Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| An Appeal to the History of Creation. True Meaning of the Term Beginning, Which the Heretic Curiously Wrests to an Absurd Sense. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XIX.—An Appeal to the History of Creation. True Meaning of the
Term Beginning, Which the Heretic Curiously Wrests to an Absurd
Sense.
But I shall appeal to the original
document6316
6316 Originale
instrumentum: which may mean “the document which treats of the
origin of all things.” | of Moses, by help
of which they on the other side vainly endeavour to prop up their
conjectures, with the view, of course, of appearing to have the support
of that authority which is indispensable in such an inquiry. They have
found their opportunity, as is usual with heretics, in wresting the
plain meaning of certain words. For instance the very
beginning,6317 when God made the
heaven and the earth, they will construe as if it meant something
substantial and embodied,6318 to be regarded as
Matter. We, however, insist on the proper signification of every word,
and say that principium means
beginning,—being a term which is suitable to represent things
which begin to exist. For nothing which has come into being is without
a beginning, nor can this its commencement be at any other moment than
when it begins to have existence. Thus principium or beginning,
is simply a term of inception, not the name of a substance. Now,
inasmuch as the heaven and the earth are the principal works of God,
and since, by His making them first, He constituted them in an especial
manner the beginning of His creation, before all things else, with good
reason does the Scripture preface (its record of creation) with the
words, “In the beginning God made the heaven and the
earth;”6319 just as it would
have said, “At last God made the heaven and the earth,” if
God had created these after all the rest. Now, if the beginning
is a substance, the end must also be material. No doubt, a substantial
thing6320
6320 Substantivum
aliquid. | may be the beginning of some other thing
which may be formed out of it; thus the clay is the beginning of the
vessel, and the seed is the beginning of the plant. But when we employ
the word beginning in this sense of origin, and not in that of
order, we do not omit to mention also the name of that
particular thing which we regard as the origin of the other. On the
other hand,6321 if we were to make
such a statement as this, for example, “In the beginning the
potter made a basin or a water-jug,” the word beginning will not
here indicate a material substance (for I have not mentioned the clay,
which is the beginning in this sense, but only the order
of the work, meaning that the potter made the basin and the jug first,
before anything else—intending afterwards to make the rest. It
is, then, to the order of the works that the word beginning has
reference, not to the origin of their substances. I might also explain
this word beginning in another way, which would not, however, be
inapposite.6322 The Greek term for
beginning, which is ἀρχή, admits the sense not only of priority
of order, but of power as well; whence princes and magistrates are
called ἀρχοντες.
Therefore in this sense too, beginning may be taken for princely
authority and power. It was, indeed, in His transcendent authority and
power, that God made the heaven and the earth.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|