A citation from the library
Origen, on Ps 103:6
Origen · c. A.D. 184–253
Ps 103:6 · Douay-Rheims
“The deep like a garment is its clothing: above the mountains shall the waters stand.”
On this verse:
“Now, according to a Hebrew figure of speech, it is said of God in the eighteenth psalm that "he made darkness his secret place," to signify that those notions that should be worthily entertained of God are invisible and unknowable, because God conceals himself in darkness, as it were, from those who cannot endure the splendors of his knowledge or are incapable of looking at them, partly owing to the pollution of their understanding, which is clothed with the body of mortal lowliness, and partly owing to its feebler power of comprehending God. And in order that it may appear that the knowledge of God has rarely been vouchsafed to people and has been found in very few individuals, Moses is related to have entered into the darkness where God was. And again, with regard to Moses it is said, "Moses alone shall come near the Lord, but the rest shall not come near." And again, that the prophet may show the depth of the doctrines that relate to God and that are unattainable by those who do not possess the "Spirit that searches all things, even the deep things of God," he added, "The abyss like a garment is his covering." No, our Lord and Savior, the Logos of God, manifesting that the greatness of the knowledge of the Father, is appropriately comprehended and known preeminently by him alone, and in the second place by those whose minds are enlightened by the Logos and God, declares, "No one knows the Son but the Father; neither does any one know the Father but the Son, and he to whoever the Son will reveal him." For no one can worthily know the "uncreated" and firstborn of all created nature like the Father who begat him, nor any one the Father like the living Logos, and his Wisdom and Truth. By sharing in him who takes away from the Father what is called "darkness," which he "made his secret place," and "the abyss," which is called his "covering," and by unveiling the Father in this way, every one knows the Father who is capable of knowing him.”
Imported from an open dataset — not yet checked against the printed edition.