and in the same Proportion
+they needed less Supplies from the Abyss.</p>
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_551'>551</span>
+ <h3 class='c009'>CHAP. <abbr title='six'>VI.</abbr> <br> <i>Concerning the Figure of the Earth.</i></h3>
+</div>
+<p class='c004'>I Deferr’d the Consideration of this Chapter to the last,
+because I thought it of a more general Concern, and
+might deserve a fuller Disquisition. ’Tis now, you
+know, become a common Controversy or Enquiry, <i>what
+the Figure of the Earth is</i>. Many think it not truly Spherical,
+as it was imagin’d formerly, but a Spheroid, either
+oblong or oblate; that is, either extended in Length toward
+the Poles, like an oval; or, on the contrary, swelling
+in Breadth under the Equator, and so shorter than a
+just Sphere betwixt Pole and Pole, and broader in the
+middle Parts. ’Tis true, the Theorist is not directly concern’d
+in this Controversy, because he does not in the
+<i>Theory</i> affirm the present Earth to be oblong or oval, not
+knowing what Change might be made at its Dissolution.
+However, it may be worth the while to enquire what
+Arguments are bought, either from Causes or Effects, to
+determine the Figure of the Earth, whether past or present.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>’Tis easy indeed by Observation to determine, that the
+Earth is a convex Body, not plain, as the <i>Epicureans</i> fansied;
+and convex on all Sides, and therefore in some sort orbicular;
+but whether it be truly spherical, those common
+Observations will not determine. The Theorist nam’d
+and pointed at such Observations, as he thought would
+be most likely to discover the precise Figure of the Earth:
+As to observe, for Instance, whether the Extent of a Degree
+was the same all the Earth over, in different Latitudes,
+or at different Distances from the Equator. Then
+to observe whether the Shade of the Earth in a total Eclipse
+of the Moon be truly round, or any other ways
+irregular. And also to observe, if towards the Poles,
+the Return of the Sun into their Horizon, be according to
+the Rules of a spherical Surface of the Earth. Let us
+consider these separately, as to the present Earth.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to the Measure of a Degree in different Latitudes,
+we find that Authors are not all of the same Mind. Some
+will have them unequal, and in such a manner, according
+to their Distance from the Equator, as from that to
+infer, that the Earth is oblong. This Examiner takes
+Notice of Dr. <i>Eisensmidius</i>, as one that hath made that
+Observation, and that Inference from it, and gives him
+very rude Words upon that occasion, making him a Man
+of <i>prodigious Stupidity, and Crackpot</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 140</i>, and one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_552'>552</span>that did <i>not understand the first six Elements of Euclid, or
+indeed those of common Sense, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 143.</i> Whatsoever this
+Professor was, he was not the first that made that Observation
+and Inference. For another Mathematician, better
+known, had made the same, some time before him: I mean
+<i>Milliet Deschales</i>, in his <i>general Principles of Geography</i>, <i>Fr.
+<abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 1. propos. 29.</i> But, ’tis true, he says, this Conjecture of
+his, that the Figure of the Earth is oval or ecliptick, would
+not be well grounded, if the Shade of the Earth in Lunar
+Eclipses was found to be always perfectly round; of
+which we shall have occasion to speak hereafter. For
+this, which he makes a Scruple against his own Opinion,
+is by others made an Occasion of suspecting that the Earth
+is really Oval. But we must also acknowledge, that the
+same <i>Deschales</i> in his <i>Latin</i> Works does not own the Observation,
+but owns the Inference, which is that the Examiner
+quarrels with. He owns it, I say, in these Words,<a id='r27'></a><a href='#f27' class='c013'><sup>[27]</sup></a>
+<i>Si figura terræ esset ovalis, plura milliaria decurrenúa essent
+versus Æquinoctialem ad inveniendum in elevatione
+poli mutationem unius gradûs quàm versus polos.</i> And he
+gives this Reason, <i>Quià ovalis figura prope vertices minorem
+sphæram imitatur: versus Æquinoctialem autem in majorem
+sphæram degenerat.</i> And again, having taken Notice
+of the various Computations of a Degree upon the
+Earth, he subjoins<a id='r28'></a><a href='#f28' class='c013'><sup>[28]</sup></a>, <i>Hæc observationum discrepantia nonnullis
+suspicionem fecit, Tellurem non omninò sphæricam esse,
+sed sphæroidem ellipticam, ita ut versus polos in minorem
+circulum abiret. Sed opus est pluribus observationibus adid
+persuadendum.</i> The Theorist did not assert either the Observation
+to be true or the Inference, but mark’d it as an
+Observation that deserv’d to be enquir’d into, in order to
+determine the Figure of the Earth. For it seems apparent,
+that if the Body of the Earth be oblong or oblate, the
+Extent of a Degree will not be really the same as if it was
+truly spherical. Neither do I know any single Observation
+that would give us more Light, or better help us to
+discover what the Configuration of the Earth is, than the
+Measure of a Degree exactly taken in different Latitudes.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I happened lately to be in Company with a learned
+Gentleman, and amongst other Things that fell into Discourse,
+I ask’d his Opinion, what Inequality there would
+be in the Degrees of the Earth, in case it was oval, and
+where it would fall; whether they would be greater towards
+the Poles, or towards the Equator. We were
+suddenly interrupted by the coming in of new Company,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_553'>553</span>but he said he would send me his Thoughts upon a little
+Reflection; and accordingly, after a few Days he was
+pleased to send me this Letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c014'><i>SIR</i>,</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id003'>
+<img src='images/fig5.jpg' alt='A Circle, with various Points marked.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>Figure 5.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>Having now some Leisure (the Elections for Parliament,
+wherein I had any Concern, being over) I
+have here sent you my Thoughts on a Subject we lately
+discours’d of at <i>Kensington</i>. Whether in case the Earth
+is a long Spheroid, the Degrees of Latitude would be
+greater near the Equator, or near the Poles. I conceive
+they would be greater near the Equator. Let the Ellipsis
+<abbr class='spell'><i>BDCF.</i></abbr> represent the Earth, draw the Line <abbr class='spell'><i>gp.</i></abbr> which
+may be a Tangent to the Ellipsis, and likewise meeting
+with the Axis <abbr class='spell'><i>BC</i></abbr>, and its Transverse <abbr class='spell'><i>FD</i></abbr> (after they are
+produc’d) make the Triangle <abbr class='spell'><i>gAp</i></abbr> an Isosceles, and consequently
+the Angles at the Base <abbr class='spell'><i>Agp</i></abbr>, <abbr class='spell'><i>Apg</i></abbr> each 45 Degrees.
+I say <abbr class='spell'><i>HC</i></abbr> will measure the 45 Degrees of Latitude
+near the Pole, and <abbr class='spell'><i>DH</i></abbr> (which by Inspection without
+farther Demonstration is evidently bigger) those near
+the Equator. (I ought to have premis’d that <abbr class='spell'><i>B</i></abbr> and <abbr class='spell'><i>C</i></abbr> represent
+the Poles.) It is plain the Inhabitants at <abbr class='spell'><i>H</i></abbr> will be
+in the Latitude of 45 Degrees, by reason their horizontal
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_554'>554</span>Plane <abbr class='spell'><i>gp</i></abbr> is by Construction 45 Degrees distant to
+the Horizon of the Inhabitants under the Line at <abbr class='spell'><i>D</i></abbr>, which
+lies parallel to the Axis <abbr class='spell'><i>BC</i></abbr>.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>If the Earth be a broad Spheroid, <abbr class='spell'><i>D</i></abbr> and <abbr class='spell'><i>F</i></abbr> representing
+the Poles, then by the same Method of Reasoning, the
+Degrees of Latitude will be greatest near the Poles: But
+as the longest and shortest Diameter of the Earth has in
+no wise so great a Disproportion as in their Figure (their
+Difference not exceeding the two hundredth Part at most)
+the Inequality of the Degrees of Latitude will be proportionally
+less; but in all Cases, the long Spheroid makes the
+Degrees greatest near the Equator; and the broad Spheroid
+those greatest near the Poles. I hope in a Fortnight to
+have the Satisfaction of seeing you in <i>London</i>, and remain,</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><i>Sir, Your most Humble Servant.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The Examiner would do well to consider this, lest all the
+reproachful Characters he casts upon <i>Eisensmidius</i>, should
+recoil upon himself. ’Tis Prudence, as well as good Manners
+not to be fierce and vehement in Censures, for fear
+of a Mistake, and a Blackblow. However, the pretended
+Demonstration which this Examiner brings to prove, that,
+in case the Earth was oblong, the Degrees would be greater
+toward the Poles, does not affect <i>Eisensmidius</i>, for it
+proceeds upon a Supposition which that Author does not
+allow; namely, that the Vertical Lines, or the Lines of
+Gravity are to be drawn directly to the Center of the
+Earth: Whereas <i>Eisensmidius</i> supposes they ought to be
+drawn at right Angles, to the Tangent of each respective
+Horizon, and would not in all Figures lead directly to the
+Center. However, we do not wonder that he is so rude
+to Strangers, seeing he bears so hard in other places, upon
+some of our own learned Countrymen.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We proceed now to the Theorist’s second Observation,
+about Lunar Eclipses and the Shade of the Earth. This
+Shade is generally presumed to be exactly round, as the
+Section of a Cone: And yet the best Astronomers have
+doubted of it, and some upon that Occasion have doubted
+of the Figure of the Earth. <i>Kepler</i><a id='r29'></a><a href='#f29' class='c013'><sup>[29]</sup></a> in an Observation
+of a Lunar total Eclipse, not finding the Shade of the
+Earth perfectly round, but rather oblong, <i>ut ejus dimetiens
+à Zona Torrida consurgentis sit minor dimetiente ejus à
+Polis Terræ surgentis</i>, suspects that the Figure of the
+Earth was so too. And that we must conclude it to be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_555'>555</span>so from this Observation, if there was not some Obliquity
+in the Rays of the Sun, whereof he shews no Cause or
+Occasion. <i>Si retinenda esset, inquit, rectitudo radiorum,
+Globus ipse Terræ fiet oviformis, diametro per Polos longiore.</i>
+And a like Observation to this he cites from <i>Tycho
+Brahé</i>, in a central, or next to central Eclipse of the
+Moon. These two great Astronomers, it seems, did not
+find the Shade of the Earth to be justly conical; and
+thereby take away the Reason or lessen the Doubt, which
+hindered <abbr class='spell'>M.</abbr> <i>Deschales</i> from concluding (upon another
+Observation) the Figure of the Earth to be oval.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The third Observation of the Theorist remains, which
+is about the Return of the Sun unto the polar Parts of the
+Earth, whether that be according to the Rules of a spherical
+Surface. The Observations that have been made hitherto
+in the Northern Climates about the Return of the
+Sun to them, make it quicker than will easily consist with
+a spherical Figure of the Earth; much less are they favourable
+to a gibbous Form: For that Gibbosity under the Equator
+must needs hinder the Appearance and Discovery of the
+Sun in the respective polar Parts, more than a spherical
+Figure would do. Now it hath been observ’d in <i>Nova
+Zembla</i>, that the returning Sun appear’d to them seventeen
+Days sooner than they expected, according to the
+Rules of Astronomy, the Earth being supposed truly spherical;
+and this may be thought an Argument that the
+Earth is rather depress’d in its middle Parts. I leave the
+Matter to farther Examination. I know ’tis usually imputed
+to Refractions, but that is upon the Presumption
+that the Earth is justly spherical; and a better Answer (upon
+that Supposition) I think cannot be found. Though,
+I think, it will not be easy in that Way, and upon that
+Solution to make all the Phænomena agree, or to shew
+that the Refractions could make so great a Difference.
+However, this is no improper Topick to be consider’d in
+reference to the Determination of the Figure of the Earth,
+and for that purpose it was noted by the Theorist.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have now done with that side of the Question,
+that respects the oblong Figure of the Earth, and it remains
+to consider the other Part; I mean the Opinion of
+those that make the Earth protuberant about the Equator,
+or an oblate Spheroid. This the learned Monsieur <i>Hugens</i><a id='r30'></a><a href='#f30' class='c013'><sup>[30]</sup></a>
+thinks may be prov’d by Experiments made about
+the different Vibrations of <i>Pendulums</i> in different Latitudes
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_556'>556</span>of the Earth. ’Tis found, he says, by Experience
+that a <i>Pendulum</i> near the Equator, makes its Vibrations
+slower than another of the same Length, farther from the
+Equator; and gives an Instance of it from an Experiment
+made at <i>Caiene</i> in <i>America</i> (which is four or five Degrees
+from the Equator) compar’d with another made at <i>Paris</i>.
+From this Trial he concludes, first, that the Gravitation
+is less under and near the Equator than towards the Poles,
+according to their several Degrees of Latitude. Then he
+infers, by Consequence, that the Land and the Sea are
+higher towards the Equator, than towards the Poles. And
+in Conclusion, that the Figure of the Earth is protuberant
+and gibbous in the Middle, and more flatted, or of a shorter
+Diameter betwixt Pole and Pole.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In this Conclusion, you see, there are several Things to be
+considered according to the Premisses. First, Matter of
+Fact, concerning the Inequality of Vibrations in equal
+Pendulums, according to their different Latitudes; then
+the following Inferences made from that Inequality. As
+to the Matter of Fact, Monsieur <i>Hugens</i> seems to be doubtful
+himself: He does not vouch it from his own Experience,
+but he takes it from the Report of Monsieur <i>Richer</i>;
+whose Person or Character I do not know, nor whether
+his Relation be extant in Print. However, Monsieur <i>Hugens</i>
+speaks dubiously of the Experiment, as such an one
+whereof we ought to expect farther Confirmation. For
+he says<a id='r31'></a><a href='#f31' class='c013'><sup>[31]</sup></a>, <i>we cannot trust entirely to this first Observation,
+whereof we have not any Circumstance noted to us; and
+still less to those that are said to be made at Guadeloupe, (at
+a greater Latitude,) where the Pendule is said to be shorter
+by two Lines than that at Paris.<a id='r32'></a><a href='#f32' class='c013'><sup>[32]</sup></a> We must expect to be
+more justly inform’d of these different Lengths of Pendules,
+as well under the Line as in other Climates.</i> And he refers
+us to a farther Trial by his Clocks, rectified for a second
+Voyage, whereof I have yet heard no Report. If
+Matter of Fact be dubious, or Experiments discordant,
+we cannot be assur’d of the Conclusion. It were to be
+wish’d, that this different Gravitation in different Latitudes,
+might be prov’d by other Experiments than that of
+the Pendulum. Methinks, in ponderous Bodies, this Difference
+might become sensible: Not indeed by a Balance
+or Scales, for the supposed Decrease of Gravity would
+have the same Effect upon the Counterpoise as upon the Body
+weighed; but by other Powers that do not depend immediately
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_557'>557</span>upon Gravity, as <i>Springs</i>, or any other Engines,
+or by Rarefactions, or whatsoever hath the Force to raise,
+sustain, or remove ponderous Bodies. For such Powers
+have a less Effect with us than near the Equator, where
+the Gravitation of Bodies that make the Counterpoise, is
+supposed to be much lessen’d. Neither do I know if they
+have try’d the Barometer, whether that will discover any
+such Elevation, at, or near the Equator; the Mercury
+sinking there much lower than with us, or indeed to nothing,
+if the Height be comparatively so great as is supposed.
+It seems strange, that the Difference of seventeen
+Miles (call it little, or call it great, compar’d with the
+Semidiameter of the Earth) should have a sensible Effect
+upon Pendulums and upon nothing else.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Methinks, that Height of the Equator should make a
+different Horizon (as to the Heavens, or the Earth, and
+Sea) East and West, from North and South; the Figure
+of the Earth being a Sphere one way and a Spheroid in the
+other. The Sea also must be a prodigious Depth at the
+Equator; deeper by seventeen Miles, than at or near
+the Poles. I would gladly know what Experience there
+is of this. Then in reference to our <i>Rivers</i>, how swift
+and rapid, upon this Hypothesis, must the <i>Rivers</i> be that
+rise at or near the Equator, or how slow the Motion of
+those that ascend towards it, if at all they can be supposed
+to climb so great an Hill. The great River of the
+<i>Amazons</i>, in Southern <i>America</i>, is in some Parts of it four
+or five Degrees from the Equator, others say much more;
+yet runs up to the Equator with that vast load of Water, and
+throws it self there into the Ocean. In the Northern <i>America</i>,
+<i>Rio Negro</i> is represented to us, as having a longer
+Course against the bent of the Earth, and crossing the
+Equator, falls down Southward several Degrees: So
+the <i>Nile</i> in <i>Africa</i> crosses the Line, and hath a long
+Course on this side of it. <i>Rivers</i> do not rise higher by
+a natural Course than their Fountain’s Head, and Hydrographers
+usually assign two Foot, or two Foot and an
+half in a Mile for the Descent of <i>Rivers</i>, but upon this
+Hypothesis there will be fourteen or fifteen Foot (in respect
+of the Center of the Earth) for every Mile, in Rivers
+descending from the Equator; which is a Precipitation
+rather than a navigable Stream. Suppose a Canal
+cut from the Equator to the Pole, ’twould be a Paradox
+to say the Water would not flow in this Chanel, nor descend
+towards the Pole, having fourteen or fifteen Foot
+Descent for every Mile, according to your Figure of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_558'>558</span>Earth: And also it would be as great or a greater Paradox,
+to suppose that Rivers would rise to the Equator, and with
+the same Celerity (as we see they do) upon an Ascent of
+so many Feet. And after all, to conclude the Argument,
+if this Difference of Pendulums be found, it will still bear
+a Dispute from what physical Causes that Difference
+proceeds.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Thus far we have considered what Arguments have been
+brought for the oblate Figure of the Earth from Effects;
+and have noted such Observations to be made, as we
+thought might be useful for Discovery of Truth, on
+what side soever it may fall. We are now to consider an
+Argument taken from the Causes, and brought by these
+Authors to prove the same spheroidical Figure of the
+Globe. To this purpose they observe, as is obvious and
+reasonable, that in the diurnal Motion of the Earth, the
+middle Parts about the Equator (where the Circles are
+greatest, and consequently the Motion swiftest) would
+fly off with a greater Force, and so rise higher than the
+other Parts that were mov’d in lesser Circles in the same
+time, and would have less Force to remove themselves
+from the Center of their Motion. This is agreed on
+all Hands, and was own’d by the Theorist in a fluid
+Globe turn’d about its Axis, in case there was no Impediment
+to hinder the rising or recession of those
+middle Parts. But before we speak to that, on both
+sides you see it must be suppos’d and granted, that the
+Globe of the Earth was once fluid, or the exterior
+Orb of it; and we ought to consider when, or at
+what Time this was. It must have been surely at the
+first Formation of the Earth, when it rose from a
+Chaos, and before its Parts were consolidated and
+grown hard. Supposing then that the interior Orb of
+the Earth was once cover’d over with an Orb of Water,
+the Question will be, how this Orb of Water
+came to be cover’d with dry Land, or came to be
+divided into Land and Water, as it is now.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id003'>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_559'>559</span>
+<img src='images/fig6.jpg' alt='The Earth, covered with Water.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>Figure 6</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter id003'>
+<img src='images/fig7.jpg' alt='The Earth, as it is now.' class='ig001'>
+<div class='ic002'>
+<p>Figure 7</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_560'>560</span>Let (A) represent an Hemisphere of the Earth, in its
+first State, when covered with Water; and (B) the same
+Hemisphere as it is now. This Author must tell us, consistently
+with his Hypothesis, how the Earth could pass out
+of one of these States into the other, without passing
+through some intermediate State; or how this Change was
+made in its Surface, from what Causes, and in what manner.
+If the first Earth was a Concretion upon the Face of
+the Waters, then indeed it would have the same Figure
+with the watery Globe under it; but if it was from the
+Beginning in this present Form firm and solid, as it is now
+rocky and mountainous, then the Question is, <i>how</i> the
+Parts or Regions of the Earth about the Equator could
+be raised above a spherical Figure, or into an oblate
+Spheroid, as they say the Earth is now. I take it for
+granted, that they suppose the Land raised as well as the
+Water; for otherwise the Ocean would overflow at those
+Parts of the Earth. Suppose then the Waters raised by the
+Circumvolution of the Earth, how was the <i>Terra firma</i>
+rais’d, or how could it be rais’d by that or any such Cause?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These Questions are no matter of Difficulty to the
+Theorist, who supposes the first Earth to have covered the
+Waters, and to have taken their Shape, whatsoever it was,
+as upon a Mold: Then upon its Dissolution and Disruption
+at the Deluge, to have fallen into that uneven and
+uninterrupted Form it hath now. But feeling this Method
+does not please the Examiner, he must tell us how, upon
+his Hypothesis, the Land or solid Parts of the Earth could
+be rais’d above a spherical Convexity into such a gibbous
+Figure, as he supposes them now to have under the Equator.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Monsieur <i>Hugens</i><a id='r33'></a><a href='#f33' class='c013'><sup>[33]</sup></a> makes this broad Spheroid of the
+Earth to have been the Effect of Gravity in the Formation
+of the Earth; the Matter whereof being then turned round,
+it would, as he thinks, be brought to settle in this oblate
+Figure. Very well! But this must be in its very first Concretion
+from a Chaos, before it was fix’d and compact as
+it is now; for the Rotation of the Earth could have no
+such effect upon it after it was hard. Now if you admit
+the exterior Globe of the Earth, to have been in such a
+State betwixt Fixtness and Fluidity, it will lead us directly
+to the Theorist’s Hypothesis, which supposes a soft and
+tender Concretion at first, over all the Face of the Waters.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_561'>561</span>I say, <i>over all the Face of the Waters</i>: For it must be
+universal; both because there is no Reason why these earthy
+Particles that made the Concretion, should not fall upon
+one Part of the Globe, as well as upon another; and also
+if they did not fall upon the Equinoctial Parts, how came
+there to be Land in that part, or that Land rais’d higher
+than the rest, as this Hypothesis will have it?</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In these Remarks upon the protuberant Figure of the
+Earth, you see it is allow’d, that there would be a greater
+Tendency from the Center in the middle Parts of the Globe,
+and the Waters would rise there, if there was no Impediment.
+But the Theorist did believe that the Vortex, or
+circumfluent Orb was streighter, or of a shorter Diameter
+there than through the Poles; and consequently the Waters
+having less room to dilate, would be press’d and detruded
+towards the Poles. These Authors, it may be, will allow
+no Vortices to the Planets; but then they must assign some
+other sufficient Cause to carry the Planets in their periodical
+Motions (and with the same Velocity for innumerable
+Ages) about their common Center; and the Secondary
+about their Primary: As also what gives them their diurnal
+Rotation, and the different Position of their Axes. Neither
+would it be easy to conceive, how a great Mass of
+fluid and volatile Matter, having no Current, or Determination
+any one way, and being often check’d in its progressive
+Motion, should not fall into circular Motions,
+or into Vortices of one sort or other; especially if you
+place in this Mass some great solid Bodies turned about
+their Axes.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>These are more general Problems; and when they are
+determin’d with Certainty, we shall better judge of the
+Particulars that depend upon them. But I say still, that
+neither Figure of the Earth, oblong or oblate, can be
+prov’d from the Rotation of the Earth and its Gravity, without
+supposing the Globe form’d into that Shape before it
+came to be harden’d, before it came to be loaded and stiffen’d
+by Rocks and stony Mountains. Therefore upon both Hypotheses
+it must be allow’d, that there was such a Time, such a
+State of the Earth, when its tender Orb was capable of those
+Impressions and Modifications; and that Orb must have lain
+above the Waters, not under them, nor radicated to the
+Bottom of them, for then such Cause could not have had
+such an Effect upon it. And in the last place, this Concretion
+upon the Waters must have been throughout all
+the Parts of the Earth, or all the Parts of the Land which
+are now rais’d above a spherical Surface; and no reason
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_562'>562</span>can be given, as we noted before, why the rest should not
+be cover’d as well as those. So that in effect both the Hypotheses
+suppose that all the watery Globe was at first cover’d
+with an earthy Concretion.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now this being admitted, you have confirm’d the main
+Point of the <i>Theory</i>: Namely, that the Abyss was once,
+or at first cover’d with a terrestrial Concretion, or an Orb
+of Earth. Grant this, and we’ll compound for the rest,
+let the Earth at present be of what Figure it will: If there
+was such an original Earth that cover’d the Waters, both
+the Form and Equilibration of the Earth may easily appear,
+and how by a Dissolution of it a Deluge might arise.
+But as to the present Earth, the Theorist never affirm’d
+that its Figure was oval, but he<a id='r34'></a><a href='#f34' class='c013'><sup>[34]</sup></a> noted such Observations
+made or to be made, as he thought might be proper to determine
+its Figure, and still desires that they may be pursued.
+He added also, that he would be glad to receive any
+new ones, that would demonstrate the precise Figure of
+the Earth. And accordingly, he is willing to consider in
+this Particular and all others, the Arguments and Remarks
+of such eminent Authors, as have lately given a new
+Light to the System of the World.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This may suffice to have spoken in general concerning
+these two spheroidical Figures of the Earth. We must
+now consider what particular Objections are made by the
+Examiner against its oval Figure. He says, <i><abbr title='pages'>p.</abbr> 103, 104</i>, <i>&#38;c.</i>
+admitting the oval Figure of that first Earth, it would not
+be capable however, to give a Course to the Rivers from
+the polar Parts, towards the Equinoctial. And his Reason
+is this; because the same Causes which cast the Abyss or
+the Ocean towards the Poles, would also keep the Rivers
+from descending from the Poles: But there is no Parity of
+Reason betwixt the Abyss or the Ocean, and the Rivers.
+We see in the Flux and Reflux of the Ocean, let the Cause
+of it be what it will, it hath not that Effect upon Rivers,
+nor upon Lakes, nor upon lesser Seas; yet the Circum-rotation
+of the Earth continues the same. And his confounding
+the Ocean and Rivers in the ante-diluvian Earth
+is so much the worse, seeing there never was an Ocean
+and Rivers together in that Earth. While there was an
+open Ocean, there were no Rivers, and when there were
+Rivers, there was no open Ocean, but an inclos’d Abyss:
+So though he makes large Transcripts there and elsewhere
+out of the Theory, he does not seem always to have
+well digested the Method of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_563'>563</span>After this Objection, the Examiner charges the Theorist
+with want of Skill in Logick; but his Charge is
+grounded upon another Misunderstanding or Misrepresentation.
+He pretends there, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 107.</i> that the Theorist
+hath made such a Ratiocination as this. <i>All Bodies by
+reason of the Earth’s diurnal Rotation, do endeavour to recede
+from the Axis of their Motion; but by reason of the
+Pressure of the Air, and the Streightness of the Orb, they
+cannot recede from the Axis of their Motion, therefore they
+will move towards the Poles, where they will come nearer
+to the Axis of their Motion.</i> These are the Examiner’s Words
+in that Place, where he says he will put the Theorist’s Reasoning
+in other Words: But I do not like that Method,
+unless the Examiner were a more judicious or faithful Paraphrast
+than he seems to be: Let every one be tried by
+their own Words, and if there be any false Logick or
+Nonsense in the forecited Words of the Examiner, let it
+fall upon their Author. The Theorist said<a id='r35'></a><a href='#f35' class='c013'><sup>[35]</sup></a>, that Bodies,
+by reason of the Earth’s Motion did, <i>conari à centro sur
+motûs recederè</i>: These Words this Translator renders, <i>endeavour
+to recede from the Axis of their Motion</i>; and by
+changing the Word <i>Center</i> into <i>Axis</i> (whether carelesly
+or wilfully I know not) of plain Sense he hath made Nonsense;
+and then makes this Conclusion, <i>p. 108.</i> (which
+follows indeed from his own Words, but not from those
+of the Theorist) <i>because all Bodies do endeavour to recede
+from the Axis of their Motion, therefore they will endeavour
+to go to the Axis of their Motion</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>The Theorist’s Argumentation was plainly this: Seeing
+in the Rotation of the Earth, Bodies tend from the Center
+of their Motion, if they meet with an Impediment
+there, they will move laterally in the next easiest and
+openest way; and therefore the Waters under the Equator
+being stopp’d in their first Tendency, would divert
+towards the Poles; wherein, I think, there is no
+false Logick. That there was no Impediment there,
+he must prove by other Arguments than his own Dictates
+or bare Assertion, which will not pass for a Proof.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>He proceeds now to discourse of the centrifugal Force
+and the Effects of it, together with Gravity: But he should
+have given us a better Notion of the centrifugal Force,
+than what he sets down there; for he says (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 110. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 24.</i>)
+<i>A centrifugal Force, is that Force by which a Body is drawn
+towards the Center</i>: This is a strange Signification of that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_564'>564</span>Word. And in the next Page (<i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 111. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 22.</i>) he says, by
+this centrifugal Force, Bodies <i>endeavour to recede from the
+Center of their Motion</i>; which is true, but contrary to
+what he said just before. I think ’tis Gravity, not centrifugal
+Force, that brings Bodies towards the Center.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>But to pass by this Contradiction, and to proceed:
+What he says, from others, about the Proportions of the
+centrifugal Force and Gravity in Bodies turn’d round, and
+particularly in Fluids, how they would fly off more or
+less, according to the Circles of their Motion, was always
+(as hath been mention’d before) suppos’d and allow’d
+by the Theorist, if there was no Restraint or Pressure
+upon one Part more than another of the fluid Globe:
+So that he might have spared here six or seven Pages.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>In like manner, he might have spar’d what he hath transcrib’d
+in his following Pages from those excellent Authors
+we referr’d to before, about calculating the Diminutions
+of Gravity made by the centrifugal Force, in different
+Latitudes; with other such Excursions. These, I
+say, might have been spar’d, as needless upon this Occasion,
+or to the Confutation of the <i>Theory</i>, till the principal
+Point, upon which they depend, be better prov’d. I
+made bold to say, they were transcrib’d from those Authors,
+as any one may see that pleases to consult the Originals,
+<i>Newt. Philos. Nat. Princ. Math. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 3. prop. 18,
+19, 20.</i> <i>Hugens Discour. de la cause de la Pesanteur, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i>
+147, 148, <i>&#38;c.</i> And this <i>French</i> Discourse of Monsieur
+Hugens, he hath not so much as once nam’d, though he
+hath taken so much from it. And after all, when these
+Things are determin’d in Speculation, it will still be a
+Question what the true physical Causes of them are.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>At last, for a farther Confirmation of the broad spheroidical
+Figure of the Earth, he adds an Observation from
+the Planet <i>Jupiter</i>, which is found to be of such a Figure.
+And <i>therefore</i>, he says, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 137, 138.</i> <i>We need not doubt,
+but that the Earth, which is a Planet like the rest, and
+turns round its Axis, as they do, is of the same Figure</i>. He
+might as well conclude, that every Planet, as well as the
+Earth, is of the same Figure. And what Reason can he
+give, why all the Planets that have a Rotation upon their
+Axis, are not broad Spheroids, as well as those two which
+he supposes to be so? If that be a sufficient Cause, and
+be found in other Planets as well as those, why hath it
+not the same Effect? Or he might as well conclude, that
+the Earth hath a perpetual Equinox, because <i>Jupiter</i> hath
+so. This is the same Fault which he hath so often committed,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_565'>565</span>of measuring all the Works of God by one or
+two. If a Man was transported into the Moon, the
+nearest Planet; or into <i>Mercury</i> that is so near the Sun, or
+into <i>Saturn</i>, (or any of his <i>Satellites</i>) that is so remote from
+it; would he not find, think you, a much different Face
+and State of those Planets, from what we have upon this
+Earth? Inhabitants of a different Constitution, the Furniture
+of every World different, Animals, Plants, Waters,
+and other inanimate Things: As also different Vicissitudes
+of Days and Nights, and the Seasons of the Year; according
+to their different Positions, Revolutions and
+Forms? Therefore not without Reason we noted before,
+how much the Narrowness of some Mens Spirits, Thoughts
+and Observations, confine them to a particular Pattern and
+Model, nor considering the infinite Variety of the divine
+Works, whereof we are not competent Judges.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Now comes in his rude Censure of Dr. <i>Eisensmidius</i>,
+both for his Mathematicks and bad Logick, or want of
+<i>common Sense</i>; but to this we have spoken before. He
+also, in the same Paragraph, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 142.</i> wonders at the Theorist’s
+strange Logick, to make the centrifugal Force of
+Bodies upon the Earth, to be the Cause of its oblong Figure.
+That indeed would be strange Logick if it was
+made the proximate Cause of it. But that is not the Theorists’s
+Logick but the Examiner’s, as it is distorted and
+misrepresented by him. The Theorist suppos’d the Pressure
+of that Tumour of the Waters, occasion’d by the
+centrifugal Force (as its original Cause) to be the immediate
+Cause of the oblong Figure of the Earth; and that
+Pressure suppos’d, there is nothing illogical in the Inference.
+He had formerly taken Notice, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 101, 103.</i> of
+this Reason, from the Streightness of the Orb in that Part,
+when he gave the Theorist’s Account of that Figure; but
+he thought fit to forget it now, that his Charge might not
+appear lame.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>This, Sir, is a short Account of this Author’s Objections;
+but there are some Things so often repeated by him,
+that we are forc’d to take Notice of them more than
+once; as that about Miracles and final Causes. He truly
+notes, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 31.</i> that to be <i>a much easier and shorter Way of
+giving an account of the Deluge</i>, or other Revolutions of
+Nature: But the Question is not, which is the shortest and
+easiest Way, but which is the truest. No Man in his Senses
+can question the divine Omnipotency, God could do
+these Things purely miraculously, if he pleas’d; but the
+Thing to be consider’d is, whether, according to the Methods
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_566'>566</span>of Providence, in the Changes and Revolutions of
+the natural World, the Course of Nature and of natural
+Causes is not made use of so far as they will go. Both
+<i>Moses</i> and <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Peter</i> mention material Causes, but always
+including the divine Word and Superintendency. The
+Theorist does not think (as is sufficiently testified in several
+Places) that purely material and mechanical Causes,
+guided only by the Laws of Motion, could form this
+Earth, and the Furniture of it; and does readily believe
+all Miracles recorded in Holy Writ, or elsewhere, well
+grounded: But Miracles of our own making or imagining,
+want Authority to support them. Some Men when
+they are at a loss in the Progress of their Work, call in
+a Miracle to relieve them in their Distress. You know
+what hath been noted both by <a id='r36'></a><a href='#f36' class='c013'><sup>[36]</sup></a>Philosophers and others
+to that purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>As to final Causes, the Contemplation of them is very
+useful to moral Purposes, and of great Satisfaction to the
+Mind, where we can attain to them. But we must not
+pretend to prove a thing to be so or so in Nature, because
+we fancy it would be better so; nor deny it to be in such
+a manner, because to our Mind it would be better otherwise.
+Almighty Power and Wisdom, that have the whole
+Complex and Composition of the Universe in View, take
+other Measures than we can comprehend or account for.
+Even in this small Earth that we inhabit, there are several
+Plants and Animals, which to us appear useless or noxious,
+and yet no doubt would be found proper for this State, if
+we had the whole Prospect and Scheme of Providence.
+As to efficient Causes, they must be either material or
+immaterial, and whatsoever is prov’d to be the immediate
+Effect of an immaterial Cause, is so much the more acceptable
+to the Theorist, as it argues a Power above Matter.
+But as to purely material Causes, they must be mechanical;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_567'>567</span>there being no other Modes, or Powers of Matter
+(at least in the Opinion of the Theorist) but what are
+mechanical: And to explain Effects by such Causes, is
+properly natural Science.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>We have taken Notice before of this Author’s ambiguous
+use of Words, without declaring in what Sense he
+uses them: And he is no less ambiguous as to his Opinions.
+When he speaks of the Origin and Formation of
+the WORLD, he does not tell us what he means by that
+Word; whether the great Compound of the Universe, or
+that small Part only where we reside. His <i>centrifugal</i>
+Force he interprets in contrary Senses, or in contrary
+Words, and reserves the Sense to himself. Sometimes
+he speaks of the Motion of the Sun, and sometimes
+of the Motion of the Earth, and sticks to no System:
+Neither does he tell us what he means by the <i>Mosaical</i>
+Abyss, or <i>Tehom Rabbah</i>, which the Theorist supposes
+to have been broken up at the Deluge. We ought
+to know in what Sense and Signification he uses Words
+or Phrases: at least if he use them in a different Sense from
+that of the Theorist’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>I know, <i>Sir</i>, you will also take Notice of his hard Words
+and coarse Language, as, <i>that’s false, that’s absurd, that’s
+ridiculous</i>. This, you will say, is not the usual Language
+amongst Gentlemen; but we find it too usual with
+some Writers, according to their particular Temper and
+Experience in the World. For my part, I think Rudeness
+or Disingenuity in examining the Writings of another
+Person, fall more heavy (in the Construction of fair
+Readers) upon him that uses them, than upon him that
+suffers them. I am,</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>SIR</i>,</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Your most humble Servant</i>,</p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>FINIS</i>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Footnotes</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Lib. 5. <abbr title='chapter'>ch.</abbr> 32, &#38;c.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>Dial. <i>cum</i> Tryph.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Contra Marc.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Lib. 7.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Quest. &#38; respon. 93.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>There was a Sect amongst the <i>Jews</i> that held this Perpetuity
+and Immutability of Nature; and <i>Maimonides</i> himself was of this
+Principle, and gives the same Reason for it with the Scoffers
+here in the Text, <i>Quod mundus retinet &#38; sequitur Consuetudinem
+suam.</i> And as to those of the <i>Jews</i> that were <i>Aristoteleans</i>, it was
+very suitable to their principles to hold the Incorruptibility of
+the World, as their Master did. <i>Vid. Med. in loc.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>δὶ ῀ὠν, <i>per que</i>. Vulgat. <i>Quamobrem</i>, Beza. <i>Quâ de causâ</i>,
+Grot. <i>Nemo interpretum reddidit</i> δὶ ῀ὠν, per quas; <i>subintelligendo</i>
+aquas. <i>Hoc enim argumentationem Apostolicana tolleret, supponeretque
+illusores illos ignorâsse quod olim fuerit Diluvium; Quod supponi
+non posse supra ostendimus.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>This Phrase or manner of Speech συνισάναι ἐκ vel ἐξ is
+not usual in <i>Greek</i> Authors; and upon a like Subject, <i>Plato</i>
+saith, τὸν δὲ κόσμον συνισάναι ἐκ πυρὸς ὕδατος, ἀέρος, γῆς, but
+he that should translate <i>Plato</i>, <i>the World stands out of Fire, Water</i>,
+<i>&#38;c.</i> would be thought neither <i>Grecian</i>, nor Philosopher.
+The same Phrase is us’d in reciting <i>Heraclitus</i> his Opinion,
+τὰ πάντα ἐκ πυρὸς συνεσάναι, καὶ εἰς τοῦτο ἀναλιέως. And also in
+<i>Thales</i> his which is still nearer to the Subject, ἐκ τοῦ ὑδατός,
+φηοι, συνιζάναι πάντα, which <i>Cicero</i> renders, <i>ex aquâ, dixit, constare
+omnia</i>. So that it is easy to know the true Importance
+of this Phrase, and how it is ill render’d in the English, <i>standing
+out of the Water</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>Whether you refer the Words ἐξ ὕδατ. καὶ δὶ ὕδατ separately
+to the Heavens and the Earth, or both to the Earth, or
+both to both, it will make no great Difference as to our Interpretation.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>I know some would make this Place of no effect by rendering
+the <i>Hebrew</i> Particle על <i>juxta, by</i> or <i>near</i> to; so they
+would read it thus, <i>he had founded the Earth by the Sea-side</i>, and
+establish’d it by the Floods. What is there wonderful in this,
+that the Shores should lie by the Sea-side? Where could they
+lie else? What Reason or Argument is this, why the Earth should
+be the Lord’s? The Earth is the Lord’s, <i>for</i> he hath founded it <i>near</i>
+the Seas. Where is the Consequence of this? But if he founded it
+upon the Seas, which could not be done by any other Hand but his,
+it shews both the Workman and the Master. And accordingly in
+that other, <i><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr></i> <abbr title='a hundred and thirty-six'>cxxxvi.</abbr> 6, if you render it, He <i>stretched</i> out the
+Earth <i>near</i> the Waters, How is that one of God’s great Wonders,
+as it is there represented to be? Because in some few Places this
+Particle is rendered otherwise, where the Sense will bear it, must
+we therefore render it so when we please, and where the Sense will
+not bear it? This being the most usual Signification of it, and there
+being no other Word that signifies <i>above</i> more frequently or determinately
+than this does, why must it signify otherwise in this Place?
+Men will wriggle any way to get from under the Force of a Text,
+that does not suit to their own Notions.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>This reading or translating is generally followed, (<i>Theor.
+Book</i> <abbr title='one'>i.</abbr> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 86.) though the <i>English</i> Translation read <i>on a heap</i>,
+unsuitably to the Matter and to the Sense.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>See <i>Philo Judæus</i> his Description of the Deluge, both as
+to the Commotions of the Heavens, and the Fractions of the
+Earth. In his first Treatise <i>de Abrahamo</i>, <i>mih</i>, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 279.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Uti comparatio præcedens</i>, <abbr title='verse'>ver.</abbr> 4, 5, 6. <i>de ortu Telluris, sumitur
+ab ædificio, ita hæc altera de orsu maris, sumitur à partu; &#38; exhibetur
+Oceanus, primùm, ut fœtus inclusus in utero, dein ut erumpens &#38; prodeuns,
+denique ut fasciis &#38; primus suis panniis involvutus. Atque ex
+aperto Terræ utero prorupit aquarum moles, ut proluties illæ, quam
+simul cum fœtu profundere solet puerpera</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Eg: quidem i et sum sententis, so in barum resum de quibus agnt
+regnitienem, a alarum qunque, quo mements snt, sum s Des aut
+Natur ut pat estes perviniendi, ratio i ce est, aliq
+claris invi: Non eujecturatis, v, Quetras
+nimpe i, que opesmi sui, qui meimi sicavent ab,
+quam amcteren.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Si admittamus insupor Ignam Centratem, sive Maisom ignir in centra Terra,
+quod quidem ain est basus argumenti. Neque partem intimam Chaos, niji ibiter
+&#38; pro formo, conjiaeravi, cum ad um, nesram non spestet.</i> <i>Vid. etiam</i> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 186.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Notandum verò, quamvis mundi veteris dissolutionem &#38; rationes Diluvii secundum
+ordinem causarum naturalium, explicemus, quòd eo modo magis clarè &#38;
+distinctè intelligantur; non ideò in pœnam humani generis ordinatum suisse diluvium,
+singulisque ipsius motibus præfuisse providentiam, inficiamur: imò in eo elucet
+maximè Sapientia divina, quòd mundum naturalem morali ita coaptet &#38; attemperet,
+ut hujus ingenio, illius ordo &#38; dispositio semper respondeat: &#38; amberum
+libratis momentis, simul concurrant &#38; unà compleantur utriusque tempora &#38; vicissitudines;
+ipse etiam Apostolus Petrus diluvii &#38; excidii mundani causas naturales
+assignat, cùm ait</i>, δὶ ὧν, &#38;c.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>De Grat. prim. tm. <abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr> 12.</i></p>
+
+<p class='c005'><i>Accedit adbat, quad Paradisus ita deferiditus à Sinsto</i> Basilio<i>, in I. ’to de Paradiso;
+à</i> Joan. Damasceno,<i> Libre secundo, de fide, capit; à Sano</i> Augustino
+<i>Libre decim: quarto et cevit ete Dei, capit. 10. Ab A, A &#38; Claud. Ma.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>The Exceptor rejects, first the <i>Waters of the Sea</i>: Then the <i>Waters in
+the Bowels of the Earth</i>: Then the <i>supercelestial Waters</i>: Then a <i>new Creation
+of Waters</i>: Then the <i>Mass of Air</i> chang’d into Water: And lastly, a <i>partial
+Deluge</i>. And therefore he puts Men fatally, either upon the Theory, or upon
+his new Hypothesis.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&#160;&#160;</span>This he acknowledges, <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 325. (<i>We expound a Text or two of Scripture
+so as none ever did; and deferring the common received Sense, put an unusual
+Gloss upon them</i>, not to say, ἰδίαν ἐπίλυσιν, <i>a private Interpretation</i>,) and
+<abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 359.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r20'>20</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><abbr title='page'>P.</abbr> 303. <i>But though these Caverns be called Deeps, we must not take them
+for profound Places, that went down into the Earth, below the common Surface of
+it: On the contrary, they were situate above it.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r21'>21</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><abbr title='Psalms'>Psal.</abbr> <abbr title='a hundred and fourteen'>cxiv.</abbr> 7, 8. <i>Tremble, then Earth, at the Presence of the Lord, at the
+Presence of the God of</i> Jacob: <i>Which turned the Rock into a standing Water,
+the Flint into a Fountain of Waters</i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c005'>Numb. <abbr title='twenty'>xx.</abbr> 10, 11. <i>And</i> Moses <i>and</i> Aaron <i>gathered the Congregation together
+before the Rock, and he said unto them, Hear now, you Rebels; must we fetch you
+Water out of this Rock? And</i> Moses <i>lift up his Hand, and with his Rod he smite
+the Rock twice, and the Water came out abundantly</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r22'>22</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Engl. Theor.</i> <i><abbr title='chapter'>Chap.</abbr></i> <abbr title='eight'>VIII.</abbr> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 112, <i>&#38;c.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r23'>23</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Cic. de Nat. Dict. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 1.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r24'>24</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Galil. Syst. Cos.</i> <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 133. <i>Hugen. Cosmetô.</i> <i><abbr class='spell'>c.</abbr></i> 2. <i><abbr title='page'>p.</abbr></i> 115.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r25'>25</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Engl. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 230, &#38;c. Lat. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 107.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r26'>26</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Cosmoth. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 135.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r27'>27</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i><abbr class='spell'>l. s.</abbr> Prop. 4.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r28'>28</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Ibid.</i> Prop. 56.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r29'>29</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Ephames. par. 2. ad An. 1624.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r30'>30</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><abbr title='page'>P.</abbr> 145.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r31'>31</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Disc. de la Pesant. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 149.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r32'>32</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Ibid. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 165.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r33'>33</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i><abbr class='spell'>M.</abbr> Hugens de la Pesant, <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 152. Il est a croire, que la Terre a pris
+cette figure, lors qu’ elli a esté assemblee par l’effect de la Pesanteux: sa matiere
+sient des mouvement circulatoire de 24 heures.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r34'>34</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Lat. Theor. lib. 2. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 185.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r35'>35</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Theor. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 2. 5. <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 186.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
+<p class='c005'><span class='label'><a href='#r36'>36</a>.&#160;&#160;</span><i>Plat. Cratyl. <abbr class='spell'>m.</abbr> <abbr title='page'>p.</abbr> 425. Ἐπειάν τι ἀπορῶσιν, ἐτὶ τάς μηχανὰς καταθεύγουσι,
+θεοῦς αἴροντεσ. Cum rei alicujus engusios, ad machines
+consugiunt &#38; D inducunt.</i> This is also remark’d and render’d in other
+Words by <i>Tully</i> in <i>Nat. Dor. <abbr class='spell'>l.</abbr> 1.</i> Cum <i>explicare argumenti exitum non pet,
+confugitis ad Deum</i>. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <i>Austin</i> also speaking about the supercelestial Waters,
+hath noted this Method, and reprov’d it, in these Words, <i>Nec quisquam
+echos refellere, ut decat secundum omnpotentism Dei sunt possibatis
+nos credere equas etiam am era quam novimus atque sentimus,
+corpori in que sunt sydera, super sufas: Nunc enim quam Deus
+rerum secundum Scripturam ejus, nec qu convenit, non solus quad
+in vel ad misacutum omnipotent.</i>
+You see Discretion and Moderation is to be used in these and such like
+Matters.</p>
+</div>
+<div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1 c002'>
+ <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
+ <ul class='ul_2'>
+ <li>Footnotes have been collected at the end of the text, and are linked for ease of
+ reference.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76101 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2025-05-15 20:30:04 GMT -->
+</html>
+
diff --git a/76101-h/images/cover.jpg b/76101-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..96f7a60
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/76101-h/images/fig4-1.jpg b/76101-h/images/fig4-1.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c5df23b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-h/images/fig4-1.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/76101-h/images/fig5.jpg b/76101-h/images/fig5.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..806af99
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-h/images/fig5.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/76101-h/images/fig6.jpg b/76101-h/images/fig6.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..526a5f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-h/images/fig6.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/76101-h/images/fig7.jpg b/76101-h/images/fig7.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ba91d4d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76101-h/images/fig7.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b5dba15
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This book, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this book outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dfc2c3c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+book #76101 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76101)