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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK THIRTEEN
CHAPTER
XXX
45. And I heard this, O Lord my God, and drank up a drop
of sweetness from thy truth, and understood that there are
some men to whom thy works are displeasing, who say that
many of them thou didst make under the compulsion of necessity--such
as the pattern of the heavens and the courses of the stars--and
that thou didst not make them out of what was thine, but
that they were already created elsewhere and from other
sources. It was thus [they say] that thou didst collect
and fashion and weave them together, as if from thy conquered
enemies thou didst raise up the walls of the universe; so
that, built into the ramparts of the building, they might
not be able a second time to rebel against thee. And, even
of other things, they say that thou didst neither make them
nor arrange them--for example, all flesh and all the very
small living creatures, and all things fastened to the earth
by their roots. But [they say] a hostile mind and an alien
nature--not created by thee and in every way contrary to
thee--begot and framed all these things in the nether parts
of the world.[647] They who speak thus are mad [insani],
since they do not see thy works through thy Spirit, nor
recognize thee in them.
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