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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
ELEVEN
CHAPTER
VI
8. But how didst thou speak? Was it in the same manner in
which the voice came from the cloud saying, "This is my
beloved Son"[423]?
For that voice sounded forth and died away; it began and
ended. The syllables sounded and passed away, the second
after the first, the third after the second, and thence
in order, till the very last after all the rest; and silence
after the last. From this it is clear and plain that it
was the action of a creature, itself in time, which sounded
that voice, obeying thy eternal will. And what these words
were which were formed at that time the outer ear conveyed
to the conscious mind, whose inner ear lay attentively open
to thy eternal Word. But it compared those words which sounded
in time with thy eternal word sounding in silence and said:
"This is different; quite different! These words are far
below me; they are not even real, for they fly away and
pass, but the Word of my God remains above me forever."
If, then, in words that sound and fade away thou didst say
that heaven and earth should be made, and thus madest
heaven and earth, then there was already some kind of corporeal
creature before heaven and earth by whose motions
in time that voice might have had its occurrence in time.
But there was nothing corporeal before the heaven and the
earth; or if there was, then it is certain that already,
without a time-bound voice, thou hadst created whatever
it was out of which thou didst make the time-bound voice
by which thou didst say, "Let the heaven and the earth be
made!" For whatever it was out of which such a voice was
made simply did not exist at all until it was made by thee.
Was it decreed by thy Word that a body might be made from
which such words might come?
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