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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TWELVE
CHAPTER
XIII
16. Meanwhile this is what I understand, O my God, when
I hear thy Scripture saying, "In the beginning God made
the heaven and the earth, but the earth was invisible and
unformed, and darkness was over the abyss." It does not
say on what day thou didst create these things. Thus, for
the time being I understand that "heaven of heavens" to
mean the intelligible heaven, where to understand is to
know all at once--not "in part," not "darkly," not "through
a glass"--but as a simultaneous whole, in full sight, "face
to face."[472] It is not this thing now and
then another thing, but (as we said) knowledge all at once
without any temporal change. And by the invisible and unformed
earth, I understand that which suffers no temporal vicissitude.
Temporal change customarily means having one thing now and
another later; but where there is no form there can be no
distinction between this or that. It is, then, by means
of these two--one thing well formed in the beginning and
another thing wholly unformed, the one heaven (that is,
the heaven of heavens) and the other one earth (but the
earth invisible and unformed)--it is by means of these two
notions that I am able to understand why thy Scripture said,
without mention of days, "In the beginning God created the
heaven and the earth." For it immediately indicated which
earth it was speaking about. When, on the second day, the
firmament is recorded as having been created and called
heaven, this suggests to us which heaven it was that he
was speaking about earlier, without specifying a day.
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