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| (2) in Time. The Beginning of Creation. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
17. (2) in
Time. The Beginning of Creation.
Again, there is a beginning in a matter of origin, as
might appear in the saying:4531 “In the
beginning God made the heaven and the earth.” This meaning,
however, appears more plainly in the Book of Job in the
passage:4532 “This
is the beginning of God’s creation, made for His angels to mock
at.” One would suppose that the heavens and the earth were
made first, of all that was made at the creation of the world.
But the second passage suggests a better view, namely, that as many
beings were framed with a body, the first made of these was the
creature called dragon, but called in another passage4533 the great whale (leviathan) which the Lord
tamed. We must ask about this; whether, when the saints were
living a blessed life apart from matter and from any body, the dragon,
falling from the pure life, became fit to be bound in matter and in a
body, so that the Lord could say, speaking through storm and clouds,
“This is the beginning of the creation of God, made for His
angels to mock at.” It is possible, however, that the
dragon is not positively the beginning of the creation of the Lord, but
that there were many creatures made with a body for the angels to mock
at, and that the dragon was the first of these, while others could
subsist in a body without such reproach. But it is not so.
For the soul of the sun is placed in a body, and the whole creation, of
which the Apostle says:4534 “The
whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until
now,” and perhaps the following is about the same:
“The creation was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but on
account of Him who subjected it for hope;” so that bodies might
be in vanity, and doing the things of the body, as he who is in the
body must.4535
4535 The text is defective
here. | …One who is in
the body does the things of the body, though unwillingly.
Wherefore the creation was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but
he who does unwillingly the things of the body does what he does for
the sake of hope, as if we should say that Paul desired to remain in
the flesh, not willingly, but on account of hope. For though he
thought it better4536 to be dissolved and
to be with Christ, it was not unreasonable that he should wish to
remain in the flesh for the sake of the benefit to others and of
advancement in the things hoped for, not only by him, but also by those
benefited by him. This meaning of the term
“beginning,” as of origin, will serve us also in the
passage in which Wisdom speaks in the Proverbs.4537 “God,” we read,
“created me the beginning of His ways, for His
works.” Here the term could be interpreted as in the first
application we spoke of, that of a way: “The Lord,”
it says, “created me the beginning of His ways.” One
might assert, and with reason, that God Himself is the beginning of all
things, and might go on to say, as is plain, that the Father is the
beginning of the Son; and the demiurge the beginning of the works of
the demiurge, and that God in a word is the beginning of all that
exists. This view is supported by our: “In the
beginning was the Word.” In the Word one may see the Son,
and because He is in the Father He may be said to be in the
beginning.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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