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Fire is one of the four elements, light and with a greater tendency to
ascend than the others. It has the power of burning and also of giving
light, and it was made by the Creator on the first day. For the
divine Scripture says, And God said, Let there be light, and
there was light. Fire is not a different thing from what light is, as
some maintain. Others again hold that this fire of the universe is
above the air and call it ether. In the beginning, then, that is to
say on the first day, God created light, the ornament and glory of
the whole visible creation. For take away light and all things remain
in undistinguishable darkness, incapable of displaying their native
beauty. And God called the light day, but the darkness He called
night. Further, darkness is not any essence, but an accident: for
it is simply absence of light. The air, indeed, has not light in its
essence. It was, then, this very absence of light from the air that
God called darkness: and it is not the essence of air that is
darkness, but the absence of light which clearly is rather an accident
than an essence. And, indeed, it was not night, but day, that was
first named, so that day is first and after that comes night. Night,
therefore, follows day. And from the beginning of day till the next
day is one complete period of day and night. For the Scripture says,
And the evening and the morning were one day.
When, therefore, in the first three days the light was poured forth
and reduced at the divine command, both day and night came to pass.
But on the fourth day God created the great luminary, that is, the
sun, to have rule and authority over the day: for it is by it that day
is made: for it is day when the sun is above the earth, and the
duration of a day is the course of the sun over the earth from its
rising till its setting. And He also created the lesser luminaries,
that is, the moon and the stars, to have rule and authority over the
night, and to give light by night. For it is night when the sun is
under the earth, and the duration of night is the course of the sun
under the earth from its rising till its setting. The moon, then,
and the stars were set to lighten the night: not that they are in the
daytime under the earth, for even by day stars are in the heaven over
the earth but the sun conceals both the stars and the moon by the
greater brilliance of its light and prevents them from being seen.
On these luminaries the Creator bestowed the first-created light:
not because He was in need of other light, but that that light might
not remain idle. For a luminary is not merely light, but a vessel for
containing light.
There are, we are told, seven planets amongst these luminaries, and
these move in a direction opposite to that of the heaven: hence the
name planets. For, while they say that the heaven moves from east to
west, the planets move from west to east; but the heaven bears the
seven planets along with it by its swifter motion. Now these are the
names of the seven planets: Luna, Mercury, Venus, Sol, Mars,
Jupiter, Saturn, and in each zone of heaven is, we are told, one
of these seven planets:
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In the first and highest / Saturn
In the second / Jupiter
In the third / Mars
In the fourth / Sol
In the fifth / Venus
In the sixth / Mercury
In the seventh and lowest / Luna
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The course which the Creator appointed for them to run is unceasing
and remaineth fixed as He established them. For the divine David
says, The moan and the stars which Thou establishedst, and by the
word 'establishedst,' he referred to the fixity and unchangeableness
of the order and series granted to them by God. For He appointed
them for seasons, and signs, and days and years. It is through the
Sun that the four seasons are brought about. And the first of these
is spring: for in it God created all things, and even down to the
present time its presence is evidenced by the bursting of the flowers
into bud, and this is the equinoctial period, since day and night each
consist of twelve hours. It is caused by the sun rising in the
middle, and is mild and increases the blood, and is warm and moist,
and holds a position midway between winter and summer, being warmer and
drier than winter, but colder and moister than summer. This season
lasts from March 21st till June 24th. Next, when the rising of
the sun moves towards more northerly parts, the season of summer
succeeds, which has a place midway between spring and autumn,
combining the warmth of spring with the dryness of autumn: for it is
dry and warm, and increases the yellow bile. In it falls the longest
day, which has fifteen hours, and the shortest night of all, having
only nine hours. This season lasts from June 24th till September
25th. Then when the sun again returns to the middle, autumn takes
the place of summer. It has a medium amount of cold and heat, dryness
and moisture, and holds a place midway between summer and winter,
combining the dryness of summer with the cold of winter. For it is
cold and dry, and increases the black bile. This season, again, is
equinoctial, both day and night consisting of twelve hours, and it
lasts from September 25th till December 25th. And when the
rising of the sun sinks to its smallest and lowest point, i.e. the
south, winter is reached, with its cold and moisture. It occupies a
place midway between autumn and spring, combining the cold of autumn
and the moisture of spring. In it falls the shortest day, which has
only nine hours, and the longest night, which has fifteen: and it
lasts from December 25th till March 21st. For the Creator made
this wise provision that we should not pass from the extreme of cold,
or heat, or dryness, or moisture, to the opposite extreme, and thus
incur grievous maladies. For reason itself teaches us the danger of
sudden changes.
So, then, it is the sun that makes the seasons, and through them the
year: it likewise makes the days and nights, the days when it rises
and is above the earth, and the nights when it sets below the earth:
and it bestows on the other luminaries, both moon and stars, their
power of giving forth light.
Further, they say that there are in the heaven twelve signs made by
the stars, and that these move in an opposite direction to the sun and
moon, and the other five planets, and that the seven planets pass
across these twelve signs. Further, the sun makes a complete month in
each sign and traverses the twelve signs in the same number of months.
These, then, are the names of the twelve signs and their respective months:
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The Ram, which receives the sun on the 21st of March.
The Bull, on the 23rd of April.
The Twins, on the 24th of May.
The Crab, on the 24th of June.
The Virgin, on the 25th of July.
The Scales, on the 25th of September.
The Scorpion,on the 25th of October.
The Archer, on the 25th of November.
Capricorn, on the 25th of December.
Aquarius, on the 25th of January.
The Fish, on the 24th of February.
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But the moon traverses the twelve signs each month, since it occupies
a lower position and travels through the signs at a quicker rate. For
if you draw one circle within another, the inner one will be found to
be the lesser: and so it is that owing to the moon occupying a lower
position its course is shorter and is sooner completed
Now the Greeks declare that all our affairs are controlled by the
rising and setting and collision of these stars, viz., the sun and
moon: for it is with these matters that astrology has to do. But we
hold that we get from them signs of rain and drought, cold and heat,
moisture and dryness, and of the various winds, and so forth, but no
sign whatever as to our actions. For we have been created with free
wills by our Creator and are masters over our own actions. Indeed,
if all our actions depend on the courses of the stars, all we do is
done of necessity: and necessity precludes either virtue or vice. But
if we possess neither virtue nor vice, we do not deserve praise or
punishment, and God, too, will turn out to be unjust, since He
gives good things to some and afflicts others. Nay, He will no
longer continue to guide or provide for His own creatures, if all
things are carried and swept along in the grip of necessity. And the
faculty of reason will be superfluous to us: for if we are not masters
of any of our actions, deliberation is quite superfluous. Reason,
indeed, is granted to us solely that we might take counsel, and hence
all reason implies freedom of will.
And, therefore, we hold that the stars are not the causes of the
things that occur, nor of the origin of things that come to pass, nor
of the destruction of those things that perish. They are rather signs
of showers and changes of air. But, perhaps, some one may say that
though they are not the causes of wars, yet they are signs of them.
And, in truth, the quality of the air which is produced by sun, and
moon, and stars, produces in various ways different temperaments, and
habits, and dispositions. But the habits are amongst the things that
we have in our own hands, for it is reason that rules, and directs,
and changes them.
It often happens, also, that comets arise. These are signs of the
death of kings, and they are not any of the stars that were made in the
beginning, but are formed at the same tithe by divine command and again
dissolved. And so not even that star which the Magi saw at the birth
of the Friend and Saviour of man, our Lord, Who became flesh for
our sake, is of the number of those that were made in the beginning.
And this is evidently the case because sometimes its course was from
east to west, and sometimes from north to south; at one moment it was
hidden, and at the next it was revealed: which is quite out of harmony
with the order and nature of the stars.
It must be understood, then, that the moon derives its light from the
sun; not that God was unable to grant it light of its own, but in
order that rhythm and order may be unimpressed upon nature, one part
ruling, the other being ruled, and that we might thus be taught to
live in community and to share our possessions with one another, and to
be under subjection, first to our Maker and Creator, our God and
Master, and then also to the rulers set in authority over us by Him:
and not to question why this man is ruler and not I myself, but to
welcome all that comes from God in a gracious and reasonable spirit.
The sun and the moon, moreover, suffer eclipse, and this
demonstrates the folly of those who worship the creature in place of the
Creator, and teaches us how changeable and alterable all things are
For all things are changeable save God, and whatever is changeable is
liable to corruption in accordance with the laws of its own nature.
Now the cause of the eclipse of the sun is that the body of the moon is
interposed like a partition-wall and casts a shadow, and prevents the
light from being shed down on us: and the extent of the eclipse is
proportional to the size of the moon's body that is found to conceal
the sun. But do not marvel that the moon's body is the smaller. For
many declare that the sun is many times larger even than the earth, and
the holy Fathers say that it is equal to the earth: yet often a small
cloud, or even a small hill or a wall quite conceals it.
The eclipse of the moon, on the other hand, is due to the shadow the
earth casts on it when it is a fifteen days' moon and the sun and moon
happen to be at the opposite poles of the highest circle, the sun being
under the earth and the moon above the earth. For the earth casts a
shadow and the sun's light is prevented from illuminating the moon,
and therefore it is then eclipsed.
It should be understood that the moon was made full by the Creator,
that is, a fifteen days' moon: for it was fitting that it should be
made complete. But on the fourth day, as we said, the sun was
created. Therefore the moon was eleven days in advance of the sun,
because from the fourth to the fifteenth day there are eleven days.
Hence it happens that in each year the twelve months of the moon
contain eleven days fewer than the twelve months of the sun. For the
twelve months of the sun contain three hundred and sixty-five and a
quarter days, and so because the quarter becomes a whole, in four
years an extra day is completed, which is called bis-sextile. And
that year has three hundred and sixty-six days. The years of the
moon, on the other hand, have three hundred and fifty-four days.
For the moon wanes from the time of its origin, or renewal, till it
is fourteen and three-quarter days' old, and proceeds to wane till
the twenty-ninth and a half day, when it is completely void of light
And then when it is once more connected with the sun it is reproduced
and renewed, a memorial of our resurrection. Thus in each year the
moon gives away eleven days to the sun, and so in three years the
intercalary month of the Hebrews arises, and that year comes to
consist of thirteen months, owing to the addition of these eleven
days.
It is evident that both sun and moon and stars are compound and liable
to corruption according to the laws of their various natures. But of
their nature we are ignorant. Some, indeed, say that fire when
deprived of matter is invisible, and thus, that when it is quenched it
vanishes altogether. Others, again, say that when it is quenched it
is transformed into air.
The circle of the zodiac has an oblique motion and is divided into
twelve sections called zodia, or signs: each sign has three divisions
of ten each, i.e. thirty divisions, and each division has sixty very
minute subdivisions. The heaven, therefore, has three hundred and
sixty-five degrees: the hemisphere above the earth and that below the
earth each having one hundred and eighty degrees.
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The abodes of the planets.
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The Ram and the Scorpion are the abode of Mars: the Bull and the
Scales, of Venus: the Twins and the Virgin, of Mercury: the
Crab, of the Moon: the Lion, of the Sun: the Archer and the
Fish, of Jupiter: Capricorn and Aquarius, of Saturn.
The Ram has the altitude of the Sun: the Bull, of the Moon: the
Crab, of Jupiter: the Virgin, of Mars: the Scales, of
Saturn: Capricorn, of Mercury: the Fish, of Venus.
It is in conjunction whenever it is in the same degree as the sun: it
is born when it is fifteen degrees distant from the sun: it rises when
it is crescent-shaped, and this occurs twice, at which times it is
sixty degrees distant from the sun: it is half-full twice, when it is
ninety degrees from the sun: twice it is gibbous, when it is one
hundred and twenty degrees from the sun: it is twice a full moon,
giving full light, when it is a hundred and fifty degrees from the
sun: it is a complete moon when it is a hundred and eighty degrees
distant from the sun. We say twice, because these phases occur both
when the moon waxes and when it wanes. In two and a half days the moon
traverses each sign.
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