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1. list       The foundation of all religion being laid in our relation to God as  our Creator, it was fit that the book of divine revelations which  was intended to be the guide, support, and rule, of religion in  the world, should begin, as it does, with a plain and full account  of the creation of the world--in answer to that first enquiry of a  good conscience, "Where is God my Maker?"  (Job xxxv. 10). Concerning this the pagan philosophers wretchedly blundered,  and became vain in their imaginations, some asserting the world's  eternity and self-existence, others ascribing it to a fortuitous  concourse of atoms: thus "the world by wisdom knew not  God," but took a great deal of pains to lose him. The holy  scripture therefore, designing by revealed religion to maintain  and improve natural religion, to repair the decays of it and supply  the defects of it, since the fall, for the reviving of the  precepts of the law of nature, lays down, at first, this principle of the unclouded light of nature, That this world was, in the beginning of time, created by a Being of infinite wisdom and power, who was himself before all time and all worlds. The entrance into God's word gives this light,  Ps. cxix. 130..  The   first verse of the Bible gives us a surer and better, a more satisfying and useful, knowledge of the origin of the universe, than all the volumes of the philosophers. The lively faith of humble Christians understands this matter better than the elevated fancy of the greatest wits, Heb. xi. 3.

We have three things in this chapter:--I. A general idea given us  of the work of creation ver. 1, 2. II. A particular account of the several days' work, registered, as in a journal, distinctly and in order. The creation of the light the first day, ver. 3-5; of the firmament the second day, ver. 6-8; of the sea, the earth, and its fruits, the third day, ver. 9-13; of the lights of heaven the fourth day, ver. 14-19; of the fish and fowl the fifth day, ver. 20-23; of the beasts, ver. 24, 25; of man, ver. 26-28; and of food for both the sixth day, ver. 29, 30. III. The review and approbation of the whole work, ver. 31.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       1 In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.  2 And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness *was* upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters.

In these verses we have the work of creation  in its epitome and in its embryo.

I. In its epitome,  *v.* 1, where we find, to  our comfort, the first article of our creed,  that *God the Father Almighty is the Maker of  heaven and earth,* and as such we believe in him.

1. Observe, in this verse, four things:--

(1.) The effect produced--*the heaven and  the earth,* that is, the world, including the  whole frame and furniture of the universe,  the *world and all things therein,* Acts xvii. 24. The world is a great house, consisting of  upper and lower stories, the structure stately  and magnificent, uniform and convenient,  and every room well and wisely furnished.  It is the visible part of the creation that  Moses here designs to account for; therefore he mentions not the creation of angels. But  as the earth h as not only its surface adorned  with grass and flowers, but also its bowels enriched with metals and precious stones  (which partake more of its solid nature and  more valuable, though the creation of  them is not mentioned here), so the heavens  are not only beautified to our eye with glorious  lamps which garnish its outside, of whose  creation we here read, but they are within replenished  with glorious beings, out of our  sight, more celestial, and more surpassing  them in worth and excellency than the gold  or sapphires surpass the lilies of the field.  In the visible world it is easy to observe, [1.] Great variety, several sorts of beings vastly  differing in their nature and constitution from  each other. *Lord, how manifold are thy works,*  and all good! [2.] Great beauty. The azure  sky and verdant earth are charming to the   eye of the curious spectator, much more the  ornaments of both. How transcendent then  must the beauty of the Creator be! [3.] Great exactness and accuracy. To those  that, with the help of microscopes, narrowly  look into the works of nature, they appear  far more fine than any of the works of art. [4.] Great power. It is not a lump of dead  and inactive matter, but there is virtue, more  or less, in every creature: the earth itself has a magnetic power. [5.] Great order, a mutual  dependence of beings, an exact harmony  of motions, and an admirable chain and connection  of causes. [6.] Great mystery. There  are phenomena in nature which cannot be  solved, secrets which cannot be fathomed nor  accounted for. But from what we see of  heaven and earth we may easily enough infer  the eternal power and Godhead of the great  Creator, and may furnish ourselves with  abundant matter for his praises. And let  our make and place, as men, remind us of  our duty as Christians, which is always to  keep heaven in our eye and the earth under  our feet.

(2.) The author and cause of this great  work--GOD. The Hebrew word is *Elohim,*  which bespeaks, [1.] The power of God the  Creator. *El* signifies *the strong God;* and  what less than almighty strength could bring  all things out of nothing? [2.] The plurality  of persons in the Godhead, Father, Son, and  Holy Ghost. This plural name of God, in  Hebrew, which speaks of him as many though  he is one, was to the Gentiles perhaps a savour of death unto death, hardening them in  their idolatry; but it is to us a savour of life  unto life, confirming our faith in the doctrine  of the Trinity, which, though but darkly intimated  in the Old Testament, is clearly revealed  in the New. The Son of God, the  eternal Word and Wisdom of the Father, was  with him when he made the world  (Prov. viii. 30), nay, we are often told that the world was made by him, and nothing made without him, John i. 3, 10; Eph. iii. 9; Col. i. 16; Heb. 1. 2. O what high thoughts should  this form in our minds of that great God whom we draw nigh to in religious worship,  and that great Mediator in whose name we  draw nigh!

(3.) The manner in which this work was  effected: *God created it,* 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. By the ordinary power  of nature, it is impossible that any  thing should be made out of nothing; no  artificer can work, unless he has something  to work on. But by the almighty power of  God it is not only possible that something  should be made of nothing (the God of nature  is not subject to the laws of nature), but in  the creation it is impossible it should be   otherwise, for nothing is more injurious to  the honour of the Eternal Mind than the  supposition of eternal matter. Thus the excellency  of the power is of God and all the glory  is to him.

(4.) When this work was produced: *In  the beginning,* that is, in the beginning of  time, when that clock was first set a going:  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? And he did make it in  the beginning of time, according to his eternal  counsels before all time. The Jewish  Rabbies have a saying, that there were seven  things which God created before the world,  by which they only mean to express the excellency  of these things:--The law, repentance,  paradise, hell, the throne of glory, the  house of the sanctuary, and the name of the Messiah. But to us it is enough to say, *In  the beginning was the Word,*  John i. 1.

2. Let us learn hence,   (1.) That atheism is folly, and atheists are the greatest fools in nature; for they see there is a world that could not make itself, and yet they will not own there is a God that made it. Doubtless, they are without excuse, but the god of this  world has blinded their minds.   (2.) That  God is sovereign Lord of all by an incontestable right. If he is the Creator, no doubt he is the owner and possessor of heaven and earth. (3.) That with God all things are possible,  and therefore happy are the people  that have him for their God, and whose help  and hope stand in his name,  Ps. cxxi. 2; cxxiv. 8. (4.) That the God we serve is  worthy of, and yet is exalted far above, all  blessing and praise,  Neh. ix. 5, 6. If he  made the world, he needs not our services,  nor can be benefited by them  (Acts xvii. 24, 25), and yet he justly requires them, and deserves  our praise,  Rev. iv. 11. If all is of  him, all must be to him.

II. Here is the work of creation in its  embryo,  *v.* 2, where we have an account of  the first matter and the first mover.

1. A chaos was the first matter. It is  here called the earth (though the earth, properly  taken, was not made till the third day *v.* 10), because it did most resemble that  which afterwards was called *earth,* mere  earth, destitute of its ornaments, such a heavy unwieldy mass was it; it is 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 immense  mass of matter was it out of which  all bodies, even the firmament and visible  heavens themselves, were afterwards produced  by the power of the Eternal Word. The Creator could have made his work perfect  at first, but by this gradual proceeding   he would show what is, ordinarily, the method  of his providence and grace. Observe the  description of this chaos.   (1.) There was  nothing in it desirable to be seen, for it was  *without form and void. Tohu* and *Bohu, confusion*  and *emptiness;* so these words are  rendered,  Isa. xxxiv. 11. It was shapeless,  it was useless, it was without inhabitants,  without ornaments, the shadow or rough draught of things to come, *and not the image  of the things,*  Heb. x. 1. The earth is almost  reduced to the same condition again by the  sin of man, under which the creation groans.  See  Jer. iv. 23, *I beheld the earth, and lo it  was without form, and void.* To those who  have their hearts in heaven this lower world,  in comparison with that upper, still appears  to be nothing but confusion and emptiness.  There is no true beauty to be seen, no satisfying  fulness to be enjoyed, in this earth, but  in God only.   (2.) If there had been any  thing desirable to be seen, yet there was no  light to see it by; for *darkness,* thick darkness, *was upon the face of the deep.* God  did not create this darkness (as he is said to  create the darkness of affliction,  Isa. xlv. 7), for it was only the want of light, which yet could not be said to be wanted till something  was made that might be seen by it; nor needs  the want of it be much complained of, when  there was nothing to be seen but confusion  and emptiness. If the work of grace in the  soul is a new creation, this chaos represents  the state of an unregenerate graceless soul:  *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 effects a blessed change.

2. The Spirit of God was the first mover:  He *moved upon the face of the waters.* When  we consider the earth without form and void, methinks it is like the valley full of dead and  dry bones. Can these live? Can this confused  mass of matter be formed into a beautiful world? Yes, if a spirit of life from God  enter into it,  Ezek. xxxvii. 9. Now there is  hope concerning this thing; for the Spirit of  God begins to work, and, if he work, who or  what shall hinder? God is said to make the  world by his Spirit,  Ps. xxxiii. 6; Job xxvi. 13; and by the same mighty worker the new  creation is effected. He moved upon the  face of the deep, as Elijah stretched himself  upon the dead child,--as the *hen gathers her  chickens under her wings,* and hovers over  them, to warm and cherish them,  Matt. xxiii. 37,--as the eagle stirs up her nest, and *flutters*  over her young (it is the same word that is  here used),  Deut. xxxii. 11. Learn hence,  That God is not only the author of all being,  but the fountain of life and spring of motion.   Dead matter would be for ever dead if he did  not quicken it. And this makes it credible  to us that God should raise the dead. That  power which brought such a world as this  out of confusion, emptiness, and darkness,   at the beginning of time, can, at the end of time, bring our vile bodies out of the grave,  though it is *a land of darkness as darkness  itself, and without any order*  (Job x. 22), and can make them glorious bodies.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       3 And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.  4 And God saw the light, that *it was* good: and God divided the light from the darkness.  5 And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the  morning were the first day.

We have here a further account of the  first day's work, in which observe,   1. That  the first of all visible beings which God  created was light; not that by it he himself  might see to work (for the darkness and  light are both alike to him), but that by it  we might see his works and his glory in  them, and might work our works while it is  day. The works of Satan and his servants  are works of darkness; but he that doeth  truth, and doeth good, cometh to the light,  and coveteth it, *that his deeds may be made manifest,*  John iii. 21. Light is the great  beauty and blessing of the universe. Like  the first-born, it does, of all visible beings,  most resemble its great Parent in purity and  power, brightness and beneficence; it is of  great affinity with a spirit, and is next to it;  though by it we see other things, and are  sure that it is, yet we know not its nature, nor can describe what it is, or *by what way  the light is parted,*  Job xxxviii. 19, 24. By the sight of it let us be led to, and assisted  in, the believing contemplation of him who  is light, infinite and eternal light  (1 John i. 5), and the *Father of lights*  (Jam. i. 17), and who dwells in inaccessible light,  1 Tim. vi. 16. In the new creation, the first thing  wrought in the soul is *light:* the blessed  Spirit captives the will and affections by  enlightening the understanding, so coming  into the heart by the door, like the good  shepherd whose own the sheep are, while  sin and Satan, like thieves and robbers, climb  up some other way. Those that by sin were  darkness by grace become light in the world.   2. That the light was made by the word of  God's power. He said, *Let there be light;*  he willed and appointed it, and it was done  immediately: *there was light,* such a copy as  exactly answered the original idea in the  Eternal Mind. O the power of the word of  God! *He spoke, and it was done,* done  really, effectually, and for perpetuity, not in  show only, and to serve a present turn, for  *he commanded, and it stood fast:* with him it  was *dictum, factum--a word, and a world.*  The world of God (that is, his will and the  good pleasure of it) is quick and powerful.  Christ is the Word, the essential eternal  Word, and by him the light was produced,  for *in him was light, and he is the true light,  the light of the world,*  John  i. 9; ix. 5.. The divine light which shines in sanctified souls  is wrought by the power of God, the power  of his word and of the Spirit of wisdom and  revelation, opening the understanding, scattering  the mists of ignorance and mistake,  and giving the knowledge of the glory of  God in the face of Christ, as at first, *God commanded the light to shine out of darkness,*  2 Cor. iv. 6. Darkness would have been  perpetually upon the face of fallen man if the  Son of God had not *come, and given us an  understanding,*  1 John v. 20. 3. That the  light which God willed, when it was produced, he  approved of: *God saw the light that it was  good.* It was exactly as he designed it, and  it was fit to answer the end for which he  designed it. It was useful and profitable;  the world, which now is a palace, would have  been a dungeon without it. It was amiable  and pleasant. *Truly the light is sweet*  (Eccl. xi. 7); *it rejoiceth the heart,*  Prov. xv. 30. What God commands he will approve and  graciously accept; he will be well pleased  with the work of his own hands. That is  good indeed which is so in the sight of God,  for he sees not as man sees. If the light  is good, how good is he that is the fountain  of light, from whom we receive it, and to  whom we owe all praise for it and all the services we do by it!   4. That God *divided  the light from the darkness,* so put them  asunder as that they could never be joined  together, or reconciled; for *what fellowship  has light with darkness?*  2 Cor. vi. 14. And yet he divided time between them, the day  for light and the night for darkness, in a constant  and regular succession to each other.  Though the darkness was now scattered by the light, yet it was not condemned to a perpetual banishment, but takes its turn with  the light, and 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, and draw the curtains about  us, that we may sleep the better. See  Job vii. 2. God has thus divided time between  light and darkness, because he would daily  remind us that this is a world of mixtures  and changes. In heaven there is perfect  and perpetual light, and no darkness at all;  in hell, utter darkness, and no gleam of light.   In that world between these two there is a great  gulf fixed; but, in this world, they are counterchanged,  and we pass daily from one to  another, that we may learn to expect the  like vicissitudes in the providence of God,  peace and trouble, joy and sorrow, and may  set the one over-against the other, accommodating ourselves to both as we do to the  light and darkness, bidding both welcome,  and making the best of both.   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 the Lord of both; for *the day is   his, the night also is his,*  Ps. lxxiv. 16. 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. Let us acknowledge God in the  constant succession of day and night, and  consecrate both to his honour, by working  for him every day and resting in him every  night, and meditating in his law day and  night.   6. That this was the first day's  work, and a good day's work it was. *The  evening and the morning were the first day.*  The darkness of the evening was before the  light of the morning, that it might serve for a foil to it, to set it off, and make it shine the brighter. This was not only the first day of the world, but the first day of the week. I observe it to the honour of that day, because the new world began on the first day of the week likewise, in the resurrection of Christ, as the light of the world, early in the morning. In him the day-spring from on high has visited the world; and happy are we, for ever happy, if that *day-star arise in our hearts.*

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       6 And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters.  7 And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which *were* under the firmament from the waters which *were* above the firmament: and it was so.  8 And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were  the second day.

We have here an account of the second  day's work, the creation of the firmament, in  which observe,   1. The command of God  concerning it: *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, regions--the celestial  globe, and all the spheres and 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*  (*v.* 14, 15), and as low as the place where the birds fly, for  that also is called the *firmament of heaven,*  *v.* 20. When God had made the light, he  appointed the air to be the receptacle and  vehicle of its beams, and to be as a medium  of communication between the invisible and  the visible world; for, though between heaven  and earth there is an inconceivable distance,  yet there is not an impassable gulf, as there  is between heaven and hell. This firmament  is not a wall of partition, but a way of intercourse.  See  Job xxvi. 7; xxxvii. 18; Ps. civ. 3; Amos ix. 6. 2. The creation of it. Lest it should seem as if God had only commanded  it to be done, and some one else had  done it, he adds, *And God made the firmament.*  What God requires of us he himself  works in us, or it is not done. He that commands  faith, holiness, and love, creates them  by the power of his grace going along with  his word, that he may have all the praise.  *Lord, give what thou commandest, and then  command what thou pleasest.* The firmament  is said to be *the work of God's fingers,*  Ps. viii. 3. Though the vastness of its extent  declares it to be the work of his arm stretched  out, yet the admirable fineness of its constitution  shows that it is a curious piece of art,  the work of his fingers.   3. The use and design  of it--to *divide the waters from the  waters,* that is, to distinguish between the  waters that are wrapped up in the clouds and  those that cover the sea, the waters in the  air and those in the earth. See the difference  between these two carefully observed,  Deut. xi. 10, 11, where Canaan is upon this account  preferred to Egypt, that Egypt was  moistened and made fruitful with the waters  that are under the firmament, but Canaan  with waters from above, out of the firmament,  even the dew of heaven, which tarrieth  not *for the sons of men,*  Mic. v. 7. God has,  in the firmament of his power, chambers,  store-chambers, whence he *watereth the earth,*  Ps. civ. 13; lxv. 9, 10. He has also *treasures,  or magazines, of snow and hail, which  he hath reserved against the day of battle and  war,*  Job xxxviii. 22, 23. O what a great  God is he who has thus provided for the  comfort of all that serve him and the confusion  of all that hate him! It is good having  him our friend, and bad having him our  enemy.   4. The naming of it: *He called the  firmament heaven.* It is the visible heaven,  the pavement of the holy city; above the  firmament God is said to have his throne  (Ezek. i. 26), for he has prepared it in the heavens; the heavens therefore are said to  rule,  Dan. iv. 26. *Is not God in the height of  heaven?*  Job xxii. 12. Yes, he is, and we  should be led by the contemplation of the  heavens that are in our eye to consider *our  Father who is in heaven.* The height of the  heavens should remind us of God's supremacy  and the infinite distance there is between  us and him; the brightness of the  heavens and their purity should remind us of  his glory, and majesty, and perfect holiness;  the vastness of the heavens, their encompassing  of the earth, and the influence they have  upon it, should remind us of his immensity  and universal providence.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       9 And God said, Let the waters under the heaven be gathered together unto one place, and let the dry *land* appear: and it was so.  10 And God called the dry *land* Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called he Seas: and God saw that *it was* good.  11 And God said, Let the   earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, *and* the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed *is* in itself, upon the earth: and it was so.  12 And the earth brought forth  grass, *and* herb yielding seed after  his kind, and the tree yielding fruit,  whose seed *was* in itself, after his  kind: and God saw that *it was* good.  13 And the evening and the morning  were the third day.

The third day's work is related in these  verses--the forming of the sea and the dry  land, and the making of the earth fruitful.  Hitherto the power of the Creator had been  exerted and employed about the upper part  of the visible word; the light of heaven was  kindled, and the firmament of heaven fixed:  but now he descends to this lower world, the  earth, which was designed for the children of  men, designed both for their habitation and  for their maintenance; and here we have an  account of the fitting of it for both, and building  of their house and the spreading of their  table. Observe,

I. How the earth was prepared to be a  habitation for man, by the gathering of the  waters together, and the making of the dry  land to appear. Thus, instead of the confusion  which there was  (*v.* 2) when earth and  water were mixed in one great mass, behold,  now, there is order, by such a separation as  rendered them both useful. God said, *Let  it be so, and it was so;* no sooner said than  done.   1. The waters which had covered the  earth were ordered to retire, and to gather  into one place, namely, those hollows which  were fitted and appointed for their reception  and rest. The waters, thus cleared, thus  collected, and thus lodged, in their proper  place, he called *seas.* Though they are many,  in distant regions, and washing several  shores, 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  flow,  Eccl. i. 7. Waters and seas often, in scripture, signify troubles and afflictions,  Ps. xlii. 7; lxix. 2, 14, 15. God's own  people are not exempted from these in this  world; but it is their comfort that they are  only waters under the heaven (there are none  in heaven), and that they are all in the place  that God has appointed them and within  the bounds that he has set for them. How  the waters were gathered together at first,  and how they are still bound and limited by  the same Almighty had that first confined them,  are elegantly described,  Ps. civ. 6-9, and are there mentioned as matter of praise. *Those that go down to the sea in ships* ought  to acknowledge daily the wisdom, power,  and goodness, of the Creator, in making the  great waters serviceable to man for trade  and commerce; and *those that tarry at home*  must own themselves indebted to him that  keeps the sea with bars and doors in its decreed  place, and stays its proud waves,  Job xxxviii. 10, 11. 2. The dry land was  made to appear, and emerge out of the waters,  and was called *earth,* and *given to the children  of men.* The earth, it seems, was in being  before; but it was of no use, because it was  under water. Thus many of God's gifts are  received in vain, because they are buried;  make them to appear, and they become serviceable.  We who, to this day, enjoy the  benefit of the dry land (though, since this,  it was once deluged, and dried again) must  own ourselves tenants to, and dependents  upon, that God whose *hands formed the dry  land,*  Ps. xcv. 5; Jonah i. 9.

II. How the earth was furnished for the  maintenance and support of man,  *v.* 11, 12. Present provision was now made, by the immediate  products of the upstart earth, which, in obedience to God's command, was no  sooner made than it became fruitful, and  brought forth grass for the cattle and herb  for the service of man. Provision was likewise  made for time to come, by the perpetuating  of the several kinds of vegetables,  which are numerous, various, and all curious,  and 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. *Lord,  what is man, that he is thus visited and regarded*--that  such care should be taken, and  such provision made, for the support and  preservation of those guilty and obnoxious  lives which have been a thousand times  forfeited! Observe here,   1. That not only  the earth is the Lord's, but *the fulness thereof,*  and he is the rightful owner and sovereign  disposer, not only of it, but of all its furniture.  The earth was *emptiness*  (*v.* 2), but now, by a word's speaking, it has become  full of God's riches, and his they are still--*his  corn and his wine, his wool and his flax,*  Hos. ii. 9. Though the use of them is allowed  to us, the property still remains in  him, and to his service and honour they  must be used.   2. That common providence  is a continued creation, and in it *our Father  worketh hitherto.* The earth still remains  under the efficacy of this command, to bring  forth grass, and herbs, and its annual products;  and though, being according to the  common course of nature, these are not  standing miracles, yet they are standing instances  of the unwearied power and unexhausted  goodness of the world's great Maker  and Master.   3. That though God, ordinarily,  makes use of the agency of second  causes, according to their nature, yet he  neither needs them nor is tied to them; for,  though the precious fruits of the earth are  usually brought forth by the influences of  the sun and moon  (Deut. xxxiii. 14), yet here  we find the earth bearing a great abundance   of fruit, probable ripe fruit, before the sun  and moon were made.   4. That it is good to  provide things necessary before we have  occasion to use them: before the beasts and  man were made, here were grass and herbs  prepared for them. God thus dealt wisely  and graciously with man; let not man then  be foolish and unwise for himself.   5. That  God must have the glory of all the benefit  we receive from the products of the earth,  either for food or physic. It is he that *hears  the heavens when they hear the earth,*  Hos. ii. 21, 22. And if we have, through grace, an  interest in him who is the fountain, when  the streams are dried up and the *fig-tree doth  not blossom* we may rejoice in him.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       14 And God said, Let there be  lights in the firmament of the heaven  to divide the day from the night; and  let them be for signs, and for seasons,  and for days, and years:  15 And let  them be for lights in the firmament  of the heaven to give light upon the  earth: and it was so.  16 And God  made two great lights; the greater  light to rule the day, and the lesser  light to rule the night: *he made* the  stars also.  17 And God set them in  the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth,  18 And to  rule over the day and over the night,  and to divide the light from the darkness:  and God saw that *it was* good.  19 And the evening and the morning  were the fourth day.

This is the history of the fourth day's  work, the creating of the sun, moon, and  stars, which are here accounted for, not as  they are in themselves and in their own nature,  to satisfy the curious, but as they are  in relation to this earth, to which they serve  as lights; and this is enough to furnish us  with matter for praise and thanksgiving.  Holy Job mentions this as an instance of the  glorious power of God, that *by the Spirit he  hath garnished the heavens*  (Job xxvi. 13); and here we have an account of that garniture  which is not only so much the beauty of  the upper world, but so much the blessing of  this lower; for though heaven is high, yet  has it respect to this earth, and therefore  should have respect from it. Of the creation  of the lights of heaven we have an account,

I. In general,  *v.* 14, 15, where we have   1. The command given concerning them:  *Let there be lights in the firmament of heaven.*  God had said, *Let there be light*  (*v.* 3), and there was light; but this was, as it were, a  chaos of light, scattered and confused: now  it was collected and modelled, and made into  several luminaries, and so rendered both  more glorious and more serviceable. God is  the God of order, and not of confusion; and,  as he is light, so he is the Father and former  of lights. Those lights were to be *in the  firmament of heaven,* that vast expanse which  encloses the earth, and is conspicuous to all;  for *no man, when he has lighted a candle,  puts it under a bushel, but on a candlestick*  (Luke viii. 16), and a stately golden candlestick  the firmament of heaven is, from which  these candles give light *to all that are in the  house.* The firmament itself is spoken of as  having a brightness of its own  (Dan. xii. 3), but this was not sufficient to give light to the  earth; and perhaps for this reason it is not  expressly said of the second day's work, in  which the firmament was made, that it was  good, because, till it was adorned with these  lights on the fourth day, it had not become  serviceable to man.   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, which are  interchanged by the motion of the sun, whose  rising makes day, his setting night, his approach  towards our tropic summer, his recess  to the other winter: and thus, *under the  sun,* there is *a season to every purpose,*  Eccl. iii. 1. (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, foreseeing, by the  face of the sky, when second causes have begun  to work, whether it will be fair or foul,  Matt. xvi. 2, 3. They do also *give light upon  the earth,* that we may *walk*  (John xi. 9), and *work* (John ix. 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, who need them not; but  they shine for us, for our pleasure and advantage.  Lord, what is man, that he should  be thus regarded!  Ps. viii. 3, 4. How ungrateful  and inexcusable are we, if, when God  has set up these lights for us to work by, we  sleep, or play, or trifle away the time of business,  and neglect the great work we were  sent into the world about! The lights of  heaven are made to serve us, and they do it  faithfully, and shine in their season, without  fail: but we are set as lights in this world to  serve God; and do we in like manner answer  the end of our creation? No, we do  not, our light does not shine before God as  his lights shine before us,  Matt. v. 14. We burn our Master's candles, but do not mind  our Master's work.

II. In particular,  *v.* 16-18.

1. Observe, The lights of heaven are the  sun, moon, and stars; and all these are the  work of God's hands.   (1.) The sun is  the greatest light of all, more than a million  times greater than the earth, 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. Let us learn from   Ps. xix. 1-6 how to give unto God the glory due  unto his name, as the Maker of the sun.   (2.) The moon is a less light, and yet is here  reckoned one of the greater lights, because  though, in regard to its magnitude and borrowed  light, it is inferior to many of the stars,  yet, by virtue of its office, as ruler of the  night, and in respect of its usefulness to the  earth, it is more excellent than they. Those  are most valuable that are most serviceable;  and those are the greater lights, not that  have the best gifts, but that humbly and  faithfully do the most good with them.  *Whosoever will be great among you, let him be  your minister,*  Matt. xx. 26.  (3.) *He made the  stars also,* which are here spoken of as they  appear to vulgar eyes, without distinguishing  between the planets and the fixed stars, or  accounting for their number, nature, place,  magnitude, motions, or influences; for the  scriptures were written, not to gratify our  curiosity and make us astronomers, but to lead  us to God, and make us saints. Now these  lights are said to *rule*  (*v.* 16, 18); not that  they have a supreme dominion, as God has,  but they are deputy-governors, rulers under  him. Here the less light, the moon, is said  to rule *the night;* but in  Ps. cxxxvi. 9 the stars are mentioned as sharers in that government;  *The moon and stars to rule by  night.* No more is meant than that they  *give light,*  Jer. xxxi. 35. The best and most  honourable way of ruling is by giving light  and doing good: those command respect that  live a useful life, and so shine as lights.

2. Learn from all this,   (1.) The sin and  folly of that ancient idolatry, the worshipping  of the sun, moon, and stars, which,  some think, took rise, or countenance at  least, from some broken traditions in the patriarchal  age concerning the rule and dominion  of the lights of heaven. But the  account here given of them plainly shows  that they are both God's creatures and man's  servants; and therefore it is both a great  affront to God and a great reproach to ourselves  to make deities of them and give them  divine honours. See  Deut. iv. 19. (2.) The  duty and wisdom of daily worshipping that  God who made all these things, and made  them to be that to us which they are. The  revolutions of the day and night oblige us  to offer the solemn sacrifice of prayer and  praise every morning and evening.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       20 And God said, Let the waters  bring forth abundantly the moving  creature that hath life, and fowl *that*  may fly above the earth in the open firmament of heaven.  21 And God created great whales, and every living creature that moveth, which the waters brought forth abundantly, after their kind, and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that *it was* good.  22 And God blessed them, saying, Be fruitful, and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let fowl multiply in the earth.  23 And the evening and the morning were the fifth day.

Each day, hitherto, has produced very  noble and excellent beings, which we can  never sufficiently admire; but we do not  read of the creation of any living creature  till the fifth day, of which these verses give  us an account. The work of creation not  only proceeded gradually from one thing to  another, but rose and advanced gradually  from that which was less excellent to that  which was more so, teaching us to press  towards perfection and endeavour that our  last works may be our best works. It was  on the fifth day that the fish and fowl were  created, and both out of the waters. Though  there is one kind of flesh of fishes, and  another of birds, yet they were made together,  and both out of the waters; for the power of  the first Cause can produce very different  effects from the same second causes. Observe,   1. The making of the fish and fowl,  at first,  *v.* 20, 21. God commanded them to  be produced. He said, *Let the waters bring  forth abundantly;* not as if the waters had  any productive power of their own, but, "Let  them be brought into being, the fish in the  waters and the fowl out of them." This  command he himself executed: *God created  great whales,* &c. Insects, which perhaps are as various and as numerous 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. Mr. Boyle (I remember) says he admires  the Creator's wisdom and power as  much in an ant as in an elephant. Notice is  here taken of the various sorts 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 particular  mention if made of great whales, the  largest of fishes, whose bulk and strength,  exceeding that of any other animal, are remarkable  proofs of the power and greatness  of the Creator. The express notice here  taken of the whale, above all the rest, seems  sufficient to determine what animal is meant  by the Leviathan,  Job xli. :1. The curious  formation of the bodies of animals, their different  sizes, shapes, and natures, with the  admirable powers of the sensitive life with  which they are endued, when duly considered,  serve, not only to silence and shame the  objections of atheists and infidels, but to  raise high thoughts and high praises of God  in pious and devout souls,  Ps. civ. 25, &c.  2. The blessing of them, in order to their  continuance. Life is a wasting thing. Its  strength is not the strength of stones. It is  a candle that will burn out, if it be not first  blown out; and therefore the wise Creator  not only made the individuals, but provided   for the propagation of the several kinds; *God  blessed them, saying, Be fruitful and multiply,*  *v.* 22. God will bless his own works, and  not forsake them; and *what he does shall be  for a perpetuity,*  Eccl. iii. 14. The power of  God's providence preserves all things, as  at first his creating power produced them.  Fruitfulness 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. Well, let us give  to God the glory of the continuance of these  creatures to this day for the benefit of man.  See  Job xii. 7, 9. It is a pity that fishing  and fowling, recreations innocent in themselves,  should ever be abused to divert any  from God and their duty, while they are  capable of being improved to lead us to the  contemplation of the wisdom, power, and  goodness, of him that made all these things,  and to engage us to stand in awe of him, as  the fish and fowl do of us.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       24 And God said, Let the earth  bring forth the living creature after  his kind, cattle, and creeping thing,  and beast of the earth after his kind:  and it was so.  25 And God made  the beast of the earth after his kind,  and cattle after their kind, and every  thing that creepeth upon the earth  after his kind: and God saw that *it  was* good.

We have here the first part of the sixth  day's work. The sea was, the day before,  replenished with its fish, and the air with its  fowl; and this day were made the beasts of  the earth, the 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,* not as if the earth had  any such prolific virtue as to produce these  animals, or as if God resigned his creating  power to it; but, "Let these creatures now  come into being upon the earth, and out of  it, in their respective kinds, conformable to  the ideas of them in the divine counsels concerning  their creation."   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--some to  be tame about the house, others to be wild  in the fields--some living upon grass and  herbs, others upon flesh--some harmless, and  others ravenous--some bold, and others timorous--some  for man's service, and not his  sustenance, as the horse--others for his sustenance,  and not his service, as the sheep--others  for both, as the ox--and some for  neither, as the wild beasts. In all this appears  the manifold wisdom of the Creator.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       26 And God said, Let us make man  in our image, after our likeness:  and let them have dominion over the  fish of the sea, and over the fowl of  the air, and over the cattle, and over  all the earth, and over every creeping  thing that creepeth upon the earth.  27 So God created man in his *own*  image, in the image of God created  he him; male and female created he  them.  28 And God blessed them,  and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth,  and subdue it: and have dominion  over the fish of the sea, and over the  fowl of the air, and over every living  thing that moveth upon the earth.

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, that we may know ourselves. Observe,

I. That man was made last of all the creatures,  that it might not be suspected that he  had been, any way, a helper to God in the  creation of the world: that question must be  for ever humbling and mortifying to him,  *Where wast thou,* or any of thy kind, *when I  laid the foundations of the earth?*  Job xxxviii. 4. Yet it was both an honour and a favour to  him that he was made last: an honour, for  the method of 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 up 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. Man was made the same  day that the beasts were, because 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!

II. That man's creation was a more signal  and immediate act of divine wisdom and  power than that of the other creatures. The  narrative of it is introduced with something  of solemnity, and a manifest distinction from  the rest. Hitherto, it had been said, "Let  there be light," and "Let there be a firmament,"  and "Let the earth, or waters, bring  forth" such a thing; 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: this is a  work we must take into our own hands."  In the former he speaks as one having authority,  in this as one having affection; for  his *delights were with the sons of men,*  Prov. viii. 31. It should seem as if this were the  work which he longed to be at; as if he had  said, "Having at last settled the preliminaries,  let us now apply ourselves to the  business, *Let us make man.*" 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  him, 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. Into that great name we are,  with good reason, baptized, for to that great  name we owe our being. Let him rule man  who said, *Let us make man.*

III. That man was made in God's image  and after his likeness, two words to express  the same thing and making each other the  more expressive; *image* and *likeness* denote  the likest image, the nearest resemblance of  any of the visible creatures. Man was not  made in the likeness of any creature that  went before him, but in the likeness of his  Creator; yet still between God and man  there is an infinite distance. Christ only is  the *express* image of God's person, as the  Son of his Father, having the same nature.  It is only some of God's honour that is put  upon man, who is God's image only as the  shadow in the glass, or the king's impress  upon the coin. God's image upon man consists  in these three things:--  1. In his nature  and constitution, not those of his body (for  God has not a body), but those of his soul.  This honour indeed God has put upon the  body of man, that the Word was made flesh,  the Son of God was clothed with a body like  ours and will shortly clothe ours with a glory  like that of his. And this we may safely say,  That he by whom God made the worlds, not  only the great world, but man the little  world, formed the human body, at the first,  according to the platform he designed for  himself in the fulness of time. But it is the  soul, the great soul, of man, that does especially  bear God's image. The soul is a spirit,  an intelligent immortal spirit, an influencing  active spirit, herein resembling God, the Father  of Spirits, and the soul of the world.  *The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord.*  The soul of man, considered in its three  noble faculties, understanding, will, and active  power, is perhaps the brightest clearest looking-glass  in nature, wherein to see God.   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,  or viceroy, upon earth; they are not capable  of fearing and serving God, therefore God  has appointed them to fear and serve man. 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. In  his purity and rectitude. God's image upon  man consists in knowledge, righteousness,  and true holiness,  Eph. iv. 24; Col. iii. 10. He was upright,  Eccl. vii. 29. He had an  habitual conformity of all his natural powers  to the whole will of God. His understanding  saw divine things clearly and truly, and  there were no errors nor mistakes in his  knowledge. His will complied readily and  universally with the will of God, without reluctancy  or resistance. His affections were  all regular, and he had no inordinate appetites  or passions. His thoughts were easily  brought and fixed to the best subjects, and  there was no vanity nor ungovernableness in  them. All the inferior powers were subject  to the dictates and directions of the superior,  without any mutiny or rebellion. Thus holy,  thus happy, were our first parents, in having  the image of God upon them. And this  honour, put upon man at first, is a good reason why we should not speak ill one of  another  (Jam. iii. 9), nor do ill one to another  (Gen. ix. 6), and a good reason why we should  not debase ourselves to the service of sin, and  why we should devote ourselves to God's  service. 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!

IV. That man was made male and female,  and blessed with the blessing of fruitfulness  and increase. God said, *Let us make man,*  and immediately it follows, *So God created  man;* he performed what he resolved. With  us saying and doing are two things; but they  are not so with God. He created him male  and female, Adam and Eve--Adam first, out  of earth, and Eve out of his side,  *ch.* ii. It should seem that of the rest of the creatures  God made many couples, but of man *did not  he make one?*  (Mal. ii. 15), though he had the  residue of the Spirit, whence Christ gathers  an argument against divorce,  Matt. xix. 4, 5. Our first father, Adam, was confined to one  wife; and, if he had put her away, there was  no other for him to marry, which plainly intimated that the bond of marriage was not to  be dissolved at pleasure. Angels were not  made male and female, for they were not to  propagate their kind  (Luke xx. 34-36); but man was made so, that the nature might be  propagated and the race continued. Fires  and candles, the luminaries of this lower  world, because they waste, and go out, have  a power to light more; but it is not so with  the lights of heaven: stars do not kindle  stars. 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;* it is this  that is bestowed upon the children of men.     They were made *to dwell upon the face of all  the earth,*  Acts xvii. 26. This is the place 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 the receiver of God's  bounty, which other creatures live upon, but  do not know it; to be likewise the collector  of his praises in this lower world, and to pay  them into the exchequer above  (Ps. cxlv. 10); 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 virtue of which their posterity  should extend to the utmost corners of the  earth and continue to the utmost period of  time. Fruitfulness and increase depend upon  the blessing of God: Obed-edom had eight  sons, *for God blessed him,*  1 Chron. xxvi. 5. It is owing to this blessing, which God commanded  at first, that the race of mankind is  still in being, and that as *one generation passeth  away another cometh.*

V. That God gave to man, when he had  made him, a dominion over the inferior  creatures, *over the 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,* which are more under his care and within his reach. God designed hereby to put an honour upon man, that he might find himself the more strongly obliged to bring honour to his Maker. This dominion is very much diminished and lost by the fall; yet God's providence continues so much of it to the children of men as is necessary to the safety and support of their lives, and God's grace has given to the saints a new and better title to the creature than that which was forfeited by sin; for all is ours if we are Christ's, 1 Cor. iii. 22.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       29 And God said, Behold, I have  given you every herb bearing seed,  which *is* upon the face of all the  earth, and every tree, in the which *is*  the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.  30 And to  every beast of the earth, and to every  fowl of the air, and to every thing  that creepeth upon the earth, wherein *there is* life, *I have given* every green  herb for meat: and it was so.

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,  Ps. cxxxvi. 25. He that made man and beast thus took care to preserve both, Ps. xxxvi. 6. Here is,

I. Food provided for man,  *v.* 29. Herbs and fruits must be his meat, including corn  and all the products of the earth; these were  allowed him, but (it should seem) not flesh,  till after the flood,  *ch.* ix. 3. 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  than marrow and fatness, and all the portion  of the king's meat, are now. See here,   1. That which should make us humble. As we  were made out of the earth, so we are maintained  out of it. Once indeed men did eat  angels' food, bread from heaven; but they  died  (John vi. 49); it was to them but as  food out of the earth,  Ps. civ. 14. There is  meat that endures to everlasting life; the  Lord evermore give us this.   2. That which  should make us thankful. The Lord is for  the body; from him we receive all the supports  and comforts of this life, and to him  we must give thanks. He gives us all things  richly to enjoy, not only for necessity, but  plenty, dainties, and varieties, for ornament  and delight. How much are we indebted!  How careful should we be, as we live upon  God's bounty, to live to his glory!   3. That  which should make us temperate and content  with our lot. Though Adam had dominion  given him over fish and fowl, yet God  confined him, in his food, to herbs and  fruits; and he never complained of it.  Though afterwards he coveted forbidden  fruit, for the sake of the wisdom and knowledge  he promised himself from it, yet we never read that he coveted forbidden flesh.  If God give us food for our lives, let us not,  with murmuring Israel, ask food for our  lusts,  Ps. lxxviii. 18; see Dan. i. 15.

II. Food provided for the beasts,  *v.* 30. *Doth God take care for oxen?* Yes, certainly,  he provides food convenient for them,  and not for oxen only, which 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. Let us give to God  the glory of his bounty to the inferior creatures,  that all are fed, as it were, at his table,  every day. He is a great housekeeper, a  very rich and bountiful one, that satisfies the  desire of every living thing. Let this encourage  God's people to cast their care upon  him, and not to be solicitous respecting what  they shall eat and what they shall drink.  He that provided for Adam without his  care, and still provides for all the creatures  without their care, will not let those that  trust him want any good thing,  Matt. vi. 26. He that feeds his birds will not starve his  babes.

*The Creation.* B. C. 4004.       31 And God saw every thing that  he had made, and, behold, *it was*  very good. And the evening and the  morning were the sixth day.

We have here the approbation and conclusion  of the whole work of creation. As for  God, his work is perfect; and if he begin  he will also make an end, in providence and  grace, as well as here in creation. Observe,

I. The review God took of his work: He  *saw every thing that he had made.* So he  does still; all the works of his hands are  under his eye. He that made all sees all;  he that made us sees us,  Ps. cxxxix. 1-16. Omniscience cannot be separated from omnipotence.  *Known unto God are all his works,*  Acts xv. 18. But this was the Eternal  Mind's solemn reflection upon the copies of  its own wisdom and the products of its own  power. God has hereby set us an example  of reviewing our works. Having given us a power of reflection, he expects we should  use that power, see our way  (Jer. ii. 23), and think of it,  Ps. cxix. 59. When we have  finished a day's work, and are entering upon  the rest of the night, we should commune  with our own hearts about what we have  been doing that day; so likewise when we  have finished a week's work, and are entering  upon the sabbath-rest, we should thus  prepare to meet our God; and when we are  finishing our life's work, and are entering  upon our rest in the grave, that is a time to  bring to remembrance, that we may die repenting,  and so take leave of it.

II. 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. He did not pronounce it good till he  had seen it so, to teach us not to answer a  matter before we hear it. The work of  creation was a very good work. All that God  made was well-made, and there was no flaw  nor defect in it.   1. It was good. Good, for  it is all agreeable to the mind of the Creator,  just as he would have it to be; when the  transcript came to be compared with the  great original, it was found to be exact, no  errata in it, not one misplaced stroke. Good,  for it answers the end of its creation, and is  fit for the purpose for which it was designed.  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 and veneration of  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, who was designed to be the  visible image of the Creator's glory and the  mouth of the creation in his praises.   (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.  When the top-stone is brought forth we shall  cry, *Grace, grace, unto it,*  Zech. iv. 7. Therefore judge nothing before the time.

III. The time when this work was concluded:  *The evening and the morning were the  sixth day;* 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.  He said that, *Let there be light, and there was  light,* could have said, "Let there be a  world," and there would have been a world,  *in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye,* as at  the resurrection,  1 Cor. xv. 52. But he did  it in six days, that he might show 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; it is therefore made the reason of  the fourth commandment. So much would  the sabbath conduce to the keeping up of religion  in the world that God had an eye to it  in the timing of his creation. And now, as  God reviewed his work, let us review our  meditations upon it, and we shall find them  very lame and defective, and our praises low  and flat; let us therefore stir up ourselves,  and all that is within us, to *worship him that  made the heaven, earth, and sea, and the  fountains of waters,* according to the tenour  of the everlasting gospel, which is preached  to every nation,  Rev. xiv. 6, 7. All his works,  in all places of his dominion, do bless him;  and, therefore, *bless thou the Lord, O my soul!*