BOOK IIChapter I.-On the
World.
1. Although all the
discussions in the
preceding book have had
reference to the
world and its
arrangements, it now seems to
follow mat we should
specially re-discuss a few
points respecting the
world itself,
i.e., its beginning and end, or those
dispensations of
Divine Providence which have
taken place between the beginning and the end, or those
events which are
supposed to have
occurred before the
creation of the
world, or are to
take place after the end.
In this
investigation, the first
point which
clearly appears is, that the
world in all its
diversified and
varying conditions is
composed not only of
rational and
diviner natures, and of a
diversity of
bodies, but of
dumb animals,
wild and
tame beasts, of
birds, and of all
things which
live in the
waters; then,
secondly, of
places,
i.e., of the
heaven or
heavens, and of the
earth or
water, as well as of the
air, which is
intermediate, and which they
term aether, and of everything which
proceeds from the
earth or is
born in it.
Seeing, then, there is so
great a
variety in the
world, and so
great a
diversity among
rational beings themselves, on
account of which every other
variety and
diversity also is
supposed to have
come into
existence, what other
cause than this
ought to be
assigned for the
existence of the
world,
especially if we have
regard to that end by
means of which it was
shown in the
preceding book that all
things are to be
restored to their
original condition? And if this should seem to be
logically stated, what other
cause, as we have already
said, are we to
imagine for so
great a
diversity in the
world,
save the
diversity and
variety in the
movements and
declensions of those who
fell from that
primeval unity and
harmony in which they were at first
created by
God, and who,
being driven from that
state of
goodness, and
drawn in
various directions by the
harassing influence of
different motives and
desires, have
changed, according to their
different tendencies, the
single and
undivided goodness of their
nature into
minds of
various sorts?
2. But
God, by the
ineffable skill of His
wisdom,
transforming and
restoring all
things, in whatever
manner they are made, to some
useful aim, and to the
common advantage of all,
recalls those very
creatures which
differed so much from each other in
mental conformation to one
agreement of
labour and
purpose; so that, although they are under the
influence of
different motives, they nevertheless
complete the
fulness and
perfection of one
world, and the very
variety of
minds tends to one end of
perfection. For it is one
power which
grasps and
holds together all the
diversity of the
world, and
leads the
different movements towards one
work,
lest so
immense an
undertaking as that of the
world should be
dissolved by the
dissensions of
souls. And for this
reason we
think that
God, the
Father of all
things, in
order to
ensure the
salvation of all His
creatures through the
ineffable plan of His
word and
wisdom, so
arranged each of these, that every
spirit, whether
soul or
rational existence, however
called, should not be
compelled by
force, against the
liberty of his own will, to any other
course than that to which the
motives of his own
mind led him (
lest by so
doing the
power of
exercising free-will should seem to be
taken away, which
certainly would
produce a
change in the
nature of the
being itself); and that the
varying purposes of these would be
suitably and
usefully adapted to the
harmony of one
world, by some of them
requiring help, and others
being able to
give it, and others again
being the
cause of
struggle and
contest to those who are
making progress, amongst whom their
diligence would be
deemed more
worthy of
approval, and the
place of
rank obtained after
victory be
held with
greater certainty, which should be
established by the
difficulties of the
contest.
3. Although the whole
world is
arranged into
offices of
different kinds, its
condition, nevertheless, is not to be
supposed as one of
internal discrepancies and
discordances; but as our one
body is
provided with many
members, and is
held together by one
soul, so I am of
opinion that the whole
world also
ought to be
regarded as some
huge and
immense animal, which is
kept together by the
power and
reason of
God as by one
soul. This also, I
think, is
indicated in
sacred Scripture by the
declaration of the
prophet, "Do not I
fill heaven and
earth?
saith the
Lord; " and again, "The
heaven is My
throne, and the
earth is My
footstool; " and by the
Saviour's
words, when He
says that we are to
swear "neither by
heaven, for it is
God's
throne; nor by the
earth, for it is His
footstool: " To the same
effect also are the
words of
Paul, in his
address to the
Athenians, when he
says, "In Him we
live, and
move, and have our
being." For how do we
live, and
move, and have our
being in
God, except by His
comprehending and
holding together the whole
world by His
power? And how is
heaven the
throne of
God, and the
earth His
footstool, as the
Saviour Himself
declares,
save by His
power filling all
things both in
heaven and
earth, according to the
Lord's own
words? And that
God, the
Father of all
things,
fills and
holds together the
world with the
fulness of His
power, according to those
passages which we have
quoted, no one, I
think, will have any
difficulty in
admitting. And now, since the
course of the
preceding discussion has
shown that the
different movements of
rational beings, and their
varying opinions, have
brought about the
diversity that is in the
world, we must
see whether it
may not be
appropriate that this
world should have a
termination like its beginning. For there is no
doubt that its end must be
sought amid much
diversity and
variety; which
variety,
being found to
exist in the
termination of the
world, will again
furnish ground and
occasion for the
diversities of the other
world which is to
succeed the
present.
4. If now, in the
course of our
discussion, it has been
ascertained that these
things are so, it seems to
follow that we next
consider the
nature of
corporeal being,
seeing the
diversity in the
world cannot
exist without
bodies. It is
evident from the
nature of
things themselves, that
bodily nature admits of
diversity and
variety of
change, so that it is
capable of
undergoing all
possible transformations, as,
e.g., the
conversion of
wood into
fire, of
fire into
smoke, of
smoke into
air, of
oil into
fire. Does not
food itself, whether of
man or of
animals,
exhibit the same
ground of
change? For whatever we
take as
food, is
converted into the
substance of our
body. But how
water is
changed into
earth or into
air, and
air again into
fire, or
fire into
air, or
air into
water, although not
difficult to
explain, yet on the
present occasion it is enough
merely to
mention them, as our
object is to
discuss the
nature of
bodily matter. By
matter, therefore, we
understand that which is
placed under
bodies,
viz., that by which, through the
bestowing and
implanting of
qualities,
bodies exist; and we
mention four qualities-heat,
cold,
dryness,
humidity. These
four qualities being implanted in the
u\ #
lh, or
matter (for
matter is found to
exist in its own
nature without those
qualities before
mentioned),
produce the
different kinds of
bodies. Although this
matter is, as we have
said above, according to its own
proper nature without
qualities, it is never found to
exist without a
quality. And I cannot
understand how so many
distinguished men have been of
opinion that this
matter, which is so
great, and
possesses such
properties as to
enable it to be
sufficient for all the
bodies in the
world which
God willed to
exist, and to be the
attendant and
slave of the
Creator for whatever
forms and
species He
wished in all
things,
receiving into itself whatever
qualities He
desired to
bestow upon it, was
uncreated,
i.e., not
formed by
God Himself, who is the
Creator of all
things, but that its
nature and
power were the
result of
chance. And I am
astonished that they should
find fault with those who
deny either
God's
creative power or His
providential administration of the
world, and
accuse them of
impiety for
thinking that so
great a
work as the
world could
exist without an
architect or
overseer; while they themselves
incur a
similar charge of
impiety in
saying that
matter is
uncreated, and
co-eternal with the
uncreated God. According to this
view, then, if we
suppose for the
sake of
argument that
matter did not
exist, as these
maintain,
saying that
God could not
create anything when nothing
existed, without
doubt He would have been
idle, not
having matter on which to
operate, which
matter they
say was
furnished Him not by His own
arrangement, but by
accident; and they
think that this, which was
discovered by
chance, was
able to
suffice Him for an
undertaking of so
vast an
extent, and for the
manifestation of the
power of His might, and by
admitting the
plan of all His
wisdom, might be
distinguished and
formed into a
world. Now this
appears to me to be very
absurd, and to be the
opinion of those
men who are
altogether ignorant of the
power and
intelligence of
un-crested nature. But that we
may see the
nature of
things a
little more
clearly, let it be
granted that for a
little time matter did not
exist, and that
God, when nothing formerly
existed,
caused those
things to
come into
existence which He
desired, why are we to
suppose that
God would
create matter either
better or
greater, or of another
kind, than that which He did
produce from His own
power and
wisdom, in
order that that might
exist which formerly did not? Would He
cream a
worse and
inferior matter, or one the same as that which they
call uncreated? Now I
think it will very
easily appear to any one, that neither a
better nor
inferior matter could have
assumed the
forms and
species of the
world, if it had not been such as that which actually did
assume them. And does it not then seem
impious to
call that
uncreated, which, if
believed to be
formed by
God, would
doubtless be found to be such as that which they
call uncreated?
5. But that we
may believe on the
authority of
holy Scripture that such is the
case,
hear how in the
book of
Maccabees, where the
mother of
seven martyrs exhorts her
son to
endure torture, this
truth is
confirmed; for she
says, "I
ask of thee, my
son, to
look at the
heaven and the
earth, and at all
things which are in them, and
beholding these, to
know that
God made all these
things when they did not
exist." In the
book of the
Shepherd also, in the first
commandment, he
speaks as
follows: "First of all
believe that there is one
God who
created and
arranged all
things, and made all
things to
come into
existence, and out of a
state of
nothingness." Perhaps also the
expression in the
Psalms has
reference to this: "He
spake, and they were made; He
commanded, and they were
created." For the
words, "He
spake, and they were made,"
appear to
show that the
substance of those
things which
exist is
meant; while the others, "He
commanded, and they were
created," seem
spoken of the
qualities by which the
substance itself has been
moulded.