And Moses, in another place, says, "Behold, when I go forth out of the city I will spread out my hands unto the Lord, and the sounds shall cease, and the hail, and there shall be no more rain, that thou mayest know that the earth is the Lord’s;" that is to say, every thing that is made of body or of earth, "and that thou," that is the mind which bears in itself the images of things, "and thy servants," that is the particular reasonings which act as body-guards to the mind, "for I know that ye do not yet fear the Lord;" Exodus ix. 29. by which he means not the Lord who is spoken of commonly and in different senses, but him who is truly the Master of all things. For there is in truth no created Lord, not even if a king shall have extended his authority and spread it from one end of the world even to the other end, but only the uncreated God, the real governor, whose authority he who reverences and fears receives a most beneficial reward, namely, the admonitions of God, but utterly miserable destruction awaits the man who despises him; therefore he is held forth as the Lord of the foolish, striking them with a terror which is appropriate to him as ruler. But he is the God of those who are improved; as we read now, "I am thy God, I am thy God, be thou increased and multiplied." Genesis xvii. 1, also Genesis xxxv. 2. And in the case of those who are perfect, he is both together, both Lord and God; as we read in the ten commandments, "I am the Lord thy Genesis vii. 1. Exodus vii. 17. Exodus vi. 29. Exodus ix. 29. Genesis xvii. 1, also Genesis xxxv. 2. God." Exodus xx. 2. And in another passage it is written, "The Lord God of our fathers." Deuteronomy iv. 1. For he thinks it right for the wicked man to be governed by a master as by a lord; that, being in a state of alarm and groaning, he may have the fear of a master suspended over him; but him who is advancing in improvement he thinks deserving to receive benefits as from God in order that by means of these benefits he may arrive at perfection; and him who is complete and perfect he thinks should be both governed as by the Lord, and benefited as by God; for the last man remains for ever unchangeable, and he is, by all means and in all respects, the man of God: and this is especially shown to be the fact in the case of Moses; for, says the scripture, "This is the blessing which Moses, the man of God, blessed." Deuteronomy xxxiii. 1. O the man thus thought worthy of this all-beautiful and sacred recompense, to give himself as a requital for the divine Providence!