<SPAN name="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_IV"id="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
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<p><i>That Man's Soul is not propagated by their parents, but is
infused by its Creator, and can neither die nor corrupt. At what
time it is infused. Of its immortality and certainty of its
resurrection.</i></p>
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<p>Man's soul is of so divine a nature and excellency that man
himself cannot comprehend it, <!-- Page 25 --> being the infused breath of the Almighty, of an
immortal nature, and not to be comprehended but by Him that gave
it. For Moses, relating the history of man, tells us that "God
breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and he became a
living soul." Now, as for all other creatures, at His word they
were made and had life, but the creature that God had set over His
works was His peculiar workmanship, formed by Him out of the dust
of the earth, and He condescended to breathe into his nostrils the
breath of life, which seems to denote both care and, if we may so
term it, labour, used about man more than about all other living
creatures, he only partaking and participating of the blessed
divine nature, bearing God's image in innocence and purity, whilst
he stood firm; and when, by his fall, that lively image was
defaced, yet such was the love of the Creator towards him that he
found out a way to restore him, the only begotten son of the
Eternal Father coming into the world to destroy the works of the
devil, and to raise up man from that low condition to which sin and
his fall had reduced him, to a state above that of the angels.</p>
<p>If, therefore, man would understand the excellency of his soul,
let him turn his eyes inwardly and look unto himself and search
diligently his own mind, and there he shall see many admirable
<!-- Page 26 --> gifts and
excellent ornaments, that must needs fill him with wonder and
amazement; as reason, understanding, freedom of will, memory, etc.,
that clearly show the soul to be descended from a heavenly
original, and that therefore it is of infinite duration and not
subject to annihilation.</p>
<p>Yet for its many operations and offices while in the body it
goes under several denominations: for when it enlivens the body it
is called the soul; when it gives knowledge, the judgment of the
mind; and when it recalls things past, the memory; when it
discourses and discerns, reason; when it contemplates, the spirit;
when it is the sensitive part, the senses. And these are the
principal offices whereby the soul declares its powers and performs
its actions. For being seated in the highest parts of the body it
diffuses its force into every member. It is not propagated from the
parents, nor mixed with gross matter, but the infused breath of
God, immediately proceeding from Him; not passing from one to
another as was the opinion of Pythagoras, who held a belief in
transmigration of the soul; but that the soul is given to every
infant by infusion, is the most received and orthodox opinion. And
the learned do likewise agree that this is done when the infant is
perfected in the womb, which happens about the twenty-
<!-- Page 27 --> fourth day
after conception; especially for males, who are generally born at
the end of nine months; but in females, who are not so soon formed
and perfected, through defect of heat, until the fiftieth day. And
though this day in either case cannot be truly set down, yet
Hippocrates has given his opinion, that it is so when the child is
formed and begins to move, when born in due season. In his book of
the nature of infants, he says, if it be a male and be perfect on
the thirtieth day, and move on the seventieth, he will be born in
the seventh month; but if he be perfectly formed on the
thirty-fifth day, he will move on the seventieth and will be born
in the eighth month. Again, if he be perfectly formed on the
forty-fifth day, he will move on the ninetieth and be born in the
ninth month. Now from these paring of days and months, it plainly
appears that the day of forming being doubled, makes up the day of
moving, and the day, three times reckoned, makes up the day of
birth. As thus, when thirty-five perfects the form, if you double
it, makes seventy the day of motion; and three times seventy
amounts to two hundred and ten days; while allowing thirty days to
a month makes seven months, and so you must consider the rest. But
as to a female the case is different; for it is longer perfecting
in the womb, the mother ever going <!-- Page 28 --> longer with a girl than with a boy,
which makes the account differ; for a female formed in thirty days
does not move until the seventieth day, and is born in the seventh
month; when she is formed on the fortieth day, she does not move
till the eightieth and is born in the eighth month; but, if she be
perfectly formed on the forty-fifth day she moves on the ninetieth,
and the child is born in the ninth month; but if she that is formed
on the sixtieth day, moves on the one hundred and tenth day, she
will be born in the tenth month. I treat the more largely of love
that the reader may know that the reasonable soul is not propagated
by the parents, but is infused by the Almighty, when the child has
its perfect form, and is exactly distinguished in its
lineaments.</p>
<p>Now, as the life of every other creature, as Moses shows, is in
the blood, so the life of man consists in the soul, which although
subject to passion, by reason of the gross composures of the body,
in which it has a temporary confinement, yet it is immortal and
cannot in itself corrupt or suffer change, it being a spark of the
Divine Mind. And that every man has a peculiar soul plainly appears
by the vast difference between the will, judgment, opinions,
manners, and affections in men. This David observes when he says:
"God hath fashioned the hearts <!-- Page 29 --> and minds of men, and has given to every one his
own being and a soul of its own nature." Hence Solomon rejoiced
that God had given him a soul, and a body agreeable to it. It has
been disputed among the learned in what part of the body the soul
resides; some are of opinion its residence is in the middle of the
heart, and from thence communicates itself to every part, which
Solomon (Prov. iv. 23) seems to confirm when he says: "Keep thy
heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life."
But many curious physicians, searching the works of nature in man's
anatomy, do affirm that its chief seat is in the brain, from whence
proceed the senses, the faculties, and actions, diffusing the
operations of the soul through all parts of the body, whereby it is
enlivened with heat and force to the heart, by the arteries,
corodities, or sleepy arteries, which part upon the throat; which,
if they happen to be broken or cut, they cause barrenness, and if
stopped an apoplexy; for there must necessarily be ways through
which the spirits, animal and vital, may have intercourse and
convey native heat from the soul. For though the soul has its chief
seat in one place, it operates in every part, exercising every
member which are the soul's instruments, by which she discovers her
power. But if it happen that any of the original parts are out of
<!-- Page 30 --> tune, its whole
work is confused, as appears in idiots and mad men; though, in some
of them, the soul, by a vigorous exertion of its power, recovers
its innate strength and they become right after a long despondency
in mind, but in others it is not recovered again in this life. For,
as fire under ashes, or the sun obscured from our sight by thick
clouds, afford not their native lustre, so the soul, overwhelmed in
moist or morbid matter, is darkened and reason thereby overclouded;
and though reason shines less in children than it does in such as
are arrived at maturity, yet no man must imagine that the soul of
an infant grows up with the child, for then would it again decay;
but it suits itself to nature's weakness, and the imbecility of the
body wherein it is placed, that it may operate the better. And as
the body is more capable of recovering its influence, so the soul
does more and more exert its faculties, having force and endowment
at the time it enters the form of a child in the womb; for its
substance can receive nothing less. And thus much to prove that the
soul does not come from the parents, but is infused by God. I shall
next prove its immortality and demonstrate the certainty of our
resurrection.</p>
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<h4>OF THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SOUL</h4>
<p>That the soul of man is a Divine ray, infused by the Sovereign
Creator, I have already proved, and now come to show that whatever
immediately proceeds from Him, and participates of His nature, must
be as immortal as its original; for, though all other creatures are
endowed with life and motion, they yet lack a reasonable soul, and
from thence it is concluded that their life is in their blood, and
that being corruptible they perish and are no more; but man being
endowed with a reasonable soul and stamped with a Divine image, is
of a different nature, and though his body is corruptible, yet his
soul being of an immortal nature cannot perish; but at the
dissolution of the body returns to God who gave it, either to
receive reward or punishment. Now, that the body can sin of itself
is impossible, because wanting the soul, which is the principle of
life, it cannot act nor proceed to anything either good or evil;
for could it do so, it might even sin in the grave. But it is plain
that after death there is a cessation; for as death leaves us so
judgment will find us.</p>
<p>Now, reason having evidently demonstrated the soul's
immortality, the Holy Scriptures do abundantly give testimony of
the truth of the <!-- Page 32 --> resurrection, as the reader may see by perusing the
14th and 19th chapters of Job and 5th of John. I shall, therefore,
leave the further discussion of this matter to divines, whose
province it is, and return to treat of the works of nature.</p>
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