For if there had not been any other part of the
world against Nature, but every thing had been in the
same place and quality it naturally ought to be, without
standing in need of any change or transposition or having
had any occasion for it from the beginning, I know not
what the work of Divine Providence is or in what it consists, or of what Jupiter has been the father, creator, or
worker. For there would not in a camp be any need of
the art of ranging and ordering of battles, if every soldier
of himself knew and understood his rank, place, and
station, and the opportunity he ought to take and keep;
nor would there be any want of gardeners or builders, if
water were of itself framed to flow where it is necessary,
and irrigate such plants as stand in need of watering, or if
bricks, timber, and stones would of their own inclinations
and natural motion range and settle themselves in due and
fitting places and orders. Now if this discourse manifestly
takes away Providence, and if the ordering and distinction
of things that are in the world belongs to God, why should
we wonder at Nature's having been so disposed and ordained by him, that the fire should be here, and the stars
there, and again the earth should be situated here below,
and the moon above, lodged in a prison found out by
reason, more sure and straight than that which was first
ordained by Nature? For if it were of absolute necessity
that all things should follow their natural instinct and
move according to the motion given them by Nature,
neither the Sun, Venus, nor any other planet would any
more run a circular course; for light and fiery substances
have by Nature their motion directly upwards. And if
[p. 251]
perhaps Nature itself receives this permutation and change
by reason of the place, so that fire should here in a direct
line tend upwards, but being once arrived at heaven, should
turn round with the revolution of the heavens; what wonder would it be, if heavy and terrestrial bodies, being in
like manner out of their natural place, were vanquished
by the ambient air, and forced to take another sort of motion? For it cannot with any reason be said that heaven
has by Nature the power to take away from light things
the property of mounting directly upwards, and cannot
likewise have the force to overcome heavy things and such
as tend downwards; but that sometimes making use of
this power, and sometimes of the proper nature of the
things, it still orders every thing for the best.
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