Search This Blog

Followers

Friday, January 31, 2025

Genesis 11 (Tower of Babel pre-historic narrative) and De Civitate Dei

from Gerard O'Daly's Augustine's The City of God: Reader's Edition

on Books 15 - 18

Augustine connects the Tower of Babel

(Genesis 11: 1 - 10) with Babylon,

which he understands to mean "confusion."

The foundations of Babylon, archetype of

the earthly city as a political reality, is thus

linked with the tower, a symbol of Nimrod's

pride (Book 16 #4).  The Babel narrative allows

Augustine to employ an exegetical principle

and that enables him to explain why Genesis

11:5 has 'the Lord came down' and verse 7

(same chapter) 'the Lord saying "Come,

let us go down to Babel"'.  The principle,

which Augustine took from the Donatist

theologian - exegete Tyconius is called 

recapitulation which accounts for such

features by relating them to an earlier

point in Biblical narratives. . .Augustine

stresses that these passages are not to be

'taken literally,' indicating as they do that

'God's movement and sudden decision';

A. suggests that they refer to an angelic

intervention (Book 16 #5).  The

attribution to God of language here leads

A. to consider the divine words of

Genesis 1:26 LET US MAKE MAN.

The plural here is not to be understood

to refer to angels, as that would involve

them in creation.  Rather, it refers to

The TRINITY; which makes man in

'our image'.  In Genesis 11:7 however

the words ARE more appropriately

those of angels:  the reason Augustine

gives is the artificial one that the 

exclamation 'Come' alludes to the

angels' approach to God as the source

of eternal truth, towards which they move.

God's meta-language is soundless,

it precedes his action as the unchanging

ground (ratio) of the action itself,

communicating itself directly to the 

angelic minds.  Augustine, who has 

little to say about the multiplicity of

human languages other than that it

exists, reckons that from Noah's sons

after Babel: 72 languages came into

existence, and even more peoples 

(Book 16 #6).

page 200 of O'Daly's 2020 book

No comments: