case. 2. As it is now in man after the fall.
The light of nature and image of God in man is not
totally abolished and utterly razed by the fall; there
remain still some relics and fragments thereof, some
glimmerings, dawnings, and common principles of light,
both touching piety to God, equity to man, and sobriety
to a man’s self, &c., as is evident by comparing
these places, Psal. xix. 1, 2, &c., Acts xiv. 17,
and xvii. 27, 28; Rom. i. 18-21, and ii. 12, 14, 15;
2 Cor. v. 1: in which places it is plain, 1.
That the book of the creature is able (without the
scriptures, or divine revelations) to make known to
man much of God, his invisible Godhead and attributes,
Psalm xix. 1, 2, &c.; Acts xiv. 17, and xvii. 27,
28; yea, so far as to leave them without excuse, Rom.
i. 18-21. 2. That there remained so much natural
light in the minds even of the heathens, as to render
them capable of instruction by the creature in the
invisible things of God; yea, and that they actually
in some measure did know God, and because they walked
not up to this knowledge, were plagued, Rom. i. 18-21,
24, &c. 3. That the work of the law (though not
the right ground, manner, and end of that work, which
is the blessing of the new covenant, Jer. xxxi. 33;
Heb. viii. 10) was materially written in some measure
in their hearts. Partly because they did by nature
without the law the things contained in the law, so
being a law to themselves, Rom. ii. 14, 15; partly,
because they by nature forbore some of those sins
which were forbidden in the law, and were practised
by some that had the law, as 2 Cor. v. 1; and partly,
because according to the good and bad they did, &c.,
their conscience did accuse or excuse, Rom. ii. 15.
Now conscience doth not accuse or excuse but according
to some rule, principle, or law of God, (which is
above the conscience,) or at least so supposed to be.
And they had no law but the imperfect characters thereof
in their own hearts, which were not quite obliterated
by the fall. Now so far as this light of nature
after the fall, is a true relic of the light of nature
before the fall, that which is according to this light
may be counted of divine right in matters of religion,
which is the next thing to be proved.
For the second, how it may be proved that what things
in religion are evident by, or consonant to this true
light of nature, are of divine right. Thus briefly,
1. Because that knowledge which by the light
of nature Gentiles have of the invisible things of
God, is a beam of divine light, as the apostle, speaking
of the Gentiles’ light of nature, saith, That
which may be known of God is manifest in them—for
God hath showed it to them. For the invisible
things, &c., Rom. i. 19, 20. God himself is the
Fountain and Author of the true light of nature; hence
some not unfitly call it the divine light of nature,
not only because it hath God for its object, but also
God for its principle; now that which is according
to God’s manifestation, must needs be of divine
right.