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AUGUSTINE:
CONFESSIONS INDEX
BOOK
TWELVE
CHAPTER
VIII
8. That heaven of heavens was thine, O Lord, but the earth which thou didst
give to the sons of men to be seen and touched was not then in the same form
as that in which we now see it and touch it. For then it was invisible and unformed
and there was an abyss over which there was no light. The darkness was truly
over the abyss, that is, more than just in the abyss. For this
abyss of waters which now is visible has even in its depths a certain light
appropriate to its nature, perceptible in some fashion to fishes and the things
that creep about on the bottom of it. But then the entire abyss was almost nothing,
since it was still altogether unformed. Yet even there, there was something
that had the possibility of being formed. For thou, O Lord, hadst made the world
out of unformed matter, and this thou didst make out of nothing and didst make
it into almost nothing. From it thou hast then made these great things which
we, the sons of men, marvel at. For this corporeal heaven is truly marvelous,
this firmament between the water and the waters which thou didst make on the
second day after the creation of light, saying, "Let it be done," and it was
done.[468] This firmament thou didst
call heaven, that is, the heaven of this earth and sea which thou madest on
the third day, giving a visible shape to the unformed matter which thou hadst
made before all the days. For even before any day thou hadst already made a
heaven, but that was the heaven of this heaven: for in the beginning thou hadst
made heaven and earth.
But this earth itself which thou hadst made was unformed
matter; it was invisible and unformed, and darkness was
over the abyss. Out of this invisible and unformed earth,
out of this formlessness which is almost nothing, thou didst
then make all these things of which the changeable world
consists--and yet does not fully consist in itself[469]--for
its very changeableness appears in this, that its times
and seasons can be observed and numbered. The periods of
time are measured by the changes of things, while the forms,
whose matter is the invisible earth of which we have spoken,
are varied and altered.
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