Post tenebras lux
Post tenebras lux is a Latin phrase translated as Light After Darkness. It appears as Post tenebras spero lucem ("After darkness, I hope for light") in the Vulgate version of Job 17:12.[1]
The phrase came to be adopted as the Calvinist motto, and was subsequently adopted as the motto of the entire Protestant Reformation.[2] It is used by John Calvin's adopted city of Geneva, Switzerland on their coins. As a mark of its role in the Calvinist movement, the motto is engraved on the Reformation Wall, in Geneva, and the Huguenot Monument, in Franschhoek, South Africa.
In the form Post tenebras spero lucem, the motto appears in Part II of Cervantes' Don Quixote, and features on the title pages of the first editions of both Parts I and II, published by Juan de la Cuesta in 1605 and 1615 respectively.
Post tenebras lux was formerly the state motto of Chile, before being replaced by the Spanish Por la razón o la fuerza (By reason or by force).
It is/was the motto of:
- American International College (Springfield, Massachusetts)
- Geneva Academy, K–12 school (Monroe, Louisiana)
- The Geneva School a classical Christian school (Winter Park, Florida)
- Smith Preparatory Academy, a K-12 classical Christian school (Altamonte Springs, Florida)
- Robert College, an American school in Istanbul, Turkey; one of two school mottos
- Beyoğlu Anadolu Lisesi, an English high school for girls (Istanbul, Turkey)
- University Externado of Colombia (Bogotá, Colombia)
- University of Geneva
- Europa Ventures in the movie Europa Report
- Wolverhampton, translated as Out of darkness cometh light; also E tenebris oritur lux (on the seal of the Mayor, Aldermen and Burgesses of the Borough of Wolverhampton).
- Certain of Sir Rowland Hill's (publisher of the Geneva Bible) publishing activities and appears on the second quatro of A Midsummer Night's Dream
References
- Job 17:11–13:
11 dies mei transierunt cogitationes meae dissipatae sunt torquentes cor meum
12 noctem verterunt in diem et rursum post tenebras spero lucem
13 si sustinuero infernus domus mea est in tenebris stravi lectulum meum - "History of the Reformation" (PDF). Retrieved 3 March 2007.