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| Chapter XV.—Of the Fourth Day. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XV.—Of the Fourth Day.
On the fourth day the luminaries were made;
because God, who possesses foreknowledge, knew the follies of the vain
philosophers, that they were going to say, that the things which grow
on the earth are produced from the heavenly bodies, so as to exclude
God. In order, therefore, that the truth might be obvious, the plants and
seeds were produced prior to the heavenly bodies, for what is posterior
cannot produce that which is prior. And these contain the pattern and
type of a great mystery. For the sun is a type of God, and the moon of
man. And as the sun far surpasses the moon in power and glory, so far
does God surpass man. And as the sun remains ever full, never becoming
less, so does God always abide perfect, being full of all power, and
understanding, and wisdom, and immortality, and all good. But the moon
wanes monthly, and in a manner dies, being a type of man; then it is
born again, and is crescent, for a pattern of the future resurrection.
In like manner also the
three days which were before the
luminaries,583
583 Following
Wolf’s reading. | are types of the Trinity,584
584 Τριάδος.
[The earliest use of this word “Trinity.” It seems to have
been used by this writer in his lost works, also; and, as a learned
friends suggests, the use he makes of it is familiar. He does not lug
it in as something novel: “types of the Trinity,” he says,
illustrating an accepted word, not introducing a new one.] |
of God, and His Word, and His wisdom.585
585 [An eminent authority says, “It is certain,
that, according to the notions of Theophilus, God, His Word, and
His wisdom constitute a Trinity; and it should seem a Trinity of
persons.” He notes that the title σοφία, is here
assigned to the Holy Spirit, although he himself elsewhere gives this
title to the Son (book ii. cap. x., supra), as is more usual
with the Fathers.” Consult Kaye’s Justin Martyr,
p. 157. Ed. 1853.] | And the fourth is the type of man, who needs
light, that so there may be God, the Word, wisdom, man. Wherefore also
on the fourth day the lights were made. The disposition of the stars,
too, contains a type of the arrangement and order of the righteous
and pious, and of those who keep the law and commandments of God. For
the brilliant and bright stars are an imitation of the prophets, and
therefore they remain fixed, not declining, nor passing from place
to place. And those which hold the second place in brightness, are
types of the people of the righteous. And those, again, which change
their position, and flee from place to place, which also are called
planets,586
586 i.e., wandering
stars. | they too are a type of the men who have wandered from
God, abandoning His law and commandments.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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