Chapter XVII.—Of the Sixth Day.
And on the sixth day, God having made the quadrupeds,
and wild beasts, and the land reptiles, pronounced no blessing upon them,
reserving His blessing for man, whom He was about to create on the sixth
day. The quadrupeds, too, and wild beasts, were made for a type of some
men, who neither know nor worship God, but mind earthly things, and repent
not. For those who turn from their iniquities and live righteously, in
spirit fly upwards like birds, and mind the things that are above, and are
well-pleasing to the will of God. But those who do not know nor worship
God, are like birds which have wings, but cannot fly nor soar to the high
things of God. Thus, too, though such persons are called men, yet being
pressed down with sins, they mind grovelling and earthly things. And
the animals are named wild beasts [θηρία],
from their being hunted [θηρεύεσθαι],
not as if they had been made evil or venomous from the first—for
nothing was made evil by God,587587 but all things good,
yea, very good,—but the sin in which man was concerned brought evil
upon them. For when man transgressed, they also transgressed with him.
For as, if the master of the house himself acts rightly, the domestics
also of necessity conduct themselves well; but if the master sins, the
servants also sin with him; so in like manner it came to pass, that in
the case of man’s sin, he being master, all that was subject to
him sinned with him. When, therefore, man again shall have made his way
back to his natural condition, and no longer does evil, those also shall
be restored to their original gentleness.