|
|
| print this
AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
ELEVEN
CHAPTER
V
7. But how didst thou make the heaven and the earth, and what was the
tool of such a mighty work as thine? For it was not like a human worker fashioning
body from body, according to the fancy of his mind, able somehow or other to
impose on it a form which the mind perceived in itself by its inner eye (yet
how should even he be able to do this, if thou hadst not made that mind?). He
imposes the form on something already existing and having some sort of being,
such as clay, or stone or wood or gold or such like (and where would these things
come from if thou hadst not furnished them?). For thou madest his body for the
artisan, and thou madest the mind which directs the limbs; thou madest the matter
from which he makes anything; thou didst create the capacity by which he understands
his art and sees within his mind what he may do with the things before him;
thou gavest him his bodily sense by which, as if he had an interpreter, he may
communicate from mind to matter what he proposes to do and report back to his
mind what has been done, that the mind may consult with the Truth which presideth
over it as to whether what is done is well done.
All these things praise thee, the Creator of them all. But
how didst thou make them? How, O God, didst thou make the
heaven and earth? For truly, neither in heaven nor on earth
didst thou make heaven and earth--nor in the air nor in
the waters, since all of these also belong to the heaven
and the earth. Nowhere in the whole world didst thou make
the whole world, because there was no place where it could
be made before it was made. And thou didst not hold anything
in thy hand from which to fashion the heaven and the earth,[421] for where couldst thou have gotten
what thou hadst not made in order to make something with
it? Is there, indeed, anything at all except because thou
art? Thus thou didst speak and they were made,[422] and by thy Word thou didst make
them all.
|

|