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ON THE

EXISTENCE AND ATTRIBUTES OF GOD.

DISCOURSE X.

ON THE POWER OF GOD.

JOB XXVI. 14.-Lo, these are parts of his ways: but how little a portion is heard of him! but the thunder of his power who can understand?

BILDAD had in the foregoing chapter entertained Job with a discourse on the dominion and power of God, and the purity of his righteousness, whence he argues an impossibility of the justification of man in his presence, who is no better than a worm. Job in this chapter acknowledges the greatness of God's power, and descants more largely upon it than Bildad had done; but doth preface it with a kind of ironical speech, as if he had not acted a friendly part, or spake little to the purpose, or the matter in hand. The subject of Job's discourse was the worldly happiness of the wicked, and the calamities of the godly; and Bildad reads him a lecture of the extent of God's dominion, the number of his armies, and the unspotted rectitude of his nature, in comparison of which the purest creatures are foul and crooked. Job, therefore, from ver. 1 to 4, taxes him in a kind of scoffing manner, that he had not touched the point, but rambled from the subject in hand, and had not applied a salve proper to his sore: "How hast thou helped him that is without power? How savest thou the arm of him that hath no strength?" ver 2; your discourse is so impertinent, that it will neither strengthen a weak person, nor instruct a simple one. But since Bildad would take up an argument of God's power, and discourse so short of it, Job would show that he wanted not his instructions in that kind, and that he had more distinct conceptions of it than his antagonist had uttered: and therefore, from ver. 5, to the end of the chapter, he does magnifi

VOL. II.-2

1 Munser.

cently treat of the power of God in several branches. And he begins with the lowest, ver. 25.

"Dead things are formed from under the waters, and the inhabitants thereof." You read me a lecture of the power of God in the heavenly host: indeed it is visible there, yet of a larger extent; and monuments of it are found in the lower parts. What do you think of those dead things under the earth and waters, of the corn that dies, and by the moistening influences of the clouds springs up again with a numerous progeny and increase for the nourishment of man? What do you think of those varieties of metals and minerals conceived in the bowels of the earth, those pearls and riches in the depths of the waters, brought forth by this power of God? Add to these those more prodigious creatures in the sea, the inhabitants of the waters, with their vastness and variety, which are all the births of God's power, both in their first creation by his mighty voice, and their propagation by his cherishing providence.

Stop not here, but consider also that his power extends to hell; either the graves, the repositories of all the crumbled dust that has yet been in the world; (for so hell is sometimes taken in Scripture; "Hell is naked before him, and destruction has no covering," ver. 6;) the lodgings of deceased men are known to him; no screen can obscure them from his sight, nor their dissolution be any bar to his power, when the time is come to compact those mouldered bodies to entertain again their departed souls, either for weal or woe: or hell, the place of punishment, is naked before him; as distinctly discerned by him as a naked body in all its lineaments by us, or a dissected body is in all its parts by a skilful eye. Destruction has no covering: none can free himself from the power of his hand. Every person in the bowels of hell, every person punished there, is known to him, and feels the power of his wrath.

From the lower parts of the world he ascends to the consideration of the power of God in the creation of heaven and earth: "He stretcheth out the north over the empty place," ver. 7; the north or north pole over the air, which by the Greeks was called void or empty, because of the tenuity and thinness of that element; and he mentions here the north, or north pole, for the whole heaven, because it is more known and apparent than the southern pole. "And hangeth the earth upon nothing." The massy and weighty earth hangs like a thick globe in the midst of a thin air, that there is as much air on the one side of it as on the other. The heavens have no prop to sustain them in their height, and the earth has no basis to support it in its place. The heavens are as if you saw a curtain stretched smooth in the air without any hand to hold it; and the earth is as if you saw a ball hanging in the air

without any solid body to underprop it, or any line to hinder it from falling; both standing monuments of the omnipotence of God.

He then takes notice of his daily power in the clouds: "He bindeth up the waters in his thick clouds, and the cloud is not rent under them," ver. 8. He compacts the waters together in clouds, and keeps them by his power in the air against the force of their natural gravity and heaviness, till they are fit to flow down upon the earth, and perform his pleasure in the places for which he designs them. "The cloud is not rent. under them;" the thin air is not split asunder by the weight of the waters contained in the clouds above it. He causes them to distil by drops, and strains them as it were through a thin lawn, for the refreshment of the earth: and suffers them not to fall in the whole lump, with a violent torrent, to waste the industry of man, and bring famine upon the world by destroying the fruits of the earth. What a wonder would it be to see but one entire drop of water hang itself but one inch above the ground, unless it be a bubble which is preserved by the air enclosed within it! What a wonder would it be to see a gallon of water contained in a thin cobweb as strongly as in a vessel of brass! Greater is the wonder of Divine power in those thin bottles of heaven, as they are called, Job xxxviii. 37; and therefore called his clouds here, as being daily instances of his omnipotence. That the air should sustain those rolling vessels, as it should seem, weightier than itself; that the force of this mass of waters should not break so thin a prison, and hasten to its proper place which is below the air; that they should be daily confined against their natural inclination, and held by so slight a chain; that there should be such a gradual and successive falling of them, as if the air were pierced with holes like a gardener's watering-pot, and not fall in one entire body to drown or drench some parts of the earth; these are hourly miracles of Divine power, as little regarded as clearly visible.

He proceeds, ver. 9. "He holdeth back the face of his throne, and spreadeth his cloud upon it." The clouds are designed as curtains to cover the heavens, as well as vessels to water the earth, Psal. cxlvii. 8; as a tapestry curtain between the heavens, the throne of God, and the earth, his footstool, Isa. lxvi. 1. The heavens are called his throne, because his power does most shine forth there, and magnificently declare the glory of God; and the clouds are as a screen between the scorching heat of the sun, and the tender plants of the earth, and the weak bodies of men.

From hence he descends to the sea, and considers the Divine power apparent in the bounding of it: "He has compassed the waters with bounds, until the day and night come to an

end," ver. 10. This is several times mentioned in Scripture, as a signal mark of Divine strength, Job xxxviii. 8; Prov. viii. 27. He has measured a place for the sea, and struck the limits of it as with a compass, that it might not mount above the surface of the land, and ruin the ends of the earth's creation; and this while day and night have their mutual turns, till he shall make an end of time by removing the measures of it. The bounds of the tumultuous sea are in many places as weak as the bottles of the upper waters; the one is contained in thin air, and the other restrained by weak sands in many places, as well as by stubborn rocks in others; that though it swells, foams, roars, and the waves, encouraged and urged on by strong winds, come like mountains against the shore, they overflow it not, but humble themselves when they come near to those sands, which are set as their lists and limits, and retire back to the womb that brought them forth, as if they were ashamed, and repented of their proud invasion: or else it may be meant of the tides of the sea, and the stated time God has set it for its ebbing and flowing, till night and day come to an end. Both that the fluid waters should contain themselves within due bounds, and keep their perpetual orderly motion, are amazing arguments of Divine power.

He passes on to the consideration of the commotions in the air and earth, raised and stilled by the power of God: "The pillars of heaven tremble and are astonished at his reproof," ver. 11. By pillars of heaven are not meant angels, as some think; but either the air, called the pillars of heaven in regard of place, as it continues and knits together the parts of the world, as pillars do the upper and nether parts of a building. As the lowest parts of the earth are called the foundations of the earth; so the lowest parts of the heaven may be called the pillars of heaven.2 Or else by that phrase may be meant mountains which seem at a distance to touch the sky, as pillars do the top of a structure; and so it may be spoken according to vulgar capacity, which imagines the heavens to be sustained by the two extreme parts of the earth, as a convex body, or to be arched by pillars; whence the Scripture, according to common apprehensions, mentions the ends of the earth, and the utmost parts of the heavens, though they have properly no end, as being round. The power of God is seen in those commotions in the air and earth, by thunders, lightnings, storms, earthquakes, which rack the air, and make the mountains and hills tremble as servants before a frowning and rebuking

master.

And as he makes motions in the earth seen in their influences upon the sea.

1 Coccei. in loc.

and air, so is his power "He divideth the sea

1 Coccei.

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