(God) spoke and they were made, He commanded and they were created. Creation, therefore, did not take place slowly in order that a slow development might be implanted in those things that are slow by nature; nor were the ages established at plodding pace at which they now pass. Time brings about the development of these creatures according to the laws of their numbers,
but there was no passage of time when they received these laws at creation
Perhaps we ought not to think of these creatures at the moment they were produced as subject to the processes of nature which we now observe in them, but rather as under the wonderful and unutterable power of the Wisdom of God, which
reaches from end to end mightily and governs all graciously. For this power of Divine Wisdom does not reach by stages or arrive by steps. It was just as easy, then, for God to create everything as it is for Wisdom to exercise this mighty power. For through Wisdom all things were made, and the motion we now see in creatures, measured by the lapse of time, as each one fulfills its proper function, comes to creatures from those causal reasons implanted in them, which God scattered as seeds at the moment of creation when
He spoke and they were made, He commanded and they were created.
Creation, therefore, did not take place slowly in order that a slow development might be implanted in those things that are slow by nature; nor were the ages established at plodding pace at which they now pass. Time brings about the development of these creatures according to the laws of their numbers, but there was no passage of time when they received these laws at creation.
2
The Literal Meaning of Genesis, translated by John Hammond Taylor (1982), Vol. 1, Book 4, Chapter 33, paragraph 51–52, p. 141, italics in the original. New York: Newman Press.
Whoever, then, does not accept the meaning that my limited powers have been able to
discover or conjecture but seeks in
the enumeration of the days of creation a different meaning, which might be understood not in the prophetical or figurative sense, but
literally and more aptly, in interpreting the works of creation, let him search and find a solution with God’s help. I myself may possibly
discover some other meaning more in harmony with the words of Scripture.
15
The Literal Meaning of Genesis, in Lavallee, Louis. 1989. Augustine on the Creation Days,
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 32, no. 4:464.