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| Heaven and Earth Were Made ‘In the Beginning;’ Afterwards the World, During Six Days, from Shapeless Matter. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VIII.—Heaven and Earth
Were Made “In the Beginning;” Afterwards the World, During Six
Days, from Shapeless Matter.
8. But that heaven of heavens was for Thee, O
Lord; but the earth, which Thou hast given to the sons of men,1083 to be seen
and touched, was not such as now we see and touch. For it was
invisible and “without form,”1084 and there was a deep over which
there was not light; or, darkness was over the deep, that is, more
than in the deep. For this deep of waters, now visible, has, even
in its depths, a light suitable to its nature, perceptible in some
manner unto fishes and creeping things in the bottom of it. But the
entire deep was almost nothing, since hitherto it was altogether
formless; yet there was then that which could be formed. For Thou,
O Lord, hast made the world of a formless matter, which matter, out
of nothing, Thou hast made almost nothing, out of which to make
those great things which we, sons of men, wonder at. For very
wonderful is this corporeal heaven, of which firmament, between
water and water, the second day after the creation of light, Thou
saidst, Let it be made, and it was made.1085 Which firmament Thou calledst
heaven, that is, the heaven of this earth and sea, which Thou
madest on the third day, by giving a visible shape to the formless
matter which Thou madest before all days. For even already hadst
Thou made a heaven before all days, but that was the heaven of this
heaven; because in the beginning Thou hadst made heaven and earth.
But the earth itself which Thou hadst made was formless matter,
because it was invisible and without form, and darkness was upon
the deep. Of which invisible and formless earth, of which
formlessness, of which almost nothing, Thou mightest make all these
things of which this changeable world consists, and yet consisteth
not; whose very changeableness appears in this, that times can be
observed and numbered in it. Because times are made by the changes
of things, while the shapes, whose matter is the invisible earth
aforesaid, are varied and turned.
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