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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TWELVE
CHAPTER
XVII
24. For they say: "Even if these things are true, still Moses did not refer
to these two things when he said, by divine revelation, `In the beginning God
created the heaven and the earth.' By the term `heaven' he did not mean that
spiritual or intelligible created order which always beholds the face of God.
And by the term `earth' he was not referring to unformed matter."
"What
then do these terms mean?"
They reply, "That man [Moses] meant what we mean; this is what he was saying
in those terms." "What is that?"
"By
the terms of heaven and earth," they say, "he wished first to indicate universally
and briefly this whole visible world; then after this, by an enumeration of
the days, he could point out, one by one, all the things that it has pleased
the Holy Spirit to reveal in this way. For the people to whom he spoke were
rude and carnal, so that he judged it prudent that only those works of God which
were visible should be mentioned to them."
But they do agree that the phrases, "The earth was invisible and unformed,"
and "The darkened abyss," may not inappropriately be understood to refer to
this unformed matter--and that out of this, as it is subsequently related, all
the visible things which are known to all were made and set in order during
those specified "days."
25. But now, what if another one should say, "This same formlessness and chaos
of matter was first mentioned by the name of heaven and earth because, out of
it, this visible world--with all its entities which clearly appear in it and
which we are accustomed to be called by the name of heaven and earth--was created
and perfected"? And what if still another should say: "The invisible and visible
nature is quite fittingly called heaven and earth. Thus, the whole creation
which God has made in his wisdom--that is, in the beginning--was included under
these two terms. Yet, since all things have been made, not from the essence
of God, but from nothing; and because they are not the same reality that God
is; and because there is in them all a certain mutability, whether they abide
as the eternal house of God abides or whether they are changed as the soul and
body of man are changed--then the common matter of all things invisible and
visible (still formless but capable of receiving form) from which heaven and
earth were to be created (that is, the creature already fashioned, invisible
as well as visible)--all this was spoken of in the same terms by which the invisible
and unformed earth and the darkness over the abyss would be called. There was
this difference, however: that the invisible and unformed earth is to be understood
as having corporeal matter before it had any manner of form; but the darkness
over the abyss was spiritual matter, before its unlimited fluidity was
harnessed, and before it was enlightened by Wisdom."
26. And if anyone wished, he might also say, "The entities
already perfected and formed, invisible and visible, are
not signified by the terms `heaven and earth,' when it reads,
`In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth';
instead, the unformed beginning of things, the matter capable
of receiving form and being made was called by these terms--because
the chaos was contained in it and was not yet distinguished
by qualities and forms, which have now been arranged in
their own orders and are called heaven and earth: the former
a spiritual creation, the latter a physical creation."
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