On the Creation (Philo)
Philo of Alexandria's philosophical interpretation of the Genesis creation account, blending Jewish Scripture with Platonic and Stoic philosophy. A key text for understanding the intellectual world that produced the Gospel of John and Paul's letters.
Translation: Loeb Classical Library (via Sefaria) (public-domain)
Overview
On the Creation of the World (Greek: De Opificio Mundi) is the opening treatise of Philo of Alexandria's Exposition of the Law, a series designed to present the Mosaic legislation to educated Gentile and Jewish audiences in terms drawn from Greek philosophy. It is Philo's most systematic account of creation theology and one of the most important documents in the entire history of the interpretation of Genesis 1.
Philo's central argument is that the world was not created arbitrarily or by chance but according to a pre-existing intelligible pattern — the ideal world of Platonic Forms — which exists in the mind of God and which Philo identifies with the divine Logos. Before creating the material cosmos, God first conceived an incorporeal, intelligible world that served as the architect's blueprint. The six days of creation are not strictly sequential in time but describe the logical order of this divine creative rationality.
This Platonic interpretation of Genesis 1 proved immensely influential. It allowed Philo to present Moses as a philosopher in deep agreement with Plato, and it provided the conceptual framework that later enabled Christian thinkers to speak of the Logos as the pre-existing creative principle and to develop the doctrine of creation out of nothing. John 1:1 — 'In the beginning was the Word' — reflects the same interpretive move Philo makes: the creation account of Genesis 1 begins with the Logos as the intelligible pattern of all that exists.
- Genesis 1:1-2:3 (the primary text interpreted throughout)
- John 1:1-18 (Logos as creative principle in the beginning)
- Colossians 1:15-17 (Christ as image of God and firstborn of all creation)
- Hebrews 1:2-3 (the Son through whom God made the universe)
- Romans 1:20 (the invisible God perceived through the created order)
- Proverbs 8:22-31 (Wisdom as creative principle beside God)
Philo argued that Moses was the greatest philosopher who ever lived — that Plato himself had learned from Moses. While this claim cannot be historically sustained, it reflects the genuine depth of conceptual overlap between Platonic cosmology and Philo's reading of Genesis 1, and it became a standard argument in early Christian apologetics for the superiority of Jewish-Christian revelation over Greek philosophy.