Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

them." Nor yet was man placed therein merely to be a spectator and an interpreter; but also, in a great measure, to be possessor and lord thereof; or, as it were, the Creator's "substitutet," in a spacious and convenient house ready built, and stored with all sorts of useful furniture.

Now, that man himself is a grand and noble piece of workmanship, appears even from this circumstance, that the most wise operator, when he was going to create him, thought fit to preface his design, with these words, "Let us make man.' So that he was created, not merely by a word of command like the rest of the creatures, "but by a consultation of the blessed Trinityt."

[ocr errors]

And, indeed, man is a wonderful composition, the conjunction of heaven and earth; "The breath of God, and the dust of the ground;" the bond of union between the visible and invisible world, and truly a “world in miniature, a kind of mixt world, nearly related to the other two §," Nor is he only a lively epitome and representation of the greater world, but also dignified with the image of his great Creator. He made the heavens and the earth, the sea and the stars, and then all sorts of living crea

* ὡς θεατήν τε ἀυτᾶ και των αυτὸ ἔργων, και 3 μόνον θεατήν αλλά και ἐξηγήτην. Arrian.

† ὑποκαλάςατον.

Faciamus hominem. Ut non solo jubentis sermone sicut reliqua, sed consilio sanctæ Trinitatis conditus sit. Arnob.

§ Μικροκόσμος, μικτός τίς κόσμος, συγγηνής των δύο κόσμων. Greg. Nyss.

tures; but, in the words of the poet, "a more divine creature, and more capable of elevated sentiments, was yet wanting, and one that could rule over the rest, therefore man was born, &c. *.

The rest of the creatures, according to the observation of the schoolmen, which is not amiss, had the impression of the divine foot stamped upon them, but not the image of the Deity. These he created, and reviewing them, found them to be good, yet he did not rest in them; but, upon the creation of man, the sabbath immediately followed. He made man, and then rested, having a creature capable of knowing that he was his Creator, one that could worship him, and celebrate his sabbath, whose sins, if he should commit any, he might forgive, and send, clothed with human nature, his only begotten son," in whom he is absolutely well pleased," and over whom, as the person that fulfilled his good pleasure, he rejoices for ever, to redeem his favourite creature. By the production of man, the supreme Creator exhibited himself in the most admirable light, and, at the same time, had a creature capable of admiring and loving him; and as St Ambrose observes, "one that was under obligation to love his Creator the more ardently, the more wonderfully he perceived himself to be made t." And man, says the same author, was

* Sanctius his animal, mentisq; capacius alta, Deerat ad huc, et quod dominari in cætera posset,

Natus homo est. Ovid. 1 Met.

+ Et quidem tanto ardentius amaret conditorem, quanto mira bilius se ab eo conditum intelligeret.

made a two footed animal, that he might be, as it were, one of the inhabitants of the air, that he might, "aspire at high things, and fly with the wings of sublime thoughts *."

And, indeed, the structure of man is an instance of wonderful art and ingenuity, whether you consider the symmetry of his whole fabric taken together, or all his parts and members separately. Gregory Nyssen speaks very much to the purpose, when he says, "The frame of man is awful, and hard to be explained, and contains in it a lively representation of many of the hidden mysteries of God t." How wonderful is even the structure of his body, which, after all, is but the earthen case of his soul? accordingly it is in the Chaldaic language called Nidne, which signifies a sheath. How far does the workmanship exceed the materials? and how justly may we say, "What a glorious creature out of the meanest elements?" The Psalmist's mind seems to have dwelt upon this medi. tation, till he was quite lost in it, "How fearfully, says he, and wonderfully am I made!" And that celebrated physician, who studied nature with such unwearied application, in his book upon the structure of the human body, in which, after all, there

* Et factus est homo bipes, ut sit unus quasi de volatilibus, qui alta visu petat, et quodam remigio volitet sublimum cogitationum.

† ἡ τὸ ἀνθρώπε κατασκευὴ φοβερὰ τὶς και δυσερμήνευτος και πολλὰ ἀπόκρυφα ἐν αυτή μυστήρια θεῖ ἐξεικώνιζεσα.

† Οἷοςἐξ οίς.

is nothing divine, often expresses his admiration in these words, "Who is worthy to praise the wisdom and power of the Creator*?" and many other such exclamations. The Christian writers, however, are most full upon this subject, particularly St Basil, St Chrysostom, and others, who carry their observations so far as the nails, and hair, especially that on the eye-lids. And Nyssen, on the words, "Let us make man," has the following observation: "Man is a grand and noble creature-How can man be said to be any great matter? seeing he is a mortal creature, subject to a great many passions: from the time of birth, to that of his old age, exposed to a vast many evils and distresses, and of whom it is written, Lord, what is man, that thou should be mindful of him, &c. The history we have of the production of man, delivered me from this difficulty; for we are told, that God took some of the dust of the earth, and out of it formed man; from these words I understood, that man was at once nothing, and yet something very grandt." He intended to say, that the materials, out of which man was made, were low, and, as it were, nothing; but, if you consider the wonderful workmanship, how great was the honour

* Τὶς ἴκανος ἐσὶ τὴν δημιεργοῦ σοφίαν και δύναμιν ἐπαινεῖν.

† Μέγα άνθρωπος και τιμίον. "Αλλὰ πως μεγὰ ὁ ἄνθρωπος; τό ἐπικηρον ζῶον τὸ μυρίοις πάθεσιν ὑποκειμενον, τὸ ἐκγεννητῆς ἐις γῆρας μυς ξίων κακῶν ἑσμὸν ἐξαντλῶν. Περὶ δ ει πηλαι. Κύριε τίς ἐςιν ὁ ἄνθρωπος, ὁτὶ μιμνήσκη αυτέ, &c. αλλά μοι την τοιάυλην διαπόρησαν ἔλυσεν ἱςορία τῆς γεννήσεως τὸ ἀνθρώπε ἀναγνωσθεισα, &c, Orat. ii.

conferred upon him! The "earth did not spontaneously produce man as it did grasshoppers; God did not commit the production of this or that particular creature to his ministering powers; no, the gracious Creator took the earth in his own. hand." But besides the noble frame of his body, though it was made of the dust of the earth, that divine breath, and, by means of it, the infusion of a precious soul, mixes heaven and earth together; not, indeed, in the common acceptation of that term, as if things so vastly different, were promiscuously jumbled together, and the order of nature subverted; but only implying, that the two parts of the human constitution are compounded with inexpressible art, and joined in a close union. As to the misery of the human race, and the contemptible figure in which the life of man appears, it is to be ascribed to another source, very different from the earthly materials, out of which his body was made. That he was created happy, beautiful, and honourable, he owed to his great and good Creator; but he himself is the author of his own misery. And hence it is, that though, with regard to his original and pure nature, we ought, for the strongest reasons, to speak more honourably of him, than of any other part of the visible world; yet, if we view him, " in his present circumstancest," no part of the creation,

εκ ἡ γῆ ἀυτομάτως ὤπες τῆς τέτλιγαο ἐξέβρασε, ἀλλ' ἐκ ἔιπε τῶδε και τῶδε ποιῆσαι λέτεργίκαις δυγάμεσιν, ἀλλ ̓ ἰδιὰ χειρὶ φιλοτεχνεί γῆν έλαβεν.

† ἐιος νῦν βρότος ἐςίν.

« ZurückWeiter »