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| Chapter IV.—Absurd Opinions of the Philosophers Concerning God. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter IV.—Absurd Opinions of the Philosophers Concerning God.
Some of the philosophers of the Porch say that there
is no God at all; or, if there is, they say that He cares for none but
Himself; and these views the folly of Epicurus and Chrysippus has set
forth at large. And others say that all things are produced without
external agency, and that the world is uncreated, and that nature is
eternal;550
550 This is according
to the Benedictine reading: the reading of Wolf, “nature is
left to itself,” is also worthy of consideration. |
and have dared to give out that there is no providence of God at
all, but maintain that God is only each man’s conscience. And
others again maintain that the spirit which pervades all things is
God. But Plato and those of his school acknowledge indeed that God
is uncreated, and the Father and Maker of all things; but then they
maintain that matter as well as God is uncreated, and aver that it
is coeval with God. But if God is uncreated and matter uncreated,
God is no longer, according to the Platonists, the Creator of all
things, nor, so far as their opinions hold, is the monarchy551
551 That is, the existence of God
as sole first principle. | of God established. And further,
as God, because He is uncreated, is also unalterable; so if matter,
too, were uncreated, it also would be unalterable, and equal to God;
for that which is created is mutable and alterable, but that which is
uncreated is immutable and unalterable. And what great thing is it if
God made the world out of existent materials?552
552 Literally, “subject-matter.” |
For even a human artist, when he gets material from some one, makes of it
what he pleases. But the power of God is manifested in this, that out of
things that are not He makes whatever He pleases; just as the bestowal
of life and motion is the prerogative of no other than God alone. For
even man makes indeed an image, but reason and breath, or feeling, he
cannot give to what he has made. But God has this property in excess of
what man can do, in that He makes a work, endowed with reason, life,
sensation. As, therefore, in all these respects God is more powerful
than man, so also in this; that out of things that are not He creates and
has created things that are, and whatever He pleases, as He pleases.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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