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Genesis Chapter
One
Genesis 1
Chapter Contents
God creates heaven and earth. (1,2) The creation of
light. (3-5) God separates the earth from the waters, and makes it fruitful.
(6-13) God forms the sun, moon, and stars. (14-19) Animals created. (20-25) Man
created in the image of God. (26-28) Food appointed. (29,30) The work of
creation ended and approved. (31)
Commentary on Genesis 1:1,2
The first verse of the Bible gives us a satisfying and
useful account of the origin of the earth and the heavens. The faith of humble
Christians understands this better than the fancy of the most learned men. From
what we see of heaven and earth, we learn the power of the great Creator. And
let our make and place as men, remind us of our duty as Christians, always to
keep heaven in our eye, and the earth under our feet. The Son of God, one with
the Father, was with him when he made the world; nay, we are often told that
the world was made by him, and nothing was made without him. Oh, what high
thoughts should there be in our minds, of that great God whom we worship, and
of that great Mediator in whose name we pray! And here, at the beginning of the
sacred volume, we read of that Divine Spirit, whose work upon the heart of man
is so often mentioned in other parts of the Bible. Observe, that at first there
was nothing desirable to be seen, for the world was without form, and void; it
was confusion, and emptiness. In like manner the work of grace in the soul is a
new creation: and in a graceless soul, one that is not born again, there is
disorder, confusion, and every evil work: it is empty of all good, for it is
without God; it is dark, it is darkness itself: this is our condition by
nature, till Almighty grace works a change in us.
Commentary on Genesis 1:3-5
God said, Let there be light; he willed it, and at once
there was light. Oh, the power of the word of God! And in the new creation, the
first thing that is wrought in the soul is light: the blessed Spirit works upon
the will and affections by enlightening the understanding. Those who by sin
were darkness, by grace become light in the Lord. Darkness would have been
always upon fallen man, if the Son of God had not come and given us
understanding, 1 John 5:20. The light which God willed, he
approved of. God divided the light from the darkness; for what fellowship has
light with darkness? In heaven there is perfect light, and no darkness at all;
in hell, utter darkness, and no gleam of light. The day and the night are the
Lord's; let us use both to his honour, by working for him every day, and
resting in him every night, meditating in his law both day and night.
Commentary on Genesis 1:6-13
The earth was emptiness, but by a word spoken, it became
full of God's riches, and his they are still. Though the use of them is allowed
to man, they are from God, and to his service and honour they must be used. The
earth, at his command, brings forth grass, herbs, and fruits. God must have the
glory of all the benefit we receive from the produce of the earth. If we have,
through grace, an interest in Him who is the Fountain, we may rejoice in him
when the streams of temporal mercies are dried up.
Commentary on Genesis 1:14-19
In the fourth day's work, the creation of the sun, moon,
and stars is accounted for. All these are the works of God. The stars are
spoken of as they appear to our eyes, without telling their number, nature,
place, size, or motions; for the Scriptures were written, not to gratify
curiosity, or make us astronomers, but to lead us to God, and make us saints.
The lights of heaven are made to serve him; they do it faithfully, and shine in
their season without fail. We are set as lights in this world to serve God; but
do we in like manner answer the end of our creation? We do not: our light does
not shine before God, as his lights shine before us. We burn our Master's
candles, but do not mind our Master's work.
Commentary on Genesis 1:20-25
God commanded the fish and fowl to be produced. This
command he himself executed. Insects, which are more numerous than the birds
and beasts, and as curious, seem to have been part of this day's work. The
Creator's wisdom and power are to be admired as much in an ant as in an
elephant. The power of God's providence preserves all things, and fruitfulness
is the effect of his blessing.
Commentary on Genesis 1:26-28
Man was made last of all the creatures: this was both an
honour and a favour to him. Yet man was made the same day that the beasts were;
his body was made of the same earth with theirs; and while he is in the body,
he inhabits the same earth with them. God forbid that by indulging the body,
and the desires of it, we should make ourselves like the beasts that perish!
Man was to be a creature different from all that had been hitherto made. Flesh
and spirit, heaven and earth, must be put together in him. God said, "Let
us make man." Man, when he was made, was to glorify the Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost. Into that great name we are baptized, for to that great name we owe
our being. It is the soul of man that especially bears God's image. Man was
made upright, Ecclesiastes 7:29. His understanding saw Divine
things clearly and truly; there were no errors or mistakes in his knowledge;
his will consented at once, and in all things, to the will of God. His
affections were all regular, and he had no bad appetites or passions. His
thoughts were easily brought and fixed to the best subjects. Thus holy, thus
happy, were our first parents in having the image of God upon them. But how is
this image of God upon man defaced! May the Lord renew it upon our souls by his
grace!
Commentary on Genesis 1:29,30
Herbs and fruits must be man's food, including corn, and
all the products of the earth. Let God's people cast their care upon him, and
not be troubled about what they shall eat, and what they shall drink. He that
feeds his birds will not starve his babes.
Commentary on Genesis 1:31
When we come to think about our works, we find, to our
shame, that much has been very bad; but when God saw his work, all was very
good. Good, for it was all just as the Creator would have it to be. All his
works, in all places of his dominion, bless him; and therefore, bless thou the
Lord, O my soul. Let us bless God for the gospel of Christ, and when we
consider his almighty power, let us sinners flee from the wrath to come. If
new-created unto the image of God in holiness, we shall at length enter the
"new heavens and new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness."
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Genesis¡n
Genesis 1
Verse 1
Observe here. 1. The effect produced, The
heaven and the earth - That is, the world, including the whole frame and
furniture of the universe. But 'tis only the visible part of the creation that
Moses designs to give an account of. Yet even in this there are secrets which
cannot be fathomed, nor accounted for. But from what we see of heaven and
earth, we may infer the eternal power and godhead of the great Creator. And let
our make and place, as men, mind us of our duty, as Christians, which is always
to keep heaven in our eye, and the earth under our feet. Observe 2. The author
and cause of this great work, God. The Hebrew word is Elohim; which (1.) seems
to mean The Covenant God, being derived from a word that signifies to swear.
(2.) The plurality of persons in the Godhead, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. The
plural name of God in Hebrew, which speaks of him as many, tho' he be but one,
was to the Gentiles perhaps a favour of death unto death, hardening them in
their idolatry; but it is to us a favour of life unto life, confirming our
faith in the doctrine of the Trinity, which, tho' but darkly intimated in the
Old Testament, is clearly revealed in the New. Observe 3. The manner how this
work was effected; God created, that is, made it out of nothing. There was not
any pre-existent matter out of which the world was produced. The fish and fowl
were indeed produced out of the waters, and the beasts and man out of the
earth; but that earth and those waters were made out of nothing. Observe 4.
When this work was produced; In the beginning - That is, in the beginning of
time. Time began with the production of those beings that are measured by time.
Before the beginning of time there was none but that Infinite Being that
inhabits eternity. Should we ask why God made the world no sooner, we should
but darken counsel by words without knowledge; for how could there be sooner or
later in eternity?
Verse 2
Where we have an account of the first matter,
and the first Mover. 1. A chaos was the first matter. 'Tis here called the
earth, (tho' the earth, properly taken, was not made 'till the third day, Genesis 1:10) because it did most resemble that
which was afterwards called earth, a heavy unwieldy mass. 'Tis also called the
deep, both for its vastness, and because the waters which were afterwards
separated from the earth were now mixed with it. This mighty bulk of matter was
it, out of which all bodies were afterwards produced. The Creator could have
made his work perfect at first, but by this gradual proceeding he would shew
what is ordinarily the method of his providence, and grace. This chaos, was
without form and void. Tohu and Bohu, confusion and emptiness, so those words
are rendered, Isaiah 34:11. 'Twas shapeless, 'twas useless,
'twas without inhabitants, without ornaments; the shadow or rough draught of
things to come. To those who have their hearts in heaven, this lower world, in
comparison of the upper, still appears to be confusion and emptiness. And
darkness was upon the face of the deep-God did not create this darkness, (as he
is said to create the darkness of affliction, Isaiah 45:7.) for it was only the want of light.
2. The Spirit of God was the first Mover; He moved upon the face of the waters
- He moved upon the face of the deep, as the hen gathereth her chicken under
her wings, and hovers over them, to warm and cherish them, Matthew 23:37 as the eagle stirs up her nest,
and fluttereth over her young, ('tis the same word that is here used) Deuteronomy 32:11.
Verses 3-5
We have here a farther account of the first
day's work. In which observe, 1. That the first of all visible beings which God
created was light, the great beauty and blessing of the universe: like the
first-born, it doth, of all visible beings, most resemble its great parent in
purity and power, brightness and beneficence. 2. That the light was made by the
word of God's power; He said, Let there be light - He willed it, and it was
done; there was light - Such a copy as exactly answered the original idea in
the eternal mind. 3. That the light which God willed, he approved of.
God saw the light, that it was good ¡X 'Twas exactly as he designed it; and it was fit to answer the end for
which he designed it. 4. That God divided the light from the darkness - So put
them asunder as they could never be joined together: and yet he divided time
between them, the day for light, and the night for darkness, in a constant
succession. Tho' the darkness was now scattered by the light, yet it has its
place, because it has its use; for as the light of the morning befriends the
business of the day, so the shadows of the evening befriend the repose of the
night. God has thus divided between light and darkness, because he would daily
mind us that this is a world of mixtures and changes. In heaven there is
perpetual light, and no darkness; in hell utter darkness, and no light: but in
this world they are counter-changed, and we pass daily from one to another;
that we may learn to expect the like vicissitudes in the providence of God. 5.
That God divided them from each other by distinguishing names. He called the
light Day, and the darkness he called night - He gave them names as Lord of
both. He is the Lord of time, and will be so 'till day and night shall come to
an end, and the stream of time be swallowed up in the ocean of eternity. 6.
That this was the first day's work, The evening and the morning were the first
day - The darkness of the evening was before the light of the morning, that it
might set it off, and make it shine the brighter.
Verses 6-8
We have here an account of the second day's
work, the creation of the firmament. In which observe, 1. The command of God;
Let there be a firmament - An expansion; so the Hebrew word signifies, like a
sheet spread, or a curtain drawn out. This includes all that is visible above
the earth, between it and the third heavens, the air, its higher, middle, and
lower region, the celestial globe, and all the orbs of light above; it reaches
as high as the place where the stars are fixed, for that is called here the
firmament of heaven, Genesis 1:14,15, and as low as the place where
the birds fly for that also is called the firmament of heaven, Genesis 1:20. 2. The creation of it: and God
made the firmament. 3. The design of it; to divide the waters from the
waters-That is, to distinguish between the waters that are wrapt up in the
clouds, and those that cover the sea; the waters in the air, and those in the
earth. 4. The naming it; He called the firmament Heaven - 'Tis the visible
heaven, the pavement of the holy city. The height of the heavens should mind us
of God's supremacy, and the infinite distance that is between us and him; the
brightness of the heavens, and their purity, should mind us of his majesty, and
perfect holiness; the vastness of the heavens, and their encompassing the
earth, and influence upon it, should mind us of his immensity and universal
providence.
Verses 9-13
The third day's work is related in these
verses; the forming the sea and the dry land, and making the earth fruitful.
Hitherto the power of the Creator had been employed about the upper part of the
visible world; now he descends to this lower world, designed for the children
of men, both for their habitation, and their maintenance. And here we have an
account of the fitting of it for both; the building of their house, and the
spreading of their table. Observe, 1. How the earth was prepared to be a
habitation for man by the gathering of the waters together, and making the dry
land appear. Thus, instead of that confusion which was, when earth and water
were mixed in one great mass; now there is order, by such a separation as
rendered them both useful. (1.) The waters which covered the earth were ordered
to retire, and to gather into one place, viz. those hollows which were fitted
for their reception. The waters thus lodged in their proper place, he called
Seas; for though they are many, in distant regions, yet either above ground or
under ground, they have communication with each other, and so they are one, and
the common receptacle of waters, into which all the rivers run. (2.) The dry
land was made to appear, and emerge out of the waters, and was called Earth.
Observe, 2. How the earth was furnished for the support of man, Genesis 1:11,12. Present provision was made, by
the immediate products of the earth, which, in obedience to God's command, was
no sooner made but it became fruitful. Provision was likewise made for time to
come, by the perpetuating of the several species of vegetables, every one
having its seed in itself after its kind, that during the continuance of man upon
the earth, food might be fetched out of the earth, for his use and benefit.
Verses 14-19
This is the history of the fourth day's work,
the creating the sun, moon and stars. Of this we have an account, 1. In
general, verse 14, 15. where we have, (1.) The command given concerning them.
Let there be lights in the firmament of
heaven ¡X God had said, Genesis 1:3 Let there be light, and there was
light; but that was, as it were, a chaos of light, scattered and confused; now
it was collected and made into several luminaries, and so rendered both more
glorious and more serviceable. (2.) The use they were intended to be of to this
earth. [1.] They must be for the distinction of times, of day and night, summer
and winter. [2.] They must be for the direction of actions: they are for signs
of the change of weather, that the husbandman may order his affairs with
discretion. They do also give light upon the earth - That we may walk John 11:9 and work John 9:4 according as the duty of every day
requires. The lights of heaven do not shine for themselves, nor for the world of
spirits above, they need them not; but they shine for us, and for our pleasure
and advantage. Lord, what is man that he should be thus regarded, Psalms 8:3,4. 2. In particular, Genesis 1:16,17,18, The lights of heaven are the
sun, moon and stars, and these all are the work of God's hands. (1.) The sun is
the greatest light of all, and the most glorious and useful of all the lamps of
heaven; a noble instance of the Creator's wisdom, power and goodness, and an
invaluable blessing to the creatures of this lower world. (2.) The moon is a
lesser light, and yet is here reckoned one of the greater lights, because,
though in regard of its magnitude, it is inferior to many of the stars, yet in
respect of its usefulness to the earth, it is more excellent than they. (3.) He
made the stars also - Which are here spoken of only in general; for the
scriptures were written not to gratify our curiosity, but to lead us to God.
Now, these lights are said to rule, Genesis 1:16,18; not that they have a supreme
dominion as God has, but they are rulers under him. Here the lesser light, the
moon, is said to rule the night; but Psalms 136:9 the stars are mentioned as sharers
in that government, the moon and stars to rule by night. No more is meant, but
that they give light, Jeremiah 31:35. The best and most honourable way
of ruling is, by giving light, and doing good.
Verses 20-23
Each day hitherto hath produced very excellent
beings, but we do not read of the creation of any living creature till the
fifth day. The work of creation not only proceeded gradually from one thing to
another, but advanced gradually from that which was less excellent, to that
which was more so. 'Twas on the fifth day that the fish and fowl were created,
and both out of the waters. Observe, 1. The making of the fish and fowl at
first. Genesis 1:20,21 God commanded them to be produced,
he said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly - The fish in the waters, and
the fowl out of them. This command he himself executed, God created great
whales, etc.-Insects which are as various as any species of animals, and their
structure as curious, were part of this day's work, some of them being allied
to the fish, and others to the fowl. Notice is here taken of the various
species of fish and fowl, each after their kind; and of the great numbers of
both that were produced, for the waters brought forth abundantly; and in
particular of great whales the largest of fishes, whose bulk and strength, are
remarkable proofs of the power and greatness of the Creator. Observe, 2, The
blessing of them in order to their continuance. Life is a wasting thing, its
strength is not the strength of stones; therefore the wise Creator not only
made the individuals, but provided for the propagating of the several species, Genesis 1:22.
God blessed them, saying, Be fruitful, and
multiply ¡X Fruitfullness is the effect of God's
blessing, and must be ascribed to it; the multiplying of the fish and fowl from
year to year, is still the fruit of this blessing here.
Verses 24-25
We have here the first part of the sixth
day's work. The sea was the day before replenished with fish, and the air with
fowl; and this day are made the beasts of the earth, cattle, and the creeping
things that pertain to the earth. Here, as before, (1.) The Lord gave the word:
he said, Let The earth bring forth - Let these creatures come into being upon
the earth, and out of it, in their respective kinds. 2. He also did the work;
he made them all after their kind - Not only of divers shapes, but of divers
natures, manners, food, and fashions: In all which appears the manifold wisdom
of the Creator.
Verses 26-28
We have here the second part of the sixth
day's work, the creation of man, which we are in a special manner concerned to
take notice of. Observe, 1. That man was made last of all the creatures, which
was both an honour and a favour to him: an honour, for the creation was to
advance from that which was less perfect, to that which was more so and a
favour, for it was not fit he should be lodged in the palace designed for him,
till it was completely fitted and furnished for his reception. Man, as soon as
he was made, had the whole visible creation before him, both to contemplate,
and to take the comfort of. 2. That man's creation was a mere signal act of
divine wisdom and power, than that of the other creatures. The narrative of it
is introduced with solemnity, and a manifest distinction from the rest.
Hitherto it had been said, Let there be light, and Let there be a firmament:
but now the word of command is turned into a word of consultation, Let us make
man - For whose sake the rest of the creatures were made. Man was to be a
creature different from all that had been hitherto made. Flesh and spirit,
heaven and earth must be put together in him, and he must be allied to both
worlds. And therefore God himself not only undertakes to make, but is pleased
so to express himself, as if he called a council to consider of the making of
him; Let us make man - The three persons of the Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost, consult about it, and concur in it; because man, when he was made, was
to be dedicated and devoted to Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. 3. That man was
made in God's image, and after his likeness; two words to express the same
thing. God's image upon man, consists, 1. In his nature, not that of his body,
for God has not a body, but that of his soul. The soul is a spirit, an
intelligent, immortal spirit, an active spirit, herein resembling God, the
Father of spirits, and the soul of the world. 2. In his place and authority.
Let us make man in our image, and let him have dominion. As he has the
government of the inferior creatures, he is as it were God's representative on
earth. Yet his government of himself by the freedom of his will, has in it more
of God's image, than his government of the creatures. 3. And chiefly in his
purity and rectitude. God's image upon man consists in knowledge,
righteousness, and true holiness, Ephesians 4:24; Colossians 3:10. He was upright, Ecclesiastes 7:29. He had an habitual conformity
of all his natural powers to the whole will of God. His understanding saw
divine things clearly, and there were no errors in his knowledge: his will
complied readily and universally with the will of God; without reluctancy: his
affections were all regular, and he had no inordinate appetites or passions:
his thoughts were easily fixed to the best subjects, and there was no vanity or
ungovernableness in them. And all the inferior powers were subject to the
dictates of the superior. Thus holy, thus happy, were our first parents, in
having the image of God upon them. But how art thou fallen, O son of the
morning? How is this image of God upon man defaced! How small are the remains
of it, and how great the ruins of it! The Lord renew it upon our souls by his
sanctifying grace! 4. That man was made male and female, and blessed with
fruitfulness. He created him male and female, Adam and Eve: Adam first out of
earth, and Eve out of his side. God made but one male and one female, that all
the nations of men might know themselves to be made of one blood, descendants,
from one common stock, and might thereby be induced to love one another. God
having made them capable of transmitting the nature they had received, said to
them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth - Here he gave them,
1. A large inheritance; replenish the earth, in which God has set man to be the
servant of his providence, in the government of the inferior creatures, and as
it were the intelligence of this orb; to be likewise the collector of his
praises in this lower world, and lastly, to be a probationer for a better
state. 2. A numerous lasting family to enjoy this inheritance; pronouncing a
blessing upon them, in the virtue of which, their posterity should extend to
the utmost corners of the earth, and continue to the utmost period of time. 5.
That God gave to man a dominion over the inferior creatures, over fish of the
sea, and over the fowl of the air - Though man provides for neither, he has
power over both, much more over every living thing that moveth upon the earth -
God designed hereby to put an honour upon man, that he might find himself the
more strongly obliged to bring honour to his Maker.
Verses 29-30
We have here the third part of the sixth
day's work, which was not any new creation, but a gracious provision of food
for all flesh, Psalms 136:25.-Here is, 1. Food provided for
man, Genesis 1:29. herbs and fruits must be his meat,
including corn, and all the products of the earth. And before the earth was
deluged, much more before it was cursed for man's sake, its fruits no doubt,
were more pleasing to the taste, and more strengthening and nourishing to the
body. 2. Food provided for the beasts, Genesis 1:30. Doth God take care of oxen? Yes,
certainly, he provides food convenient for them; and not for oxen only that
were used in his sacrifices, and man's service, but even the young lions and
the young ravens are the care of his providence, they ask and have their meat
from God.
Verse 31
We have here the approbation and conclusion
of the whole work of creation. Observe, 1. The review God took of his work, he
saw every thing that he had made - So he doth still; all the works of his hands
are under his eye; he that made all sees all. 2. The complacency God took in
his work. When we come to review our works we find to our shame, that much has
been very bad; but when God reviewed his, all was very good. 1. It was good.
Good, for it is all agreeable to the mind of the creator. Good, for it answers
the end of its creation. Good, for it is serviceable to man, whom God had
appointed lord of the visible creation. Good, for it is all for God's glory;
there is that in the whole visible creation which is a demonstration of God's
being and perfections, and which tends to beget in the soul of man a religious
regard to him. 2. It was very good - Of each day's work (except the second) it
was said that it was good, but now it is very good. For, 1. Now man was made,
who was the chief of the ways of God, the visible image of the Creator's glory,
2. Now All was made, every part was good, but all together very good. The glory
and goodness, the beauty and harmony of God's works both of providence and
grace, as this of creation, will best appear when they are perfected. 3. The
time when this work was concluded.
The evening and the morning were the sixth
day ¡X So that in six days God made the world. We
are not to think but that God could have made the world in an instant: but he
did it in six days, that he might shew himself a free agent, doing his own
work, both in his own way, and in his own time; that his wisdom, power and
goodness, might appear to us, and be meditated upon by us, the more distinctly;
and that he might set us an example of working six days, and resting the
seventh. And now as God reviewed his work, let us review our meditations upon
it; let us stir up ourselves, and all that is within us, to worship him that
made the, heaven, earth, and sea, and the fountains of waters. All his works in
all places of his dominion bless him, and therefore bless thou the Lord, O my
soul.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Genesis¡n
GOD¡¦S
CREATIVE ACTS TYPICAL OF HIS NEW CREATION
¢¹. Darkness upon the Waters. ¡§ Darkness was upon the face of the deep¡¨
( Gen.1:2). This is typical of the state of the sinner in the darkness of sin,
ignorance, and unbelief. The purpose of the Gospel, as Christ told Paul, is to
¡§ turn them from darkness to light¡¨ (Acts 26:18).
¢º. The Spirit moving upon the Waters. ¡§ And the Spirit of God moved
upon the face of the waters¡¨ (Gen.1:2). This shadows forth the work of the Holy
Spirit in regeneration; even as Peter, in reminding us of what the Lord has
done for us, says, ¡§ Who hath called you out of darkness into His marvelous
light¡¨ (1. Peter 2:9).
¢». The Light shining forth. ¡§ God said, Let there be light, and there
was light¡¨ (Gen.1:3). This reminds us of the light shining into the heart by
the Holy Spirit, through the Word; in fact, the apostle uses it as an
illustration of this truth, ¡§ 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¡¨ (11. Cor.4:6).
¢¼. Life and growth. ¡§ Let the earth bring forth¡K¡Kand the earth brought
forth grass¡K¡Kherb¡Ktree yielding fruit¡¨ (Gen.1:11,12). God said, and then life
and fruit followed. So it is with us who have heard the voice of God. We have
eternal life, and the evidence of it is growth in grace, for the command of
Christ is very clear. ¡§ Let your light so shine before men, that they may see
your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven¡¨ (Matthew 5:16).
¢½. Blessing and fruit-bearing. ¡§ And God blessed them, and God said
unto them, Be fruitful,¡¨ ¡®c.(Gen.1:28).
In and by Him we are blessed; in Him is our fruit found, and by Him we are
fruitful. This is the result of fellowship with Him, for ¡§ If we walk in the
light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another¡¨ (1. John
1:7), that is, with the Father and the Son.
¢¾. Union and power. ¡§ God said, Let us make man in Our image, after
Our likeness, and let them have dominion,¡¨ ¡®c.
(Gen.1:26). This was lost by sin, but, in a spiritual sense, is restored by
accepting Christ; as Paul reminded the Ephesians, in telling them what they
were, are, and should be, ¡§ Ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in
the Lord; walk as children of light¡¨ (Eph.5:8).
¢¿. Sanctification ( Gen.2:3). As God set apart the seventh day as a
day of rest, so He has set apart the believer in Christ for Himself; and
because he is thus set apart, he is to separate from all that is, and those who
are not the Lord¡¦s. ¡§ For what fellowship hath righteousness with
unrighteousness? And what communion hath light with darkness?¡¨ (11. Cor.6:14).
¢w¢w F.E. Marsh¡mFive Hundred Bible Readings¡n
01 Chapter 1
Verse 1
In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth
The Christian doctrine of creation
In considering the subject of creation we see, first of all, that
a distinction must be drawn between what I would call primary and secondary
creation.
Primary creation is creation proper. It is that grand act whereby Almighty God
in the beginning called into being the finite world. Secondary creation, on the
other hand, belongs to the sphere of Providence, or to the sphere of the
history of the finite world. If we look at the history of the finite world, we
see that during its course a vast series of beings have been called into
existence. All the generations of mankind have come into existence during ages
gone by. In like manner all the countless hosts of living creatures, the
animals and plants that inhabit the world. Nor is this all. Men of science now
tell us, that even the earth itself, the sun, the moon, and the planets, have
come into existence during the history of the world. There was a time in the
history of the finite world when there was neither sun, nor moon, nor earth,
when the matter of which all these bodies are composed was diffused in a
previous state. They have, therefore, like ourselves, received their existence
during the history of the world. Now, the origination or bringing into
existence of all these things I call a creation. Creation is that which is the
work of an intelligent being. It is the giving of existence, by an intelligent
being, to that which had previously none. And since all these things have
received existence, and have received it at the hand of God, their origination
is a creation.
I. In regard to
SECONDARY CREATION, the great difficulty is this--If you will think over what I
have been saying to you about it, you will see that the truth of my view all
depends upon this, that the laws of nature alone and unaided are not sufficient
to govern the course of nature. The view which I have given requires us to
suppose that, in addition to the laws of nature, there is needed the Divine
Intelligence to combine and direct them. In a word, we must suppose that the
Divine Intelligence never leaves nature, but continually guides and directs its
course to those great ends and purposes which God has in view. Now here it is
that the difficulty comes in. It is held, by a large class of reasoners, that
the laws of nature alone and unaided are perfectly sufficient for the purpose
indicated. But is this view true? I think not. In fact there are many ways in
which I could show its inadequacy were this the place to discuss the question.
I shall not attempt any such discussion, but shall content myself with simply
pointing out one fact which makes it impossible; I mean the fact that the
course of nature is a history. If the course of nature were governed solely by
the laws of nature, it must, as a necessary consequence, flow in grooves or
cycles. But, in point of fact, it does neither. If we look at the course of
nature, we see that it is a varied and ever-varying stream. From the beginning
of the world up to the present moment, no two events, and no two objects,
however similar, have been exactly the same in all respects. The course of
nature is a free, orderly, progressive sequence, or series of events flowing
towards, and attaining high ends and purposes. The course of nature being thus
confessedly a history, what principle is it, which alone can account for it?
You may ponder over the matter as much as you please, you may turn it and twist
it in every possible way, but you will in the end be obliged to confess that
the only principle sufficient for the purpose, is Intelligence. No other
principle but Intelligence can account for the order of a free, varied, and
progressive whole such as the course of nature actually is. Why is it that the
conviction of a never-ceasing Providence in the affairs of the world is written
in such living characters on the hearts of all men? It is from the perception
that the course of nature is a history, and the inference which is
instantaneously drawn, that it must be ordered by intelligence. The result then
is, that the course of nature cannot be conceived by us as possible apart from
the Divine Intelligence. We must suppose that the Divine Intelligence presided
over it in the beginning and has ever since continuously guided its course. Now
what follows from this? It follows that the first chapter of Genesis is
literally true, in the sense in which the ordinary English reader understands
it. It is still literally true that God created the sun, the moon, the sea, the
dry land, the various species of plants and animals. For God prepared the
conditions under which all these things came into existence. He guided the
course of nature so that it should aid or abut in their production. They are,
therefore, His creations; and owe their existence to His creative fiat. I wish
I could stay to point out the many striking consequences which flow from this
view--the air of grandeur and living interest it imparts to nature, the Divine
light it sheds into every corner and crevice of it. But I must content myself
with merely indicating one point, viz., how this view satisfies all our
religious aspirations. It brings us very near to God. It brings God all round
us and within us. But what comes home especially to the religious mind is the
assurance which this view gives us, that we, as individuals, owe our existence
not to dead and unintelligent laws, but to the will and purpose of the living
God. Our individual existence was prepared and intended by God. We are His
creation.
II. We have next
to consider PRIMARY CREATION, which is far more difficult. Primary creation, as
I have said, is that grand act whereby God called into being the finite world.
It differs from secondary creation in these two respects: first, that there
were no pre-existent materials out of which the finite world was formed, and
secondly, in that the process whereby it was made was not one of natural law,
but a process of intelligence. The difficulties which have been raised in
modern times against this cardinal doctrine have been very great, and in
dealing with them I do not well know how to make myself intelligible to some of
you. One of the most perplexing of these difficulties is the view which regards
creation as a breach of the law of continuity. The law of continuity obliges us
to suppose that each state of the material world was preceded by a previous
state. Hence, according to this law, it is impossible that the material world
could ever have had a beginning. For the law compels us to add on to each state
of things, a previous state, without ever coming to a stop. If we do stop short
we break the law. And hence those who take this view would exclude creation, as
being nothing else but a stopping short, and consequent breaking of the law.
Creation, they say, is the doctrine that there is an absolutely first link in
this grand chain, and if we are to adhere to the law of continuity we must
exclude it. But this whole view of the matter is radically wrong. In supposing
creation to be the first link in the chain of continuity, we necessarily
suppose that, like all the other links, it took place in time. There was a time
before, and a time after it. But if you will think over the matter, you will
see that this could not be; for time only came into existence when the creative
process was completed. In fact, space and time, the laws of nature, and the law
of continuity, are all relations of the finite world; and they could not
possibly have any existence till the finite world itself existed, that is, till
the creative act was completed. Hence, if we would grasp in thought the
creative act, we must transcend the law of continuity; we must transcend all
the laws of nature; we must transcend and forget even space and time. If we
would understand aright the creative act, we must view the finite world solely
in relation ¡¥to the Divine Intelligence, of which it is the product. The great
question in regard to primary creation is, Is it conceivable by us? There is a
sect of people called agnostics, who say that it is utterly inconceivable, that
no intelligible meaning can be attached to the word. They have wrongly compared
creation to a process of natural law, and finding no analogy in this
comparison, they have rashly set it down as unthinkable by us. But I have shown
you that creation is not a process of natural law; I have shown you that it
transcends natural law; I have shown you that it is purely a process of
intelligence. Regarded in this point of view, I will now show you that it is
intelligible to us, not, perhaps, perfectly intelligible, but still so much so,
as to afford us a very tangible notion. The Bible conception of creation is
simply this. The finite world as a whole, and in each one of its details, was
formed as an image or idea in the Divine Intelligence, and in and by that act
of formation it obtained objective or substantial reality. God had not, like
us, to seek for paper whereon to describe His plan, nor for materials wherein
to embody it. By His absolute power, the image of the world formed in the
Divine Intelligence became the actual, substantial, external world. It
obtained, as we say, objective reality. Thus the finite world was not a
creation out of nothing, neither was it the fall of the finite out of the
infinite, nor a necessary evolution out of the Divine Essence, it was the
objectified product of the Divine Intelligence. It may, however, be said that
this goes a very little way in making the act of creation conceivable to us,
for we have no experience of the immediate and unconditioned externalization of
a mere mental idea, and we cannot imagine how it could be possible. I admit
that we have not the experience indicated. And yet, I would ask you, which is
the most marvellous point in the whole process--the act by which the image of
the finite world was constituted in the Divine Intelligence, or the act by
which it obtained objective reality? Plainly it is the former. It is far more
marvellous that the finite world in its first beginning, and in its whole
subsequent development, should be imaged forth in the Divine Intelligence, than
that this image should crystallize into concrete objective existence. Thus the
very point of creation which is the most difficult is made conceivable to us by
being reflected in the processes of our own minds. We can create to the extent
of forming the mental image. It is only in the externalization of our idea that
we are hemmed in and hampered by conditions. I maintain, therefore, that the
Bible doctrine, whether we believe it or not, is conceivable by us. We have,
first of all, a clear notion of the human intelligence, which is infinite and
absolute in one of its aspects; this gives us a notion, inadequate no doubt,
but still a tangible notion of the Divine Intelligence which is infinite and
absolute in every aspect. Then we have a clear notion of the origination or
creation of mental images or plans of things by the human intelligence; this
enables us to understand how the plan or pattern of the finite world originated
in the Divine Intelligence. The last point, viz., the externalization of the
Divine idea, is the most difficult. But though a hard one to you and me, you
see it did not present the same elements of difficulty to those great men who
had made the powers and processes of intelligence their peculiar study. But I
will say more for the Bible doctrine. It is the only philosophical account of
the finite world that does not throw human knowledge into irretrievable
confusion. The bearing of the question is simply this. If we view the finite
world apart from intelligence, the moment we begin to reason on it, we fall
into contradiction and absurdity. The consequence of this is, that we land
ourselves first of all in agnosticism, and then in utter scepticism;
disbelieving in God, in the moral world, nay, even in the most assured results
of physical science. Hence, if we would save human knowledge, the finite world
must be viewed in relation to intelligence; and the whole question lies between
the Bible and a doctrine such as that of Fichte. Is the finite world the
product of our intelligence? or is it the product of the Divine Intelligence?
We cannot hesitate between the two. Indeed the logic of facts has already
decided for us. (D. Greig, M. A.)
Import of faith in a Creator
When man looks out from himself upon the wonderful home in which
he is placed, upon the various orders of living things around him, upon the
solid earth which he treads, upon the heavens into which he gazes, with such
ever-varying impressions, by day and by night; when he surveys the mechanism of
his own bodily frame; when he turns his thought, as he can turn it, in upon
itself, and takes to pieces by subtle analysis the beautiful instrument which
places him in conscious relation to the universe around him; his first and last
anxiety is to account for the existence of all that thus interests him; he must
answer the question, How and why did this vast system of being come to be?
Science may unveil in nature regular modes of working, and name their laws. But
the great question still awaits her--the problem of the origin of the universe.
This question is answered by the first verse in the Bible: ¡§In the beginning
God created,¡¨ etc. And that answer is accepted by every believer in the
Christian Creed: ¡§I believe in one God,¡¨ etc.
I. WHAT IS MEANT
BY CREATION? The giving being to that which before was not. Creation is a
mystery eminently satisfactory to reason, but strictly beyond it. We men can do
much in the way of modifying existing matter, but we cannot create the minutest
particle of it. That God summoned it into being is a truth which we believe on
God¡¦s authority, but which we can never verify.
II. BELIEF IN THE
CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE OUT OF NOTHING IS THE ONLY ACCOUNT OF ITS ORIGIN WHICH
IS COMPATIBLE WITH BELIEF IN A PERSONAL AND MORAL GOD.
1. Men have conceived of the relation between the universe and a
higher power in four different ways. Either God is a creation of the world, that
is to say, of the thinking part of it; or God and the world are really
identical; or God and the world, although distinct, are co-existent; or God has
created the world out of nothing.
2. Again, belief in the creation of the universe by God out of nothing
naturally leads to belief in God¡¦s continuous providence; and providence, in
turn, considering the depth of man¡¦s moral misery, suggests redemption. If love
or goodness was the true motive for creation, it implies God¡¦s continuous
interest in created life.
3. Belief in creation, indeed, must govern the whole religious
thought of a consistent believer. It answers many a priori difficulties
as to the existence of miracle, since the one supreme inexplicable miracle,
compared with which all others are insignificant, is already admitted.
4. Once more, belief in creation is of high moral value. It keeps a
man in his right place. ¡§It is He that hath made us, and not we ourselves.¡¨ At
first sight, man is insignificant when confronted with external nature. Yet we
know that this is not so. The heavens and the earth will pass away. But the
soul will still remain, face to face with God. (Canon Liddon.)
The Creator and the creation
I. THE WHOLE
TRINITY, each in His separate office, though all in unity, addressed themselves
to the work of creation.
1. The Holy Spirit brooded over the watery chaos.
2. The Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, was that power, or ¡§Arm of the
Lord,¡¨ by which the whole work was executed. ¡§In the beginning was the Word.¡¨
3. The Father¡¦s mind willed all, planned all, and did all.
II. God created
ONLY ¡§the heaven and the earth.¡¨ He provided a heaven, but He did not provide a
hell. That was provided, not for our world at all, but for the devil and his
angels.
III. If we ask WHY
God created this universe of ours, three purposes suggest themselves.
1. It was the expression and out-going of His wisdom, power, and
love.
2. It was for the sake of His noblest work, His creature, man.
3. The heaven and the earth were meant to be the scene of the
exhibition of His own dear Son. Remember, that marvellously grand as it was,
that first creation was only a type and earnest of a better. (J. Vaughan, M.
A.)
The Creator and His work
I. THEN ATHEISM
IS A FOLLY. Atheism is proved absurd--
1. By the history of the creation of the world. It would be
impossible for a narrative to be clearer, more simple, or more divinely
authenticated than this of the creation. The very existence of things around us
is indisputable evidence of its reality.
2. By the existence of the beautiful world around us. The world
standing up around us in all its grandeur--adaptation--evidence of
design--harmony--is a most emphatic assertion of the Being of God. Every flower
is a denial of atheism. Every star is vocal with Deity.
3. By the moral convictions of humanity. There is probably not an
intelligent man in the wide universe, who does not believe in, and pay homage
to, some deity or other.
II. THEN PANTHEISM
IS AN ABSURDITY. We are informed by these verses that the world was a creation,
and not a spontaneous, or natural emanation from a mysterious something only
known in the vocabulary of a sceptical philosophy. Thus the world must have had
a personal Creator, distinct and separate from itself.
III. THEN MATTER IS
NOT ETERNAL. ¡§In the beginning.¡¨ Thus it is evident that matter had a
commencement. It was created by Divine power. It had a birthday.
IV. THEN THE WORLD
WAS NOT THE RESULT OF A FORTUITOUS COMBINATION OF ATOMS. ¡§In the beginning God
created.¡¨ Thus the world was a creation. There was the exercise of supreme
intelligence. There was the expression in symbol of great thoughts, and also of
Divine sympathies.
V. THEN CREATION
IS THE OUTCOME OF SUPERNATURAL POWER. ¡§In the beginning God created.¡¨ There
must of necessity ever be much of mystery connected with this subject. Man was
not present to witness the creation, and God has only given us a brief and
dogmatic account of it. God is mystery. The world is a mystery. But there is
far less mystery in the Mosaic account of the creation than in any other, as it
is the most natural, the most likely, and truly the most scientific, as it
gives us an adequate cause for the effect. The re-creation of the soul is the
best explanation of the creation of the universe, and in fact of all the other
mysteries of God. (J. S.Exell, M. A.)
The theology of creation
Man naturally asks for some account of the world in which he
lives. Was the world always in existence? If not, how did it begin to be? Did
the sun make itself? These are not presumptuous questions. We have a right to
ask them--the right which arises from our intelligence. The steam engine did
not make itself; did the sun? In the text we find an answer to all our
questions.
I. THE ANSWER IS
SIMPLE. There is no attempt at learned analysis or elaborate exposition. A
child may understand the answer. It is direct, positive, complete. Could it
have been more simple? Try any other form of words, and see if a purer
simplicity be possible. Observe the value of simplicity when regarded as
bearing upon the grandest events. The question is not who made a house, but who
made a world, and not who made one world, but who made all worlds; and to this
question the answer is, God made them. There is great risk in returning a
simple answer to a profound inquiry, because when simplicity is not the last
result of knowledge, it is mere imbecility.
II. THE ANSWER IS
SUBLIME. God! God created!
1. Sublime because far reaching in point of time: in the beginning.
Science would have attempted a fact, religion has given a truth. If any
inquirer can fix a date, he is not forbidden to do so. Dates are for children.
2. Sublime because connecting the material with the spiritual. There
is, then, something more than dust in the universe. Every atom bears a
superscription. The wind is the breath of God. The thunder is a note from the
music of his speech.
3. Sublime, because revealing, as nothing else could have done, the
power and wisdom of the Most High.
III. THE ANSWER IS
SUFFICIENT. It might have been both simple and sublime, and yet not have
reached the point of adequacy. Draw a straight line, and you may describe it as
simple, yet who would think of calling it sublime? We must have simplicity
which reaches the point of sublimity, and sublimity which sufficiently covers
every demand of the case. The sufficiency of the answer is manifest: Time is a
drop of eternity; nature is the handiwork of God; matter is the creation of
mind; God is over all, blessed for evermore. This is enough. In proportion as
we exclude God from the operation, we increase difficulty. Atheism never
simplifies. Negation works in darkness. The answer of the text to the problem
of creation is simple, sublime, and sufficient, in relation--
1. To the inductions of geology.
2. To the theory of evolution.
Practical inferences:
1. If God created all things, then all things are under His
government.
2. Then the earth may be studied religiously.
3. Then it is reasonable that He should take an interest in nature.
(J. Parker, D. D.)
What we learn here about God
1. His being.
2. His eternity.
3. His omnipotence.
4. His absolute freedom.
5. His infinite wisdom.
6. His essential goodness. (J. White.)
A revelation of God and of nature
I. A REVELATION
OF GOD.
1. His name: names have meaning.
2. His nature: spirituality, personality.
3. His mode of existence: manifold unity.
II. A REVELATION
OF NATURE.
1. Matter not eternal.
2. The antiquity of the earth.
3. The order of creation. (Pulpit Analyst.)
Love in the fact of creation
I. WHAT IS
CREATION? Creation is a work of free condescension on the part of God. There
was a time when it was not, and God willed that it should be. It was by Him
called into existence out of nothing. It is not only not God, but it is not
Divine--partakes in no way of His essence, nor (except in one, its spiritual
department, where He has specially willed it) of His nature; has in itself no
principle of permanence, cannot uphold itself, but depends altogether for its
being, and well being, on the good pleasure of Him, whose Divine love created and
upholds it. The world is a standing proof of God¡¦s condescension--that He
lowers Himself to behold the things which are in heaven and in earth, which He
needeth not. Creation, viewed in its true light, is as really a proof of the
self-forgetting, self-humbling love of our God, as redemption; for in it He
left His glory which He had, the Father with the Son, and the Holy Spirit with
both, before the worlds began, and descended to converse with and move among
the works of His own hands; to launch the planets on their courses through
space, and uphold in them all things living by His ever-abiding Spirit.
II. WHY IS
CREATION? May we presume to ask, What moved Him who was perfect in Himself, who
needed nothing beyond Himself, whose character of love was fulfilled in the
unity of the Three Persons in the God-head--what moved Him to lower Himself to
the creation and upholding of matter, and of life organized in matter? We have
already attributed the act to free condescending love; but what love--love for
whom? Here again Scripture gives us an answer. ¡§The Father loveth the Son, and
hath given all things into His hand.¡¨ ¡§By Him (the Son) were all things
created, that are in heaven and that are in earth, visible and invisible--all
things were created by Him and for Him.¡¨ I hesitate not then in saying that all
creation was the result of the love of the Father for the Son; the result of
His Almighty will to carry forward, and to glorify, His Divine character of
love, by the glorification of His beloved and only-begotten Son. This world is
Christ¡¦s world--made by and made for Christ--made as the theatre whereon, to
all created beings, and even to the Father Himself, was to be shown forth the
glorious self-denying love of the Son of God. Thus the world is to the Christian
a fact in the very path and process of his faith, and hope, and love. Thus
creation is to him part of redemption; the first free act of love of his God,
which provided for his being called into existence, as the next free act of
love provided for his being called to be a partaker of the Divine nature. (Dean
Alford.)
Creation
I. GOD. No
attempt made to prepare mind of reader for idea of God; as though every human
being had this naturally; and so they all have.
II. CREATED. God
made world out of nothing; then He must have absolute power over it and all in
it. Nothing can hurt those whom God loves, and protects. Events of world are
still in His hands. All must work for Him.
III. COURSE AND
PROGRESS OF CREATION¡¦S WORK.
1. Gradual, in measured stages, deliberate. But, observe, never
lingering or halting; no rest until complete. Each day has its work; and each
day¡¦s work, done for God, and as God appoints, has its reward. Result may not
always be seen; as seed is not seen unfolding beneath ground, yet as truly
growing there as when it shoots up green in face of day. So in a good man¡¦s
life. He looks onward.
2. Orderly. (C. P. Eden, M. A.)
Creation
The language of man follows things and imitates them; the Word of
God precedes and creates them. Man speaks because things are; but these are
because God hath spoken. Let Him speak again, and things will revert together
with man who speaks of them, to nothing. Let us be content to perceive in
creation a character which belongs only to God, and which distinguishes His
work from that of His creatures. The human mind works only with the materials
with which God supplies it; it observes, imitates, combines, but does not
create. The best painter in the world, composing the most beautiful picture
that ever proceeded from the hand of man, creates nothing: neither the canvas,
nor the colours, nor the brushes, nor his own hands, nor even the conception of
his work, since that conception is the fruit of his genius, which he has not
given unto himself. Trace to the origin of each of the several things which
have combined to form this picture, and you will find that all the channels
from which they came, converge towards, and meet in the Creator, who is God. In
thus showing us from its first page that the visible world has had such a
wonderful beginning, the Bible informs us that it is also as a Creator that God
saves souls. He not only develops the natural dispositions of our hearts, but
creates in them new ones, ¡§For we are labourers together with God¡¨; but
labourers working like the painter, with what God has given to us. We hear,
read, seek, believe, pray, but even these come from God. ¡§For it is God which
worketh in you both to will and to do of His good pleasure¡¨; and if we seek the
principle of our salvation we shall find that we owe all to God from the
beginning, and from the beginning of the beginning. ¡§For we are His workmanship
created in Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should
walk in them.¡¨ ¡§You have been taught in Christ,¡¨ writes St. Paul to the
Ephesians, ¡§to put off the old man, to be renewed in the spirit of your mind,
and to put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true
holiness.¡¨ ¡§In Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth anything, nor
uncircumcision, but a new creature.¡¨ Thus speaks the New Testament. The Old
uses the same language. Not only does David, rising from his fall, pray in
these words by the Spirit: ¡§Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a
right spirit within me¡¨ (Psalms 51:12); but all the Lord¡¦s
dealings towards the people of Israel, that type of the future Church, are
compared by Isaiah to a creation--¡§I am the Lord, your Holy One, the Creator of
Israel, your Isaiah 43:15). If He alternately deals
out to them good and badfortune--He creates. ¡§I am the Lord, and there is none
else. I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I,
the Lord, do all these things¡¨ (Isaiah 45:6-7). If He tries them for a
time by chastisingthem through the hands of their enemies, He creates: ¡§Behold,
I have created the smith that bloweth the coals in the fire, and that bringeth
forth an instrument of destruction for his work¡¨ (Isaiah 54:16). If He raises up prophets
to them, He creates: ¡§I create the fruit of the lips; Peace, peace, to him that
is far off, and to him that is near¡¨ (Isaiah 57:19); and if ultimately He give
to that people, after many vicissitudes, happier days and an eternal rest, He
will create: ¡§For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth: but be ye glad
and rejoice forever in that which I create; for, behold, I create Jerusalem a
rejoicing¡¨ (Isaiah 65:17-18). The creation of the
world affords us a new lesson as to the manner in which God acts in the
dispensation of grace. There again, all that God makes is good, and very good;
what is evil proceeds from another source. For all that is good and holy, let
us ascribe the glory to God; for what is evil let us accuse ourselves. This
doctrine, too, is necessary in order that you should not make a false
application of what you have just heard respecting the sovereignty of God. He
acts as Creator, we should say in things which belong to His government, but He
only uses this sovereign power for good; He only gives birth to good thoughts,
holy desires and dispositions, consistent with salvation. God creates, but how
does He create? At first view we only see here the sovereign Lord, alone at
first in His eternity, alone afterwards in the work of creation. But a more
deliberate contemplation leads us to discern in this singleness a certain
mysterious union of persons previously hidden in the depths of the Divine
nature, and displaying itself at the creation, as it was to be manifested at a
later period in the redemption of our race. And have you the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost? The Three unite in the creation of the world; they unite in
the redemption of man; are they also united within you? Are you born of the
Father, and become His children? Are you washed in the blood, of the Son, and
become members of His body? Are you baptized with the Spirit, and become His
temples? Ponder upon these things; for it is not a vain thing for you, because
it is your life. Finally, God creates, but for what purpose? does He only wish
to spread before you an enchanting exhibition? No, He has nobler designs. The
Lord has created all things for His glory, and His first object is to render
visible the invisible things hidden within Himself, by giving them a body, and,
if one may so speak, by exhibiting them in the form of flesh. (A. Monod, D.
D.)
Chance cannot explain order in creation
How often might a man, after he had jumbled a set of letters in a
bag, fling them upon the ground before they would fall into an exact poem, yea,
or so much as make a good discourse in prose! And may not a little book be as
easily made by chance as this great volume of the world? How long might a man
be in sprinkling colours upon a canvas with a careless hand before they could
happen to make the exact picture of a man? And is a man easier made by chance
than his picture? How long might twenty thousand blind men, which should be
sent out from the several remote parts of England, wander up and down before
they would all meet in Salisbury Plains, and fall into rank and file in the
exact order of an army? And yet this is much more easy to be imagined than how
the innumerable blind parts of matter should rendezvous themselves into a
world. (Archbishop Tillotson.)
Chance not creative
Athanasius Kircher, the celebrated German astronomer, had an
acquaintance whom he much esteemed, but who was unfortunately infected by
atheistical principles, and denied the very existence of a God. Kircher,
sincerely desirous to rescue his friend from his mistaken and ruinous opinion,
determined to try to convince him of his error upon his own principles of
reasoning. He first procured a globe of the heavens, handsomely decorated, and
of conspicuous size, and placed it in a situation in his study where it would
be immediately observed. He then called upon his friend with an invitation to
visit him, which was readily responded to, and on his arrival he was shown into
the study. It happened exactly as Kircher had planned. His friend no sooner
observed it than he inquired whence it had come, and to whom it belonged.
¡§Shall I tell you, my friend,¡¨ said Kircher, ¡§that it belongs to no one; that
it was never made by anyone, but came here by mere chance?¡¨ ¡§That,¡¨ replied the
atheist, ¡§is impossible; you jest.¡¨ This was Kircher¡¦s golden opportunity, and
he promptly and wisely availed himself of it. ¡§You will not, with good reason,
believe that this small globe which you see before you originated in mere
chance, and yet you will contend that those vast heavenly bodies, of which this
is but a faint diminutive resemblance, came into existence without either
order, design, or a creation!¡¨ His friend was first confounded, then convinced,
and, ultimately abandoning all his former scepticisms, he gladly united with
all who reverence and love God in acknowledging the glory and adoring the
majesty of the great Creator of the heavens and earth and all their host.
Order no proof of evolution
His (Professor Huxley¡¦s) conclusion is an hypothesis evolved from
an hypothesis. To see that this is indeed the case, let us put his argument in
syllogistic form. It is as follows: Wherever we have an ascending series of
animals with modifications of structure rising one above another, the later
forms must have evolved themselves from the earlier. In the case of these
fossil horses we have such a series, therefore the theory of evolution is
established universally for all organized and animal life. Now, even if we
admit his premises, everyone must see that the conclusion is far too sweeping.
It ought to have been confined to the horses of which he was treating. But
passing that, let us ask where is the proof of the major premise? Indeed, that
premise is suppressed altogether, and he nowhere attempts to show that the
existence of an ascending series of animals, with modifications of structure
ascending, one above another, is an infallible indication that the higher
members of the series evolved themselves out of the lower. The existence of a
series does not necessarily involve the evolution of the higher members of it
from the lower. The steps of a stair rise up one above another, but we cannot
reason that therefore the whole staircase has developed itself out of the
lowest step. It may be possible to arrange all the different modifications of
the steam engine, from its first and crudest form up to its latest and most
complete organized structure, in regular gradation; but that would not prove
that the last grew out of the first. No doubt in such a case there has been
progress--no doubt there has been development too--but it was progress guided
and development directed by a presiding and intervening mind. All present
experience is against this major premise which Huxley has so quietly taken for
granted. It is a pure conjecture. I will go so far as to say that even if he
should find in the geologic records all the intervening forms he desires, these
will not furnish evidence that the higher members of the series rose out of the
lower by a process of evolution. The existence of a graduated series is one
thing; the growth of the series out of its lowest member is quite another. (W.
M. Taylor, D. D.)
The creation
I. In the first
place, THE OBJECT OF THIS INSPIRED COSMOGONY, OR ACCOUNT OF THE WORLD¡¦S ORIGIN,
IS NOT SCIENTIFIC BUT RELIGIOUS. Hence it was to be expected, that while
nothing contained in it could ever be found really and in the long run to
contradict science, the gradual progress of discovery might give occasion for
apparent and temporary contradictions.
II. Then again, in
the second place, let it be observed that THE ESSENTIAL FACTS IN THIS DIVINE
RECORD are,--the recent date assigned to the existence of man on the earth, the
previous preparation of the earth for his habitation, the gradual nature of the
work, and the distinction and succession of days during its progress.
III. And, finally,
in the third place, let it be borne in mind that the sacred narrative of the
creation is evidently, in its highest character, MORAL, SPIRITUAL, AND
PROPHETICAL. The original relation of man, as a responsible being, to his
Maker, is directly taught; his restoration from moral chaos to spiritual beauty
is figuratively represented; and as a prophecy, it has an extent of meaning
which will be fully unfolded only when ¡§the times of the restitution of all
things¡¨ (Acts 3:2-11 have arrived.
Conclusion:--The first verse, then, contains a very general announcement; in
respect of time, without date,--in respect of space, without limits. (R. S.
Candlish, D. D.)
On the existence and character of God
I. THE ARGUMENT
FOUNDED ON THE PRINCIPLE OF CAUSATION. The belief in causation is one of the
primary convictions of the human mind. It will be unnecessary for the purposes
of this argument to discuss its origin. It is also certain that this conviction
is not the result of any conscious process of reasoning. We acquiesce in it
because we cannot help doing so. Anyone may satisfy himself that this is the
case, by trying whether it is possible for him to believe that any particular
phenomenon has come into existence without a cause. One of these primary
beliefs is that every phenomenon must owe its existence to a cause adequate to
produce it. This proposition therefore constitutes one of the highest
rectitudes which is attainable by man, and lies at the foundation of all
reasoned truth. Such being the case, it becomes necessary to determine what we
mean by the term ¡§cause,¡¨ not what philosophers mean by it, but what is the
idea which the common sense of mankind attaches to it? Unless we are under the
bias of some particular theory, we invariably associate the idea of efficiency
with that of cause. We may frequently mistake non-causes for causes, but
efficiency, i.e., power to produce the effect, is the fundamental idea
which underlies the conception of cause in the minds of ordinary men. This
being so, the following important consequences follow.
1. Whatever exists in the effect, must exist either actively or
potentially in the cause.
2. The cause of one effect may be the effect of some preceding
cause.
3. Various things, which philosophers and men of science have
designated causes, are not causes, but necessary conditions of the existence of
a particular thing. Thus space is the necessary condition of the existence of
extended bodies, but is certainly not the cause of their existence. In a
similar manner, in the language of the Darwinian theory, the environment of a thing
is frequently spoken of as its cause. It may be the necessary condition of the
existence of a thing in that particular form, but to designate it its cause is
an inaccuracy of thought. The truth is, necessary conditions limit the action
of causes, and may direct their activity into this or that channel; but to
treat them as causes is absurd, for they neither do, nor can produce anything.
4. Law is not a cause. The reader¡¦s attention cannot be too
carefully directed to this fact, for, in scientific language, law is habitually
used as the equivalent of force, and the greatest confusion of thought has been
the result; nay, more, it is frequently personified even by those who refuse to
allow that we have any means of knowing that the First Cause of the universe is
a personal Being. Thus even scientific men are constantly in the habit of
affirming that the laws of nature effect this or that; and that feeble man is
unable to resist their overwhelming power. The truth is, that while the forces
of nature effect much, the laws of nature can effect nothing. What are the laws
of nature? They are merely expressions of the definite order of the occurrence
of phenomena. I must now recur to one more point above referred to, as fraught
with consequences of extreme importance. I have observed that the very
conception of an efficient cause (and an efficient cause is the only one which
satisfies the idea of real causation), involves the consequence that it must
contain within itself, either actively or potentially, all the effects of which
it is the cause; otherwise, such portions of the effects which are not inherent
in the cause must be self-produced, which is a self-contradiction, or be
produced by the energy of an independent Creator, a conclusion which the theist
will readily accept. This being so, all the effects, or in other words, the
phenomena, which exist in the universe, must exist either actively or
potentially in its first cause, i.e., in God. Now, one of the phenomena
of the universe is intelligence. Intelligence therefore must exist in God.
Another of its phenomena is the moral nature of man, and the principles of
morality founded on the moral law. God therefore must be a moral Being. Another
of its phenomena is free agency as it exists in man. The first cause of man (i.e.,
God)
must therefore be a free agent. Another of its phenomena is will, for it exists
in man. Volition therefore must exist in God. Another of its phenomena is
personality, for it exists in man. Personality therefore must exist in God.
Another of its phenomena is that its forces act in accordance with invariable
law, from which action the order of the universe springs. Invariable law
therefore must be an expression of the Divine will, and the love of order must
exist in God. This argument may be pursued to a much greater length; but this
will be sufficient to indicate its character.
II. THE ARGUMENT
FOUNDED ON THE ORDER OF THE UNIVERSE. This argument proves that its first cause
(i.e., God)
must be possessed of intelligence. It is one of the instinctive beliefs of our
minds, when our rational powers have attained their full development, that
whenever we contemplate an orderly arrangement of a complicated character, we
instinctively draw the inference that it denotes the presence of intelligence.
We feel that this is an inference which we cannot help drawing, for order and
intelligence are in our minds mutually correlated. Observe, I make this
affirmation under the qualification that we cannot help drawing this inference
when our rational powers have attained to their full development. I do so
because I maintain that the ideal of human nature and the testimony which its
constitution affords to the realities of things, are to be found in the perfect
and not in the imperfect man. The opponents of theism dispute the correlation
of order and intelligence on two grounds. First, they affirm that the
conception is an anthropomorphic one, inapplicable to the works of nature.
Secondly, that the production of all the phenomena of the universe by the
unintelligent forces of nature, acting in conformity with laws from which they
are incapable of varying, is an adequate account of these orderly arrangements.
With respect to the tact of these objections to the validity of our argument, I
answer--First, that our belief in this correlation between order and
intelligence is not a relative, but an absolute belief, embracing all things,
all places, and all times. Secondly, that even if the objection were valid, it
makes no attempt to propound an alternative theory of the origin of these
orderly arrangements. Thirdly, the affirmation that the alternative theory,
viz., that all existing phenomena have been evolved by the action of the
unintelligent forces of nature, in conformity with invariable law,--affords an
adequate account of the existence of this order, contradicts alike our reason
and our experience. First, it contradicts our reason. What, I ask, is the
conclusion which we draw, when we contemplate an orderly arrangement of a
complicated character? I answer that we cannot help inferring that it has
originated in intelligence. If the suggestion is made, that it is due to what
is commonly called chance, we reject it with scorn. Scientific unbelief, I
know, affirms that there is no such thing as chance. Let me adduce one or two
simple illustrations. Suppose a traveller had met in some foreign country a
construction (it is my misfortune, and not my fault, that I can only express
myself in language which has the appearance of assuming the point at issue),
which on examination he found to bear a striking resemblance to the machinery
in the arsenal at Woolwich, and that no one could tell him how it had
originated. Further, that he succeeded in setting it in motion; and that after
carefully observing it, he discovered that all its movements took place in a
constantly recurring definite order. Let us also further suppose, that on
making inquiry how it got there, he was told that during some distant period of
the past, a number of the unintelligent forces of nature, after a prolonged
struggle, had succeeded in evolving this singular result. Would he, I ask,
consider this an adequate account of its origin, or view it as an attempt to
impose on his credulity? Or let us take a case nearer home, the library of the
British Museum for example, or its collections of minerals or fossils. On
walking round them he could observe that their contents were arranged in a
certain definite order, yet he is entirely ignorant how they got arranged in
this order. But he would scorn the idea, if it were suggested to him, that
these arrangements were the result of the concurrence of a number of
unintelligent forces, and would without a moment¡¦s hesitation draw the
conclusion that they were due to the agency of intelligence. Of this he would
feel as certain as of his own existence. These instances will be equally
suitable as illustrations of the argument from adaptation. But it will be
needless to multiply examples. I therefore ask if in these, and in an
indefinite number of similar cases, we esteem this conclusion to be one of the
most unquestionable of certitudes, why should the inference become
inconclusive, when we observe similar arrangements in the phenomena of nature,
the only difference being that the latter are on a vaster scale, and in an
endless variety of complication? It follows, therefore, that the alternative
suggested by unbelief contradicts the convictions of the reason of an
overwhelming majority of civilized men. Secondly, the alternative theory
derives no support from experience. No one has ever witnessed an orderly
arrangement issue from the meeting together of a number of the unintelligent
forces of nature. If on throwing up twelve dice an equal number of times, they
invariably fall in the same order, the conclusion is inevitable--they are
loaded. In a similar manner the conclusion is equally inevitable, when we
contemplate the orderly arrangements of the universe. They are loaded with a
Divine intelligence.
III. THE ARGUMENT
FOUNDED ON THE INNUMERABLE CORRELATIONS AND ADAPTATIONS WHICH EXIST IN THE
UNIVERSE, COMMONLY CALLED THE ARGUMENT FROM FINAL CAUSES. The argument from
adaptation may be best exhibited under two heads. First, those adaptations
which denote plan, or the realization of an idea through a gradual course of
evolution; and, secondly, those adaptations by which a particular result is
produced, and which alone render its production possible. To take an example of
each. The human hand, if contemplated as a piece of mechanism, is one of the
most wonderful of contrivances. We all know the innumerable and the delicate
functions which it is capable of executing. It consists of a number of parts
marvellously adjusted and correlated together, which, if any one of them had
been different from what it is, or had been differently correlated one to the
other, the mechanism in question would either never have come into existence,
or it would have failed to produce the results which it is now capable of
accomplishing. This serves as an illustration of the argument from both kinds
of adaptation above referred to. This marvellous instrument, as it exists in
man, is found in embryo in the fore feet of the lowest form of vertebrate
animals. Its parts are all found there, yet in such a form that they are
utterly unable to produce the results which they do in man. They exist there in
type only, or idea, of which the human hand is the realization. Before it has
attained to this realization it has appeared in different orders of animals,
each time making a nearer approach to the realization which the idea has
received in the hand of man, and each time correlated to a corresponding
advance in mind. Throughout the whole series of these improvements in the
instrument, we recognize what in ordinary language we designate a plan, or, the
gradual realization of an idea, commencing in a very rudimentary form, and
gradually attaining to higher stages of perfection, until it has culminated in
the human hand. A process of this kind, when we witness it under ordinary
circumstances, we designate a plan. But a plan implies the presence of
intelligence. When, therefore, we see such plans carried out in nature, which
only differ from ordinary ones in the multitude of the adaptations and
correlations which are necessary to enable them to become realities, we may
surely draw the inference that they must have originated in intelligence. But
the hand forms an apt illustration of the other kind of adaptation. I have
already observed that it is admitted on all hands to be a marvellous piece of
mechanism, so constituted as to be capable of executing an almost endless
variety of functions. The unbeliever, however, asks us to believe that this
affords no proof that it has originated in intelligence. But if he were to fall
in with an instrument devoid of life, which was capable of executing only ball
of the functions which are performed by the human hand, he would not only infer
that it had had a contriver, but he would be loud in the praises of his
ingenuity. Why then, I ask, should the contemplation of the one piece of
mechanism afford unquestionable evidence of the presence of an intelligent
contriver, and the contemplation of that of which it is the copy, only far more
elaborate and perfect, afford none? The reason why the opponent of theism
accepts the one inference, and rejects the other, must be left to him to
explain. I will only adduce one further illustration, viz., our faculty of
hearing, because this is effected by three sets of adjustments, each of which
is entirely independent of the others; and each of which consists of a number
of complicated correlations. The first of these adjustments consists of the
vocal organs, which form a musical instrument of a far more complicated
character than has ever been invented by man. Be it observed also that this
musical instrument is so constituted, that it subserves a multitude of purposes
beyond the production of noise. Yet exquisite as this instrument is, it never
would have produced a single sound unless it had been correlated to the
atmospheric air, or the air to it, in such a manner that its waves should
correspond with the different movements of the instrument. These correlations,
in order theft they may produce musical sounds, must be of the most complicated
character; and yet the one set are absolutely independent of the other. Yet
both these sets of marvellous adjustments and correlations would fail to
produce a single sound, except for the existence of another highly complicated
set of correlations and adjustments, independent of both, viz., the human ear,
adapted to receive the impressions of the waves of sound, the auric nerves, and
the brain to perceive them, and the human mind to interpret their meaning. Each
of these is composed of a number of the most complicated adjustments; and
unless the entire series, of which all three sets of adaptations are composed,
had been mutually correlated the one to the other, with the utmost care,
hearing would have been impossible, and the remaining complicated adjustments
would have existed in vain. I have only adduced these two examples for the
purpose of illustrating the nature of the argument. The reader must estimate
its force, remembering only that the universe is admitted on all hands to be
full of similar adjustments, in numbers which surpass the powers of the human
intellect even to conceive. What then must be the conjoint force of the whole?
Let me draw the inference, Reason affirms that the theory that these
adaptations, adjustments, and correlations, with which every part of the
universe abounds, have originated in an intelligence which possesses a power
adequate to their production, is an account of their origin which satisfies the
requirements alike of common sense and a sound philosophy; or to employ the
metaphor used above, these adjustments, adaptations, and correlations proclaim
the fact that the forces of the universe are everywhere loaded with
intelligence. This argument acquires an additional conclusiveness, the amount
of which it is difficult to estimate, from considerations derived from the
mathematical doctrine of chances. I have already observed that these
adjustments and correlations are conditioned on a number of the forces of the
universe concurring in meeting together at the same time and place; and that if
any one of them had failed to do so, the result produced by their correlation
would have either not existed at all, or would have been a different one from
that which would have been produced by the conjoint action of the whole. Now,
it is obvious that if these adaptations, etc., have not been produced by a
superintending intelligence, they can only have been the result of that
fortuitous concurrence of forces which we have above described as constituting
what is popularly designated chance. This being so, the production of those
sets of complicated correlations, which I have above described as necessary for
the production of that infinite variety of sounds which the ear is capable of
distinguishing, by the fortunate meeting together of a number of independent
forces at the same time and place, in accordance with the mathematical doctrine
of chances, could only be expressed by a fraction, which, if its numerator is
unity, its denominator would be some number followed by an array of ciphers,
the length of which I must leave to the reader to conjecture. But this is only
an inconsiderable part of the difficulty which besets the theory which I am
controverting. This process would have to be repeated in the case of every
independent correlation in the universe; and to get at the combined result,
these fractions would have to be multiplied together; and the result would be a
fraction whose numerator is unity, having for its denominator some number
followed by an array of ciphers continued ad infinitum. According, then,
to the mathematical doctrine of chances, it is an improbability, amounting to
an impossibility, that these adaptations and correlations can have been the
result of a fortuitous concurrence of the unintelligent forces of nature. They
must then originate in intelligence. The theory which opponents of theism ask
us to accept, as affording a rational account of the origin of those
adaptations and correlations with which the universe is full, is this. The
forces of the universe have gone on energizing in conformity with laws from
which they cannot deviate during the eternal ages of the past; and in their
course have passed through every possible combination. The unstable ones have
perished, and the stable ones have survived, and by means of this
ever-reiterated process have at length emerged the order and adaptations of that
portion of the universe which is destitute of life, without the intervention of
intelligence. How these forces originated, and became endowed with their
specific qualities, which have rendered them capable of effecting such
marvellous results, we are asked to believe to be a secret into which the
limitations of the human mind render it impossible for us to penetrate, and
which must therefore remain forever unknown. But with respect to the process by
which animated existence has been evolved, its language is less vague. Its
theory is as follows. The original germs of life, the existence of which it is
compelled to postulate, and which, in a manner wholly unaccounted for, became
possessed of a most convenient power of generating their like, with a number of
inconsiderable variations, produced a progeny greatly in excess of their means
of subsistence. Hence originated among them a struggle for life, with the
effect that the weaker living forms have perished, and the stronger, i.e., those
better adapted to their environment, have survived. This struggle has been
continued during an indefinite number of ages. This theory is called the theory
of natural selection, or the survival of the fittest in the struggle for
existence; and modern atheistic unbelief propounds it, aided by another theory,
viz., that of sexual selection, and a third, viz., that of the accumulation of
habits through a long succession of transmissions from remote ancestors, which
have gradually become fixed, as an adequate account of the origin of all the
adaptations and correlations which are presented in the existing forms of
animal and vegetable life. This theory utterly breaks down, as affording even a
specious account of the origin of these adaptations and correlations at several
points. First, it fails to account for the origin of life, or to show that it
is possible to produce living out of non-living matter. Until it can effect
this, it is simply useless for the purposes of atheism. Strange to say,
unbelief is now compelled to live by faith. It is confident that the discovery
will be made hereafter. Secondly, it fails to give any account of the origin of
those qualities, which the original germs of life must have possessed, in order
that a starting point may be found for the course of evolution which it
propounds. Thirdly, it assumes the concurrence of a multitude of fortunate
chances (I use the word ¡§chance¡¨ in the sense above described), so numerous as
to approximate to the infinite, of what common sense and reason refuse to
believe to be possible, and which hopelessly conflicts with the mathematical
doctrine of chances and probabilities. Fourthly, it demands an interval of time
for the carrying out of this vast process of evolution, which although
abstractedly possible, other branches of science refuse to concede to it as
lying within the existing order of things. Fifthly, it utterly fails to bridge
over that profound gulf which separates the moral from the material universe,
the universe of freedom from the universe of necessity. All that it can urge
with respect to the origin of life and of free agency, is that it hopes to be
able to propound a theory at some future time which shall be able to account
for these phenomena. Sixthly, the theory in question, including the Darwinian
theory of the production of the entire mass of organisms that have existed in
the past, and exist in the present, by the sole agency of natural selection,
without the intervention of intelligence, is, in fact, a restatement in a
disguised form of the old theory of the production of all the adaptations and
correlations in the universe, by the concurrence of an infinite number of
fortunate chances--a theory which contradicts the primary intuitions of our
intellectual being. Seventhly, as a fact, the recorded observations by mankind
for the last, say, four thousand years, show no instance of evolution of one
species from another, but display variation, not infinite but limited, and
recurrent to the original form. Eighthly, as a fact, geology (Palaeontology)
shows the same absence of such evolution and of indefinite variation. Ninthly,
all the ascertained facts point only to creation by a plan, or in accordance
with a rule, which permits variability within discoverable limits, and requires
adaptation, and therefore furnishes no evidence of evolution of species. Let me
set before the reader in two sentences the result of the foregoing reasonings.
The atheistic theory of evolution utterly breaks down as affording a rational
account of the origin of adaptations and correlations with which every region
of the universe abounds. Consequently the theistic account of their origin,
which satisfies alike sound philosophy and common sense, is the only adequate
one; or, in other words, they have originated in an intelligence which is possessed
of a power adequate to their production.
IV. THE EVIDENCE
WHICH IS FURNISHED BY CONSCIENCE AND THE MORAL NATURE OF MAN. Two universes
exist beside each other. One, in which the laws of necessity dominate; the
other in which free agency is the essential factor. The first may be designated
the material, and the second the moral universe. These are separated from each
other by a gulf which no theory of evolution can bridge over. When the first
free agent came into existence, a power essentially different from any which
had preceded it was introduced into that universe, where necessary law had
hitherto reigned supreme. The question therefore presents itself, and demands
solution: How did it originate? It could not have produced itself. It therefore
issued from a cause adequate to produce it. That cause must ultimately resolve
itself into the first cause of the universe, that is, God. From this follow the
following conclusions--Man is a free agent; therefore God must be a free agent.
Man¡¦s free agency is limited by conditions; but God is not limited by
conditions. Therefore His free agency is more absolute and perfect than the
free agency of man. A moral universe exists. God is the cause of its existence.
Therefore the essential principles of morality, as affirmed by conscience, and
witnessed by the moral nature of man, must exist in God. Personality exists in
man as an essential portion of his moral nature; therefore, He who framed man, i.e.,
God, must be a person, who is at the same time the Creator, the Upholder,
and the moral Governor of the universe which He has created. Such are the
inferences which we are entitled to draw by the aid of our reason respecting
the existence and the moral character of God. (Preb. Row, M. A.)
Pantheism
We object to this system as follows.
1. Its idea of God is self-contradictory, since it makes Him
infinite, yet consisting only of the finite; absolute, yet existing in
necessary relation to the universe; supreme, yet shut up to a process of
self-evolution and dependent for self-consciousness on man; without
self-determination, yet the cause of all that is.
2. Its assumed unity of substance is not only without proof, but it
directly contradicts our intuitive judgments. These testify that we are not
parts and particles of God, but distinct personal subsistences.
3. It assigns no sufficient cause for that fact of the universe
which is highest in rank, and therefore most needs explanation, namely, the
existence of personal intelligences. A substance which is itself unconscious,
and under the law of necessity, cannot produce beings who are self-conscious
and free.
4. It therefore contradicts the affirmations of our moral and
religious natures by denying man¡¦s freedom and responsibility; by making God to
include in Himself all evil as well as all good; and by precluding all prayer,
worship, and hope of immortality.
5. Our intuitive conviction of the existence of a God of absolute
perfection compels us to conceive of God as possessed of every highest quality
and attribute of men, and therefore, especially, of that which constitutes the
chief dignity of the human spirit, its personality. (A. H. Strong, D. D.)
The end of God in creation
I. LET US FIRST
EXPLAIN WHAT WE MEAN BY THE END OF GOD IN CREATION. It will be seen at once
that an ultimate end, or that for which all other ends in the series exist, and
from which they derive their importance, is in the mind of the agent his chief
end. It is contended by some that the same series of subordinate ends may have
more than one ultimate end, of which one may be chief, and the others inferior
ends. This was the opinion of Edwards. He says: ¡§Two different ends may be both
ultimate ends, and yet not be chief ends. They may be both valued for their own
sake, and both sought in the same work or acts, and yet one valued more highly
and sought more than another. Thus a man may go a journey to obtain two
different benefits or enjoyments, both which may be agreeable to him in
themselves considered, and so both may be what he values on their own account,
and seeks for their own sake; and yet one may be much more agreeable than the
other; and so be what he sets his heart chiefly upon, and seeks most after in
his going a journey. Thus a man may go a journey partly to obtain the
possession and enjoyment of a bride that is very dear to him, and partly to
gratify his curiosity in looking in a telescope, or some new invented and
extraordinary optic glass. Both may be ends that he seeks in his journey, and
the one not properly subordinate, or in order to another. One may not depend on
another, and therefore both may be ultimate ends; but yet the obtaining his
beloved bride may be his chief end, and the benefit of the optic glass his
inferior end. The former may be what he sets his heart most upon, and so be properly
the chief end of his journey.¡¨ Our view differs somewhat from that of Edwards
upon this point. As these different objects are to be obtained by the same
course of action, or by the same series of subordinate ends, we believe it
would be speaking more correctly to represent them as forming one compound
ultimate end, rather than two distinct ultimate ends. Again: The ends or
purposes of intelligent beings are divided into subjective and objective ends.
The subjective end has reference to the feelings and desires of the agent or
being, which are to be gratified by the selection and accomplishment of the
objective end. It consists in the gratification of these feelings and desires.
The objective end is the thing to be done or brought to pass, and to the accomplishment
of which the agent is prompted by these feelings, affections, or desires. It is
not the subjective end of God in creating the universe that we seek. We know
this must have been based in the perfections of His character; it must have
been for the gratification of His infinite benevolence, His boundless love,
that He adopted and spake into being the present system of things. But there
must be some objective end toward which He is impelled by His benevolence and
love, and for the accomplishment of which the present system was caused to
exist. It is this objective end that we are endeavouring to ascertain.
II. WE PROCEED TO
POINT OUT WHAT WE CONSIDER GOD¡¦S END IN CREATION TO HAVE BEEN. And here we
premise that whatever this end was, it was something in the order of time
future; that is, something yet to be obtained or accomplished. It would be
absurd to suppose a being to adopt and carry out a plan to obtain a good, or to
accomplish an end which was already obtained or accomplished. We are now prepared
for the general statement that, according to our view, the end of God in
creation is not to be found in Himself--that God is not His own end. The
differences between Edwards and ourself upon this point may be traced mainly to
a distinction which he has omitted to make, but which we deem of great
importance. We mean the distinction which exists between the display of the
attributes and perfections of God, and the effect produced by that display upon
the mind of the beholder. These attributes and perfections belong to God; their
display is the act of God; but the impression made upon the mind of another, by
this display, forms no part of God; it is not the act of God, but the result of
that act; it is an effect which was not produced, nor does it exist in the mind
of God, but which was produced and exists in the mind of the creature. The
importance of this distinction will be made apparent hereafter. That God could
not have been His own end in creation, we argue from the infinite fulness of
His nature. We can conceive of but one way in which a being can become his own
objective end in anything he does, and that is by supposing that he is
destitute of something of which he feels the needs, and consequently desires
for himself. To illustrate: Take the scholar who pursues with diligence his
studies; he may do this because he delights in knowledge, and his ultimate
objective end may be an increase of knowledge; or he may do it because
knowledge will render him more worthy of esteem. In either case, the ultimate end
is to be found in himself, and in both the idea of defect on the part of the
agent is prominent. Were his knowledge already perfect, there would be no need
that he should study to increase it. Now until some defect is found to exist in
God--until it can be shown that He does not possess, and has not from eternity
possessed, infinite fulness; that there is in His case some personal want
unsupplied, it is impossible to show that God is His own end in creation. But
it may be well to dwell more at large upon this part of the subject.
1. God¡¦s own happiness could not be His ultimate end in creation. It
will be borne in mind, that the ultimate end is something in the future,
something yet to be accomplished. God¡¦s happiness can be made His end in
creation in only two ways--by increasing it, or by continuing it, But this
happiness can never be increased, for it is already perfect in kind, and
infinite in degree. And the only way in which the continuance of this happiness
can be made God¡¦s end in creation is by supposing it necessary order to the
continued gratification of His benevolent feelings. While the feelings of God¡¦s
heart are fully gratified He must be happy; and we admit that His failing to
accomplish any purpose, and thus failing to gratify these feelings, would
disappoint and render Him unhappy. So that the continued gratification of these
feelings, and thus the continuance of His happiness, was undoubtedly an end of
God in creation; but, as we have seen, this was His subjective, and not His
objective end. We perceive, then, that God¡¦s happiness, either in its increase
or continuance, is not the end for which we seek.
2. God¡¦s attributes, natural or moral, could not have been His end
in creation. The only ways in which we can conceive the attributes of God to be
His end in creation, are to increase them, to exercise them, or to display
them. The first could not have been His end, for the increase of attributes
already infinite is impossible. It will be seen that Edwards makes the exercise
of God¡¦s infinite attributes a thing desirable in itself, and one of His ends
in creation. If we understand him, he teaches that God exerted His infinite
power and wisdom in creation for the sake of exerting them; their exercise was
in itself excellent, and one ultimate object or end which Deity had in view in
exerting them, was that they might be exerted. That is, the exercise itself,
and the end of that exercise, are the same thing. To show the absurdity of this
position, we remark--
1. The attributes of God are most wonderfully displayed in the work
of creation. His power and wisdom are everywhere conspicuous. So, likewise, the
moral excellencies of His character are written in sunbeams upon the works of
His hand: and to minds not darkened by sin, these excellencies stand out in
bold relief. Now a display of this character must produce a powerful effect
upon intelligent mind; and upon the supposition that the mind is perfectly
formed and rightly attuned, the effect must be blessed indeed. The result to
which we come, then, is, that the display of the Divine perfections would
produce an effect upon mind, perfectly organized and undisturbed by adverse
influences, which would cause the recipient to admire and love the Lord his God
with all his heart, mind, and strength; and this effect would be limited only
by his capacity.
2. There is another display or exhibition secured by, or consequent
upon, the work of creation, viz., that of the attributes, both natural and
moral, of the creatures themselves.
3. There is still another effect secured by the work of creation,
and the display consequent upon, it, viz., that produced ¡§upon a being by the
display of his own powers, attributes, or qualities. These he becomes
acquainted with by consciousness, and by a careful observation of their
workings in various directions. The impression which these attributes of self
must make upon the mind of self, provided this mind is perfect in its
organization, and undisturbed by adverse influences, will be in exact
proportion to the worth of self in the scale of being. This is self-love as
distinguished from selfishness; which is self-love overleaping its boundaries,
or overflowing its banks. We have arrived, then, at the following result, viz.,
that the effect which the display of character consequent upon the work of
creation is calculated to produce upon perfect mind, is admiration of love
toward, and delight in God, to the full extent of the powers of the creature,
and love to self, and all creature intelligences, measured by their worth in the
scale of being. In other words, it is entire conformity to the moral law, which
consists in loving God with all the soul, mind, and strength, and our neighbour
as ourself. This is the result of the action of perfect mind in the direction
of perfection itself, it is easy to perceive that perfect bliss, happiness, or
delight midst inhere in, or constitute a part of such action--and this, not
merely in the sense of art effect, but that it must be woven into its very
texture, so as to form a part of its web and woof. This effect is denominated
holiness; and as it is produced in the mind of the creature, and not in the
mind of God (who was perfectly and infinitely holy before creation began), we
call it creature holiness, i.e., holiness belonging to the creature; and
the happiness which inheres therein and forms a part of it is, for the same
reason, creature happiness. The production of this effect upon the minds of
intelligent creatures, we believe to have been God¡¦s end in creation--that end
without which the universe would not have existed. This position thrown into
the form of a proposition would run thus: God¡¦s last end in creation was to
secure the greatest possible amount of creature holiness, and of that happiness
which inheres in and forms a part of such holiness. Or thus: The ultimate,
objective end for which God created the universe, was the production of the
greatest possible amount of creature holiness and happiness. We use the term
creature holiness and happiness in opposition to the position of Edwards, that
this holiness and happiness are emanations from God in such a sense, that they
are communicated to the creature from His fulness; so that, in fact, they are
God¡¦s holiness and happiness diffusing themselves among the creatures of His
empire. He holds that communication of holiness and happiness formed a part of
God¡¦s last end, or one of His ultimate ends, in creation. But then, to carry
out his theory, which makes God His own end, he calls this holiness and
happiness an emanation from Deity Himself, like a fountain overflowing its
banks, or sending forth its waters in streams. The idea that creation is an
emanation from God is not strictly true. It is a production of God, and a
production of something out of nothing, not an emanation from Him. We can see
how the benevolence of God could lead Him to purpose from all eternity to
create the universe at a certain time,--in which case, the universe would not
exist until that time arrived. But we cannot see how an original tendency can
exist in God, for something to flow out of Himself, as water streams from a
fountain, unless the flowing out co-exists with the tendency; and if so, then
the universe has co-existed with God, that is, it has existed from eternity.
The phraseology used by Edwards would go to show that the universe is a part of
God; and that the holiness of the creature is simply God¡¦s holiness
communicated to the creature. He says: ¡§The disposition to communicate Himself,
or diffuse His own fulness, which we must conceive of as being originally in
God as a perfection of His nature, was what moved Him to create the world.¡¨. .
.¡¨But the diffusive disposition that excited God to give creatures existence
was rather a communicative disposition in general, or a disposition in the
fulness of the divinity to flow out and diffuse itself.¡¨ If these statements
are correct, then the creation must be a part of the fulness of God. If the act
of creating was the flowing out and the diffusion of the Divinity itself, then
the result must have been a part of that divinity; or, in other words, the
universe must be a part of God. Again, in speaking of the knowledge, holiness,
and joy of the creature, he says: ¡§These things are but the emanations of God¡¦s
own knowledge, holiness, and joy.¡¨ So that the universe is not only a part of
God, but the very attributes of His intelligent creatures, their perfections,
their holiness and happiness, are only communications of the perfections, the
holiness and happiness of God: they are God¡¦s perfections, God¡¦s holiness and
happiness, communicated by Him to the creature. We believe that the universe,
instead of being an emanation from Deity, is the work of His hand; instead of
being the overflowing of His fulness, it is a creation of His omnipotence--a
causing something to exist out of nothing; and the holiness and happiness of
creatures, instead of being the holiness and happiness of God communicated to
them, consists in their conformity to the rule of right, and that delight which
inheres in and is consequent upon such conformity. The production of these, or
the securing them to the greatest possible extent, we hold to be God¡¦s last end
in creation. We repeat, then, that the ultimate objective end of God in
creating the universe was, to secure the greatest possible amount of creature
holiness and happiness. Our reasons for this opinion are as follows:
1. As we have seen, God¡¦s ultimate end must be something desirable
in itself, and not desired merely as a means to an end. The holiness of God is
the most excellent thing in the universe; and next to it, is the holiness of
His creatures. God¡¦s end in creation could not have been to promote the former,
for it was perfect from eternity. It must, therefore, have been to promote the
latter, which is so excellent in itself, and so much to be prized for its
results, that it is entirely worthy to be the ultimate end of Jehovah. But it
may be asked, May not God¡¦s end in creation have been to display His own
holiness, on account of the delight He takes in having that holiness praised,
loved, and adored? No doubt God delights to have the perfections of His
character praised, loved, and adored; but, is this delight selfish, or is it
benevolent? If selfish, then it is sin. If benevolent, then it is a delight in
holiness. God delights to be praised, loved, and adored, because this praise,
love, and adoration, form the principal ingredient in holiness; and as it is
the creature who praises, loves, and adores, so that this effect is produced in
the mind and heart of the creature, we call it creature holiness.
2. We argue that creature holiness is the end of God in creation,
from the fact that for God to promote His own glory, or to promote such a state
of mind in the creature as will lead the creature to glorify Him, is the same
thing as to promote holiness in the creature. The Scriptures teach that God
does what He does for His own name¡¦s sake, or, which is the same thing, for His
glory¡¦s sake; and we are commanded, ¡§whether we eat or drink, or whatever we
do, to do all to the glory of God.¡¨ If, therefore, ¡§God¡¦s glory,¡¨ and ¡§God¡¦s
being glorified,¡¨ as they are set forth in the Scriptures, differ from creature
holiness, then His holiness is not the end of God in creation; but if they can
be shown to be the same thing, then is it His last great end in creating the
universe. God¡¦s glory consists either in that which constitutes His intrinsic
glory, or in that in which He delights and glories, as something which He
desires and seeks to accomplish above everything else; or in that state of mind
in others, which leads them to praise and glorify Him. That God¡¦s intrinsic
glory was not, and could not have been His end in creation, is evident from the
fact that it was and is the same from eternity, before creation existed; it has
never been in any sense changed or altered, nor is it possible that such change
should take place: and it is perfectly evident that that which existed before
an event, and is not in the least changed by the event, could not have been the
end or object of that event. Again: If we mean, by God¡¦s glory, that in which
He delights and glories, as something which He desires and seeks to accomplish
above everything else; then, as we contend, this something is holiness: and as
it cannot be His own holiness (for He cannot seek to accomplish what is already
accomplished), it must be creature holiness. That holiness is what God delights
in above everything else, and desires to promote, is evident from the following
considerations:
1. Those passages which speak of what God does as being done for His
name¡¦s sake, or for His own glory (Isaiah 43:6-7; Isaiah 60:21;2 Samuel 7:23; Psalms 106:8). These texts teach that God
does what He does, to lead His subjects to praise and glorify Him, and to
magnify His great and holy name; in other words, to love Him with all their
soul, mind, and strength: and what is that but creature holiness?
2. Those passages which enjoin it upon the creature to do what he
does to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 6:20; 1 Corinthians 10:31).
3. Those passages which speak of the glory of God as the result of
certain acts of the creature (Philippians 1:11; John 15:8). But how is itthat, ¡§being
filled with the fruits of righteousness,¡¨ and ¡§bearing much fruit,¡¨ glorifies
God? It does this in two ways: These fruits are holiness embodied in the life,
and they present the transcendent excellence of God¡¦s ultimate end in creation.
They produce their effect upon other minds, and lead them to praise and glorify
God, and thus promote holiness in them. To love and adore God with all the
heart, is to glorify God; and to love and adore God with all the heart, is
holiness in exercise: so that, in this sense, God¡¦s glory and the exercise of
holy affections are the same thing. And to lead others to love and adore God
with all the heart, is to lead them to glorify God; and to lead others to love
and adore God with all the heart, is to lead them to exercise holy affections:
so that to promote the glory of God in others, and to promote holiness in them,
is the same thing. The end of God in creation, then, as we think we have shown,
is not in Himself, but consists in the promotion of creature holiness, and that
happiness which may appropriately be called the happiness of holiness. (W.
C. Wisner.)
The creative laws and the Scripture revelation
It is proposed to examine the general teaching of the Scriptures
in the light of six laws, according to which, by the common consensus of
competent authorities, the Creator worked in the production of this present
terrestrial order.
1. The first of these laws is the law of progress. It may be taken
as a fact, settled by overwhelming scientific evidence, and no less clearly
affirmed in Genesis, that the world was not created all at once, and that there
was a certain order in which its various parts appeared. It was, without an
exception, an order under a law of progress; first, that which was lower,
afterward that which was higher. The illustrations are so familiar that they
scarcely need to be mentioned. Is this law of progress still in force; or is
the progress ended, and is man, as we know him, the last and highest form of
life that earth shall see? The impossibility of further progress cannot
therefore be argued on the ground of inconceivability. It can only be
established if it be proved beyond controversy that the end of creation has
been reached in man. Is there sufficient reason to believe this? Reason itself
teaches that if there be a personal God, the Creator of all, then the
self-manifestation of God must be the highest end of the earthly creation.
When, therefore, the Holy Scripture tells us of the appearance on earth of a
God-man, the perfect ¡§image of the invisible God,¡¨ and of a new order of
manhood begotten by a new birth into union with this second man, and renewed
after the image of the Creator, to be manifested hereafter in a corresponding
embodiment and in a changed environment, through a resurrection from the dead,
all this is so far from being contrary to the order established in creation,
that it is in full accord therewith, and only furnishes a new illustration of
that law of progress according to which God worked from the beginning.
2. A second law which has been discovered to have been
characteristic of the creative process, is the law of progress by ages. That
this was the law of Divine procedure is clear both from the book of revelation
and of nature. There were periods of creative activity. The work had its
evenings and its mornings, repeatedly recurring. The line of progress was not a
uniform gradient; not an inclined plane, but a stairway, in which the steps
were aeons. In each instance a ¡§new idea in the system of progress¡¨ was
introduced, and that fact constituted, in part at least, the new age. But it
may be further remarked, that each new age was marked, not merely by the
presence, but by the dominance, of a higher type of life than the one
preceding. Now we have seen that, according to Scripture, the law of progress
is still in force; after man as he now is, shall appear manifested in the earth
a humanity of a higher type than the present animal man, namely, the ¡§spiritual
man,¡¨ as Paul calls him. Does the Scripture also recognize this plan of
progress by ages as still the plan of God? The contrast between the present age
and that which is to come, is indeed one of the fundamental things in the
inspired representation of the divinely established order. And we can now see
how, in this mode of representation, the Scriptures speak with scientific
precision, and harmonize completely with the best certified conceptions of
nineteenth century science. Not only, according to their teaching, is there to
be still further progress, progress manifested in the introduction of a new and
higher type of manhood, even that which is ¡§from heaven,¡¨ but the introduction
of that new manhood of the resurrection to dominance in the creation is
uniformly represented as marking the beginning of a new age. And just herein,
according to the Scripture, lies the contrast between the age which now is and
that which is to come; that in the age which is now, the dominant type of life
is that of the natural, or ¡§animal,¡¨ man; in that which is to come, the
dominant type of life shall be ¡§spiritual¡¨ or resurrection manhood, manifested
in men described by our Lord as those ¡§who cannot die any more, but are equal
unto the angels.¡¨
3. Another law of the Divine working in the bygone ages of the
earth¡¦s history, we may call the law of anticipative or prophetic forms. This
law has been formulated by Professor Agassiz in the following words, which have
been endorsed by the most recent authorities as correctly representing the
facts: ¡§Earlier organic forms often appear to foreshadow and predict others
that are to succeed them in time, as the winged and marine reptiles of the
Mesozoic age foreshadow the birds and cetaceans (that were to succeed them in
the next age). There were reptiles before the Reptilian age; mammals before the
Mammalian age. These appear now like a prophecy in that earlier time of an
order of things not possible with the earlier combinations then prevailing in
the animal kingdom.¡¨ Such, then, has been the law in all the past ages. Is it
still in force, or is its operation ended? What a momentous question! How full
of both scientific and religious interest! For even on scientific grounds, as
has been shown, we are led to anticipate an age to come which shall be marked
by the dominance of a type of life higher than the present. And, as we have
seen, the suggestion of science is in this case confirmed by Scripture, which
describes the life and characteristics of that ¡§age to come,¡¨ as science could
not. Such descriptions are not very minute, but so far as they go they are very
definite and clear. Perhaps the most full and clear single statement is that found
in the words of Christ to the Sadducees, to whom He spoke of an age to follow
the present, to be inherited by men in resurrection; a type of men who ¡§neither
marry nor are given in marriage. Neither can they die any more: for they are
equal unto the angels; and are sons of God, being sons of the resurrection.¡¨ (Luke 20:35-36). Men incapable of
subjection to death, sons of God, perfectly holy--such is the race which shall
come to headship in creation in the future age. Herein again, then, the record
of Scripture is consistent at once with the system of law as revealed in the
past, and with itself, in that, having predicted an age to come, to be
inherited by the higher order of resurrection manhood, it sets forth also, as
historic fact, the appearance of anticipative forms in the age which now is.
Not to speak of the cases of Enoch and Elijah, we have an Illustrious instance
of a prophetic type in the person of Jesus of Nazareth. In Him was manifested a
type of life transcending beyond measure embodied life as we know it here. It
appeared in One who claimed to be the Son of God, and who manifested powers, in
proof of this claim, such as well befitted it--powers which later, by one of His
disciples, were suggestively called ¡§powers of the age to come,¡¨ and who
finally became the firstborn from the dead, being the firstborn son of the
resurrection.
4. Another law to be observed in the Divine working in the early
history of the earth, is the law of creative interpositions. We must, on
scientific grounds, affirm creative intervention at least in the origination of
matter, and of life, and of free moral agents. The only alternative is absolute
agnosticism on this subject. So much, then, as regards the past. Creative
interposition appears as included in the system of law. How is it as regards
the future? Are we now done with these manifestations of creative power, or
shall they, according to the Scripture, be witnessed again in the future? For
we are taught, as we have seen, that the present age, marked by the presence
and dominance of the animal man, shall end; and that another age shall then
follow, marked by the introduction of a new physical order, ¡§a new heavens and
a new earth,¡¨--an order of things to be inherited by an order of men called by
our Lord ¡§children of God and sons of the resurrection,¡¨ sexless, sinless, and
incapable of dying. Has the man of the present age power to raise himself into
this exalted order of life? No one will pretend this. In particular, the
natural, or psychical, animal man of the present age cannot by any
self-development or self-culture raise himself into the order of the spiritual
manhood of the coming age. For regeneration and for resurrection alike he is powerless.
Hence Holy Scripture tells us with utmost plainness that what has been in time
past, is now and shall be again. It tells us that even in this present age the
creative power of God is secretly working, in the ¡§new birth¡¨ of those who are
chosen to become the sons of God and heirs of the age to come, and therefore
styles the regenerated man ¡§a new creature.¡¨ As yet, however, it is but the
faint dawn of the creative morning. When the day breaks, the same Scriptures
teach us, shall be seen a new and magnificent display of the creative might of
God, introducing ¡§a new heavens and a new earth,¡¨ and bringing in also the sons
of the resurrection with their spiritual bodies to inherit the glory. For as
the new order of the new age shall itself be introduced by creative power, so
shall the new manhood which is destined to inherit that order. For resurrection
is by no possibility the outcome of a natural process; it will be the direct
result of an act of the almighty power of God.
5. Reference may be made to another law of the Divine administration
in the earlier terrestrial history. It may be called the law of exterminations.
The rocks bear testimony to the fact that from time to time during the long
creative ages, at the close of one great period after another, there occurred
exterminations, more or less extensive, of various orders of life. Professor
Dana, for instance, tells us, ¡§At the close of each period of the Palaeozoic
ages, there was an extermination of a large number of living species; and, as
each epoch terminated . . . one, in most cases, less general.¡¨ In particular,
he says, again, that at the close of the Cretaceous age there was an
extermination ¡§remarkable for its universality and thoroughness¡¨; ¡§the vast
majority of the species, and nearly all the characteristic genera disappeared.¡¨
The same thing occurred again at the close of the Tertiary, and again in the
Quaternary. The causes of these various exterminations were different in
different instances. Often they were due to the elevation or submergence of
extensive areas of the earth¡¦s surface; sometimes to the more sudden and rapid
action of earthquakes; sometimes, within narrow limits, they were caused by
fiery eruptions from the interior of the earth. Sometimes, again, they were due
to changes of climate more or less extensive, through the operation of causes
which need not be here detailed. As a matter of fact, it appears that the
inbringing of a higher order of life and organization commonly involved the
extermination of various genera and species unsuited to the new environment.
This was demonstrably a part of the plan of God in the development of His
creative thoughts. Even lesser divisions of the great creative aeons were
sometimes marked in like manner. Up to the present human period, therefore,
there has been in force a law of exterminations, operating under the conditions
specified. But yet another age, according to Scripture, is to succeed the
present. Is there reason to anticipate that when the point shall be reached of
transition from the present to the coming age, the law of exterminations will
again take effect? Does Scripture give any hint in answer to this question, and
is it here again in harmony with scientific discovery as regards the laws of
the past? The reader will have anticipated the answer which must be given. For
it is the repeated declaration of the New Testament Scriptures that the present
age shall end, as earlier ages have sometimes ended, with catastrophic changes;
this next time, with a catastrophe, not of water, but of fire, giving a new and
very terrible application of the ancient law of exterminations. For we are told
that a day is coming when ¡§the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth
also and the works that are therein shall be burned up.¡¨ The day for which the
present heavens and earth are ¡§reserved into fire,¡¨ shall also be a ¡§day of the
perdition of ungodly men.¡¨ 2 Peter 3:7).
6. Yet one other law of the creative working may be discerned as we
study the record of the rocks. We may well call it the law of preparation. It
were thinkable, since God is almighty, that each age should have been
introduced as something absolutely new, having no connection with the ages that
had preceded it; that He should have prepared the earth for the new orders of
life which were to inhabit it, by a direct act of creative power. But, as a
matter of fact, God did not do in this way. On the contrary, He so constituted
the successive ages in the earth¡¦s history that each was a preparation for that
which was to come afterward. Illustrations are as numerous as the ages and
periods of geologic time. Each age had its roots, so to speak, in the age or
ages that had preceded it. Indeed, the whole Scripture history is a series of
illustrations of this law. Just as in the geologic ages, here were subordinate
periods, less sharply distinct indeed, into which the greater ages were
subdivided, so the Scriptures divide the whole present age of the natural man
into what, in theological and biblical language, we call successive
¡§dispensations.¡¨ In the case of each of these we may see this law of
preparation exemplified. Each dispensation was in order to another which was to
follow. The Adamic age prepared for the Noachian; the Noachian, for the Mosaic;
the Mosaic--and indeed all of these again--for the Christian. So also,
according to the same revelation, shall it prove to be as regards the whole
great age of the natural man. In a manner still more momentous and comprehensive,
this age is set forth as a preparation for the age which is to come, the
resurrection age. This may be true even in a physical sense. For in the new
age, according to Isaiah, Peter, and John, there is to be a new earth, which
shall appear out of the fires which shall yet consume the present world; and
for this and the physical changes which shall thus be brought about, we know
not what forces may not even now silently be working beneath our very feet.
They teach this as regards regeneration and sanctification. These are
preparatory in their nature. It is thus that the new man is ¡§made in secret,
and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth.¡¨ Even death, whether it
be of the saint or of the sinner, has its part in the preparatory plan. The application
of this is evident. Whence such a harmony in the one case, and in such
unexpected directions, for which we search in the authoritative books of other
religions in vain? Whence had these men who wrote the Scriptures this their
wisdom? Assume what they claim for themselves, a special inspiration from the
Former of the universe Himself, and then the harmony with the original system
of natural law which pervades the representations of the past, present, and
future, is what we should expect. Deny this, and how shall the fact be
explained? Further, it is evident that the facts to which our attention has
been directed, reverse the argument which one often hears from unbelievers
against the probability of the truth of Scripture history and prophecy, derived
from the observed uniformity of the system of natural law. Instead of saying
that the observed invariability of the system of natural law makes the
Scripture teachings with regard to the incarnation, the resurrection, the new
heavens and the new earth, and the judgment by which they shall be introduced,
to be intrinsically improbable, we must say the opposite! These thoughts also
have a bearing on the theodicy. Much in the present age is dark with painful
mystery. If there be a God infinite in holiness, goodness, and power, then, it
has been asked in all ages, Why such a miserable, imperfect world? Why the
earthquake, the pestilence, and the famine, with the destruction and agony they
bring? Why sorrow, and sin, and death? Why the disappointed hopes, the darkened
homes, empires wrecked, races degenerating, and disappearing from sight at last
in a morass of moral corruptions? These questions burden the holy, while the
scoffer answers in his desperation, ¡§There is no God such as you dream!¡¨ If
this were the last age of earth, it is hard to see how such questions could be
answered. But if we recall to mind the ancient law of progress, and progress by
ages, and that other law of preparation, we may be able to see--not indeed the
answer to our questionings, but so much as shall enable us to hold fast,
without wavering, our faith in the God of nature, of history, and of
revelation. (S. Kellogg, D. D.)
Creation
I. DEFINITION OF
CREATION. By creation we mean that free act of the triune God by which in the
beginning for His own glory He made, without the use of pre-existing materials,
the whole visible and invisible universe. In explanation we notice--
1. Creation is not ¡§production out of nothing,¡¨ as if ¡§nothing¡¨ were
a substance out of which ¡§something¡¨ could be formed.
2. Creation is not a fashioning of preexisting materials, nor an
emanation from the substance of Deity, but is a making of that to exist which
once did not exist, either in form or substance.
3. Creation is not an instinctive or necessary process of the Divine
nature, but is the free act of a rational will, put forth for a definite and
sufficient end. Creation is different in kind from that eternal process of the
Divine nature in virtue of which we speak of generation and procession.
Begetting is eternal, out of time; creation is in time, or with time.
4. Creation is the act of the triune God, in the sense that all the
persons of the Trinity, themselves uncreated, have a part in it--the Father as
the originating, the Son as the mediating, the Spirit as the realizing cause.
II. PROOF OF THE
DOCTRINE OF CREATION. Creation is a truth of which mere science or reason
cannot fully assure us. Physical science can observe and record changes, but it
knows nothing of origins. Reason cannot absolutely disprove the eternity of
matter. For proof of the doctrine of Creation, therefore, we rely wholly upon
Scripture. Scripture supplements science, and renders its explanation of the
universe complete,
III. THEORIES WHICH
OPPOSE CREATION.
1. Dualism. Of dualism there are two forms.
(a) The maxim ex nihilo nihil fit, upon which it rests, is
true only in so far as it asserts that no event takes place without a cause. It
is false, if it mean that nothing can ever be made except out of material
previously existing. The maxim is therefore applicable only to the realm of
second causes, and does not bar the creative power of the great first Cause.
The doctrine of creation does not dispense with a cause; on the other hand, it
assigns to the universe a sufficient cause in God. Martensen, ¡§Dogmatics,¡¨
116--¡§The nothing out of which God creates the world, is the eternal
possibilities of His will, which are the sources of all the actualities of the
world.¡¨
(b) Although creation without the use of pre-existing material is
inconceivable, in the sense of being unpicturable to the imagination, yet the
eternity of matter is equally inconceivable. For creation without pre-existing
material, moreover, we find remote analogies in our own creation of ideas and
volitions, a fact as inexplicable as God¡¦s bringing of new substances into
being. Mivart, ¡§Lessons from Nature,¡¨ 371,372--¡§We have to a certain extent an
aid to the thought of absolute creation in our own free volition, which, as
absolutely originating and determining, may be taken as the type to us of the
creative act.¡¨ We speak of ¡§the creative faculty¡¨ of the artist or poet. We
cannot give reality to the products of our imaginations, as God can to his. But
if thought were only substance, the analogy would be complete. Shedd, ¡§Dogm. Theol.,¡¨
1.467--¡§Our thoughts and volitions are created ex nihilo, in the sense
that one thought is not made out of another thought, nor one volition out of
another volition.¡¨
(c) It is unphilosophical to postulate two eternal substances, when
one self-existent Cause of all things will account for the facts.
(d) It contradicts our fundamental notion of God as absolute
sovereign to suppose the existence of any other substance to be independent of
His will.
(e) This second substance with which God must of necessity work,
since it is, according to the theory, inherently evil and the source of evil,
not only limits God¡¦s power, but destroys His blessedness.
(f) This theory does not answer its purpose of accounting for moral
evil, unless it be also assumed that spirit is material--in which case dualism
gives place to materialism. The other form of dualism is:
(a) by all the arguments for the unity, omnipotence, sovereignty, and
blessedness of God;
(b) by the Scripture representations of the prince of evil as the
creature of God and as subject to God¡¦s control.
2. Emanation. This theory holds that the universe is of the same
substance with God, and is the product of successive evolutions from His being.
This was the view of the Syrian Gnostics. Their system was an attempt to
interpret Christianity in the forms of Oriental theosophy. A similar doctrine
was taught, in the last century, by Swedenborg. We object to it upon the
following grounds:
3. Creation from eternity. This theory regards creation as an act of
God in eternity past. It was propounded by Origen, and has been held in recent
times by Martensen. The necessity of supposing such creation from eternity has
been argued upon the grounds--
4. Spontaneous generation. This theory holds that creation is but the
name for a natural process still going on--matter itself having in it the
power, under proper conditions, of taking on new functions, and of developing
into organic forms. This view is held by Owen and Bastian. We object that
IV. GOD¡¦S END IN
CREATION. In determining this end, we turn first to--
1. The testimony of Scripture. This may be summed up in four
statements. God finds His end
All these statements may be combined in the following, namely,
that God¡¦s supreme end in creation is nothing outside of Himself, but is His
own glory--in the revelation, in and through creatures, of the infinite
perfection ofHis own being. Since holiness is the fundamental attribute in God,
to make Himself, His own pleasure, His own glory, His own manifestation, to be
His end in creation, is to find His chief end in His own holiness, its
maintenance, expression, and communication. To make this His chief end,
however, is not to exclude certain subordinate ends, such as the revelation of
His wisdom, power, and love, and the consequent happiness of innumerable
creatures to whom this revelation is made.
2. The testimony of reason. That His own glory, in the sense just
mentioned, is God¡¦s supreme end in creation, is evident from the following
considerations:
V. RELATION OF
THE DOCTRINE OF CREATION TO OTHER DOCTRINES.
1. To the holiness and benevolence of God. This is not a perfect
world. It was not perfect even when originally constituted. Its imperfection is
due to sin. God made it with reference to the Fall--the stage was arranged for
the great drama of sin and redemption which was to be enacted thereon. We
accept Bushnell¡¦s idea of ¡§anticipative consequences,¡¨ and would illustrate it
by the building of a hospital room while yet no member of the family is sick,
and by the salvation of the patriarchs through a Christ yet to come. If the
earliest vertebrates of geological history were types of man and preparations
for his coming, then pain and death among those same vertebrates may equally
have been a type of man¡¦s sin and its results of misery. If sin bad not been an
incident, foreseen and provided for, the world might have been a Paradise. As a
matter of fact, it will become a paradise only at the completion of the
redemptive work of Christ.
2. To the wisdom and free-will of God.
3. To providence and redemption. (A. H. Strong, D. D.)
The creation as a revelation of God
1. His omnipotence.
2. His wisdom.
3. His goodness.
4. His love. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The world according to its various forms
1. As creation.
2. As nature.
3. As cosmos.
4. As aeon. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The work of God and the work of man
What is different, and what is common to both.
1. The order.
2. The constancy.
3. The gradual progression.
4. The aim. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The creation and revelation of life from God
1. The foundations of life in
the elementary world.
2. The symbolical phenomena of life in the animal world.
3. The reality and truth of life in the human world. (J. P.Lange,
D. D.)
The birth of the world also the birth of time
1. The fact that the world
and time are inseparable.
2. The application.
The outline of creation
heaven and earth:--
1. Heaven and earth in union.
2. Earth for heaven.
3. Heaven for earth. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
Creation
How to begin to write the Bible must have been a question of great
difficulty. The beginning which is given here commends itself as peculiarly
sublime. Regard it as you please, as literal, historical, prabolical, it is
unquestionably marked by adequate energy and magnificence of style. He finds that
he must say something about the house before he says anything about the tenant,
but he feels that that something must be the least possible.
I. THIS ACCOUNT
OF CREATION IS DEEPLY RELIGIOUS, and from this fact I infer that the whole book
of which it is the opening chapter is intended to be a religious and not a
scientific revelation.
II. THIS ACCOUNT
OF CREATION EVIDENTLY ADMITS OF MUCH ELUCIDATION AND EXPANSION. Moses does not
say, ¡§I have told you everything, and if any man shall ever arise to make a
note or comment upon my words, he is to be regarded as a liar and a thief.¡¨ He
gives rather a rough outline which is to be filled up as life advances. He says
in effect ¡§This is the text, now let the commentators come with their notes.¡¨
This first chapter of Genesis is like an acorn, for out of it have come great
forests of literature; it must have some pith in it, and sap, and force, for
verily its fertility is nothing less than a miracle.
III. This account
of creation, though leaving so much to be elucidated, is in harmony with fact
in a sufficient degree to GIVE US CONFIDENCE IN THE THINGS WHICH REMAIN TO BE
ILLUSTRATED.
IV. THERE IS A
SPECIAL GRANDEUR IN THE ACCOUNT WHICH IS HERE GIVEN OF THE ORIGIN OF MAN. ¡§Let
Us make man¡¨--¡§make,¡¨ as if little by little, a long process, in the course of
which man becomes a party to his own malting! Nor is this suggestion so wide of
the mark as might at first appear. Is man not even now in process of being
¡§made¡¨? Must not all the members of the ¡§Us¡¨ work upon him in order to complete
him and give him the last touch of imperishable beauty? The Father has shaped
him, the Son has redeemed him, the Spirit is now regenerating and sanctifying
him, manifold ministries are now working upon him, to the end that he may ¡§come
to a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ.¡¨ (J.
Parker, D. D.)
God the Maker of heaven and earth
I. As regards the
time of creation we are told nothing. There is no note of date or time until
after the creation of Adam. Six successive periods of creation are spoken of,
with no indication as to the length of each.
II. There is no
contradiction, I think, between any result as to the world¡¦s age at which
science may arrive, and the record with which the Book of Genesis opens. Are
there not clear indications that the creation of the world was not the result
of the omnipotent act of a moment, but of the Divine creative energy working
(as we ever still see it working) through gradual processes, through successive
gradations?
III. As long as
science keeps to her own great sphere of discovering and codifying facts, we
have only to thank her for her labours. I need scarcely say, however, that a
certain school of scientific men are not content with this. They leave the
boundaries of science, and enter the domain of theology. They say, because we
find these successive stages of progress in creation--this development of one
period from another--we will regard matter as having in itself all power and
potency of life. They will not mention God at all, or if they do it is merely
as another name for law. In the law which they discover from its operations--in
the potency which they find in matter itself, they see sufficient to account
for all creation; and we can dispense with that myth which we call ¡§God the
Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth.¡¨ It is here they impugn Genesis. It
was not ¡§God¡¨ who created these things; they were evolved from eternal matter,
in accordance with irresistible law. The Bible is primarily a religious book. This
chapter is not meant to tell us all the varied processes through which God
carried on His great creative work. The lesson Moses had to tell the people he
ruled when he brought them out of a land where material force was everything;
where men worshipped the physical universe--the fruits of the field, and the
moon and stars of heaven--was, that there was a God beyond all these; that
these were only the works of His creative power. Without Him they could not be.
It was not a scientific view of the material universe, but a religious view,
that Moses wished to give these people. He sought to impress on them that,
though these things passed through various add successive stages, God was
there. God did it. (T. T. Shore, M. A.)
The creation
We must judge the book by the times.
I. The first
principle to be inferred is that of THE UNITY OF GOD. One Divine Being is
represented as the sole Cause of the universe. Now this is the only foundation
of a true religion for humanity.
II. The next
principle in this chapter is that ALL NOBLE WORK IS GRADUAL. God spent six days
at His work, and then said it was very good. In proportion to the nobility of
anything, is it long in reaching its perfection. The greatest ancient nation
took the longest time to develope its iron power; the securest political
freedom in a nation did not advance by bounds, or by violent revolutions, but
in England ¡§broadened slowly down from precedent to precedent.¡¨ The greatest
modern society--the Church of Christ--grew as Christ prophesied, from a beginning
as small as a grain of mustard seed into a noble tree, and grows now more
slowly than other society has ever grown--so slowly, that persons who are not
far-seeing say that it has failed. The same law is true of every individual
Christian life. Faith, to be strong, must be of gradual growth. Love, to be
unconquerable, must be the produce not of quick-leaping excitement, but of
patience having her perfect work. Spiritual character must be moulded into the
likeness of Christ by long years of battle and of trial, and we are assured
that eternity is not too long to perfect it.
III. Connected with
this universal principle is another--that THIS GRADUAL GROWTH OF NOBLE THINGS,
CONSIDERED IN ITS GENERAL APPLICATION TO THE UNIVERSE, IS FROM THE LOWER TO THE
HIGHER--is, in fact, a progress, not a retrogression. We are told in this
chapter that first arose the inorganic elements, and then life--first the life
of the plant, then of the animal, and then of man, ¡§the top and crown of
things.¡¨ It is so also in national life--first family life, then pastoral, then
agricultural, then the ordered life of a polity, the highest. It is the same
with religion. First, natural religion, then the dispensation of the law, then
the more spiritual dispensation of the prophets, then the culmination of the
external revelation through man in Christ, afterwards the higher inward
dispensation of the universal Spirit, to be succeeded by a higher still--the
immediate presence of God in all. So also with our own spiritual life. First,
conviction of need, then the rapture of felt forgiveness, then God¡¦s testing of
the soul, through which moral strength and faith grow firm; and as these grow
deeper, love, the higher grace, increasing; and as love increases, noble work
and nobler patience making life great and pure, till holiness emerges, and we
are at one with God; and then, finally, the Christian calm--serene old age,
with its clear heaven and sunset light, to prophesy a new and swift approaching
dawn for the emancipated spirit.
IV. The next truth
to be inferred from this chapter is that THE UNIVERSE WAS PREPARED FOR THE GOOD
AND ENJOYMENT OF MAN. I cannot say that this is universal, for the stars exist
for themselves, and the sun for other planets than ours; and it is a poor thing
to say that the life of animals and plants is not for their own enjoyment as
well as ours! but so far as they regard us, it is an universal truth, and the
Bible was written for our learning. Therefore, in this chapter, the sun and
stars are spoken of only in their relation to us, and man is set as master over
all creation. It is on the basis of this truth that man has always
unconsciously acted, and made progress in civilization.
V. The next
principle is THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF REST AND WORK. The Sabbath is the outward
expression of God¡¦s recognition of this as a truth for man. It was commanded
because it was necessary. ¡§The Sabbath was made for man,¡¨ said Christ. And the
same principle ought to be extended over our whole existence.
VI. Lastly, there
is one specially spiritual principle which glorifies this chapter, and the
import of which is universal, ¡§GOD MADE MAN IN HIS OWN IMAGE.¡¨ It is the
divinest revelation in the Old Testament. In it is contained the reason of all
that has ever been great in human nature or in human history. In it are
contained all the sorrows of the race as it looks back to its innocence, and
all the hope of the race as it aspires from the depths of its fall to the
height of the imperial palace whence it came. In it is contained all the joy of
the race as it sees in Christ this great first principle revealed again. In it
are contained all the history of the human heart, all the history of the human
mind, all the history of the human conscience, all the history of the human
spirit. It is the foundation stone of all written and unwritten poetry, of all
metaphysics, of all ethics, of all religion. (Stopford A. Brooke, M. A.)
Creation¡¦s birth
1. What a strange opening to
a book! Without observation, parade, flourish.
2. Strange that there is no argument on the being of God. The
Architect is simply named in the description of the building. A portrait in oil
suggests a painter.
3. There is a gradual unveiling of God as you proceed with the book.
God reveals Himself to us by slow processes.
I. What was
BEFORE the beginning?
1. God in underived and perfect existence.
2. God dwelling in the silence and grandeur of His own eternity.
II. What was IN
the beginning?
1. When was the beginning? Date not fixed here. We only know the
fact, that there was a beginning.
2. What occurred in the beginning? The material universe began to
be.
III. What FOLLOWED
the beginning?
1. Law.
2. Life.
3. History.
4. Redemption.
Remarks:
1. From a beginning we know not what may come.
2. The beginning contains what follows. (J. S. Withington.)
God first
I. THE DEVOUT
RECOGNITION OF GOD SHOULD PRECEDE ALL PHILOSOPHY. The God whom we worship is
not a metaphysical idea; a form of thought; a philosophical abstraction; but a
living, personal, eternal Being, apart from and prior to all human thought. He
is not a creation of the intellect, but the intellect¡¦s Creator. We must begin
with Him. Is not this one of the child¡¦s first thoughts, and one which life¡¦s
long experience but deepens and confirms--that it was God who created all
things? Does not the bare statement carry with it its own conviction? What need
is there of proof? Who argues that there is a solid earth on which he stands; a
sun shining in midday sky? Who constructs arguments to prove his own existence?
And does not God stand at the beginning of all thought and all argument? And is
not the denial of Him a sheer and wilful absurdity which no attempt at proof
can make even plausible?
II. THE DEVOUT
RECOGNITION OF GOD SHOULD PRECEDE ALL SCIENCE. The fact of His existence lies
at the foundation of all physical science, and must be admitted as its first
and most essential fact. For what is science in general, or a science in
particular, but the knowledge of facts--their qualities, relations, and
causes--arranged and classified? But if science begins by refusing to admit, or
by failing to perceive, the First Fact, and the Great Cause of all things? Does
nothing exist but what the knife of the anatomist, or the tests of the chemist
can detect? Matter and force do exist, or matter under some plastic power
passing through innumerable changes. But what is it? And is this all? Are there
no marks of intelligence?--purpose?--will? Is there no distinction of
beauty?--of right and wrong? And what are these but marks of the ever-present
God? Atheism explains nothing, and Pantheism nothing. No! Science cannot
discover God. It is in the light of God¡¦s presence that science is best
revealed. Science and philosophy alike presuppose HIM.
III. THE DEVOUT
RECOGNITION OF GOD PRECEDES ALL MORALITY AND RELIGION. It lies at the basis of
any sound ethical theory, and any true religious system of doctrine and
practice. Religion, whether natural or revealed, is based on this fact. It is
no more the part of religion than it is of philosophy and science to discover
or to demonstrate the existence of God, but to worship Him. (F. J. Falding,
D. D.)
The creation
I. THERE WAS A
BEGINNING, AND THIS WAS THE ACT OF GOD.
II. THE DISORDER
OF PRIMAL CREATION IS REDUCED TO ORDER BY THE POWER AND INTELLIGENCE OF THE
DIVINE WILL. The life of God is imparted to the chaotic world.
III. THIS PROGRESS
OF CREATION PASSES FROM ORDER, THROUGH ORGANIZATION, INTO LIFE, UNTIL IT
CULMINATES IN MAN. Plants and animals are ¡§after their kind.¡¨ Not so with man.
He is ¡§after the likeness¡¨ of God. Lessons:
1. The adaptation of this world to be man¡¦s place of abode while God
tries him by the duty He has placed upon him to perform.
2. All things are subject to man¡¦s use and government.
3. The human race is of one blood, derived from one pair.
4. God loves order. (L. D. Bevan, LL. B.)
Creation
This simple sentence--
I. DENIES
ATHEISM. It assumes the being of God.
II. DENIES
POLYTHEISM. Confesses the one eternal Creator.
III. DENIES
MATERIALISM. Asserts the creation of matter.
IV. DENIES
PANTHEISM. Assumes the existence of God before all things, and apart from them.
V. DENIES
FATALISM. Involves the freedom of the Eternal Being. (James G. Murphy, LL.
D.)
Moses and Darwin
Though the Hebrew prophet was not a teacher of science, he has in
this chapter given us the alphabet of religious science. The great principles
of things were disclosed to him, and in these verses he has given us a rapid
and suggestive sketch of the great outlines of God¡¦s creative work. His
instructions were not incorrect, but incomplete, in order to meet the pupil¡¦s
capacity.
I. LOOK AT THE
HARMONY BETWEEN MOSES AND DARWIN.
1. According to Moses, creation has its origin in God. Darwin has
gone down into the bowels of the earth, he has traced this globe to a nebulous
light, and pursued the molecules to their furthest point. But he has confessed
that beyond there is a mystery which baffles all skill, and this mystery he
calls God. According to him the material universe has a spiritual origin, and
before and after each creation he would write the word ¡§God.¡¨
2. According to Moses, God¡¦s method of creation was by slow
development. Evolution is the great faith of the scientific world today. It
directs us to trace everywhere the processes of unfolding growth. And according
to Darwin these processes are the methods of creative wisdom.
II. THE
GROUNDLESSNESS OF ALL FEARS FROM THE TEACHING OF TRUE SCIENCE.
1. No honest criticism can destroy God¡¦s truth.
2. Evolution does not banish God or design from nature.
III. LESSONS FROM
THE LIFE OF DARWIN.
1. Patience and perseverance in study. He accumulated facts, but he
took time to reflect upon them before he formed them into systems. All great
work is slow work.
2. Darwin loved nature, and therefore could interpret her.
3. Darwin lived a simple, true, and loving life. (D. B. James.)
The creation
I. THE ORIGIN OF
THE UNIVERSE.
1. The universe not self-existent, self-evolved, or eternal, but
¡§created.¡¨
2. Brought into existence by the exercise of Divine power. ¡§God
created.¡¨
3. Stages in process of formation implied.
II. THE ORIGIN OF
THE PRESENT ORDER OF OUR PLANET.
1. The chaotic condition of the planet described.
2. The Divine Author of the present order.
3. The first recorded fiat.
III. THE SUMMARY OF
THE CREATIVE WEEK (Genesis 2:4-8). Lessons:
1. Learn the comprehensiveness of the opening sentence of the
Bible.
2. Learn to appreciate this clear, refreshing, and authoritative
declaration that the origin of the universe and of man is a personal, all-wise,
almighty, and loving God.
3. Learn the lofty dignity of our primal spiritual nature in its
identification with the ineffable nature of God.
4. Learn that to worship, love, and obey God, is our reasonable
service. (D. C. Hughes, M. A.)
Genesis of the universe
I. A FUNDAMENTAL
QUESTION. What is the origin of things? Perhaps the sublimest question mortal
man can ask. A profoundly religious question, going down to the very roots of
Truth, and Science, and Theology, and Character, and Worship.
II. THE PRECISE
PROBLEM. It is not touching the shaping of matter already existing; it is
touching the origin of matter itself.
III. IMMENSITY OF
THE PROBLEM. The universe, practically speaking, is infinite.
IV. THE PROBLEM
ITSELF. Here are sixty or seventy elements which, so far as we know at present,
make up the existing universe. And the point to be exactly observed is this:
not one solitary atom of these elements which make up the universe can man
make. All that man can do is to operate on these elements, compounding them in
various proportions, using the compounds in various ways, shaping them,
building with them, and so on. In short, man must have something on which, as
well as with which, to operate. Here, then, is the mighty question: ¡§How
account for this tremendous fact? Whence came this inconceivable amount of
material?¡¨
1. The question is legitimate. We cannot help asking it. Every
effect must have a cause. Here is a stupendously measureless effect: what
caused it? Not one man, not all mankind together, with the most perfect
machinery conceivable, can make one solitary atom of matter. Where, then, did
all this measureless, unutterable, inconceivable quantity of matter composing
this material universe come from? Suppose you say it came from a few cells or
germs, or perhaps one. That does not answer the question. The axiom, ¡§Every
effect must have a cause,¡¨ implies another axiom: ¡§Effects are proportional to
their causes¡¨--that is to say, causes are measured by their effects. If the
whole material universe came from a few germs and from nothing else, then the
weight of these germs must be equal to the weight of the universe. You cannot
get out of a thing more than is in it.
2. Only two answers are possible.
3. Grandeur of the answer. Thus this word ¡§create¡¨ is the divinest
word in language, human or angelic. It is the august separatrix between the
creature and the Creator, between the finite and the Infinite. Well, then, may
our text stand forth as the opening sentence of God¡¦s communication to man. For
all theology is wrapped up in this one simple, majestic word--Created. It gives
us an unbeginning, almighty, personal, self-conscious, voluntary God.
4. Final cause of creation. Why did God create the material
universe? Let us not be wise above what is written. And yet I cannot help
thinking that there is a reason for the creation in the very constitution of
our spiritual nature. We need the excitation of sensible objects. We need a
material arena for self-discipline. As a matter of fact, we receive our moral
training for eternity in the school of matter. It is the material world around
us, coming into contact with our moral personalities through the senses of
touching and seeing, and hearing and tasting, which tests our moral character.
And so it comes to pass that the way in which we are impressed by every object
we consciously see or touch probes us, and will testify for us or against us on
the great day. But while this is one of the proximate causes of the creation,
the final cause is the glory of God. It is the majestic mirror from which we
see His invisible things, even His eternal power and Godhead (Romans 1:20). (G. D. Boardman.)
Creation
I. THE MAKER OF
THE WORLD, God. The great I AM. The First Cause.
II. THE MAKING OF
THE WORLD.
1. By God¡¦s Word.
2. By God¡¦s Spirit.
III. THE MEANING OF
THE WORLD. God created the world--
1. For His own pleasure and glory (Revelation 4:11).
2. For the happiness of all His creatures (Psalms 104:1-35).
LESSONS:
1. Faith in God, as the Almighty, the All-wise Creator.
2. Reverence for God, as wonderful in all His doings.
3. Gratitude to God, as providing for the wants of His creatures. (W.
S. Smith, B. D.)
The word ¡§earth¡¨ as used in Scripture
In Scripture, as well as in ordinary language, the word ¡§earth¡¨ is
used in two different meanings: sometimes it means the whole globe on which we
live; and sometimes only the solid dust with which the globe is covered, which
is supposed not to be much more than from nine to twelve miles in thickness.
1. The word ¡§earth¡¨ is used to express the whole globe in the 1st
verse of Genesis--¡§In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth¡¨; and
it is so used also in the 40th chapter of Isaiah, verse 22; and again in the
26th chapter of Job, verse 7, where we are told that the Lord ¡§hangeth the
earth upon nothing.¡¨
2. The word ¡§earth¡¨ is also used to express the solid and rocky
crust with which our globe is everywhere covered, and on which rest the vast
waters of the ocean. It is used in this sense in the 10th verse of the 1st
chapter of Genesis: ¡§God called the dry land earth.¡¨ Earth is the dry land as
distinguished from the sea; it means the continents and islands which appear
above the waters.
Design
Creation is not caprice or chance. It is design. The footprints on
the sands of time speak of design, for geology admits that her discoveries all
are based upon design. And this verse, as the whole creation narrative,
confirms the admission of science as to design. Therefore, both the Revelation
of God and the Revelation of Nature go hand in hand. Which, then, is the
higher? Surely, Revelation. And why?
1. Because Revelation alone can tell the design. Nature is a riddle
without revelation. I may admire the intricate mechanism of machinery, or even
part of the design hanging from the loom; but all is apparent confusion until
the master takes me to the office, places plans before me, and so discloses the
design. Revelation is that plan--that key by which man is able to unlock the
arcana of nature¡¦s loom.
2. Because that design is the law of Christ. All are parts of one
mighty creation, of which Christ is the centre. (Wm. Adamson.)
On beginnings
I. VARIOUS KINDS
OF BEGINNINGS.
1. Some beginnings are thoroughly evil, and their evil nature is
beyond dispute. To begin to steal, however small the theft; to begin to lie,
however trifling the falsehood; to begin selling things for what they are not,
and by false weight and measure, however the deception may escape discovery; to
begin to swear, however silent the oath may be kept; to begin dissolute
practices, however trimly they may be dressed up.
2. Other beginnings are innocent, but such as are easily turned into
an evil course. One begins to take proper recreation, and ends in a pleasure
seeking, self-indulgent, idle, undutiful habit.
3. Other beginnings are a mixture of good and evil. It is
undoubtedly well that a drunkard should become a total abstainer; but it is not
an unmixed good when with his abstention he mingles self-righteous pride and
unjust reflections on others.
4. Moreover, there are good beginnings whose good character is
complete and unquestionable. It is always good to set ourselves, for Christ¡¦s
sake, to do honestly, to work diligently, to show mercy, to pray believingly,
to help and succour, and sympathize with one another. Every really Christian
beginning is an entire good.
II. HOW BEGINNINGS
ARE MADE.
1. Bad beginnings are made without forethought and resolve, without
definite intention, choice, and premeditation; in a word, heedlessly.
2. Good beginnings are made with forethought, and election, and
predetermination. ¡§What shall I do with my life?¡¨ is a question for every man
who would be right minded.
God the Author of all things.
¡§In the corner of a little garden,¡¨ said the late Dr. Beattie, of
Aberdeen, ¡§without informing any one of the circumstance, I wrote in the mould
with my finger the initial letters of my son¡¦s name, and sowed garden cress in
the furrows, covered up the seed, and smoothed the ground. Ten days after this
he came running up to me, and with astonishment in his countenance told me his
name was growing in the garden. I laughed at the report, and seemed to
disregard it, but he insisted on my going to see what had happened. ¡§Yes,¡¨ said
I carelessly, ¡§I see it is so, but what is there in this worth notice? Is it
not mere chance?¡¨ ¡§It cannot be so,¡¨ he said, ¡§somebody must have contrived
matters so as to produce it.¡¨ ¡§Look at yourself,¡¨ I replied, ¡§and consider your
hands and fingers, your legs and feet; came you hither by chance?¡¨ ¡§No,¡¨ he
answered, ¡§something must have made me.¡¨ ¡§And who is that something?¡¨ I asked.
He said, ¡§I don¡¦t know.¡¨ I therefore told him the name of that Great Being who
made him and all the world. This lesson affected him greatly, and he never
forgot it or the circumstances that introduced it.¡¨
Seeking the true God
Twenty years ago, when Christian missions scarcely existed in
Japan, a young Japanese of good family met with a book on geography in the
Chinese language, which had been compiled by an American missionary in China.
It began with these words: ¡§In the beginning God created the heaven and the
earth.¡¨ What could this mean? Who was that God? Certainly He was not known in
Japan; perhaps He might live in America, whence the author of the book came.
The young man determined to go to America and seek for God. He left Japan
secretly, at the peril of his life; for the old law was then still in force,
under which death was the penalty incurred by any Japanese who quitted his
country. He made his way to China, and thence to the United States. There,
after some perplexing experiences, he did find the God he had been seeking, and
with his whole heart embraced the faith of Christ. That young man, Joseph
Nisima, is now Principal of a Native Christian College at Kioto, the ancient
sacred capital of Japan. (E. Stock.)
A question for atheists
Napoleon the First, with all his disdain for men, bowed to one
power that he was pleased to regard as greater than himself. In the heart of an
atheistic age he replied to the smattering theorists of his day, ¡§Your
arguments gentlemen, are very fine. But who,¡¨ pointing up to the evening sky,
¡§who made all these?¡¨ And even the godless science of our times, while
rejecting the scriptural answer to this question, still confesses that it has
no other to give. ¡§The phenomena of matter and force,¡¨ says Tyndall, ¡§lie
within our intellectual range; and as far as they reach we will, at all hazard,
push our inquiries. But behind, and above, and around all, the real mystery of
the universe lies unsolved, and as far as we are concerned, is incapable of
solution.¡¨ But why incapable of solution? Why not already solved, so far as we
are concerned, in this ¡§simple, unequivocal, exhaustive, majestic¡¨ alpha of the
Bible--¡§In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth¡¨? (J. B.
Clark.)
The folly of atheism
A suggestive scene took place lately in a railway car that was
crossing the Rocky Mountains. A quiet business man, who with the other
passengers, had been silently watching the vast range of snow-clad peaks, by
him seen for the first time, said to his companion: ¡§No man, it seems to me,
could look at that scene without feeling himself brought nearer to his
Creator.¡¨ A dapper lad of eighteen, who had been chiefly engaged in caressing
his moustache, pertly interrupted, ¡§If you are sure there is a Creator.¡¨ ¡§You
are an atheist,¡¨ said the stranger, turning to the lad. ¡§I am an agnostic,¡¨
raising his voice. ¡§I am investigating the subject. I take nothing for granted.
I am waiting to be convinced. I see the mountains, I smell the rose, I hear the
wind; therefore, I believe that mountains, roses, and wind exist. But I cannot
see, smell, or hear God. Therefore--¡¨ A grizzled old cattle raiser glanced over
his spectacles at the boy. ¡§Did you ever try to smell with your eyes?¡¨ he said,
quietly. ¡§No.¡¨ ¡§Or hear with your tongue, or taste with your ears?¡¨ ¡§Certainly
not.¡¨ ¡§Then why do you try to apprehend God with faculties which are only meant
for material things?¡¨ ¡§With what should I apprehend Him?¡¨ said the youth, with
a conceited giggle. ¡§With your intellect and soul?--but I beg your
pardon¡¨--here he paused--¡§some men have not breadth and depth enough of
intellect and soul to do this, This is probably the reason that you are an
agnostic.¡¨ The laugh in the car effectually stopped the display of any more
atheism that day.
Creation a comforting thought
When Mr. Simeon, of Cambridge, was on his dying bed, his
biographer relates that, ¡§After a short pause, he looked round with one of his
bright smiles, and asked, ¡¥What do you think especially gives me comfort at
this time? The creation! Did Jehovah create the world, or did I? I think He
did; now, if He made the world, He can sufficiently take care of me.¡¦¡¨
Man¡¦s limited knowledge of nature
Systems of nature! To the wisest man, wide as is his vision,
nature remains of quite infinite depth, of quite infinite expansion; and all
experience thereof limits itself to some few computed centuries and square
miles, The course of nature¡¦s phases, on this our little fraction of a planet,
is partially known to us, but who knows what deeper courses these depend on!
What infinitely larger cycle (of causes) our little epicycle revolves on! To
the minnow every cranny and pebble, and quality and accident, of its little
native creek may have become familiar; but does the minnow understand the ocean
tides and periodic currents, the trade winds and monsoons, and moon¡¦s eclipses;
by all which the condition of its little creek is regulated? (T. Carlyle.)
Let there be light
The creation of light
I.
DIVINELY
PRODUCED.
1. For the protection of life. Plants could not live without light;
without it, the flowers would soon wither. Even in a brief night they close
their petals, and will only open them again at the gentle approach of the
morning light. Nor could man survive in continued darkness. A sad depression
would rest upon his soul.
2. For the enjoyment of life. Light is one of God¡¦s best gifts to the
world.
3. For the instruction of life. Light is not merely a protection. It
is also an instructor. It is an emblem. It is an emblem of God, the Eternal
Light. It is an emblem of truth. It is an emblem of goodness. It is an emblem
of heaven. It is an emblem of beneficence.
II. DIVINELY
APPROVED. ¡§And God saw the light, that it was good.¡¨
1. It was good in itself. The light was pure. It was clear. It was
not so fierce as to injure. It was not so weak as to be ineffectual. It was not
so loud in its advent as to disturb.
2. It was good because adapted to the purpose contemplated by it.
Nothing else could more efficiently have accomplished its purpose toward the
life of man. Hence it is good because adapted to its purpose, deep in its
meaning, wide in its realm, happy in its influence, and educational in its
tendency.
3. We see here that the Divine Being carefully scrutinises the work
of His hands. When He had created light, He saw that it was good. May we not
learn a lesson here, to pause after our daily toil, to inspect and review its
worth. Every act of life should be followed by contemplation.
III. DIVINELY
PROPORTIONED. ¡§And God called the light day, and the darkness He called night.¡¨
1. The light was indicative of day. In this light man was to work.
The light ever active would rebuke indolence. By this light man was to read. In
this light man was to order his moral conduct.
2. The removal of light was indicative of night. In this night man
was to rest from the excitement of pleasure, and the anxiety of toil. Its
darkness was to make him feel the need of a Divine protection. (J. S. Exell,
M. A.)
Light and the gospel compared
I. THE
APPROPRIATENESS OF THE METAPHOR.
1. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their source and
Divine resemblance.
2. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their adaptation to
the end designed.
3. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their purity.
4. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their inseparable
connection with joy and happiness.
II. THE WILL OF
GOD RESPECTING IT.
1. That man should have the light of salvation.
2. That His Church should be the light of the world.
3. That the world should be filled with the light of the gospel of
Christ.
APPLICATION.
1. Have you the light of Divine grace in your hearts?
2. Have you this light in your families?
3. Have you this light in your neighbourhood?
4. Are you assisting to enlighten the world? (J. Burns, D. D.)
Genesis of light
I. EXPLANATION OF
THE PASSAGE.
1. ¡§God said¡¨: an anthropomorphism.
2. The God-said of Moses the God-word of John.
3. The first light chemical.
4. ¡§And God saw the light, that it was good.¡¨ It is to light that
the cloud, the sunset, the rainbow, the diamond, the violet, owe their
exquisite hues. Truly the light is sweet, and a pleasant thing it is for the
eyes to behold the Ecclesiastes 11:7). Nay, more: Light is
one of the essential conditions of all life itself--alike vegetal, animal,
human, and, doubtless, angelic. Yes, there is a better curative than allopathy
or homeopathy, hydropathy or aeropathy; it is heliopathy, or light of the sun.
Physicians understand this, and so seek for their patients the sunny side of
hospitals. And so they unconsciously confirm the holy saying, ¡§To you that fear
My name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in His wings¡¨ Malachi 4:2).
5. Evening: Morning. Observe the order of the words: It is not first
morning, and then evening; it is first evening, then morning: ¡§And there was
evening, and there was morning, day one.¡¨
II. MORAL MEANING
OF THE STORY.
1. God is light (1 John 1:5). For aught I know, the
apostle¡¦s message is literally true. Remember that when we are talking of light
we are moving in presence of a very subtile mystery. The origin and nature of
light is still a profound problem. True, we talk learnedly and correctly about
the laws of light; its laws of reflection, refraction, absorption, dispersion,
polarization, etc. But these are only phenomena; they tell us nothing about the
nature or origin of light itself. All we know of light is merely a knowledge of
the mode and laws of its motion. We do not know the essence of light itself.
One thing is certain: light is the nearest known, sensible approach to
immateriality, being classed with its apparent kindred--heat, electricity,
magnetism--among the imponderables. Indeed, the modern magnificent undulatory
theory denies that light is material, and affirms that it is but a mode of
motion. We are accustomed to say that there are but two things in the
universe--spirit and matter--and that the chasm between these is infinite.
Possibly this is one of those assumptions which, did we know more, we would
affirm less. Possibly light is an instance of what the philosophers call tertium
quid--a third something, intermediate between spirit and matter, ethereally
bridging the measureless chasm. Possibly light is God¡¦s natural expression,
outflow, radiation, manifestation, vestment Psalms 104:1-2). Possibly, when the
Creator moves in that finite world we call time, He leaves light as His
personal vestige and train. His mantle ripples into light, is light itself. In
view of this possibility, how natural as well as fitting that the ancient token
of God¡¦s personal presence among the Hebrews should have been the shechinah, or
dazzling glory cloud.
2. And as God is light, so also are His children light. Expressly
are they called Sons of Light (Luke 16:8). Expressly is He called Father
of Lights (James 1:17). We know that light is latent
in every form of matter; for, when sufficiently heated, it becomes
incandescent--that is to say, self-luminous. What is flame but a mass of
heated, visibly glowing gas? True, it doth not yet appear what we shall be (1 John 3:2). Nevertheless, I believe
that light is latent within us all, and that by-and-by, at least in the case of
God¡¦s saintly children, it will stream forth; not that it will be evolved by
the action of any heat or chemical force, but that, under the free,
transcendent conditions of the heavenly estate, it will ray forth
spontaneously.
3. Jesus Christ Himself, as Incarnate, is the shadow of God¡¦s light.
Infinite God, Deity as unconditioned and absolute, no man hath ever seen or can
ever see, and live (Exodus 33:20). He dwelleth in light which
no man can approach unto (1 Timothy 6:15), is light itself.
¡§Dark with excess of light,¡¨ we poor finite beings cannot behold Him except
through the softening intervention of some medium. Therefore the Son of God,
brightness of His glory and express image of His person (Hebrews 1:3), radiance of His effulgence
and character, or impress of His substance, became incarnate, that in the
softer morning star and suffused dayspring of the Incarnation we might be able
to look on the dazzling Father of Lights, and not be dazed into blindness.
4. Jesus Christ is not only the shadow or tempered image of God: in the
very act of becoming that shadow Jesus Christ also became the Light of the John 8:12). Ah, how much the world needed
His illumination!
5. As Jesus Christ is the Light of the World, so also is His Church.
He, clear as the sun, she, fair as the moon, both together resplendent as an
army with banners (Song of Solomon 6:10).
In conclusion:
1. A word of cheer for the saint. Ye are sons of light. Recall now
how much light means. It means all that is most bright and clean, and direct,
and open, and unselfish, and spotless, and lovely, and healthful, and true, and
Divine. How exceedingly great, then, your wealth! Oh, live worthily of your
rich estate.
2. A word of entreaty to the sinner. Of what use is the most
abounding light if we persist in keeping our eyes closed? As there is an
eternal day for the sons of light, so there is an eternal night for the sons of
darkness. (G. D.Boardman.)
Light and life
I. THE UPWARD
PROGRESS OF NATURE, as created by God.
II. THE ORDERLY
ARRANGEMENT OF NATURE, as settled by God.
III. THE VARIETY OF
LIFE IN NATURE, as filled by God. LESSONS:
1. Trust in God¡¦s overruling providence.
2. The study of nature should not be separated from religion. (W.
S. Smith, B. D.)
Light
I. Light is PURE.
Its property repels defilement. It traverses unstained each medium of
uncleanness.
II. Light is
BRIGHT. Indeed, what is brightness but light¡¦s clear shining.
III. Light is
LOVELY. Beauty cannot live without it. So Christ decks all on whom His beams
descend.
IV. Light is FREE.
The wealth of the wealthy cannot purchase, nor the poverty of the poor debar
from it. Waste not time in seeking a price for Him, compared with whom an
angel¡¦s worth is nothing worth.
V. Light is
ALL-REVEALING. By Christ¡¦s rays, sin is detected, as lurking in every corner of
the heart; and the world, which we so fondled, is unmasked, as a monster whose
embrace is filth, and in whose hand is the cup of death.
VI. Light is the
PARENT OF FRUITFULNESS. In Christ¡¦s absence, the heart is rank with every weed,
and every noxious berry. But when His beams enliven, the seeds of grace bud
forth, the tree of faith pours down its golden fruit.
VII. Light is the
chariot which CONVEYS HEAT. Without Christ, the heart is ice. But when He
enters, a glow is kindled, which can never die.
VIII. Light is the
HARBINGER OF JOY. Heaven is a cloudless God. (Dean Law.)
The Word of God
¡§Let there be.¡¨
1. How the growth of the world points back to the eternal existence
of the Word.
2. How the eternal Word is the foundation for the growth of the
world. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
Light, a source of life
1. Its good, as existing in
its ground.
2. Its beauty, as disclosed in its appearing. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The creation of light a day¡¦s work of God
1. The first day¡¦s work.
2. A whole day¡¦s work.
3. A continuous day¡¦s work.
4. A day¡¦s work rich in its consequences. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
All the blessings of the light
We, who worship ¡§the Father of lights,¡¨ have reason every day that
we live to thank God for life and health, for countless blessings. And not
least among these may be reckoned the free gift of, and the many ¡§blessings of
the light.¡¨ For in many ways that we can tell off, at once, upon our fingers,
and in very many more ways that we neither dream of nor think of, does light
minister to our health, wealth, and comfort.
1. The very birds sing at daybreak their glad welcome to the dawn,
and the rising sun. And we all know and feel how cheering is the power of
light. In the sunlight rivers flash, and nature rejoices, and our hearts are
light, and we take a bright view of things.
2. So, too, light comes to revive and restore us. Darkness is
oppressive. In it we are apt to lose heart. We grow anxious, and full of fears.
With the first glimmer of light in the distance, hope awakens, and we feel a
load lifted off our minds.
3. Again, we have often felt the reassuring power of light. In the
darkness, objects that are perfectly harmless take threatening shapes; the
imagination distorts them, and our fancy creates dangers. Light shows us that
we have been alarmed at shadows: quiets and reassures us.
4. Once again, the light comes to us, often, as nothing less than a
deliverer. It reveals dangers hidden and unsuspected; the deadly reptile; the
yawning precipice; the lurking foe.
5. And when, over and above all this, we remember that light is
absolutely essential, not to health only, but to life in every form, animal and
vegetable alike, we shall heartily echo the words of the wise king in
Ecclesiastes: ¡§Truly the light is sweet; and a pleasant thing it is for the
eyes to behold the sun.¡¨ (J. B. C. Murphy, B. A.)
The first day
The work begins with light, God said, ¡§Let there be light,¡¨ and at
once light shone where all before was dark. God says, ¡§Repent ye--the kingdom
of heaven is at hand¡¨: then our darkness displeases us, and we are turned to
light. Thus of all those blessings hid in Christ from everlasting, and which
are predestinated to be accomplished in the creature, light is the first that
is bestowed: ¡§God shines in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of
the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.¡¨ But the ¡§heaven¡¨ announced ¡§at
hand¡¨ is yet unformed. No sun yet shines, no fruits adorn the creature. Many
steps remain before the image of God will come, the man created in
righteousness, to rule all things. Then at once comes a division between what
is of God and what is not; between the natural darkness in the creature and the
light which God has made. The light shines in darkness, but the darkness
comprehends it not. Two conflicting powers are striving each to gain the day,
making the old domain of darkness a continually shifting but ceaseless battle
field. Then a name is given by God both to light and darkness; that is, the
character of each is learnt according to the mind of God. Now the darkness has
a name. What God calls it, we call it. His thoughts are not altogether strange
to us. Natural as the darkness may seem to the creature, God calls it ¡§night,¡¨
or deviation. It is a turning from the right or straight line. The light is
¡§day,¡¨ or movement: there is a disturbance of the darkness. Death rules no
longer; life with light is come. Besides, in this name there is a form given to
both. Until now light and darkness were unformed, but ¡§day¡¨ and ¡§night¡¨
intimate order and distribution. Night is darkness put within limits. So with
light; it is not ¡§day¡¨ till it is arranged and put in form and order. (A.
Jukes.)
Light, natural and spiritual
Every saved man is a new creation.
I. THE DIVINE
FIAT. ¡§Let there be light.¡¨ The work of grace by which light enters the soul
is--
1. A needful work. No heart can be saved without spiritual light, to
reveal self and Jesus Christ.
2. An early work. First day.
3. A Divine work.
4. Wrought by the Word. God spake.
5. Unaided by the darkness itself. Darkness cannot help to bring
day.
6. It was unsolicited.
7. Instantaneous.
8. Irresistible.
II. DIVINE
OBSERVATION.
III. DIVINE
APPROBATION. Natural light is good. Gospel light is good. Spiritual light is
good.
1. Because of its source.
2. Because of its likeness. God is light.
3. Because of its effects.
4. It glorifies God.
IV. DIVINE
SEPARATION. The Christian man has light and darkness contending within him;
also contending forces without him.
V. DIVINE
NOMINATION. We must call things by their right names. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Light and its laws
I. The light God
has made, and His mind concerning it.
1. Physical light--good; light, sweet; pleasant. Sun, the emblem of
many things; cheerful revealing.
2. Mental light--good. Hence in some parts an idiot is called
¡§dark.¡¨
3. Gospel light--good; the light of the story of God; light that
shined out of darkness to enlighten Gentiles; Christ, the Light of the world,
the Sun of Righteousness.
4. Spiritual light--good.
5. Essential light--light of heaven from the Father of lights.
II. The law by
which it is governed.
1. Not mixed, but separated.
2. Sons of light must have no communion with darkness.
3. Churches should be lights in the world.
4. Truth not to be mixed with error.
Learn:
1. Love the light.
2. Walk in it.
3. Enforce the law concerning it. (J. C. Gray.)
The ceaseless act of the Almighty
I. THE THINGS
SPOKEN OF IN THE TEXT, LIGHT AND DARKNESS. To each of these terms there are
different significations. There is what we term natural light; there are also
mental and moral light (the illumination of the understanding and of the
heart); there are also providential, spiritual, and eternal light: each of
these has its opposite state of darkness. It is true that our text speaks only
of light natural; yet, as the works of God in nature are often typical of His
works of grace, we may follow the example of Scripture, and in tracing out the
truths it teaches, may endeavour to prove, that in the whole economy of nature,
providence, and grace, it is the practice and prerogative of God to divide the
light from the darkness. Is it darkness with any of the Lord¡¦s people present?
Are His dealings mysterious? Are their state and prospects full of gloom and
obscurity? Child of sorrow, strive to bow with submission to the will of your
Heavenly Father. ¡§Let patience have her perfect work.¡¨ ¡§Light is sown for the
righteous, and gladness for the upright in heart.¡¨ ¡§Why art thou cast down, oh
my soul! and why art thou disquieted within me?¡¨ ¡§Hope in God, for thou shalt
yet praise Him who is the health of thy countenance.¡¨ ¡§At evening time it shall
be light.¡¨ Yes, then, when you are expecting the darkness to increase--when the
sun of enjoyment seems to have set forever,--then, ¡§at evening time it shall be
light.¡¨ ¡§Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voice of His
servant: that walketh in darkness and hath no light; let him trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay upon his God.¡¨ ¡§Unto the upright there ariseth light in
darkness.¡¨ There are also spiritual and eternal lights, with their opposite
states of darkness. ¡§With Thee is the fountain of life,¡¨ said the sacred writer,
and ¡§in Thy light shall we see light.¡¨ While we are in the darkness of natural
corruption and alienation from God, we know nothing aright, nothing of the
evils of sin, nothing of the astonishing love of Jesus, we have no just
conceptions of the amazing and stupendous work of redemption, or of the work of
the Holy Spirit upon the soul of man. But when in infinite compassion Jehovah
enlightens the understanding and touches the heart, we see and feel the reality
and vast importance of eternal things--we see at what an awful distance sin has
placed us from a God of spotless purity--we feel how deeply we are steeped in
the poison and pollution of iniquity--we adore the infinite wisdom manifested
in the plan of redemption, that stupendous plan, which while it redeems,
pardons, and sanctifies the sinner, satisfies also the high claims of Divine
justice, magnifies the Divine perfections, and brings ¡§Glory to God in the
highest.¡¨
II. We have now to
consider WHAT MAY BE AFFIRMED CONCERNING THE OBJECTS HERE SET BEFORE US: GOD
DIVIDES THE LIGHT FROM THE DARKNESS. He is accomplishing this upon earth by a
mysterious but infinitely wise process. Much light and darkness dwells in the
minds of individuals--in the various religious sects throughout the land, and
among the different nations of the world. Whatever true light is in the world,
it is of God. He is its Author. By nature all are under the dominion of the
prince of darkness, and are enslaved by Him. But a stronger than he comes upon
him, and delivers the captive from the dark dungeons of iniquity. Jesus came to
be a light to them that sit in darkness; He sends His Spirit with His Word to
subdue the rebellious heart, to awaken the insensible heart--to pour the light
of celestial day upon the benighted spirit--to show the sinner to himself, and
to reveal the saving mercy, of God in Christ--to reveal the dangers that lie in
his pathway to eternity--to give him right views of every essential truth
connected with salvation and eternal life--to teach him everything it is requisite
he should know and experience ere he can inhabit the realms of light above--in
short, to separate the light from the darkness. Hitherto the very light had
been darkness; there had been light in the intellect perhaps, but darkness in
the soul (for in many an unrenewed character the one is strangely mixed with
the other). There may even possibly exist a theoretic knowledge of Divine
things where blackest crimes dwell in the heart and are perpetrated in the
life. But where Jesus shines forth in mercy--where the Holy Spirit exerts His
power, the light is separated from the darkness: there is no longer that
heterogeneous mixture of knowledge and sin, of Divine truth in the intellect
and sin in the life, which formerly existed. Jehovah has wrought His wondrous
work, has divided the light from the darkness, has separated the sinner from
his sins, ¡§and behold all things become new.¡¨ To conclude: The day of final
separation is hastening on, then, forever and at once, God will divide ¡§the
light from the darkness,¡¨ truth from error, holiness from iniquity, the
righteous from the wicked. Truth and righteousness shall dwell in heaven, error
and iniquity shall sink to hell. The wicked will then be all darkness, the
righteous will then be all light. (W. Burgess.)
Darkness before light
And do you think, children, that you were first light and then
became dark? or that you were first dark and then became light? Because when
you were a baby boy or girl you did not know much; it was very dark: now I hope
that the light of the Sun of Righteousness is upon you, that the evening has
become the morning. The morning star has risen, I hope. It is light! light! (J.
Vaughan, M. A.)
Night a necessity
A remarkable effect was mentioned by Mr. Robert Hunt (to whom the
public are indebted for much valuable information on solar and other phenomena)
to the present writer. In the course of his early experiments on the active
power of the sun¡¦s rays, he subjected a metal plate to its operation, and, of
course, received upon it a picture of the objects within its range. He now
rubbed this off, making the surface clear and fresh as at first; photographed a
different picture, and then effaced this as he had done the former. In this way
he proceeded some ten or twelve times, now receiving, and now rubbing off the
traces of the sunlight, when the question arose in his mind, ¡§What would be the
result were I to transmit an electrical current through this plate?¡¨ To
determine it, he caused a current to pass through it diagonally, when, to his
astonishment, the various objects that had been, as he supposed, effaced from
the surface, rushed to it confusedly together, so that he could detect there a
medley of them all; thus proving that there had not been merely a superficial
action of the light, but that it had produced a molecular disturbance
throughout the plate. Only let, therefore, the sunbeams play uninterruptedly on
the iron, the brass, or the granite, and they will crumble into dust under an
irresistible power; the falling over them of the mantle of night alone prevents
the occurrence of a catastrophe. (C. Williams.)
It was good
The first day of creation
1. Man¡¦s fallen nature is a
very chaos, ¡§without form and void,¡¨ with darkness thick and sevenfold covering
all. The Lord begins His work upon man by the visitation of the Spirit, who
enters the soul mysteriously, and broods over it, even as of old He moved upon
the face of the waters. He is the quickener of the dead soul.
2. In connection with the presence of the Holy Spirit the Lord sends
into the soul, as His first blessing, light. The Lord appeals to man¡¦s
understanding and enlightens it by the gospel.
3. If you keep your eye upon the chapter you will observe that the
light came into the world at first by the Word ¡§God said, ¡¥Let there be light.¡¦¡¨
It is through the Word of God contained in this book, the Bible, that light
comes into the soul. This is that true light which lighteth every man that
cometh into the world.
4. The light which broke in upon the primeval darkness was of a very
mysterious kind, and came not according to ordinary laws, for as yet neither
sun nor moon had been set as lights in the firmament. Can we tell how spiritual
light first dawns on nature¡¦s night? How He removes darkness from the
understanding, and illuminates the intellect, is a secret reserved for Himself
alone.
5. The light came instantaneously. Six days were occupied in
furnishing the earth, but a moment sufficed for illuminating it. God works
rapidly in the operation of regeneration: as with a flash He darts light and
life into the soul. The operations of grace are gradual, but its entrance is
instantaneous. Although instantaneous, it is not, however, shallow and short
lived.
I. THE LORD SEES
WHATEVER HE CREATES. ¡§The Lord saw the light.¡¨
1. He was the sole observer of it. Neither eye of man, nor bird, nor
beast was there to behold the golden glory; but God saw the light. Newly
enlightened one, it may be you are pained because you have no Christian
companion to observe your change of heart: cease from your sorrow, for God
beholds you.
2. That light had come into the world in a noiseless manner, yet the
Lord saw it. The entrance of God¡¦s Word which giveth light is effected in
¡§solemn silence of the mind.¡¨ If men make an illumination, we can hear the
crackling of their fireworks over all the city; but when God illuminates the
earth with the sun, the orb of day arises without a sound. Although the work in
your soul has been so quiet, so hidden from the eyes of men, so unremarkable
and commonplace, yet take comfort from the text, ¡§The Lord saw the light.¡¨ No
trumpet proclaimed it, but the Lord saw it; no voice went forth concerning it,
but the Lord saw it and it was enough; and in your case it is the same.
3. The earth itself could not recognize the light, yet the Lord saw
it. How often do we mourn that we have scarcely more light than suffices to
reveal our darkness and make us pine for more. Oh, troubled one, lay this home
to your soul, the Lord saw the light when earth herself could not perceive it.
4. Let us not forget that besides the light there was no other
beauty. The earth, according to the Hebrew, was ¡§tohu and bohu,¡¨
which, in order to come near both to the sense and sound at the same time, I
will render ¡§anyhow and nohow.¡¨ Even so your experience may seem to be a chaos,
nohow and anyhow, exactly what it should not be, a mass of unformed
conceptions, and half-formed desires, and ill-formed prayers, but yet there is
grace in you, and God sees it, even amid the dire confusion and huge uproar of
your spirit.
5. Remember, too, that when the light came it had to contend with
darkness, but God saw it none the less. So, also, in your soul there still
remains the darkness of inbred corruption, ignorance, infirmity, and tendency
to sin, and these cause a conflict, but the light is not thereby hidden from
the eyes of God.
6. For many reasons the Lord sees the light, but chiefly He sees it
because He made it, and He forsakes not the work of His own hands.
II. THE LORD
APPROVES OF WHAT HE CREATES. ¡§God saw the light that it was good.¡¨ He took
pleasure in it.
1. Now, as far as this world was concerned, light was but young and
new: and so in some of you grace is quite a novelty. You were only converted a
very little while ago, and you have had no time to try yourselves or to
develope graces, yet the Lord delights in your newborn life. Light is good at
dawn as well as at noon: the grace of God is good though but newly received; it
will work out for you greater things by-and-by, and make you more happy and
more holy, but even now all the elements of excellence are in it, and its first
day has the Divine blessing upon it.
2. Here we must mention again that it was struggling light, yet none
the less for that approved of by the Lord. We do not understand how it was that
the light and the darkness were together until God divided them, as this verse
intimates; but as John Bunyan says, ¡§No doubt darkness and light here began
their quarrel,¡¨ for what communion hath light with darkness. My brethren, I am
sure you are no strangers to this conflict, nor is it to you altogether a thing
of the past. You are in the conflict still. Still grace and sin are warring in
you, and will do so till you are taken home. Let this help you, O ye who are
perplexed; remember that struggling as the light is, God approves of it, and
calls it good.
3. As yet the light had not been divided from the darkness, and the
bounds of day and night were not fixed. And so in young beginners; they hardly
know which is grace and which is nature, what is of themselves and what is of
Christ, and they make a great many mistakes. Yet the Lord does not mistake, but
approves of that which His grace has placed in them.
4. As yet the light and darkness had not been named: it was
afterwards that the Lord called the light ¡§day,¡¨ and the darkness ¡§night,¡¨ yet
He saw the light that it was good. And so, though you do not know the names of
things, God knows your name.
5. The light of the first day could not reveal much of beauty, for
there was none, and so the light within does not yet reveal much to you; and
what it, does reveal is uncomely, but the light itself is good, whatever it may
make manifest.
6. But why did God say that light was good?
III. THE LORD
QUICKLY DISCERNS ALL THE GOODNESS AND BEAUTY WHICH EXISTS IN WHAT HE CREATES.
The Lord did not merely feel approbation for the light, but He perceived reason
for it: He saw that it was good. He could see goodness in it where, perhaps, no
one else would have been able to do so.
1. Let us note, then, that light is good in itself; and so is Divine
grace. What a wonderful thing light is! Just think of it! How simple it is, and
yet how complex. Light, too, how common it is! We see it everywhere, and all
the year round. Light, too, how feeble and yet how strong! Its beams would not
detain us one-half so forcibly as a cobweb; yet how mighty it is, and how
supreme! Scarcely is there a force in the universe of God which is more potent.
The grace of God in the same manner is contemptible in the eyes of man, and yet
the majesty of omnipotence is in it, and it is more than conqueror.
2. Light is good, not only in itself, but in its warfare. The light
contended with darkness, and it was good for darkness to be battled with. Grace
has come unto you, and it will fight with your sin, and it ought to be fought
with, and to be overcome.
3. The light which came from God was good in its measure. There was
neither too much of it nor too little. If the Lord had sent a little more light
into the world we might all have been dazzled into blindness, and if He had
sent less we might have groped in gloom. God sends into the newborn Christian
just as much grace as he can bear; He does not give him the maturity of after
years, for it would be out of place.
4. Light was good as a preparation for God¡¦s other works. He knew
that light, though it was but the beginning, was necessary to the completion of
His work. Light was needful, that the eye of man might rejoice in the works of
God, and so God saw the light that it was good, in connection with what was to
be. And, oh, I charge you who have to deal with young people, look at the grace
they have in them in relation to what will be in them.
5. What a mass of thought one might raise from this one truth of the
goodness of light and the goodness of grace, as to their results. Light
produces the beauty which adorns the world, for without it all the world were
uncomely blackness. Light¡¦s pencil paints the whole, and even so all beauty of
character is the result of grace. Light sustains life, for life in due time
would dwindle and die out without it, and thus grace alone sustains the virtues
and graces of the believer; without daily grace we should be spiritually dead.
Light heals many sicknesses, and grace brings healing in its wings. Light is
comfort, light is joy, the prisoner in his darkness knows it to be so; and so
the grace of God produces joy and peace wherever it is shed abroad. Light
reveals and so does grace, for without it we could not see the glory of God in
the face of Jesus Christ.
IV. GOD RECORDED
HIS ESTIMATE OF THIS FIRST DAY¡¦S PRODUCT. ¡§God saw the light that it was good.¡¨
1. This leads me to say to the young Christian, the Lord would have
you encouraged.
2. My last word is to older Christian people. If the Lord says that
His work in the first day is good, I want you to say so too. Do not wait till
you see the second, third, fourth, fifth, or sixth day before you feel
confidence in the convert and offer Him fellowship. If God speaks encouragingly
so soon, I want you to do the same. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
And God called the light day, and the darkness He called night:--
Light, natural and spiritual
The Holy Ghost mysteriously quickens the dead heart, excites
emotions, longings, desires.
I. DIVINE FIAT:
God said, Let there be light, and there was light. The Lord Himself needed no
light to enable Him to discern His creatures. He looked upon the darkness, and
resolved that He would transform its shapeless chaos into a fair and lovely
world.
1. We shall observe that the work of grace by which light enters the
soul is a needful work. God¡¦s plan for the sustaining of vegetable and animal
life, rendered light necessary. Light is essential to life. It is light which
first shows us our lost estate; for we know nothing of it naturally. This
causes pain and anguish of heart; but that pain and anguish are necessary, in
order to bring us to lay hold on Jesus Christ, whom the light next displays to
us. No man ever knows Christ till the light of God shines on the cross.
2. Next observe it was a very early work. Light was created on the
first day, not on the third, fourth, or sixth, but on the first day; and one of
the first operations of the Spirit of God in a man¡¦s heart is to give light
enough to see his lost estate, and to perceive that he cannot save himself from
it but must look elsewhere.
3. It is well for us to remember that light giving is a Divine work.
God said, ¡§Let there be light,¡¨ and there was light.
4. This Divine work is wrought by the Word. God did not sit in
solemn silence and create the light, but He spake. He said, ¡§Light be,¡¨ and
light was. So the way in which we receive light is by the Word of God. Faith
cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. Christ Himself is the
essential Word, and the preaching of Christ Jesus is the operative Word. We
receive Christ actually when God¡¦s power goes with God¡¦s Word--then have we
light. Hence the necessity of continually preaching the Word of God.
5. While light was conferred in connection with the mysterious
operation of the Holy Spirit, it was unaided by the darkness itself. How could
darkness assist to make itself light? Nay, the darkness never did become light.
It had to give place to light, but darkness could not help God. The power which
saves a sinner is not the power of man.
6. As this light was unassisted by darkness, so was it also
unsolicited. There came no voice out of that thick darkness, ¡§Oh God, enlighten
us¡¨; there was no cry of prayer. The first work of grace in the heart does not
begin with man¡¦s desire, but with God¡¦s implanting the desire.
7. This light came instantaneously.
8. As it is instantaneous, so it is irresistible. Darkness must give
place when God speaks.
II. DIVINE
OBSERVATION. ¡§And God saw the light.¡¨ Does He not see everything? Yes, beloved,
He does; but this does not refer to the general perception of God of all His
works, but is a something special. ¡§God saw the light¡¨--He looked at it with
complacency, gazed upon it with pleasure. A father looks upon a crowd of boys
in a school and sees them all, but there is one boy whom he sees very
differently from all the rest: he watches him with care: it is his own child,
and his eye is specially there. Though you have come here sighing and groaning
because of inbred sin, yet the Lord sees what is good in you, for He has put it
there. Satan can see the light and he tries to quench it: God sees it and
preserves it. The Lord watches you, and He sees the light. He has His eye
always fixed upon the work of grace that is in your soul.
III. DIVINE
APPROBATION. ¡§God saw the light, that it was good.¡¨ Light is good in all
respects.
1. The natural light is good. Solomon says, ¡§It is a pleasant thing
to behold the sun¡¨; but you did not want Solomon to inform you upon that point.
Any blind man who will tell you the tale of his sorrows will be quite
philosopher enough to convince you that light is good.
2. Gospel light is good. ¡§Blessed are the eyes which see the things
which ye see.¡¨ You only need to travel into heathen lands, and witness the
superstition and cruelty of the dark places of the earth, to understand that
gospel light is good.
3. As for spiritual light, those that have received it long for more
of it, that they may see yet more and more the glory of heaven¡¦s essential
light! O God, Thou art of good the unmeasured Sea; Thou art of light both Soul,
and Source, and Centre.
IV. DIVINE
SEPARATION. It appears that though God made light there was still darkness in
the world: ¡§And God divided the light from the darkness.¡¨ Beloved, the moment
you become a Christian, you will begin to fight. You will be easy and
comfortable enough, as long as you are a sinner, but as soon as you become a
Christian, you will have no more rest.
1. One part of the Divine work in the soul of man is to make a
separation in the man himself. Do you feel an inward contention and war going
on? Permit me to put these two verses together--¡§O wretched man that I am, who
shall deliver me from the body of this death? There is therefore now no
condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh,
but after the Spirit.¡¨ How can these two things be consistent? Ask the
spiritual man: he will tell you, ¡§The Lord divideth between light and
darkness.¡¨
2. Whereas there is a division within the Christian, there is
certain to be a division without. So soon as ever the Lord gives to any
believer light, he begins to separate himself from the darkness. He separates
himself from the world¡¦s religion, finds out where Christ is preached, and goes
there. Then as to society, the dead, carnal religionist can get on very well in
ordinary society, but it is not so when he has light. I cannot go to light
company, wasting the evening, showing off my fine clothes, and talking
frivolity and nonsense.
V. DIVINE
NOMINATION. Things must have names; Adam named the beasts, but God Himself
named the day and the night. ¡§And God called the light day, and the darkness
called He night.¡¨ It is a very blessed work of grace to teach us to call things
by their right names. The spiritual aspirations of God¡¦s people never can be
evil. Carnal reason calls them folly, but the Lord would have us call them
good. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Lessons from the night
1. One of the first lessons
which God intends us to learn from the night is a larger respect for wholesome
renovation. Perhaps this may not show itself in any great lengthening of our
bodily life, but rather in a more healthy spirit, less exposed to that
prevailing unrest which fills the air and which troubles so many minds.
2. The night is the season of wonder. A new and strangely equipped
population, another race of beings, another sequence of events, comes into and
fills the world of the mind. Men who have left their seal upon the world, and
largely helped in the formation of its deepest history--men whose names stand
up through the dim darkness of the past, great leaders and masters, have
admitted that they learned much from the night.
3. The next thought belonging to the night is that then another
world comes out, and as it were, begins its day. There is a rank of creatures
which moves out into activity as soon as the sun has set. This thought should
teach us something of tolerance; senses, dispositions, and characters are very
manifold and various among ourselves. Each should try to live up to the light
he has, and allow a brother to do the same.
4. Such extreme contrasts as are involved in light and darkness may
tell us that we have as yet no true measure of what life is, and it must be
left to some other conditions of existence for us to realize in anything like
fulness the stores, the processes, the ways of the Kingdom of the Lord which
are provided for such as keep His law.
5. Let us learn that, whether man wake or sleep, the universe is in
a state of progress, ¡§the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain
together.¡¨
6. Let us learn to use day rightly and righteously, to accept the
grace and the forces of the Lord while it is called today, and then the night
shall have no forbidding, no repulsive significance.
The evening and the
morning were the first day
The first day
I. THINK OF THE
DAY¡¦S BEGINNING. Evening came before morning. Light issued out of darkness. The
first goings of creative power were in obscurity.
II. THE DAY¡¦S
CHARACTER--¡§Evening and morning.¡¨ In all life are alternations of darkness and
light--shadow and sunshine. Rest is the condition of labour, and labour of
rest.
III. THE DAY¡¦S
RELIGION. There was a morning and an evening sacrifice.
IV. THE DAY¡¦S END.
That which began in darkness is followed by darkness, which ushers in a new
day. ¡§The night cometh.¡¨ (The Preacher¡¦s Monthly.)
The evening and the morning
I. Let us reflect
on what is God¡¦s way of estimating THE PERIODS OF HISTORY. I do no unjust
disparagement to the common way of recording the course of human history, when
I say that it takes the form of a record of failures and catastrophes coming
down upon splendid beginnings of empire. It is the morning and the evening that
make the day; not the evening and the morning. For one Motley to tell the story
of the Rise, there be many Gibbons to narrate the Decline and Fall. History, as
told in literature, is a tragedy, and ends with a death. So human history is
ever looking backward; and the morning and the evening make the day. But it is
not so that God writes history. The annals of mankind in the Holy Book begin in
the darkness of apostasy; but the darkness is shot through with gleams of hope,
the first rays of the dawn. The sentence of death is illuminated with the
promise of a Saviour: and the evening and the morning are the first day. There
is night again when the flood comes down and the civilization and the
wickedness of the primeval world are whelmed beneath it. But the flood clears
off with a rainbow, and it is proved to have been the clearing of the earth for
a better progress, for the rearing of a godly race, of whom by and by the
Christ shall come according to the flesh: and the evening and the morning are
the second day. And again the darkness falls upon the chosen race. They have
ceased from off the land of promise. They are to be traced through a marvellous
series of events down into the dark, where we dimly recognize the descendants
of heroic Abraham and princely Joseph in the gangs and coffles of slaves,
wearing themselves out in the brickyards of the land of Egypt, the house of
bondage. And this--is this the despairing evening of so bright a patriarchal
age as that gone by? No, no! it is so that men reckon, but not God. This is the
evening, not of yesterday, but of tomorrow. The elements of a new civilization
are brooding there in that miserable abode of slavery: of a civilization that
shall take ¡§the learning of the Egyptians¡¨ and infuse into it the spirit of a
high and fraternal morality, that shall take its religious pomps and rituals
and cleanse them of falsehoods and idolatries and inform them with the
spiritual worship of the one invisible God. The holy and priestly civilization
of David and Solomon, of the sons of Asaph and the sons of Korah, is to come
forth out of that dark chaos of Egyptian slavery. And the evening and the
morning shall be the fourth day. We need not trace the history of humanity and
of the Church on through all its pages. We have only to carry the spirit of
this ancient story forward into later times, and the dark places of history
become irradiated, and lo! the night is light about us. We behold ¡§the decline
and fall of the Roman Empire¡¨--that awful convulsion of humanity; nation
dashing against nation; civilization, with its monuments and records, its
institutions and laws, going down out of sight, overwhelmed by an inrushing sea
of barbaric invasion, and it looks to us, as we gaze, like nothing but
destruction and the end, ruin and failure. So it seems to us at this distance:
so it seemed to that great historian, Gibbon. But in the midst of the very
wreck and crash of it sat that great believer, Augustine, and wrote volume
after volume of the Civitas Dei--the ¡§city of God,¡¨ the ¡§city that hath
foundations,¡¨ the ¡§kingdom that cannot be moved.¡¨ This awful catastrophe, he
tells the terrified and quaking world, is not the end--it is the beginning.
History does not end so. This is the way its chapters open. The night was a
long night, but it had an end: and now we look back and see how through all its
dark and hopeless hours God was slowly grinding materials for the civilization
of modern times. So long, so long it seemed: but the morning came at last. And
the evening and the morning made the day. And we, today, are only in the
morning twilight, after just such another convulsion and obscuration of the
world. I have spoken to you now of this principle of the divine order, which
begins the day with the evening, as illustrated, first in creation, and then in
history; and now, can I safely leave it with you to make the more practical
application of it--
II. TO THE COURSE
OF HUMAN LIFE? For this is where you most need to know and feel it, and where,
I suspect, you most fail to see it. It has been such a common blunder, from the
days of Job and his friends down to the days when Christ rebuked the Pharisees,
and from those days again down to ours--the blunder of supposing that the
evening goes with the day before, and not with the day after--that the dark
times of human life are a punishment for what is past, instead of being, as
they always are to them that love God, a discipline and preparation for what is
coming. There are many and many such eventides in life--times of enforced
repose; hard times, when business stagnates or runs with adverse current; times
of sickness, pain, seclusion; times of depression, sorrow, bereavement, fear.
Such are the night times of life; and blessed are they who at such times have
learned to ¡§look forward, and not back¡¨; to say, not, What have I done, that
this thing should befall me? but, rather, What is God preparing for me, and for
what is He preparing me, that thus He should lovingly chasten and instruct me
in the night season? Then lift your heads, ye saints, and answer: ¡§No, no! this
is not the end; this is the beginning. The evening is come, and the morning
also cometh; and the evening and the morning are the day. Look! look at the
glory of the evening sky. It shall be fair weather in the morning, for the sky
is red.¡¨ So shall it ¡§come to pass that at evening time it shall be light.¡¨ (L.
W. Bacon.)
The first day
¡§The evening and the morning were the first day.¡¨ The evening came
first. God¡¦s glorious universe sprang into existence in obscurity. ¡§There was
the hiding of His power.¡¨ It is very remarkable that the creation work and the
redemption work of God were both alike shrouded in darkness. When God spake,
and the worlds were made, it is said, ¡§darkness was upon the face of the deep.¡¨
When Christ hung upon the cross, having finished His work of love, it is said,
¡§There was a darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour.¡¨ What a lesson
does this teach us! The glory was so exceeding that it needed to be
overshadowed: for us the veil was thrown over Jehovah¡¦s brightness; the light
would have been too strong for mortal eyes; the diadem of the King of kings
would have been too dazzling to meet our gaze, had it not been dimmed for our
sakes. Nevertheless, hidden as He is in unapproachable majesty, His secret is
with them that fear Him; and while the evening lasts, they wait with longing
expectation for that morning when they shall see no longer through a glass
darkly, but rather face to face. ¡§The evening and the morning were the first
day.¡¨ It was the alternation of light and shade which constituted this first
day; and is it not so with the spiritual days of a Christian? Darkness and
light succeed each other. If, then, thou art one who, ass child of God, art
sitting in darkness, there is comfort in this word for thee. If it is evening
now, the sunlight shall arise again. Even the record of God¡¦s creation speaks
to thee of consolation: there is in it a promise of joy to come; thy day would
not be perfect, if there were not a morning to succeed thy night. But if thou
art one with whom there is the brightness of sunshine in providence and in
grace, this sentence speaks to thee in warning. Although now thou canst look up
to an unclouded sky, and there is light in thy dwelling and in thine heart;
remember the evening shadows. The longest day has its sunset. God hath ordained
the alternation of light and darkness. As it is with individuals, so it is with
the whole Church of Christ; and now it is peculiarly with her the night time,
the deepest night she has ever known, and, blessed be God, the last night. She
standeth now beneath the darkened sky of that ¡§tribulation¡¨ which is to issue
in the millennial brightness of her coming Bridegroom¡¦s kingdom. How often does
she inquire, ¡§Watchman, what of the night?¡¨ and the answer is, ¡§The morning
cometh, still as yet there will be night: if ye inquire already, yet must ye
return; come and inquire again¡¨ (Isaiah 21:12, Geneva version). It shallbe
darker yet with her, ere the breaking morn appeareth: but how glorious will be
the dawn of that light, when the Sun of Righteousness Himself shall arise with
healing in His beams. Truly, said David, when he saw the glory of the King of
kings and spake of Him--¡§He shall be as the light of the morning when the sun
ariseth, even a morning without clouds.¡¨ ¡§Even so,¡¨ Saviour, ¡§come quickly,¡¨
¡§The evening and the morning were the first day.¡¨ I cannot help noticing
another thing in the consideration of this subject. The evening of a natural
day is the season of rest from labour: ¡§Man goeth forth unto his work and to
his labour until the evening.¡¨ In the darkness of the night, the various
occupations of busy men are laid aside, and the world is hushed in silence,
waiting the returning morning. Is there nothing of this in the Christian¡¦s
experience? Can he work when the night sets in upon his soul? Does not he, too,
wait and long for sunrise? ¡§The evening and the morning were the first day.¡¨
There is yet another lesson in these words, which I would notice. What is it
which constitutes the evening of a natural day? It is not that the position of
the sun is changed; but that the inhabitants of the earth are turned from Him.
Let us not forget that it is so with the evening of the soul. There are some in
the religious world, who seem to be just like the philosophers of a former day,
who believed and taught that the sun moved round our planet; they speak as if
the light of the Christian were caused by some change in Christ, the eternal
Sun of Righteousness. Nay, it is not so. Our Saviour God is ever the same, in
the glory of His salvation, in the brightness of His redemption; but we alas I
turn away our faces from Him, and are in darkness, it is sin which causes it to
be evening with us; it is our iniquity which has made it dark. There is one
thought connected with the evening and the morning, which is so precious to me,
that I cannot pass it over. There was, under the law, a sacrifice appointed
both for the morning and the evening. Ah! when it is daylight with thee,
Christian, and thou goest into the sanctuary, having boldness to enter into the
very holiest, having free access unto the Father; thy soul can there offer its
sacrifice of willing, loving praise. But the evening cometh, and then thou dost
shrink back from saying aught to God, from bringing thine offering with so
heavy a heart. Still, go even then; and pleading the blood of that richer
sacrifice which never faileth to bring down a blessing, lay the tribute of thy
broken heart beside it, and ask thy God, for His sake not to despise it. He
will not do so, for, in the provisions of His temple service, there was a
sacrifice for the evening too. (The Protoplast.)
The record of the first day of creation reminds us of the first
day of human life
How rapidly do the ¡§few days¡¨ which succeed the first evening and
morning in the life of man, pass away. I think I have somewhere read of a
philosopher who was seen in tears, and on being asked, ¡§Why weepest thou?¡¨
answered, ¡§I weep because there is so much for me to do, and my life is too
short to do it in.¡¨ Whether the philosopher said so or not, I am sure my own
heart has said it oftentimes, and so, I doubt not, have the hearts of others.
Sorrow and sickness are the two great means by which many a young heart has
become aged; the mind is early matured, and the stranger wondering says, ¡§How
old such an one is in character!¡¨ Yet every day of natural life has its burden,
as foreordained of God. There is one thought connected with the day, that is a
very solemn one. The evening and the morning will succeed each other, without
break or change, year after year; but a day will come upon us, the evening of
which we shall never see; a sun will rise that we shall never see go down; the
morning will come and find us in a body of sin and suffering, and before the
evening we shall have passed away. (The Protoplast.)
Let there be a firmament
The atmosphere
I.
THE
ATMOSPHERE IS NECESSARY TO THE POSSIBILITY OF HUMAN LIFE.
1. Gathers up the vapours.
2. Throws them down again in rain, snow, or dew, when needed.
3. Modifies and renders more beautiful the light of the sun.
4. Sustains life.
II. IT IS
NECESSARY FOR THE PRACTICAL PURPOSES OF LIFE.
1. The atmosphere is necessary for the transmission of sound. If
there were no atmosphere, the bell might be tolled, the cannon might be fired,
a thousand voices might render the music of the sweetest hymn, but not the
faintest sound would be audible. Thus all commercial, educational, and social
intercourse would be at an end, as men would not be able to hear each other
speak. We seldom think of the worth of the atmosphere around us, never seen,
seldom felt, but without which the world would be one vast grave.
2. The atmosphere is necessary for many purposes related to the
inferior objects of the world. Without it the plants could not live, our
gardens would be divested of useful vegetables, and beautiful flowers.
Artificial light would be impossible. The lamp of the mines could not be
kindled. The candle of the midnight student could never have been lighted. The
bird could not have wended its way to heaven¡¦s gate to utter its morning song,
as there would have been no air to sustain its flight.
III. LET US MAKE A
PRACTICAL IMPROVEMENT OF THE SUBJECT.
1. To be thankful for the air we breathe. How often do we recognize
the air by which we are surrounded as amongst the chief of our daily blessings,
and as the immediate and continued gift of God? How seldom do we utter praise
for it.
2. To make the best use of the life it preserves. To cultivate a
pure life. To speak golden words. To make a true use of all the subordinate
ministries of nature. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Uses of the atmosphere
1. The atmosphere is the
great fund and storehouse of life to plants and animals; its carbonic acid is
the food of the one, and its oxygen the nourishment of the other; without its
carbonic acid the whole vegetable kingdom would wither, and without its oxygen
the blood of animals, ¡§which is the life thereof,¡¨ would be only serum and
water.
2. It is a refractor of light. Without it the sun¡¦s rays would fall
perpendicularly and directly on isolated portions of the world, and with a
velocity which would probably render them invisible; but by means of the
atmosphere they are diffused in a softened effulgence through the entire globe.
3. It is a reflector of light. Hence its mysterious, beautiful, and
poetical blue, contrasting and yet harmonizing with the green mantle of the
world.
4. It is the conservator and disperser and modifier of heat. By its
hot currents constantly flung from the equatorial regions of the world, even
the cold of the frigid zones is deprived of its otherwise unbearable rigour;
while the mass of cold air always rushing from about the poles towards the
equator quenches half the heat of tropical suns, and condenses the vapour so
needful to the luxuriant vegetation.
5. It is the great vibratory of sound, the true sounding board of
the world, and without it the million voices and melodies of this earth would
all be dumb; it would be a soundless desert, where an earthquake would not make
a whisper. By its pressure the elastic fluids of animal bodies are prevented
from bursting their slender vessels and causing instantaneous destruction. Its
winds propel our ships, its electricity conveys our messages. By the aid of its
warm gales and gentle dews the desert can be made to blossom as the rose. (John
Cobley.)
The composition of the atmosphere
But the atmosphere with which the Creator has surrounded the earth
is wonderful also in its composition. The two elements of which it chiefly
consists--oxygen and nitrogen--are mixed in definite proportions, as 20 to 80
in 100 parts. If this proportion were but slightly altered, as nitrogen
destroys life and extinguishes flame, the result of any perceptible increase of
it would be that fires would lose their strength and lamps their brightness,
plants would wither, and man, with the whole animal kingdom, would perform
their functions with difficulty and pain. Or if the quantity of nitrogen were
much diminished, and the oxygen increased, the opposite effect would be
produced. The least spark would set anything combustible in a flame; candles
and lamps would burn with the most brilliant blaze for a moment, but would be
quickly consumed. If a house caught fire, the whole city would be burnt down.
The animal fluids would circulate with the greatest rapidity, brain fever would
soon set in, and the lunatic asylums would be filled. A day is coming when ¡§the
elements shall melt with fervent heat.¡¨ God has but to subtract the nitrogen
from the air, and the whole world would instantly take fire; such is the
activity and energy of the oxygen when left uncontrolled. (Brewer.)
Interesting illustrations of design in the atmosphere
Vast quantities of oxygen are daily consumed by animals, and by
combustion. Carbonic acid gas is evolved instead. But this gas is so injurious
that when the air is charged with only one-tenth part of it, it is wholly unfit
for animals to breathe, and is unsuitable to the support of fires. The
vegetable kingdom meets the whole difficulty. It gives out oxygen and takes in
carbonic acid in amply sufficient measure to balance the disturbance created by
the animals. Thus every breath we draw instructs us to admire the wisdom of Him
who doeth all things well. (Brewer.)
Again, oxygen is a little heavier and nitrogen a little lighter
than common air. Had it been otherwise, had nitrogen been a little heavier, and
carbonic acid gas been a little lighter, we must have breathed them again, so
that, instead of breathing wholesome air, we should have been constantly
inhaling the very gases which the lungs had rejected as offal. The consequences
would have been most fatal. Life would have been painful; diseases ten times
more prevalent than they now are; and death would have cut us off at the very
threshold of our existence. (Brewer.)
Further, if the air had possessed an odour, such as that of
phosphuretted hydrogen, it would have interfered not only with the perfume of
flowers, but also with our faculty of discriminating wholesome foods by their
smell. If it had been coloured like chlorine gas, or a London fog, we should
have seen only the thick air, and not the objects around us. Had it been less
transparent than it now is, it would have obstructed the rays of the sun,
diminished their light and warmth, and abridged our power of distant vision. (Brewer.)
The air is the great means of life, not only to man, but to all
living things. It is also essential to combustion. Without it no fire would
burn, and all our industries which depend on the use of fire would necessarily
be at a standstill. By the heat of the sun an immense quantity of water in the
form of vapour is daily carried up from the earth, rivers, and seas--amounting,
indeed, to many millions of gallons! In the course of a year it is not less
than forty thousand cubic miles! But if there were no atmosphere this
circulation could not exist. There would be no rain, rivers, or seas, but one
vast desert. Neither could the clouds be buoyed up from the surface of the
earth, nor could the winds blow to disperse noxious vapours, and produce a
system of ventilation among the abodes of men. (Brewer.)
The influence of sin seen in its deterioration
There is something in the earth¡¦s atmosphere that blights and
injures. It is not the same healthful, genial, joyous firmament that it was
when God created it. (H. Bonar.)
Genesis of the sky
I. EXPLANATION OF
THE PASSAGE.
1. Ancient conception of the sky. To the ancient Hebrew the sky
seemed a vast, outstretched, concave surface or expansion, in which the stars
were fastened, and over which the ethereal waters were stored. (See Proverbs 8:27; Hebrews 1:12; Isaiah 34:4; Isaiah 40:22; Job 22:14; Job 37:18; Psalms 148:4.) ¡§Ah, all this,¡¨ you
tell me, ¡§is scientifically false; the sky is not a material arch, or tent, or
barrier, with outlets for rain; it is only the matterless limit of vision.¡¨
Neither, let me again remind you, is there any such thing as ¡§sunrise¡¨ or
¡§sunset.¡¨ To use such words is to utter what science declares is a falsehood.
And yet your astronomer, living in the blaze of science, fresh from the
discovery of spectrum analysis and satellites of Mars, and knowing too that his
words are false, still persists in talking of sunrise and sunset. Will you,
then, deny to the untutored Moses, speaking in the child-like language of that
ancient infarct civilization, the privilege which you so freely accord to the
nineteenth-century astronomer?
2. Panorama of the emerging sky. Everywhere is still a shapeless,
desolate chaos. And now a sudden break is seen. A broad, glorious band or
expanse glides through the angry, chaotic waste, separating it into two
distinct masses--the lower, the heavy fluids; the upper, the ethereal vapours.
The band, still bearing upward the vapour, swells and mounts and arches and
vaults, till it becomes a concave hemisphere or dome. That separating, majestic
dimension we cannot to this day call by a better name than the expanse. And
that expanse God called heavens. And there was evening and there was morning, a
second day.
II. MORAL MEANING
OF THE STORY.
1. The heavens suggest the soul¡¦s true direction--it is upward. To
express moral excellence by terms of altitude is an instinct. How naturally we
use such phrases as these: ¡§Exalted worth, high resolve, lofty purpose,
elevated views, sublime character, eminent purity!¡¨ How naturally, too, we use
opposite phrases: ¡§Low instincts, base passions, degraded character, grovelling
habits, stooping to do it!¡¨ Doubtless here, too, is the secret of the arch, and
especially the spire, as the symbol of Christian architecture: the Church is an
aspiration. Even the very word ¡§heaven¡¨ itself, like the Greek Ouranos, means
height, and, according to the etymologists, is an Anglo-Saxon word, heo-fan;
meaning what is heaved up, lifted, heav-en--heaven. Well, then, may the
vaulting sky stand as a symbol of human aspiration. The true life is a
perpetual soaring and doming; or rather, like the mystic temple of Ezekiel¡¦s
vision, it is an inverted spiral, forever winding upward, and broadening as it
winds (Ezekiel 41:7). The soul¡¦s true life is a
perpetual exhalation; her affections evermore evaporating from her own great
deep, and mounting heavenward in clouds of incense.
2. As the heavens suggest human aspirations, so do the heavens
suggest their complement, Divine perfections. It is true, e.g., in
respect to God¡¦s immensity. Nothing seems so remote from us, or gives such an
idea of vastness, as the dome of heaven. Climb we ever so high on mountain top,
the stars are still above us. Again: It is true in respect to God¡¦s
sovereignty. Nothing seems to be so absolutely beyond human control or
modification as the sun and stars of heaven. Again: It is true in respect to
God¡¦s spirituality. Nothing seems so like that rarity of texture which we
instinctively ascribe to pure, incorporeal spirit, as that subtile, tenuous
ether which, it is believed, pervades the clear, impalpable sky, and, indeed,
all immensity. And in this subtile ether, so invisible to sight, so impalpable
to touch, so diffused throughout earth and the spaces of the heavenly expanse,
we may behold a symbol of that invisible, intangible, ever-omnipresent One who
Himself is Spirit; and who, accordingly, can be worshipped only in spirit and
truth (John 4:24). Again: it is true in respect
to God¡¦s purity. Nothing is so exquisite an emblem of absolute spotlessness and
eternal chastity, as the unsullied expanse of heaven, untrodden by mortal foot,
unswept by aught but angel wings. Again: It is true in respect to God¡¦s
beatitude. We cannot conceive a more perfect emblem of felicity and moral
splendour than light. Everywhere and evermore, among rudest nations as well as
among most refined, light is instinctively taken as the first and best possible
emblem of whatever is most intense and perfect in blessedness and glory. And
whence comes light--the light which arms us with health, and fills us with joy,
and tints flower and cloud with beauty, and floods mountain and mead with
splendour--but from the sky? Well, then, may the shining heaven be taken as the
elect emblem of Him who decketh Himself with light as with a robe (Psalms 104:2), who dwelleth in light
which no man can approach unto (1 Timothy 6:16), who Himself is the
Father of lights (James 1:17). (G. D.Boardman.)
The atmosphere
The word ¡§atmosphere¡¨ indicates, in general, its character and its
relation to the earth. It is compounded of two Greek words, one signifying
vapour and the other sphere, and, taken together, they denote a sphere of
vapour enveloping or enwrapping the whole earth. The ancients regarded the air,
as children do now, as nothing at all. A vessel filled only with air, had nothing
in it. ¡§As light as air¡¨ is a proverbial expression, but a very false one, to
denote nothingness. We may not be aware of it, but yet it is true that the
breathing of the air yields us three-quarters of our nourishment, while the
other quarter only is supplied by the food, solid and liquid, of which we
partake. The principal parts of this food are oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and
carbonic acid, and these, too, are the constituent elements of the atmosphere.
There is a sense, therefore, in which we may truly say of the air, what the
apostle and the old Greek poet before him said of God, ¡§In it we live and move
and have our being.¡¨ The weight of the atmosphere is so great that its pressure
upon a man of ordinary size has been computed to be about fourteen or fifteen
tons. A man of large frame would have to carry one or two tons additional. But
as the air¡¦s pressure is lateral as well as vertical, and equal upon all sides
and parts of every body, it not only does not crush or injure the frailest
flower, but actually feeds and nourishes it. There are other than atmospheric
burdens, and those which consciously press more heavily, which yet a man may
find a great blessing ill carrying with a cheerful face and courage. The
atmosphere is tenanted by myriad forms of life, vegetable and animal. A French
naturalist of great eminence, M. Miquel, writing upon ¡§Living Organisms of the
Atmosphere,¡¨ has found numberless organisms dancing in the light of a single
sunbeam. The atmosphere, moreover, is the great agent by which nature receives
the wonderful colours which are her most beautiful adorning. It is owing to the
reflection of the sun¡¦s rays that the sky and the distant horizon assume that
beautiful azure hue which is subject to endless variations. It is owing to the refraction
of these rays as they pass obliquely through the aerial strata, that we have
the splendours of the morning and evening twilight, and that we seem to see the
sun three or four minutes before he actually rises above the eastern horizon,
and three or four minutes after he actually disappears below the western
horizon. If it were not for the atmosphere, the light would instantaneously
disappear as the sun sank below the horizon, and leave the world in utter
darkness, while at his rising in the morning the world would pass in an instant
from complete darkness into a flood of dazzling and blinding light. Such daily
and sudden shocks to vision would be painful, and probably destructive to
sight. Without the atmosphere there would have been no place in the universe
for the dwelling place of man, because without it the waters would have
prevailed. But as by the atmosphere the waters below were, on the second day of
the creative week, divided from those above, a place was provided suitable for
the abode of man. Without the air, which gathers the moisture in the clouds and
sends it down again upon the earth, there could be no precipitation of rain or
snow. Without the atmosphere there could be no purifying winds, which are but
air in motion, no medium to transmit and diffuse the light and heat of the sun,
no agent to modify and make surpassingly beautiful the light of the sun, and no
possibility of respiration for plants or animals, without which it would be
impossible to maintain any form of organic life. The atmosphere, too, is
indispensable for all the practical purposes of life. If by some miraculous
intervention it should be made possible for human life to exist without the
air, it would be useless and vain. The air is necessary for the transmission of
sound. Without it, the bell might be tolled, the cannon might be fired, a great
multitude of voices might unite to render the music of the sweetest hymn, but
not the faintest sound would be audible either to the performers or to the
listeners. In the worship of God we should need no tune books, no organ, no
choir, no preacher, ¡§for there is no speech nor language where their voice is
not heard,¡¨ and the voices of none of these could be heard. You might breathe
or even loudly speak your words of love into the very ear of some dear one, and
yet not one of your words would be heard without the presence of air in the ear
to empower its wondrous mechanism for hearing. As light is indispensable for
seeing, so in exactly the same way is the air necessary for hearing, and
without it the ear would be a perfectly useless organ, instead of being, as
now, a wonderful organ to minister to our joy and delight. And since without
the atmosphere we could not hear each other speak, it follows that all
commercial, educational, and social intercourse would be at an end, and the
earth would become one vast grave.
1. Let us learn from the air a lesson--and it is a most impressive
one--as to the inestimable value of our ¡§common mercies,¡¨ which we enjoy every
moment, without a thought and without an emotion of gratitude to the great
Giver of them.
2. Let us learn from the atmosphere a lesson as to how to overcome
our difficulties. The dove in the fable was irritated because the wind ruffled
its feathers and opposed its flight. It foolishly desired to have a firmament
free from air, through the empty spaces of which it vainly thought it could fly
with the speed of lightning. Silly bird! It did not know that without the air
it could not fly at all, nor even live. And just so it is with the difficulties
we encounter. Without them and without conquering them, a high Christian
manhood or character is unattainable.
3. Let us learn from the atmosphere a lesson of thankfulness. It is
amongst the chief of our daily blessings, and is the immediate and continuous
gift of God, to whom our praises are continually due.
4. Let us learn from the atmosphere to make the best use possible of
the life it nourishes and preserves. As in itself the air is sweet, wholesome,
and life-giving, let us be taught by it to live pure and noble lives which
shall yield for others wholesome and helpful and not poisonous and corrupt
influences. Our example makes a moral atmosphere for others to breathe, which
is wholesome or noxious, according as the example is good or bad. (G.
C.Noyes, D. D.)
The atmosphere
The atmosphere, like an ocean, overlies the whole surface of the
earth; in fact, it is an ocean; and it is literally true, that, like crabs and
lobsters, we live and move and spend our days at the bottom of a sea--an aerial
sea. This atmospheric ocean rises far above us, and, like that of waters, has
its waves, its currents, and its tides. It is found to grow more rarified, as
well as colder, as we ascend towards its upper limit, which is supposed to be
about forty-five miles above the level of the sea. Barometrical observations,
however, show that on ascending to the height of three and a half miles (nearly
that of Cotopaxi), we leave behind us, by weight, more than one-half the whole
mass of the atmosphere. And from the experience of aeronauts, it is believed
that there is no such air as man can breathe at an elevation of eight miles;
probably death would be the certain consequence of exceeding seven, though
some, of late, at great risk and suffering, have ascended to nearly that
height. On the summit of Mont Blanc, which is a trifle under three miles, the
sensations of those who make the ascent are very painful, owing to the levity
of the air; the flesh puffs out, the head is oppressed, the respiration is
difficult, and the face becomes livid; whilst the temperature is cold almost
past endurance. This ocean of air, like that of water, has also its weight and
pressure. People, in general, are not aware, because they are not conscious, of
any weight resting upon them from the atmosphere; yet reliable experiments
prove that at the sea level it presses with a force equal to fourteen and
three-fifths pounds on every square inch, or 2,100 pounds on every square foot,
or 58,611,548,160 pounds on every square mile; or on the whole surface of the
earth with a weight equal to that of a solid globe of lead sixty miles in
diameter! How few reflect that they live under an ocean of such stupendous
weight! But to bring this fact more sensibly before the mind, we may state that
the atmospheric pressure on the whole surface of a medium sized man is no less
than fourteen tons--a weight that would instantly crash him, as hollow vessels
collapse when sunk deep in the ocean, but for the elasticity and equal pressure
of the air on every part without, and the counterbalancing pressure and
elasticity of the air within. The air encompassing the earth is a compound
substance, made up of two gases, mixed in the proportion of twenty-one parts of
oxygen to seventy-nine parts of nitrogen, by measure; mixed with these is a
small proportion of carbonic acid gas, which does not exceed one two-thousandth
part of the whole volume of the atmosphere. Whether the air is taken from the
greatest depths, or the most exalted heights which man has ever reached, this
proportion of the oxygen and nitrogen gases is maintained invariably.
Considering the vast and varied exhalations that constantly ascend from sea and
land, together with the incessant agitation of winds and tempests, this stands
before us a most astonishing fact, indeed! But it is not more wonderful than it
is important. No possible change could be made in the composition of the air,
without rendering it injurious both to animal and vegetable life. If the
quantity of nitrogen were but a little increased, all the vital functions of
man would be performed with difficulty, pain, and slowness, and the pendulum of
life would soon come to a stand. If, on the other hand, the proportion of
oxygen were increased, all the processes of life would be quickened into those
of a fever, and the animal fabric would soon be destroyed, as it were, by its
own fires. (H. W. Morris, D. D.)
Reflections
1. On the mass of the atmosphere. Vast an appendage as this is to
our globe, its dimensions and density have been adapted with the utmost
exactness to the constitution of all organized existences. Any material change
in its mass would require a corresponding change in the structure of both
plants and animals, and, indeed, in the whole economy of the world. If its mass
were considerably reduced, all the difficulties experienced by travellers on
the summits of lofty mountains, and by aeronauts at great elevations above the
earth, would ensue; on the other hand, if much increased, opposite and equally
disastrous results would follow. If the atmosphere had been twice or three
times its present mass, currents of air would move with double or triple their
present force. With such a change nothing on sea or land could stand against a
storm. But how happily do we find all things balanced as now constituted. And
how obvious, that, ere ever God had breathed forth the fluid air, in His
all-comprehending Mind, its mass was measured and weighed, and the strength and
wants of all living creatures duly estimated before one of them had been called
into being. All the works of God have been done according to a determinate
counsel and infallible foreknowledge.
2. On the pressure of the atmosphere. Contemplating the enormous
weight of the air, resting upon all things and all persons, who but must
devoutly admire both the wisdom and the goodness of the Creator, in so
adjusting all the properties of the firmament, that under it we can breathe and
walk and act with ease, unconscious of weight or oppression, while in fact we
are every moment under a load, which, when reduced to figures, surpasses both
our comprehension and belief.
3. On the composition of the atmosphere. How very wonderful is this!
When we reflect upon the proportions and combinations of its constituent
elements, we cannot but look up with adoring reverence to its Divine Author.
What wisdom, what power, what benevolence, have been exercised in arranging the
chemical constitution and agencies of this world, to adapt them unfailingly to
the strength and wants of animals and of plants, even the most delicate and
minute! How very slightly the atmosphere of life differs from one that would
produce instant and universal death How trifling the change the Almighty had
need make in the air we hourly breathe, to lay all the wicked and rebellious
sons of men lifeless and silent in the dust! (H. W. Morris, D. D.)
A type of prayer and its answer
In the natural world, the sun pours down its light and heat, and
diffuses his genial influences over all; yet warming and animating, in a
special degree, those fields and hillsides turned more directly towards him,
and drawing upward from them a proportionally greater amount of vapour; this
vapour, as we have seen, in due time, returns in showers, refreshing and
beautifying all nature. So in the world of Christian devotion. Under the
benignant beams of the Sun of Righteousness, the exhalations of prayer and
praise are drawn upwards to the heavenly throne, more abundantly, as in nature,
from those more completely under His gracious influences; and these exhalations
of the heart, through a Saviour¡¦s mediation, are made to return in richer
showers, even showers of grace, to refresh and strengthen those souls to bring
forth fruit unto everlasting life. Again: As the earth, without showers, would
soon become parched and barren and dead; so, without the rain and dew of Divine
grace, the moral earth would become as iron, and its heavens as brass; every
plant of holiness, every flower of piety, and every blade of virtue, would soon
droop and die. Nor does the parallel end here: as in the physical world, the
greater the quantity of vapours drawn up from sea and land, the greater will be
the amount of rain that sooner or later will come down on plain and mountain;
so in the spiritual, the more abundant the exhalations of prayer and supplication
from the children of men, the more copious the showers of grace that will be
poured out in return. Let prayer, therefore, daily ascend as the vapours from
the ends of the earth, and rise as clouds of incense before the throne, and
this wilderness shall yet blossom as the rose, flourish as the garden of the
Lord, and bloom with all the beauties of an unblighted paradise. (H. W.
Morris, D. D.)
Atmospherical adjustments
The atmosphere constitutes a machinery which, in all its
complicated and admirable adjustments, offers the most striking displays and
convincing proofs of this. This vast and wonderful appendage of our globe has
been made expressly to meet the nature and wants of the living creatures and
growing vegetation that occupy its surface; and all these plants and animals
have been created with distinct reference to the properties of the atmosphere.
Throughout design and mutual adaptation are most manifest. The atmosphere has
been composed of those elements, and composed of them in just the proportions
that are essential to the health and nurture of all living creatures. The
atmosphere has been made for lungs; and lungs have been made for the
atmosphere, being elaborately constructed for its alternate admission and
expulsion. And how beautiful that adjustment by which animals breathe of the
oxygen of the air, and set carbonic acid free for the use of plants, while
plants absorb carbonic acid, and set oxygen free for the benefit of animals!
The atmosphere and the ear have also been formed one for the other. This organ
is so constructed that its use depends entirely upon the elastic properties of
the air. In like manner the atmosphere and the organs of speech have been
formed in mutual adaptation. The whole mouth, the larynx, the tongue, the lips,
have been made with inimitable skill to form air into words. Equally evident is
the mutual adaptation of the atmosphere and the organs of smell, as the latter
can effect their function only in connection with the former. In one word, all
the parts of all animal organizations, even to the very pores of the skin, have
been contrived with minute nicety in adaptation to the constituent elements and
elastic properties of the atmosphere. Add to all the foregoing, its admirable
qualities for disseminating h, at evaporating moisture, equalizing climate,
producing winds, forming clouds, and diffusing light--and we behold in the
Firmament of heaven a concourse of vast contrivances, that constitute a sublime
anthem to the Creator¡¦s praise! The various elements composing the atmosphere,
its gases, and vapours, and electricity, are, indeed, as if instinct with life
and reason. Animated by the solar beams, they are everywhere in busy and
unerring activity,--sometimes acting singly, sometimes in combination, but
always playing into each other¡¦s hands with a certainty and perfection which
might almost be called intelligence, and which nothing short of Infinite Wisdom
could have devised. Thus, by their manifold and beneficial operations, ¡§the
heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament showeth His handiwork.¡¨ (H.
W. Morris, D. D.)
The firmament
The use of it was to ¡§divide the waters from the waters¡¨: that is,
the waters on the earth from the waters in the clouds, which are well known to
be supported by the buoyant atmosphere. The ¡§division¡¨ here spoken of is that
of distribution. God having made the substance of all things, goes on to
distribute them. By means of this the earth is watered by the rain of heaven,
without which it would be unfruitful, and all its inhabitants perish. God makes
nothing in vain. There is a grandeur in the firmament to the eye; but this is
not all: usefulness is combined with beauty. Nor is it useful only with respect
to animal subsistence: it is a mirror, conspicuous to all, displaying the glory
of its Creator, and showing His handiworks. The clouds also, by emptying
themselves upon the earth, set us an example of generosity; and reprove those
who, full of this world¡¦s good, yet keep it principally to themselves. (A.
Fuller.)
The second day
The second day¡¦s work is the forming of an expanse or heaven in
the creature, by which the hitherto unbounded waters are divided from the
waters. God then names the expanse. At this stage the state of the creature,
that it is drowned in waters, begins to be perceived. Such is the second state
or stage in the new creation. In the midst of the waters a heaven is formed in
the once benighted creature. That unstable element, so quickly moved by storms,
is the well-known type of the restless desires of the heart of fallen man; for
¡§the wicked are like the troubled sea, which cannot rest, whose waters cast up
mire and dirt.¡¨ Before regeneration, unquiet lusts everywhere prevail: the
whole man or creature is drowned and buried in them. In the progress of the new
creation, these waters are not at once removed: indeed, they are never wholly
removed till that other creation comes, when there is ¡§no more sea.¡¨ They are
first divided by a heaven; then bounded on the third day, when the dry land
rises up out of them. This heaven represents the understanding opened, as the
rising earth upon the third day shows us the will liberated. For till now, ¡§the
understanding has been darkened¡¨; nay, it is written of the natural man that he
has ¡§no understanding.¡¨ But now the heaven is stretched. Christ ¡§opens the
understanding¡¨ of those who before this had been His disciples. And thus
another precious gift, once hid with Christ in God, now by Christ is wrought in
us also. A heaven is formed within the creature; a heaven into which darkness may
return, and through which clouds shall pour as well as bright sunshine; a
heaven which for sin may be shut up and become like brass, but which was made
to be the home and treasure house of sweet and dewy showers; a heaven like
Israel¡¦s path through the sea of old, sorely threatened by dark and thick
waters, but, like that same path, a step to resurrection power, and worthy to
be called ¡§heaven,¡¨ even by God Himself; influencing the earth in untold ways,
here attracting, there repelling; the great means after light of arranging and
disposing all things. (A. Jukes.)
The gathering together of the waters called He seas
The sea and the dry land
I.
THE
SEA. ¡§Let the waters . . . unto one place.¡¨
1. The method of their location. Perhaps by volcanic agency.
2. The degree of their proportion. If the sea were smaller, the
earth would cease to be verdant and fruitful, as there would not be sufficient
water to supply our rivers and streams, or to distil upon the fields. If the
sea was larger, the earth would become a vast uninhabitable marsh, from the
over abundance of rain. Hence, we see how needful it is that there should be a
due proportion between the sea and dry land, and the wisdom and goodness of the
Creator, in that it is established so exactly and beneficently.
3. The extent of their utility. They not only give fertility to the
earth, but they answer a thousand social and commercial purposes.
II. THE DRY LAND.
1. The dry land was made to appear. The land had been created
before, but it was covered with a vast expanse of water. Even when things are
created, when they merely exist, the Divine call must educate them into the
full exercise of their utility, and into the complete manifestation of their
beauty. So it can remove the tide of passion from the soul, and make all that
is good in human nature to appear.
2. It was made to be verdant. ¡§And let the earth bring forth grass.¡¨
The plants now created are divided into three classes: grass, herb, and tree.
In the first, the seed is not noticed, as not obvious to the eye. In the
second, the seed is the striking characteristic. In the third, the fruit. This
division is simple and natural.
3. It was made to be fruitful. ¡§And the fruit tree yielding fruit.¡¨
The earth is not merely verdant and beautiful to look at, but it is also
fruitful and good for the supply of human want. Nature appears friendly to man,
that she may gain his confidence, invite his study, and minister to the removal
of his poverty.
III. AND IT WAS
GOOD.
1. For the life and health of man.
2. For the beauty of the universe.
3. For the commerce and produce of the nations. (J. S. Exell, M.
A.)
Various uses of the sea
1. Water is as indispensable
to all life, whether vegetable or animal, as is the air itself. But this
element of water is supplied entirely by the sea. All the waters that are in
the rivers, the lakes, the fountains, the vapours, the dew, the rain, the snow,
come alike out of the ocean. It is a common impression that it is the flow of
the rivers that fills the sea. It is a mistake. It is the flow of the sea that
fills the rivers.
2. A second use of the sea is to moderate the temperature of the
world. A common method of warming houses in the winter is by the use of hot
water. The water, being heated in the basement, is carried by iron pipes to the
remotest parts of the building, where, parting with its warmth and becoming
cooler and heavier, it flows back again to the boiler, to be heated anew, and
so to pass round in the same circuit continuously. The advantage of this method
is, that the heat can be carried to great distances, and in any direction.
3. A third important use of the sea is to be a perpetual source of
health to the world. Without it there could be no drainage for the lands. The
process of death and decay, which is continually going on in the animal and
vegetable kingdoms, would soon make the whole surface of the earth one vast
receptacle of corruption, whose stagnant mass would breathe a pestilence,
sweeping away all the life of a continent. The winds would not purify it; for,
having no place to deposit the burden, it would only accumulate in their hands,
and filling their breath with its poisonous effluvia, it would make them swift
ministers of death, carrying the sword of destruction into every part of the
world at once.
4. It may be mentioned, as a fourth office of the sea, that it is
set to furnish the great natural pathways of the world. Instead of a barrier,
the sea is a road across the barrier. Hence the ocean has been the great
educator of the world. The course of empire began on its shores, and has always
kept within sight of its waters. No great nation has ever sprung up except on
the seaside, or by the banks of those great navigable rivers which are
themselves but an extension of the sea. Had it not been for the Mediterranean,
the history of Egypt, of Phoenicia, of Greece and Rome and Carthage, would have
been impossible.
5. A fifth office of the sea is to furnish an inexhaustible
storehouse of power for the world. Of the three great departments of labour
which occupy the material industry of the race,--agriculture, commerce, and
manufactures,--we have seen how the first depends upon the ocean, the one for
the rains which support all vegetable life, the other for the thousand paths on
which its fleets are travelling. We now find that the third one also, though at
first appearing not to have very intimate connection with the ocean, does in
fact owe to it almost the whole of its efficiency. Ninety-nine hundredths of
all the mechanical power now at work in the world is furnished by the water
wheel and the steam engine.
6. A sixth office of the sea is to be a vast storehouse of life. The
sea has a whole world of life in itself. It is said that the life in the sea
far exceeds all that is out of it. There are more than twenty-five thousand
distinct species of living beings that inhabit its waters. Incredible numbers
of them are taken from the sea; in Norway, four hundred millions of a single
species in a single season; in Sweden, seven hundred millions; and by other
nations, numbers without number.
7. Omnipresent and everywhere is this need and blessing of the sea.
It is felt as truly in the centre of the continent, where, it may be, the rude
inhabitant never beard of the ocean, as it is on the circumference of the
wave-beaten shore. He is surrounded, every moment, by the presence and bounty
of the sea. It is the sea that looks out upon him from every violet in his
garden bed; from the broad forehead of his cattle, and the rosy faces of his
children; and from the cool-dropping well at his door. It is the sea that feeds
him. It is the sea that clothes him, It is the sea that cools him with the
summer cloud, and that warms him with the blazing fires in winter.
8. There is a sea within us which responds to the sea without. Deep
calleth unto deep, and it is the answer and the yearning of these inward waves,
in reply to that outward call, which makes our hearts to swell, our eyes to
grow dim with tears, and our whole being to lift and vibrate with such strong
emotion when we stand upon the shore and look out upon the deep, or sit in the
stern of some noble ship and feel ourselves cradled on the pulsations of its
mighty bosom. There is a life within us which calls to that sea without--a
conscious destiny which only its magnitude and its motion can symbolize and
utter. (Bib. Sacra.)
Genesis of the lands
I. EXPLANATION OF
THE PASSAGE.
1. Panorama of emergent lands. A sublime spectacle it is--this
resurrection of the terrestrial forms out of ocean¡¦s baptismal sepulchre--this
emergence of island, and continent, and mountain--this heaving into sight of
Britain and Madagascar and Cuba and Greenland, of Asia and Africa and Australia
and America, of Alps and Himalayas and Andes and Sierra Nevada; more thrilling
still, of Ararat and Sinai and Pisgah and Carmel and Lebanon and Zion and
Olivet.
2. Geologic confirmation. How could the geologist make out his
magnificent geological calendar, if it were not for the successive layers of
deposited or stratified rocks of the lands upheaved into view from the depths
of old ocean¡¦s sepulchre? And so, at this very point, the ancient seer and the
modern sceptic agree; both say that the earth was formed out of water and by
means of water (2 Peter 3:5). But they differ as to
the explanation. The ancient seer said, ¡§The secret of Nature is God.¡¨ The
modern sceptic says, ¡§The secret of Nature is Law.¡¨ And yet both speak truly,
for Truth is evermore unutterably large: God is the cause of Nature, and Law is
God¡¦s means.
3. Beneficence of the arrangement. ¡§God saw that it was good.¡¨ And
well might He delight in it. For a blessed thing this Divine distribution of
lands and seas was.
II. MORAL MEANING
OF THE STORY.
1. The birth of individuality.
2. The birth of duty. Each man is in himself a little world. The
individualization of each man is not so much for the man¡¦s own sake as for the
sake of all men. This, then, is the stirring thought of the hour:
Individualization for the sake of mankind. Go forth then, brother, inspired
with the majestic thought that you are a personal unit--a man among
men--individualized from the mass of humanity for the sake of humanity
andhumanity¡¦s King. Yes, happy the day, let me again say it, when God says to
thee: ¡§Let the waters gather themselves to one place, and let the dry land
appear.¡¨ Thrice happy the day when thou obeyest, looking upward to the opening
heavens and outward to the broadening horizon. (G. D.Boardman.)
The third day
Up to this point the unquiet element, which is naturally uppermost
in the creature, has prevailed everywhere. Light has come, and shown the waste;
a heaven is formed within it; but nothing fixed or firm has yet appeared. Just
as in the saint there is first light, and a heaven too within, while as yet he
is all instability, with nothing firm or settled. But now the firm earth rises.
The state desired by Paul,--¡§that we be no more tossed to and fro with every
wind of doctrine, but may grow up in all things into Him who is the Head, even
Christ,¡¨--here begins to be accomplished. Now the will, long buried and
overwhelmed with tossing lusts, rises above them to become very fruitful; and
the soul, once lost in passions, emerges from the deep, like ¡§the earth which
He hath founded forever.¡¨ There is yet more for us to mark in this emerging
earth. Not only does it escape the floods: it comes up also into the expanse of
heaven. That creature, so long buried, now mounts up to meet the skies, as
though aspiring to touch and become a part of heaven; while on its swelling
bosom rest the sweet waters, the clouds, which embrace and kiss the hills. When
the man by resurrection is freed from restless lusts; when he comes up from
under the dominion of passions into a state of rest and peace; not only is he
delivered from a load, but he also meets a purer world, an atmosphere of clear
and high blessing; where even his hard rocks may be furrowed into channels for
the rain; heaven almost touching earth, and earth heaven, Not without awful
convulsions can such a change be wrought. The earth must heave before the
waters are gathered into one place. (See Psalms 104:7-8.) Many a soul shows
rents and chasms like the steep mountains. Nevertheless, ¡§the mountains bring
peace, and the little hills righteousness.¡¨ And this is effected on the third
or resurrection day; for in creation, as elsewhere, the ¡§third day¡¨ always
speaks of resurrection. Then the earth brings forth fruit. Fruitfulness,
hitherto delayed, at once follows the bounding of the waters. For, ¡§being made
free from sin, we have fruit unto righteousness, and the end everlasting life.¡¨
The order of the produce is instructive; first the grass, then the herb, then
the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind: as ever, the blade before the
ear, the small before the great, from imperfection onwards to perfection. The
first thing borne is ¡§grass,¡¨ the common emblem of the flesh. Is it asked how
the risen creature can bring forth fruits, which are, like the goodliness of
the grass, of the flesh and carnal? Because for long the regenerate man is yet
¡§carnal,¡¨ and his fruits are in the flesh, though with sincere desires for
God¡¦s glory. The development of Adam, as exhibited in the Word, not to say
experience, gives proofs on proofs of this. The Corinthians, too, were
¡§carnal,¡¨ though with many spiritual gifts. But after ¡§grass¡¨ comes ¡§herb and tree,¡¨
with ¡§seed and fruit¡¨; some to feed the hungry, some to cure the serpent¡¦s
bite; some hid in a veil of leaves, or bound in shapeless husks; some exposing
their treasures, as the lovely vine and olive; the one to cheer man¡¦s heart,
the other to give the oil to sustain the light for God¡¦s candlestick. Such is
the faithful soul, with many-coloured fruits, ¡§as the smell of a field which
the Lord blesses.¡¨ The form of the fruit may vary; its increase may be less or
more--some thirty, some sixty, some an hundredfold; for ¡§the fruit of the
Spirit may be love, or peace, or faith, or truth, or gentleness¡¨: but all to
the praise of His grace, who bringeth forth fruit out of the earth, ¡§fruits of
righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ.¡¨ Nor let us forget,--¡§whose seed is
in itself, after his kind.¡¨ God¡¦s fruits all multiply themselves: this is their
constitution. (A. Jukes.)
Distribution of sea and land
By means of this distribution the waters are ever in motion, which
preserves them and almost everything else from stagnancy and putrefaction. That
which the circulation of the blood is to the animal frame, that the waters are
to the world: were they to stop, all would stagnate and die. See how careful
our heavenly Father was to build us a habitation before He gave us a being. Nor
is this the only instance of the kind: our Redeemer has acted on the same
principle, in going before us to prepare a place for us. (A. Fuller.)
Let the earth bring forth grass
Vegetation
I.
THAT
IT IS THE RESULT OF A COMBINED INSTRUMENTALITY.
1. There was the Divine agency. It was the power of God that gave
seed and life to the earth. For it is very certain that the earth could not
have produced grass, and herb, and tree of itself.
2. There was the instrumentality of the earth. ¡§And God said, Let
the earth bring forth grass,¡¨ etc. So when called by God the most barren
instrumentalities become life-giving and verdant. When the Divine Being is
about to enrich men, He gives them the power to help themselves.
II. IT IS GERMINAL
IN THE CONDITION OF ITS GROWTH. ¡§Seed.¡¨ Fertility never comes all at once. God
does not give man blade of grass or tree in full growth, but the seeds from
which they are to spring. Germs are a Divine gift. God does not give man a
great enterprise, but the first hint of it. The cultivation of germs is the
grandest employment in which men can be engaged.
III. IT IS FRUITFUL
IN THE PURPOSE OF ITS LIFE. ¡§Yielding fruit.¡¨
1. Life must not always remain germinal. The seed must not alway
remain seed. It must expand, develop. The world is full of men who have great
thoughts and enterprises in the germ, but they never come to perfection.
The fruit must be--
1. Abundant.
2. Rich.
3. Beautiful.
4. Refreshing.
IV. IT IS
DISTINCTIVE IN ITS SPECIES AND DEVELOPMENT. ¡§Fruit after his kind.¡¨ The growth
will always be of the same kind as the seed. There may be variation in the
direction and expression of the germinal life, but its original species is
unchanged. This is true in the garden of the soul. Every seed produces fruit
after its kind. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
The grass
1. Consider the grass for
(a) its humility;
(b) its cheerfulness;
(c) as an emblem of human life.
2. Consider it, particularly, in the places where your dead are
lying. What Golgoth as would be our cemeteries did not the grass grow there
more green and more abundant, if possible, than almost anywhere beside! (Homiletic
Review.)
The beauty of the grass
What is there in it of beauty or of strength? Let Ruskin answer:
¡§A very little strength, and a very little tallness, and a few delicate long
lines meeting in a point--not a perfect point either, but blunt and unfinished,
by no means a creditable or apparently much-cared-for example of Nature¡¦s
workmanship; made, as it seems, only to be trodden on today, and tomorrow to be
cast into the oven; and a little pale and hollow stalk, feeble and flaccid,
leading down to the dull brown fibres of its roots.¡¨ That is all. ¡§And yet,¡¨ he
adds, ¡§think of it well, and judge whether of all the gorgeous flowers that
beam in summer air, and of all strong and goodly trees, pleasant to the eyes
and good for food--stately palm and pine, strong ash and oak, scented citron,
burdened vine--there be any by man so deeply loved, by God so highly graced, as
that narrow point of feeble green.¡¨
Genesis of the plants
I. EXPLANATION OF
THE PASSAGE.
1. Panorama of the emerging plants. On all sides spring up, as
though by magic, the floating algae, the circling lichens, the luxuriant
mosses, the branching ferns, the waving grasses, the graceful palms, the kingly
cedars, the iris-hued flowers. And a blessed vision it is: this grateful
exchange of dull uniformity and barren nakedness for vegetable colours--for
carpets of emerald, and tapestries of white and azure and crimson and orange
and purple. Even the God of beauty Himself feels that it is good.
2. The birth of life.
3. The soil the matrix of the plant.
4. Fruit after its kind. Here the Sacred Chronicle virtually asserts
the invariability of what we call ¡§Species.¡¨
5. Ministry of vegetation.
II. MORAL MEANING
OF THE STORY.
1. The plant is a beautiful emblem, or, rather, a prophetic type of
man himself.
2. The birth of powers.
This then is the lesson of the hour: The birth of powers to issue
in heavenly fruitage. Be not content then with the mere sense of individuality
and of duty, mechanically taking your allotted place with the grouping lands
and Genesis 1:9-10); actually put forth in
living exercise your latent powers. Yes, happy the day when the Lord of seeds
and of souls says to thee: ¡§Let the earth put forth shoots, and the fruit tree
yield its fruits!¡¨ Thrice happy the day when thou obeyest, thy life becoming
arborescent, the leaves of thy tree spirally arranged so as to take in the most
thou canst of God¡¦s air and sunshine, yielding the fruits of a Christian
character. (G. D.Boardman.)
The vegetable creation
Notice the general parts and functions of trees and plants.
I. THE ROOTS. Two
important and special purposes.
1. To attach the plant or tree to the soil, and support it there in
its proper position.
2. To select and draw suitable juices from the soil, for nourishment.
II. THE LEAVES.
The principal organ of every plant. The seed in which the plant originates,
when carefully examined, is found to be composed of a leaf rolled tightly, and
altered in tissue and contents, so as to suit its new requirements. The bud
also consists of leaves folded in a peculiar manner, and covered with hardened
scales to protect them from the winter cold. And the flowers, the glory of the
vegetable world, are merely leaves arranged so as to protect the vital organs
within them, and coloured so as to attract insects to scatter the fertilizing
pollen, and to reflect or absorb the light and heat of the sun for ripening the
seed. If we pursue our study of leaves still further, and contemplate their
chemical functions, we shall find each a marvel and a mystery in itself. Every
leaf is an individual, gifted with peculiar powers; its stomata and other
organs constitute a complete laboratory; it absorbs air, and exhales moisture;
it elects the carbon, and sends forth as useless the excess of oxygen, it
extracts from the sunbeam its chlorophyll, and with it adorns itself in the
charms of verdancy. In a word, it embodies in its thin and distended form one
of the most wonderful examples of organic chemistry. It is at once full of
science and full of poetry.
III. THE FLOWERS.
They are the most beautiful productions of the vegetable kingdom; and, as to
the delicacy of their forms, the beauty of their colouring, and the sweetness
of their odour, seem preeminently designed for the pleasure of man, for he
alone of all the living tenants of the earth is capable of appreciating them.
They also perform several important functions in connection with the
reproduction of the species. Flowers exhibit many powers and properties which
the science of man has never been able to explain. Some will instantly close
upon the slightest touch. Some will flutter as if in alarm, upon sudden
exposure to intense light. Some seem possessed of limited powers of locomotion;
a certain species of wild oats, when placed upon a table, will spontaneously
move; pea blossoms always turn their backs upon the wind; the heliotrope always
faces the sun; the tulip opens its petals when the weather is fine, but closes
them during rain and darkness. The pond lily closes its pure white leaves at
night, as it lies on its watery bed, but unfolds them again in the morning.
On the other hand, some flowers open only at night; that splendid
flower, the night-blooming cereus, is of this kind; it opens but once, and that
in the night, for a few hours only, then wilts and dies without ever admitting
the light of day into its bosom. Some open and shut at certain hours, and that
so regularly as to indicate the time of day, like the sindrimal of Hindostan,
which opens at four in the evening and closes at four in the morning. Dr. Good,
in his ¡§Book of Nature,¡¨ describes a water plant, valisneria spiralis, which,
at a certain season, detaches itself from its stem, and, like a gallant suitor,
sails complacently over the waters in pursuit of a mate, till he finds her.
Other flowers there are, as the nepenthes, that will adroitly catch flies and
devour them. Others again possess a most extraordinary luminous property; the
nasturtium, if plucked during sunshine, and carried into a dark room, will
there show itself by its own light; a plant that abounds in the jungles of
Madura illumines the ground to a distance all around; and many species of
lichens, creeping along the roofs of caverns, lend to them an air of
enchantment, by the soft and clear light they diffuse. Who can explain to us
these phenomena of flowers? Who but must see that the hand and counsel of
Infinite Wisdom are concerned in the production of these vegetable wonders! I
add but one fact more respecting flowers, and that is, the power which each
flower has to regulate for itself the heat of the sun.
IV. THE SEEDS.
1. Look at the admirable contrivance of the vessels, or capsules, in
which the various seeds are lodged and protected while they mature. These are
so many, so diverse, and often so complicated in their forms and materials,
that it would seem as if they had been adopted only for the sake of
demonstrating the inexhaustible resources of the Divine invention. Some are
invested in close tunicles, some are surrounded with hard shells, some are elaborately
folded in leaves, some are deposited in rows within parchment pods, some are in
eases lined with softest velvet, some are wrapped in wool, some are held as in
blown bladders, some are placed between hard scales, some are defended by
pointed thorns, some are housed as beneath a roof, some are within slits made
in the edge of the ]eaves, some are buried in the heart of the fruit, and some
in various other manners.
2. The fecundity of plants, or their capacity for producing seeds,
presents us with another remarkable fact. The common cereals often yield from
sixty to a hundred fold. One castor oil plant will produce 1,500, one sunflower
4,000, and one thistle 24,000 seeds in a single season.
3. Another interesting fact connected with seeds is the arrangement
made for their dispersion. Sometimes the pericarp, or vessel containing the
seed, opens elastically, as with a mechanical spring, and discharges the seeds
contained in its cavity to a considerable distance. Some seeds, as those of the
dandelion and thistle, are provided with a beautiful stellate down, which
serves as wings, and by means of which they often travel many miles. Other
seeds, as the burdock, are furnished with little hooks, by means of which they
cling to men and beasts as they pass by, and are thus scattered far and wide.
Birds, also, are important agents in this great work. Many of the heavier
seeds, such as acorns, are gathered and buried by mice, squirrels, etc., of
which, while part are consumed, many are left in the ground to germinate.
Rains, and rivers, also, often carry seeds hundreds and even thousands of miles
from where they were produced; and the ocean not unfrequently bears them to the
shores of other continents, or wafts them upon the coral islands just risen
from its bosom, and thus soon covers them with vegetation.
4. The seed having been dispersed and dropped in the soil, the next
process to be noticed is its germination. To this certain conditions are
necessary. A certain degree of heat must be had; at a temperature below
freezing point, seed will not germinate, and if the temperature be up to, or
very near, the boiling point of water, it will not germinate, but die. The most
suitable temperature for each particular plant varies between these limits
according to the nature of the plant. Again, if seeds have the necessary warmth
and moisture, yet if exposed to bright light, they will not germinate; shade is
always, absolute darkness sometimes, necessary for the success of the
germinating process. If the seed enjoys all the required conditions of shade,
water, air, and heat, it will grow and flourish. When a seed, a grain of wheat,
say, is cast into the ground, from one end of it issues a plumule, or tender
sprout; from the other a number of fibrous threads; the plumule immediately
tends upward, and works for the air and light, and becomes a plant; the fibres
also at once struggle downwards, and become the roots. ¡§Now, what is a little
remarkable,¡¨ says Paley, ¡§the parts issuing from the seed take their respective
directions, into whatever position the seed itself happens to be cast. If the
seed be thrown into the wrongest possible position, that is, if the ends in the
ground point the reverse of what they ought to do, everything, nevertheless,
goes on right. The sprout, after being pushed out a little way, makes a bend
and turns upwards; the fibres, on the contrary, after shooting at first upward,
turn down.¡¨ This fact is not more wonderful than it is important; for, how
unprofitable would be the labours of the husbandman, if only the grains that
happened to be right end up would prove productive, for scarce one seed out of
a hundred would be found in this position. Or, how endless would be his toil,
if he had with care to place each particular seed in the ground with plumule end
up. But for the present wise and happy constitution of the seed, by which each
part proceeds in its right direction, and to fulfil its appointed office, where
would be our daily bread? How manifest both the wisdom and goodness of God in
this thing.
5. The longevity of seeds, or the power which they possess for
retaining the vital principle for lengthy periods of time, is another
remarkable fact to be noticed here. This is an important provision, as it
supplies a safeguard against the extinction of the species under unfavourable
circumstances, which may often occur. ¡§In the time of the Emperor Hadrian, a
man died soon after he had eaten plentifully of raspberries. He was buried at
Dorchester. About thirty years ago the remains of this man, together with coins
of the Roman Emperor, were discovered in a coffin at the bottom of a barrow,
thirty feet under the surface. The man had thus lain undisturbed for some one
thousand seven hundred years. But the most curious circumstance connected with
the case was, that the raspberry seeds were recovered from the stomach, and
sown in the garden of the Horticultural Society, where they germinated and grew
into healthy bushes.¡¨ What a wondrous creation, then, have we in a grain of
seed! What a mystery is its life, that can thus well nigh immortalize its tiny
and delicate organism, preserving it uninjured and unchanged through the lapse
of hundreds and thousands of years!
V. THE EDIBLE AND
OTHER USEFUL PRODUCTIONS OF PLANTS is another subject that demands our grateful
consideration. He might have made all these of the same, or nearly the same,
taste; but so far from this was His Divine generosity, that we have almost an
interminable variety of fragrance and flavour, of sweetness and acid, of
mellowness and pungency: and all so wonderfully suited to gratify our taste, to
stimulate our appetite, and to yield us every required and desirable nutriment
in health and in sickness. Then, too, plants not only feed, but clothe us. (H.
W. Morris, D. D.)
Reflections on the vegetable creation
In vegetation we have the productions of Divine chemistry! Out of
the same elements we here behold the utmost diversity of results. Ten thousand
species of herbs, plants, and trees, springing from the same soil, watered by
the same showers, surrounded by the same atmosphere, and warmed by the same
sun--yet how different in their qualities! Some are acid and some are
tasteless, some offering the richest nourishment and others the rankest poison,
some are exhilarating and some stupefying, a few are as sweet as honey, and
many as bitter as the waters of Marsh, some secreting oil while others are
exuding gum, some sending forth odours that delight and some that sicken and
offend--yet all these are constituted of the same four or five primary
elements, the diversity arising simply from the different proportions in which
Infinite skill has combined them. And herein is chemistry which man,
astonishing as his progress has been in this science, can neither imitate nor
approach. Man, indeed, can take a plant and separate these its elements, and
ascertain their exact proportions, but he can never recombine them so as to
restore the plant. This is God¡¦s prerogative. ¡§What a thought that was, when
God thought of a tree!¡¨ exclaimed a philosopher. Yes, a tree, a single tree,
originating in an atom seed, deriving its vitality from heaven, drawing its
juices from the earth, feeding upon the air, eliciting its colouring from the
sunbeam, and elaborating its several parts by the mysterious power of its own
vitality--presents a concourse of contrivances and properties and functions
such as would never have entered the mind of man, or perhaps of any other
intelligence, had not God set it in living form before him. What conceptions,
then, shall we form, and what sentiments entertain of that Mind, who, with
unerring foresight, contrived a thousand, yea a hundred thousand differing
trees and plants--differing in their size from the invisible lichen of the
naked rock to the expanded banian tree of India, which proffers beneath its shade
ample room for an army--differing in form from the creeping vine to the cedar
of Libanus--differing in their age and duration from the ephemeral ¡§flower of
the grass¡¨ to the mighty adonsonia, hoary with the mosses of more than twenty
centuries--differing in their juices from the nourishing grape to the pohon
upas in their deadly valleys--differing in their aspect from the serpent cactus
to the stately pine--differing in their habitations from the climbing lianas of
the Guinea forests to the confervae of the silent pool--differing in the
structure of their roots, in the form of their leaves, and in the texture of
their stems--differing in their flowers, and seeds, and fruits--differing in
the rapidity of their growth, and circulation, and decay--differing in their
qualities for absorbing and reflecting the heat of the sun--and differing in a
multitude of other particulars! In the vegetable kingdom we behold a diversity
all but endless. In their creation, then, what countless ends to be secured.
What an infinitude of influences, properties, and agencies to be determined.
And what an infinitude, too, of weights, and measures, and proportions to be
calculated. Yet in the Divine mind, as in a vast storehouse of glorious ideas
and designs, the plans of all were perfect and complete ere ever the omnipotent
word to clothe the earth with verdure had gone forth. In that plan nothing was
forgotten, nothing overlooked. No unforeseen difficulty arose, no part of the
Divine purpose failed, no tree or plant or blade of grass came short of its
designed perfection. (H. W. Morris, D. D.)
Lessons from leaves, flowers, and grass
We need not seek for rare or out-of-the-way productions to gather
lessons--every green thing that springs out of the ground is a preacher to us,
if we would but listen to its voice. All the leaves of the forest join in one
general murmur to repeat in our ears the prophet¡¦s warning, ¡§We all do fade as
a leaf.¡¨ And as we are so prone to thrust this truth out of mind, as comes on
every fading fall of the year, God spreads before us on plain and hillside a
great parable, in which our own decay and death are pictorially represented in
such a vivid and impressive manner, that he who runs may read, and he who reads
must reflect and profit. With the leaves join the beauteous flowers, like
whispering angels, to impress the same needful admonition upon the heart and
mind of man. ¡§As a flower of the field, so he flourisheth.¡¨ And each flower
along his path seems to look up and address him in language of its own, and say--
¡§Child
of the dust, like me you spring,
A
bright but evanescent thing;
Like
me may be cut down today,
And
cast a worthless weed away.¡¨
The grass also has its speech. It spreads itself before us like a
living allegory, in which we may see our image and our end. It says, ¡§All flesh
is grass; in the morning it flourisheth and groweth up; in the evening it is
cut down and withered.¡¨ And when its beauties and benefits, and teachings all
can avail man no more, the green grass reverently spreads itself as a robe over
his slumbering form, and forsakes not even that upon which all others have
turned their back--his grave--remaining there, in each bright blade, a
perpetual type of a coming glorious resurrection! (H. W. Morris, D. D.)
The growth of plants
The creation of vegetables is placed by Moses subsequent to the
production of light and of the atmosphere; immediately after the waters had
receded from the land, and just before the creation and arrangement of the
solar system. This position of vegetables in the series of creation exactly
answers the demands of our present knowledge. Instead of requiring the suns
light to germinate, seeds and plants, in order to do so, must be sowed and
placed in darkness before they begin to vegetate (solar light is unfriendly to
first germination). A small heat and moisture first cause their living
principle to begin its operations, but they cannot flower and fruit until they
receive the solar beams; nor could they grow without light, air, and moisture.
A portion of oxygen air is essential to vegetation. Hence the previous
atmosphere, which contains in its composition that portion, was indispensable,
as was also some water on the soil where they were to grow. This exact placing
of the vegetable formation and first germination is another test of the
authenticity of the Hebrew cosmogony, which random fiction could not have
stood. (S. Turner.)
The miracle of reproduction
This was not a mere transformation; it was a new creation, a
miracle, or rather sixty thousand miracles in one. A chemist can form rocks,
and even precious stones, by combining silicium, lime, carbon, etc.; but could
any chemist form a tree, a blade of grass, a bit of moss, or the smallest
living plant? Look at the flowers, the trees, the seeds, the fruits, and all the
wonders of vegetable life! Oh, what a collection of miracles! but the miracle
of miracles is, that each has ¡§its seed in itself.¡¨ A watch, which is one of
the most admirable works of man, is very inferior in its workmanship even to
the smallest plant, which we can scarcely see without the help of a microscope;
but what would you think of a watch which could produce watches, which in their
turn could produce other watches, and so on from generation to generation, from
age to age? (Professor Gaussen.)
Plant life
Have you ever thought what life is? for it was then that life
appeared for the first time upon the earth. The air, the winds, and the
tempests have no life; the sea, the dry land, the mountains, the valleys, the
rocks, the volcanoes and their flowing lavas, have no life--a gas has no life.
But a tree and a plant have life, although they have not thought or feeling.
Consider how the plant is born and grows: it springs from its seed as the bird
springs from the egg; it pierces the soil; it grows up; it is fed by the juices
of the earth through the hundred mouths of its roots; it drinks through its
leaves the air and the dew of heaven; and it faithfully gives out in return its
delicious odours. We know that it even breathes--it inhales and exhales the air;
it sleeps in the night, and is revived to new beauty and vigour in the day. A
life-giving juice circulates through all its vessels, as the blood circulates
in our veins. Every year it gives birth to numerous children, which resemble
the mother plant, and live, and grow, and breathe, and bring forth other plants
in their turn. (Professor Gaussen.)
An inimitable work
Scientific men such as Sir James Hall and others, have succeeded
in imitating some of the natural rocks in their laboratories. By taking chalk,
silicium, vegetable matter, and other things, and subjecting them to strong
heat and powerful pressure, they have been able to manufacture, in small
quantities, marble like that of our mountains, coal such as we burn in our
fires, crystallized silicates like the granites of the Alps, and even a few
small fragments of precious stones. But do you suppose that any chemist could
succeed in making a living plant, even a blade of grass, a sprig of hyssop, a
morsel of the humble moss that grows on the wall, a strawberry plant, a
blue-hell, or a field daisy? All the greatest triumphs of human art and skill
have been lately collected in the Exhibitions of London and Paris; but if all
the mechanics who made these, and all the learned men in the world were united,
and if they were to work together for a thousand years, they could not form one
living grain of corn, one seed of a living poppy, one seed of any kind,
containing within it, infolded in the germ, ten thousand plants of corn, or one
hundred thousand plants of poppies, proceeding from and succeeding each other
from this time till the end of the world. (Professor Gaussen.)
Seed
Have you ever considered how wonderful a thing the seed of a plant
is? It is the miracle of miracles. God said, Let there be plants ¡§yielding
seed¡¨; and it is further added, each one ¡§after his kind.¡¨ The great
naturalist, Cuvier, thought that the germs of all past, present, and future
generations of seeds were contained one within the other, as if packed in a
succession of boxes. Other learned men have explained this mystery in a
different way. Let them explain it as they will, the wonder remains the same,
and we must still look upon the reproduction of the seed as a continual
miracle. Consider first, their number. A noted botanist counted sixty thousand,
then eighty thousand, and he supposed it possible that the number might even
amount to one hundred thousand. Well, let me ask you, Have these one hundred
thousand kinds of plants ever failed to bear the right seed? Have they ever
deceived us? Has a seed of wheat ever yielded barley, or a seed of a poppy
grown up into a sunflower? Has a sycamore tree ever sprung from an acorn, or a
beech tree from a chestnut? A little bird may carry away the small seed of a
sycamore in its beak to feed its nestlings, and on the way may drop it on the
ground. The tiny seed may spring up and grow where it fell, unnoticed, and
sixty years after it may become a magnificent tree, under which the flocks of
the valleys and their shepherds may rest in the shade. Consider next the
wonderful power of life and resurrection bestowed on the seeds of plants, so
that they may be preserved from year to year, and even from century to century.
Some years ago a vase hermetically sealed was found in a mummy pit in Egypt, by
the English traveller Wilkinson, who sent it to the British Museum. The
librarian there having unfortunately broken it, discovered in it a few grains
of wheat and one or two peas, old, wrinkled, and as hard as stone. The peas
were planted carefully under glass on the 4th of June 1844, and at the end of
thirty days these old seeds were seen to spring up into new life. They had been
buried probably about three thousand years ago, perhaps in the time of Moses,
and had slept all that long time, apparently dead, yet still living in the dust
of the tomb. Lastly, consider the almost incredible fruitfulness of these
marvellous seeds. I have heard it said that a very well-known traveller, who
returned from America to Europe between two and three hundred years ago, having
admired in the New World this beautiful tree, then unknown in Europe, had put
two or three chestnuts in the pocket of his coat. After his arrival in Paris,
having put on the same coat again, he found a single chestnut still remaining
in the pocket, and he took a fancy to plant it in the court of his house. The
following spring a young chestnut tree appeared, which grew and flourished, and
became the parent, not only of all the chestnuts in France, but of all the
magnificent trees of this kind under which the people of France, Germany, and
Italy assemble on their days of festival. These all sprang from the solitary
chestnut brought from America in that traveller¡¦s pocket. But what do you think
of the wonderful reproducing power of seeds, when I tell you that from a single
poppy seed, not larger than a grain of gunpowder, there may spring in four
years, poppies enough to cover all the habitable earth, that is to say,
one-fourth of the surface of the globe, or about fifty million square miles? If
each seed should produce as much as Ray calculates, I have reckoned it would
amount in four years to a million of millions of millions of seed; which may be
estimated at 660,000 bushels (or 82,500 quarters), and would be more than
enough to cover the five continents of the earth. All this immense multitude of
seeds might spring in so short a time from a single little seed, not nearly so
large as a grain of oats. Now, let us try to calculate the productive power of
a grain of corn. All historians tell us that in old times the harvests in Egypt
and Syria returned a hundredfold for one, and in Babylonia two hundred fold for
one. Well, suppose that I were to sow my grain in a soil as fertile as that of
Egypt is said to have been in old times, my first harvest would be 100 grains;
these 100 grains would produce 100 times as much for my second harvest, or
10,000 grains; my third harvest would be 100 times 10,000, or 1,000,000 grains;
and my fourth, 100,000,000 grains. It has been reckoned that there are about
820,000 grains in a bushel. At this rate, my fourth harvest would yield about
122 bushels of grain; and four years after, it would be 100,000,000 as much, or
12,200,000,000 bushels, or 1,525,000,000 quarters. This is scarcely one-sixth
less than twice the 900,000,000 quarters which we reckoned would be necessary
to supply the whole human race for a year. Thus in eight years as much corn
might spring from one seed as to supply all mankind with bread for more than a
year and a half. Remark, also, my friends, that God has not given the
reproductive power of plants to their seeds alone. The life of vegetables
exists in many parts of them separately, and each of these parts alone,
separated from all the others, can reproduce the whole plant. (Professor
Gaussen.)
The first vegetable
We come now to the consideration of the highest form of pure
matter, unconnected with an immaterial principle; viz., that which is invested
with organic power. Before the creation of the vegetable, the state of matter
had been inorganic; but at the commandment of God, a portion of it became
invested with altogether new properties and new powers. It assumed, at once,
and in obedience to the will of Him that spake, that extraordinary form of
existence, which we call organized structure: and became, in that change,
subject to new forces, regulated by new laws. The great difference which
strikes us at once, as existing between an inorganic and organic structure is,
that in the former, each particle acts as it were separately, and for itself;
and in the latter, each particle acts as a part of a whole, for a certain end
to be brought about in the whole structure; but then this effect is the
beautiful resultant of certain fixed though unknown laws of combination.
Professor Faraday has divided the powers of matter into two great
classes--instant and waiting. Gravitation, for instance, he calls instant,
because its action is unceasing, under all circumstances. Electricity, on the
other hand, he calls waiting, because it is only called forth under certain
circumstances, and, so to speak, waits for them.
1. Organic powers are eminently waiting forces; they are manifested
under certain circumstances, and so we find that a seed will remain for
thousands of years without germinating, if deprived of the influences of heat
and light.
2. Again: These powers seem to be communicable. As the particles of
the inorganic world are drawn into the organic fabric, they become themselves
organic; they receive a communication of power, and act as invested with it,
until they are again thrown off.
3. These powers seem also to be exhaustible. I feel the extent of
the difficulty that lies in this admission, and yet I must acknowledge that
there does appear to be a kind of exhaustion of power in an organized
structure. We find that in a certain time, these powers cease to act, and the
plant, according to common language, dies. This is the stronghold of those who
believe the functions of the vegetable arise from, and are governed by, an
immaterial principle. For, they say, upon the removal of this principle, the
whole material frame becomes powerless, and the plant dies. The great answer to
this is, that the whole organic fabric does not always lose its power, or as it
is called die, at once, but very often, both in the plant and in the animal,
one portion of it ceases to manifest organic power before the rest; and this
fact overthrows the whole argument. I feel strongly inclined to believe that,
after all, there is no real exhaustion of organic power, any more than there is
of physical power, but that when, in the appointed time, the whole fabric of
the plant (or animal) goes to decay, these powers lie dormant in the particles
of matter, till, in the wondrous revolution of the wheel of natural providence,
they became incorporated with organic structure again, and put forth their
manifested actions. In fact, that organic powers are powers of circumstance and
not of essence; they are always present in matter, but always waiting. They
are, what an ancient writer called so long ago, ¡§moveable powers¡¨; and they are
governed, ruled, and regulated by Him who first said, ¡§Let the earth bring
forth grass,¡¨ etc. Let us now consider especially the words, ¡§Whose seed is in
itself.¡¨ Of all the manifestations of power, there is none so wonderful as that
of reproduction. Even when we come to the consideration of the material portion
of the complex nature of the animal, although we shall find other forms of
power, such as contractibility, as in the case of muscle; vibration, as in the
case of the fibres of the brain, receiving the impressions of light and sound;
yet shall we discover none more extraordinary than this of reproduction. And
yet, strange and striking as this power is, when we reflect upon it, it is not
perhaps more so than certain physical powers. It is almost as wonderful that
matter should attract matter, as that matter should produce matter; for both
actions are alike dependent on the Creator¡¦s will. Strictly and philosophically
speaking, there is no further creation of matter in the case, but a gathering
in of surrounding matter, to form the germ of the future plant. We know that
the most complex structure of any plant or animal (man included) is but the
elaboration of the simple cell: this cell draws from the world around the
materials which compose other cells, and these new cells develop themselves
into the different parts which compose their future fabric, root, leaves, buds,
etc.; perhaps according to their different reception of the influences of heat,
light, and electricity: but this is all wrapt in mystery. There is a limit to
all the investigations of man, a point beyond which he cannot go; when, like
one of old, he ¡§looks up unto the heavens, and bewails his ignorance;¡¨ but the
Christian, amidst all these wonders, has a sure resting place whereon to stand,
for he knows by whom all these things consist. ¡§He upholdeth all things by the
word of His power,¡¨ is the true solution to all our difficulties; and if we
rested on this there would not be that unquietness which we so often feel in
the pursuit of natural science. We are too apt to speak as if we thought that
God having created the universe left it to itself. He is the governor of the
material world, as He is of the spiritual world. God said, ¡§Let the earth bring
forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit,¡¨ etc.;
¡§and it was so.¡¨ (The Protoplast.)
All nature is emblematic
When the Incarnate Jehovah preached upon this earth that He had
made, He took the whole of creation as His text. The waving corn in the fields
through which He walked with His disciples, the wild flowers, the trees which
overshadowed Him, all served as symbols of heavenly things. ¡§Consider,¡¨ He
said, ¡§the lilies of the field.¡¨ While we walk in a world where beauty still
lingers, for it is ¡§though spoiled by sin, in ruin fair,¡¨ we may read a lesson
in every leaf, and bud, and blossom. If we are anxious and distrustful as to
God¡¦s provision of our wants in this life, even the very herb of the field
rebukes us, for God has clothed it; the wild flowers raise their heads, bright
with His workmanship, and they speak to us, saying, ¡§Hath God so decked us, and
shall He not rather clothe you, O ye of little faith?¡¨ And then how many
lessons do we learn from the sowing of the seed. Christ said, ¡§Hear ye the parable
of the sower.¡¨ Have we heard it? Again, Christ said in another parable, ¡§So is
the kingdom of God, as if a man should cast seed into the ground, and should
sleep, and rise night and day, and the seed should spring and grow up, he
knoweth not how.¡¨ It is just so with the servant of God, scattering the seed in
preaching the word of life; it springs up, he knows not how; he obeys the
command of God. Another lesson Christ drew from natural vegetation was given in
these words: ¡§The kingdom of heaven is like to a grain of mustard seed, which a
man took and sowed in his field: which indeed is the least of all seeds, but
when it is grown it is the greatest among herbs, so that the birds of the air
come and lodge in the branches thereof.¡¨ Christ cast the little seed of His
Church into the world: neglected, despised, unnurtured, it sank into the
ground, and man trod it under foot; but when it is grown to its full height and
established in its millennial glory upon earth, all nations shall flow into
it,--¡§the birds shall come and lodge in the branches thereof.¡¨ Once more, the
Apostle Paul preaches from the same text in the book of creation, the
resurrection from the dead. When we see the seed sown, and remember how unlike
it is to the perfect fabric of the future plant, let us reflect that just so
little will the sin-bearing, suffering, decaying body we now wear resemble that
which shall be raised in perfect beauty. (Professor Gaussen.)
The law of food production
God has given to every seed and living plant the tendency to
develop itself, or grow under certain conditions. These conditions are an
adequate supply of moisture, heat, light, air, and the all-essential requisite
of a suitable soil. This law operates mainly through the principle of capillary
attraction. Every blade, leaf, or stalk has in it a number of very small tubes,
each with a bore as small as a hair, which has the singular power of drawing up
the sap from the soil into the plant or stalk, so making it grow. This sap when
drawn up lengthens and enlarges the blade or stalk, and continues to do so from
day to day until it reaches an ultimate point fixed by the Creator, when it
issues in blossom and fruit. That point being reached, the process stops, when
man steps in and gathers the fruit which God has provided for him. These tubes
act like so many mouths, which are endowed with a sort of instinct for
selecting from the soil such nourishment as suits the age or species of the
plant or vegetable to which they belong. The sap itself consists of water mixed
with saline, sulphurous, or oily materials, and is prepared in such a manner as
to suit the various seeds that are put into the ground.
I. THE ADVANTAGES
OF THIS LAW in supplying food.
1. It gives continual freshness to our food. Had the food of the
world been all provided on the day when God made men and the cattle, and the
supply been made large enough to last till the end of the world, it must long
ere this time have become corrupt.
2. It supplies abundance. Every seed is endowed with both a power of
self-development and also a power of self-multiplication.
3. It secures variety of food. This is as important as abundance.
Had there been only one species of food we should almost have died from having
the same constantly served up at our tables.
4. It saves space on the world¡¦s surface. Had the whole supply of
the world¡¦s food been provided on the first day the world itself could not have
furnished accommodation.
5. This law secures a permanent supply of food to the end of time.
6. This law impressively teaches man¡¦s continual dependence on God.
7. Never does anything get out of order. There is nothing to repair,
everything works with the most perfect order and regularity.
8. Far greater skill and beauty lie beneath the surface than upon
it. This is the characteristic of all God¡¦s works as compared with man¡¦s.
II. THE EXCELLENT
WORKING of this law.
1. In the simplicity of its operation.
2. In its efficiency.
3. In its beautiful adaptations. Processes of the most consummate
skill are set a-going in every part of nature in order to furnish man with
food. Take the case of plants. The bark which covers them defends them from the
extremes of heat and cold, and also opens up a free entrance for sap and air to
reach them. The leaves which clothe them assist in bringing food from all parts
within reach. They are furnished with the power of sucking nourishment for
them; they protect them in their tender state, and carry off by perspiration
the redundant fluids which would otherwise stagnate and turn rancid. They are
the lungs of the plant.
Let there be lights in the firmament
The heavenly luminaries
I.
THESE
LIGHTS ARE ALL GOD¡¦S SERVANTS.
II. THE MISTAKES MAN¡¦S
EYE MAKES IN JUDGING THE WORKS OF GOD. We ¡§limit the Holy One of Israel.¡¨ What
a small world man¡¦s eye would make of God¡¦s creation!
III. THE DEEPEST
HUMILITY IS THE TRUEST WISDOM. The most difficult discovery for man to make in
the world is to find out his own littleness.
IV. UNCONSCIOUS
BENEFITS ARE RENDERED BY ONE. PART OF CREATION TO ANOTHER. Here are seen the
wisdom, power, and goodness of the great Creator. Little do these distant stars
know what benefits they confer on our small world.
V. THE HIGH
ESTIMATE WHICH GOD PUTS ON MAN. He ordains such glorious worlds to serve Him.
VI. THE GREAT SIN
OF IDOL WORSHIP. (J. P. Millar.)
The heavenly bodies
I. THE HEAVENLY
BODIES WERE CALLED INTO EXISTENCE BY GOD.
1. Their magnitude.
2. Variety.
3. Splendour.
II. THE PURPOSES
FOR WHICH THE HEAVENLY BODIES ARE DESIGNED.
1. They were to be for lights. They are unrivalled, should be highly
prized, faithfully used, carefully studied, and devotionally received. These
lights were regnant.
2. They were made to divide the day from the night. Thus the
heavenly bodies were not only intended to give light, but also to indicate and
regulate the time of man, that he might be reminded of the mighty change, and
rapid flight of life. But the recurrence of day and night also proclaim the
need of exertion and repose; hence they call to work, as well as remind of the
grave.
3. To be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years. The
moon by her four quarters, which last each a little more than seven days,
measures for us the weeks and months. The sun, by his apparent path in the sky,
measures our seasons and our years, whilst by his daily rotation through the
heavens he measures the days and the hours; and this he does so correctly that
the best watchmakers in Geneva regulate all their watches by his place at noon;
and from the most ancient times men have measured from sun dials the regular
movement of the shadow. It has been well said that the progress of a people in
civilization may be estimated by their regard for time--their care in measuring
and valuing it. Our time is a loan. We ought to use it as faithful stewards.
III. A FEW
DEDUCTIONS FROM THIS SUBJECT.
1. The greatness and majesty of God. How terrible must be the
Creator of the sun. How tranquil must be that Being who has given light to the
moon. One glance into the heavens is enough to overawe man with a sense of the
Divine majesty.
2. The humility that should characterize the soul of mall. ¡§When I
consider the heavens, the work of Thine hand,¡¨ etc. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Reflections on the sun
In the sun we have the most worthy emblem that the visible
universe presents of Him, who, with the word of His power, kindled up its
glories, and with the strength of His right hand established it in the heavens.
And the analogies between the sun of nature and the Sun of Righteousness are
both striking and instructive.
1. In the opening scene of the fourth day we have a fine image of
the advent of the Redeemer of men. On that morning the sun burst forth in its
unveiled glories, irradiating the new-made earth, and revealing upon its face
scenes of loveliness and grandeur which could neither be seen nor known before.
So arose the Sun of Righteousness upon the world of mankind, an object as
wonderful and as new in His person, and character, and office, as the great orb
of day when it first came forth to run the circuit of the heavens--pouring a
flood of light from above upon benighted humanity, and opening up to them views
of truth, happiness, and immortality, such as the world had never known or
heard before; and, like the solar light, while revealing all else, remaining
Himself a glorious mystery.
2. As the natural sun is the centre of the system of creation, so
the Sun of Righteousness is the vital centre of revealed truth and religion.
3. As the sun shines by his own light, so the Son of God poured the
light of truth upon men from the fountain of His own mind. The instructions He
imparted were neither derived from tradition nor borrowed from philosophy. He
was a self-luminous and Divine Orb, rising upon the darkness of the world,
shedding new light, and revealing new truths to bewildered humanity.
4. As in the pure sunbeam we have combined all the colours of the
rainbow in their due proportions, so in Christ we find all virtues and graces
harmoniously blended in one perfect character. In Him we behold every
principle, every affection, every impulse, in perfect equipoise.
5. As the sunlight, on whatever foulness or corruption it may fall,
remains uncontaminated, so the Son of Man, amid all the temptations, guilt, and
depravity of earth, continued pure and unspotted.
6. As the light of the sun is unlimited and inexhaustible, so also
are the healing and saving beams of the Sun of Righteousness.
7. As the sun¡¦s law of gravitation extends over the whole solar
system, so the law of love, proceeding from the Sun of Righteousness, extends
its authority over the whole family of man. Gravitation exercises its dominion
alike over the mightiest planet and the minutest asteroid; so the Divine law of
love, with equal hand, imposes its obligations upon kings, and peasants, and
beggars; its authority is no less binding in courts and cabinets than in
churches and families, its voice is to be heeded no less by the diplomatist
sent to foreign realms, than by the preacher who remains among his flock at
home. To all it speaks alike, in the name and in the words of its Divine
original, ¡§Love one another, as I have loved you.¡¨ (H. W. Morris, D. D.)
The great time keeper
What are the benefits God intends to secure for us, by the
arrangements here made? By this means, He--
I. Compels men,
as far as they can be compelled, to reckon their time, or number their days
aright.
II. Calls us often
to a reckoning with ourselves under the most impressive influences.
III. Invites us to
new purposes of future life.
IV. Teaches us, in
the most impressive manner possible, the value of time.
V. Impresses upon
us, as a truth of practical moment, that everything must be done in its time.
VI. Reminds us
both of our rapid transit here and immortality hereafter.
VII. Teaches us that there is a changeless empire of being, which
theestablished round of seasons and years, and the mechanical order of heaven
itself suggests and confirms. (H. Bushnell, D. D.)
Light
I. ITS SPEED!
Have you any idea of it? The mind becomes confused when we try to imagine it.
For instance, whence, think you, came the bright rays which this very morning
lighted up your room with their dazzling brightness? Ah! they had travelled
very far before they reached you, even all the distance between the sun and the
earth. If a man could take the same journey, travelling at the rate of
ninety-five miles a day, he would take a million of days, or nearly three
thousand years to do it. And yet, how long do you think those bright rays have
been in travelling this morning from the sun to your window? Only eight minutes
and thirteen seconds.
II. But if you
wonder at the speed of light, what will you say when you think of its
ABUNDANCE? This is, if possible, still more wonderful. Who can even imagine the
immense and immeasurable torrents of light which from age to age have gushed
forth from the sun in every direction, constantly filling with their ceaseless
waves the whole extent of planetary space? I do not speak thoughtlessly when I
tell you of the ceaseless flow of these waves of light, for they gush forth
from the sun by night as well as by day. Some young people fancy that when it
is night with us, it is then night in the universe; but this is a childish fancy,
for, on the contrary, there is perpetual day in the wide universe of space.
III. ITS BRILLIANT
COLOURS. The rays of light which come to us directly from the sun, are, you
know, of a dazzling white. If you shut carefully all the shutters in your room,
so as to make it perfectly dark, and if you allow a single ray of light to
enter through a small hole, you will see it mark on the opposite wall a
beautiful circle of white light. But do you know what would happen to this ray
if you were to place before the hole a prism of finely polished glass? When the
great Newton tried this experiment for the first time, he tells us that he
started with joy. The sight that he saw, and that you would see, would be this:
The prism would decompose and divide the beautiful white ray into seven rays,
still more beautiful, of bright-coloured light, which would paint themselves
each separately on the wall, in the following order: violet, indigo, blue,
green, yellow, orange, red. These brilliant-coloured rays, of which each white
ray is made up, are reflected in various ways, according to the nature and
composition of different bodies, and thus they give their varied and manifold
tints to all objects in nature. (Professor Gaussen.)
The clock of time
It is beautiful to observe how the motions of the stars of heaven
in their orbits are represented by the flowers of earth in their opening and
closing, in their blossoming and fading. The clock of time has two faces: the
one above, on which the hours are marked by the rising and setting of the orbs
of heaven; the other below, on which the hours are marked by the blossoming and
the fading, the opening and the closing of the flowers. The one exactly
corresponds with the other. The movements of the living creatures depend upon
the movements of the lifeless stars. The daisy follows with its golden eye the
path of the sun through the sky, opens its blossom when he rises, and closes it
when he sets. Thus should it be with our souls. There should be a similar
harmony between them and the motions of the heavenly bodies which God has set
in the firmament for signs to us. Our spiritual life should progress with their
revolutions; should keep time with the music of the spheres; our thoughts
should be widened with the process of the suns. This is the true astrology. And
as the daisy follows the sun all day to the west with its open eye, and
acknowledges no other light that falls upon it--lamplight, moonlight, or
starlight--remaining closed under them all, except under the light of the sun;
so should we follow the Sun of Righteousness whithersoever He goeth, and say
with the Psalmist, ¡§Whom have we in the heavens but Thee; and there is none
upon the earth whom we desire besides Thee.¡¨ (H. Macmillan, D. D.)
The clock of the universe
It was the will of God that man should be able to measure and
reckon time, that he might learn its value and regulate its employment of it.
He therefore placed in the heavens a magnificent and perfect clock, which tells
the hours, the days, the weeks, the months, the seasons, and the years--a clock
which no one ever winds up, but which yet goes constantly, and never goes
wrong. The dial plate of this clock is the blue vault of heaven over our
heads--a vault spangled with stars at night, brilliant with light by day--a
vault whose edges, rounded like the edge of a watch, rest on the horizon of our
mountains here at Geneva, while far out at sea the whole great dial plate may
be seen, the dome of the sky seeming to rest on the wide circle of the ocean.
And what, think you, are the hands of this magnificent dial plate? God has
placed on it two, the greater and the lesser. Both are ever shining, both are
ever moving. They are never either too early or too late. The greater is the
great light which rules the day, and which, while it seems to turn above our
heads from east to west across the celestial vault, rising each morning over
the Alps, and setting each evening over the Jura, seems to move at the same
time on the great dial plate of the heavens in a contrary direction, that is to
say, from the west to the east, or from the Jura towards the Alps, advancing
every day the length of twice its own breadth. And the lesser hand of the clock
is the lesser light which rules the night, which progresses also in the same
direction with the sun, but twelve times faster, advancing each day from
twenty-four to twenty-rive times its own breadth, and thus turning round the
dial plate in a single month. Thus, for example, if you look this evening at
the moon as she sets behind the Jura, and if you carefully observe what stars
are hidden behind her disk, tomorrow you will see her again set behind the same
mountain, but three-quarters of an hour later, because she has in the meantime
moved towards the east twenty-four times her own breadth; and then she will
cover stars much nearer the Alps, so that twenty-four moons might be placed in
the sky between the place that she will occupy tomorrow and the one she
occupies today. (Prof. Gaussen.)
No note of time in the dark
When the famous Baron de Trenck came out of his dark dungeon in
Magdeburg, where he could not distinguish night from day, and in which the King
of Prussia had kept him imprisoned for ten years, he imagined that he had been
in it for a much shorter period, because he had no means of marking how the
time had passed, and he had seen no new events, and had had even few thoughts:
his astonishment was extreme when he was told how many years had thus passed
away like a painful dream. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Time should be valued
The savages of North America, after their fatiguing hunting
parties, and warlike expeditions, pass whole weeks and months in amusement and
repose, without once thinking that they are wasting or losing anything that is
valuable. It has been well said that the progress of a people in civilization
may be estimated by their regard for time--their care in measuring and valuing
it. If that be true even of a half-savage people, how much more must it be true
of a Christian nation! Ah, how much ought a Christian to value his time, if he
means to be a faithful steward, since his hours belong not to himself, but to
his gracious Master, who has redeemed him at so great a price; and since he
knows that he must give an account of it at last. (Prof. Gaussen.)
The moon, an emblem of the Church
1. As the moon, though widely
separated from the earth, is attached to it by the invisible bonds of
gravitation, and ordained to travel with it in its appointed course round the
sun--so the Church militant, though distinct from the world, is connected with
it by many ties, and appointed to pursue her pilgrimage along with it to
eternity.
2. As the moon receives all her natural light from the sun, so the
Church receives all her spiritual light from the Sun of Righteousness.
3. As the moon has been appointed to reflect the light she receives
upon the earth to relieve her darkness, to guide the lone mariner on the deep,
to lead the belated traveller in his path, and to cheer the shepherd keeping
watch over his flock by night--so the Church has been ordained to reflect her
heavenly light for the guidance of benighted and bewildered humanity around
her. The design of her establishment, like that of the moon, is to give light
upon the earth.
4. As the moon remains not stationary in the heavens over some
favoured spot, but according to the law of her creation, pursues her career
around the globe to cheer and enlighten its every habitable region--so the
Church has been organized and commanded to carry the light of the gospel into
all the world, and preach the unsearchable riches of Christ to every creature.
5. As the moon, while shining in her usual brightness, moves forward
unnoticed, but when under an eclipse has the gaze and remarks of half the
earth¡¦s population--so the Church while walking in light and love, enlists but
little of the world¡¦s attention; but let her honour pass under a cloud, or her
purity be tarnished by the misconduct of but a member, and the eyes of all are
fixed upon her, and her failing repeated by every tongue. Let the Israel of God
take heed to their ways. (H. W. Morris, D. D.)
God calling the luminaries into existence
1. The call was omnipotent.
Man could not have kindled the great lights of the universe.
2. The call was wise. The idea of the midnight sky, as now beheld by
us, could never have originated in a finite mind. The thought was above the
mental life of seraphs. It was the outcome of an infinite intelligence. And
nowhere throughout the external universe do we see the wisdom of God as in the
complicated arrangement, continual motions, and yet easily working and harmony
of the heavenly bodies. There is no confusion. They need no readjustment.
3. The call was benevolent. The sun is one of the most kindly gifts
of God to the world; it makes the home of man a thing of beauty. Also the light
of the moon is welcome to multitudes who have to wend their way by land or sea,
amid the stillness of night, to some far-off destination.
4. The call was typal. The same Being who has placed so many lights
in the heavens can also suspend within the firmament of the soul the lights of
truth, hope, and immortality. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
God has placed the lights above us
1. As ornaments of His
throne.
2. To show forth His majesty.
3. That they may the more conveniently give their light to all parts
of the world.
4. To manifest that light comes from heaven, from the Father of
lights.
5. The heavens are most agreeable to the nature of these lights.
6. By their moving above the world at so great a distance, they help
to discover the vast circuit of the heavens. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
The heavenly bodies
1. Not to honour them as
gods.
2. To honour God in and by them (Psalms 8:1; Timothy 6:16; Isaiah 6:2). (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
The place and use of creatures are assigned unto them by God
1. That He may manifest His
sovereignty.
2. That He may establish a settled order amongst the creatures.
3. Let all men abide in their sphere and calling.
The stars and the spiritual life
Not for secular purposes alone are the divisions of time marked
out for us by the heavenly bodies; they have a still higher and more important
purpose to serve in connection with our spiritual life.
I. The lights
which God hath set in the firmament BREAK UP THE MONOTONY OF LIFE. Life is not
a continuous drudgery, a going on wearily in a perpetual straight line; but a
constant ending and beginning. We do not see all the road of life before us;
the bends of its clays and months and years hide the future from our view, and
allure us on with new hopes, until at last we come without fatigue to the end
of the journey.
II. The lights
which God hath set in the firmament DIVIDE OUR LIFE INTO SEPARATE AND MANAGEABLE
PORTIONS. Each day brings its own work, and its own rest.
III. The lights
which God hath set in the firmament ENABLE US TO REDEEM THE TIME to retrieve
the misspent past by the right improvement of the present. Each day is a
miniature of the whole of life and of all the seasons of the year. Morning
answers to spring; midday to summer; afternoon to autumn; evening to winter. We
are children in the morning, with fresh feelings and hopes; grown-up men and
women, with sober and sad experiences, at noon; aged persons, with whom the
possibilities of life are over, in the afternoon and night.
IV. The lights
which God hath set in the firmament ENABLE US TO SET OUT ON A NEW COURSE FROM
SOME MARKED AND MEMORABLE POINT. God is giving to us, with every new horizon of
life, a sense of recovered freedom, separating us from past painful
experiences, and enabling us to begin a new course of life on a higher plane.
And with this division of time by the orbs of heaven--this arrangement of days
and months and years, with their perpetually recurring new opportunities of
living no more unto ourselves but unto God,--coincide the nature and design of
the blessed gospel, whose unique peculiarity is, that it is the cancelling of
debts that could never be paid, the assurance that our relations to God are
entirely changed, and that all old things are passed away, and all things
become new. It is this association that gives such importance to anniversaries,
birthdays, and new year¡¦s days-seasons considered peculiarly auspicious for commencing
life afresh, and which are generally taken advantage of to form new
resolutions. (H. Macmillan, D. D.)
Lessons of the firmament
I. LET US LOOK AT
THE SUN, AS AN EMBLEM OF GOD HIMSELF. The king of the hosts of heaven, the
centre of revolving orbs, the source of light and heat.
II. THE MOON,
SHINNING WITH BORROWED LIGHT, MAY REPRESENT THE CHURCH, which, like a city set
on a hill, only reflects the light that falls on it. Out of Zion, the
perfection of beauty, God shines.
III. THE STARS MAY
REPRESENT CONSPICUOUS CHARACTERS. The brightest star and best is the Star of
Bethlehem, which ushered in Christ.
The star of the East is the daystar which marks our bright,
guiding light, Jesus Christ. He is the centre of attraction to all. (J. B.
Smith, D. D.)
The fourth day
The fourth day¡¦s work is ¡§lights set in heaven¡¨: mighty work: more
glorious far than the ¡§light¡¨ upon the first day. Then the light was undefined.
Now lights are come; one with warmth; one cold but shining: each defined; the
one direct, the other reflex; but both to rule and mightily affect, not the
earth only, but even the wide waters: giving another cheek, too, to darkness,
not only taking from it day, but invading and conquering it by the moon and
stars in its own domain of night. And so after that the seas of lust are
bounded, and the fruits of righteousness begin to grow and bud, a sun, a mighty
light is kindled in our heaven,--Christ dwells there, God¡¦s eternal word and
wisdom,--no longer undefined, but with mighty warmth and power, making the
whole creation to bud and spring heavenward: while as a handmaid, another
light, of faith, grows bright within,--our inward moon, truth received on
testimony, the Church¡¦s light; for as men say, Christ is the sun, the Church
the moon, so is faith our moon within to rule the night. Of these two, the
lesser light must have appeared the first; for each day grew and was measured
¡§from the evening to the morning¡¨; just as faith, with borrowed light, in every
soul still precedes the direct beams of this light or Word within. Now both
shine to pour down light. Oft would darkness fall, if our moon of faith rose
not to rule the night. Yet fair as she is, she but reminds us of present night,
making us sigh for the day star and the perfect day. These lights are ¡§for
signs and for seasons and for years,¡¨ and ¡§to rule over the day and over the
night also.¡¨ For ¡§signs¡¨--first, of what we are. We have thought this earth is
fixed: but sun and moon show that we are but wanderers here. We have supposed
ourselves the centre; that it is the sun that moves. The lights will teach us
in due time that he is steadfast: it is we who journey on. Again, these lights
are ¡§for a sign¡¨ how we stand, and where we are; by our relative positions
toward them showing us, if we will learn, our real situation. For the moon is
new and feeble, when, between us and the sun, it trenches on his place, and
sets at eventide. So is our faith: put in Christ¡¦s place, it must be weak: dark
will be our night: we shall move on unillumined. Not so when in her place, not
in His, but over against Him, our moon of faith rises at even, as our Sun
withdraws Himself. Now she trenches not upon Him; therefore she is full of
light, making the midnight almost as the noon-day. Signs they are, too, to the
man, when at length he walks upon the earth,--the image of God, which after
fruits and lights is formed in us,--to guide him through the wastes within the
creature, as he seeks to know its lengths and breadths that he may subdue it
all. The lights are ¡§for seasons¡¨ also; to give healthful alternations of cold
and heat, and light and darkness. Sharp winters with their frosts, chill and
deadness in our affections, and the hours of darkness which recur to dim our
understandings, are not unmixed evil. Ceaseless summer would wear us out:
therefore the lights are ¡§for seasons,¡¨ measuring out warmth and light as we
can profit by it. So faith wanes and waxes, and Christ is seen and hid, each
change making the creature learn its own dependence; forcing it to feel, that,
though blessed, it is a creature, all whose springs of life and joy are not its
own. These lights, too, are ¡§to rule over the day and over the night.¡¨ To rule
the creature, much more to rule such gifts as the day, wrought by God Himself
in it, as yet has been unknown. Even to bound the natural darkness hitherto has
seemed high attainment. Now we learn that the precious gifts, which God
vouchsafes, need ruling; an earnest this of that which comes more fully on the
sixth day. A sun ¡§to rule the day¡¨ leads to the man ¡§to have dominion,¡¨ set to
rule, not the day only, but every creature. It is no slight step, when God¡¦s
aim, hitherto unknown, is learnt; that in His work this gift is for this, that
for the other purpose; when it is felt that the best gifts may be misused and
wasted; that they need governing, and may and must be ruled. (A. Jukes.)
The heavenly bodies emblematic of the spiritual
It is interesting to notice the many applications made in
Scripture of the heavenly bodies as emblems of the spiritual.
1. God is a Sun and Shield (Psalms 84:11).
2. Christ is the Sun of Righteousness (Malachi 4:2); the Light of the John 8:12); the Morning Star (Revelation 2:16); the dispeller of the
darkness (2 Samuel 23:4).
3. The Church is fair as the moon (Song of Solomon 6:10); clear as the Song of Solomon 6:10): the moon under her
feet (Revelation 12:1); crowned with stars; the
saints are to shine as the stars (Daniel 12:3); with different glories (1 Corinthians 15:41); as the sun in
his Judges 5:31); as the sun in the kingdom
of their Father Matthew 13:43).
4. Christ¡¦s ministers are likened to stars (Revelation 1:16-20).
5. Apostates are likened to wandering stars (Jude 1:13).
6. It was a star that lighted the wise men (Matthew 2:2).
7. At the coming crisis of earth¡¦s history, all these heavenly orbs
are to be shaken and darkened for a season (Mark 13:25). (H. Bonar, D. D.)
Lights
I. THE LIGHTS OF
ANGELS, OF MEN, AND OF ANIMALS. The angels behold the face of God and watch His
plans from age to age. Compared with us, they live in the blaze of day: we have
the lesser light of human reason, which relieves, but does not banish, the
night. There are around us other conscious creatures, endowed with still
feebler powers, who grope in the dim starlight of animal existence. God is the
¡§Father of all lights.¡¨
II. THE LIGHTS OF
HEATHENISM, JUDAISM, AND CHRISTIANITY. What a glimmering starlight of religious
knowledge is that of the heathen millions! How partial and imperfect was the
knowledge that even the Jews possessed! At last ¡§the Sun of Righteousness arose
with healing in His wings.¡¨ The world has not exhausted, it has scarcely
touched, the wealth of spiritual light and life in Him.
III. THE LIGHTS OF
CHILDHOOD, MANHOOD, AND THE HEAVENLY STATE. The faint gleam of light in
childhood develops into the stronger light of manhood, but even that does not
banish the night. ¡§In Thy light we shall see light.¡¨ (T. M. Herbert, M. A.)
Genesis of the luminaries
I. EXPLANATION OF
THE PASSAGE.
1. Twin triads of the creative week. This venerable creation archive
evidently divides into two great eras, each era consisting of three days; each
day of the first era having a corresponding day in the second era. Thus, to the
chemical light of the first day correspond the sidereal lights of the fourth
day. To the terrestrial individualization of the second day corresponds the
vital individualization of the fifth day. To the genesis of the lands and of
the plants on the third day corresponds the genesis of the mammals and of man
on the sixth day. Thus, the first era of the triad was an era of prophecy; the
second era of the triad an era of fulfilment.
2. The two-fold difficulty.
3. Panorama of the emerging luminaries. There is still light on the
newly-verdured mountain and mead. But it is a strange, weird light; perhaps
like that of the zodiacal gleam, or the dying photosphere, or perhaps like the
iris-hued, lambent shimmer of the northern aurora. Suddenly the goldening
gateways of the East open, and, lo, a dazzling orb, henceforth the lord of day,
strides forth from his cloud pavilion as a bridegroom from his chamber, and
rejoices to run his course as a giant his race; upward and upward he royally
mounts; downward and downward he royally bows: as he nears the goal of his
resplendent march, lo, the blushing portals of the West open to receive him:
and lo, again, his gentle consort, ¡§pale empress of the night,¡¨ sweeps forth in
silver sheen, while around her planet and comet, Arcturus and Mazzaroth, Orion
and Pleiades, hold glittering court.
4. Purpose of the luminaries.
II. MORAL MEANING
OF THE STORY.
1. The luminaries are guides to Jesus Christ. The Creator has
expressly bidden us accept His ordinances of the heavenly bodies as the pledge
of His covenant of grace in the Divine Son (Jeremiah 31:35; Jeremiah 33:20-26; Psalms 89:35-37).
2. Jesus Christ and His Church and His truths are the true
luminaries, shining in the true heavens. Jesus Christ Himself is the true
Greater Light, ruling the day as the Sun of Righteousness, coming out of the
chamber of His eternity as the King of the worlds, going forth from the ends of
the heavens, circling unto the ends thereof, and nothing is hidden from His
heat Psalms 19:5-6). The Church of Jesus
Christ--Immanuel¡¦s real, spiritual Church, the aggregate of saintly
characters--is the true lesser light: ruling the night as the moon of His
grace, shining because He shines upon her, silvering the pathway of this
world¡¦s benighted travellers. The truths of Jesus Christ--the truths which He
came to disclose--are the true stars of heaven, from age to age sparkling on
His brow as His many-jewelled diadem. And Jesus Christ and His Church and His
truths are the world¡¦s true regulators--serving for its signs and its seasons,
its days and its years. Let me cite a single instance. Why do not the world¡¦s
scholars still measure time from the Greek Olympiads? Why do not the world¡¦s
kings still reckon their annals from the Year of Rome? Why do not the world¡¦s
scientists date their era from some memorable transit or occultation? Ah, Jesus
Christ and His Church and His truth are too much for them. And so they all, even
the most infidel, bow in unconscious homage before the Babe of Bethlehem,
reckoning their era from that manger birth, dating their correspondence, their
legislations, their discoveries, their exploits, with the august words: Anno
Domini. Yes, Christianity is humanity¡¦s true meridian, dictating its measures
of time and space, its calendars and eras, its latitudes and longitudes. All
history, if we did but know it, is time¡¦s great ecliptic around the eternal Son
of God. Happy the hour, brother, when the fourth day dawns on thy soul, and
thou takest thy place in the moral heavens, henceforth to shine and rule as one
of earth¡¦s luminaries!
2. A personal entreaty. Take heed, O friend, lest the day come when
the stars, now fighting in their courses for thee, shall fight against thee Judges 5:20). In that coming day of
sack-clothed sun and crimsoned moon and falling stars, one thing shall survive
the dissolving heavens and melting elements: It is the blood-bought Church of
the living God. (G. D. Boardman.)
Time
There are few words much oftener in our mouths than that short but
most important word, time. In one sense, the thought of it seems to mingle
itself with almost everything which we do. It is the long measure of our
labour, expectation, and pain; it is the scanty measure of our rest and joy.
Its shortness or its length are continually given as our reason for doing, or
leaving undone, the various works which concern our station, our calling, our
family, our souls. What present time is; which it is most difficult to
conceive, if we try it by more exact thought than we commonly bestow on it; for
even as we try to catch it, though but in idea, it slips by us. Subdivide ore¡¨
measure as we may, we never actually reach it. It was future, it is past; it is
the meeting point of these two, and itself, it seems, is not. And so, again,
whether there is really any future time; whether it can exist, except in our
idea, before it is. Or whether there can be any past time; what that can be
which is no more; whose track of light has vanished from us in the darkness;
which is as a shadow that swept by us, and is gone. All this is full of wonder,
and it may become, in many ways, most useful matter of reflection to those who
can bear to look calmly into the depths of their being. It may lead us to
remember how much of what is round us here is, after all, seeming and unreal,
and so force us from our too ready commerce with visible shadows into communion
with invisible realities. It may show us how continually we are mocked in the
regions of the senses and the understanding, and so drive us for certainty and
truth to the higher gifts of redeemed reason and fellowship with God. It may
abate the pride of argument on spiritual things, and teach us to take more
humbly what has been revealed. And this should give us higher notions of that
eternity towards which we are ever drifting on. We are apt to think of it as
being merely prolonged time. But the true idea of eternity is not prolonged
time, but time abolished. To enter on eternity is to pass out of the succession
of time into this everlasting present. And this suggests to us the two
remarkable characters, which together make up the best account we can give of
time. The one--how completely, except in its issue, it passes from us: the
other--how entirely, in that issue, it ever abides with us. In itself how
completely does it pass away. Past time, with all its expectations, pains, and
pleasures, how it is gone from us! The pleasures and the pains of childhood, of
youth, nay, even of the last year, where are they? Every action has tended more
to strengthen the capricious tyranny of our self-will, or to bring us further
under the blessed liberty of Christ¡¦s law. We are the sum of all this past
time. It was the measure of our opportunities, of our growth. We are the result
of all these minutes. And if we thus look on past time, how, at this break in
our lives, should we look on to the future? Surely with calm trust, and with
resolutions of increased earnestness. Let our thanksgivings grow into the one,
our humiliation change into the other. If time is the opportunity and measure
of this growth, what a work have we to perform in it! How should we strive to
store it full with deeds which may indeed abide! (Bishop S. Wilberforce.)
The sun
The sun is almost the heart and brain of the earth. It is the
regulator of its motions, from the orbital movement in space, to the flow of
its currents in the sea and air, the silent rise of vapours that fly with the
winds to become the source of rivers over the land; and the still more profound
action in the living growth of the plant and animal. It is no creator of life;
but through its outflowing light, heat, and attraction, it keeps the whole
world in living activity, doing vastly more than simply turning off days and
seasons. Without the direct sunlight there may be growth, as many productions
of the sea and shady grounds prove. But were the sun¡¦s face perpetually veiled,
far the greater part of living beings would dwindle and die. Many chemical
actions in the laboratory are suspended by excluding light; and in the
exquisite chemistry of living beings this effect is everywhere marked: even the
plants that happen to grow beneath the shade of a small tree or hedge in a
garden evince, by their dwarfed size and unproductiveness, the power of the
sun¡¦s rays, and the necessity of this orb to the organic period of the earth¡¦s
history. (Bib. Sacra.)
God more glorious than the sun
We are told that the late Dr. Livingstone of America, and Louis
Bonaparte, ex-king of Holland, happened once to be fellow passengers, with many
others, on board one of the North River steamboats. As the doctor was walking
the deck in the morning, and gazing at the refulgence of the rising sun, which
appeared to him unusually attractive, he passed near the distinguished
stranger, and, stopping for a moment, accosted him thus: ¡§How glorious, sir, is
that object!¡¨ pointing gracefully with his hand to the sun. The ex-king assenting,
he immediately added, ¡§And how much more glorious, sir, must be its Maker, the
Sun of Righteousness!¡¨ A gentleman who overheard this short incidental
conversation, being acquainted with both personages, now introduced them to
each other, and a few more remarks were interchanged. Shortly after, the doctor
again turned to the ex-king, and, With that air of polished complaisance for
which he was remarkable, invited him first, and then the rest of the company,
to attend a morning prayer. It is scarcely necessary to add that the invitation
was promptly complied with.
The luminaries
The use of these bodies is said to be not only for dividing the
day from the night, but ¡§for signs and seasons, and days and years.¡¨ They
ordinarily afford signs of weather to the husbandman; and prior to the
discovery of the use of the loadstone, were of great importance to the mariner.
They appear also on some extraordinary occasions to have been premonitory to
the world. Previous to the destruction of Jerusalem, our Lord foretold that
there should be ¡§great earthquakes in divers places, and famines, and
pestilences, and fearful sights, and great signs from heaven.¡¨ And it is said
by Josephus, that a comet like a flaming sword was seen for a long time over
that devoted city, a little before its destruction by the Romans. Heathen
astrologers made gods of these creatures, and filled the minds of men with
chimerical fears concerning them. Against these God warns His people; saying,
¡§Be ye not dismayed at the signs of heaven.¡¨ This, however, does not prove but
that He may sometimes make use of them. Modern astronomers, by accounting for
various phenomena, would deny their being signs of anything: but to avoid the
superstitions of heathenism, there is no necessity for our running into atheism.
The heavenly bodies are also said to be for seasons, as winter and summer, day
and night. We have no other standard for the measuring of time. The grateful
vicissitudes also which attend them are expressive of the goodness of God. If
it were always day or night, summer or winter, our enjoyments would be
unspeakably diminished. Well is it said at every pause, ¡§And God saw that it
was good!¡¨ David improved this subject to a religious purpose. He considered
¡§day unto day as uttering speech, and night unto night as showing knowledge.¡¨
Every night we retire we are reminded of death, and every morning we arise of
the resurrection. In beholding the sun also, ¡§which as a bridegroom cometh out
of his chamber, and rejoiceth as a strong man to run his race,¡¨ we see every
day a glorious example of the steady and progressive ¡§path of the just, which
shineth more and more unto the perfect day.¡¨ (A. Fuller.)
Let the waters bring forth abundantly
Fish and fowl
I.
THAT
LIFE IS THE IMMEDIATE CREATION OF GOD.
1. Life was not an education.
2. It was not the result of combination.
3. It was a miraculous gift. There are two words in this sentence
that should be remembered, and joined together most closely, they are ¡§God¡¨ and
¡§life.¡¨ This should be so in the soul of man, as God is the source of its true
and higher life. If the Church were to remember the connection of these two
great words, she would be much more powerful in her toil. Life was at first the
miraculous gift of God. Its continuance is His gift.
II. THAT LIFE IS VARIED IN
ITS MANIFESTATION AND CAPABILITY.
1. Life is varied in its manifestations. There were created on this
day both fish and fowl. Thus life is not a monotony. It assumes different
forms. It grows in different directions. It has several kingdoms. It has
numerous conditions of growth.
2. Life is varied in its capability. The fish swim in the water. The
fowls fly in the air; the abilities and endowments of each are distinct and
varied. Each takes a part in the great ministry of the universe. The whole in
harmony is the joy of man.
3. Life is abundant and rich in its source. The waters brought forth
abundantly. There was no lack of life-giving energy on the part of God. The
world is crowded with life. The universe will not soon become a grave, for even
in death there is life, hidden but effective to a new harvest.
4. Life is good in its design.
III. THAT THE LOWER SPHERES OF
LIFE ARE RICHLY ENDOWED WITH THE DIVINE BLESSING.
1. It was the blessing of increasing numbers.
2. It was the blessing of an extended occupation of the land and
sea.
3. Let us always remember that the blessing of God rests upon the
lower spheres of life. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Genesis of the animals
I. EXPLANATION OF THE
PASSAGE.
1. Animals the issue of fifth and sixth days.
2. Panorama of the emerging animals. Lo! the nautilus spreads his
sail, and the caterpillar winds his cocoon, and the spider weaves his web, and
the salmon darts through the sea, and the lizard glides among the rocks, and
the eagle soars the sky, and the lion roams the jungle, and the monkey chatters
among the trees, and all animate creation waits the advent and lordship of man,
God¡¦s inspiration and therefore God¡¦s image, God¡¦s image and therefore God¡¦s
viceroy.
3. The animal succession a progress.
And with this Mosaic account of the origin of life, ascending from
plant, by way of animal, to man, the geological records substantially agree:
first, plants and fishes of the Palaeozoic period; secondly, birds and reptiles
of the Mesozoic period; thirdly, mammals and man of the Neozoic period.
4. ¡§After their kind.¡¨ Almost like a prophetic caveat against
the modern hypothesis of the mutability of species.
5. The Creator¡¦s blessing. The benediction of fertility.
6. The Divine delight.
II. MORAL MEANING OF THE
STORY.
1. Animals have ¡§souls.¡¨ What in man we call reason, in animals we
call instinct. As that mysterious force which vitalizes and builds up the fabric
of the human body is the same mysterious force which vitalizes and builds up
the fabric of the animalcule, so that mysterious guide which teaches Newton how
to establish the law of gravity, and Shakespeare how to write his ¡§Hamlet,¡¨ and
Stephenson how to bridge the St. Lawrence, seems substantially to be the same
mysterious guide which teaches the beaver how to build his dam, and the spider
how to weave his web, and the ant how to dig his spiral home. The difference
does not seem to be so much a difference in nature or kind, as in degree or
intensity. As the diamond is the same substance with charcoal--only under
superior crystalline figure--so reason seems to be substantially the same with
instinct--only in an intensely organized state. One thing is common to man and
animals: it is that mysterious principle or force which, in want of a better
name, and in distinction from the term spirit, we call ¡§soul.¡¨
2. Animals perhaps are immortal. I quote from that profound treatise
by Louis Agassiz, entitled ¡§Essay on Classification¡¨: ¡§Most of the arguments of
philosophy in favour of the immortality of man apply equally to the permanency
of the immaterial principle in other living beings. May I not add that a future
life in which man should be deprived of that great source of enjoyment and
intellectual and moral improvement, which results from the contemplation of the
harmonies of an organic world, would involve a lamentable loss? And may we not
look to a spiritual concert of the combined worlds and all their inhabitants in
presence of their Creator, as the highest conception of paradise?¡¨ (See Romans 8:19-23.) (G. D.Boardman.)
The prolific character of the life of the ocean
The finny tribes are specially prolific. The eggs of fish, or
spawn, produce vast multitudes. The row of a codfish contains nine millions of
eggs, of a flounder, about a million and a half, and of a mackerel, half a
million. ¡§The unchecked produce of one pair of herrings would in a very few
years crowd the Atlantic.¡¨ So is it also with birds. The passenger pigeon of
North America has been seen in flocks a mile broad, and taking four hours in
passing, at the rate of a mile a minute, and was calculated to contain 250 millions
of Psalms 104:24-25). The microscope also
shows there are beings with perfect organs of nutrition and locomotion, a
million of which would not exceed in bulk one grain of sand, and eight millions
of which might be compressed within a grain of mustard seed. Others are so
small that 500 millions of them could live in a dish of water. There are even
animalcules so minute that a cubic inch could contain a million millions of
them. (Jacobus.)
Shoals of animalculae
Some few years ago a newspaper correspondent, writing from the
Gulf of Siam, said: ¡§We steamed forward at the rate of six or seven knots an
hour, and a wonderful spectacle presented itself. Athwart the vessel, long
white waves of light were seen rushing towards it, ever brighter and in swifter
motion, till they seemed to flow together, and at length nothing could be seen
on the water but a whirling white light. Looking stedfastly at it, the water,
the air, and the horizon seemed blended in one; thick streamers of mist seemed
to float by both sides of the ship with frantic speed. The appearances of
colour resembled those which arise when one turns a black-and-white striped
ball so quickly that the white stripes seem to run together. The spectacle
lasted for five minutes, and was repeated once again for two minutes. No doubt
it was caused by shoals of animalculae in the water.¡¨
Resemblances between fishes and birds
I must tell you of a discovery made by a very dear friend whom I
have lost, the excellent Dr. Prevost, a learned anatomist of Geneva. He often
mentioned it to me as affording a remarkable testimony to the Word of God. It
helps to explain the words of the 20th verse. We may perhaps wonder that two
such apparently different kinds of creatures as fishes and birds should be
classed together. Who among us would have thought of such an arrangement? But,
dear children, scientific men have discovered, on examination, that there are
very close resemblances between them in their anatomical structure and in some
other things. Both spring from eggs; and while the one class--the birds--swim
in the air with wings, the other--the fishes--fly in the water with fins. And
besides these points of resemblance, the discovery made by Dr. Prevost, which
astonished himself and interested the learned world very much, was this, that
the globules of the blood of fishes and birds are seen to be the same, when
closely examined, and do not at all resemble the globules of the blood of those
animals which sprang from the earth on the sixth day. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Some of the faculties and organs of fishes
Fishes appear to be endowed with the senses common to land
animals. Those of touch and taste are supposed to be feeble, in general: though
some are furnished with flexible feelers, or organs of touch. Their organs of
smelling and hearing are more acute, and are in their structure happily adapted
to the element in which they live. These latter senses have no external
avenues, as in land animals; for immediate and perpetual contact with the dense
element of water would soon prove ruinous to their delicate and sensitive
nerves. Smelling is said to be the most acute of all their senses. The
olfactory membrane and nerves in them are of remarkable extent; in a large
shark they expand over a surface of no less than twelve or thirteen square
feet. Hence, by this sense the finny tribes can discover their prey or their
enemies at a great distance, and direct their course in the thickest darkness,
and amid the most agitated waves. Possessing the foregoing faculties fishes are
not without a degree of sagacity. They have been found even capable of
instruction, and been taught to come when called by their names, and to
assemble for their food at the sound of a whistle or bell. They are said to be
among the most long-lived of all animals. The carp has been known to reach more
than a hundred years of age. And Kirby relates that a pike was taken in 1754,
at Kaiserslautern, which had a ring fastened to the gill covers, from which it
appeared to have been put into the pond of that castle by order of Frederick II
in 1487--a period of two hundred and sixty-seven years. Fishes excel in
strength, and seem to be capable of prolonged exertion without apparent
fatigue. Even the feathered tribe, in this, must yield the palm to the finny
race. The shark will out travel the eagle, and the salmon will out strip the
swallow in speed. The thunny will dart with the rapidity of an arrow, and the
herring will travel for days and weeks at the rate of sixteen miles an hour,
without respite or repose. Sharks have been observed to follow and play around
a ship through its whole voyage across the Atlantic; and the same fish, when
harpooned, has been known to drag a vessel of heavy tonnage at a high speed
against wind and tide. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Fecundity of fishes
This ¡§blessing¡¨ is to be regarded, not simply as a solemn word of
command, but the imparting of reproducing energies to the varied tribes of the
deep. And to see how effective this blessing was, we need but look at the
results which followed. Nothing can exceed that ¡§abundance¡¨ brought forth. If
we attempt to estimate the number of eggs in the toes of various kinds of fish,
we may be able to form some faint conception of it. The roe of the cod fish,
according to Harmer¡¦s estimate, contains 3,686,000 eggs; of the flounder,
225,000; of the mackerel, 500,000; of the tench, 350,000; of the carp, 203,000;
of the roach, 100,000; of the sole, nearly 100,000; of the pike, 50,000; of the
herring, the perch, and the smelt, from 20,000 to 30,000. Other species are
equally prolific. Such numbers present an idea of fecundity that is truly
overwhelming. It must be observed, however, that a large proportion of the eggs
deposited are destroyed in various ways; they are eagerly sought after by other
fishes, by aquatic birds, and by reptiles, as food; and in the young state,
they are pursued and devoured by larger ones of their own species, as well as
by those of others. Still the numbers which arrive at maturity surpass all
comprehension, as appears from the countless myriads of those that are of
gregarious and migratory habits. Impelled and guided by that mysterious power
we call instinct, fishes, at certain seasons, migrate and travel in immense
droves to seek a suitable place and temperature for the reproduction of their
species. Vast migrations take place from the oceans into all the rivers of the
earth; the salmon and others often ascend large streams in great numbers for
hundreds and even thousands of miles. Vaster yet by far are the migrations that
occur in the ocean from one region to another. The migratory tribes of the sea
are very numerous; of these, among the best known is the cod; at spawning time
these fish proceed northward, and frequent the shallows of the ocean, such as
the banks of Newfoundland, where they are found in infinite multitudes. The
haddock resorts, in like manner, to northern coasts, and has been found in
immense shoals of more than twenty miles long and three miles broad. The
mackerel also is a migratory tribe; these winter in the Arctic and Antarctic
oceans, from whence in the spring they emerge from their hiding places in
innumerable myriads, and proceed to more genial seas to deposit their eggs. The
thunny travels for the same end in numbers without number. But the most notable
of all the migratory species are the herrings; these, like many others, pass
the winter in high northern latitudes, and at different times through the
summer, proceed southward in search of food, and to deposit their spawn. Some
idea of their numbers may be formed from the vast quantities that are taken.
Many years since, when the business was prosecuted on a more limited scale than
at present, it was reported that on the coast of Norway no less than 20,000,000
were frequently taken at a single fishing; and that the average capture of the
season exceeded 400,000,000. At Gottenberg, 700,000,000 were annually caught.
Yet all these millions were but a fraction of the numbers taken by the English,
Dutch, and other nations. But all that are taken by all nations put together,
are no more missed from the countless hosts of the ocean than a drop out of the
full bucket. Their shoals, says Kirby, consist of millions of myriads, and are
many leagues in width, many fathoms in depth, and so dense that the fishes
touch each other; and this stream continues to move at a rapid rate past any
particular point nearly all summer. If, then, these single groups of a few
species that happen to fall under the observation of man be thus numerous, or
rather innumerable, it is obvious that the aggregate of all the orders, genera,
and species, making up the whole population of the deep, must infinitely
transcend all the powers of human enumeration! (Prof. Gaussen.)
Birds
As in the beauteous creations of the vegetable world, and among
the countless living tenants of the deep, so also among the birds of the air,
we behold indubitable evidences and most impressive displays of the universal
and constant agency of God. In all their doings and movements, the guiding
finger of their Creator is clearly seen. Prior to all experience, and
independent of all instruction, we see the little feathered tribes undertake
and accomplish all the ingenious duties of their being; and accomplish them,
too, with a certainty and perfection which no instruction could teach, and no
experience improve. The sparrow performs and goes through with the whole
process of building, laying, hatching, and rearing, as successfully the first
time as the last. And whence is all this to the little bird of the air, if not
from the omnipresent and infinite Spirit? Who or what leads the young female
bird to prepare a nest, untaught and undirected, long before she has need of
it? Who instructs each particular species in its own peculiar style of
architecture? And when the first egg is brought forth, who teaches her what she
must do with it? or that it is a thing to be taken care of, that it must be
laid and preserved in the nest? And the germ of future life being wrapped in
the egg, who teaches its little owner that heat will develop and mature that
germ? Who acquaints her with the fact that her own body possesses the precise
kind and degree of warmth required? And what is it that holds her so constantly
and so long upon the nest, amid light and darkness, storm and sunshine, without
the least knowledge or idea as to what the result or fruit of all this toil and
self-denial is to be? Here, then, are operations carried on, and effects
produced, which must constrain every candid mind to recognize in them the
invisible band of God. Again, the migration of birds--how astonishing is all
this! ¡§The stork in the heavens knoweth her appointed times; and the turtle and
the crane and the swallow observe the time of their coming.¡¨ So fixed are the
dates of departing and returning with many tribes of the feathered race that,
¡§in certain eastern countries at the present day, almanacs are timed and
bargains struck upon the data they supply.¡¨ Now, who informs them that the day
is come for them to take their leave? or announces to them that the time has
arrived for their return? Without science, without a map, without a compass,
without a waymark, who acquaints them with the direction they are to take? or
measures out for them the length of the journey they have to perform? Who
enables them to pursue undeviatingly their course over pathless oceans, and
through the trackless voids of the atmosphere, alike in the day time and in the
night season, and to arrive exactly at the same spot from year to year? To whom
shall we ascribe this extraordinary power--to God, or to the little bird? It
must be either to the one, or to the other. It is obvious that the little bird
does not possess either the reasoning powers, or the geographical acquaintance,
or the meteorological knowledge, which would enable it either to plan or to
carry out such astonishing enterprises. Indeed, could man thus, amid all storms
and darkness, infallibly steer his voyages over the main, it would render
superfluous the use of his compass and sextant, and enable him at once to
dispense with his trigonometry and logarithms. Whatever name, then, we may give
this mysterious power, and in whatever light we may regard these astonishing
facts, correct and sound reasoning as well as the Scripture, will lead us to the
conviction and acknowledgment of the illustrious Newton, that all this is done
through the immediate influence and guidance of Him, ¡§in whom all live and move
and have their being,¡¨ and without whom ¡§not a sparrow falleth to the ground.¡¨
In the feathered population of our globe we also behold, not proofs only, but
most interesting and delightful displays of the goodness of God. The very
introduction of the winged race into the new-made world was, in itself, a
demonstration of the benevolence of the Divine mind, as they constitute one of
its most beautiful and lovely features. Birds are also living parables, and as
such the Great Teacher often employed them. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Insects
On the fifth day were also produced the insect population of the
new-made world, for these, as well as birds, must be included in the term
winged thing. This department of animated nature presents to us a field of
study all but illimitable, insects being by far the most numerous and
diversified of all the living orders that occupy the dry land. Not less than
100,000 different species are already known, and many more doubtless remain to
be discovered. A distinguished naturalist has made the statement, that there
are probably six species of insects to every species of plants; this estimate,
therefore, would make the entire number of insect species on the face of the
globe considerably over half a million. The insect tribes are of all
conceivable forms, habits, and instincts. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Reflections on the insect creation
Insects, like every other class of living creatures, have their
place to occupy, and their office to fulfil in the Divine plan, and form an
essential link in the great chain of animated nature. Small and insignificant
as they appear, viewed singly, yet taken collectively, they make up armies far
more potent and formidable than either Alexander, or Caesar, or Bonaparte ever
mustered; and these being everywhere dispersed, and daily and hourly at work in
their several departments, they constitute an agency of great power, and no
doubt of great good, in the economy of the world. We may not be able to
determine how, or what, each particular species contributes to the benefit of
the great whole; but we may be sure that their great variety of organs, and
their wonderful instinctive capacities, have been bestowed upon them for ends
worthy of the wisdom that produced them. The works of the Lord are perfect, and
nothing has been made in vain. Insects are an ornament to the earth¡¦s scenery,
and, no doubt, were designed by the munificent Creator to be objects of
pleasurable observation and study to man. The insect creation teaches us that
God is to be seen in the least as well as in the greatest of His works. He is
in all and through all. The guidance of His finger is to be traced as
distinctly in the circles of the spider¡¦s web as in the orbits of the planets;
and the operation of His hand is as plainly seen in the lustre of an insect¡¦s
wing, as in the resplendent disk of the sun, which sheds light and life on
surrounding globes. In the history of insects, we meet with the most beautiful
illustration that all nature affords of the great and distinguishing doctrine
of Christianity--the resurrection of the dead. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Verse 22-23
And God blessed them, saying, Be fruitful and multiply
God¡¦s blessing abundant
At the close of this day the Lord does what He has not done on any
of the other four days; He blesses that which He has created, and the object of
His blessing is an abundant and perpetual increase.
God is liberal; munificent in His donations both temporal and spiritual. Does
He give joy? It is unspeakable joy. Does He give peace? It is a peace which
passeth all understanding. Does He give pleasures? They are pleasures for
evermore. Does He give glory: It is an exceeding eternal weight of glory. The
close-handed and narrow-hearted Christian has not learned to be so in the
school of the Master. All who are in His school, and who practice the lessons
which they receive there, are open-handed and large-hearted. (A. McAuslane,
D. D.)
God¡¦s blessing upon the means of great importance
As in a course of physic, a diseased man is prescribed to boil
certain midicinabble herbs in running water, and then to drink a quantity of
that water, and so is cured of his disease; and yet we know that it is not the
water, but the decoction or infusion, which cureth the patient: so it is not
the bread that nourisheth, nor the abundance of outward things which enricheth
or contenteth, but the infusion of God¡¦s blessing, which is the staff of life,
without which a man may starve for hunger with bread in his mouth, suffer the
extremity of cold with good clothes on his back, and die like the children of Israel
with the flesh of quails in his mouth. (J. Spencer.)
God made the beast of the earth
The animal creation
I.
THAT
THE ANIMAL WORLD WAS CREATED BY GOD.
1. We should regard the animal world with due appreciation. Man has
too low an estimate of the animal world. We imagine that a tree has as much
claim to our attention and regard as a horse. The latter has a spirit; is
possessed of life; it is a nobler embodiment of Divine power; it is a nearer
approach to the fulfilment of creation.
2. We should treat the animal world with humane consideration.
Surely, we ought not to abuse anything on which God has bestowed a high degree
of creative care, especially when it is intended for our welfare.
II. THAT THE
ANIMAL WORLD WAS DESIGNED BY GOD FOR THE SERVICE OF MAN.
1. Useful for business. How much of the business of man is carried
on by the aid of animals. They afford nearly the only method of transit by road
and street. The commercial enterprise of our villages and towns would receive a
serious check if the services of the animal creation were removed.
2. Needful for food. Each answers a distinct purpose toward the life
of man; from them we get our varied articles of food, and also of clothing.
These animals were intended to be the food of man, to impart strength to his
body, and energy to his life. To kill them is no sacrilege. Their death is
their highest ministry, and we ought to receive it as such; not for the purpose
of gluttony, but of health. Thus is our food the gift of God.
III. THAT THE
ANIMAL WORLD WAS AN ADVANCE IN THE PURPOSE OF CREATION. The chaos had been
removed, and from it order and light had been evoked. The seas and the dry land
had been made to appear. The sun, moon, and stars had been sent on their
light-giving mission. The first touch of life had become visible in the
occupants of the waters and the atmosphere, and now it breaks into larger
expanse in the existence of the animal creation, awaiting only its final
completion in the being of man.
IV. THAT THE
ANIMAL WORLD WAS ENDOWED WITH THE POWER OF GROWTH AND CONTINUANCE, AND WAS GOOD
IN THE SIGHT OF GOD.
1. The growth and continuance of the animal world was insured. Each
animal was to produce its own kind, so that it should not become extinct;
neither could one species pass into another by the operation of any physical
law.
2. The animal world was good in the sight of God. It was free from
pain. The stronger did not oppress, and kill the weaker. The instinct of each
animal was in harmony with the general good of the rest. But animals have
shared the fate of man, the shadow of sin rests upon them; hence their
confusion and disorder, their pain, and the many problems they present to the moral
philosopher. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
The animals of the earth as fore runners of man
1. The first signs and
pictures of human life.
2. Its most intimate assistants.
3. Its first conditions. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
Reflections on the domestic animals
In domestic animals we recognize a very marked token of the
paternal kindness of the Creator. Their value and importance to man cannot well
be estimated. How much do they add to his strength in toil, to his ease and
speed in travelling, and to his sustenance and gratification in food. Even the
dog proffers to us a serious and profitable lesson. ¡§Man,¡¨ said the poet Burns,
¡§is the god of the dog. He knows no other, he can understand no other. And see
how he worships him. With what reverence he crouches at his feet, with what
love he fawns upon him, with what dependence he looks up to him, and with what
cheerful alacrity he obeys him! His whole soul is wrapped up in his god; all
the powers and faculties of his nature are devoted to his service, and these
powers and faculties are ennobled by the intercourse. Divines tell us that it
ought to be just so with the Christian; but does not the dog often put the
Christian to shame?¡¨ The ox, also, is to us a living parable. As he slowly
wends his way from the field of toil, at noon, or evening, toward home, how
affecting the remonstrance his moving figure is made to utter--¡§The ox knoweth
his owner, and the ass his master¡¦s crib; but Israel doth not know, My people
do not consider.¡¨ And when he bows his submissive neck to receive the yoke and
go forth to his labour again, how gracious the invitation symbolized by the
willing act--¡§Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek and lowly
in heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My
burden is light.¡¨ The sheep, likewise, is a sacred emblem. Were this animal to
repeat all the various truths committed by the Spirit to its symbolism, it
would preach to us a new lesson with every change of situation in which we
beheld it--following after the shepherd--enclosed in the fold--scattered on the
mountain--lying down in green pastures--straying among wolves--borne on the
shepherd¡¦s shoulder--bound before the shearer--separating from the goats--in
these various circumstances, sheep read to us the most solemn and important
truths of the gospel of the Son of God. And the lamb--this is the central
symbol of the Christian system. This innocent and gentle creature is
preeminently the type of Him who was holy, harmless, and undefiled, the Lamb of
God that was slain to take away the sins of the world, in whose blood the
redeemed of heaven have washed their robes and made them white. The horse also
is a chosen figure of inspiration. In the Book of Revelation--that wonderful
portion of the sacred volume--the King of kings, and Lord of lords, is
represented as riding on a white horse; and the armies of heaven as following
Him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean, to witness His
victory over all the enemies of truth and righteousness, and to participate in
the final triumphs of His grace. Such is the deeply interesting event, such the
glorious consummation, of which the horse stands forever a symbol and a
remembrancer before his rider. How wise the arrangement that has thus embodied
Divine truth in living forms, that ever move before our view. How kind and
gracious in God our Father thus to constitute¡¨ sheep and oxen¡¨ to be unto us as
priests and prophets, holding forth the Word of life, and, though they see not
the vision themselves, symbolizing the glorious things of Christ and of heaven,
to inspire us with the comfort of the most blessed hope. (H. W. Morris, D.
D.)
Beasts, or wild animals
The term beast in the history of this day, as has already been
stated, is employed to designate wild animals, in contradistinction from the
tame, included under the word cattle. Although these are not designed so
immediately or so eminently for the service of man as domestic animals, yet
many, if not most of them, contribute in one way or another to his welfare--some
as game for his sustenance, some by their hides and fur for his clothing, and
all as subjects of interesting and profitable study. It is stated in the Holy
Scriptures concerning the various branches of the human family, that ¡§God
before appointed the bounds of their respective habitations¡¨; this is equally
true of the different tribes of animals, Wise design and kind adaptation stand
forth conspicuously in the arrangement which has assigned to them their several
localities. The hairless elephant, rhinoceros, and tapir are obviously made for
the heat and luxuriance of the Torrid Zone; and it is there they are found. The
camel and the dromedary have been fashioned and constituted with specific
adaptations for the parched and sandy deserts of the tropics; and here,
accordingly, they have been located. Advancing to the more temperate regions,
we still find all creatures, both domestic and wild, admirably fitted to occupy
the zone given to them for their inheritance. And as we proceed northward, we
discover given to the various animals hardihood of constitution, together with
warmth of covering, increasing with the increasing rigour of the climate, till
we pass within the Arctic circle, and reach the polar bears. Voyagers in those
latitudes tell us that these animals disport in the regions of ice, and revel
in an intensity of cold, which, to man with every contrivance of art for
protection, is almost past endurance, and produces in him diseases which
shortly terminate his existence--that they sit for hours like statues upon
icebergs, where, if we were to take up our position for one half hour, we
should become statues indeed, and be frozen into the lasting rigidity of
death--that they slide in frolic down slopes of snows, which if we were to
touch with our bare hand, would instantly, like fire, destroy its vitality. Who
that contemplates these shaggy creatures of the pole, so constituted as to find
a congenial home amid eternal ice and snow, and to take their frolicsome
pastime amid the bleak and dismal horrors of an arctic night, but must confess
that every creature, by Divine appointment and adaptation, is suited for its
place, and that every place is fitted for its given occupants? (H. W.
Morris, D. D.)
Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness
The creation of man
I.
THAT
THE CREATION OF MAN WAS PRECEDED BY A DIVINE CONSULTATION.
1. This consultation was Divine. Held by the Three Persons of the
Ever-Blessed Trinity, who were one in the creative work.
2. This consultation was solemn Man, unlike the rest of creation, is
a being endowed with mind and volition, capable even of rebellion against his
Creator. There must be a pause before such a being is made. The project must be
considered. The probable issue must be calculated. His relation to heaven and
earth must be contemplated.
3. This consultation was happy. The Divine Being had not yet given
out, in the creative work, the highest thought of His mind; He had not yet
found outlet for the larger sympathies of His heart in the universe He had just
made and welcomed into being. The light could not utter all His beneficence.
The waters could not articulate all His power. The stars did but whisper His
name. The being of man is vocal with God, as is no other created object. He is
a revelation of his Maker in a very high degree. In him the Divine thought and
sympathy found welcome outlet. The creation of man was also happy in its
bearing toward the external universe. The world is finished. It is almost
silent. There is only the voice of the animal creation to break its stillness.
But man steps forth into the desolate home. He can sing a hymn--he can offer a
prayer--he can commune with God--he can occupy the tenantless house. Hence the
council that contemplated his creation would be happy.
II. THAT MAN WAS
CREATED IN THE IMAGE OF GOD. Man was originally God-like, with certain
limitations. In what respect was man created after the image of God?
1. In respect to his intelligence. God is the Supreme Mind. He is
the Infinite Intelligence. Man is like Him in that he also is gifted with mind
and intelligence; he is capable of thought.
2. In respect to his moral nature. Man is made after the image of
God, in righteousness and true holiness. He was made with a benevolent
disposition, with happy and prayerful spirit, and with a longing desire to
promote the general good of the universe; in these respects he was like God,
who is infinitely pure, Divinely happy in His life, and in deep sympathy with
all who are within the circle of His Being.
3. In respect to his dominion. God is the Supreme Ruler of all
things in heaven and in earth. Both angels and men are His subjects. Material
Nature is part of His realm, and is under His authority. In this respect, man
is made in the image of God. He is the king of this world. The brute creation
is subject to his sway. Material forces are largely under his command.
4. In respect to his immortality. God is eternal. Man partakes of
the Divine immortality. Man, having commenced the race of being, will run
toward a goal he can never reach. God, angels, and men are the only
immortalities of which we are cognizant. What an awful thing is life.
5. In respect to the power of creatorship. Man has, within certain
limits, the power of creatorship. He can design new patterns of work.
III. THAT THE
CREATION OF MAN IN THE DIVINE IMAGE IS A FACT WELL ATTESTED. ¡§So God created
man in His own image¡¨ (Genesis 1:27). This perfection of
primeval manhood is not the fanciful creation of artistic genius--it is not the
dream of poetic imagination--it is not the figment of a speculative philosophy;
but it is the calm statement of Scripture.
1. It is attested by the intention and statement of the Creator. It
was the intention of God to make man after His own image, and the workman
generally follows out the motive with which he commences his toil. And we have
the statement of Scripture that He did so in this instance. True, the image was
soon marred and broken, which could not have been the case had it not
previously existed. How glorious must man have been in his original condition.
2. It is attested by the very fall of man. How wonderful are the
capabilities of even our fallen manhood. The splendid ruins are proof that once
they were a magnificent edifice. What achievements are made by the intellect of
man--what loving sympathies are given out from his heart--what prayers arise
from his soul--of what noble activities is he capable; these are tokens of
fallen greatness, for the being of the most splendid manhood is but the rubbish
of an Adam. Man must have been made in the image of God, or the grandeur of his
moral ruin is inexplicable. Learn:
1. The dignity of man¡¦s nature.
2. The greatness of man¡¦s fall.
3. The glory of man¡¦s recovery by Christ. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
What is the image of God in which man was created?
I. NEGATIVELY.
Let us see wherein the image of God in man does not consist. Some, for
instance, the Socinians, maintain that it consists in that power and dominion
that God gave Adam over the creatures. True, man was vouched God¡¦s immediate
deputy upon earth, the viceroy of the creation. But that this power and
dominion is not adequately and completely the image of God is clear from two
considerations.
1. Then he that had most power and dominion would have most of God¡¦s
image, and consequently Nimrod had more of it than Noah, Saul than Samuel,
Caesar than Christ--which is a blasphemous paradox.
2. Self-denial and humility will make us unlike.
II. POSITIVELY.
Let us see wherein the image of God in man does consist. It is that universal
rectitude of all the faculties of the soul--by which they stand, act, and
dispose their respective offices and operations, which will be more fully set
forth by taking a distinct survey of it in the several faculties belonging to
the soul; in the understanding, in the will, in the passions or affections.
1. In the understanding. At its first creation it was sublime,
clear, and inspiring. It was the leading faculty. There is as much difference
between the clear representations of the understanding then, and the obscure
discoveries that it makes now, as there is between the prospect of landscape
from a casement, and from a keyhole. This image was apparent--
2. In the will. The will of man in the state of innocence had an
entire freedom to accept or not the temptation. The will then was ductile and
pliant to all the motions of right reason. It is in the nature of the will to
follow a superior guide--to be drawn by the intellect. But then it was
subordinate, not enslaved; not as a servant to a master, but as a queen to her
king, who both acknowledges her subjection and yet retains her majesty.
3. In the passion. Love. Now this affection, in the state of
innocence, was happily pitched upon its right object; it flamed up in direct
fervours of devotion to God, and in collateral emissions of charity to its
neighbour. Hatred. It was then like aloes--bitter, but wholesome. Anger. Joy.
Sorrow. Hope. Fear. The use of this point--that man was created in the image of
God--might be various; but it shall be two fold.
The Divine image in man
It is not too much to say that redemption, with all its graces and
all its glories, finds its explanation and its reason in creation. He who
thought it worth while to create, foreseeing consequences, can be believed, if
He says so, to have thought it worth while to rescue and to renew. Nay, there
is in this redemption a sort of antecedent fitness, inasmuch as it exculpates
the act of creation from the charge of short-sightedness or of mistake. ¡§Let us
make man in our image,¡¨ created anew in Jesus Christ, ¡§after the image of Him
that created him.¡¨ Notice three respects in which the Divine image has been
traced in the human.
I. ¡§God is
Spirit,¡¨ was our Lord¡¦s saying to the Samaritan. Man is spirit also. This it is
which makes him capable of intercourse and communion with God Himself.
SPIRITUALITY thus becomes the very differentia of humanity. The man who
declares that the spiritual is not, or is not for him, may well fancy himself
developed out of lower organisms by a process which leaves him still
generically one of them; for he has parted altogether from the great strength
and life of his race.
II. Spirituality
is the first Divine likeness. We will make SYMPATHY the second. Fellow
suffering is not necessarily sympathy. On the other hand, sympathy may be where
fellow suffering is not. Love is sympathy, and God is love. Sympathy is an attribute
of Deity. When God made man in His own likeness, He made him thereby capable of
sympathy. Spirituality without sympathy might conceivably be a cold and
spiritless grace; it might lift us above earth, but it would not brighten earth
itself.
III. The third
feature is that which we call INFLUENCE the other two are conditions of it.
Influence is by name and essence the gentle flowing in of one nature and one
personality into another, which touches the spring of will and makes the
volition of one the volition of the other. It is indeed a worse than heathenish
negation of the power and activity of God, the source of all, if we debar Him
alone from the exercise of that spiritual influence upon the understanding, the
conscience, and the heart of mankind, which we find to be all but resistless in
the hands of those who possess it by His leave. (Dean Vaughan.)
Man in God¡¦s image
The small can represent the great. Is not the sun reflected in the
hues of the smallest flower, and in the greenness of the finest blade of grass?
Yet that sun is distant from our earth ninety-five millions of miles, and is
larger than our earth one hundred thousand times.
I. IN WHAT THE
IMAGE OF GOD UPON MAN CONSISTS.
1. In the possession of moral powers and susceptibilities.
2. In the pure and righteous state of his whole nature.
3. In his relative position toward other terrestrial creatures.
II. GREAT
BLESSEDNESS WAS INVOLVED IN THE POSSESSION OF GOD¡¦S IMAGE.
1. In the possession of the Divine image human nature had within
itself a mirror of God.
2. It led to fellowship with, God.
3. It was a mirror of God to other creatures.
4. It was a mirror in which God saw Himself.
In this was involved--
Reflections:
1. How sadly changed is human nature.
2. How elevated is the Christian.
3. How blessed is God. (S. Martin.)
The image of God in man
In man two widely different elements are blended, of which only
the one could be moulded in the image of God. God is a Spirit: but man is
material as well as spiritual. God ¡§breathed into (man¡¦s) nostrils the breath
of life¡¨: but He had previously ¡§formed (him) of the dust of the ground.¡¨ Man
therefore is like a coin which bears the image of the monarch: when we would
describe the features of that royal likeness, we take no thought of the earthly
material of the metal on which it is impressed.
1. In the first place, then, man bears God¡¦s image, because God gave
him a freewill, by the force of which gift he is entrusted with individual
responsibility, and exercises a sort of delegated power. This freewill was made
separate from that of God, or the gift would not have been complete. But it was
never meant to be independent of that of God, or the gift to a creature would
have been fatal; as indeed man made it, when he started aside into the rebellion
of a self-seeking and isolated will. God is the great First Cause.
2. But what are the next features of God¡¦s image, in addition to
this gift of will? It might resemble mere force committed to some powerful but
lawless body, which could move without the help of sense or sight. Thus the
madman, for instance, retains will with its full originating power. But it
impels him blindly and irrationally; it may impel him to do himself an injury,
or to injure those whom he once loved most dearly. And this would be an
instance of will without light. Or again, the thoroughly abandoned man, who is
given over to a sort of moral madness, he too retains the power of will; but it
has lost all moral guidance; it no longer obeys the laws of rectitude; it has
become, by the loss of that guidance, more dangerous, because more mischievous,
than even the mightiest of the powers of nature. And this would be an instance
of will without law. To complete our notion of God¡¦s image, therefore, we must
add to the power of will the law of conscience. Whatsoever is right is our
bounden duty, which the strict harmony of our nature enjoins; whatsoever is
wrong must be firmly shunned, as a contradiction to that nature, as a new
discord in the place of harmony, as a new dishonour to the image of God,
3. But in the third place; it is not sufficient to have added the
law of conscience, unless we add the light of reason too. For we could imagine
a creature, possessing something like both will and conscience, who might
nevertheless be far less richly endowed than man. The will of such a being
might be unenlightened: the conscience might be no more than a sort of stolid
sensation of mindless and unreasoning fear. The gift of intellect, then, is a
third essential feature in our nature; and a third trace of the image of God.
Our first parents had dominion, for God ¡§endued them with strength by
themselves, and made them according to His image, and put the fear of man upon
all flesh, and gave him dominion over beasts and fowls.¡¨ They had intelligence,
for ¡§counsel, and a tongue, and eyes, ears, and a heart gave He them to
understand.¡¨ They had intercourse with God, for ¡§He made an everlasting
covenant with them, and showed them His judgments.¡¨ Now I need scarcely point
out how precisely and accurately this threefold division corresponds with what
we had reached through an altogether different process. It was as an image of
God¡¦s will that man possessed dominion: as an image of God¡¦s mind that he was
capable of knowledge: as an image of God¡¦s moral nature, that he was admitted
to intercourse with God. (Archdeacon Hannah.)
The creation of man in the Divine image
I. WHAT BELONGS
TO THE IMAGE OF GOD, OR TO THE UPRIGHTNESS IN WHICH MAN IS HERE SAID TO BE
CREATED? The principal question here to be considered is, whether the
expressions in the text relate to the nature or to the character of man.
Perfection of original constitution is one thing; perfection of action and of
moral character is a different thing. Now we understand the expressions in our
text to be employed with exclusive reference to the nature of man, to the
essential being and constitution of his powers. We suppose the meaning to be,
that God created man with certain spiritual faculties, which are an image or
likeness of what exists in the Maker Himself.
1. We include here, first, reason, or the intellectual powers by
which knowledge is acquired.
2. Intimately connected with these intellectual faculties, is the
power of feeling moral obligation and of recognizing moral law; and we
therefore name this as a second thing embraced in the Divine image, which
belongs to man by creation. If the first is an image of the Divine knowledge,
this is an image of the Divine holiness.
3. Still another part of the image of God in the soul is the power
of free will, or the faculty of determining our actions, and so forming our
character. This constitutes the executive power in man, or that by which he
gives being and direction to his actions.
4. We may further include in the Divine image in man the power of
exercising certain affections. There are decisive indications in nature, and
most emphatic declarations in Scripture, that God is compassionate, and loves
His creatures. We are, therefore, justified in regarding the feelings of which
we are capable of love to God, and of love and piety towards other persons, as
still another part of the image of God in the soul.
II. WE INQUIRE
WHETHER THE LANGUAGE OF OUR TEXT OUGHT TO BE UNDERSTOOD OF OUR FIRST PARENTS
MERELY, OR OF MANKIND IN GENERAL? We think it applies essentially (though
possibly with some modification in respect to the original constitution in the
descendants of Adam) to all human beings. Much which we have already said has,
in fact, assumed this view; but we shall here state the reasons of it more
fully.
1. The passage in Genesis is most naturally viewed as relating to
the human nature generally, which then began its existence in Adam and Eve.
2. The Scriptures in several places speak of men generally as made
in the image and likeness of God (See Genesis 9:6; James 3:9).
3. We conclude with a few brief remarks.
1. The discussion through which we have passed enables us to see the
ground on which Paul could say of the Gentile nations, who have no written
revelation, that they are a law unto themselves. Endowed with spiritual
faculties which enable them to determine for themselves the main substance of
their duty. Made in image of God; so moral and accountable beings.
2. We see also that natural religion, or the religion which
developes itself out of the conscience, must be the foundation of the religion
of revelation.
3. All men need much and careful instruction. (D. N. Sheldon, D.
D.)
Our ancestors
I. WHEN did God
make man?
1. After He had created the world.
2. After He had enlightened the world.
3. After He had furnished and beautified the world.
II. How did God
make man?
1. Consultation amongst the Persons of the Godhead.
2. Process.
3. Breath of life.
III. WHAT did God
make man?
1. A creature comely and beautiful in his outward appearance.
2. Dignified in his soul.
3. Princely in his office.
4. Probationary in his circumstance.
Concluding reflections:
1. How happy must have been the state of man in Paradise!
2. How keenly would they feel the effects of the fall!
3. How visibly do we see the effects of the fall in our world!
4. How thankful ought we to be for the redemption of the world by
our Lord Jesus Christ! (Benson Bailey.)
The image of God
I. IN WHAT
RESPECTS GOD CREATED MAN AFTER HIS IMAGE.
1. After His natural image.
2. After His political image. Man is God¡¦s representative on earth.
3. After His moral image. This consists in knowledge, holiness,
righteousness, and happiness resulting therefrom (Colossians 3:10; Ephesians 4:24).
II. WHETHER MAN HAS
LOST THIS IMAGE OF GOD, IN WHICH HE WAS CREATED AND, IF SO, HOW FAR, AND BY
WHAT MEANS HE HAS LOST IT.
III. WHETHER MAN
MAY, AND MUST RECOVER THIS IMAGE OF GOD HOW FAR, AND BY WHAT MEANS.
1. Man may certainly recover the moral image of God. His ignorance
as to spiritual and Divine things, his unreasonableness and folly, may be
removed, and he may be enlightened with knowledge and wisdom. As to the
necessity of thus recovering the Divine image. Without this we do not learn
Christ aright; the gospel and grace of God do not answer their end upon us, nor
are we Christians (Ephesians 4:21); without this we do not,
cannot glorify God, but dishonour Him (Romans 2:23-26); without this, we cannot
be happy here, we cannot be admitted into heaven Hebrews 12:14; Matthew 5:8; 1 John 3:3; Revelation 7:14, Matthew 22:11.; 2 Corinthians 5:3). In order to
recover this lovely image of God, we must look at it, as Eve looked at the
fruit (2 Corinthians 3:18); we must long
for it, must hunger and thirst after it Matthew 5:6); we must exercise faith in
Christ (Acts 26:18), and in the promises (2 Peter 1:4); and thus approach the
tree of life, and pluck, and eat its fruit; we must pray for the Spirit (Titus 3:5; Ezekiel 36:25; Ezekiel 36:27; 2 Corinthians 3:18); we must read
the word, hear, meditate, etc. (John 8:31-32; John 17:17; 1 Peter 1:22-23; James 1:18); we must use self-denial, and
mortification (Ro Galatians 5:16), and watchfulness (1 Peter 5:8; Revelation 16:15). (J. Benson.)
Man¡¦s creation and empire
I. MAN CREATED
THE GODLIKE CREATURE. We are justified in emphasizing man¡¦s entrance into the
world as a creation. In the first chapter of Genesis a distinct word is used to
denote three separate beginnings: first, when matter was created; second, when
animal life was created; third, when man was created. Man only approaches the
animal when he is under the control of the spirit that tempted him at the fall.
Man is, however, connected with the earth and the animal. The added mental and
spiritual endowments consummated the likeness of God upon the earth. When
Christ came into the world it was in the same image.
II. THE EMPIRE AND
THE GRANARIES FOR MAN. That kingship which came to man from his likeness to God
he has kept as he has retained the Divine image. Single-handed man was not
equal to a contest with the monsters that filled the deep. The beasts that
roamed the primeval forests could not be conquered, even by the giants who were
on the earth in those days, by sheer strength of arm. The sea, the winds, the
creeping, flying, browsing mammoths have always been man¡¦s master, save as he
used mind and heart to secure his dominion. What, then, makes man the master?
Mind, reason, judgment, like God¡¦s.
III. THE UNFINISHED
DAY. Of each preceding evening and morning God said: ¡§And there was evening and
there was morning, one day,¡¨ but no such record has come to us respecting the
seventh day. This is the Scripture: ¡§And on the seventh day God finished the
work which He had made; and He rested on the seventh day from all His work
which He had made. And God blessed the seventh day, and hallowed it.¡¨ We are
still in that day. (W. R. Campbell.)
The Divine in man
The heathen, recognizing in their own way the spiritual in man,
tried to bridge over the chasm between it and the earthly by making God more
human. The way of revelation on the contrary is to make man more godlike, to
tell of the Divine idea yet to be realized in his nature. Nor have we far to go
to find some of the traces of this Divine in human nature.
1. We are told that God is just and pure and holy. What is the
meaning of these words? Speak to the deaf man of hearing, or the blind of light,
he knows not what you mean. And so to talk of God as good and just and pure
implies that there is goodness, justice, purity, within the mind of man.
2. We find in man the sense of the infinite: just as truly as God is
boundless is the soul of man boundless; there is something boundless, infinite,
in the sense of justice, in the sense of truth, in the power of self sacrifice.
3. In man¡¦s creative power there is a resemblance to God. He has
filled the world with his creations. It is his special privilege to subdue the
powers of nature to himself. He has turned the forces of nature against
herself; commanding the winds to help him in braving the sea. And marvellous as
is man¡¦s rule over external, dead nature, more marvellous still is his rule
over animated nature. To see the trained falcon strike down the quarry at the
feet of his master, and come back, when God¡¦s free heaven is before him; to see
the hound use his speed in the service of his master, to take a prey not to be
given to himself; to see the camel of the desert carrying man through his own
home: all these show the creative power of man, and his resemblance to God the
Creator. (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)
Wherein can the image of God, in a finite creature, consist? To
this question some answer, that the image of God consisted in the superiority
of man¡¦s physical faculties, in the admirable conformation of his body. This
answer is unworthy of our text and God. Is God a material being? Has He a body,
in the image of which lie could create man? Others, on hearing the question,
answer, that the image of God in man consisted in the dominion which was given
him over all created beings. But can this be the whole of God¡¦s image? Others,
again, reply to our question, that the image of God consisted in the faculty of
the understanding with which man is endowed, and which so eminently
distinguishes him from all other creatures. This answer is less remote from the
truth, but it is incomplete. In the fifth chapter of Genesis we find the two
words, image and likeness, employed in a manner calculated to make us
understand their meaning in our text. There it is said, that ¡§Adam begat a son
in his own likeness, after his image, and called his name Seth.¡¨ Now is it not
evident, that these words ascribe to Seth all the qualifies, physical,
intellectual, and moral, which his father possessed? And, can we, without doing
violence to the grammar itself, restrain the meaning of these expressions in
our text to a certain superiority by which man is distinguished? We think,
then, that we are authorized to extend these words to all that which
constitutes the character of God, with all the restrictions which the finite
nature of man requires. Man resembled his Creator with regard to his
intellectual and moral qualities. Doubtless there are, in God, incommunicable
perfections which belong to His eternal essence; and, indeed, it is for having
arrogated to himself these august perfections, that man unhappily excavated an
abyss of woe beneath his feet. But there are in God moral perfections which He
communicates to His creatures, endowed with an understanding to know, and a
heart to love. In this sense, man was a reflection, feeble, no doubt, and
finite, of the Divinity Himself. He was, St. Paul tells us, created in
¡§righteousness and true holiness.¡¨ But that we might be able still better to
distinguish the traits of this image, God has not contented Himself with merely
giving us an exact description of them in the words which we have just
considered. Bead the Gospels; there is developed before our eyes the life of
one whom the Bible calls the second Adam, one who is designated the image of
God, the express image of the person of God, the image of the invisible God.
What Divine traits does that image bear! What a reflection of the Divine perfections!
What wisdom! What level What devotion! What holiness! There, my brethren, we
clearly behold the being made ¡§after God in righteousness and true holiness,¡¨
of which the apostle speaks. Now see how the image of God in man develops
itself in the idea of the inspired apostle, and in the manifestation of the Son
of God on earth. We too, place some traits of this image in the understanding.
Not, indeed, in the understanding which requires to be ¡§renewed in knowledge,¡¨
because it has forgotten the things which are above, and has lost the knowledge
of the name of its heavenly Father; but in the clear and enlightened
understanding of the first man, created after the image of God; a spiritual
understanding, the reflection of the supreme intelligence, capable of rising to
God, of seeking God, of adoring God in His works, and in all His moral
perfections; an understanding without error and without darkness, possessing a
full knowledge of the author of its being, and all the means of continually
making new progress in that knowledge by experience. Now to know God is life
eternal; it is the perfection of the understanding; it is the image of God. We
do not, however, mean to represent man, created in the image of God,
notwithstanding the superiority of his understanding, as a savant, in the
ordinary meaning of that word, nor as a philosopher, or metaphysician: it was
not by the way of reasoning that he arrived at the knowledge of things; he had
no need of such a process. The superiority, even of his understanding, consisted,
perhaps, chiefly in its simplicity, its ignorance of what is false, its
inexperience of evil, in that practical ingenuousness, which constitutes the
charm of the unsophisticated character of a child, a character which Jesus
commands us to acquire anew. Always disposed to learn, never presuming upon
itself, plying those around it with questions, listening to their answers with
an entire confidence--such is the child in the arms of its father, such was
Adam before his God, who condescended to instruct him, and whose word was never
called in doubt. The Scripture confirms us in the idea, that this was indeed an
admirable feature of God¡¦s image, when it tells us, that ¡§God made man upright,
but that (afterwards, alas!) they sought out many inventions (reasonings)¡¨ (Ecclesiastes 7:29). The Apostle Paul also
countenances this opinion, when, in his tender solicitude for the Christians at
Corinth, who were exposed to the sophistry of a false philosophy, he writes to
them, with an evident allusion to the seduction of our first parents, ¡§I fear
lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, your minds
should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.¡¨ Finally, Jesus
Christ also establishes it, when, showing us, in this humble and noble
simplicity, this child-like candour, full of openness and confidence,
characteristic feature of the children of His kingdom, He addresses to His
still presumptuous disciples this solemn declaration: ¡§Verily, I say unto you,
except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall not enter into
the kingdom of heaven.¡¨ This feature of character leads us to another, which is
inseparable from it. This simplicity in the mind supposes or produces
simplicity in the heart. When an individual is straightforward in thought, he
is straightforward in his actions. Hence, when the Bible tells us that ¡§God
made man upright,¡¨ it employs a word which, in the original language, means
straightness, as, for example, of a way or a line; and to be upright, is to
follow, without deviation, this way, or this line. Now, man created after the
image of God, followed without effort, as by instinct, this way of uprightness.
This feature, so beautiful and so noble, is reproduced in the new man, which,
according to the apostle, is ¡§created after God in righteousness,¡¨ that is, in
uprightness of mind and of heart. Finally, let us not forget (and this
consideration includes all that remains for us to say on the image of God in
man), that this being, ¡§created after God in righteousness and true holiness,¡¨
bore in him a heart capable of loving. And what is the feature of His glorious
perfections, that God takes the greatest pleasure in engraving upon His creature,
if it be not His love? Is not God love? And shall not he, who bears impressed
upon his whole being the image of God, who places his glory in being loved, be
capable of loving? Yes, lively, deep, powerful affections filled the heart of
the first man, since, even to this day, these affections exercise so great an
influence over us, and are often, without our knowing it, the real motives of
our actions. But in Adam these affections were pure, as his whole being, they
partook of that ¡§true holiness¡¨ which constitutes the image of God. To man,
still innocent, to love God was life. But love is an all-powerful principle of
activity, devotedness, and energy. In the first man it must have been the
motive of his devotion to God, the mysterious bond of his intimate communion
with Him, the sure guarantee of his filial obedience, the ineffable charm which
made him find in that obedience all his happiness. So sweet is devotedness to
that which we love! Ah! that servile obedience which makes us tremble before
the law, because the commandment came forth with thunderings from the smoking
summits of Sinai, was unknown in Eden; that tardy, imperfect obedience, which
costs our selfish, grovelling hearts so much, was unknown; it was unknown,
because that same love reigned there, which makes the seraph find his happiness
in flying at the will of Him who pours life and felicity over him in an
unceasing stream. Thus, the understanding of man, always enlightened in the
will of God, who spake to His creature as a man speaks to his friend; and the
heart of man, which loving that sovereign will above all things, made him find
liberty in perfect submission and happiness in ready obedience; so that, in
him, thought, will, and affection, all united in one holy harmony, to the glory
of Him that had ¡§created him in righteousness and true holiness.¡¨ (L.
Bonnet.)
Man created in the image of God
I. To inquire
wherein this ¡§image of God¡¨ consisted.
II. To suggest
some useful inferences from the inquiry.
1. In the first place, then, we may venture to affirm that man¡¦s
resemblance to his Maker did not, as some have strangely imagined, consist in
the form or structure of his body, though ¡§fearfully and wonderfully made,¡¨ and
reflecting, as it does in an eminent degree the wisdom and goodness of the Creator.
For with what propriety can body said to be ¡§the image¡¨ of spirit?
2. To suggest some practical inferences from the inquiry which has
been made.
The antiquity of man historically considered
I. The problem of
the antiquity of man has to the historian two stages. In the first, it is a
matter wholly within the sphere of historical investigation, and capable of
being determined, if not with precision, at any rate within chronological
limits that are not very wide, i.e., that do not exceed a space of two
or three centuries. In the further or second stage, it is only partially a
historical problem; it has to be decided by an appeal to considerations which
lie outside the true domain of the historian, and are to a large extent
speculative; nor can any attempt be made to determine it otherwise than with
great vagueness, and within very wide limits--limits that are to be measured
not so much by centuries as by millennia. The two stages which are here spoken
of correspond to two phrases which are in ordinary use--¡§Historic man¡¨ and
¡§Prehistoric man.¡¨ In pursuing the present inquiry, we shall, first of all,
examine the question, to what length of time history proper goes back--for how
many centuries or millennia do the contemporary written records of historic man
indicate or prove his existence upon the earth? The result is, that for the
¡§Old Empire¡¨ we must allow a term of about seven centuries or seven centuries
and a half; whence it follows that we must assign for the commencement of
Egyptian monarchy about the year B.C. 2500, or from that to B.C. 2650. This is
the furthest date to which ¡§history proper¡¨ can be said, even probably, to
extend. It is capable of some curtailment, owing to the uncertainty which
attaches to the real length of the earlier dynasties, but such curtailment
could not be very considerable. The history of man may then be traced from
authentic sources a little beyond the middle of the third millennium before our
era. It is true and safe to say that man has existed in communities under settled
government for about four thousand five hundred years; but it would not be safe
to say that he had existed in the condition which makes history possible for
any longer term.
II. What is the
probable age of ¡§prehistoric man¡¨? for how long a time is it reasonable to
suppose that mankind existed on the earth before states and governments grew
up, before writing was invented, and such a condition of the arts arrived at as
we find prevailing in the time when history begins, e.g., in Egypt at
the Pyramid period, about B.C. 2600, and in Babylonia about two centuries
later. Professor Owen is of opinion that the space of ¡§seven thousand years is
but a brief period to be allotted to the earliest civilized and governed
community¡¨--that of Egypt; nay, he holds that such a period of ¡§incubation,¡¨ as
he postulates, is so far from extravagant that it is ¡§more likely to prove
inadequate¡¨ for the production of the civilization in question. This is
equivalent to saying that we must allow two thousand five hundred years for the
gradual progress of man from his primitive condition to that whereto he has
attained when the Pyramid kings bear sway in the Nile valley. Other writers
have proposed a still longer term, as ten thousand, fifteen thousand, or even
twenty thousand years. Now, here it must be observed, in the first place, that
no estimate can be formed which deserves to be accounted anything but the
merest conjecture, until it has been determined what the primitive condition of
man was. To calculate the time occupied upon a journey, we must know the point
from which the traveller set out. Was, then, the primitive condition of man, as
seems to be supposed by Professor Owen, savagery, or was it a condition very
far removed from that of the savage? ¡§The primeval savage¡¨ is a familiar term
in modern literature; but there is no evidence that the primeval savage ever
existed. Rather, all the evidence looks the other way. ¡§The mythical traditions
of almost all nations place at the beginnings of human history a time of
happiness, perfection, a ¡¥golden age,¡¦ which has no features of savagery or
barbarism, but many of civilization and refinement.¡¨ The sacred records,
venerated alike by Jews and Christians, depict antediluvian man as from the
first ¡§tilling the ground,¡¨ ¡§building cities,¡¨ ¡§smelting metals,¡¨ and ¡§making
musical instruments.¡¨ Babylonian documents of an early date tell, similarly, of
art and literature having preceded the great Deluge, and having survived it.
The explorers who have dug deep into the Mesopotamian mounds, and ransacked the
tombs of Egypt, have come upon no certain traces of savage man in those
regions, which a widespread tradition makes the cradle of the human race. So
far from savagery being the primitive condition of man, it is rather to be
viewed as a corruption and a degradation, the result of adverse circumstances
during a long period of time, crushing man down, and effacing the Divine image
wherein he was created. Had savagery been the primitive condition of man, it is
scarcely conceivable that he could have ever emerged from it. Savages, left to
themselves, continue savages, show no signs of progression, stagnate, or even
deteriorate. There is no historical evidence of savages having ever civilized
themselves, no instance on record of their having ever been raised out of their
miserable condition by any other means than by contact with a civilized race.
The torch of civilization is handed on from age to age, from race to race. If
it were once to be extinguished, there is great doubt whether it could ever be
re-lighted. Doubtless, there are degrees in civilization. Arts progress. No
very high degree of perfection in any one art was ever reached per saltum. An
¡§advanced civilization¡¨--a high amount of excellence in several arts--implies
an antecedent period during which these arts were cultivated, improvements
made, perfection gradually attained. If we estimate very highly the
civilization of the Pyramid period in Egypt, if we regard the statuary of the
time as equalling that of Chantrey, if we view the great pyramid as an
embodiment of profound cosmical and astronomical science, or even as an
absolute marvel of perfect engineering construction, we shall be inclined to
enlarge the antecedent period required by the art displayed, and to reckon it,
not so much by centuries, as by millennia. But if we take a lower view, as do
most of those familiar with the subject--if we see in the statuary much that is
coarse and rude, in the general design of the pyramid a somewhat clumsy and
inartistic attempt to impress by mere bulk, in the measurements of its various
parts and the angles of its passages adaptations more or less skilful to
convenience, and even in the ¡§discharging chambers¡¨ and the ¡§ventilating
shafts¡¨ nothing very astonishing, we shall be content with a shorter term, and
regard the supposed need of millennia as an absurdity. There is in truth but
one thing which the Egyptians of the Pyramid period could really do
surprisingly well; and that was to cut and polish hard stone. They must have
had excellent saws, and have worked them with great skill, so as to produce
perfectly flat surfaces of large dimensions. And they must have possessed the
means of polishing extremely hard material, such as granite, syenite, and
diorite. But in other respects their skill was not very great. Their quarrying,
transport, and raising into place of enormous blocks of stone is paralleled by
the Celtic builders of Stonehenge, who are not generally regarded as a very
advanced people. Their alignment of their sloping galleries at the best angle
for moving a sarcophagus along them may have been the result of ¡§rule of
thumb.¡¨ Their exact emplacement of their pyramids so as to face the cardinal
points needed only a single determination of the sun¡¦s place when the shadow
which a gnomon cast was lowest. Primitive man, then, if we regard him as made
in the image of God--clever, thoughtful, intelligent, from the first, quick to
invent tools and to improve them, early acquainted with fire and not slow to
discover its uses, and placed in a warm and fruitful region, where life was
supported with ease--would, it appears to the present writer, not improbably
have reached such a degree of civilization as that found to exist in Egypt
about B.C. 2600, within five hundred or, at the utmost, a thousand years. There
is no need, on account of the early civilization of Egypt, much less on account
of any other, to extend the ¡§prehistoric period¡¨ beyond this term. Mere
rudeness of workmanship and low condition of life generally is sometimes
adduced as an evidence of enormous antiquity; and the discoveries made in
cairns, and caves, and lake beds, and kjokkenmoddings are brought forward to
prove that man must have a past of enormous duration. But it seems to be
forgotten that as great a rudeness and as low a savagism as any which the spade
has ever turned up still exists upon the earth in various places, as among the
Australian aborigines, the bushmen of South Africa, the Ostiaks and Samoyedes
of Northern Asia, and the Weddas of Ceylon. The savagery of a race is thus no
proof of its antiquity. As the Andaman and Wedda barbarisms are contemporary
with the existing civilization of Western Europe, so the palaeolithic period of
that region may have been contemporary with the highest Egyptian refinement.
Another line of argument sometimes pursued in support of the theory of man¡¦s
extreme antiquity, which is of a semi-historic character, bases itself upon the
diversities of human speech. There are, it is said, four thousand languages
upon the earth, all of them varieties, which have been produced from a single
parent stock--must it not have taken ten, fifteen, twenty millennia to have
developed them? Now here, in the first place, exception may be taken to the
statement that ¡§all languages have been produced from a single parent stock,¡¨
since, if the confusion of tongues at Babel be a fact, as allowed by the
greatest of living comparative philologists, several distinct stocks may at
that time have been created. Nor has inductive science done more as yet than
indicate a possible unity of origin to all languages, leaving the fact in the
highest degree doubtful. But, waiving these objections, and supposing a
primitive language from which all others have been derived, and further
accepting the unproved statement, that there are four thousand different forms
of speech, there is, we conceive, no difficulty in supposing that they have all
been developed within the space of five thousand years. The supposition does
not require even so much as the development of one new language each year. Now,
it is one of the best attested facts of linguistic science, that new languages
are being formed continually. Nomadia races without a literature, especially
those who have abundant leisure, make a plaything of their language, and are
continually changing its vocabulary. ¡§If the work of agglutination has once
commenced,¡¨ says Professor Max Muller, ¡§and there is nothing like literature or
science to keep it within limits, two villages, separated only for a few
generations, will become mutually unintelligible.¡¨ Brown, the American
missionary, tells us of some tribes of Red Indians who left their native
village to settle in another valley, that they became unintelligible to their
forefathers in two or three generations. Moffatt says that in South Africa the
bulk of the men and women of the desert tribes often quit their homes for long
periods, leaving their children to the care of two or three infirm old people.
¡§The infant progeny, some of whom are beginning to lisp, while others can just
master a whole sentence, and those still further advanced, romping together
through the livelong day, become habituated to a language of their own. The
more voluble condescend to the less precocious, and thus from this infant Babel
proceeds a dialect of a host of mongrel words and phrases, joined together
without rule, and in the course of one generation the entire character of the
language is changed.¡¨ Castren found the Mongolian dialects entering into a new
phase of grammatical life, and declared that ¡§while the literary language of
the race had no terminations for the persons of the verb, that characteristic
feature of Turanian speech had lately broken out in the spoken dialects of the
Buriatic and the Tungusic idioms near Njestschinsk in Siberia.¡¨ Some of the
recent missionaries in Central America, who compiled a dictionary of all the
words they could lay hold of with great care, returning to the same tribe after
the lapse of only ten years, ¡§found that their dictionary had become antiquated
and useless.¡¨ When men were chiefly nomadic, and were without a literature,
living, moreover, in small separate communities, linguistic change must have
proceeded with marvellous rapidity, and each year have seen, not one new
language formed, but several. The linguistic argument sometimes takes a
different shape. Experience, we are told, furnishes us with a measure of the
growth of language, by which the great antiquity of the human race may be well
nigh demonstrated. It took above a thousand years for the Romance
languages--French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Wallachian, and Roumansch, or
the language of the Grisons--to be developed out of Latin. Must it not have
taken ten times as longto develop Latin and its sister tongues--Greek, German,
Celtic, Lithuanian, Sclavonic, Zend, Sanskrit--out of their mother speech? Nor
was that mother speech itself the first form of language. Side be side with it,
when it was a spoken tongue, must have existed at least two other forms of
early speech, one the parent of the dialects called Semitic--Hebrew, Arabic,
Syriac, Phoenician, Assyro-Babylonian, etc.
The other bearing the same relation to the dialects of the nomad
races scattered over Central and Northern Asia--the Tungusic, Mongolic. Turkic,
Samoyedic, and Finnic--which are all ¡§radii from a common centre,¡¨ and form a
well-established linguistic family. But these three mighty streams, which we
may watch rolling on through centuries, if not millennia, distinct and separate
one from another, are not wholly unconnected. If we trace them back as far as
the records of the past allow, we shall find that ¡§before they disappear from
our sight in the far distance, they clearly show a convergence towards one
common source.¡¨ Widely different, therefore, as they are, both in grammar and
vocabulary, they too must have had a common parent, have been developed out of
a still earlier language, which stood to them in the relation that Latin bears
to Italian, Spanish, and French. But in what a length of time? If the daughter
languages of the Latin were only developed in the space of a thousand years,
and Latin, with its sister tongues, required ten or twenty times as long to be
developed out of the primitive Aryan speech, how much longer a time must have
been needed for the formation from one common stock of the primitive Aryan, the
primitive Semitic, and the primitive Turanian types! When from reasoning of
this kind--regarded as valid--the conclusion is deduced, that ¡§twenty-one
thousand years is a very probable term for the development of human language in
the shortest line,¡¨ we can only feel surprise at the moderation of the
reasoner. But the reasoning is invalid on several grounds.
(a) The supposed induction is made from a single instance--the case
of Latin and its daughter tongues. To prove the point, several cases parallel
to that of Latin should have been adduced.
(b) The time which it took for Latin to develop into Italian,
Spanish, Wallachian, etc., assumed to be known, is not known. No one can say
when Italian was first spoken. All that we know is, when it came to be a
literary language. The fact seems to be that the Gauls and Spaniards, even the
provincial Italians, learnt Latin imperfectly from the first, clipped it of its
grammatical forms, corrupted its vocabulary, introduced phonetic changes
consonant with their own habits and organs of speech. Languages nearer to
Spanish and Italian than to classical Latin were probably spoken generally in
Spain and Italy, while Latin was still the language of the capital and of
polite society.
(c) Linguistic development is not, in fact, equal in equal times. On
the contrary, there are periods when changes are slow and gradual, while there
are others when they take place with extraordinary rapidity. English altered
between Chaucer and Shakespeare very greatly more than it has changed between
Shakespeare and the present day. Changes are greatest and most rapid before
there is a literature; consequently, in the early stages of a language¡¦s life.
And they are facilitated by the absence of intercourse and isolation of tribe from
tribe, which is the natural condition of mankind before states have been formed
and governments set up. In the infancy of man linguistic change must almost
certainly have progressed at a rate very much beyond that at which it has moved
within the period to which history reaches back. It is as impossible,
therefore, to measure the age of language by the period--supposing it
known--which a given change occupied, as it would be to determine the age of a
tree by the rate of growth noted at a particular time in a particular branch.
The diversities of physical type have also been viewed as indicating a vast
antiquity for man, more especially when taken in connection with supposed proof
that the diversities were as great four thousand years ago as they are now. The
main argument here is one with which history has nothing to do. It is for
physiologists, not for historians, to determine how long it would take to
develop the various types of humanity from a single stock. But the other point
is an historical one, and requires to be considered here. Now, it is decidedly
not true to say that all, or anything like all, the existing diversities of
physical type can be traced back for four thousand years, or shown to have
existed at the date of B.C. 2100. The early Egyptian remains indicate, at the
most, five physical types--those of the Egyptians themselves, the Cushites or
Ethiopians, the Nashi or negroes, the Tahennu or Lybians, and the Amu or
Asiatics. The Egyptians are represented as of a red-brown colour, but their women
as nearly white. They have Caucasian features, except that their lips are
unduly thick. The Ethiopians have features not dissimilar, but are prognathous
and much darker than the Egyptians, sometimes absolutely black. The negroes are
always black, with crisp, curly hair, snub noses, and out-turned lips; but they
are not represented until about B.C. 1500. The Tahennu or Lybians of the North
African coast have features not unlike the Egyptians themselves, but are
fair-skinned, with blue eyes and lightish hair. The Ainu have features like
those of the Assyrians and Jews: they vary in colour, being sometimes reddish,
sometimes yellow, and having hair which is sometimes light, sometimes dark. The
diversities are thus considerable, but they are far from equalling those which
now exist. And it may be suspected that each type is exaggerated. As there
cannot have been the difference of colour between the Egyptian men and the
Egyptian women which the monuments represent, so it is to be supposed that in
the other cases the artists intensified the actual differences. The Ethiopian
was represented darker than he was, the Lybian lighter; the negro was given
crisper and bushier hair, a snubber nose, and thicker lips. Art, in its
infancy, marks differences by caricaturing them. We must not argue from
caricatures, as if they had been photographs. We are not obliged, then, to
relegate the entire development of existing physical types to the prehistoric
period, and on that account to give it, as has been proposed, a vast enlargement.
History shows us five types only as belonging to its first period. The rest may
have been developed subsequently.
III. Further, there
are a certain number of positive arguments which may be adduced in favour of
the ¡§juvenility¡¨ of man, or, in other words, of his not having existed upon the
earth for a much longer period than that of which we have historical evidence.
As, first, the population of the earth. Considering the tendency of mankind to
¡§increase and multiply,¡¨ so that, according to Mr. Malthus, population would,
excepting for artificial hindrances, double itself every twenty-five years, it
is sufficiently astonishing that the human race has not, in the space of five
thousand years, exceeded greatly the actual number, which is estimated commonly
at a thousand millions of souls. The doubling process would produce a thousand
millions from a single pair in less than eight centuries. No doubt,
¡§hindrances¡¨ of one kind or another would early make themselves felt. Is it
conceivable that, if man had occupied the earth for the ¡§one hundred or two
hundred thousand years¡¨ of some writers, or even for the ¡§twenty-one thousand¡¨
of others, he would not by this time have multiplied far beyond the actual
numbers of the present day? Secondly, does not the fact that there are no
architectural remains dating back further than the third millennium before
Christ indicate, if not prove the (comparatively) recent origin of man? Man is
as naturally a building animal as the beaver. He needs protection from sun and rain,
from heat and cold, from storm and tempest. How is it that Egypt and Babylonia
do not show us pyramids and temple towers in all the various stages of decay,
reaching back further and further into the night of ages, but start, as it
were, with works that we can date, such as the pyramids of Ghizeh and the ziggurat
of Urukh at Mugheir? Why has Greece no building more ancient than the
treasury of Atreus, Italy nothing that can be dated further back than the
flourishing period of Etruria (B.C. 700-500)? Surely, if the earth has been
peopled for a hundred thousand, or even twenty thousand years, man should have
set his mark upon it more than five thousand years ago. Again, if man is of the
antiquity supposed, how is it that there are still so many waste places upon
the earth? What vast tracts are there, both in North and South America, which
continue to this day untouched primeval forests?
IV. The results
arrived at seem to be that, while history carries back the existence of the
human race for a space of four thousand five hundred years, or to about B.C.
2600, a prehistoric period is needed for the production of the state of things
found to be then existing, which cannot be fairly estimated at much less than a
millennium. If the Flood is placed about
B.C. 3600, there will be ample time for the production of such a
state ofsociety and such a condition of the arts as we find to have existed in
Egypt a thousand years later, as well as for the changes of physical type and
language which are noted by the ethnologist. The geologist may add on two
thousand years more for the interval between the Deluge and the Creation, and
may perhaps find room therein for his ¡§palaeolithic¡¨ and his ¡§neolithic¡¨
periods. (G. Rawlinson, M. A.)
The Jewish and the Christian thought of man
I. THE JEWISH
CONCEPTION OF MAN. It involved--
1. A similarity of nature to that of God Himself.
2. Likeness of character to the Divine.
3. A share in Divine authority.
4. Divine interest and attention.
5. Privilege of approach to the Most High.
6. A sense of man¡¦s degradation and misery through sin. The same
heart that swelled with loftiest hope and noblest aspiration, as it felt that
God was its Father and its King, was the heart that filled with tremor and
shame, as it saw the heinousness of its guilt and the depth of its declension.
II. THE
DISTINCTIVELY CHRISTIAN VIEW. What has Christ added to our thought about
ourselves?
1. He has led us to take the highest view of our spiritual nature. A
treasure of absolutely inestimable worth.
2. He has drawn aside the veil from the future, and made that long
life and that large world our own.
3. He has taught us to think of ourselves as sinners who may have a
full restoration to their high estate. (W. Clarkson, B. A.)
The creation of man
I. SOME GENERAL CIRCUMSTANCES
CONNECTED WITH THE CREATION OF MAN. There is something striking--
1. In the manner of his creation.
2. In the period of his creation.
3. The exalted scale in the rank of beings in which he was placed.
4. The perfect happiness he possessed.
II. THE EXPRESS
IMAGE IN WHICH MAN WAS CREATED. ¡§The image of God.¡¨
1. The image of His spirituality.
2. The image of His perfections.
3. The image of His holiness.
4. The image of His dominion.
5. The image of His immortality. ¡§A living soul.¡¨
Application:
1. Let us remember with gratitude to God the dignity He conferred
upon us in creation. ¡§What is man,¡¨ etc. (Psalms 8:4).
2. Let us shed tears of sorrow over the fallen, ruined state of man.
3. Man is still a precious creature, amid all the ruin sin has
produced.
4. In redemption, we are exalted to dignity, happiness, and
salvation.
5. Let us seek the restoration of the Divine image on our souls; for
without this, without holiness, no man can see the Lord. (J. Burns, D. D.)
The Divine image in man
I. LET US
INQUIRE, IN WHAT DID THE DIVINE IMAGE CONSIST?
1. In immortality.
2. Intelligence.
3. Righteousness.
4. Blessedness.
II. NOTICE THE
PAINFUL TRUTH THAT THE DIVINE IMAGE HAS BEEN DEFACED IS MAN.
1. This is seen in the body of man. Disease; death.
2. It is seen more painfully in his soul. God will not dwell in the
heart which cherishes sin.
III. THE PROVISION
MADE FOR RESTORING THE DIVINE IMAGE TO MAN. Christ, the second Adam. (The
Evangelical Preacher.)
Man created in the Divine image
I. THE MORAL
CONSTITUTION OF MAN. Man has sometimes been called a microcosm, a little world,
a sort of epitome of the universe. The expression is not without meaning; for
in man unite and meet the two great elements of creation, mind and matter; the
visible and the invisible; the body, which clothes the brute, and the spirit,
which belongs to angels. Now, it is a law and property of this outward purl
that it should perish and decay; whilst it is the privilege and designation of
this inward part, that it should be renewed and strengthened day by day. And
this we shall see, as we examine this immaterial part of man¡¦s nature more
closely. Take, for example, the operation of the thinking principle. Although
we often think to a very bad purpose, yet in our hours of waking and
consciousness we always do think. The mind is an ocean of thought, and, like
the ocean, is never still. It may have its calm thoughts, and its tumultuous
thoughts, and its overwhelming thoughts; but it never knows a state of perfect
rest and inaction. Of no material or visible thing could this be affirmed. No
one expects to find amongst the undiscovered properties of matter the power of
thought. Again: we see this with regard to the freedom of moral agency which we
possess; the power we have to follow out our own moral choice and
determination. Man was formed first for duty, and then for happiness; but
without this liberty of action he could not have fulfilled the designation of
his being in either of these respects. I must be capable of choosing my own
actions, and must be capable of determining the objects towards which they
shall be directed, or I could never become the subject either of praise or of
blame. I should be ¡§serving not God, but necessity.¡¨
II. IN SO CREATING
MAN, GOD HAD RESPECT TO CERTAIN MORAL RESEMBLANCES OF HIMSELF.
1. Man¡¦s created bias was towards purity and holiness.
2. Man was created in a condition of perfect happiness. He had a
mind to know God, and affections prompting to communion with Him.
3. And then, once more, we cannot doubt that man is declared to be
made in the image of God, because he was endowed by his Maker with perpetuity
of being, clothed with the attribute of endless life, placed under circumstances
wherein, if he had continued upright, ample provision was made for his
spiritual sustentation, until, having completed the cycle of his earthly
progressions, he should be conveyed, like Enoch, in invisible silence, or like
Elijah, on his chariot of fire, or like the ascending Saviour, in His beautiful
garments of light and cloud, to the mansions of glory and immortality. For
there was the ¡§tree of life in the midst of the garden.¡¨ He was permitted to
partake of that; it was to be his sacrament, his sacramental food, the pledge
of immortal being, the nourishment of that spiritual nature which he had with
the breath of God. Thus man¡¦s chief resemblance to his Maker consisted in the
fact, that he was endued with a living soul--something which was incapable of
death or annihilation. He had an eternity of future given to him, coeval with
the being of God Himself. (D. Moore, M. A.)
Genesis of man
I. THE CREATION
ARCHIVE TWO FOLD (Genesis 1:26-31; if. 5-22).
II. PANORAMA OF
EMERGENT MAN.
III. MAN, GOD¡¦S
IMAGE.
1. Jesus Christ the image of God. He becomes this in and by the fact
of His Incarnation. In Ecce Homo is Ecce Deus.
2. Man the image of Jesus Christ. In the order of time, the Son of
God made Himself like to man; in the order of purpose, the Son of God made man
like to Himself. It was an august illustration of His own saying when
incarnate: ¡§The first shall be last, and the last first¡¨ (Matthew 20:16). Do you ask in what
respect man was made in the image of Christ? Evidently, I answer, in
substantially the same respects in which Christ became the image of God. Thus:
in respect to a spiritual nature: When
Jehovah God had formed the man of dust of the ground, He breathed
into his nostrils the breath of life. The language, of course, is figurative.
Nevertheless it must mean something. What, then, does this inbreathing by the
Creator mean, if not the mysterious communication of Himself--the eternal Air
or Spirit--into man? As Christ, surveyed man-wise, was born of the Spirit in
Nazareth, so man, made in His image, after His likeness, was born of the Spirit
in Eden. Again: a spiritual nature necessarily involves personality; and
personality, at least finite, as necessarily involves what I have called
secular attributes, e.g., attributes of sensation, cognition, passion,
action, etc. All these belonged to Christ; and through these He declared and
interpreted the Father, being in very truth the Word of God, or Deity in
articulation. And the Word has existed from the beginning, being the God-Said
of the creative week. In man¡¦s potencies of whatever kind--moral, intellectual,
emotional, aesthetic--whatever power or virtue or grace there may be--in all
this we behold an image of the Lord from heaven. Once more: personality cannot,
at least in this world, exist apart from embodiment, or some kind of
incarnation, which shall be to it for sphere and vehicle and instrument. Some
kind of body is needed which, by its avenues and organs, shall awaken,
disclose, and perfect character. And as Christ¡¦s body vehicled and organed His
Personality, and so enabled Him to manifest the fullness of the Godhead which
dwelt in Him body-wise, so man¡¦s body was made in the image of Christ¡¦s, even
that body which in His eternal foreknowledge was eternally His. This, then, was
the image in which man was created, the image of Christ¡¦s human Personality, or
Christ¡¦s spirit and soul and body. Man is the image of Christ and Christ is the
image of God; that is to say: Man is the image of the image of God, or God¡¦s
image as seen in secondary reflection.
IV. MAN GOD¡¦S
INSPIRATION (Genesis 2:7). On his body side he sprang
from dust: on his soul side he sprang up with the animals: on his spirit side
he sprang from God. Thus, in his very beginning, in the original makeup of him,
man was a religious being. Coming into existence as God¡¦s inbreathing, man was,
in the very fact of being Divinely inbreathed, God¡¦s Son and image. Well, then,
might man¡¦s first home be an Eden--type of heaven, and his first day God¡¦s
seventh day--even the Creator¡¦s Sabbath.
V. THE PRIMAL
COMMISSION.
1. Man¡¦s authority over nature. It was man¡¦s original commission,
humanity¡¦s primal charter. And history is the story of the execution of the
commission, civilization the unfolding of the privileges of the charter.
Wherever civilized man has gone, there he has been gaining
dominion over the fish of the sea, and the fowl of the air, and every living
thing that moveth on the earth, ay, subduing earth itself. See, e.g., how
he makes the fish feed him, and the sheep clothe him, and the horse draw him,
and the ox plough for him, and the fowl of the air furnish him with quills to
write his philosophies and his epics. Again: see man¡¦s supremacy over the face
of Nature; see, e.g., how he dikes out the ocean, as in Holland; and
opens up harbours, as at Port Said; and digs canals, as at Suez; and explodes
submarine reefs, as in East River; and builds roads, as over St. Gothard; and
spans rivers, as the St. Lawrence; and stretches railways, as from Atlantic to
Pacific; see how he reclaims mountain slopes and heaths and jungles and deserts
and pestilential swamps, bringing about interchanges of vegetable and animal
life, and even mitigating climates, so that here, at least, man may be said to
be the creator of circumstances rather than their creature. Again: see man¡¦s
supremacy over the forces and resources of Nature; see how he subsidizes its
mineral substances, turning its sands into lenses, its clay into endless blocks
of brick, its granite into stalwart abutments, its iron into countless shapes
for countless purposes, its gems into diadems; see how he subsidizes its
vegetable products, making its grains feed him, its cottons clothe him, its
forests house him, its coals warm him. See how he subsidizes the mechanical
powers of nature, making its levers lift his loads, its wheels and axles weigh
his anchors, its pulleys raise his weights, its inclined planes move his
blocks, its wedges split his ledges, its screws propel his ships. See how he
subsidizes the natural forces, making the air waft his crafts, the water run
his mills, the heat move his engines, the electricity bear his messages,
turning the very gravitation into a force of buoyancy.
2. But in whose name shall man administer the mighty domain? In his
own name, or in another¡¦s? In another¡¦s most surely, even in the name of Him in
whose image he is made. The Son of God alone is King, and man is but His
viceroy; viceroy because His inspiration and image. Man holds the estate of
earth in fief; his only right the right of usufruct.
VI. CONCLUDING
OBSERVATIONS.
1. Jesus Christ the archetypal Man. Jesus the form, mankind the
figure. See Romans 8:29; Colossians 1:15; Revelation 3:14.
2. Man¡¦s incomparable dignity. His starting point is the Eternal,
Infinite One. A genuine coin, stamped in effigy of Kaiser or President, is
worth what it represents. Man, stamped in the effigy of the King of kings and
Lord of lords, is worth, let me dare to say it, what he
represents, even Deity. Little lower than the angels, little lower than Elohim,
did Elohim make him (Psalms 8:5). All this explains why this
earth, cosmically so tiny, morally is so vast. Jesus Christ came not to save
the worthless. He came to save Divine imageship: that is to say, all Godlike
potentialities. He came to save Divine imageship itself.
3. Imageship the die of race unity. May it ever be ours to recognize
lovingly every human being, whether Caucasian or Mongolian, as a member of
mankind, and so our kinsman! When all men do this, mankind will not only be the
same as humanity; mankind will also have humanity.
4. We see the secret of man¡¦s coming triumph: it is imageship. Jesus
Christ is the image of God; as such, He is the Lord of all. Mankind is Christ¡¦s
image lost. The Church is Christ¡¦s image restored: as such, she, like her
image, is lord of all. All things are hers; whether Paul, or Apollos, or
Cephas, or the world, or life, or death, or things present, or things to come:
all are hers; and she is Christ¡¦s, and Christ is God¡¦s (1 Corinthians 3:21-23).
5. Would you know how to be restored in the image of God? Then gaze
on the character of Him who is the brightness from His Father¡¦s glory, and the
express image of His Person. Enter into the fellowship of that character. Be
everlastingly closeted with Him in the kinships and intimacies of a perfect
friendship. Lovingly study every feature of that beaming Image (2 Corinthians 3:18). Thus gazing,
and thus changed, it matters little what our earthly fate be, whether renown or
obscurity, wealth or poverty, long life or early death. Enough that on the
resurrection morn we shall perceive that as we had borne the image of the
earthly, even of the first man Adam, so henceforth we shall bear the image of
the heavenly, even of the Second Man, the Lord from heaven (1 Corinthians 15:47-49). (G.
D.Boardman.)
The image of God
I. GOD¡¦S DECREE.
God consults with Himself. Complex nature of Deity.
II. MAN¡¦S DIGNITY.
Nearer to God¡¦s own nature than other animals. A moral being.
III. MAN¡¦S
DOMINION. Lessons:
1. Our position of dignity should strengthen our sense of duty.
2. Our relationship to God should encourage us to noble aims.
3. In Jesus Christ man is restored to the image of God and to the
hope of a high and blessed destiny. (W. S. Smith, B. D.)
The vastness of man
¡§Let Us make man in Our image.¡¨ Such is man¡¦s height, and depth,
and breadth, and mystery. He has not come from one principle or distinction of
the Divine nature, but out of all principles. Man is the image of the whole
Deity. There is in him a sanctuary for the Father, for the Son, and for the
Holy Ghost. (J. Pulsford.)
The making of man
There is surely no bolder sentence in all human speech. It takes
an infinite liberty with God! It is blasphemy if it is not truth. We have been
accustomed to look at the statement so much from the human point that we have
forgotten how deeply the Divine character itself is implicated. To tell us that
all the signboards in Italy were painted by Raphael is simply to dishonour and
bitterly humiliate the great artist. We should resent the suggestion that
Beethoven or Handel is the author of all the noise that passes under the name
of music. Yet we say, God made man. Here is the distinct assurance that God
created man in His own image and likeness; in the image of God created He him.
This is enough to ruin any Bible. This is enough to dethrone God. Within narrow
limits any man would be justified in saying, If man is made in the image of
God, I will not worship God who bears such an image. There would be some logic
in this curt reasoning, supposing the whole case to be on the surface and to be
within measurable points. So God exists to our imagination under the
inexpressible disadvantage of being represented by ourselves. When we wonder
about Him we revert to our own constitution. When we pray to Him we feel as if
engaged in some mysterious process of self-consultation. When we reason about
Him the foot of the ladder of our reasoning stands squarely on the base of our
own nature. Yet, so to say, how otherwise could we get at God? Without some
sort of incarnation we could have no starting point. We should be hopelessly
aiming to seize the horizon or to hear messages from worlds where our language
is not known. So we are driven back upon ourselves--not ourselves as outwardly
seen and publicly interpreted, but our inner selves, the very secret and mystery
of our soul¡¦s reality. Ay; we are now nearing the point. We have not been
talking about the right ¡§man¡¨ at all. The ¡§man¡¨ is within the man; the ¡§man¡¨ is
not any one man; the ¡§man¡¨ is Humanity. God is no more the man we know than the
man himself is the body we see. Now we come where words are of little use, and
where the literal mind will stumble as in the dark. Truly we are now passing
the gates of a sanctuary, and the silence is most eloquent. We have never seen
man; he has been seen only by his Maker! As to spirit and temper and action, we
are bankrupts and criminals. But the sinner is greater than the sin. We cannot
see him; but God sees him; yes, and God loves him in all the shame and ruin.
This is the mystery of grace. This is the pity out of which came blood,
redemption, forgiveness, and all the power and glory of the gospel. We cannot
think of God having made man without also thinking of the responsibility which
is created by that solemn act. God accepts the responsibility of His own
administration. Righteousness at the heart of things, and righteousness which
will yet vindicate itself, is a conviction which we cannot surrender. It is
indeed a solemn fact that we were no parties to our own creation. We are not
responsible for our own existence. Let us carefully and steadily fasten the
mind upon this astounding fact. God made us, yet we disobey Him; God made us,
yet we grieve Him; God made us, yet we are not godly. How is that? There is no
answer to the question in mere argument. For my part I simply wait, I begin to
feel that, without the power of sinning, I could not be a man. As for the rest,
I hide myself in Christ. Strange, too, as it may appear, I enjoy the weird
charm of life¡¦s great mystery, as a traveller might enjoy a road full of sudden
turnings and possible surprises, preferring such a road to the weary, straight
line, miles long, and white with hot dust. I have room enough to pray in. I
have room enough to suffer in. By-and-by I shall have large space, and day
without night to work in. We have yet to die; that we have never done. We have
to cross the river--the cold, black, sullen river. Wait for that, and let us
talk on the other side. Keep many a question standing over for heaven¡¦s eternal
sunshine. If we would see God¡¦s conception of man, we must look upon the face
of His Son--Him of whom He said, ¡§This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased.¡¨ That is man; that is the ideal humanity. It is useless to look in any
other direction for God¡¦s purpose and thought. (J. Parker, D. D.)
God makes man near to Himself
Earthly sovereigns perpetuate and multiply distinctions between
themselves and their subjects. In Great Britain the monarch is removed from the
rank of the people by princes of the blood royal, dukes, marquises, earls,
barons, viscounts, baronets, knights, esquires; and outward appearances,
especially on public occasions, are so regulated, as to impress the people with
their own distance; while an audience with the sovereign, or any correspondence
or intercourse is, except to the favoured few, a thing impossible. All this may
be necessary and even useful, where the ruling power is but earthly and human.
In bold contrast with this political policy is the conduct of the supreme
Sovereign--God. The King of kings formed His first earthly subjects with
affinitiesbetween them and Himself most near and intimate. (S. Martin.)
Fellowship with God
The possession of the image of God led to fellowship with God. It
was a means of knowing God, and a power to love God. Looking into themselves they
saw God, and looking out of and beyond themselves they saw God. They were drawn
to God by cords of love, and enjoyed with God the communion of mind and heart.
God was in all their thoughts. God sat enthroned over all their feelings. He
was to them the first, and He the last. God spake, they listened, understood,
and believed. God wrought, they saw and rejoiced in His works. They spake to
God, and knew that God heard and understood. They laboured and knew that God
had pleasure in their doings. They walked with God--yea, dwelt in God, and God
in them. Separation from their Creator they knew not. Clouds and darkness were
never about Him. The light of love was always in His countenance. A filial
character was given by likeness to God to the entire religion of our first
parents. Their notion of Deity was the idea of a father--their feelings toward
God were those of children--and their service to God was that of a son and of a
daughter. The inward moulded the outward. Without doubt the very body
sympathized with the spirit, Remorse did not turn their moisture into the
drought of summer. Jealousy did not mock and feed upon their flesh. Sorrow did
not cause their bones to wax old. Grief did not furrow the cheek, or blanch the
hair. Shame brought not confusion on the face. There was no inward fire to
consume--no worm to gnaw and devour. A glowing conscience, a joyful heart,and a
peaceful mind, were marrow to the bones, health to the flesh, and beauty to the
countenance. (S. Martin.)
God manifests Himself through man
By reason of His complacency in His own nature, God desires to
manifest Himself--to express and to make known His own being--to develope His
own character of life. God is also disposed to hold fellowship with His
spiritual universe. Had He preferred solitude, He could have dwelt alone in His
own eternity, or have created merely these material forms which, like a sea of
glass, should have reflected His nature in the cold distance of an unconscious
and inanimate likeness. But willing to hold fellowship with His creatures,
determining to make Himself visible, and delighting in His own nature with
infinite complacency--He made man in His own image. This reflection of Himself
was pleasant to God. He rejoiced in this work. He looked upon what He had made,
and to Him it seemed good. He ceased to create when He bad made man, and
entered on His sabbath satisfied with this masterwork of His hand. His own
blessedness was increased because livingly reflected. As the artist rejoices
when his metal, or marble, or canvas expresses his ideal--as the poet leaps
with pleasure when his metaphor and rhythm breathethe inspiration of his
heart--as the father glows with gladness to behold in his firstborn boy his own
features--so God delighted in the image of Himself in man. Distance from God!
Distance! Where was distance then? As the shadow to the form--as the fruit to
the tree bough--as the recent born to the mother--man in God¡¦s image was to
God. (S. Martin.)
The Divine image a thought experimentally useful
And of what special importance is this subject to you--Christians?
It is profitable for doctrine, and it is profitable for reproof--it rebukes
that self-conceit, that vanity, that pride, that self-importance which not a
few Christians exhibit. How can men think of themselves more highly than they
ought to think, when they remember that their characteristic should be the
image of God! It is profitable for correction--it may correct the grovelling of
the willingly ignorant, and of the worldly, and of the fleshly, and of the
low-minded; it may correct the false ambition of such as make money, and
earth¡¦s honour their goal--it may correct the self-complacency of the
self-righteous, and the error of those who hold that man has not fallen. And it
is profitable for instruction in righteousness; it saith, Make not orthodoxy
your goal, neither benevolent activity, but make a nature renewed by the Holy
Ghost the mark of the prize of your high calling of God in Christ Jesus. (S.
Martin.)
Man a creation, not an evolution
The theory holds that, in the struggle for existence, the
varieties best adapted to their surroundings succeed in maintaining and
reproducing themselves, while the rest die out. Thus, by gradual change and
improvement of lower into higher forms of life, man has been evolved. We grant
that Darwin has disclosed one of the important features of God¡¦s method. We
deny that natural selection furnishes a sufficient explanation of the history
of life, and that for the following reasons:
1. It gives no account of the origin of substance, nor of the origin
of variations. Darwinism simply says that ¡§round stones will roll down hill
further than flat ones¡¨ (Gray, ¡§Natural Science and Religion¡¨). It accounts for
the selection, not for the creation, of forms.
2. Some of the most important forms appear suddenly in the
geological record, without connecting links to unite them with the past. The
first fishes are the Ganoid, large in size and advanced in type. There are no
intermediate gradations between the ape and man.
3. There are certain facts which mere heredity cannot explain, such
for example as the origin of the working bee from the queen and the drone,
neither of which produces honey. The working bee, moreover, does not transmit
the honey making instinct to its posterity; for it is sterile and childless. If
man had descended from the conscienceless brute, we should expect him, when
degraded, to revert to his primitive type. On the contrary, he does not revert
to the brute, but dies out instead.
4. The theory can give no explanation of beauty in the lowest forms
of life, such as molluscs and diatoms. Darwin grants that this beauty must be
of use to its possessor, in order to be consistent with its origination through
natural selection. But no such use has yet been shown; for the creatures which
possess the beauty often live in the dark, or have no eyes to see. So, too, the
large brain of the savage is beyond his needs, and is inconsistent with the
principle of natural selection which teaches that no organ can permanently
attain a size as required by its needs and its environment. See Wallace,
¡§Natural Selection,¡¨ 838-360.
5. No species is yet known to bare been produced either by
artificial or by natural selection. In other words, selection implies
intelligence and will, and therefore cannot be exclusively natural.
I. UNITY OF THE
HUMAN RACE.
1. The Scriptures teach that the whole human race is descended from
a single pair.
2. This truth lies at the foundation of Paul¡¦s doctrine of the
organic unity of mankind in the first transgression, and of the provision of
salvation for the race in Christ.
3. This descent of humanity from a single pair also constitutes the
ground of man¡¦s obligation of natural brotherhood to every member of the race.
The Scripture statements are corroborated by considerations drawn from history
and science.
Three arguments may be briefly mentioned:
1. The argument from history. So far as the history of nations and
tribes in both hemispheres can be traced, the evidence points to a common
origin and ancestry in central Asia.
2. The argument from language. Comparative philology points to a
common origin of all the more important languages, and furnishes no evidence
that the less important are not also so derived.
3. The argument from psychology. The existence, among all families
of mankind, of common mental and moral characteristics, as evinced in common
maxims, tendencies, and capacities, in the prevalence of similar traditions,
and in the universal applicability of one philosophy and religion, is most
easily explained upon the theory of a common origin.
4. The argument from physiology.
(a) The numberless intermediate gradations which connect the
so-called races with each other.
(b) The essential identity of all races in cranial, osteological, and
dental characteristics.
(c) The fertility of unions between individuals of the most diverse
types, and the continuous fertility of the offspring of such unions.
The creation of man
I. MAN WAS THE
LAST OF GOD¡¦S WORKS.
1. He was not made to be in anywise a helper to God in creation.
There is nothing that we see around us, or behold above us, or that we trample
on with our feet, that was created by us. The most insignificant insect that
crawls, the meanest among herbs, had their first origin from the Almighty.
2. But, again, as the order of the universe shows clearly to us that
we had no share either in the formation or design of anything that we see, so
does it lead us to grateful reflections upon God¡¦s goodness and wisdom in our
creation. He did not place our first parents in a void, empty, and unfurnished
dwelling, but He garnished the heavens with light, and clothed the earth with
beauty, ere He introduced into it that creature who should dress and keep it,
and be allowed to have dominion over every living thing.
II. THE PECULIAR
DELIBERATION WITH WHICH GOD APPLIED HIMSELF TO THIS HIS NOBLER WORK. ¡§Let Us
make man in Our image, after Our likeness.¡¨ Whence this altered form of
expression? What other view can we take of it, than that it is a token of man¡¦s
greater dignity and higher worth? Should it not excite us to soar above our
fallen state--to rise superior to the ruin in which we find ourselves
involved--to recollect the glory of our first creation, and the honour which
was put upon us in this deliberate purpose and counsel of the several persons
of the blessed Trinity in our creation.
III. MAN WAS
CHEATED IN GOD¡¦S IMAGE, AFTER HIS LIKENESS. Let us, in concluding the subject,
consider what practical improvement may be derived from it. Is God our Maker,
and shall we not worship and adore Him? Again, ought not the image of God in
man to be prized above all beside? The body decays and moulders into dust: the
spirit is indestructible. Whence is it that this dying body exercises our chief
care and thought, while the immortal spirit is neglected and forgotten? Shall
the tongue be allowed to utter lies, seeing that it is given us by the God of
truth? Shall we curse man, that is made after the image and likeness of God?
Again, are we distinguished from the beasts that perish by the noble gift of
reason, and understanding, and conscience, and shall we allow the members of
the body to ¡§usurp a wretched dominion over us? (H. J. Hastings, M. A.)
Man created in God¡¦s image
1. Whatever may be the
difficulties this text of ours presents to expositors and divines, the main
fact it embodies and sets forth is so clearly expressed as to exclude the
possibility of a difference of opinion respecting it. And this fact is none
other than that our first parents were created by God, and this in His image
and likeness. This plain statement of Holy Writ, that man has been created, is
nevertheless considered by many scientists of our days as being utterly
erroneous and untenable.
2. It must have been a most solemn moment in the history of creation
when, at the close of it, God undertook to create man, who was to complete and
crown His marvellous six days¡¦ work. What this world would have been without
man we can easily picture to ourselves when we read the descriptions by
explorers and travellers of those parts of our globe never inhabited or
cultivated by man. We know that without man¡¦s care and attention many things in
nature would have gradually disappeared, others again would not have developed
to such a state of perfection as they have attained to. Besides this, nature
without man, who combines in himself the material and spiritual, the natural
and supernatural, and thus forms a reasonable and necessary link between nature
and its Creator, would have lacked a high and noble aim worthy of the great Creator.
3. God created man in His image, after His likeness. (A. Furst,
D. D.)
Love in the creation of man
In man animal organization is carried to its highest. That which
in the quadruped is a comparatively insignificant member becomes in man the
hand, so wonderful in its powers, so infinitely versatile in its applications.
That tongue, which the rest of animal creation possess, but which the highest
among them use only for inarticulate signals, becomes in him the organ of
articulate speech, so marvellous in its construction, and its uses. And of the
same rich bestowal of the best of God¡¦s gifts of life and life¡¦s benefits on
man, many other examples might be, and have been given. But it is not in man as
the highest form of organized animal life that we are to seek for
exemplification of the declaration in my text. His erect form, his expressive
eye, his much-working hand--his majesty in the one sex, and beauty in the
other--these may excite our admiration, and lead us to praise Him who made us;
but in none of these do we find the image of God. God is without body, parts,
or passions. He is above and independent of all organized matter: it sprung
from the counsel of His will, it is an instrument to show forth His love and
praise, but it is not, and cannot be, in His image. But let us advance higher.
God bestowed on man, as on the tribes beneath him, a conscious animal soul. And
here let me remind you that I follow, as I always wish to do, that Scriptural
account and division of man, according to which the soul, the £r£o£q£b̀ of the New Testament, is that thinking and feeling and prompting
part of him, which he possesses in common with the brutes that perish; and
which I will call for clearness, his animal soul. Now here again, though he
possesses it in common with them, God has given it, in him, a wonderfully
higher degree of capability and power. The merely sentient capacities of the
animal soul in the most degraded of men are immeasurably above those of the
animal soul in the most exalted of brutes,--however he may be surpassed by them
in the acuteness Of the bodilysenses. And again, in speaking of man, we cannot
stop with these animal faculties. To the brute, they are all. It is obvious,
then, that we must not look for God¡¦s image in man in this his animal soul,
because this is confessedly not his highest part; because it is informed and
ennobled by something above it: moreover, because it is naturally bound to the
organization of his material body. And this point is an important one to be
borne in remembrance. It is not in our mental capacities, nor in any part of
our sentient being, that we can trace our likeness to God; whenever we speak of
any or of all of these in the treatment of this subject, we must look beyond
them, and beyond the aggregate of them, for that of which we are in search.
What, then, is that part of man at which we have been pointing in these last
sentences? that soul of his soul, that ennobler of his faculties, that whose
acknowledged dignity raises him far above the animal tribes, with whom he shares
the other parts of his being? Let us examine his position, as matter of fact.
By what is he distinguished from all other animals, in our common speech and
everyday thought? Shall we not all say that it is by this--that whereas we
regard each animal as merely a portion of animatedmatter, ready to drop back
again into inanimate matter, the moment its organization is broken down--we do
not thus regard ourselves or our fellow men, but designate every one of them as
a person, a term which cannot be used of any mere animal? And is it not also
true, that to this personality we attach the idea of continuous
responsibility--of abiding praise or blame? To what is this personality owing?
Not to the body, however perfect its organization; not to the animal soul, however
wonderful its faculties; but to the highest part of man--his spirit. And here
it is that we must look for man¡¦s relation to God. God is a Spirit; and He has
breathed into man a spirit, in nature and attributes related to Himself: which
spirit rules and informs, and takes up into itself, and ennobles, as we have
seen, his animal soul. This spirit is wonderfully bound up with the soul and
the body. The three make up the man in his present corporeal state--but the
spirit alone carries the personality and responsibility of the man. The body,
with its organization and sentient faculties, is only a tent wherein the spirit
dwells; itself is independent of its habitation, and capable of existing
without it. The spirit of man makes the essential distinction between him and
the lower animals. His spirit, his divine part, that Whereby he can rise to and
lay hold of God, was made in the image of God. And this leads us to the second
division of our inquiry, How was man¡¦s spirit created in the image of God? What
ideas must we attach to these words, ¡§the image of God¡¨? To this question but
one answer can be given, and that in simple and well-known words. God is love:
this is all we know of His essential character. He Who is Love, made man, man¡¦s
spirit, after His own image. That is, He made man¡¦s spirit, love--even as He is
love. In this consisted the perfection of man as he camefrom the hands of His
Creator--that his whole spirit was filled with love. Now what did this imply?
clearly, a conscious spirit; for love is the state of a knowing, feeling,
conscious being. What more? as clearly a spirit conscious of God; knowing Him
who loved it, and loving Him in return. Faith is the organ by which the spirit
reaches forth to God. We never can repeat or remember too often, that faith is
¡§appropriating belief¡¨; not belief in the existence of God as a bare fact,
distant and inoperative, but belief in Him as our God--the God who loves
us--the God who seeks our good--the God to whom we owe ourselves--the God who
is our portion andour exceeding great reward. And it is essential to faith,
that we should not, speaking strictly, know all this--not have hold of every
particular detail of it--not master the subject, as men say; this would not be
faith, but knowledge. We are masters of that which we know; but we are servants
of that which we believe. And therefore man, created in the image of God,
loving God, dependent on God, tending upwards to God, is created in a state of
faith. By this faith his love was generated--by believing God as his God--by
unlimited trust of His love, and uninterrupted return of that love. And O what
does not this description imply, that is holy, and tending to elevate and bless
man? ¡§Love,¡¨ says the apostle, ¡§is the bond of perfectness¡¨; and the same
command of our Lord, which we read in one place of the Gospel, ¡§Be ye perfect,
even as your Father in heaven is perfect¡¨; in another runs, ¡§Be ye merciful,¡¨ i.e.
loving, ¡§even as your Father is merciful.¡¨ One remark more. On this image
of God depends the immortality of man¡¦s spirit; not on its own nature, as some
have dreamed. As it had a beginning, so it might have an end. It can only be
immortal by being united to Him who liveth forever. God¡¦s love called into
being those who were in its own image, kindred to itself, bound to itself by
love; how can we conceive that love annihilating again such kindred objects of
its own good pleasure? And this immortality is not removed by sin: for it lies
at the root of the race--is its essential attribute, not an accident of its being.
(Dean Alford.)
The state of innocence
The name of Adam suggests to us at once the estate from which the
human race has fallen, the cause of that fall, the vast forfeit that one man
made to God; and naturally awakens in our own minds questions as to our lost
inheritance. Would Adam have died if he had never fallen? If he had lived,
would he have continued in paradise, or been translated into heaven? What was
his condition in paradise? Was it one of probation and of interior sufferings
dependent on such a state, or was it one of entire freedom from all such trial?
And lastly (and this is most important in such probation), was Adam indued with
a supernatural power, or did he simply depend on the gifts of his original
creation? To these four questions I will append one brief inquiry in addition.
Had our first parents a claim to eternal happiness by the right of their
original creation, or in virtue of some covenant made with them by God?
1. With regard then to the first of the above questions, a very
slight examination of Holy Scripture will assure us that Adam would not have
died in an unfallen state. As is always the case in the direct intercourse of
God with His creature, a covenant was made between the two, the terms of which
were clearly defined. ¡§Of the tree of knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not
eat; for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die¡¨; and the woman,
in stating the terms of the covenant, says, ¡§God hath saith, Ye shall not eat
of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die.¡¨ Now these propositions clearly
involve the power of inversion, and imply that, in the event of their not
eating the forbidden fruit, they shall live and not die; that is, their death
was simply and only dependent on breach of the covenant. The same point is clearly
ascertained by a comparison of 1 Corinthians 15:1-58 and Romans 5:1-21, both with the separate parts
of each and one with another.
2. I will now approach the second branch of the subject, namely, the
question, whether Adam would have remained, had he not fallen, an
inhabitant of paradise; or been translated into the immediate presence of God
in heaven. There seem to be four especial reasons, amongst many others, for
concluding that the latter would have been the case; for, in the first place,
it is apparent that in the case of all covenants, such as those which God made
with man, there is a punishment annexed to the breach of the terms of such
covenant, and a reward annexed to their fulfilment; and inasmuch as this
punishment would involve a worse condition for the fallen party than the one
which he occupied at the period of the ratification of the covenant; so, on the
other hand, a superior condition is the reward of the fulfilment of those
terms. Now the fall of Adam at once brought upon him the loss of paradise, that
is, the inferior condition; and, by parity of reasoning, had he not fallen but
endured his probation, it would have secured to him translation to heaven
itself, or a superior condition. But I pass on to the second reason on which I
base my belief that Adam would have been eventually translated to heaven. He
was clearly possessed of the perfect power of self-will; he had vast and
manifold opportunities of exercising it; he was placed in the immediate
presence of a piercing temptation; be daily passed the tree of knowledge on his
visit to the tree of life. So acute was that temptation, that in spite of the
continual presence of
Jehovah, of the purity of the nature hitherto innocent, of the
innate image of God, be exercised that power of free will, and he fell. For
what could all of the powers have been given him? and why should he have been placed
in such a position, unless some great attainment beyond what he at that moment
enjoyed was to be placed within his grasp? To imagine otherwise would be
inconsistent with the whole analogy of God¡¦s providence. But, thirdly, I spoke
above of the external support which was continually necessary from the Divine
Being for the preservation of Adam¡¦s natural life; a state of continued
exertion is unnatural to the Deity; a state of repose is His true condition;
consequently we cannot imagine but that the first Adam was eventually to have
been placed in a position in which continued life was natural to him. Even the
daily visit of the Almighty to the garden of Eden implied a transitory, and not
a permanent condition. But, fourthly, though the fact of sinning involved death
to the natural body, it by no means follows that the absence of sin leaves that
natural body in the same condition, but rather we should expect it would tend
to elevate it, as much as the fall into sin depressed it.
3. I will now pass on to the third head, the moral condition of our
first parents in Eden. There is a popular impression, not unfrequently given
children and ignorant persons, that our first parents were in a state of entire
freedom from any kind of suffering. Now the presence of an object highly
desirable to the eye and the mind, while the moral agent is fully possessed of
the power of free will and yet under a strong bias towards a different
direction from that desire, in itself implies a condition of very considerable
mental suffering, and in this condition clearly our first parents were placed,
for we are distinctly told that the tree of the knowledge of good and evil was
in the first place highly desirable to the eye; and secondly, to the mind,
inasmuch as it imparted the keenest knowledge of right and wrong; consequently
no misapprehension could be greater than that our first parents were without
probation, and all its attending trials; nay more, we are bound to consider how
intense must have been the desire after knowledge, a thing in itself so
innocent and elevated, in so sublime a creature as Adam was, fresh from the
hands of the Creator, and having as yet no bias in favour of wickedness;
besides which, some exquisite external beauty seems to have arrayed the tree of
knowledge, which made it the more fascinating to Adam and Eve, as we gather
from the terms that it was desirable to the eye. From all this it is clear Adam
was in a state of very keen probation.
4. With what power did Adam approach the scene of his temptation?
Was it with the original power of his creation or some supernatural gift of the
Spirit? Surely with the latter. (E. Monro, M. A.)
Proofs of the Divine in man
To this day no fact in natural history remains more conspicuous
than the strong contrast betwixt man and every other animal, in their relations
to nature--particularly in their power to master and utilize the forces of
nature. Once man appears upon the globe, no matter how he came there, he reacts
upon his environment in a way that is possible to no other organism. In popular
language, he is not the mere ¡§creature of circumstances¡¨ in the same sense in
which that may be affirmed of other creatures. To a large and growing degree,
he makes his own world--modifying, conquering, counteracting, utilizing the forces
of nature, with its living productions, to his own ends. This process, which
the venerable book before us calls ¡§subduing¡¨ the earth, and which it regards
as a special task assigned to our human family, is due to two faculties
peculiar to man. The first is the power to store up his observations upon
nature and compare them, until by degrees the laws according to which her
forces operate come to be understood: the result of this power is science.
Next, is the power to recombine matter in fresh combinations so as to utilize
the forces of nature for new ends of his own: the results of this we term the
Mechanical Arts. Neither of these two faculties exists in any other animal,
save in the most rudimentary form. These two in combination have given birth to
human civilization. Man enlarges his power from day to day, while the very ball
on which he is a pigmy resident seems to contract itself in his grasp. Space
and time are nearly annihilated: seas almost cease to divide; the engineer
alters even the face of the land; matter becomes less and less our enemy, more
and more our minister. By science and by art, we are entering upon a veritable
¡§dominion¡¨ over this globe which God has given us to possess, and a crown is
set upon man¡¦s head of ¡§glory and honour.¡¨ I do not pause to insist upon the
strange foresight exhibited in these ancient words, or how strangely the
destiny of our race which was thus foreshadowed in the dim dawn of history has
come to be fulfilled in our time. Let me rather ask you to notice how revelation
at its outset is not content to recognize this mastery of man over the rest of
nature as his preeminent function--it undertakes already to explain it. It
assigns a reason for it. It finds that reason in the constitution of human
nature itself, viz., in man¡¦s dual nature, and especially in his resemblance on
one side of his two-fold being to his Creator. ¡§God made man in His own
likeness.¡¨ Now, to do justice to this theory, accounting for man¡¦s supremacy
and power over nature, we must bear in mind that when it assigns to man a dual
origin it is in order to correspond with the dual constitution which he
possesses. In the picturesque and poetic style of primitive thinkers, man came
in part from the ¡§dust of the ground,¡¨ and in part from ¡§the breath of God.¡¨ In
other words, he is on one side of his being a mundane product, fashioned, or,
more probably evolved, out of material nature, under the operation of the same
biological laws which account for the origin of other species on the globe; but
on another side he is something more than that, a spiritual being possessed of
a different order of life from that which we find in other species, a life
which natural evolution fails to account for. The truth of that statement
depends on facts which lie outside the sphere of biology as one of the physical
sciences--lie in the region of metaphysics and of religion. They must justify
themselves to other observation than that of the five senses. Nay, we may go
further and say: So long as there remains a class of facts in human
consciousness, of whose origin biology can give no account--facts, for example,
like the sense of duty, the instinct of worship, the feeling of responsibility,
the desire to pray, or the yearning after immortality--so long is it only
scientific to postulate like Scripture a second origin for man¡¦s nature. The
dual constitution of this exceptional creature, so long as it cannot be
resolved into unity, calls for a dual cause to account for it. If the breath of
the beast, and of the animal life in man too, goeth downward, ¡§returning to the
earth as it was,¡¨ shall not the spirit of man go upward, ¡§returning to God who
gave it¡¨? So much as man possesses in common with the brutes, comes from ¡§the
dust of the ground¡¨--that physical science will explain to us. So much as
separates man from the brutes and makes him a scientific, inventive,
responsible, and religious animal--this demands another explanation. Can we
find a better than the old one--¡§God breathed into man the breath of life,¡¨ or
¡§God created man in His own image¡¨? I do not claim this scriptural theory of
man¡¦s spiritual origin as a result of the modern science of anthropology. On
the contrary, I believe it to be a revelation. At the same time, the facts seem
to call for some such extra-physical cause; and so far, nothing equally good
even as a working hypothesis has been discovered. The spiritual nature of man
is a fact, as I have said, both of metaphysics and of religion: and neither
metaphysics nor religion has yet been swallowed up (like the magicians¡¦ rods)
by physical science. It was not along the road of metaphysical speculation,
however, that the Hebrews reached the great fact that man is a spiritual being
akin to his Creator. That road was travelled by the Greek mind. St. Paul found
in Greek poetry traces of the same truth; and Greek poetry had learned it from
Greek philosophy. That ¡§we are the offspring of Zeus¡¨ was the result of
observing human nature on its intellectual and ethical side rather than on its
religious. But the Hebrews were not a speculative, they were preeminently a
religious, people: and when they said, man is akin to Jehovah and wears His
likeness, they meant that they were profoundly conscious through their own
religious experience of having much in common with a personal God. It was by
their devotional instincts, first and chiefly, and by the spiritual fellowship
they were conscious of enjoying with the Living Object of their worship, that
the great Hebrews, like Moses, David, Isaiah, or Paul, realized man¡¦s kinship
with the Eternal, in spite of those obvious ties which link him as an organism
to brute life upon the globe. Unquestionably this is, if one can attain it, the
surest demonstration of all. The religious man who, in his worship and in the
inward crises of his experience, finds that he can fling himself forth upon the
unseen, and, in the darkness, where sense avails no longer, can touch One who
is a real person like himself--can exchange with that awful invisible One
personal confidences and affections, can ask and receive, can love and be
loved, can lean and be upheld; he knows with certainty that he is born of God
and akin to God. To be conscious from day to day of an interior life, utterly
apart from that of sensation, to which life God forms the ever-present conditioning
environment, just as nature surrounds and conditions my animal life--this is to
be as sure that God is, and that my spirit is kindred with His, as I am sure
that nature is, and that my organism corresponds to it. No one who actually
leads this super sensuous life of personal intercourse with God will ask or
care for any lower proof that man¡¦s spirit wears God¡¦s likeness. But although
the religious experience of mankind be the leading proof that we are made in a
Divine likeness, it is far from being the only one. From man religious I fall
back on man scientific, and inquire if even his achievements do not imply that
he is akin to his Maker. Could man be the student and master of nature that he
is, were he not in some real sense intellectually akin to nature¡¦s Maker? Does
not the dominion which he is come to wield through science over physical forces
argue in favour of that anthropology of Genesis which says, God¡¦s own breath is
in him. The great masters of science tell us that they experience a very keen
intellectual delight in tracing out the hidden unity of forces and of the laws
of force by which this vast complex world is reduced to simplicity. It is not
from the observation of isolated facts that this intellectual pleasure springs.
It arises when the observer becomes aware of something more than a crowd of
isolated facts. Of what more? Of some relationship binding facts
together--binding together whole classes of facts; as, for example, of an
identical force at work in widely sundered departments of being, or of
correlated forces; of a type-form running through large families of organisms,
underlying their diversities; of universal laws creating cosmical order amid
such a multiplicity of details. The studious mind becomes aware of an ordering,
designing Mind. The thought with which God began to work leaps up anew for the
first time after all these intervening cycles of dead material change, leaps up
in a kindred mind. The dead world knew not what its Maker meant, as change
succeeded change, and race was evolved out of race, and cycle followed cycle;
but I know. Across it all, we two understand each other--He, and I His child.
Is not science a witness to the likeness of God in the mind of man? But I
cannot dwell on this, for I should like to suggest in a word how the Divine
image in man further reveals itself when, from being a student of nature, he
goes on to be its imitator. The arts are, one and all of them, so many
imitations of nature, that is, of the Divine working upon matter. For example,
we discover the dynamical laws of matter, and at once set about imitating their
natural applications in our mechanics. We discover the laws of chemical
affinity and combination; and we set about bringing into existence such
combinations as we require, or resolving compounds into their elements, at our
pleasure. We discover the laws of electrical force, and straightway we proceed
to utilize it as a motor or a light. In short, we have no sooner learnt His
method from the Author of nature (which is the task of science) than we try to
copy it and become ourselves workers, makers, builders, designers, modellers,
just like Himself, only on our own reduced and petty scale. Thus our artificial
products, like our science, bears witness to the ancient word: ¡§There is a Spirit
in man; and the breath of the Almighty giveth him understanding.¡¨ Here,
therefore, I return to the point item which I set out. Along this two-fold
road, of science, which traces out the thoughts of God; and of art, which
imitates His working in obedience to known laws, man fulfils his destined
function according to the ancient oracle of Genesis. He ¡§subdues the earth¡¨ and
wins dominion over it. He is the solitary creature on earth who even attempts
such a function. He is fitted for it by his exceptional nearness to, and
likeness to, the Creator. He can be the student and the copyist of God¡¦s works,
because he was made in the image of God. Just in proportion as he realizes this
godlike lordship over the globe, with its dead and living contents--a lordship based
on his deciphering and sharing the Creator¡¦s thoughts--in that proportion does
he approach the lofty position which Scripture assigns to him, and in which
Scripture recognizes his crown of glory and honour. But ¡§we see not yet all
things put under him.¡¨ During the long ages past it has been merely a faint
shadow of royalty man has enjoyed. In the main, natural forces have mastered
him. So they do still over a great portion of the earth. Science and art in
this late age of man certainly seem to sweep rapidly to their goal, winning and
recording year by year victories such as were never seen before.
Notwithstanding, men are still far from satisfied, and complain that the
physical ills of life and of society are far from overcome--all things far from
being put under man¡¦s feet. What is to be the future condition of humanity, its
final condition, in relation to nature? Is its lordship to grow much more
perfect than we see it? Shall nature ever yield up all her secrets, or stoop to
serve our welfare with all her forces? I know nothing that pretends to answer
such inquiries save Christianity. And her answer is: We see Jesus, sole and
perfect type of man¡¦s likeness to God, Representative and Forerunner of
humanity redeemed; and Him we see already exalted to an ideal height of mastery
over nature, crowned with the ancient royalty promised to our race, Head over
all, with the world beneath His feet. (J. O.Dykes, D. D.)
Care for the body
If one should send me from abroad a richly carved and precious
statue, and the careless drayman who tipped it upon the sidewalk before my door
should give it such a blow that one of the boards of the box should be wrenched
off, I should be frightened lest the hurt had penetrated further, and wounded
it within. But if, taking off the remaining hoards and the swathing-bands of
straw or cotton, the statue should come out fair and unharmed, I should not
mind the box, but should cast it carelessly into the street. Now, every man has
committed to him a statue, moulded by the oldest Master, of the image of God;
and he who is only solicitous for outward things, who is striving to protect
merely the body from injuries and reverses, is letting the statue go rolling
away into the gutter, while he is picking up the fragments, and lamenting the
ruin of the box. (H. W. Beecher.)
Man made in the image of God
1. It is the only basis of
revelation.
2. It is a rational basis of the Incarnation.
3. A rational basis for the doctrine of regeneration by the Holy
Spirit.
4. The foundation of those glorious hopes that are set before us in
the New Testament. (M. Gibson, D. D.)
The defaced image
But as the image of a sovereign is effaced from old coins; or as
the original expression is lost from the old figure-head on the exposed
building; or as ¡§decay¡¦s effacing fingers¡¨ soon destroy all beauty from the
dead body; so sin speedily and effectually spoiled, or obliterated, the moral
image of God from the soul of man. At Bournemouth I lately noticed some
stunted, misshapen shrubs, which were neither useful nor ornamental, and which
were a degenerate growth of the fine trees abounding in that neighbourhood, or
of the yet finer forests of fir in Norway. So what a contrast there is between
the lowest and the highest trees of men around us; and between the highest types
now and what man was at first. (H. R. Burton.)
Man in God¡¦s kingdom
The king of Prussia, while visiting a village in his land, was
welcomed by the school children of the place. After their speaker had made a
speech for them he thanked them. Then taking an orange from a plate, he asked:
¡§To what kingdom does this belong?¡¨ ¡§The vegetable kingdom, sire,¡¨ replied a
little girl. The king took a gold coin from his pocket and, holding it up,
asked: ¡§And to what kingdom does this belong?¡¨ ¡§To the mineral kingdom,¡¨ said
the girl. ¡§And to what kingdom do I belong, then?¡¨ asked the king. The little
girl coloured deeply, for she did not like to say, ¡§the animal kingdom,¡¨ as she
thought she would, lest his majesty should be offended. Just then it flashed
into her mind that ¡§God made man in His own image,¡¨ and looking up with a
brightening eye, she said, ¡§To God¡¦s kingdom, sire.¡¨ The king was deeply moved.
A tear stood in his eye. He placed his hand on the child¡¦s head and said, most
devoutly, ¡§God grant that I may be accounted worthy of that kingdom!¡¨
Have dominion
Man¡¦s dominion over the lower animals
I.
THIS
DOMINION GOD HAS MADE TO ARISE FROM THAT MENTAL SUPERIORITY WHICH CONSTITUTES
MAN¡¦S DISTINCTION AND GLORY.
1. The power of man is in his mind.
2. The benefit and extent of man¡¦s dominion is made to depend on the
moral as well as the intellectual nature with which he was originally endowed.
3. As God has thus fitted man, by his superior nature, for dominion;
so, on the other hand, He has given to the inferior animals a corresponding
disposition to acknowledge man¡¦s superiority.
4. Thus the comfort of man is evidently promoted when this dominion
is wisely and justly exercised, according to the original design of the
Creator.
¡§The hay appeareth, and the tender grass showeth itself, and herbs
of the mountains are gathered: the lambs are for thy clothing, and the goats
are for the price of the field.¡¨ But the dominion of man when justly exercised,
is a mean of comfort also to the animals who are connected with him. Living in
our society and neighbourhood, they become the objects of our care. Attached to
our persons and homes, they feel pleasure in our service. They thus partake of
our provision, and enjoy the advantage of our foresight.
II. THE MANNER IN
WHICH OUR DOMINION OVER THE INFERIOR ANIMALS OUGHT TO BE EXERCISES. A right to
rule is not a right to tyrannize; and a right to service extends only to such
duties as are consistent with the powers of the servants, and with the place
which is assigned to them. All power is of God, and can only be lawfully
exercised when exercised according to His designs. That likeness to God in
which we were originally created, should remind us that justice, and goodness,
and mercy, are the chief distinctions after which we should aspire; and that
our dominion was designed, like that of Him who designed it, to be exercised
with wisdom, rectitude, and compassion. The consideration of our dominion, and
the services by which those who are subjected to our power, in such numberless
ways, minister to our comforts, only enforces on us more strongly the duty of
providing for their comfort, and preserving them from injury. And is it not the
very essence of benevolence to desire and to promote the happiness of every
being within the sphere of our influence? (S. McGill, D. D.)
The Divine blessing
Every loving father wishes his children well. The Divine Father
wishes the first human pair well, for such is the import of the words ¡§He
blessed them.¡¨ We can say, too, without any hesitancy, that He wishes every
member of the human family well, both for time and eternity. Those who are not
blessed, and there are thousands, ought not to ascribe this to God, but to
themselves. (A. McAuslane, D. D.)
To you it shall be for meat
The universe God¡¦s gift to man
I.
THE
GIFT.
1. Extensive.
2. Valuable.
3. Increasing.
Every day becoming better known and more thoroughly appreciated.
All the gifts of God are productive; time unfolds their measure, discloses
their meaning, and demonstrates their value.
II. THE PURPOSE.
1. To evince love. One of the great objects of creation was to
manifest the love of God to the human race, which was shortly to be brought
into existence. The light, the sun, the stars, and the creation of man; all
these were the love tokens of God. These were designed, not to display His
creative power--His wisdom, but His desire for the happiness of man.
2. To teach truth. The world is a great school. It is well supplied
with teachers. It will teach an attentive student great lessons. All the Divine
gifts are instructive.
3. To sustain life. God created man without means, but it was not
His will to preserve him without; hence He tells him where he is to seek his
food. We must make use of such creatures as God has designed for the
preservation of our life. God has provided for the preservation of all life.
Let us learn to trust God for the necessities of life in times of adversity.
Men who have the greatest possessions in the world must receive their daily
food from the hand of God. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Dependence on God
I. LET EVERYONE
DEPEND UPON GOD FOR THE NECESSARIES OF LIFE.
1. Asking them by prayer.
2. Acknowledging our own beggary.
3. Trusting Him by faith.
4. Remembering His promise.
5. Obedient to His will.
II. LET US SERVE
HIM FAITHFULLY AT WHOSE TABLE WE ARE FED.
1. Else we are ungrateful.
2. Else we deserve famine. All the provisions that God allows man
for food are drawn out of the earth. The homeliness of the provision on which
God intended man to feed. (J. S. Exell, M. A.)
Let no man be discontented with mean fare
1. It is as good as the body
it nourishes.
2. It is better than we deserve.
3. It is more than we are able to procure of ourselves.
4. It is more profitable for health.
5. It is free from the temptation to excess. God gives us not all
our provisions at once, but a daily supply of them.
Food
1. It exerts an influence on
the disposition of man. A hungry man always feels the risings of cruelty,
however they may be conquered by nobler principles. When you think of the
cruelty of an Indian you should always think of his famished condition.
2. It indicates the civilized condition of man. You are told that a
people are a wheat-eating people. Of course they must raise it; they must have
the plough and the ploughshare; they must command iron, or, at least, some hard
metal; they must understand the process of mining and smelting; they must have
fields and fences; they must have foresight to sow and patience to wait for a
crop; and, finally, they must be protected by law, for no one will lend the
labour who is not assured of protection.
3. It contributes to extensive social changes. The introduction of
sugar, for example, has changed the whole face of society. It was found to be
one of the purest and least cloying sweets ever discovered. It was handed from
the Arabs to the Spaniards; it was cultivated first in the Madeira Islands;
then it was given to all the European nations; was raised in the West Indies on
an immense scale. Then came rum, brandy, and all the alcoholic drinks, slavery
and all its consequences, until now it is a debated problem whether the sweet
cane was a blessing or a curse. At any rate this single article of food, so
unimportant and neglected in its origin, changed the whole face of society.
4. It indicates the general refinement of the mind. Nay, we are
instructed not to be totally indifferent to the kind of food, for
discrimination here is connected with other discrimination, and indicates
improvement in the taste. We will not take advantage of Dr. Johnson¡¦s remark,
who held that he who did not mind his dinner would scarcely mind anything else.
Suffice it to say, that taste in food and taste in dress, science, and
literature, always go together. He that feeds grossly will judge grossly.
5. It is essential in order to the higher pursuits of life. Take
away from the astronomer his food, and he will soon cease to lift his telescope
to the stars. The saint, the martyr, the moralist, and the poet, all pursue
their sublime occupations through the vigour and animation of the body. In a
word, as the sweetest blossom on the highest tree, though it seems to be fed by
the very air which it decorates, is nourished by the dirt and manure around the
roots of the tree, so the sublimest mind is supplied by the food of the body. (Bib.
Sacra.)
Man¡¦s proper food
Remark here, that when God assigned to man, while still innocent,
his proper food, he gave him only the fruits of the field; and it was not till
after the earth had been twice cursed because of sin that he was permitted to
eat the flesh of animals. ¡§Upon this point also,¡¨ says
M. de Rougemont, in his interesting ¡§History of the Earth,¡¨--¡§upon
this point, as well as others, science has arrived, by long, circuitous ways,
and painful study, at the very same truths which are plainly revealed to us in
Genesis.¡¨ ¡§It is a question,¡¨ says M. Flourens, ¡§which has much perplexed
physiologists, and which they have not yet been able to determine, what was the
natural and primitive food of man. Now, thanks to comparative anatomy, it is
very easy to see that man was originally neither herbivorous nor carnivorous,
but frugivorous.¡¨ It was not till after the curse had been brought on the earth
by sin that man began to feed on the birds of the air and the beasts of the
field. Before he sinned he had a dominion over the creatures, which he lost in
a great measure, and which he only keeps in a degree by force and violence; but
at first they did not flee from him, and he did not eat them. Doubtless, before
man sinned, the productions of the earth were richer and better than they are
now, and offered a much greater variety of food and nourishment to man. But at
the fall the nature of the soil and of its vegetable productions must have been
in some way altered. Probably God greatly reduced the number of food-producing
plants, and the earth brought forth instead those bearing useless thorns, and
even some whose fruits or juices cause death. (Prof. Gaussen.)
The miracle of nourishment
Perhaps it may appear to you a very natural thing that corn,
strawberries, cherries, grapes, figs, dates, peaches, pineapples, and all the
various and delicious fruits of our orchards and of other climates, should feed
and nourish you; but think of the miracle which must be wrought in your
body--in your stomach, your lungs, your heart, your veins, your glands, your
arteries, and all the various parts within you--before these fruits, or any
other food that you eat, can be prepared inyour stomach, changed into a kind of
milky substance, and conveyed in your veins, and passed with your blood through
one of the ventricles of your heart, and thence into your lungs, to be burned
and purified there, and return again as perfect blood into the other ventricle,
and thence be driven by a rapid movement into your arteries, and to the very
extremities of your body, in order that it may reproduce, without your
interference, your skin, your flesh, your bones, your nerves, your nails, and
the thousands and thousands of the hairs of your head. It is a miracle wrought
by God, that any kind of food, whether leaves, seeds, fruits, or bread should
serve as food and nourishment to me at all; it is a mystery and a wonder how it
is changed into a part of my body, so as to make it grow, repair it, and renew
its waste: and therefore it was a work of almighty power when God appointed
man¡¦s food, and said of the trees and plants, ¡§To you it shall be for meat.¡¨
What is bread? It is a paste composed of ground corn, water, and salt, baked
after it has begun to ferment. But how does it happen that the corn and the
salt should nourish me? Corn, we are told, is composed of carbon and the two
gases which form water. Now, how can carbon or charcoal nourish me? Try to eat
a bit of charcoal, and you will find it like taking a mouthful of sand. Think
how wonderfully these substances, of which corn is composed, must be
transformed by Divine power to produce the corn, and then still further changed
to become a part of our bodies. Then salt is composed of two substances which
separately would hurt me, and yet combined they are wholesome, and help to
cause the corn and other things to nourish me. If I were to take two phials,
one filled with sodium and the other with hydrochloric acid, and if I were to
mix them in a glass, they would combine and form salt at the bottom of the
glass; and yet, separately, each of these phials would contain a destructive
poison. If I were to swallow the hydrochloric acid, it would burn my stomach;
and if I were to pour it into the palm of my hand and hold it there, it would
soon burn a hole right through my hand; and yet this dreadful poison, when
combined with sodium, forms salt, which is so wholesome and so necessary for
our health. (Prof. Gaussen.)
Nature productive
The botanist Ray tells us that he counted 2,000 grains of maize on
a single plant of maize sprung from one seed, 4,000 seeds on one plant of
sunflower, 32,000 seeds on a single poppy plant, and 36,000 seeds on one plant
of tobacco. Pliny tells us that a Roman governor in Africa sent to the Emperor
Augustus a single plant of corn with 340 stems, bearing 340 ears--that is to
say, at least 60,000 grains of corn had been produced from a single seed. In
modern times, 12,780 grains have been produced by a single grain of the famous
corn of Smyrna. In eight years, as much corn might spring from one seed as to
supply all mankind with bread for a year and a half. (Prof. Gaussen.)
And God saw everything that He had made, and, behold, it was very
good
Creation very good
I.
Why
was it very good?
1. It was the offspring of infinite wisdom and power and love.
2. Because guided into existence by Jesus.
3. Because there was no evil in it.
4. Because it was like God.
II. WHAT was very
good? Everything which He had made.
III. How are they
very good? In themselves--in their purposes--in their arrangements.
IV. IS EVERYTHING
VERY GOOD STILL? God is fetching very good things out of the apparent
frustration of His plan. He is restoring what is now very bad to be very good.
(J. Bolton.)
The good creation
No one can prove to us that God made the world; but faith, which
is stronger than all arguments, makes us certain of it.
1. All which God has made is good, as He is, and, therefore, if
anything in the world seems to be bad, one of two things must be true of it.
2. God created each of us good in His own mind, else He would not
have created us at all. Why does God¡¦s thought of us, God¡¦s purpose about us,
seem to have failed? We do not know, and we need not know. Whatever sin we
inherited from Adam, God looks on us now, not as we are in Adam, but as we are
in Christ. God looks not on the old corrupt nature which we inherited from
Adam, but on the new and good grace which God has meant for us from all
eternity, which Christ has given us now.
III. That which is
good in us God has made; He will take care of what He haw made, for He loves
it. All which is bad in us God has not made, and therefore He will destroy it;
for He hates all that He has not made, and will not suffer it in His world.
Before all worlds, from eternity itself, God said, ¡§Let Us make man in Our
likeness,¡¨ and nothing can hinder God¡¦s word but the man himself. If a man
loves his fallen nature better than the noble, just, loving grace of God, and
gives himself willingly up to the likeness of the beasts that perish, then only
can God¡¦s purpose towards him become of none effect. (C. Kingsley, M. A.)
God in nature; or, spring lessons
I. GLIMPSES OF
THE DIVINE NATURE.
1. The ceaseless and infinite energy of God.
2. The blessedness and beauty of God.
II. LESSONS
CONCERNING HUMAN LIFE. It is an old, but true comparison of this life to the
seasons of the year. Spring has always suggested the refreshing, promising,
transient, and changeable nature of life¡¦s early days. But notice, especially,
the improvability of life. Spring, the cultivating season. Conditional. Spring
neglected, autumn shows barren fields. Precarious. Buds, etc. may be blighted.
Need for watching, etc.
III. SUGGESTIONS
CONCERNING HUMAN DESTINY. In spring ¡§all things become new.¡¨ To be ¡§young
again¡¨ has been the dream of all ages. The distinct proof of immortal youth
beyond the grave is given only by Christ ¡§The First-begotten of the dead.¡¨ (J.
Foster, B. A.)
I. THE NATURAL
TRUTHS ASSERTED.
God¡¦s approbation of His works
1. The true origin of all things.
2. The original perfection of all things.
3. God¡¦s approbation of His works.
II. THE MORAL
TRUTHS SUGGESTED.
1. Seeing that God had done for man the utmost that his case
admitted, both as respected himself, and as respected the world around him, the
blessings of which were given him richly to enjoy, it follows that man was
under the greatest obligations possible, in his then present circumstances.
2. Sin is at once the vilest injustice and the basest ingratitude
imaginable Isaiah 1:2; Malachi 1:6).
3. A continuance in sin is the most daring imprudence. According to
that constitution of things which was ¡§very good,¡¨ holiness and happiness went
together. Sin, by violating that constitution, ¡§brought death into the world
with all our woe.¡¨
4. Reformation is well-pleasing to God. He approved of things in
their original state. He is unchangeable.
5. The text suggests a lesson of humility. ¡§How is the gold become
dim!¡¨ the Divine image effaced I Humility becomes every rational creature, on
account of its debt and its dependence.
6. The text furnishes ground of hope and encouragement. It proclaims
the goodness of Him with whom we have to do; and therefore encourages us to
hope in His mercy. Let us remember, however, that it is to the gospel we are
indebted for improving hope into assurance (Romans 8:32). (Sketches of Sermons.)
God¡¦s approbation of His works
Let us consider--
I. The natural
truths asserted by our text. Among these are--
1. The true origin of all things--¡§God saw everything that He had
made.¡¨
2. The original perfection of all things ¡§very good,¡¨ ¡§very good,¡¨
as being--
3. God¡¦s approbation of His work. He saw it very good.
II. The moral
truths suggested.
1. Gratitude.
2. Hatred of sin.
3. The discontinuing of all evil.
4. Reformation and return to virtue.
5. Humility.
6. A ground of hope and encouragement.
Everything in species made perfect at one and the same time in the
creation
All artists, in what they do, have their second thoughts (and
those usually are the best); as, for example, a watchmaker sets upon a piece of
work (it being the first time that ever men were wont to carry a pastime in
their pockets), but, having better considered of it, he makes another, and a
third, some oval, some round, some square, everyone adding lustre and
perfection to the first invention, whereas, heretofore, they were rather like
warming pans, to weary us, than warning pieces, to admonish us how the time
passed. The like may be said of the famous art of printing, painting, and the
like, all of them outdoing the first copies they were set to go by. But it was
not so with God in the creation of the several species of nature; He made them
all perfect, simul et semel, at one and the same time, everything pondere
et mensura, so just, so proportionate in the parts, such an elementary
harmony, such a symmetry in the bodies of animals, such a correspondency of
vegetals, that nothing is defective, neither can anything be added to the
perfection thereof. (J. Spencer.)
The love of beauty: in nature
In these most simple and mysterious words we are plainly told that
in the beginning the Creator of this world delighted in the beauty of its
outward form. He approved it not only as fit for the material development which
He had designed for it, fit for the ages of change, the course of history which
should be enacted on it: but also as outwardly delightful. He saw His work,
and, behold, to sight it was very good. Apart from all the uses it would serve,
its outward aspect was in harmony with a certain Divine law: and for this
Almighty God judged that it was very good. If men would only look frankly at
the first chapter of Genesis, without either timidity or injustice, it would
surely seem very strange to find this simple and complete anticipation of a
thought which, though it has been astir in the world for many centuries, has
only in the last few years received its due emphasis and its logical force. I
mean the thought that our delight in the visible beauty of this world can only
be explained by the belief that the world has in some way been made to give us
this delight by a Being who Himself knows what beauty is: and that the beauty
of Nature is a real communication made to us concerning the mind and will that
is behind Nature . . . We have then a right to say that the quality or
character which can thus speak and appeal to our spirit must have been
engendered in this visible world by a spiritual Being able and willing to enter
into communion with us, and knowing what would affect and raise our thoughts.
When we receive and read a letter, we are sure it has come from someone who
knew our language and could write it. When we listen to a beautiful piece of
music we are sure that the composer had either a theoretic or at least a
practical acquaintance with the laws and the effects of harmony. And when at
the sight of a great landscape, rich and quiet in the chaste glory of the
autumn, or glad with the bright promise, the fearless freedom of the spring,
our whole heart is filled with happiness, and every sense seems touched with
something of a pleasure that was meant for it, and all words are utterly too
poor to praise the sight--then surely, by as good an argument, we must say
that, through whatever ways and means, the world received its outward aspect by
the will of some being who knew the law and truth of beauty. It does not
matter, so far as this inference is concerned, how the result has been
attained, or how many ages and thousands of secondary causes are traced between
the beginning of the work and its present aspect: it is beautiful now: it now speaks
to us in a language which our spirits understand: and, however long ago, and in
whatever way, only a spiritual being could have taught it so to speak. Whatever
creation means, the world was created by One who could delight in beauty:
whenever its Author looked out upon His work He must have seen that it was very
good Lastly, but above all, if we are to receive from the visible beauty of the
world all that it can reveal to us concerning Him who made and praised it, we
must draw near to it with watchful obedience to His own condition for so great
a blessing: ¡§Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.¡¨ It was
nobly said by the founder of inductive science, that for entrance into the
kingdom of knowledge as for entrance into the kingdom of heaven, men must
become as little children. They must draw near with free and humble hearts if
they are to enter into the mysteries of natural science: they must not dictate
to Nature, or assert themselves in her presence: they must come to her with
affectionate attention to wait upon her self-revealing. (F. Paget, D. D.)
Admiration of completed work
¡§The Lord rejoices in His works.¡¨ What a wonderful sentence that
is! That man must have been inspired when he said that God rested from His
labours, and looked upon His works, and pronounced them good. Of all joys, that
is the grandest and sublimest, to review one¡¦s own work and pronounce it good.
There is no passage in English much more beautiful than that which describes
the author of that great work on ¡§Falling Rome¡¨ (Gibbon) when he had just come
to the conclusion of his task. Walking there under the trees of Lausanne, he,
like a true artist, drew back and admired his finished work. And he was right.
For there are times when a man may look upon his work, and say, ¡§That is
genius!¡¨ When Swift was beginning to doat, he took down from a shelf one of his
own works, and exclaimed, ¡§What a genius I must have had when I did that!¡¨ (G.
Dawson.)
Perfection of nature
I have seen the back of a splendid painting, and there, on the dusty
canvas, were blotches and daubs of colour--the experiments of the painter¡¦s
brush. There is nothing answering to that in the works of God! I have seen the
end of a piece of costly velvet; and though man had in it fairly imitated the
bloom of the fruit and the velvet of the flowers, there was a common,
unwrought, worthless selvage--a coarse, unsightly selvage. There is no selvage
in the works of God! (H. Wonnacott.)
A pretty world
I once, writes Joaquin Miller, strolled through a miserable
Mexican village. The shadows were creeping over the cabins, where women came
and went in silence, and men sat smoking at the cabin doors, while children
played in swarms by the water. The air was like a breath of God, and all nature
seemed as sacred as rest to a weary man. A black, bent, old negro woman, all
patches from head to foot, frosty-headed and half blind, came crooning forth
with a broken pot tied together, in which she had planted a flower to grow by
her door. I stopped, watched her set it down and arrange it; and then, not
wishing to stare rudely at this bent old creature, I said--¡§Good evening,
auntie; it¡¦s a fine evening.¡¨ She slowly straightened up, looked at me, looked
away at the fading sunlight on the hills, and said softly, ¡§Oh, it¡¦s a pretty
world, massa!¡¨ The old woman was a poetess--a prophetess. She had a soul to see
the beauty, the poetry about her. ¡§Oh, it¡¦s a pretty world, massa!¡¨ She had no
other form of expression, but that was enough. Hers was the password to nature.
¡§And God saw every, thing that He had made, and, behold it was very good.¡¨.
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n