God’s Approbation of His Works
“And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was
very good.”
Gen. 1:31.
1. When God created the heavens and the earth, and all that is
therein, at the conclusion of each day’s work it is said, “And God saw that it
was good.” Whatever was created was good in its kind; suited to the end for
which it was designed; adapted to promote the good of the whole and the glory of
the great Creator. This sentence it pleased God to pass with regard to each
particular creature. But there is a remarkable variation of the expression, with
regard to all the parts of the universe, taken in connection with each other,
and constituting one system: “And God saw everything that he had made, and,
behold, it was very good.”
2. How small a part of this great work of God is man able to
understand! But it is our duty to contemplate what he has wrought, and to
understand as much of it as we are able. For “the merciful Lord,” as the
Psalmist observes, “hath so done his marvellous works” of creation, as well as
of providence, “that they ought to be had in remembrance” by all that fear him;
which they cannot well be, unless they are understood. Let us, then, by the
assistance of that Spirit who giveth unto man understanding, endeavour to take a
general survey of the works which God made in this lower world, as they were
before they were disordered and depraved in consequence of the sin of man: We
shall then easily see, that as every creature was good in its primeval
state; so, when all were compacted in one general system, “behold, they were
very good.” I do not remember to have seen any attempt of this kind, unless in
that truly excellent poem, (termed by Mr. Hutchinson, “That wicked farce!”)
Milton’s “Paradise Lost.”
I. 1. “In the beginning God created the matter of the heavens
and the earth.” (So the words, as a great man observes, may properly be
translated.) He first created the four elements, out of which the whole universe
was composed; earth, water, air, and fire, all mingled together in one common
mass. The grossest parts of this, the earth and water, were utterly without
form, till God infused a principle of motion, commanding the air to move “upon
the face of the waters.” In the next place, “the Lord God said, Let there be
light: And there was light.” Here were the four constituent parts of the
universe; the true, original, simple elements. They were all essentially
distinct from each other; and yet so intimately mixed together, in all compound
bodies, that we cannot find any, be it ever so minute, which does not contain
them all.
2. “And God saw that” every one of these “was good;” was perfect
in its kind. The earth was good. The whole surface of it was beautiful in a high
degree. To make it more agreeable,
He clothed The universal face with pleasant green.
He adorned it with flowers of every hue, and with shrubs and
trees of every kind. And every part was fertile as well as beautiful; it was no
way deformed by rough or ragged rocks; it did not shock the view with horrid
precipices, huge chasms, or dreary caverns; with deep, impassable morasses, or
deserts of barren sand. But we have not any authority to say, with some learned
and ingenious authors, that there were no mountains on the original earth, no
unevenness on its surface. It is not easy to reconcile this hypothesis with
those words of Moses: “The waters prevailed; and all the high hills that were
under the whole heaven were covered. Fifteen cubits upward” above the highest
“did the waters prevail; and the mountains were covered.” (Gen. 7:19, 20.) We have no reason to believe that these
mountains were produced by the deluge itself: Not the least intimation of this
is given: Therefore, we cannot doubt but they existed before it. — Indeed, they
answered many excellent purposes, besides greatly increasing the beauty of the
creation, by a variety of prospects, which had been totally lost had the earth
been one extended plain. Yet we need not suppose their sides were abrupt, or
difficult of ascent. It is highly probable that they rose and fell by almost
insensible degrees.
3. As to the internal parts of the earth, even to this day, we
have scarce any knowledge of them. Many have supposed the centre of the globe to
be surrounded with an abyss of fire. Many others have imagined it to be
encompassed with an abyss of water; which they supposed to be termed in
Scripture, “the great deep;” (Gen. 7:11; ) all the
fountains of which were broken up, in order to the General Deluge. But, however
this was, we are sure all things were disposed therein with the most perfect
order and harmony. Hence there were no agitations within the bowels of the
globe, no violent convulsions, no concussions of the earth, no earthquakes; but
all was unmoved as the pillars of heaven! There were then no such things as
eruptions of fire; there were no volcanoes, or burning mountains. Neither
Vesuvius, Etna, or Hecla, if they had any being, then poured out smoke and
flame, but were covered with a verdant mantle from the top to the bottom.
4. The element of water, it is probable, was then mostly
confined within the great abyss. In the new earth, (as we are informed by the
Apostle, Rev. 21:1, ) there will be
“no more sea;” none covering as now the face of the earth, and rendering so
large a part of it uninhabitable by man. Hence it is probable, there was no
external sea in the paradisiacal earth; none, until the great deep burst the
barriers which were originally appointed for it. — Indeed there was not then
that need of the ocean for navigation which there is now: For either, as the
poet supposes,
Omnis tuli omnia tellus;
every country produced whatever was requisite either for the
necessity or comfort of its inhabitants; or man, being then (as he will be again
at the resurrection) equal to angels, was able to convey himself, at his
pleasure, to any given distance; over and above that, those flaming messengers
were always ready to minister to the heirs of salvation. But whether there was
sea or not, there were rivers sufficient to water the earth, and make it very
plenteous. These answered all the purposes of convenience and pleasure
by
Liquid lapse of murmuring stream;
to which were added gentle, genial showers, with salutary mists
and exhalations. But there were no putrid lakes, no turbid or stagnating waters;
but only such as Bore imprest Fair nature’s image on their placid breast.
5. The element of air was then always serene, and always
friendly to man. It contained no frightful meteor, no unwholesome vapours, no
poisonous exhalations. There were no tempests, but only cool and gentle breezes,
—
genitabilis aura Favoni,—
fanning both man and beast, and wafting the fragrant odours on
their silent wings.
6. The sun, the fountain of fire, Of this great world both eye
and soul, was situated at the most exact distance from the earth, so as to yield
a sufficient quantity of heat (neither too little nor too much) to every part of
it. God had not yet
Bid his angels turn askance This oblique
globe.
There was, therefore, then no country that groaned
under
The rage of Arctos, and eternal frost.
There was no violent winter, or sultry summer; no extreme,
either of heat or cold. No soil was burned up by the solar heat; none
uninhabitable through the want of it. Thus earth, water, air, and fire, all
conspired together to the welfare and pleasure of man!
7. To the same purpose served the grateful vicissitude of light
and darkness, — day and night. For as the human body, though not liable to death
or pain, yet needed continual sustenance by food; so, although it was not liable
to weariness, yet it needed continual reparation by sleep. By this the springs
of the animal machine were wound up from time to time, and kept always fit for
the pleasing labour for which man was designed by his Creator. Accordingly, “the
evening and the morning were the first day,” before sin or pain was in the
world. The first natural day had one part dark for a season of repose; one part
light for a season of labour. And even in paradise “Adam slept,” (Gen. 2:21, ) before he sinned: Sleep, therefore,
belonged to innocent human nature. Yet I do not apprehend it can be inferred
from hence, that there is either darkness or sleep in heaven. Surely there is no
darkness in that city of God. Is it not expressly said, (Rev. 22:5, ) “There shall be no night there?”
Indeed they have no light from the sun; but “the Lord giveth them light.” So it
is all day in heaven, as it is all night in hell! On earth we have a mixture of
both. Day and night succeed each other, till earth shall be turned to heaven.
Neither can we at all credit the account given by the ancient poet, concerning
sleep in heaven; although he allows “cloud-compelling Jove” to remain awake
while the inferior gods were sleeping. It is pity, therefore, that our great
poet should copy so servilely after the old Heathen, as to tell us,
Sleep had
seal’d All but
the unsleeping eyes of God himself.
Not so: They are “before the throne of God serve him day and
night,” speaking after the manner of men, “in his temple;” (Rev. 7:15; ) that is, without any interval. As
wicked spirits are tormented day and night without any intermission of their
misery; so holy spirits enjoy God day and night without any intermission of
their happiness.
8. On the second day God encompassed the terraqueous globe with
that noble appendage, the atmosphere, consisting chiefly of air; but replete
with earthly particles of various kinds, and with huge volumes of water,
sometimes invisible, sometimes visible, buoyed up by that ethereal fire, a
particle of which cleaves to every particle of air. By this the water was
divided ed into innumerable drops, which, descending, watered the earth, and
made it very plenteous, without incommoding any of its inhabitants. For there
were then no impetuous currents of air; no tempestuous winds; no furious hail;
no torrents of rain; no rolling thunders, or forky lightnings. One perennial
spring was perpetually smiling over the whole surface of the earth.
9. On the third day God commanded all kind of vegetables to
spring out of the earth; and then, to add thereto innumerable herbs, intermixed
with flowers of all hues. To these were added shrubs of every kind; together
with tall and stately trees, whether for shade, for timber, or for fruit, in
endless variety. Some of these were adapted to particular climates, or
particular exposures; while vegetables of more general use (as wheat in
particular) were not confined to one country, but would flourish almost in every
climate. But among all these there were no weeds, no useless plants, none that
encumbered the ground; much less were there any poisonous ones, tending to hurt
any one creature; but every thing was salutary in its kind, suitable to the
gracious design of its great Creator.
10. The Lord now created “the sun to rule the day, and the moon
to govern the night.” The sun was
Of this great world both eye and soul:—
The eye, making all things visible; distributing light
to every part of the system; and thereby rejoicing both earth and sky; — and the
soul; the principle of all life, whether to vegetables or animals. Some
of the uses of the moon we are acquainted with; her causing the ebbing and
flowing of the sea; and influencing, with a greater or smaller degree, all the
fluids in the terraqueous globe. And many other uses she may have, unknown to
us, but known to the wise Creator. But it is certain she had no hurtful, no
unwholesome influence on any living creature. “He made the stars also;” both
those that move round the sun, whether of the primary or secondary order; or
those that, being at a far greater distance, appear to us as fixed in the
firmament of heaven. Whether Comets are to be numbered among the stars, and
whether they were parts of the original creation, is, perhaps, not so easy to
determine, at least with certainty; as we have nothing but probable conjecture,
either concerning their nature or their use. We know not whether (as some
ingenious men have imagined) they are ruined worlds, — worlds that have
undergone a general conflagration; or whether (as others not improbably suppose)
they are immense reservoirs of fluids, appointed to revolve at certain seasons,
and to supply the still decreasing moisture of the earth. But certain we are
that they did not either produce or portend any evil. They did not (as many have
fancied since)
From their horrid hair Shake pestilence and
war.
11. The Lord God afterward peopled the earth with animals of
every kind. He first commanded the waters to bring forth abundantly; — to bring
forth creatures, which, as they inhabited a grosser element, so they were, in
general, of a more stupid nature; endowed with fewer senses and less
understanding than other animals. The bivalved shell-fish, in particular, seem
to have no sense but that of feeling, unless perhaps a low measure of taste; so
that they are but one degree above vegetables. And even the king of the waters,
(a title which some give the whale, because of his enormous magnitude,) though
he has sight added to taste and feeling, does not appear to have an
understanding proportioned to his bulk. Rather, he is inferior therein not only
to most birds and beasts, but to the generality of even reptiles and insects.
However, none of these then attempted to devour, or in anyway hurt, one another.
All were peaceful and quiet, as were the watery fields wherein they ranged at
pleasure.
12. It seems the insect kinds were at least one degree above
the inhabitants of the waters. Almost all these too devour one another, and
every other creature which they can conquer. Indeed, such is the miserably
disordered state of the world at present, that innumerable creatures can no
otherwise preserve their own lives than by destroying others. But in the
beginning it was not so. The paradisiacal earth afforded a sufficiency of food
for all its inhabitants; so that none of them had any need or temptation to prey
upon the other. The spider was then as harmless as the fly, and did not then lie
in wait for blood. The weakest of them crept securely over the earth, or spread
their gilded wings in the air, that wavered in the breeze, and glittered in the
sun, without any to make them afraid. Meantime, the reptiles of every kind were
equally harmless, and more intelligent than they; yea, one species of them “was
more subtil,” or knowing, “than any of the” brute creation “which God had
made.”
13. But, in general, the birds, created to fly in the open
firmament of heaven, appear to have been of an order far superior to either
insects or reptiles; although still considerably inferior to beasts; as we now
restrain that word to quadrupeds, four-footed animals, which, two hundred years
ago, included every kind of living creatures. Many species of these are not only
endowed with a large measure of natural understanding, but are likewise capable
of much improvement by art, such as one would not readily conceive. But, among
all these, there were no birds or beasts of prey; none that destroyed or
molested another; but all the creatures breathed, in their several kinds, the
benevolence of their great Creator.
14. Such was the state of the creation, according to the scanty
ideas which we can now form concerning it, when its great Author, surveying the
whole system at one view, pronounced it “very good.” It was good in the highest
degree whereof it was capable, and without any mixture of evil. Every part was
exactly suited to the others, and conducive to the good of the whole. There was
“a golden chain” (to use the expression of Plato) “let down from the throne of
God;” an exactly connected series of beings, from the highest to the lowest;
from dead earth, through fossils, vegetables, animals, to man, created in the
image of God, and designed to know, to love, and enjoy his Creator to all
eternity.
II. 1. Here is a firm foundation laid, on which we may stand,
and answer all the cavils of minute philosophers; all the objections which “vain
men,” who “would be wise,” make to the goodness or wisdom of God in the
creation. All these are grounded upon an entire mistake; namely, that the world
is now in the same state it was at the beginning. And upon this supposition they
plausibly build abundance of objections. But all these objections fall to the
ground, when we observe, this supposition cannot be admitted. The world, at the
beginning, was in a totally different state from that wherein we find it now.
Object, therefore, whatever you please to the present state, either of the
animate or inanimate creation, whether in general, or with regard to any
particular instances; and the answer is ready: — These are not now as they were
in the beginning. Had you therefore heard that vain King of Castile crying out,
with exquisite self-sufficiency, “If I had made the world, I would have made it
better than God Almighty has made it;” you might have replied, “No: God
Almighty, whether you know it or not, did not make it as it is now. He himself
made it better, unspeakably better, than it is at present. He made it without
any blemish, yea, without any defect. He made no corruption, no destruction, in
the inanimate creation. He made not death in the animal creation; neither its
harbingers, — sin and pain. If you will not believe his own account, believe
your brother Heathen: It was only
Post ignem aetherea domo Subductum,
— that is, in plain English, — after man, in utter defiance of
his Maker, had eaten of the tree of knowledge, that
— Macies, et nova
febrium Terris
incubuit cohors; —
that a whole army of evils, totally new, totally unknown till
then, broke in upon rebel man, and all other creatures, and overspread the face
of the earth.”
2. “Nay;” (says a bold man [Mr. S—- J—-s.], who has since
personated a Christian, and so well that many think him one;) “God is not to
blame for either the natural or moral evils that are in the world; for he made
it as well as he could; seeing evil must exist in the very nature of things.” It
must, in the present nature of things, supposing man to have rebelled
against God: But evil did not exist at all in the original nature of things. It
was no more the necessary result of matter, than it was the necessary result of
spirit. All things then, without exception, were very good. And how should they
be otherwise? There was no defect at all in the power of God, any more than in
his goodness or wisdom. His goodness inclined him to make all things good; and
this was executed by his power and wisdom. Let every sensible infidel, then, be
ashamed of making such miserable excuses for his Creator. He needs none
of us to make apologies, either for him or for his creation. “As for God,
his way is perfect;” and such originally were all his works; and such they will
be again, when “the Son of God” shall have “destroyed” all “the works of the
devil.”
3. Upon this ground, then, that “God made man upright,” and
every creature perfect in its kind, but that man “found out to himself many
inventions” of happiness, independent on God; and that, by his apostasy from
God, he threw not only himself, but likewise the whole creation, which was
intimately connected with him, into disorder, misery, death; — upon this ground,
I say, we do not find it difficult to
Justify the ways of God with men.
For although he left man in the hand of his own counsel, to
choose good or evil, life or death; although he did not take away the liberty he
had given him, but suffered him to choose death, in consequence of which the
whole creation now groaneth together; yet, when we consider, all the evils
introduced into the creation may work together for our good, yea, may “work out
for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory,” we may well praise God
for permitting these temporary evils, in order to our eternal good: Yea, we may
well cry out, “O the depth both of the wisdom” and the goodness of God! “He hath
done all things well.” “Glory be unto God, and unto the Lamb, for ever and
ever!”