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unclean spirit, Mark iii. 30. Besides, it was to the Pharisees that he spoke thus, who acknowledged no other Spirit than the Father himself. If this be the true interpretation of the passage, which will not be doubted by any one who examines the whole context from v. 24 to v. 32. that dreaded sin against the Holy Spirit will be in reality a sin against the Father, who is the Spirit of holiness; of which he would be guilty, who should affirm that the Spirit of the Father which was working in Christ was the prince of the devils, or an unclean spirit;-as Mark clearly shows in the passage quoted above.

But the Spirit bestows grace and blessing upon the churches in conjunction with the Father and the Son; Rev. i. 4, 5. grace be unto you and peace from him which is......and from the seven spirits which are before his throne, and from Jesus Christ. It is clear, however, that the Holy Spirit is not here meant to be implied; the number of the spirits is inconsistent with such a supposition, as well as the place which they are said to occupy, standing like angels before the throne. See also iv. 5. and v. 6. where the same spirits are called seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, and the seven horns and seven eyes of the Lamb. Those who reduce these spirits to one Holy Spirit, and consider them as synonymous with his sevenfold grace, (an opinion which is deservedly refuted by Beza') ought to beware, lest, by attributing to mere virtues the properties of persons, they furnish arguments to those commentators who interpret the ''Dei majestati adjungit suos stipatores, non tamen quasi illos ulla in parte Deo exæquet, vel cum Christo conferat, sicut etiam Paulus testes una citat Deum, Christum, et angelos, 1 Tim. v. 21. Nam quod septem hos spiritus nonnulli pro Spiritu Sancto acceperunt, cujus septiformis, ut loquuntur, sit gratia, manifeste refelli potest vel ex eo quod scribitur infra v. 5, 6. At ne quis hoc loco offendatur, quasi ad istos spiritus aliquid transferatur quod ad Deitatem tantum pertineat, vel quasi Christus istis spiritibus subjiciatur, considerentur divina elogia quæ paulo post tribuuntur Christo. Unius enim Dei est, et quidem qui homo sit factus, sanguine suo abluere mundi peccata; neque usquam angelis gloria et robur æternum tribuitur, sed hoc ipsum est quod angeli Dei acclamant. Christus ergo ut Deus hic describitur; septem autem isti spiritus ut ministri ante thronum collocantur; ergo etiam coram Christo, ut qui Deo Patri assideat. Denique ut nemo de hoc possit ambigere, iidem isti septem Spiritus infra v. 5, 6. Agni cornua et oculi, id est, ministri, dicuntur.' Beza ad Apoc. i. 4.

CHAP. VII.

OF THE

CREATION,

THE

as

HE second species of external efficiency is commonly called CREATION. As to the actions of God before the foundation of the world, it would be the height of folly to inquire into them, and almost equally so to attempt a solution of the question.' With regard to the account which is generally given from 1 Cor. ii. 7. he ordained his wisdom in a mystery, even the hidden mystery which God ordained before the world,—or, it is explained, that he was occupied with election and reprobation, and with decreeing other things relative to these subjects, it is not imaginable that God should have been wholly occupied from eternity in decreeing that which was to be created in a period of six days, and which, after having been governed in divers manners for a few thousand years, was finally to be received into an immutable state with himself, or to be rejected from his presence for all eternity.

That the world was created, is an article of faith: Heb. xi. 3. through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God.

1 Milton elsewhere alludes to the less serious employments of the Deity before the creation of the world, referring to Prov. viii. 24, 25, 30. "God himself conceals us not his own recreations before the world was built; I was, saith the eternal Wisdom, daily his delight, playing always before him.' Tetrachordon. Prose Works, II. 128. And again,

Before the hills appear'd, or fountain flow'd,
Thou with eternal Wisdom didst converse,
Wisdom thy sister, and with her didst play

In presence of th' Almighty Father, pleas'd

With thy celestial song. Paradise Lost, VII. 8.

CREATION is that act whereby GOD THE FATHER PRODUCED EVERY THING THAT EXISTS BY HIS WORD AND SPIRIT, that is, BY HIS WILL, FOR THE MANIFESTATION OF THE GLORY OF HIS POWER AND GOODNESS.

WHEREBY GOD THE FATHER. Job ix. 8. which alone spreadeth out the heavens. Isai. xliv. 24. I am Jehovah that maketh all things; that stretcheth forth the heavens alone; that spreadeth abroad the earth by myself. xlv. 6, 7. that they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside me: I am Jehovah, and there is none else: I form the light, and create darkness. If there be any thing like a common meaning, or universally received usage of words, this language not only precludes the possibility of there being any other God, but also of there being any co-equal person, of any kind whatever. Neh. ix. 6. thou art Jehovah alone; thou hast made heaven, the heaven of heavens. Mal. ii. 10. have we not all one Father? hath not one God created us? Hence Christ himself says, Matt. xi. 25. I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth. So too all the apostles, Acts iv. 24. compared with v. 27. Lord, thou art God, which hast made heaven and earth, and the sea, and all that in them is.... the kings of the earth stood up against thy holy child Jesus. Rom. xi. 36. for of him, and through him, and to him are all things. 1 Cor. viii. 6. to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things. 2 Cor. iv. 6. for God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. Heb. ii. 10. him, for whom are all things, and by whom are all things. iii. 4. he that built all things is God.

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BY HIS WORD. Gen. i. throughout the whole chapter-God said. Psal. xxxiii. 6. by the word of Jehovah were the heavens made. v. 9. for he spake, and it was done. cxlviii. 5. he commanded, and they were created. 2 Pet. iii. 5. by the word of God the heavens were of old,—that is, as is evident from other passages, by the Son, who appears hence to derive his title of Word. John i. 3, 10. all things were made by him: by him the world was made. 1 Cor. viii. 6. to us there is but one God, the Father,

of whom are all things, and we in him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things. Eph. iii. 9. who created all things by Jesus Christ. Col. i. 16. by him were all things created. Heb. i. 2. by whom also he made the worlds; whence it is said, v. 10. thou hast laid the foundation of the earth. The preposition per sometimes signifies the primary cause, as Matt. xii. 28. I cast out devils (per Spiritum) by the Spirit of God. 1 Cor. i. 9. God is faithful, (per quem) by whom ye are called,—sometimes the instrumental, or less principal cause, as in the passages quoted above, where it cannot be taken as the primary cause, for if so, the Father himself, of whom are all things, would not be the primary cause; nor is it the joint cause, for in such case it would have been said that the Father created all things, not by, but with the Word and Spirit; or collectively, the Father, the Word, and the Spirit created; which phrases are nowhere to be found in Scripture. Besides, the expressions to be of the Father, and to be by the Son, do not denote the same kind of efficient cause. If it be not the same cause, neither is it a joint cause; and if not a joint cause, certainly the Father, of whom are all things, must be the principal cause, rather than the Son by whom are all things; for the Father is not only he of whom, but also from whom, and for whom, and through whom, and on account of whom are all things, as has been proved above, inasmuch as he comprehends within himself all lesser causes; whereas the Son is only he by whom are all things; wherefore he is the less principal cause. Hence it is often said that the Father created the world by the Son,3-but never, in the same sense, that the Son created the world by the Father. It is however sometimes attempted to be proved from Rev. iii. 14. that the Son was the joint, or event he prin

For an answer to this assertion, and indeed with reference to the whole of this chapter, see Waterland's Second Sermon in defence of the Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ, where he proves that Christ is properly Creator.

3 He Heaven of Heavens and all the Powers therein
By thee created-. Paradise Lost, III. 390.

By whom,

As by his Word, the mighty Father made

All things, ev'n thee; and all the Spirits of Heaven

By him created in their bright degrees. V. 835.

cipal cause of the creation with the Father; the beginning of the creation of God; where the word beginning is interpreted in an active sense, on the authority of Aristotle. But in the first place, the Hebrew language, whence the expression is taken, nowhere admits of this sense, but rather requires a contrary usage, as Gen. xlix. 3. Reuben, thou art.... the beginning of my strength. Secondly, there are two passages in St. Paul referring to Christ himself, which clearly prove that the word beginning is here used in a passive signification. Col. i. 15, 18. the first born of every creature,...the beginning, the first born from the dead,-where the position of the Greek accent," and the passive verbal πρшτÓTOKоs, show that the Son of God was the first born of every creature precisely in the same sense as the Son of man was the first born of Mary, TρшTÓTOKOS, Matt. i. 25. The other passage is Rom. viii. 29. first born among many brethren; that is, in a passive signification. Lastly, it should be remarked, that he is not called simply the beginning of the creation, but of the creation of God; which can mean nothing else than the first of those things which God created; how therefore can he be himself God? Nor can we admit the reason devised by some of the Fathers for his being called, Col. i. 15. the first born of every creature, namely, because it is said v. 16. by him all things were created. For had St. Paul intended to convey the meaning supposed, he would have said, who was before every creature, (which is what these Fathers contend the words signify, though not without violence to the language) not, who was the first born of every creature, an expression which clearly has a superlative, and at the same time to a certain extent partitive sense, in so far as production may be considered as a kind of generation and creation; but

'See Aristotle's Metaphys. iv. 1. Milton alludes to the same interpretation in his logical work. Hinc causa proprie dicta, principium quoque nominatur a Cic. I. de Nat. Deorum, sed frequentius apud Græcos.' Artis Logica plenior Institutio, &c. Prose Works, VI. 205.

In allusion to the opinion of Isidore Pelusiota, Erasmus, and others (with whom Michaelis agrees, Annotat. ad Paraphr. ad Col. i. 15.) that it should not be read ρwróTOKOS, primogenitus, but #pwтOTÓKоs, primus genitor.

'Justin Martyr, Athenagoras, Tertullian (contra Marcionem, lib. v.) Novatian. See also Athanasius, Orat. ii. contra Arianos.

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