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    "slug": "celestial-hierarchy",
    "name": "On the Heavenly Hierarchy"
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      "name": "Dionysius the Areopagite",
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    "num": 1,
    "slug": "05-ch-caput-i",
    "title": "On the Heavenly Hierarchy — Caput I",
    "of": 15,
    "words": 723,
    "text": "## On the Heavenly Hierarchy — Caput I\n\n\n#### DIONYSIUS THE AREOPAGITE\n\n### ON THE HEAVENLY HIERARCHY.\n\n#### CAPUT I.\n\nTo my Fellow Presbyter Timothy. 151\nDionysius the Presbyter.\n\nThat every divine illumination, whilst going forth lovingly to the objects of its forethought under various forms, remains simplex. Nor is this all. It also unifies the things illuminated.\n\nSection I.\n\n\"Every good gift 152\nand every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of Lights.\"\n\nFurther also, every procession of illuminating light, proceeding from the Father, whilst visiting us as a gift of goodness, restores us again gradually as an unifying power, and turns us to the oneness of our conducting Father, and to a deifying simplicity. For 153\nall things are from Him, and to Him, as said the Sacred Word.\n\nSection II.\n\nInvoking then Jesus, the Paternal Light, the Real, the True, \"which lighteth 154\nevery man coming into p. 2 the world,\" \"through 155\nWhom we have access to the Father,\" Source of Light, let us aspire, as far as is attainable, to the illuminations handed down by our fathers in the most sacred Oracles, and let us gaze, as we may, upon the Hierarchies of the Heavenly Minds manifested by them symbolically for our instruction. And when we have received, with immaterial and unflinching mental 156\neyes, the gift of Light, primal and super-primal, of the supremely Divine Father, which manifests to us the most blessed Hierarchies of the Angels in types and symbols, let us then, from it, be elevated to its simple splendour 157\n. For it *never *loses its own unique inwardness, but multiplied and going forth, as becomes its goodness, for an elevating and unifying blending of the objects of its care, remains firmly and solitarily centred within itself in its unmoved sameness; and raises, according to their capacity, those who lawfully aspire to it, and makes them one, after the example of its own unifying Oneness. For it is not possible that the supremely Divine Ray should otherwise illuminate us, except so far as it is enveloped, for the purpose of instruction, in variegated sacred veils, and arranged naturally and appropriately, for such as we are, by paternal forethought.\n\nSection III.\n\nWherefore, the Divine Institution of sacred Rites, having deemed it worthy of the supermundane p. 3 imitation of the Heavenly Hierarchies, and having depicted the aforesaid immaterial Hierarchies in material figures and bodily compositions, in order that we might be borne, as far as our capacity permits, from the most sacred pictures to the instructions and similitudes without symbol and without type, transmitted to us our most Holy Hierarchy. For it is not possible for our mind to be raised to that immaterial representation and contemplation of the Heavenly Hierarchies, without using the material guidance suitable to itself, accounting the visiblePsalm 19:1-14 beauties as reflections of the invisible comeliness;* *and the sweet 158\nodours of the senses as emblems of the spiritual distribution; and the material 159\nlights as a likeness of the gift of the immaterial enlightenment; and the detailed sacred instructions 160\n, of the feast of contemplation within the mind; and the ranks 161\nof the orders here, of the harmonious and regulated habit, with regard to Divine things; and the reception of the most Divine Eucharist, of the partaking 162\nof Jesus, and whatever other things were transmitted to Heavenly Beings supermundanely, but to us symbolically.\n\nFor the sake, then, of this our proportioned deification, the philanthropic Source of sacred mysteries, by manifesting the Heavenly Hierarchies to us, and constituting our Hierarchy as fellow-ministers with them, through our imitation of their Godlike p. 4 priestliness 163\n, so far as in us lies, described under sensible likeness the supercelestial Minds, in the inspired compositions of the Oracles, in order that It might lead us through the sensible to the intelligible 164\n, and from inspired symbols to the simple sublimities of the Heavenly Hierarchies.\n\n#### Footnotes\n\nxx:151 1Peter 5:1.\n\nxx:152 James i. 17.\n\nxx:153 Rom. xi. 36.\n\nxx:154 John i. 9.\n\n2:155 Rom. v. 2.\n\n2:156 Syr. Doc. p. 61, Clark.\n\n2:157 Plato Rep. 6, 7-11, 121-126. Read Allegory of Cave.\n\n3:158 Num. xv. 3.\n\n3:159 Luke 11. 9.\n\n3:160 John vii. 14.\n\n3:161 Rom. 13:1, 2.\n\n3:162 1Corinthians 10:16.\n\n4:163 1Peter 2:9.\n\n4:164 νόητα.",
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