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| Monoïmus on the Sabbath; Allegorizes the Rod of Moses; Notion Concerning the Decalogue. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VII.—Monoïmus on the Sabbath; Allegorizes the
Rod of Moses; Notion Concerning the Decalogue.
The world, then, as Moses says, was made in six
days, that is, by six powers, which (are inherent) in the one tittle of
the iota. (But) the seventh (day, which is) a rest and Sabbath,
has been produced from the Hebdomad, which is over earth, and water,
and fire, and air. And from these (elements) the world has been
formed by the one tittle. For cubes, and octahedrons, and
pyramids, and all figures similar to these, out of which consist fire,
air, water, (and) earth, have arisen from numbers which are
comprehended in that simple tittle of the iota. And this (tittle)
constitutes a perfect son of a perfect man. When, therefore, he
says, Moses mentions that the rod was changeably brandished for the
(introduction of the) plagues throughout Egypt934 —now these plagues, he says, are
allegorically expressed symbols of the creation935
935 The
plagues, being transformations, were no doubt considered symbols of
creation, in accordance with the view of the ancient philosophers, that
creation itself brought nothing into existence, but simply altered the
disposition of already existing elements. [Gen. i. 2. See Dr. Chalmers’
Astronomical Discourses.] | —he did not (as a symbol) for more
plagues than ten shape the rod. Now this (rod) constitutes one
tittle of the iota, and is (both) twofold (and) various. This
succession of ten plagues is, he says, the mundane creation. For
all things, by being stricken, bring forth and bear fruit, just like
vines. Man, he says, bursts forth, and is forcibly separated from
man by being severed by a certain stroke. (And this takes place)
in order that (man) may be generated, and may declare the law which
Moses ordained, who received (it) from God. Conformably936
936 It is
very much after this allegorical mode that Philo Judæus interprets
the Mosaic law and history. | with that one tittle, the law constitutes
the series of the ten commandments which expresses allegorically the
divine mysteries of (those) precepts. For, he says, all knowledge
of the universe is contained in what relates to the succession of the
ten plagues and the series of the ten commandments. And no one is
acquainted with this (knowledge) who is (of the number) of those that
are deceived concerning the offspring of the woman. If, however,
you say that the Pentateuch constitutes the entire law, it is from the
Pentad which is comprehended in the one tittle. But the entire is
for those who have not been altogether perfected in understanding a
mystery, a new and not antiquated feast, legal, (and) everlasting, a
passover of the Lord God kept unto our generations, by those who are
able to discern (this mystery), at the commencement of the fourteenth
day, which is the beginning of a decade from which, he says, they
reckon. For the monad, as far as fourteen, is the summary of that
one (tittle) of the perfect number. For one, two, three, four,
become ten; and this is the one tittle. But from fourteen until
one-and-twenty, he asserts that there is an Hebdomad which inheres in
the one tittle of the world, and constitutes an unleavened creature in
all these. For in what respect, he says, would the one tittle
require any substance such as leaven (derived) from without for the
Lord’s Passover, the eternal feast, which is given for generation
upon generation?937
937
[Exod. xii. 17. Comp. 1 Cor. v. 7,
8.] | For the
entire world and all causes of creation constitute a passover, (i.e.,)
a feast of the Lord. For God rejoices in the conversion of the
creation, and this is accomplished by ten strokes of the one
tittle. And this (tittle) is Moses’ rod, which was given by
God into the hand of Moses. And with this (rod Moses) smites the
Egyptians, for the purpose of altering bodies,—as, for instance,
water into blood; and the rest of (material) things similarly with
these,—(as, for example,) the locusts, which is a symbol of
grass. And by this he means the alteration of the elements into
flesh; “for all flesh,” he says, “is
grass.”938 These
men, nevertheless receive even the entire law after some such manner;
adopting very probably, as I think, the opinions of those of the Greeks
who affirm that there are Substance, and Quality, and Quantity, and
Relation, and Place, and Time, and Position, and Action, and
Possession, and Passion.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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