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| Concerning the Opinion of Those Who Explain It ‘At First He Made.’ PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXIX.—Concerning the
Opinion of Those Who Explain It “At First He Made.”
40. But he who does not otherwise understand,
“In the beginning He made,” than if it were said, “At first
He made,” can only truly understand heaven and earth of the
matter of heaven and earth, namely, of the universal, that is,
intelligible and corporeal creation. For if he would have it of the
universe. as already formed, it might rightly be asked of him:
“If at first God made this, what made He afterwards?” And after
the universe he will find nothing; thereupon must he, though
unwilling, hear, “How is this first, if there is nothing
afterwards?” But when he says that God made matter first
formless, then formed, he is not absurd if he be but able to
discern what precedes by eternity, what by time, what by choice,
what by origin. By eternity, as God is before all things; by time,
as the flower is before the fruit; by choice, as the fruit is
before the flower; by origin, as sound is before the tune. Of these
four, the first and last which I have referred to are with much
difficulty understood; the two middle very easily. For an uncommon
and too lofty vision it is to behold, O Lord, Thy Eternity,
immutably making things mutable, and thereby before them. Who is so
acute of mind as to be able without great labour to discover how
the sound is prior to the tune, because a tune is a formed sound;
and a thing not formed may exist, but that which existeth not
cannot be formed?1160
1160 See a similar argument in his Con. adv. Leg. et
Proph. i. 9; and sec. 29, and note, above. | So is the matter prior to that
which is made from it; not prior because it maketh it, since itself
is rather made, nor is it prior by an interval of time. For we do
not as to time first utter formless sounds without singing, and
then adapt or fashion them into the form of a song, just as wood or
silver from which a chest or vessel is made. Because such materials
do by time
also precede the forms of the things which are made from them; but
in singing this is not so. For when it is sung, its sound is heard
at the same time; seeing there is not first a formless sound, which
is afterwards formed into a song. For as soon as it shall have
first sounded it passeth away; nor canst thou find anything of it,
which being recalled thou canst by art compose. And, therefore, the
song is absorbed in its own sound, which sound of it is its matter.
Because this same is formed that it may be a tune; and therefore,
as I was saying, the matter of the sound is prior to the form of
the tune, not before through any power of making it a tune; for
neither is a sound the composer of the tune, but is sent forth from
the body and is subjected to the soul of the singer, that from it
he may form a tune. Nor is it first in time, for it is given forth
together with the tune; nor first in choice, for a sound is not
better than a tune, since a tune is not merely a sound, but a
beautiful sound. But it is first in origin, because the tune is not
formed that it may become a sound, but the sound is formed that it
may become a tune. By this example, let him who is able understand
that the matter of things was first made, and called heaven and
earth, because out of it heaven and earth were made. Not that it
was made first in time, because the forms of things give rise to
time,1161
1161 See xi. sec. 29, above, and Gillies’ note
thereon; and compare with it Augustin’s De. Gen. ad Lit.
v. 5: “In vain we inquire after time before the creation as
though we could find time before time, for if there were no motion
of the spiritual or corporeal creatures whereby through the present
the future might succeed the past, there would be no time at all.
But the creature could not have motion unless it were. Time,
therefore, begins rather from the creation, than creation from
time, but both are from God.” | but that
was formless; but now, in time, it is perceived together with its
form. Nor yet can anything be related concerning that matter,
unless as if it were prior in time, while it is considered last
(because things formed are assuredly superior to things formless),
and is preceded by the Eternity of the Creator, so that there might
be out of nothing that from which something might be
made.
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