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| Of the Particular Works of God, More Especially of Man. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXXII.—Of the Particular
Works of God, More Especially of Man.
47. Thanks to Thee, O Lord. We behold the heaven and
the earth, whether the corporeal part, superior and inferior, or the
spiritual and corporeal creature; and in the embellishment of these
parts, whereof the universal mass of the world or the universal
creation consisteth, we see light made, and divided from the
darkness. We see the firmament of heaven,1424
1424 In his Retractations, ii. 6, he says:
“Non satis considerate dictum est; res enem in abdito est
valde.” | whether the primary body of the
world between the spiritual upper waters and the corporeal lower
waters, or—because this also is called heaven—this expanse of
air, through which wander the fowls of heaven, between the waters
which are in vapours borne above them, and which in clear nights
drop down in dew, and those which being heavy flow along the earth.
We behold the waters gathered together through the plains of the
sea; and the dry land both void and formed, so as to be visible and
compact, and the matter of herbs and trees. We behold the lights
shining from above,—the sun to serve the day, the moon and the
stars to cheer the night; and that by all these, times should be
marked and noted. We behold on every side a humid element, fruitful
with fishes, beasts, and birds; because the density of the air,
which bears up the flights of birds, is increased by the exhalation
of the waters.1425
1425 Compare De Gen. con. Manich. ii. 15. | We behold
the face of the earth furnished with terrestrial creatures, and
man, created after Thy image and likeness, in that very image and
likeness of Thee (that is, the power of reason and understanding)
on account of which he was set over all irrational creatures. And
as in his soul there is one power which rules by directing, another
made subject that it might obey, so also for the man was
corporeally made a woman,1426
1426 “‘Concipiendam,’ or the reading may be
‘concupiscendam,’ according to St. Augustin’s interpretation
of Gen. iii. 16, in the De Gen. con.
Manich. ii. 15. ‘As an instance hereof was woman made, who is
in the order of things made subject to the man; that what appears
more evidently in two human beings, the man and the woman, may be
contemplated in the one, man; viz. that the inward man, as it were
manly reason, should have in subjection the appetite of the soul,
whereby we act through the bodily members.’”—E. B. P. | who, in the mind of her rational
understanding should also have a like nature, in the sex, however,
of her body should be in like manner subject to the sex of her
husband, as the appetite of action is subjected by reason of the
mind, to conceive the skill of acting rightly. These things we
behold, and they are severally good, and all very good.
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