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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TWELVE
CHAPTER
II
2. In lowliness my tongue confesses to thy exaltation, for thou madest heaven
and earth. This heaven which I see, and this earth on which I walk--from which
came this "earth" that I carry about me--thou didst make.
But where is that heaven of heavens, O Lord, of which we
hear in the words of the psalm, "The heaven of heavens is
the Lord's, but the earth he hath given to the children
of men"?[457]
Where is the heaven that we cannot see, in relation to which
all that we can see is earth? For this whole corporeal creation
has been beautifully formed--though not everywhere in its
entirety--and our earth is the lowest of these levels. Still,
compared with that heaven of heavens, even the heaven of
our own earth is only earth. Indeed, it is not absurd to
call each of those two great bodies[458] "earth" in comparison with that
ineffable heaven which is the Lord's, and not for the sons
of men.
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