Did the Universe Have a Beginning?
At first glance, the answer at least of
Jerusalem to this question
seems to be simple and direct: the very
first word of the Hebrew Bible is Brēshith,
and in Greek en archēi, “in the beginning,” echoing the first
sentence of Part II of Timaeus,which contained the words: hē toude tou
kosmou genesis . . . kat’ archas”;and the phrase “heaven and earth” in any language, even in Lucretius’s Latin,means “universe.” But already in the
exegesis of the rabbis the prior question arose about the existence, or the
metaphysical status, of this “beginning”; for the very first letter of the
Hebrew Bible and the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet, the letter Beth, can mean not only “in” but “by means
of,” so that the sentence could be rendered “By means of the primordial God
made heaven and earth,” prompting one to ask whether therefore this
“primordial” had already (or always!) been there. If it had, what, if anything, could be said about it?
At this point Athens came to the aid of Jerusalem with the theory of
the four elements, which Empedocles, calling them “rizōmata,” had enumerated as earth, air, fire, and water,
and which Plato, especially in the Theaetetus
but also in the Timaeus,called “stoicheia,”the term that stuck. Lucretius’s Latin
word for them was either “elementa,” which he seems to have been the one to
coin as a technical term in physics and chemistry that we still use in Western
languages, or
“primordia.” If, then, the opening sentence of the Book
of Genesis were to be translated with the instrumental sense of its first
letter that I suggested earlier, “By means of the primordial God made heaven
and earth,” the first of the three Cosmic Questions on this program, “Did the
universe have a beginning?” would be answered by the familiar philosophical
(and theological and scientific) device of moving it back one notch: Did the elements of the universe have a
beginning? The consideration of this
device would lead Thomas Aquinas, drawing upon Aristotle but not without
remnants of Plato and of Timaeus
still in his vocabulary especially because of the influence of Augustine,to argue already in Question Two of Part One of the Summa Theologica against an “infinite regress” of motion or
of causality or of possibility and necessity as basically inconceivable, and
therefore for the Creator / Primum Movens
Immobile / First Cause as a proposition that was not only an article
of faith and a doctrine of revelation but was also demonstrable by reason.
It was out of such considerations that the definition of divine
creation as specifically a “creatio ex nihilo” had come. Lucretius was, again, the one who posed the
issue, quoting and paraphrasing Epicurus:
“The first principle of our study we will derive from this, that no
thing is ever by divine agency produced out of nothing [Principium cuius hinc
nobis exordia sumet, / nullam rem e nilo gigni diuinitus umquam].” Thus the combination - or, as I have called
it, the “counterpoint” - of Athens and Jerusalem led to a system in which the
elements that were the building blocks of the universe had in turn been
created. Out of what? (See how incurable, despite Aquinas’s best
efforts, the “regressus infinitus” is!)
Once again, Athens came to the rescue with an answer: it was out of the Ideas, the Platonic Forms,
which were already there! And when
Jewish scholars like Rabbi Akiba began to speculate that there was a “Torah
from heaven [Torah min ha-shamayim],”
which had preexisted in God before it came to earth through Moses,there were the “building blocks” for a combination of Athens and Jerusalem that
would have it both ways: “creatio ex
nihilo” and also preexistent reality - but in God. Orthodox Christianity gave that combination its special turn in
the doctrine of the transcendent Trinity, according to which the “Torah in
heaven,” the pre-existent Wisdom of God described by Solomon in the Book of
Proverbs as the principle of creation,which was also the Word of God, was the divine Logos, who already existed “in
the beginning, en archēi” -
the identical Greek phrase having been used both at the beginning of the
Septuagint Genesis and at the beginning of the Gospel of John - through whom
all things were made, and who “became flesh and dwelt among us.” Therefore Basil of Caesarea in the fourth
century, drawing upon Athens to explain Jerusalem, was able to posit a prior creation
of “this invisible world,” an “order of things” above all of the Platonic
Forms, and then the creation of “a new world” of the empirical realities, both
of these creations having been taught by Moses in the Hexaemeron (rightly interpreted, of course). For Basil’s harmonization of Athens and
Jerusalem in his interpretation of the Hexaemeron,
then, “the form which God wished to give” to each creature had come first; it
was “in harmony with” that preexistent form that God “created matter”; and
“finally, God welded all the diverse parts of the universe by links of
indissoluble attachment and established between them so perfect a fellowship
and harmony that the most distant, in spite of their distance, appeared united
in one universal sympathy.”
Contributed by: Dr. Jaroslav Pelikan
|