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| He Mentions Five Explanations of the Words of Genesis I. I. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XVII.—He Mentions Five
Explanations of the Words of Genesis I. I.
24. For they say, “Although these things be
true, yet Moses regarded not those two things, when by divine
revelation he said, ‘In the beginning God created the heaven and
the earth.’1130 Under the
name of heaven he did not indicate that spiritual or intellectual
creature which always beholds the face of God; nor under the name
of earth, that shapeless matter.” “What then?” “That
man,” say they, “meant as we say; this it is that he declared
by those words.” “What is that?” “By the name of heaven and
earth,” say they, “did he first wish to set forth, universally
and briefly, all this visible world, that afterwards by the
enumeration of the days he might distribute, as if in detail, all
those things which it pleased the Holy Spirit thus to reveal. For
such men were that rude and carnal people to which he spoke, that
he judged it prudent that only those works of God as were visible
should be entrusted to them.” They agree, however, that the earth
invisible and formless, and the darksome deep (out of which it is
subsequently pointed out that all these visible things, which are
known to all, were made and set in order during those “days”),
may not unsuitably be understood of this formless
matter.
25. What, now, if another should say “That
this same formlessness and confusion of matter was first introduced
under the name of heaven and earth, because out of it this visible
world, with all those natures which most manifestly appear in it,
and which is wont to be called by the name of heaven and earth, was
created and perfected”? But what if another should say, that
“That invisible and visible nature is not inaptly called heaven
and earth; and that consequently the universal creation, which God
in His wisdom hath made,—that is, ‘in the begining,’—was
comprehended under these two words. Yet, since all things have been
made, not of the substance of God, but out of nothing1131
1131 See p. 165, note 4, above. | (because
they are not that same thing that God is, and there is in them all
a certain mutability, whether they remain, as doth the eternal
house of God, or be changed, as are the soul and body of man),
therefore, that the common matter of all things invisible and
visible,—as yet shapeless, but still capable of form,—out of
which was to be created heaven and earth (that is, the invisible
and visible creature already formed), was spoken of by the same
names by which the earth invisible and formless and the darkness
upon the deep would be called; with this difference, however, that
the earth invisible and formless is understood as corporeal matter,
before it had any manner of form, but the darkness upon the deep as
spiritual matter, before it was restrained at all of its unlimited
fluidity, and before the enlightening of wisdom.”
26. Should any man wish, he may still say, “That
the already perfected and formed natures, invisible and visible,
are not signified under the name of heaven and earth when it is
read, ‘In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth;’
but that the yet same formless beginning of things, the matter
capable of being formed and made, was called by these names,
because contained in it there were these confused things not as yet
distinguished by their qualities and forms, the which now being
digested in their own orders, are called heaven and earth, the
former being the spiritual, the latter the corporeal
creature.”
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