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    the sight of which arouses in fools
    a yearning for the lifeless form of a dead image.
Lovers of evil and deserving of similar yearnings
    are those who make such figures, those who desire them, and those who worship them.

The Folly of Idol-Makers[a]

A potter laboriously kneads the soft earth,
    molding each object for our use,
fashioning out of the same clay
    both the vessels that will serve noble purposes
    and those designed for a contrary use.
But what shall be the purpose of each object
    is determined by the potter.[b]

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Footnotes

  1. Wisdom 15:7 Among those who fashion idols, the ceramists are, in the author’s eyes, the most ridiculous. This type of craftsmanship was widespread in the Greek world, and Paul had a bone to pick with the organization of silversmiths of Ephesus, whose very profitable commerce he had put in jeopardy (see Acts 19:23-40).
  2. Wisdom 15:7 An image of the potter who alone judges the destination of his vases. The Letter to the Romans (Rom 9:19-24), following the Prophets (see Isa 64:7), employs this symbol to explain the freedom of the divine election and the gratuity of the Christian vocation.