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| Allegorical Explanation of the Firmament and Upper Works, Ver. 6. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XV.—Allegorical
Explanation of the Firmament and Upper Works, Ver. 6.
16. Or who but Thou, our God, made for us that
firmament1260 of
authority over us in Thy divine Scripture?1261
1261 See sec. 33, below, and references there
given. | As it is said, For heaven shall be
folded up like a scroll;1262 and now it is extended over us
like a skin.1263
1263 Ps. civ. 2; in the Vulg. being,
“extendens cælum sicut pellem.” The LXX. agrees with
the Vulg. in translating
כַּיְרִיעָה, “as a curtain,” by “as a skin.” | For Thy
divine Scripture is of more sublime authority, since those mortals
through whom Thou didst dispense it unto us underwent mortality.
And Thou knowest, O Lord, Thou knowest, how Thou with skins didst
clothe men1264
1264 Gen. iii. 21. Skins he makes the emblems of
mortality, as being taken from dead animals. See p. 112, note 8,
above. | when by
sin they became mortal. Whence as a skin hast Thou stretched out
the firmament of Thy Book;1265
1265 That is, the firmament of Scripture was after
man’s sin stretched over him as a parchment scroll,—stretched
over him for his enlightenment by the ministry of mortal men. This
idea is enlarged on in Ps. viii. 4, sec. 7, etc., xviii.
sec. 2, xxxii. 6, 7, and cxlvi. 8, sec. 15. | that is to say, Thy harmonious
words, which by the ministry of mortals Thou hast spread over us.
For by their very death is that solid firmament of authority in Thy
discourses set forth by them more sublimely extended above all
things that are under it, the which, while they were living here,
was not so eminently extended.1266
1266 We have the same idea in Ps. ciii. sec. 8:
“Cum enim viverent nondum erat extenta pellis, nondum erat
extentum cælum, ut tegeret orbem terrarum.” | Thou hadst not as yet spread
abroad the heaven like a skin; Thou hadst not as yet noised
everywhere the report of their deaths.
17. Let us look, O Lord, “upon the heavens,
the work of Thy fingers;”1267 clear from our eyes that mist with
which Thou hast covered them. There is that testimony of Thine
which giveth wisdom unto the little ones.1268 Perfect, O my God, Thy praise out
of the mouth of babes and sucklings.1269 Nor have we known any other books
so destructive to pride, so destructive to the enemy and the
defender,1270
1270 He alludes to the Manichæans. See notes, pp. 67,
81, and 87. | who
resisteth Thy reconciliation in defence of his own sins.1271
1271 See part 2 of note 8 on p. 76, above. | I know
not, O Lord, I know not other such “pure”1272 words which so persuade me to
confession, and make my neck submissive to Thy yoke, and invite me
to serve Thee for nought. Let me understand these things, good
Father. Grant this to me, placed under them; because Thou hast
established these things for those placed under them.
18. Other “waters” there be
“above” this “firmament,” I believe immortal, and removed
from earthly corruption. Let them praise Thy Name,—those
super-celestial people, Thine angels, who have no need to look up
at this firmament, or by reading to attain the knowledge of Thy
Word,—let them praise Thee. For they always behold Thy face,1273 and
therein read without any syllables in time what Thy eternal will
willeth. They read, they choose, they love.1274
1274 “Legunt, eligunt, et diligunt.” | They are always reading; and that
which they read never passeth away. For, by choosing and by loving,
they read the very unchangeableness of Thy counsel. Their book is
not closed, nor is the scroll folded up,1275 because Thou Thyself art this to
them, yea, and art so eternally; because Thou hast appointed them
above this firmament, which Thou hast made firm over the weakness
of the lower people, where they might look up and learn Thy mercy,
announcing in time Thee who hast made times. “For Thy mercy, O
Lord, is in the heavens, and Thy faithfulness reacheth unto the
clouds.”1276 The clouds
pass away, but the heaven remaineth. The preachers of Thy Word pass
away from this life into another; but Thy Scripture is spread
abroad over the people, even to the end of the world. Yea, both
heaven and earth shall pass away, but Thy Words shall not pass
away.1277 Because
the scroll shall be rolled together,1278 and the grass over which it was
spread shall with its goodliness pass away; but Thy Word remaineth
for ever,1279
1279 Isa. xl. 6–8. The law of storms, and that
which regulates the motions of the stars or the ebbing and flowing
of the tides, may change at the “end of the world.” But the
moral law can know no change, for while the first is arbitrary, the
second is absolute. On the difference between moral and natural
law, see Candlish, Reason and Revelation, “Conscience and
the Bible.” | which now
appeareth unto us in the dark image of the clouds, and through the
glass of the heavens, not as it is;1280 because we also, although we be
the well-beloved of Thy Son, yet it hath not yet appeared what we
shall be.1281 He looketh
through the lattice1282 of our flesh, and He is
fair-speaking, and hath inflamed us, and we run after His odours.1283 But
“when He shall appear, then shall we be like Him, for we shall
see Him as He is.”1284 As He is, O Lord, shall we see
Him, although the time be not yet.
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