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The heaven is the circumference of things created, both visible and
invisible. For within its boundary are included and marked off both
the mental faculties of the angels and all the world of sense. But the
Deity alone is uncircumscribed, filling all things, and surrounding
all things, and hounding all things, for He is above all things, and
has created all things.
Since, therefore, the Scripture speaks of heaven, and heaven of
heaven, and heavens of heavens, and the blessed Paul says that he was
snatched away to the third heaven, we say that in the cosmogony of the
universe we accept the creation of a heaven which the foreign
philosophers, appropriating the views of Moses, call a starless
sphere. But further, God called the firmament also heaven, which
He commanded to be in the midst of the waters, setting it to divide
the waters that are above the firmament from the waters that are below
the firmament. And its nature, according to the divine Basilius,
who is versed in the mysteries of divine Scripture, is delicate as
smoke. Others, however, hold that it is watery in nature, since it
is set in the midst of the waters: others say it is composed of the
four elements: and lastly, others speak of it as a filth body,
distinct from the four elements.
Further, some have thought that the heaven encircles the universe and
has the form of a sphere, and that everywhere it is the highest point,
and that the centre of the space enclosed by it is the lowest part:
and, further, that those bodies that are light and airy are allotted
by the Creator the upper region: while those that are heavy and tend
to descend occupy the lower region, which is the middle. The
element, then, that is lightest and most inclined to soar upwards is
fire, and hence they hold that its position is immediately after the
heaven, and they call it ether, and after it comes the lower air.
But earth and water, which are heavier and have more of a downward
tendency, are suspended in the centre. Therefore, taking them in the
reverse order, we have in the lowest situation earth and water: but
water is lighter than earth, and hence is more easily set in motion:
above these on all hands, like a covering; is the circle of air, and
all round the air is the circle of ether, and outside air is the circle
of the heaven.
Further, they say that the heaven moves in a circle and so compresses
all that is within it, that they remain firm and not liable to fall
asunder.
They say also that there are seven zones of the heaven, one higher
than the other. And its nature, they say, is of extreme fineness,
like that of smoke, and each zone contains one of the planets. For
there are said to be seven planets: Sol, Luna, Jupiter,
Mercury, Mars, Venus and Saturn. But sometimes Venus is called
Lucifer and sometimes Vesper. These are called planets because their
movements are the reverse of those of the heaven. For while the heaven
and all other stars move from east to west, these alone move from west
to east. And this can easily be seen in the case of the moon, which
moves each evening a little backwards.
All, therefore, who hold that the heaven is in the form of a sphere,
say that it is equally removed and distant from the earth at all
points, whether above, or sideways, or below. And by 'below' and
' sideways' I mean all that comes within the range of our senses.
For it follows from what has been said, that the heaven occupies the
whole of the upper region and the earth the whole of the lower. They
say, besides, that the heaven encircles the earth in the manner of a
sphere, and bears along with it in its most rapid revolutions sun,
moon and stars, and that when the sun is over the earth it becomes day
there, and when it is under the earth it is night. And, again, when
the sun goes under the earth it is night here, but day yonder.
Others have pictured the heaven as a hemisphere. This idea is
suggested by these words of David, the singer of God, Who
stretchest out the heavens like a curtain, by which word he clearly
means a tent: and by these from the blessed Isaiah, Who hath
established the heavens like a vault: and also because when the sun,
moon, and stars set they make a circuit round the earth from west to
north, and so reach once more the east. Still, whether it is this
way or that, all things have been made and established by the divine
command, and have the divine will and counsel for a foundation that
cannot be moved. For He Himself spoke and they were made: He
Himself commanded and they were created. He hath also established
them for ever and ever: He hath made a decree which will not pass.
The heaven of heaven, then, is the first heaven which is above the
firmament. So here we have two heavens, for God called the firmament
also Heaven. And it is customary in the divine Scripture to speak of
the air also as heavens, because we see it above us. Bless Him, it
says, all ye birds of the heaven, meaning of the air. For it is the
air and not the heaven that is the region in which birds fly. So here
we have three heavens, as the divine Apostle said. But if you should
wish to look upon the seven zones as seven heavens there is no injury
done to the word of truth. For it is usual in the Hebrew tongue to
speak of heaven in the plural, that is, as heavens, and when a
Hebrew wishes to say heaven of heaven, he usually says heavens of
heavens, and this clearly means heaven of heaven, which is above the
firmament, and the waters which are above the heavens, whether it is
the air and the firmament, or the seven zones of the firmament, or the
firmament itself which are spoken of in the plural as heavens according
to the Hebrew custom.
All things, then, which are brought into existence are subject to
corruption according to the law of their nature, and so even the
heavens themselves are corruptible. But by the grace of God they are
maintained and preserved. Only the Deity, however, is by nature
without beginning and without end. Wherefore it has been said, They
will perish, but Thou dost endure: nevertheless, the heavens will
not be utterly destroyed. For they will wax old and be wound round as
a covering, and will be changed, and there will be a new heaven and a
new earth.
For the great part the heaven is greater than the earth, but we need
not investigate the essence of the heaven, for it is quite beyond our
knowledge.
It must not be supposed that the heavens or the luminaries are endowed
with life. For they are inanimate and insensible. So that when the
divine Scripture saith, Let the heavens rejoice and the earth be
glad, it is the angels in heaven and the men on earth that are invited
to rejoice. For the Scripture is familiar with the figure of
personification, and is wont to speak of inanimate things as though
they were animate: for example, The sea saw it and fled: Jordan was
driven back. And again, What ailed thee, O thou sea, that thou
fleddest? thou, O Jordan, that thou was driven back? Mountains,
too, and hills are asked the reason of their leaping in the same way as
we are wont to say, the city was gathered together, when we do not
mean the buildings, but the inhabitants of the city: again, the
heavens declare the glory of God, does not mean that they send forth a
voice that can be heard by bodily ears, but that from their own
greatness they bring before our minds the power of the Creator: and
when we contemplate their beauty we praise the Maker as the
Master-Craftsman.
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