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

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

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

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The creation of fowl <strong>and</strong> water animals.<strong>and</strong> retain, I pray you, this point in the history of birds; <strong>and</strong> if ever you see any one laughat our mystery, as if it were impossible <strong>and</strong> contrary to nature that a virgin should becomea mother without losing the purity of her virginity, bethink you that He who would savethe faithful by the foolishness of preaching, has given us beforeh<strong>and</strong> in nature a thous<strong>and</strong>reasons for believing in the marvellous. 16717. “Let the waters bring forth the moving creatures that have life, <strong>and</strong> fowl that may flyabove the earth in the open firmament of heaven.” They received the comm<strong>and</strong> to fly abovethe earth because earth provides them with nourishment. “In the firmament of heaven,”that is to say, as we have said before, in that part of the air called οὐρανός, heaven, 1672 fromthe word ὁρᾶν, which means to see; 1673 called firmament, because the air which extendsover our heads, compared to the æther, has greater density, <strong>and</strong> is thickened by the vapourswhich exhale from the earth. You have then heaven adorned, earth beautified, the seapeopled with its own creatures, the air filled with birds which scour it in every direction.Studious listener, think of all these creations which God has drawn out of nothing, think ofall those which my speech has left out, to avoid tediousness, <strong>and</strong> not to exceed my limits;recognise everywhere the wisdom of God; never cease to wonder, <strong>and</strong>, through every creature,to glorify the Creator.There are some kinds of birds which live by night in the midst of darkness; others whichfly by day in full light. Bats, owls, night-ravens are birds of night: if by chance you cannotsleep, reflect on these nocturnal birds <strong>and</strong> their peculiarities <strong>and</strong> glorify their Maker. Howis it that the nightingale is always awake when sitting on her eggs, passing the night in acontinual melody? 1674 How is it that one animal, the bat, is at the same time quadruped<strong>and</strong> fowl? That it is the only one of the birds to have teeth? That it is viviparous like quadrupeds,<strong>and</strong> traverses the air, raising itself not upon wings, but upon a kind of membrane? 1675What natural love bats have for each other! How they interlace like a chain <strong>and</strong> hang the1671 This analogy is repeated almost in identical words in <strong>Basil</strong>’s Hom. xxii. De Providentia. cf. also his Com.on Isaiah. St. Ambrose repeats the illustration (Hex. v. 20). The analogy, even if the facts were true, would befalse <strong>and</strong> misleading. But it is curious to note that were any modern divine desirous of here following in <strong>Basil</strong>’strack, he might find the alleged facts in the latest modern science,—e.g. in the so-called Parthenogenesis, orvirginal reproduction, among insects, as said to be demonstrated by Siebold. Haeckel (Hist. of Creation,Lankester’s ed. ii. p. 198) represents sexual reproduction as quite a recent development of non-sexual reproduction.1672 cf. note on p. 70.1673 The Greek word στερέωμα, from στερεός, strong, is traceable to the root star, to spread out, <strong>and</strong> so indirectlyassociated with the connotation of the Hebrew rakia.1674 Arist., H.A. viii. 75. Pliny x. 43. “Luscinus diebus ac noctibus continuis quindecim garrulus sine intermissucantus, densante se frondium germine, non in novissimum digna miratu ave.”1675 So also <strong>Basil</strong> in Hom. on Isaiah iii. 447. cf. Pliny x. 81, “cui et membranaceæ pinnæ uni.”340

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