Nilus of Ancyra→Aphthonius|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To the same person.
The almighty God, who marvelously changed the rod of Moses, dried up and unfit for sailing, into a living and breathing creeping thing (for it was a fearsome serpent, and Moses, struck with astonishment, flees the wonder), and who, by his will alone, in the course of a single night, made the rod of Aaron, which had long been dry, apart from earth, and rains, and the temperate blending of the airs, to sprout forth, with most graceful leaves and most beautiful fruit (for all things are possible to God almighty and able to do all things) -- he it is who, in the twinkling of an eye, will raise up at the appointed time the bodies of men, flourishing by his own grace, and made radiant to such a degree that by their divine splendor they overcome the rays of the lifeless sun. And let Moses persuade you, the genuine servant of the Most High, a luminary who came down from Mount Sinai with his skin pierced through with rays of light, that through what was made visible he might foreshow beforehand the grace that is to be granted to men from on high.
The almighty God, who marvelously changed the rod of Moses, dried up and unfit for sailing, into a living and breathing creeping thing (for it was a fearsome serpent, and Moses, struck with astonishment, flees the wonder), and who, by his will alone, in the course of a single night, made the rod of Aaron, which had long been dry, apart from earth, and rains, and the temperate blending of the airs, to sprout forth, with most graceful leaves and most beautiful fruit (for all things are possible to God almighty and able to do all things) -- he it is who, in the twinkling of an eye, will raise up at the appointed time the bodies of men, flourishing by his own grace, and made radiant to such a degree that by their divine splendor they overcome the rays of the lifeless sun. And let Moses persuade you, the genuine servant of the Most High, a luminary who came down from Mount Sinai with his skin pierced through with rays of light, that through what was made visible he might foreshow beforehand the grace that is to be granted to men from on high.
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.