THE TREATISE OF ATHENAGORAS THE ATHENIAN, PHILOSOPHER AND CHRISTIAN, ON THE
RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD
CHAP. I.--DEFENCE OF THE TRUTH SHOULD PRECEDE DISCUSSIONS REGARDING IT.[1]
BY the side of every opinion and doctrine which agrees with the truth of
things, there springs up some falsehood; and it does so, not because it takes
its rise naturally from some fundamental principle, or from some cause peculiar
to the matter in hand, but because it is invented on purpose by men who set a
value on the spurious seed, for its tendency to corrupt the truth. This is
apparent, in the first place, from those who in former times addicted themselves to
such inquiries, and their want of agreement with their predecessors and
contemporaries, and then, not least, from the very confusion which marks the
discussions that are now going on. For such men have left no truth free from their
calumnious attacks--not the being of God, not His knowledge, not His operations, not
those books which follow by a regular and strict sequence from these, and
delineate for us the doctrines of piety. On the contrary, some of them utterly, and
once for all, give up in despair the truth concerning these things, and some
distort it to suit their own views, and some of set purpose doubt even of things
which are palpably evident. Hence I think that those who bestow attention on
such subjects should adopt two lines of argument, one in defence of the truth,
another concerning the truth: that in defence of the truth, for disbelievers and
doubters; that concerning the truth, for such as are candid and receive the
truth with readiness. Accordingly it behoves those who wish to investigate these
matters, to keep in view that which the necessity of the case in each instance
requires, and to regulate their discussion by this; to accommodate the order of
their treatment of these subjects to what is suitable to the occasion, and not
for the sake of appearing always to preserve the same method, to disregard
fitness and the place which properly belongs to each topic. For, so far as proof
and the natural order are concerned, dissertations concerning the truth always
take precedence of those in defence of it; but, for the purpose of greater
utility, the order must be reversed, and arguments in defence of it precede those
concerning it. For the farmer could not properly cast the seed into the ground,
unless he first extirpated the wild wood, and whatever would be hurtful to the
good seed; nor the physician introduce any wholesome medicines into the body that
needed his care, if he did not previously remove the disease within, or stay
that which was approaching. Neither surely can he who wishes to teach the truth
persuade any one by speaking about it, so long as there is a false opinion
lurking in the mind of his hearers, and barring the entrance of his arguments. And,
therefore, from regard to greater utility, I myself sometimes place arguments
in defence of the truth before those concerning the truth; and on the present
occasion it appears to me, looking at the requirements of the case, not without
advantage to follow the same method in treating of the resurrection. For in
regard to this subject also we find some utterly disbelieving, and some others
doubting, and even among those who have accepted the first principles some who are
as much at a loss what to believe as those who doubt; the most unaccountable
thing of all being, that they are in this state of mind without having any
ground whatsoever in the matters themselves for their disbelief, or finding it
possible to assign any reasonable cause why they disbelieve or experience any
perplexity.
CHAP. II.--A RESURRECTION IS NOT IMPOSSIBLE.
Let us, then, consider the subject in the way I have indicated. If all
disbelief does not arise from levity and inconsideration, but if it springs up in
some minds on strong grounds and accompanied by the certainty which belongs to
truth [well and good]; for it then maintains the appearance of being just, when
the thing itself to which their disbelief relates appears to them unworthy of
belief; but to disbelieve things which are not deserving of disbelief, is the
act of men who do not employ a sound judgment about the truth. It behoves,
therefore, those who disbelieve or doubt concerning the resurrection, to form their
opinion on the subject, not from any view they have hastily adopted, and from
what is acceptable to profligate men, but either to assign the origin of men to
no cause (a notion which is very easily refuted), or, ascribing the cause of
all things to God, to keep steadily in view the principle involved in this
article of belief, and from this to demonstrate that the resurrection is utterly
unworthy of credit. This they will succeed in, if they are able to show that it is
either impossible for God, or contrary to His will, to unite and gather
together again bodies that are dead, or even entirely dissolved into their elements,
so as to constitute the same persons. If they cannot do this, let them cease
from this godless disbelief, and from this blasphemy against sacred things: for,
that they do not speak the truth when they say that it is impossible, or not in
accordance with the divine will, will clearly appear from what I am about to
say. A thing is in strictness of language considered impossible to a person, when
it is of such a kind that he either does not know what is to be done, or has
not sufficient power for the proper doing of the thing known, For he who is
ignorant of anything that requires to be done, is utterly unable either to attempt
or to do what he is ignorant of; and he, too, who knows ever so well what has
to be done, and by what means, and how, but either has no power at all to do the
thing known, or not power sufficient, will not even make the attempt, if he be
wise and consider his powers; and if he did attempt it without due
consideration, he would not accomplish his purpose. But it is not possible for God to be
ignorant, either of the nature of the bodies that are to be raised, as regards
both the members entire and the particles of which they consist, or whither each
of the dissolved particles passes, and what part of the elements has received
that which is dissolved and has passed into that with which it has affinity,
although to men it may appear quite impossible that what has again combined
according to its nature with the universe should be separable from it again. For He
from whom, antecedently to the peculiar formation of each, was not concealed
either the nature of the elements of which the bodies of men were to consist, or
the parts of these from which He was about to take what seemed to Him suitable
for the formation of the human body, will manifestly, after the dissolution of
the whole, not be ignorant whither each of the particles has passed which He
took for the construction of each. For, viewed relatively to the order of things
now obtaining among us, and the judgment we form concerning other matters, it
is a greater thing to know beforehand that which has not yet come to pass; but,
viewed relatively to the majesty and wisdom of God, both are according to
nature, and it is equally easy to know beforehand things that have not yet come into
existence, and to know things which have been dissolved.
CHAP. III.--HE WHO COULD CREATE, CAN ALSO RAISE UP THE DEAD.
Moreover also, that His power is sufficient for the raising of dead
bodies, is shown by the creation of these same bodies. For if, when they did not
exist, He made at their first formation the bodies of men, and their original
elements, He will, when they are dissolved, in whatever manner that may take place,
raise them again with equal ease: for this, too, is equally possible to Him.
And it is no damage to the argument, if some suppose the first beginnings to be
from matter, or the bodies of men at least to be derived from the elements as
the first materials, or from seed. For that power which could give shape to what
is regarded by them as shapeless matter, and adorn it, when destitute of form
and order, with many and diverse forms, and gather into one the several portions
of the elements, and divide the seed which was one and simple into many, and
organize that which was unorganized, and give life to that which had no
life,that same power can reunite what is dissolved, and raise up what is prostrate, and
restore the dead to life again, and put the corruptible into a state of
incorruption. And to the same Being it will belong, and to the same power and skill,
to separate that which has been broken up and distributed among a multitude of
animals of all kinds which are wont to have recourse to such bodies, and glut
their appetite upon them,--to separate this, I say, and unite it again with the
proper members and parts of members, whether it has passed into some one of
those animals, or into many, or thence into others, or, after being dissolved
along with these, has been carried back again to the original elements, resolved
into these according to a natural law--a matter this which seems to have
exceedingly confounded some, even of those admired for wisdom, who, I cannot tell why,
think those doubts worthy of serious attention which are brought forward by the
many.
CHAP. IV.--OBJECTION FROM THE FACT THAT SOME HUMAN BODIES HAVE BECOME PART OF
OTHERS.
These persons, to wit, say that many bodies of those who have come to an
unhappy death in shipwrecks and rivers have become food for fishes, and many of
those who perish in war, or who from some other sad cause or state of things
are deprived of burial, lie exposed to become the food of any animals which may
chance to light upon them. Since, then, bodies are thus consumed, and the
members and parts composing them are broken up and distributed among a great
multitude of animals, and by means of nutrition become incorporated with the bodies of
those that are nourished by them,--in the first place, they say, their
separation from these is impossible; and besides this, in the second place, they adduce
another circumstance more difficult still. When animals of the kind suitable
for human food, which have fed on the bodies of men, pass through their stomach,
and become incorporated with the bodies of those who have partaken of them, it
is an absolute necessity, they say, that the parts of the bodies of men which
have served as nourishment to the animals which have partaken of them should
pass into other bodies of men, since the animals which meanwhile have been
nourished by them convey the nutriment derived from those by whom they were nourished
into those men of whom they become the nutriment. Then to this they tragically
add the devouring of offspring perpetrated by people in famine and madness,
and the children eaten by their own parents through the contrivance of enemies,
and the celebrated Median feast, and the tragic banquet of Thyestes; and they
add, moreover, other such like unheard-of occurrences which have taken place
among Greeks and barbarians: and from these things they establish, as they suppose,
the impossibility of the resurrection, on the ground that the same parts
cannot rise again with one set of bodies, and with another as well; for that either
the bodies of the former possessors cannot be reconstituted, the parts which
composed them having passed into others, or that, these having been restored to
the former, the bodies of the last possessors will come short.
CHAP. V.--REFERENCE TO THE PROCESSES OF DIGESTION AND NUTRITION.
But it appears to me that such persons, in the first place, are ignorant
of the power and skill of Him that fashioned and regulates this universe, who
has adapted to the nature and kind of each animal the nourishment suitable and
correspondent to it, and has neither ordained that everything in nature shall
enter into union and combination with every kind of body, nor is at any loss to
separate what has been so united, but grants to the nature of each several
created being or thing to do or to suffer what is naturally suited to it, and
sometimes also hinders and allows or forbids whatever He wishes, and for the purpose
He wishes; and, moreover, that they have not considered the power and nature of
each of the creatures that nourish or are nourished. Otherwise they would have
known that not everything which is taken for food under the pressure of outward
necessity turns out to be suitable nourishment for the animal, but that some
things no sooner come into contact with the plicatures of the stomach than they
are wont to be corrupter, and are vomited or voided, or disposed of in some
other way, so that not even for a little time do they undergo the first and
natural digestion, much less become incorporated with that which is to be nourished;
as also, that not even everything which has been digested in the stomach and
received the first change actually arrives at the parts to be nourished, since
some of it loses, its nutritive power even in the stomach, and some during the
second change, and the digestion that takes place in the liver is separated and
passes into something else which is destitute of the power to nourish; nay, that
the change which takes place in the liver does not all issue in nourishment to
men, but the matter changed is separated as refuse according to its natural
purpose; and that the nourishment which is left in the members and parts
themselves that have to be nourished sometimes changes to something else, according as
that predominates which is present in greater or less, abundance, and is apt to
corrupt or to turn into itself that which comes near it.
CHAP. VI.--EVERYTHING THAT IS USELESS OR HURTFUL IS REJECTED.
Since, therefore, great difference of nature obtains in all animals, and
the very nourishment which is accordant with nature is varied to suit each kind
of animal, and the body which is nourished; and as in the nourishment of every
animal there is a threefold cleansing and separation, it follows that whatever
is alien from the nourishment of the animal must be wholly destroyed and
carried off to its natural place, or change into something else, since it cannot
coalesce with it; that the power of the nourishing body must be suitable to the
nature of the animal to be nourished, and accordant with its powers; and that
this, when it has passed through the strainers appointed for the purpose, and been
thoroughly purified by the natural means of purification, must become a most
genuine addition to the substance,--the only thing, in fact, which any one
calling things by their right names would call nourishment at all; because it rejects
everything that is foreign and hurtful to the constitution of the animal
nourished and that mass of superfluous food introduced merely for filling the
stomach and gratifying the appetite. This nourishment, no one can doubt, becomes
incorporated with the body that is nourished, interwoven and blended with all the
members and parts of members; but that which is different and contrary to nature
is speedily corrupted if brought into contact with a stronger power, but
easily destroys that which is overcome by it, and is converted into hurtful humours
and poisonous qualities, because producing nothing akin or friendly to the body
which is to be nourished. And it is a very clear proof of this, that in many
of the animals nourished, pain, or disease, or death follows from these things,
if, owing to a too keen appetite, they take in mingled with their food
something poisonous and contrary to nature; which, of course, would tend to the utter
destruction of the body to be nourished, since that which is nourished is
nourished by substances akin to it and which accord with its nature, but is destroyed
by those of a contrary kind. If, therefore, according to the different nature
of animals, different kinds of food have been provided suitable to their
nature, and none of that which the animal may have taken, not even an accidental part
of it, admits of being blended with the body which is nourished, but only that
part which has been purified by an entire digestion, and undergone a complete
change for union with a particular body, and adapted to the parts which are to
receive nourishment,--it is very plain that none of the things contrary to
nature can be united with those bodies for which it is not a suitable and
correspondent nourishment, but either passes off by the bowels before it produces some
other humour, crude and corrupter; or, if it continue for a longer time,
produces suffering or disease hard to cure, destroying at the same time the natural
nourishment, or even the flesh itself which needs nourishment. But even though it
be expelled at length, overcome by certain medicines, or by better food, or by
the natural forces, it is not got rid of without doing much harm, since it
bears no peaceful aspect towards what is natural, because it cannot coalesce with
nature.
CHAP. VII. --THE RESURRECTION-BODY DIFFERENT FROM THE PRESENT.
Nay, suppose we were to grant that the nourishment coming from these
things (let it be so called, as more accordant with the common way of speaking),
although against nature, is yet separated and changed into some one of the moist
or dry, or warm or cold, matters which the body contains, our opponents would
gain nothing by the concession: for the bodies that rise again are reconstituted
from the parts which properly belong to them, whereas no one of the things
mentioned is such a part, nor has it the form or place of a part; nay, it does not
remain always with the parts of the body which are nourished, or rise again
with the parts that rise, since no longer does blood, or phlegm, or bile, or
breath, contribute anything to the life. Neither, again, will the bodies nourished
then require the things they once required, seeing that, along with the want and
corruption of the bodies nourished, the need also of those things by which
they were nourished is taken away. To this must be added, that if we were to
suppose the change arising from such nourishment to reach as far as flesh, in that
case too there would be no necessity that the flesh recently changed by food of
that kind, if it became united to the body of some other man, should again as a
part contribute to the formation of that body, since neither the flesh which
takes it up always retains what it takes, nor does the flesh so incorporated
abide and remain with that to which it was added, but is subject to a great
variety of changes,--at one time being dispersed by toil or care, at another time
being wasted by grief or trouble or disease, and by the distempers arising from
being heated or chilled, the humours which are changed with the flesh and fat not
receiving the nourishment so as to remain what they are. But while such are
the changes to which the flesh is subject, we should find that flesh, nourished
by food unsuited to it, suffers them in a much greater degree; now swelling out
and growing fat by what it has received, and then again rejecting it in some
way or other, and decreasing in bulk, from one or more of the causes already
mentioned; and that that alone remains in the parts which is adapted to bind
together, or cover, or warm the flesh that has been chosen by nature, and adheres to
those parts by which it sustains the life which is according to nature, and
fulfils the labours of that life. So that whether the investigation in which we
have just been engaged be fairly judged of, or the objections urged against our
position be conceded, in neither case can it be shown that what is said by our
opponents is true, nor can the bodies of men ever combine with those of the same
nature, whether at any time, through ignorance and being cheated of their
perception by some one else, men have partaken of such a body, or of their own
accord, impelled by want or madness, they have defiled themselves with the body of
one of like form; for we are very well aware that some brutes have human forms,
or have a nature compounded of men and brutes, such as the more daring of the
poets are accustomed to represent.
CHAP. VIII.--HUMAN FLESH NOT THE PROPER OR NATURAL FOOD OF MEN.
But what need is there to speak of bodies not allotted to be the food of
any animal, and destined only for a burial in the earth in honour of nature,
since the Maker of the world has not alloted any animal whatsoever as food to
those of the same kind, although some others of a different kind serve for food
according to nature? If, indeed, they are able to show that the flesh of men was
alloted to men for food, there will be nothing to hinder its being according to
nature that they should eat one another, just like anything else that is
allowed by nature, and nothing to prohibit those who dare to say such things from
regaling themselves with the bodies of their dearest friends as delicacies, as
being especially suited to them, and to entertain their living friends with the
same fare. But if it be unlawful even to speak of this, and if for men to partake
of the flesh of men is a thing most hateful and abominable, and more
detestable than any other unlawful and unnatural food or act; and if what is against
nature can never pass into nourishment for the limbs and parts requiring it, and
what does not pass into nourishment can never become united with that which it
is not adapted to nourish,--then can the bodies of men never combine with bodies
like themselves, to which this nourishment would be against nature, even
though it were to pass many times through their stomach, owing to some most bitter
mischance; but, removed from the influence of the nourishing power, and
scattered to those parts of the universe again from which they obtained their first
origin, they are united with these for as long a period of time as may be the lot
of each; and, separated thence again by the skill and power of Him who has
fixed the nature of every animal, and furnished it with its peculiar powers, they
are united suitably, each to each, whether they have been burnt up by fire, or
rotted by water, or consumed by wild beasts, or by any other animals, or
separated from the entire body and dissolved before the other parts; and, being again
united with one another, they occupy the same place for the exact construction
and formation of the same body, and for the resurrection and life of that which
was dead, or even entirely dissolved. To expatiate further, however, on these
topics, is not suitable; for all men are agreed in their decision respecting
them,--those at least who are not half brutes.
CHAP. IX.--ABSURDITY OF ARGUING FROM MAN'S IMPOTENCY.
As there are many things of more importance to the inquiry before us, I
beg to be excused from replying for the present to those who take refuge in the
works of men, and even the constructors of them, who are unable to make anew
such of their works as are broken in pieces, or worn out by time, or otherwise
destroyed, and then from the analogy of potters and carpenters attempt to show
that God neither can will, nor if He willed would be able, to raise again a body
that is dead, or has been dissolved,--not considering that by such reasoning
they offer the grossest insult to God, putting, as they do, on the same level the
capabilities of things which are altogether different, or rather the natures of
those who use them, and comparing the works of art with those of nature. To
bestow any serious attention on such arguments would be not undeserving of
censure, for it is really foolish to reply to superficial and trifling objections. It
is surely far more probable, yea, most absolutely true, to say that what is
impossible with men is possible with God. And if by this statement of itself as
probable, and by the whole investigation in which we have just been engaged
reason shows it to be possible, it is quite clear that it is not impossible. No,
nor is it such a thing as God could not will.
CHAP. X.--IT CANNOT BE SHOWN THAT GOD DOES NOT WILL A RESURRECTION.
For that which is not accordant with His will is so either as being unjust
or as unworthy of Him. And again, the injustice regards either him who is to
rise again, or some other than he. But it is evident that no one of the beings
exterior to him, and that are reckoned among the things that have existence, is
injured. Spiritual natures (<greek>nohtai</greek> <greek>fuseis</greek>) cannot
be injured by the resurrection of men, for the resurrection of men is no
hindrance to their existing, nor is any loss or violence inflicted on them by it;
nor, again, would the nature of irrational or inanimate beings sustain wrong, for
they will have no existence after the resurrection, and no wrong can be done
to that which is not. But even if any one should suppose them to exist for ever,
they would not suffer wrong by the renewal of human bodies: for if now, in
being subservient to the nature of men and their necessities while they require
them, and subjected to the yoke and every kind of drudgery, they suffer no wrong,
much more, when men have become immortal and free from want, and no longer
need their service, and when they are themselves liberated from bondage, will they
suffer no wrong. For if they had the gift of speech, they would not bring
against the Creator the charge of making them, contrary to justice, inferior to men
because they did not share in the same resurrection. For to creatures whose
nature is not alike the Just Being does not assign a like end. And, besides, with
creatures that have no notion of justice there can be no complaint of
injustice. Nor can it be said either that there is any injustice done as regards the
man to be raised, for he consists of soul and body, and he suffers no wrong as to
either soul or body. No person in his senses will affirm that his soul suffers
wrong, because, in speaking so, he would at the same time be unawares
reflecting on the present life also; for if now, while dwelling in a body subject to
corruption and suffering, it has had no wrong done to it much less will it suffer
wrong when living in conjunction with a body which is free from corruption and
suffering. The body, again, suffers no wrong; for if no wrong is done to it
now while united a corruptible thing with an incorruptible, manifestly will it
not be wronged when united an incorruptible with an incorruptible. No; nor can
any one say that it is a work unworthy of God to raise up and bring together
again a body which has been dissolved: for if the worse was not unworthy of Him,
namely, to make the body which is subject to corruption and suffering, much more
is the better not unworthy, to make one not liable to corruption or suffering.
CHAP. XI.--RECAPITULATION.
If, then, by means of that which is by nature first and that which follows
from it, each of the points investigated has been proved, it is very evident
that the resurrection of dissolved bodies is a work which the Creator can
perform, and can will, and such as is worthy of Him: for by these considerations the
falsehood of the contrary opinion has been shown, and the absurdity of the
position taken by disbelievers. For why should I speak of their correspondence each
with each, and of their connection with one another? If indeed we ought to use
the word connection, as though they were separated by some difference of
nature; and not rather say, that what God can do He can also will, and that what God
can will it is perfectly possible for Him to do, and that it is accordant with
the dignity of Him who wills it. That to discourse concerning the truth is one
thing, and to discourse in defence of it is another, has been sufficiently
explained in the remarks already made, as also in what respects they differ from
each other, and when and in dealing with whom. they are severally useful; but
perhaps there is no reason why, with a view to the general certainty, and because
of the connection of what has been said with what remains, we should not make
a fresh beginning from these same points and those which are allied to them. To
the one kind of argument it naturally pertains to hold the foremost place, to
the other to attend upon the first, and clear the way, and to remove whatever
is obstructive or hostile. The discourse concerning the truth, as being
necessary to all men for certainty and safety, holds the first place, whether in
nature, or order, or usefulness: in nature, as furnishing the knowledge of the
subject; in order, as being in those things and along with those things which it
informs us of; in usefulness, as being a guarantee of certainty and safety to those
who become acquainted with it. The discourse in defence of the truth is
inferior in nature and force, for the refutation of falsehood is less important than
the establishment of truth; and second in order, for it employs its strength
against those who hold false opinions, and false opinions are an aftergrowth from
another sowing and from degeneration. But, notwithstanding all this, it is
often placed first, and sometimes is found more useful, because it removes and
clears away beforehand the disbelief which disquiets some minds, and the doubt or
false opinion of such as have but recently come over. And yet each of them is
referrible to the same end, for the refutation of falsehood and the
establishment of truth both have piety for their object: not, indeed, that they are
absolutely one and the same, but the one is necessary, as I have said, to all who
believe, and to those who are concerned about the truth and their own salvation;
but the other proves to be more useful on some occasions, and to some persons,
and in dealing with some. Thus much by way of recapitulation, to recall what has
been already said. We must now pass on to what we proposed, and Show the truth
of the doctrine concerning the resurrection, both from the cause itself,
according to which, and on account of which, the first man and his posterity were
created, although they were not brought into existence in the same manner, and
from the common nature of all men as men; and further, from the judgment of their
Maker upon them according to the time each has lived, and according to the
rules by which each has regulated his behaviour,--a judgment which no one can doubt
will be just.
CHAP. XII.--ARGUMENT FOR THE RESURRECTION. FROM THE PURPOSE CONTEMPLATED IN
MAN'S CREATION.
The argument from the cause will appear, if we consider whether man was
made at random and in vain, or for some purpose; and if for some purpose, whether
simply that he might live and continue in the natural condition in which he
was created, or for the use of another; and if with a view to use, whether for
that of the Creator Himself, or of some one of the beings who belong to Him, and
are by Him deemed worthy Of greater care. Now, if we consider this in the most
general way, we find that a person of sound mind, and who is moved by a
rational judgment to do anything, does nothing in vain which he does intentionally,
but either for his own use, or for the use of some other person for whom he
cares, or for the sake of the work itself, being moved by some natural inclination
and affection towards its production. For instance (to make use of an
illustration, that our meaning may be clear), a man makes a house for his own use, but
for cattle and camels and other animals of which he has need he makes the shelter
suitable for each of them; not for his own use, if we regard the appearance
only, though for that, if we look at the end he has in view, but as regards the
immediate object, from concern for those for whom he cares. He has children,
too, not for his own use, nor for the sake of anything else belonging to him, but
that those who spring from him may exist and continue as long as possible, thus
by the succession of children and grandchildren comforting himself respecting
the close of his own life, and hoping in this way to immortalize the mortal.
Such is the procedure of men. But God can neither have made man in vain, for He
is wise, and no work of wisdom is in vain; nor for His own use, for He is in
want of nothing. But to a Being absolutely in need of nothing, no one of His works
can contribute anything to His own use. Neither, again, did He make man for
the sake of any of the other works which He has made. For nothing that is endowed
with reason and judgment has been created, or is created, for the use of
another, whether greater or less than itself, but for the sake of the life and
continuance of the being itself so created. For reason cannot discover any use which
might be deemed a cause for the creation of men, since immortals are free from
want, and in need of no help from men in order to their existence; and
irrational beings are by nature in a state of subjection, and perform those services
for men for which each of them was intended, but are not intended in their turn
to make use of men: for it neither was nor is right to lower that which rules
and takes the lead to the use of the inferior, or to subject the rational to the
irrational, which is not suited to rule. Therefore, if man has been created
neither without cause and in vain (for none of God's works is in vain, so far at
least as the purpose of their Maker is concerned), nor for the use of the Maker
Himself, or of any of the works which have proceeded from Him, it is quite
clear that although, according to the first and more general view of the subject,
God made man for Himself, and in pursuance of the goodness and wisdom which are
conspicuous throughout the creation, yet, according to the view which more
nearly touches the beings created, He made him for the sake of the life of those
created, which is not kindled for a little while and then extinguished. For to
creeping things, I suppose, and birds, and fishes, or, to speak more generally,
all irrational creatures, God has assigned such a life as that; but to those
who bear upon them the image of the Creator Himself, and are endowed with
understanding, and blessed with a rational judgment, the Creator has assigned
perpetual duration, in order that, recognising their own Maker, and His power and
skill, and obeying law and justice, they may pass their whole existence free from
suffering, in the possession of those qualifies with which they have bravely
borne their preceding life, although they lived in corruptible and earthly bodies.
For whatever has been created for the sake of something else, when that has
ceased to be for the sake of which it was created, will itself also fitly cease to
be, and will not continue to exist in vain, since, among the works of God,
that which is useless can have no place; but that which was created for the very
purpose of existing and living a life naturally suited to it, since the cause
itself is bound up with its nature, and is recognised only in connection with
existence itself, can never admit of any cause which shall utterly annihilate its
existence. But since this cause is seen to lie in perpetual existence, the
being so created must be preserved for ever, doing and experiencing what is
suitable to its nature, each of the two parts of which it consists contributing what
belongs to it, so that the soul may exist and remain without change in the
nature in which it was made, and discharge its appropriate functions (such as
presiding over the impulses of the body, and judging of and measuring that which
occurs from time to time by the proper standards and measures), and the body be
moved according to its nature towards its appropriate objects, and undergo the
changes allotted to it, and, among the rest (relating to age, or appearance, or
size), the resurrection. For the resurrection is a species of change, and the
last of all, and a change for the better of what still remains in existence at
that time.
CHAP. XIII.--CONTINUATION OF THE ARGUMENT.
[1]Confident of these things, no less than of those which have already
come to pass, and reflecting on our own nature, we are content with a life
associated with neediness and corruption, as suited to our present state of existence,
and we stedfastly hope for a continuance of being in immortality; and this we
do not take without foundation from the inventions of men, feeding ourselves on
false hopes, but our belief rests on a most infallible guarantee--the purpose
of Him who fashioned us, according to which He made man of an immortal soul[1]
and a body, and furnished him with understanding and an innate law for the
preservation and safeguard of the things given by Him as suitable to an intelligent
existence and a rational life: for we know well that He would not have
fashioned such a being, and furnished him with everything belonging to perpetuity, had
He not intended that what was so created should continue in perpetuity. If,
therefore, the Maker of this universe made man with a view to his partaking of an
intelligent life, and that, having become a spectator of His grandeur, and of
the wisdom which is manifest in all things, he might continue always in the
contemplation of these; then, according to the purpose of his Author, and the
nature which he has received, the cause of his creation is a pledge of his
continuance for ever, and this continuance is a pledge of the resurrection, without
which man could not continue. So that, from what has been said, it is quite clear
that the resurrection is plainly proved by the cause of man's creation, and the
purpose of Him who made him. Such being the nature of the cause for which man
has been brought into this world, the next thing will be to consider that which
immediately follows, naturally or in the order proposed; and in our
investigation the cause of their creation is followed by the nature of the men so
created, and the nature of those created by the just judgment of their Maker upon
them, and all these by the end of their existence. Having investigated therefore
the point placed first in order, we must now go on to consider the nature of men.
CHAP. XIV.--THE RESURRECTION DOES NOT REST SOLELY ON THE FACT OF A FUTURE
JUDGMENT.
The proof[2] of the several doctrines of which the truth consists, or of
any marten whatsoever proposed for examination, if it is to produce an
unwavering confidence in what is said, must begin, not from anything without, nor from
what certain persons think or have thought,[3] but from the common and natural
notion[4] of the matter, or from the connection of secondary troths with primary
ones. For the question relates either to primary beliefs, and then all that is
necessary is reminiscence, so as to stir up the natural notion; or to things
which naturally follow from the first and to their natural sequence. And in
these things we must observe order, showing what strictly follows from the first
truths, or from those which are placed first, so as neither to be unmindful of
the truth, or of our certainty respecting it, nor to confound the things arranged
by nature and distinguished from each other, or break up the natural order.
Hence I think it behoves those who desire to handle the subject with fairness,
and who wish to form an intelligent judgment whether there is a resurrection or
not, first to consider attentively the force of the arguments contributing to
the proof of this, and what place each of them holds--which is first, which
second, which third, and which last. And in the arrangement of these they should
place tint the cause of the creation of men,--namely, the purpose of the Creator
in making man; and then connect with this, as is suitable, the nature of the men
so created; not as being second in order, but because we are unable to pass
our judgment on both at the same time, although they have the closest natural
connection with each other, and are of equal force in reference to the subject
before us. But while from these proofs as the primary ones, and as being derived
from the work of creation, the resurrection is clearly demonstrated, none the
less can we gain conviction respecting it from the arguments taken from
providence,--I mean from the reward or punishment due to each man in accordance with
just judgment, and from the end of human existence. For many, in discussing the
subject of the resurrection, have rested the whole cause on the third argument
alone, deeming that the cause of the resurrection is the judgment. But the
fallacy of this is very clearly shown, from the fact that, although all human beings
who die rise again, yet not all who rise again are to be judged: for if only a
just judgment were the cause of the resurrection, it would of course follow
that those who had done neither evil nor good--namely, very young
children[5]--would not rise again; but seeing that all are to rise again, those who have died
in infancy as well as others, they too justify our conclusion that the
resurrection takes place not for the sake of the judgment as the primary reason, but in
consequence of the purpose of God in forming men, and the nature of the beings
so formed.
CHAP. XV.--ARGUMENT FOR THE RESURRECTION FROM THE NATURE OF MAN.
But while the cause discoverable in the creation of men is of itself
sufficient to prove that the resurrection follows by natural sequence on the
dissolution of bodies, yet it is perhaps right not to shrink from adducing either of
the proposed arguments, but, agreeably to what has been said, to point out to
those who are not able of themselves to discern them, the arguments from each of
the truths evolved from the primary; and first and foremost, the nature of the
men created, which conducts us to the same notion, and has the same force as
evidence of the resurrection. For if the whole nature of men in general is
composed of an immortal soul and a body which was fitted to it in the creation, and
if neither to the nature of the soul by itself, nor to the nature of the body
separately, has God assigned such a creation or such a life and entire course of
existence as this, but to men compounded of the two, in order that they may,
when they have passed through their present existence, arrive at one common end,
with the same elements of which they are composed at their birth and during
life, it unavoidably follows, since one living-being is formed from the two,
experiencing whatever the soul experiences and whatever the body experiences, doing
and performing whatever requires the judgment of the senses or of the reason,
that the whole series of these things must be referred to some one end, in order
that they all, and by means of all,namely, man's creation, man's nature, man's
life, man's doings and sufferings, his course of existence, and the end
suitable to his nature,--may concur in one harmony and the same common experience.
But if there is some one harmony and community of experience belonging to the
whole being, whether of the things which spring from the soul or of those which
are accomplished by means of the body, the end for all these must also be one.
And the end will be in strictness one, if the being whose end that end is remains
the same in its constitution; and the being-will be exactly the same, if all
those things of which the being consists as parts are the same. And they will be
the same in respect of their peculiar union, if the parts dissolved are again
united for the constitution of the being. And the constitution of the same men
of necessity proves that a resurrection will follow of the dead and dissolved
bodies; for without this, neither could the same parts be united according to
nature with one another, nor could the nature of the same men be reconstituted.
And if both understanding and reason have been given to men for the discernment
of things which are perceived by the understanding, and not of existences only,
but also of the goodness and wisdom and rectitude of their Giver, it
necessarily follows that, since those things continue for the sake of which the rational
judgment is given, the judgment given for these things should also continue.
But it is impossible for this to continue, unless the nature which has received
it, and in which it adheres, continues. But that which has received both
understanding and reason is man, not the soul by itself. Man, therefore, who consists
of the two parts, must continue for ever. But it is impossible for him to
continue unless he rise again. For if no resurrection were to take place, the
nature of men as men would not continue. And if the nature of men does not continue,
in vain has the soul been fitted to the need of the body and to its
experiences; in vain has the body been lettered so that it cannot obtain what it longs
for, obedient to the reins of the soul, and guided by it as with a bridle; in
vain is the understanding, in vain is wisdom, and the observance of rectitude, or
even the practice of every virtue, and the enactment and enforcement of
laws,--to say all in a word, whatever is noble in men or for men's sake, or rather the
very creation and nature of men. But if vanity is utterly excluded from all
the works of God, and from all the gifts bestowed by Him, the conclusion is
unavoidable, that, along with the interminable duration of the soul, there will be a
perpetual continuance of the body according to its proper nature.
CHAP. XVI--ANALOGY OF DEATH AND SLEEP, AND CONSEQUENT ARGUMENT FOR THE
RESURRECTION.
And let no one think it strange that we call by the name of life a
continuance of being which is interrupted by death and corruption; but let him
consider rather that this word has not one meaning only, nor is there only one measure
of continuance, because the nature also of the things that continue is not
one. For if each of the things that continue has its continuance according to its
peculiar nature, neither in the case of those who are wholly incorruptible and
immortal shall we find the continuance like ours, because the natures of
superior beings do not take the level of such as are inferior; nor in men is it
proper to look for a continuance invariable and unchangeable; inasmuch as the former
are from the first created immortal, and continue to exist without end by the
simple will of their Maker, and men, in respect of the soul, have from their
first origin an unchangeable continuance, but in respect of the body obtain
immortality by means of change. This is what is meant by the doctrine of the
resurrection; and, looking to this, we both await the dissolution of the body, as the
sequel to a life of want and corruption, and after this we hope for a
continuance with immortality,[1] not putting either our death on a level with the death
of the irrational animals, or the continuance of man with the continuance of
immortals, lest we should unawares in this way put human nature and life on a
level with things with which it is not proper to compare them. It ought not,
therefore, to excite dissatisfaction, if some inequality appears to exist in regard
to the duration of men; nor, because the separation of the soul from the
members of the body and the dissolution of its parts interrupts the continuity of
life, must we therefore despair of the resurrection. For although the relaxation
of the senses and of the physical powers, which naturally takes place in sleep,
seems to interrupt the sensational life when men sleep at equal intervals of
time, and, as it were, come back to life again, yet we do not refuse to call it
life; and for this reason, I suppose, some call sleep the brother of death,[1]
not as deriving their origin from the same ancestors and fathers, but because
those who are dead and those who sleep are subject to similar states, as regards
at least the stillness and the absence of all sense of the present or the past,
or rather of existence itself and their own life. If, therefore, we do not
refuse to call by the name of life the life of men full of such inequality from
birth to dissolution, and interrupted by all those things which we have before
mentioned, neither ought we to despair of the life succeeding to dissolution,
such as involves the resurrection, although for a time it is interrupted by the
separation of the soul from the body.
CHAP. XVII.--THE SERIES OF CHANGES WE CAN NOW TRACE IN MAN RENDERS A
RESURRECTION PROBABLE.
For this nature of men, which has inequality allotted to it from the
first, and according to the purpose of its Maker, has an unequal life and
continuance, interrupted sometimes by sleep, at another time by death, and by the changes
incident to each period of life, whilst those which follow the first are not
clearly seen beforehand. Would any one have believed, unless taught by
experience, that in the soft seed alike in all its parts there was deposited such a
variety and number of great powers, or of masses, which in this way arise and
become consolidated--I mean of bones, and nerves, and cartilages, of muscles too,
and flesh, and intestines, and the other parts of the body? For neither in the
yet moist seed is anything of this kind to be seen, nor even in infants do any of
those things make their appearance which pertain to adults, or in the adult
period what belongs to those who are past their prime, or in these what belongs
to such as have grown old. But although some of the things I have said exhibit
not at all, and others but faintly, the natural sequence and the changes that
come upon the nature of men, yet all who are not blinded in their judgment of
these matters by vice or sloth, know that there must be first the depositing of
the seed, and that when this is completely organized in respect of every member
and part and the progeny comes forth to the light, there comes the growth
belonging to the first period of life, and the maturity which attends growth, and
after the maturity the slackening of the physical powers till old age, and then,
when the body is worn out, its dissolution. As, therefore, in this matter,
though neither the seed has inscribed upon it the life or form of men, nor the life
the dissolution into the primary elements; the succession of natural
occurrences makes things credible which have no credibility from the phenomena
themselves, much more does reason, tracing out the truth from the natural sequence,
afford ground for believing in the resurrection, since it is safer and stronger than
experience for establishing the truth.
CHAP. XVIII.--JUDGMENT MUST HAVE REFERENCE BOTH TO SOUL AND BODY: THERE WILL
THEREFORE BE A RESURRECTION.
The arguments I just now proposed for examination, as establishing the
truth of the resurrection, are all of the same kind, since they all start from the
same point; for their starting: point is the origin of the first men by
creation. But while some of them derive their strength from the starting-point itself
from which they take their rise, others, consequent upon the nature and the
life of men, acquire their credibility from the superintendence of God over us;
for the cause according to which, and on account of which, men have come into
being, being closely connected with the nature of men, derives its force from
creation; but the argument from rectitude, which represents God as judging men
according as they have lived well or ill, derives its force from the end of their
existence: they come into being on the former ground, but their state depends
more on God's superintendence. And now that the matters which come first have
been demonstrated by me to the best of my ability, it will be well to prove our
proposition by those also which come after--I mean by the reward or punishment
due to each man in accordance with righteous judgment, and by the final cause of
human existence; and of these I put foremost that which takes the lead by
nature, and inquire first into the argument relating to the judgment: premising
only one thing, from concern for the principle which appertains to the matters
before us, and for order--namely, that it is incumbent on those who admit God to
be the Maker of this universe, to ascribe to His wisdom and rectitude the
preservation and care of all that has been created if they wish to keep to their own
principles; and with such views to hold that nothing either in earth or in
heaven is without guardianship or providence, but that; on the contrary, to
everything, invisible and visible alike, small and great, the attention of the Creator
reaches; for all created things require the attention of the Creator,[1] and
each one in particular, according to its nature and the end for which it was
made: though I think it would be a useless expenditure of trouble to go through
the list now, or distinguish between the several cases, or mention in detail what
is suitable to each nature. Man, at all events, of whom it is now our business
to speak, as being in want, requires food; as being mortal, posterity; as
being rational, a process of judgment. But if each of these things belongs to man
by nature, and he requires food for his life, and requires posterity for the
continuance of the race, and requires a judgment in order that food and posterity
may be according to law, it of course follows, since food and posterity refer
to both together, that the judgment must be referred to them too (by both
together I mean man, consisting of soul and body), and that such man becomes
accountable for all his actions, and receives for them either reward or punishment.
Now, if the righteous judgment awards to both together its retribution for the
deeds wrought; and if it is not proper that either the soul alone should receive
the wages of the deeds wrought in union with the body (for this of itself has no
inclination to the faults which are committed in connection with the pleasure
or food and culture of the body), or that the body alone should (for this of
itself is incapable of distinguishing law and justice), but man, composed of
these, is subjected to trial for each of the deeds wrought by him; and if reason
does not find this happening either in this life (for the award according to
merit finds no place in the present existence, since many atheists and persons who
practise every iniquity and wickedness live on to the last, unvisited by
calamity, whilst, on the contrary, those who have manifestly lived an exemplary life
in respect of every Virtue, live in pain, in insult, in calumny and outrage,
and suffering of all kinds) or after death (for both together no longer exist,
the soul being separated from the body, and the body itself being resolved again
into the materials out of which it was composed, and no longer retaining
anything of its former structure or form, much less the remembrance of its actions):
the result of all this is very plain to every one,--namely, that, in the
language of the apostle, "this corruptible (and dissoluble) must put on
incorruption,"[2] in order that those who were dead, having been made alive by the
resurrection, and the parts that were separated and entirely dissolved having been again
united, each one may, in accordance with justice, receive what he has done by
the body, whether it be good or bad.
CHAP. XIX.--MAN WOULD BE MORE UNFAVOURABLY SITUATED THAN THE BEASTS IF THERE
WERE NO RESURRECTION.
In replying, then, to those who acknowledge a divine superintendence, and
admit the same principles as we do, yet somehow depart from their own
admissions, one may use such arguments as those which have been adduced, and many more
than these, should he be disposed to amplify what has been said only concisely
and in a cursory manner. But in dealing with those who differ from us concerning
primary truths, it will perhaps be well to lay down another principle
antecedent to these, joining with them in doubting of the things to which their
opinions relate, and examining the matter along with them in this manner--whether the
life of men, and their entire course of existence, is overlooked, and a sort of
dense darkness is poured down upon the earth, hiding in ignorance and silence
both the men themselves and their actions; or whether it is much safer to be of
opinion that the Maker presides over the things which He Himself has made,
inspecting all things whatsoever which exist, or come into existence, Judge of
both deeds and purposes. For if no judgment whatever were to be passed on the
actions of men, men would have no advantage over the irrational creatures, but
rather would fare worse than these do, inasmuch as they keep in subjection their
passions, and concern themselves about piety, and righteousness, and the other
virtues; and a life after the manner of brutes would be the best, virtue would be
absurd, the threat of judgment a matter for broad laughter, indulgence in
every kind of pleasure the highest good, and the common resolve of all these and
their one law would be that maxim, so dear to the intemperate and lewd, "Let us
eat and drink, for to-morrow we die." For the termination of such a life is not
even pleasure, as some suppose, but utter insensibility. But if the Maker of
men takes any concern about His own works, and the distinction is anywhere to be
found between those who have lived well and ill, it must be either in the
present life, while men are still living who have conducted themselves virtuously or
viciously, or after death, when men are in a state of separation and
dissolution. But according to neither of these suppositions can we find a just judgment
taking place; for neither do the good in the present life obtain the rewards of
virtue, nor yet do the bad receive the wages of vice. I pass over the fact,
that so long as the nature we at present possess is preserved, the moral nature
is not able to bear a punishment commensurate with the more numerous or more
serious faults. For the robber, or ruler, or tyrant, who has unjustly put to death
myriads on myriads, could not by one death make restitution for these deeds;
and the man who holds no true opinion concerning God, but lives in all outrage
and blasphemy, despises divine things, breaks the laws, commits outrage against
boys and women alike, razes cities unjustly, burns houses with their
inhabitants, and devastates a country, and at the same time destroys inhabitants of
cities and peoples, and even an entire nation--how in a mortal body could he endure
a penalty adequate to these crimes, since death prevents the deserved
punishment, and the mortal nature does not suffice for any single one of his deeds? It
is proved, therefore, that neither in the present life is there a judgment
according to men's deserts, nor after death.
CHAP. XX.--MAN MUST BE POSSESSED BOTH OF A BODY AND SOUL HEREAFTER, THAT THE
JUDGMENT PASSED UPON HIM MAY BE JUST.
For either death is the entire extinction of life, the soul being
dissolved and corrupted along with the body, or the soul remains by itself, incapable
of dissolution, of dispersion, of corruption, whilst the body is corrupted and
dissolved, retaining no longer any remembrance of past actions, nor sense of
what it experienced in connection with the soul. If the life of men is to be
utterly extinguished, it is manifest there will be no care for men who are not
living, no judgment respecting those who have lived in virtue or in vice; but there
will rush in again upon us whatever belongs to a lawless life, and the swarm of
absurdities which follow from it, and that which is the summit of this
lawlessness--atheism. But if the body were to be corrupted, and each of the dissolved
particles to pass to its kindred element, yet the soul to remain by itself as
immortal, neither on this supposition would any judgment on the soul take place,
since there would be an absence of equity: for it is unlawful to suspect that
any judgment can proceed out of God and from God which is wanting in equity.
Yet equity is wanting to the judgment, if the being is not preserved in existence
who practised righteousness or lawlessness: for that which practised each of
the things in life on which the judgment is passed was man, not soul by itself.
To sum up all in a word, this view will in no case consist with equity.
CHAP. XXI.--CONTINUATION OF THE ARGUMENT.
For if good deeds are rewarded, the body will clearly be wronged, inasmuch
as it has shared with the soul in the toils connected with well-doing, but
does not share in the reward of the good deeds, and because, though the soul is
often excused for certain faults on the ground of the body's neediness and want,
the body itself is deprived of all share in the good deeds done, the toils on
behalf of which it helped to bear during life. Nor, again, if faults are judged,
is the soul dealt fairly with, supposing it alone to pay the penalty for the
faults it committed through being solicited by the body and drawn away by it to
its own appetites and motions, at one time being seized upon and carried off,
at another attracted in some very violent manner, and sometimes concurring with
it by way of kindness and attention to its preservation. How can it possibly be
other than unjust for the soul to be judged by itself in respect of things
towards which in its own nature it feels no appetite, no motion, no impulse, such
as licentiousness, violence, covetousness, injustice, and the unjust acts
arising out of these? For if the majority of such evils come from men's not having
the mastery of the passions which solicit them, and they are solicited by the
neediness and want of the body, and the care and attention required by it (for
these are the motives for every acquisition of property, and especially for the
using of it, and moreover for marriage and all the actions of life, in which
things, and in connection with which, is seen what is faulty and what is not so),
how can it be just for the soul alone to be judged in respect of those things
which the body is the first to be sensible of, and in which it draws the soul
away to sympathy and participation in actions with a view to things Which it
wants; and that the appetites and pleasures, and moreover the fears and sorrows, in
which whatever exceeds the proper bounds is amenable to judgment, should be
set in motion by the body, and yet that the sins arising from these, and the
punishments for the sins committed, should fall upon the soul alone, which neither
needs anything of this sort, nor desires nor fears or suffers of itself any
such thing as man is wont to suffer? But even if we hold that these affections do
not pertain to the body alone, but to man, in saying which we should speak
correctly, because the life of man is one, though composed of the two, yet surely
we shall not assert that these things belong to the soul, if we only look simply
at its peculiar nature. For if it is absolutely without need of food, it can
never desire those things which it does not in the least require for its
subsistence; nor can it feel any impulse towards any of those things which it is not
at all fitted to use; nor, again, can it be grieved at the want of money or
other property, since these are not suited to it. And if, too, it is superior to
corruption, it fears nothing whatever as destructive of itself: it has no dread
of famine, or disease, or mutilation, or blemish, or fire, or sword, since it
cannot suffer from any of these any hurt or pain, because neither bodies nor
bodily powers touch it at all. But if it is absurd to attach the passions to the
soul as belonging specially to it, it is in the highest degree unjust and
unworthy of the judgment of God to lay upon the soul alone the sins which spring from
them, and the consequent punishments.
CHAP. XXII.--CONTINUATION OF THE ARGUMENT.
In addition to what has been said, is it not absurd that, while we cannot
even have the notion of virtue and vice as existing separately in the soul (for
we recognise the virtues as man's virtues, even as in like manner vice, their
opposite, as not belonging to the soul in separation from the body, and
existing by itself), yet that the reward or punishment for these should be assigned to
the soul alone? How can any one have even the notion of courage or fortitude
as existing in the soul alone, when it has no fear of death, or wounds, or
maiming, or loss, or maltreatment, or of the pain connected with these, or the
suffering resulting from them? And what shall we say of self-control and temperance,
when there is no desire drawing it to food or sexual intercourse, or other
pleasures and enjoyments, nor any other thing soliciting it from within or
exciting it from without? And what of practical wisdom, when things are not proposed
to it which may or may not be done, nor things to be chosen or avoided, or
rather when there is in it no motion at all or natural impulse towards the doing of
anything? And how in any sense can equity be an attribute of souls, either in
reference to one another or to anything else, whether of the same or of a
different kind, when they are not able from any source, or by any means, or in any
way, to bestow that which is equal according to merit or according to analogy,
with the exception of the honour rendered to God, and, moreover, have no impulse
or motion towards the use of their own things, or abstinence from those of
others, since the use of those things which are according to nature, or the
abstinence from them, is considered in reference to those who are so constituted as to
use them, whereas the soul neither wants anything, nor is so constituted as to
use any things or any single thing, and therefore what is called the
independent action of the parts cannot be found in the soul so constituted?
CHAP. XXIII.--CONTINUATION OF THE ARGUMENT.
But the most irrational thing of all is this: to impose properly
sanctioned laws on men, and then to assign to their souls alone the recompense of their
lawful or unlawful deeds. For if he who receives the laws would also justly
receive the recompense of the transgression of the laws, and if it was man that
received the laws, and not the soul by itself, man must also bear the recompense
for the sins committed, and not the soul by itself, since God has not enjoined
on souls to abstain from things which have no relation to them, such as
adultery, murder, theft, rapine, dishonour to parents, and every desire in general
that tends to the injury and loss of our neighbours. For neither the command,
"Honour thy father and thy mother," is adapted to souls alone, since such names are
not applicable to them, for souls do not produce souls, so as to appropriate
the appellation of father or mother, but men produce men; nor could the command,
"Thou shalt not commit adultery," ever be properly addressed to souls, or even
thought of in such a connection, since the difference of male and female does
not exist in them, nor any aptitude for sexual intercourse, nor appetite for
it; and where there is no appetite, there can be no intercourse; and where there
is no intercourse at all, there can be no legitimate intercourse, namely
marriage; and where there is no lawful intercourse, neither can there be unlawful
desire of, or intercourse with, another man's wife, namely adultery. Nor, again,
is the prohibition of theft, or of the desire of having more, applicable to
souls, for they do not need those things, through the need of which, by reason of
natural indigence or want, men are accustomed to steal or to rob, such as gold,
or silver, or an animal, or something else adapted for food, or shelter, or
use; for to an immortal nature everything which is desired by the needy as useful
is useless. But let the fuller discussion of these matters be left to those who
wish to investigate each point more exactly, or to contend more earnestly with
opponents. But, since what has just been said, and that which concurs with
this to guarantee the resurrection, suffices for us, it would not be seasonable to
dwell any longer upon them; for we have not made it our aim to omit nothing
that might be said, but to point out in a summary manner to those who have
assembled what ought to be thought concerning the resurrection, and to adapt to the
capacity of those present the arguments bearing on this question.
CHAP. XXIV.--ARGUMENT FOR THE RESURRECTION FROM THE CHIEF END OF MAN.
The points proposed for consideration having been to some extent
investigated, it remains to examine the argument from the end or final cause, which
indeed has already emerged m what has been said, and only requires just so much
attention and further discussion as may enable us to avoid the appearance of
leaving unmentioned any of the matters briefly referred to by us, and thus
indirectly damaging the subject or the division of topics made at the outset. For the
sake of those present, therefore, and of others who may pay attention to this
subject, it may be well just to signify that each of those things which are
constituted by nature, and of those which are made by art, must have an end peculiar
to itself, as indeed is taught us by the common sense of all men, and testified
by the things that pass before our eyes. For do we not see that husbandmen
have one end, and physicians another; and again, the things which spring out of
the earth another, and the animals nourished upon it, and produced according to a
certain natural series, another? If this is evident, and natural and
artificial powers, and the actions arising from these, must by all means be accompanied
by an end in accordance with nature, it is absolutely necessary that the end of
men, since it is that of a peculiar nature, should be separated from community
with the rest; for it is not lawful to suppose the same end for beings
destitute of rational judgment, and of those whose actions are regulated by the innate
law and reason, and who live an intelligent life and observe justice. Freedom
from pain, therefore, cannot be the proper end for the latter, for this they
would have in common with beings utterly devoid of sensibility: nor can it
consist in the enjoyment of things which nourish or delight the body, or in an
abundance of pleasures; else a life like that of the brutes must hold the first
place, while that regulated by virtue is without a final cause. For such an end as
this, I suppose, belongs to beasts and cattle, not to men possessed of an
immortal soul and rational judgment.
CHAP. XXV.--ARGUMENT CONTINUED AND CONCLUDED.
Nor again is it the happiness of soul separated from body: for we are not
inquiring about the life or final cause of either of the parts of which man
consists, but of the being who is composed of both; for such is every man who has
a share in this present existence, and there must be some appropriate end
proposed for this life. But if it is the end of both parts together, and this can be
discovered neither while they are still living in the present state of
existence through the numerous causes already mentioned, nor yet when the soul is in a
state of separation, because the man cannot be said to exist when the body is
dissolved, and indeed entirely scattered abroad, even though the soul continue
by itself--it is absolutely necessary that the end of a man's being should
appear in some reconstitution of the two together, and of the same living being.
And as this follows of necessity, there must by all means be a resurrection of
the bodies which are dead, or even entirely dissolved, and the same men must be
formed anew, since the law of nature ordains the end not absolutely, nor as the
end of any men whatsoever, but of the same men who passed through the previous
life; but it is impossible for the same men to be reconstituted unless the same
bodies are restored to the same souls. But that the same soul should obtain
the same body is impossible in any other way, and possible only by the
resurrection; for if this takes place, an end befitting the nature of men follows also.
And we shall make no mistake in saying, that the final cause of an intelligent
life and rational judgment, is to be occupied uninterruptedly with those objects
to which the natural reason is chiefly and primaily adapted, and to delight
unceasingly in the contemplation of Him who is, and of His decrees,
notwithstanding that the majority of men, because they are affected too passionately and too
violently by things below, pass through life without attaining this object.
For the large number of those who fail of the end that belongs to them does not
make void the common lot, since the examination relates to individuals, and the
reward or punishment of lives ill or well spent is proportioned to the merit of
each.