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NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works - Holy Bible Institute

NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works - Holy Bible Institute

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On the Firmament.8. “And God called the firmament heaven.” 1502 The nature of right belongs to another,<strong>and</strong> the firmament only shares it on account of its resemblance to heaven. We often findthe visible region called heaven, on account of the density <strong>and</strong> continuity of the air withinour ken, <strong>and</strong> deriving its name “heaven” from the word which means to see. 1503 It is of itthat Scripture says, “The fowl of the air,” 1504 “Fowl that may fly…in the open firmamentof heaven;” 1505 <strong>and</strong>, elsewhere, “They mount up to heaven.” 1506 Moses, blessing the tribeof Joseph, desires for it the fruits <strong>and</strong> the dews of heaven, of the suns of summer <strong>and</strong> theconjunctions of the moon, <strong>and</strong> blessings from the tops of the mountains <strong>and</strong> from theeverlasting hills, 1507 in one word, from all which fertilises the earth. In the curses on Israelit is said, “And thy heaven that is over thy head shall be brass.” 1508 What does this mean?It threatens him with a complete drought, with an absence of the aerial waters which causethe fruits of the earth to be brought forth <strong>and</strong> to grow.Since, then, Scripture says that the dew or the rain falls from heaven, we underst<strong>and</strong>that it is from those waters which have been ordered to occupy the higher regions. Whenthe exhalations from the earth, gathered together in the heights of the air, are condensedunder the pressure of the wind, this aerial moisture diffuses itself in vaporous <strong>and</strong> lightclouds; then mingling again, it forms drops which fall, dragged down by their own weight;<strong>and</strong> this is the origin of rain. When water beaten by the violence of the wind, changes intofoam, <strong>and</strong> passing through excessive cold quite freezes, it breaks the cloud, <strong>and</strong> falls assnow. 1509 You can thus account for all the moist substances that the air suspends over ourheads.And do not let any one compare with the inquisitive discussions of philosophers uponthe heavens, the simple <strong>and</strong> inartificial character of the utterances of the Spirit; as the beautyof chaste women surpasses that of a harlot, 1510 so our arguments are superior to those ofaquas inficiat.” The first of these three theories was that of Hippocrates (De Aere, Locis, et Aquis, iv. 197) <strong>and</strong>of Anaxim<strong>and</strong>er (Plutarch περὶ τῶν ἀρέσκ, etc. ii. 552). On the second vide Arist., Prob. xxiii. 30. The idea ofthe sea being the earth’s sweat was that of Empedocles. cf. Arist., Meteor. ii. 1.1502 Gen. i. 8.1503 The derivation of οὐρανός from ὁράω is imaginary. Aristotle (De Cœl i. 19, 9) derives it from ὅρος, aboundary. cf. ῾Ορίζων. The real root is the Skt. var=cover. M. Müller, Oxford Essays, 1856.1504 Ps. viii. 8.1505 Gen. i. 20.1506 Ps. cvii. 26.1507 cf. Deut. xxxiii. 13–15, LXX.1508 Deut. xxviii. 23.1509 cf. Arist., Meteor. i. 9–12, Plutarch περὶ τῶν ἀρέσκ. etc. iii. 4.1510 Fialon quotes Hor., Ep. i. 18: “Ut matrona meretrici dispar erit atque Discolor.”287

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