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Bridgewater Treatises and the Graham Lectures are thus foretold in these brief sentences."

We go farther than Dr. Hill, and say the account not only sets forth the logical order of thought, but approximately the actual order of events.* Let us see.

1. The elements in chaotic darkness and confusion, followed by light resulting from chemical action.

Comparison of data.

2. The separation of the earth and heavens by an intervening firmament, together with the upheaval of mountains and corresponding depression of ocean beds.

3. The appearance of life in the form of vegetation, as will appear in the next lecture.

4. Appearance of the sun. If the theory developed in the second lecture be correct, this occurred at a somewhat advanced stage of the work. There was an extended lapse between the appearance of cosmic and solar light, though we have no means of calculating the actual or even probable length of the period.

5. Appearance of the animal world.

6. The appearance of man-and

7. If you please, rest from the work of creating: no additions having been made to the forms

* Dr. Hill regards this as one of the secondary meanings that may be found in the record in Genesis. It seems to us primary.

of life since the introduction of man.

There is no

intimation here of weariness, or exhausted power as some inconsiderately assume. The Supreme Spirit may be as active in guiding and preserving what he created as he was in the act of creating. The meaning is, simply, that at this point he ceased to introduce new types of life.

In what is usually called a second account of the creation, beginning at the fourth verse of the second chapter, the order of the first is reversed; that is to say, the order of time is not ob served. The writer begins with man as the crown of the creation, and proceeds, in order, to those of less importance.

The reader is left to consider all the facts, together with the suggestions offered, and reach his own conclusion.

We return now from this digression, to mark, in closing, the point we reach in the development of our subject. We began Conclusion. with the earth as it emerged from the

ordeal by fire to have a thin crust about it, but shrouded still in a bed of fog and noxious gases. We have traced its progress as the vaporous surroundings gradually cleared, and a wide expanse separated the clouds that were above from the seas that were beneath. We have traced it, also, as the crust thickened and volcanic vents gave rise

to hills and mountains, here and there. And then, as the crust stiffened and grew stronger, so that it was not easily broken, the imprisoned forces, like raging, struggling giants, heaved it into huge folds here and depressed it into deep basins there, till the seas gathered into the deep places of the earth, and "the dry land appeared."

IV.

PLANT LIFE.

"Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit-tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself.”

"And then

The vacant hills did throb with life; a d

The waiting fields put on parti-colored robes,
As for a bridal day.”

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