ON THE RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH (CHAP. I to CHAP. XXXIV)
VI. ON THE RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH.
THE HERETICS AGAINST WHOM THIS WORK IS DIRECTED, WERE THE SAME WHO MAINTAINED
THAT THE DEMIURGE, OR THE GOD WHO CREATED THIS WORLD AND GAVE THE MOSAIC
DISPENSATION, WAS OPPOSED TO THE SUPREME GOD. HENCE THEY ATTACHED AN IDEA OF INHERENT
CORRUPTION AND WORTHLESSNESS TO ALL HIS WORKS--AMONGST THE REST, TO THE FLESH
OR BODY OF MAN; AFFIRMING THAT IT COULD NOT RISE AGAIN, AND THAT THE SOUL ALONE
WAS CAPABLE OF INHERITING IMMORTALITY.(1)
[TRANSLATED BY DR. HOLMES.]
CHAP. I.--THE DOCTRINE OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY BROUGHT TO LIGHT BY THE
GOSPEL. THE FAINTEST' GLIMPSES OF SOMETHING LIKE IT OCCASIONALLY MET WITH IN
HEATHENISM. INCONSISTENCIES OF PAGAN TEACHING.
The resurrection of the dead is the Christian's trust.(2) By it we are
believers. To the belief of this (article of the faith) truth compels us--that
truth which God reveals, but the crowd derides, which supposes that nothing will
survive after death. And yet they do honour(3) to their dead, and that too in
the most expensive way according to their bequest, and with the daintiest
banquets which the seasons can produce,(4) on the presumption that those whom they
declare to be incapable of all perception still retain an appetite.(5) But (let
the crowd deride): I on my side must deride it still more, especially when it
burns up its dead with harshest inhumanity, only to pamper them immediately
afterwards with gluttonous satiety, using the selfsame fires to honour them and to
insult them. What piety is that which mocks its victims with cruelty? Is it
sacrifice or insult (which the crowd offers), when it burns its offerings to those
it has already burnt?(6) But the wise, too, join with the vulgar crowd in their
opinion sometimes. There is nothing after death, according to the school of
Epicurus. After death all things come to an end, even death itself, says Seneca
to like effect. It is satisfactory, however, that the no less important
philosophy of Pythagoras and Empedocles, and the Plantonists, take the contrary view,
and declare the soul to be immortal; affirming, moreover, in a way which most
nearly approaches (to our own doctrine)? that the soul actually returns into
bodies, although not the same bodies, and not even those of human beings
invariably: thus Euphorbus is supposed to have passed into Phythagoras, and Homer into a
peacock. They firmly pronounced the soul's renewal(8) to be in a body,(9)
(deeming it) more tolerable to change the quality (of the corporeal state)than to
deny it wholly: they at least knocked at the door of truth, although they entered
not. Thus the world, with all its errors, does not ignore the resurrection of
the dead.
CHAP. II.--THE JEWISH SADDUCEES A LINK BETWEEN THE PAGAN PHILOSOPHERS AND THE
HERETICS ON THIS DOCTRINE. ITS FUNDAMENTAL IMPORTANCE ASSERTED. THE SOUL FARES
BETTER THAN THE BODY, IN HERETICAL ESTIMATION, AS TO ITS FUTURE STATE. ITS
EXTINCTION, HOWEVER, WAS HELD BY ONE LUCAN.
Since there is even within the confines of God's Church(1) a sect which
is more nearly allied to the Epicureans than to the prophets, an opportunity is
afforded us of knowing(2) what estimate Christ forms of the (said sect, even
the) Sadducees. For to Christ was it reserved to lay bare everything which before
was concealed: to impart certainty to doubtful points; to accomplish those of
which men had had but a foretaste; to give present reality to the objects of
prophecy; and to furnish not only by Himself, but actually in Himself, certain
proofs of the resurrection of the dead. It is, however, against other Sadducees
that we have now to prepare ourselves, but still partakers of their doctrine.
For instance, they allow a moiety of the resurrection; that is, simply of the
soul, despising the flesh, just as they also do the Lord of the flesh Himself. No
other persons, indeed, refuse to concede to the substance of the body its
recovery from death,(3) heretical inventors of a second deity. Driven then, as they
are, to give a different dispensation to Christ, so that He may not be
accounted as belonging to the Creator, they have achieved their first error in the
article of His very flesh; contending with Marcion and Basilides that it possessed
no reality; or else holding, after the heretical tenets of Valentinus, and
according to Apelles, that it had qualities peculiar to itself. And so it follows
that they shut out from all recovery from death that substance of which they
say that Christ did not partake, confidently assuming that it furnishes the
strongest presumption against the resurrection, since the flesh is already risen in
Christ. Hence it is that we have ourselves previously issued our volume On the
flesh of Christ; in which we both furnish proofs of its reality,(4) in
opposition to the idea of its being a vain phantom; and claim for it a human nature
without any peculiarity of condition--such a nature as has marked out Christ to be
both man and the Son of man. For when we prove Him to be invested with the
flesh and in a bodily condition, we at the same time refute heresy, by
establishing the rule that no other being than the Creator must be believed to be God,
since we show that Christ, in whom God is plainly discerned, is precisely of such
a nature as the Creator promised that He should be. Being thus refuted touching
God as the Creator, and Christ as the Redeemer of the flesh, they will at once
be defeated also on the resurrection of the flesh. No procedure, indeed, can
be more reasonable. And we affirm that controversy with heretics should in most
cases be conducted in this way. For due method requires that conclusions should
always be drawn from the most important premises, in order that there be a
prior agreement on the essential point, by means of which the particular question
under review may be said to have been determined. Hence it is that the
heretics, from their conscious weakness, never conduct discussion in an orderly manner.
They are well aware how hard is their task in insinuating the existence of a
second god, to the disparagement of the Creator of the world, who is known to
all men naturally by the testimony of His works, who is before all others in the
mysteries(5)of His being, and is especially manifested in the prophets;(6)
then, under the pretence of considering a more urgent inquiry, namely man's own
salvation--a question which transcends all others in its importance--they begin
with doubts about the resurrection; for there is greater difficulty in believing
the resurrection of the flesh than the oneness of the Deity. In this way, after
they have deprived the discussion of the advantages of its logical order, and
have embarrassed it with doubtful insinuations(7) in disparagement of the
flesh, they gradually draw their argument to the reception of a second god after
destroying and changing the very ground of our hopes. For when once a man Is
fallen or removed from the sure hope which he had placed in the Creator, he is
easily led away to the object of a different hope, whom however of his own accord he
can hardly help suspecting. Now it is by a discrepancy in the promises that a
difference of gods is insinuated. How many do we thus see drawn into the net
vanquished on the resurrection of the flesh, before they could carry their point
on the oneness of the Deity ! In respect, then, of the heretics, we have shown
with what weapons we ought to meet them. And indeed we have already encountered
them in treatises severally directed against them: on the one only God and His
Christ, in our work against Marcion,(8) on the Lord's flesh, in our book
against the four heresies,(1) for the special purpose of opening the way to the
present inquiry: so that we have now only to discuss the resurrection of the flesh,
(treating it) just as if it were uncertain in regard to ourselves also, that
is, in the system of the Creator.(2) Because many persons are uneducated; still
more are of faltering faith, and several are weak-minded: these will have to be
instructed, directed, strengthened, inasmuch as the very oneness of the
Godhead will be defended along with the maintenance of our doctrine.(3) For if the
resurrection of the flesh be denied, that prime article of the faith is shaken;
if it be asserted, that is established. There is no need, I suppose, to treat of
the soul's safety; for nearly all the heretics, in whatever way they conceive
of it, certainly refrain from denying that. We may ignore a certain Lucan,(4)
who does not spare even this part of our nature, which he follows Aristotle in
reducing to dissolution, and substitutes some other thing in lieu of it. Some
third nature it is which, according to him, is to rise again, neither soul nor
flesh; in other words, not man, but a bear perhaps--for instance, Lucan
himself.(5) Even he(6) has received from us a copious notice in our book on the entire
condition of the soul,(7) the especial immortality of which we there maintain,
whilst we also both acknowledge the dissolution of the flesh alone, and
emphatically assert its restitution. Into the body of that work were collected whatever
points we elsewhere had to reserve from the pressure of incidental causes. For
as it is my custom to touch some questions but lightly on their first
occurrence, so I am obliged also to postpone the consideration of them, until the
outline can be filled in with complete detail, and the deferred points be taken up
on their own merits.
CHAP. III.--SOME TRUTHS HELD E. EN BY THE HEATHEN, THEY WERE, HOWEVER, MORE
OFTEN WRONG BOTH IN RELIGIOUS OPINIONS AND IN MORAL PRACTICE. THE HEATHEN NOT TO
BE FOLLOWED IN THEIR IGNORANCE OF THE CHRISTIAN MYSTERY. THE HERETICS
PERVERSELY PRONE TO FOLLOW THEM.
One may no doubt be wise in the things of God, even from one's natural
powers, but only in witness to the truth, not in maintenance of error; (only) when
one acts in accordance with, not in opposition to, the divine dispensation.
For some things are known even by nature: the immortality of the soul, for
instance, is held by many; the knowledge of our God is possessed by all. I may use,
therefore, the opinion of a Plato, when he declares, "Every soul is immortal." I
may use also the conscience of a nation, when it attests the God of gods. I
may, in like manner, use all the other intelligences of our common nature, when
they pronounce God to be a judge. "God sees," (say they)(say they); and, "I
commend you to God."(8) But when they say, What has undergone death is dead," and,
"Enjoy life whilst you live," and, "After death all things come to an end, even
death itself;" then I must remember both that "the heart of man is ashes,"(9)
according to the estimate of God, and that the very "Wisdom of the world is
foolishness," (as the inspired word) pronounces it to be.(10) Then, if even the
heretic seek refuge in the depraved thoughts of the vulgar, or the imaginations
of the world, I must say to him: Part company with the heathen, O heretic ! for
although you are all agreed in imagining a God, yet while you do so in the
name of Christ, so long as you deem yourself a Christian, you are a different man
from a heathen: give him back his own views of things, since he does not
himself learn from yours. Why lean upon a blind guide, if you have eyes of your own?
Why be clothed by one who is naked, if you have put on Christ? Why use the
shield of another, when the apostle gives you armour of your own? It would be
better for him to learn from you to acknowledge the resurrection of the flesh, than
for you from him to deny it; because if Christians must needs deny it, it would
be sufficient if they did so from their own knowledge, without any instruction
from the ignorant multitude. He, therefore, will not be a Christian who shall
deny this doctrine which is confessed by Christians; denying it, moreover, on
grounds which are adopted by a man who is not a Christian. Take away, indeed,
from the heretics the wisdom which they share with the heathen, and let them
support their inquiries from the Scriptures alone: they will then be unable to keep
their ground. For that which commends men's common sense is its very
simplicity, and its participation in the same feelings, and its community of opinions;
and it is deemed to be all the more trustworthy, inasmuch as its definitive
statements are naked and open, and known to all. Divine reason, on the contrary,
lies in the very pith and marrow of things, not on the surface, and very often is
at variance with appearances.
CHAP. IV.--HEATHENS AND HERETICS ALIKE IN THEIR VILIFICATION OF THE FLESH AND
ITS FUNCTIONS, THE ORDINARY CAVILS AGAINST THE FINAL RESTITUTION OF SO WEAK AND
IGNOBLE A SUBSTANCE.
Hence it is that heretics start at once from this point,(1) from which
they sketch the first draft of their dogmas, and afterwards add the details, being
well aware how easily men's minds are caught by its influence, (and actuated)
by that community of human sentiment which is so favourable to their designs.
Is there anything else that you can hear of from the heretic, as also from the
heathen, earlier in time or greater in extent? Is not (their burden) from the
beginning and everywhere an invective against the flesh--against its origin,
against its substance, against the casualties and the invariable end which await
it; unclean from its first formation of the dregs of the ground, uncleaner
afterwards from the mire of its own seminal transmission; worthless,(2) weak, covered
with guilt, laden with misery, full of trouble; and after all this record of
its degradation, dropping into its original earth and the appellation of a
corpse, and destined to dwindle away even from this(3) loathsome name into none
henceforth at all--into the very death of all designation? Now you are a shrewd
man, no doubt: will you then persuade yourself, that after this flesh has been
withdrawn from sight, and touch, and memory, it can never be rehabilitated from
corruption to integrity, from a shattered to a solid State, from an empty to a
full condition, from nothing at all to something--the devouring fires, and the
waters of the sea, and the maws of beasts, and the crops of birds and the
stomachs of fishes, and time's own great paunch(4) itself of course yielding it all up
again? Shall the same flesh which has fallen to decay be so expected to
recover, as that the lame, and the one-eyed, and the blind, and the leper, and the
palsied shall come back again, although there can be no pleasure in returning to
their old condition? Or shall they be whole, and so have to fear exposure to
such sufferings? What, in that case, (must we say) of the consequences of
resuming the flesh? Will it again be subject to all its present wants, especially
meats and drinks? Shall we have with our lungs to float (in air or water),(5) and
suffer pain in our bowels, and with organs of shame to feel no shame, and with
all our limbs to toil and labour? Must there again be ulcers, and wounds, and
fever, and gout, and once more the wishing to die? Of course these will be the
longings incident on the recovery of the flesh, only the repetition of desires to
escape out of it. Well now, we have (stated) all this in very subdued and
delicate phrases, as suited to the character of our style; but (would you know) how
great a licence of unseemly language these men actually use, you must test
them in their conferences, whether they be heathens or heretics.
CHAP. V.--SOME CONSIDERATIONS IN REPLY EULOGISTIC OF THE FLESH. IT WAS CREATED
BY GOD. THE BODY OF MAN WAS, IN FACT, PREVIOUS TO HIS SOUL.
Inasmuch as all uneducated men, therefore, still form their opinions after
these common-sense views, and as the falterers and the weak-minded have a
renewal of their perplexities occasioned by the selfsame views; and as the first
battering-ram which is directed against ourselves is that which shatters the
condition of the flesh, we must on our side necessarily so manage our defences, as
to guard, first of all, the condition of the flesh, their disparagement of it
being repulsed by our own eulogy. The heretics, therefore, challenged us to use
our rhetoric no less than our philosophy. Respecting, then, this frail and
poor, worthless body, which they do not indeed hesitate to call evil, even if it
had been the work of angels, as Menander and Marcus are pleased to think, or the
formation of some fiery being, an angel, as Apelles teaches, it would be quite
enough for securing respect for the body, that it had the support and
protection of even a secondary deity. The angels, we know, rank next to God. Now,
whatever be the supreme God of each heretic, I should not unfairly derive the
dignity of the flesh likewise from Him to whom was present the will for its
production. For, of course, if He had not willed its production, He would have
prohibited it, when He knew it was in progress. It follows, then, that even on their
principle the flesh is equally the work of God. There is no work but belongs to
Him who has permitted it to exist. It is indeed a happy circumstance, that most
of their doctrines, including even the harshest, accord to our God the entire
formation of man. How mighty He is, you know full well who believe that He is the
only God. Let, then, the flesh begin to give you pleasure, since the Creator
thereof is so great. But, you say, even the world is the work of God, and yet
"the fashion of this world passeth away,"(1) as the apostle himself testifies;
nor must it be predetermined that the world will be restored, simply because it
is the work of God. And surely if the universe, after its ruin, is not to be
formed again, why should a portion of it be? You are right, if a portion is on an
equality with the whole. But we maintain that there is a difference. In the
first place, because all things were made by the Word of God, and without Him was
nothing made.(2) Now the flesh, too, had its existence from the Word of God,
because of the principle,(3) that here should be nothing without that Word. "Let
us make man,"(4) said He, before He created him, and added, "with our hand,"
for the sake of his pre-eminence, that so he might not be compared with the rest
of creation.(5) And "God," says (the Scripture), "formed man."(6) There is
undoubtedly a great difference in the procedure, springing of course from the
nature of the case. For the creatures which were made were inferior to him for whom
they were made; and they were made for man, to whom they were afterwards made
subject by God. Rightly, therefore, had the creatures which were thus intended
for subjection, come forth into being at the bidding and command and sole power
of the divine voice; whilst man, on the contrary, destined to be their lord,
was formed by God Himself, to the intent that he might be able to exercise his
mastery, being created by the Master the Lord Himself. Remember, too, that man is
properly called flesh, which had a prior occupation in man's designation: "And
God formed man the clay of the ground."(7) He now became man, who was hitherto
clay. "And He breathed upon his face the breath of life, and man (that is, the
clay) became a living soul; and God placed the man whom He had formed in the
garden."(8) So that man was clay at first, and only afterwards man entire. I
wish to impress this on your attention, with a view to your knowing, that whatever
God has at all posposed or promised to man, is due not to the soul simply, but
to the flesh also; if not arising out of any community in their origin, yet at
all events by the privilege possessed by the latter in its name.(9)
CHAP. VI.--NOT THE LOWLINESS OF THE MATERIAL, BUT THE DIGNITY AND SKILL OF THE
MAKER, MUST BE REMEMBERED, IN GAUGING THE EXCELLENCE OF TIlE FLESH. CHRIST
PARTOOK OF OUR FLESH.
Let me therefore pursue the subject before me--if I can but succeed in
vindicating for the flesh as much as was conferred on it by Him who made it,
glorying as it even then was, because that poor paltry material, clay, found its way
into the hands of God, whatever these were, happy enough at merely being
touched by them. But why this glorying? Was it that,(10) without any further
labour, the clay had instantly assumed its form at the touch of God? The truth
is,(11) a great matter was in progress, out of which the creature under
consideration(12) was being fashioned. So often then does it receive honour, as often as it
experiences the hands of God, when it is touched by them, and pulled, and drawn
out, and moulded into shape. Imagine God wholly employed and absorbed in
it--in His hand, His eye, His labour, His purpose, His wisdom, His providence, and
above all, in His love, which was dictating the lineaments (of this creature).
For, whatever was the form and expression which was then given to the clay (by
the Creator) Christ was in His thoughts as one day to become man, because the
Word, too, was to be both clay and flesh, even as the earth was then. For so did
the Father previously say to the Son: "Let us make man in our own image, after
our likeness."(13) And God made man, that is to say, the creature which He
moulded and fashioned; after the image of God (in other words, of Christ) did He
make him And the Word was God also, who being(14) in the image of God, "thought
it not robbery to be equal to God."(15) Thus, that clay which was even then
putting on the image of Christ, who was to come in the flesh, was not only the
work, but also the pledge and surety, of God. To what purpose is it to bandy about
the name earth, as that of a sordid and grovelling element, with the view of
tarnishing the origin of the flesh, when, even if any other material had been
available for forming man, it would be requisite that the dignity of the Maker
should be taken into consideration, who even by His selection of His material
deemed it, and by His management made it, worthy? The hand of Phidias forms the
Olympian Jupiter of ivory; worship is given to the statue, and it is no longer
regarded as a god farmed out of a most silly animal, but as the world's supreme
Deity--not because of the bulk of the elephant, but on account of the renown of
Phidias. Could not therefore the living God, the true God, purge away by His
own operation whatever vileness might have accrued to His material, and heal it
of all infirmity? Or must this remain to shaw how much more nobly man could
fabricate a god, than God could form a man? Now, although the clay is offensive
(for its poorness), it is now something else. What I possess is flesh, not earth,
even although of the flesh it is said: "Dust thou art, and unto dust shall thou
return,"(1) In these words there is the mention of the origin, not a recalling
of the substance. The privilege has been granted to the flesh to be nobler
than its origin, and to have happiness aggrandized by the change wrought in it.
Now, even gold is earth, because of the earth; but it remains earth no longer
after it becomes gold, but is a far different substance, more splendid and more
noble, though coming from a source which is comparatively faded and obscure. In
like manner, it was quite allowable for God that He should dear the gold of our
flesh from all the taints, as you deem them, of its native clay, by purging the
original substance of its dross.
CHAP. VII.--THE EARTHY MATERIAL OF WHICH FLESH IS CREATED WONDERFULLY IMPROVED
BY GOD'S MANIPULATION. BY THE ADDITION OF THE SOUL IN MAN'S CONSTITUTION IT
BECAME THE CHIEF WORK IN THE CREATION.
But perhaps the dignity of the flesh may seem to be diminished, because it
has not been actually manipulated by the hand of God, as the clay was at
first. Now, when God handled the clay for the express purpose of the growth of flesh
out of it afterwards, it was for the flesh that He took all the trouble. But I
want you, moreover, to know at what time and in what manner the flesh
flourished into beauty out of its clay. For it cannot be, as some will have it, that
those "coats of skins"(2) which Adam and Eve put on when they were stripped of
paradise, were really themselves the forming of the flesh out of clay,(3) because
long before that Adam had already recognised the flesh which was in the woman
as the propagation of his own substance ("This is now bone of my bone, and
flesh of my flesh "4), and the very taking of the woman out of the man was
supplemented with flesh; but it ought, I should suppose, to have been made good with
clay, if Adam was still clay. The clay, therefore, was obliterated and absorbed
into flesh. When did this happen? At the time that man became a living soul by
the inbreathing of God--by the breath indeed which was capable of hardening
clay into another substance, as into some earthenware, so now into flesh. In the
same way the potter, too, has it in his power, by tempering the blast of his
fire, to modify his clayey material into a stiffer one, and to mould one form
after another more beautiful than the original substance, and now possessing both a
kind and name of its own. For although the Scripture says, "Shall the clay say
to the potter?"(5) that is, Shall man contend with God? although the apostle
speaks of "ear, then vessels "(6) he refers to man, who was originally clay. And
the vessel is the flesh, because this was made of clay by the breath of the
divine afflatus; and it was afterwards clothed with "the coats of skins," that
is, with the cutaneous covering which was placed over it. So truly is this the
fact, that if you withdraw the skin, you lay bare the flesh. Thus, that which
becomes a spoil when stripped off, was a vestment as long as it remained laid
over. Hence the apostle, when he call circumcision "' a putting off (or spoliation)
of the flesh,"(7) affirmed the skin to be a coat or tunic. Now this being the
case, you have both the clay made glorious by the hand of God, and the flesh
more glorious still by His breathing upon it, by virtue of which the flesh not
only laid aside its clayey rudiments, but also took on itself the ornaments of
the soul. You surely are not more careful than God, that you indeed should refuse
to mount the gems of Scythia and India and the pearls of the Red Sea in lead,
or brass, or iron, or even in silver, but should set them in the most precious
and most highly-wrought gold; or, again, that you should provide for your
finest wines and most costly unguents the most fitting vessels; or, on the same
principle, should find for your swords of finished temper scabbards of equal worth;
whilst God must consign to some vilest sheath the shadow of His own soul, the
breath of His own Spirit, the operation of His own mouth, and by so ignominious
a consignment secure, of course, its condemnation. Well, then, has He placed,
or rather inserted and commingled, it with the flesh? Yes; and so intimate is
the union, that it may be deemed to be uncertain whether the flesh bears about
the soul, or the soul the flesh; or whether the flesh acts as apparitor to the
soul, or the soul to the flesh. It is, However, more credible that the soul has
service rendered to it,(1) and has the mastery,(2) as being more proximate in
character to God.(3) This circumstance even redounds to the glory of the flesh,
inasmuch as it both contains an essence nearest to God's, and renders itself a
partake of (the soul's) actual sovereignty. For what enjoyment of nature is
there, what produce of the world, what relish of the elements, which is not
imparted to the soul by means of the body? How can it be otherwise? Is it not by
its means that the saul is supported by the entire apparatus of the senses--the
sight, the hearing, the taste, the smell, the touch? Is it not by its means that
it has a sprinkling of the divine power, there being nothing which it does not
effect by its faculty of speech, even when it is only tacitly indicated? And
speech is the result of a fleshly organ. The arts come through the flesh;
through the flesh also effect is given to the mind's pursuits and powers; all work,
too, and business and offices of life, are accomplished by the flesh; and so
utterly, are the living acts of the soul the work of the flesh, that for the soul
to cease to do living acts, would be nothing else than sundering itself from
the flesh. So also the very act of dying is a function of the flesh, even as the
process of life is. Now, if all things are subject to the soul through the
flesh, their subjection is equally due to the flesh. That which is the means and
agent of your enjoyment, must needs be also the partaker and sharer of your
enjoyment. So that the flesh, which is accounted the minister and servant of the
soul, turns out to be also its associate and co-heir. And if all this in temporal
things, why not also in things eternal?
CHAP. VIII.--CHRISTIANITY, BY ITS PROVISION FOR THE FLESH, HAS PUT ON IT THE
GREATEST HONOUR. THE PRIVILEGES OF OUR RELIGION IN CLOSEST CONNECTION WITH OUR
FLESH. WHICH ALSO BEARS A LARGE SHARE IN THE DUTIES AND SACRIFICES OF RELIGION.
Now such remarks have I wished to advance in defence of the flesh, from a
general view of the condition of our human nature. Let us now consider its
special relation to Christianity, and see how vast a privilege before God has been
conferred on this poor and worthless substance. It would suffice to say,
indeed, that there is not a soul that can at all procure salvation, except it believe
whilst it is in the flesh, so true is it that the flesh is the very condition
on which salvation hinges. And since the soul is, in consequence of its
salvation, chosen to the service of God, it is the flesh which actually renders it
capable of such service. The flesh, indeed, is washed, in order that the soul may
be cleansed; the flesh is anointed, that the soul may be consecrated; the
flesh is signed (with the cross), that the soul too may be fortified; the flesh is
shadowed with the imposition of hands, that the soul also maybe illuminated by
the Spirit; the flesh feeds on the body and blood of Christ, that the soul
likewise may fatten on its God. They cannot then be separated in their recompense,
when they are united in their service. Those sacrifices, moreover, which are
acceptable to God--I mean conflicts of the soul, fastings, and abstinences, and
the humiliations which are annexed to such duty--it is the flesh which performs
again and again(4) to its own especial suffering. Virginity, likewise, and
widowhood, and the modest restraint in secret on the marriage-bed, and the one only
adoption(5) of it, are fragrant offerings to God paid out of the good services
of the flesh. Come, tell me what is your opinion of the flesh, when it has to
contend for the name of Christ, dragged out to public view, and exposed to the
hatred of all men; when it pines in prisons under the cruellest privation of
light, in banishment from the world, amidst squalor, filth, and noisome food,
without freedom even in sleep, for it is bound on its very pallet and mangled in
its bed of straw; when at length before the public view it is racked by every
kind of torture that can be devised, and when finally it is spent beneath its
agonies, struggling to render its last turn for Christ by dying for Him--upon His
own cross many times, not to say by still more atrocious devices of torment.
Most blessed, truly, and most glorious, must be the flesh which can repay its
Master Christ so vast a debt, and so completely, that the only obligation
remaining due to Him is, that it should cease by death to owe Him more--all the more
bound even then in gratitude, because (for ever) set free.
CHAP. IX.--GOD'S LOVE FOR THE FLESH OF MAN, AS DEVELOPED IN THE GRACE OF
CHRIST TOWARDS IT. THE FLESH THE BEST MEANS OF DISPLAYING THE BOUNTY AND POWER OF
GOD.
To recapitulate, then: Shall that very flesh, which the Divine Creator
formed with His own hands in the image of God; which He animated with His own
afflatus, after the likeness of His own vital vigour; which He set over all the
works of His hand, to dwell amongst, to enjoy, and to rule them; which He clothed
with His sacraments and His instructions; whose purity He loves, whose
mortifications He approves; whose sufferings for Himself He deems precious;--(shall
that flesh, I say), so often brought near to God, not rise again? God forbid, God
forbid, (I repeat), that He should abandon to everlasting destruction the
labour of His own hands, the care of His own thoughts, the receptacle of His own
Spirit,(1) the queen of His creation, the inheritor of His own liberality, the
priestess of His religion, the champion of His testimony, the sister of His
Christ! We know by experience the goodness of God; from His Christ we learn that He
is the only God, and the very good. Now, as He requires from us love to our
neighbour after love to Himself,(2) so He will Himself do that which He has
commanded. He will love the flesh which is, so very closely and in so many ways, His
neighbour--(He will love it), although infirm, since His strength is made
perfect in weakness;(3) although disordered, since "they that are whole need not the
physician, but they that are sick;"(4) although not honourable, since "we
bestow more abundant honour upon the less honourable members;"(5) although ruined,
since He says, "I am come to save that which was lost;"(6) although sinful,
since He says, "I desire rather the salvation of the sinner than his death;"(7)
although condemned, for says He, "I shall wound, and also heal. "(8) Why reproach
the flesh with those conditions which wait for God, which hope in God, which
receive honour from God, which He succours? I venture to declare, that if such
casualties as these had never befallen the flesh, the bounty, the grace, the
mercy, (and indeed) all the beneficent power of God, would have had no
opportunity to work.(9)
CHAP. X.--HOLY SCRIPTURE MAGNIFIES THE FLESH, AS TO ITS NATURE AND ITS
PROSPECTS.
You hold to the scriptures in which the flesh is disparaged; receive also
those in which it is ennobled. You read whatever passage abases it; direct your
eyes also to that which elevates it. "All flesh is grass."(10) Well, but
Isaiah was not content to say only this; but he also declared, "All flesh shall see
the salvation of God. "(11) They notice God when He says in Genesis, "My Spirit
shall not remain among these men, because they are flesh; "(12) but then He is
also heard saying by Joel, "I will pour I out of my Spirit upon all
flesh."(13) Even the apostle ought not to be known for any one statement in which he is
wont to reproach the flesh. For although he says that "in his flesh dwelleth no
good thing;"(14) although he affirms that "they who are in the flesh cannot
please God,"15 because "the flesh lusteth against the Spirit;"(16) yet in these
and similar assertions which he makes, it is not the substance of the flesh, but
its actions, which are censured. Moreover, we shall elsewhere(17) take
occasion to remark, that no reproaches can fairly be cast upon the flesh, without
tending also to the castigation of the soul, which compels the flesh to do its
bidding. However, let me meanwhile add that in the same passage Paul "carries about
in his body the marks of the Lord Jesus;"(18) he also forbids our body to be
profaned, as being "the temple of God;"(19) he makes our bodies "the members of
Christ;"(20) and he exhorts us to exalt and "glorify God in our body."(21) If,
therefore, the humiliations of the flesh thrust off its resurrection, why
shall not its high prerogatives rather avail to bring it about?--since it better
suits the character of God to restore to salvation what for a while He rejected,
than to surrender to perdition what He once approved.
CHAP. XI.--THE POWER OF GOD FULLY COMPETENT TO EFFECT THE RESURRECTION OF THE
FLESH.
Thus far touching my eulogy of the flesh, in opposition to its enemies,
who are, notwithstanding, its greatest friends also; for there is nobody who
lives so much in accordance with the flesh as they who deny the resurrection of the
flesh, inasmuch as they despise all its discipline, while they disbelieve its
punishment. It is a shrewd saying which the Paraclete utters concerning these
persons by the mouth of the prophetess Prisca: "They are carnal,(22) and yet
they hate the flesh." Since, then, the flesh has the best guarantee that could
possibly accrue for securing to it the recompense of salvation, ought we not also
to consider well the power, and might, and competency(23) of God Himself,
whether He be so great as to be able to rebuild and restore the edifice of the
flesh, which had become dilapidated and blocked up,(1) and in every possible way
dislocated?--whether He has promulgated in the public domains of nature any
analogies to convince us of His power in this respect, lest any should happen to be
still thirsting for the knowledge of God, when faith in Him must rest on no
other basis than the belief that He is able to do all things? You have, no doubt
amongst your philosophers men who maintain that this world is without a beginning
or a maker. It is, however, much more true, that nearly all the heresies allow
it an origin and a maker, and ascribe its creation to our God. Firmly believe,
therefore, that He produced it wholly out of nothing, and then you have found
the knowledge of God, by believing that He possesses such mighty power. But
some persons are too weak to believe all this at first, owing to their views about
Matter. They will rather have it, after the philosophers, that the universe
was in the beginning made by God out of underlying matter. Now, even if this
opinion could be held in truth, since He must be acknowledged to have produced in
His reformation of matter far different substances and far different forms from
those which Matter itself possessed, I should maintain, with no less
persistence, that He produced these things out of nothing, since they absolutely had no
existence at all previous to His production of them. Now, where is the
difference between a thing's being produced out of nothing or out of something, if so be
that what existed not comes into being, when even to have had no existence is
tantamount to having been nothing? The contrary is likewise true; for having
once existed amounts to having been something. If, however, there is a
difference, both alternatives support my position. For if God produced all things
whatever out of nothing, He will be able to draw forth from nothing even the flesh
which had fallen into nothing; or if He moulded other things out of matter, He
will be able to call forth the flesh too from somewhere else, into whatever abyss
it may have been engulphed. And surely He is most competent to re-create who
created, inasmuch as it is a far greater work to have produced than to have
reproduced, to have imparted a beginning, than to have maintained a continuance. On
this principle, you may be quite sure that the restoration of the flesh is
easier than its first formation.
CHAP. XII.--SOME ANALOGIES IN NATURE WHICH CORROBORATE THE RESURRECTION OF THE
FLESH.
Consider now those very analogies of the divine power (to which we have
just alluded). Day dies into night, and is buried everywhere in darkness. The
glory of the world is obscured in the shadow of death; its entire substance is
tarnished with blackness; all things become sordid, silent, stupid; everywhere
business ceases, and occupations rest. And so over the loss of the light there is
mourning. But yet it again revives, with its own beauty, its own dowry, is own
sun, the same as ever, whole and entire, over all the world, slaying its own
death, night--opening its own sepulchre, the darkness--coming forth the heir to
itself, until the night also revives--it, too, accompanied with a retinue of its
own. For the stellar rays are rekindled, which had been quenched in the
morning glow; the distant groups of the constellations are again brought back to
view, which the day's temporary interval had removed out of sight. Readorned also
are the mirrors of the moon, which her monthly course had worn away. Winters and
summers return, as do the spring-tide and autumn, with their resources, their
routines, their fruits. Forasmuch as earth receives its instruction from heaven
to clothe the trees which had been stripped, to colour the flowers afresh, to
spread the grass again, to reproduce the seed which had been consumed, and not
to reproduce them until consumed. Wondrous method! from a defrauder to be a
preserver, in order to restore, it takes away; in order to guard, it destroys;
that it may make whole, it injures; and that it may enlarge, it first lessens.
(This process) indeed, renders back to us richer and fuller blessings than it
deprived us of--by a destruction which is profit, by an injury which is advantage,
and by a loss which is gain. In a word, I would say, all creation is instinct
with renewal. Whatever you may chance upon, has already existed; whatever you
have lost, returns again without fail. All things return to their former state,
after having gone out of sight; all things begin after they have ended; they
come to an end for the very purpose of coming into existence again. Nothing
perishes but with a view to salvation. The whole, therefore, of this revolving order
of things bears witness to the resurrection of the dead. In His works did God
write it, before He wrote it in the Scriptures; He proclaimed it in His mighty
deeds earlier than in His inspired words. He first sent Nature to you as a
teacher, meaning to send Prophecy also as a supplemental instructor, that, being
Nature's disciple, you may more easily believe Prophecy, and without hesitation
accept (its testimony) when you come to hear what you have seen already on every
side; nor doubt that God, whom you have discovered to be the restorer of all
things, is likewise the reviver of the flesh. And surely, as all things rise
again for man, for whose use they have been provided-but not for man except for his
flesh also--how happens it that (the flesh) itself can perish utterly, because
of which and for the service of which nothing comes to nought?
CHAP. XIII.--FROM OUR AUTHOR'S VIEW OF A VERSE IN THE NINETY-SECOND PSALM, THE
PHOENIX IS MADE A SYMBOL OF THE RESURRECTION OF OUR BODIES.
If, however, all nature but faintly figures our resurrection; if creation
affords no sign precisely like it, inasmuch as its several phenomena can hardly
be said to die so much as to come to an end, nor again be deemed to be
reanimated, but only re-formed; then take a most complete and unassailable, symbol of
our hope, for it shall be an animated being, and subject alike to life and
death. I refer to the bird which is peculiar to the East, famous for its
singularity, marvelous from its posthumous life, which renews its life in a voluntary
death; its dying day is its birthday, for on it it departs and returns; once more
a phoenix where just now there was none; once more himself, but just now out of
existence; another, yet the same. What can be more express and more
significant for our subject; or to what other thing can such a phenomenon bear witness?
God even in His own Scripture says: "The righteous shall flourish like the
phoenix;"(1) that is, shall flourish or revive, from death, from the grave--to teach
you to believe that a bodily substance may be recovered even from the fire.
Our Lord has declared that we are "better than many sparrows:"(2) well, if not
better than many a phoenix too, it were no great thing. But must men die once for
all, while birds in Arabia are sure of a resurrection?
CHAP. XIV.--A SUFFICIENT CAUSE FOR THE RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH OCCURS IN THE
FUTURE JUDGMENT OF MAN, IT WILL TAKE COGNISANCE OF THE WORKS OF THE BODY NO
LESS THAN OF THE SOUL.
Such, then, being the outlines of the divine energies which God has
displayed as much in the parables of nature as in His spoken word, let us now
approach His very edicts and decrees, since this is the division which we mainly adopt
in our subject-matter. We began with the dignity of the flesh, whether it were
of such a nature that when once destroyed it was capable of being restored.
Then we pursued an inquiry touching the power of God, whether it was sufficiently
great to be habitually able to confer this restoration on a thing which had
been destroyed. Now, if we have proved these two points, I should like you to
inquire into the (question of) cause, whether it be one of sufficient weight to
claim the resurrection of the flesh as necessary and as conformable in every way
to reason; because there underlies this demurrer: the flesh may be quite
capable of being restored, and the Deity be perfectly able to effect the restoration,
but a cause for such recovery must needs pre-exist. Admit then a sufficient
one, you who learn of a God who is both supremely good as well as just(3)
supremely good from His own (character), just in consequence of ours. For if man had
never sinned, he would simply and solely have known God in His superlative
goodness, from the attribute of His nature. But now he experiences Him to be a just
God also, from the necessity of a cause; still, however, retaining under this
very circumstance His excellent goodness, at the same time that He is also just.
For, by both succouring the good and punishing the evil, He displays His
justice, and at the same time makes both processes contribute proofs of His
goodness, whilst on the one hand He deals vengeance, land on the other dispenses
reward. But with Marcion(4) you will have the opportunity of more fully learning
whether this be the whole character of God. Meanwhile, so perfect is our (God),
that He is rightly Judge, because He is the Lord; rightly the Lord, because the
Creator; rightly the Creator, because He is God. Whence it happens that that
heretic, whose name I know not, holds that He properly is not a Judge, since He is
not Lord; properly not Lord, since He is not the Creator. And so I am at a loss
to know how He is God, who is neither the Creator, which God is; nor the Lord,
which the Creator is. Inasmuch, then, as it is most suitable for the great
Being who is God, and Lord, and Creator to summon man to a judgment on this very
question, whether he has taken care or not to acknowledge and honour his Lord
and Creator, this is just such a judgment as the resurrection shall achieve. The
entire cause, then, or rather necessity of the resurrection, will be this,
namely, that arrangement of the final judgment which shall be most suitable to
God. Now, in effecting this arrangement, you must consider whether the divine
censure superintends a judicial examination of the two natures of man--both his
soul and his flesh. For that which is a suitable object to be judged, is also a
competent one to be raised. Our position is, that the judgment of God must be
believed first of all to be plenary, and then absolute, so as to be final, and
therefore irrevocable; to be also righteous, not bearing less heavily on any
particular part; to be moreover worthy of God, being complete and definite, in
keeping with His great patience. Thus it follows that the fulness and perfection of
the judgment consists simply in representing the interests of the entire human
being. Now, since the entire man consists of the union of the two natures, he
must therefore appear in both, as it is right that he should be judged in his
entirety; nor, of course, did he pass through life except in his entire state.
As therefore he lived, so also must he be judged, because he has to be judged
concerning the way in which he lived. For life is the cause of judgment, and it
must undergo investigation in as many natures as it possessed when it discharged
its vital functions.
CHAP. XV.--AS THE FLESH IS A PARTAKER WITH THE SOUL IN ALL HUMAN CONDUCT, SO
WILL IT BE IN THE RECOMPENSE OF ETERNITY.
Come now, let our opponents sever the connection of the flesh with the
soul in the affairs of life, that they may be emboldened to sunder it also in the
recompense of life. Let them deny their association in acts, that they may be
fairly able to deny also their participation in rewards. The flesh ought not to
have any share in the sentence, if it had none in the cause of it. Let the soul
alone be called back, if it alone went away. But (nothing of the kind ever
happened); for the soul alone no more departed from life, than it ran through
alone the course from which it departed--I mean this present life. Indeed, the soul
alone is so far from conducting (the affairs of) life, that we do not withdraw
from community with the flesh even our thoughts, however isolated they be,
however unprecipitated into act by means of the flesh; since whatever is done in
man's heart is done by the soul in the flesh, and with the flesh, and through
the flesh. The Lord Himself, in short, when rebuking our thoughts, includes in
His censures this aspect of the flesh, (man's heart), the citadel of the soul:
"Why think ye evil in your hearts?"(1) and again: "Whosoever looketh on a woman,
to lust after her, hath already committed adultery with her in his heart."(2)
So that even the thought, without operation and without effect, is an act of the
flesh. But if you allow that the faculty which rules the senses, and which
they call Hegemonikon,(3) has its sanctuary in the brain, or in the interval
between the eyebrows, or wheresoever the philosophers are pleased to locate it, the
flesh will still be the thinking place of the soul. The soul is never without
the flesh, as long as it is in the flesh. There is nothing which the flesh does
not transact in company with the soul, when without it does not exist. Consider
carefully, too, whether the thoughts are not administered by the flesh, since
it is through the flesh that they are distinguished and known externally. Let
the soul only meditate some design, the face gives the indication--the face
being the mirror of all our intentions. They may deny all combination in acts, but
they cannot gainsay their co-operation in thoughts. Still they enumerate the
sins of the flesh; surely, then, for its sinful conduct it must be consigned to
punishment. But we, moreover, allege against them the virtues of the flesh;
surely also for its virtuous conduct it deserves a future reward. Again, as it is
the soul which acts and impels us in all we do, so it is the function of the
flesh to render obedience. Now we are not permitted to suppose that God is either
unjust or idle. Unjust, (however He would be,) were He to exclude from reward
the flesh which is associated in good works; and idle, were He to exempt it from
punishment, when it has been an accomplice in evil deeds: whereas human
judgment is deemed to be the more perfect, when it discovers the agents in every
deed, and neither spares the guilty nor grudges the virtuous their full share of
either punishment or praise with the principals who employed their services.
CHAP. XVI.--THE HERETICS CALLED THE FLESH "THE VESSEL OF THE SOUL," IN ORDER
TO DESTROY THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE BODY. THEIR CAVIL TURNS UPON THEMSELVES AND
SHOWS THE FLESH TO BE A SHARER IN HUMAN. ACTIONS.
When, however, we attribute to the soul authority, and to the flesh
submission, we must see to it that (our opponents) do not turn our position by
another argument, by insisting on so placing the flesh in the service of the soul,
that it be not (considered as) its servant, lest they should be compelled, if it
were so regarded, to admit its companionship (to the soul). For they would
argue that servants and companions possess a discretion in discharging the
functions of their respective office, and a power over their will in both relations: in
short, (they would claim to be) men themselves, and therefore (would expect)
to share the credit with their principals, to whom they voluntarily yielded
their assistance; whereas the flesh had no discretion, no sentiment in itself, but
possessing no power of its own of willing or refusing, it, in fact, appears to
stand to the soul in the stead of a vessel as an instrument rather than a
servant. The soul alone, therefore, will have to be judged (at the last day)
pre-eminently as to how it has employed the vessel of the flesh; the vessel itself, of
course, not being amenable to a judicial award: for who condemns the cup if
any. man has mixed poison in it? or who sentences the sword to the beasts, if a
man has perpetrated with it the atrocities of a brigand? Well, now, we will
grant that the flesh is innocent, in so far as bad actions will not be charged upon
it: what, then, is there to hinder its being saved on the score of its
innocence? For although it is free from all imputation of good works, as it is of evil
ones, yet it is more consistent with the divine goodness to deliver the
innocent. A beneficent man, indeed, is bound to do so: it suits then the character of
the Most Bountiful to bestow even gratuitously such a favour. And yet, as to
the cup, I will not take the poisoned one, into which some certain death is
injected, but one which has been infected with the breath of a lascivious woman,(1)
or of Cybele's priest, or of a gladiator, or of a hangman: then I want to know
whether you would pass a milder condemnation on it than on the kisses of such
persons? One indeed which is soiled with our own filth, or one which is not
mingled to our own mind we are apt to dash to pieces, and then to increase our
anger with our servant. As for the sword, which is drunk with the blood of the
brigand's victims, who would not banish it entirely from his house, much more from
his bed-room, or from his pillow, from the presumption that he would be sure
to dream of nothing but the apparitions of the souls which were pursuing and
disquieting him for lying down with the blade which shed their own blood? Take,
however, the cup which has no reproach on it, and which deserves the credit of a
faithful ministration, it will be adorned by its drinking-master with
chaplets, or be honoured with a handful of flowers. The sword also which has received
honourable stains in war, and has been thus engaged in a better manslaughter,
will secure its own praise by consecration. It is quite possible, then, to pass
decisive sentences even on vessels and on instruments, that so they too may
participate in the merits of their proprietors and employers. Thus much do I say
from a desire to meet even this argument, although there is a failure in the
example, owing to the diversity in the nature of the objects. For every vessel or
every instrument becomes useful from without, consisting as it does of material
perfectly extraneous to the substance of the human owner or employer; whereas
the flesh, being conceived, formed, and generated along with the soul from its
earliest existence in the womb, is mixed up with it likewise in all its
operations. For although it is called "a vessel" by the apostle, such as he enjoins
to be treated "with honour,"(2) it is yet designated by the same apostle as "the
outward man,"(3)--that clay, of course, which at the first was inscribed with
the title of a man, not of a cup or a sword, or any paltry vessel. Now it is
called a "vessel" in consideration of its capacity, whereby it receives and
contains the soul; but "man," from its community of nature, which renders it in all
operations a servant and not an instrument. Accordingly, in the judgment it
will be held to be a servant (even though it may have no independent discretion of
its own), on the ground of its being an integral portion of that which
possesses such discretion, and is not a mere chattel. And although the apostle is well
aware that the flesh does nothing of itself which is not also imputed to the
soul, he yet deems the flesh to be "sinful;"(4) lest it should be supposed to be
free from all responsibility by the mere fact of its seeming to be impelled by
the soul. So, again, when he is ascribing certain praiseworthy actions to the
flesh, he says, "Therefore glorify and exalt God in your body,"(5)--being
certain that such efforts are actuated by the soul; but still he ascribes them to
the flesh, because it is to it that he also promises the recompense. Besides,
neither rebuke, (on the one hand), would have been suitable to it, if free from
blame; nor, (on the other hand), would exhortation, if it were incapable of
glory. Indeed, both rebuke and exhortation would be alike idle towards the flesh, if
it were an improper object for that recompence which is certainly received in
the resurrection.
CHAP. XVII.--THE FLESH WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE SOUL IN ENDURING THE PENAL
SENTENCES OF THE FINAL JUDGMENT.
"Every uneducated(6) person who agrees with our opinion will be apt to
suppose that the flesh will have to be present at the final judgment even on this
account, because otherwise the soul would be incapable of suffering pain or
pleasure, as being incorporeal; for this is the common opinion. We on our part,
however, do here maintain, and in a special treatise on the subject prove, that
the soul is corporeal, possessing a peculiar kind of solidity in its nature,
such as enables it both to perceive and suffer. That souls are even now
susceptible of torment and of blessing in Hades, though they are disembodied, and
notwithstanding their banishment from the flesh, is proved by the case of Lazarus. I
have no doubt given to my opponent room to say: Since, then, the soul has a
bodily substance of its own, it will be sufficiently endowed with the faculty of
suffering and sense, so as not to require the presence of the flesh. No, no, (is
my reply): it will still need the flesh; not as being unable to feel anything
without the help of the flesh, but because it is necessary that it should
possess such a faculty along with the flesh. For in as far as it has a sufficiency of
its own for action, in so far has it likewise a capacity for suffering. But
the truth is, in respect of action, it labours under some amount of incapacity;
for in its own nature it has simply the ability to think, to will, to desire, to
dispose: for fully, carrying out the purpose, it looks for the assistance of
the flesh. In like manner, it also requires the conjunction of the flesh to
endure suffering, in order that by its aid it may be as fully able to suffer, as
without its assistance it was not fully able to act. In respect, indeed, of those
sins, such as concupiscence, and thought, and wish, which it has a competency
of its own to commit, it at once(1) pays the penalty of them. Now, no doubt, if
these were alone sufficient to constitute absolute desert without requiring
the addition of acts, the soul would suffice in itself to encounter the full
responsibility of the judgment, being to be judged for those things in the doing of
which it alone had possessed a sufficiency. Since, however, acts too are
indissolubly attached to deserts; since also acts are ministerially effected by the
flesh, it is no longer enough that the soul apart from the flesh be requited
with pleasure or pain for what are actually works of the flesh, although it has a
body (of its own), although it has members (of its own), which in like manner
are insufficient for its full perception, just as they are also for its perfect
action. Therefore as it has acted in each several instance, so proportionably
does it suffer in Hades, being the first to taste of judgment as it was the
first to induce to the commission of sin; but still it is waiting for the flesh in
order that it may through the flesh also compensate for its deeds, inasmuch as
it laid upon the flesh the execution of its own thoughts. This, in short, will
be the process of that judgment which is postponed to the last great day, in
order that by the exhibition of the flesh the entire course of the divine
vengeance may be accomplished. Besides, (it is obvious to remark) there would be no
delaying to the end of that doom which souls are already tasting in Hades, if it
was destined for souls alone.
CHAP. XVIII.--SCRIPTURE PHRASES AND PASSAGES CLEARLY ASSERT "THE RESURRECTION
OF THE DEAD." THE FORCE OF THIS VERY PHRASE EXPLAINED AS INDICATING THE
PROMINENT PLACE OF THE FLESH IN THE GENERAL RESURRECTION.
Thus far it has been my object by prefatory remarks to lay a foundation
for the defence of all the Scriptures which promise a resurrection of the flesh.
Now, inasmuch as this verity is supported by so many just and reasonable
considerations--I mean the dignity of the flesh itself,(2) the power and might of
God,(3) the analogous cases in which these are displayed,(4) as well as the good
reasons for the judgment, and the need thereof(5)--it will of course be only
right and proper that the Scriptures should be understood in the sense suggested
by such authoritative considerations, and not after the conceits of the
heretics, which arise from infidelity solely, because it is deemed incredible that the
flesh should be recovered from death and restored to life; not because (such a
restoration) is either unattainable by the flesh itself, or impossible for God
to effect, or unsuitable to the final judgment. Incredible, no doubt, it might
be, if it had not been revealed in the word of God;(6) except that, even if it
had not been thus first announced by God, it might have been fairly enough
assumed, that the revelation of it had been withheld, simply because so many strong
presumptions in its favour had been already furnished. Since, however, (the
great fact) is proclaimed in so many inspired passages, that is so far a
dissuasive against understanding it in a sense different from that which is attested by
such arguments as persuade us to its reception, even irrespective of the
testimonies of revelation. Let us see, then, first of all in what title this hope of
ours is held out to our view.(7)
There is, I imagine, one divine edict which is exposed to the gaze of all
men: it is "The Resurrection of the Dead."(1) These words are prompt, decisive,
clear. I mean to take these very terms, discuss them, and discover to what
substance they apply. As to the word resurrectio, whenever I hear of its impending
over a human being, I am forced to inquire what part of him has been destined
to fall, since nothing can be expected to rise again, unless it has first been
prostrated. It is only the man who is ignorant of the fact that the flesh falls
by death, that can fail to discover that it stands erect by means of life.
Nature pronounces God's sentence: "Dust thou art, and unto dust shall thou
return."(2) Even the man who has not heard the sentence, sees the fact. No death but
is the ruin of our limbs. This destiny of the body the Lord also described,
when, clothed as He was in its very substance, He said, "Destroy this temple, and
in three days I will raise it up again."(3) For He showed to what belongs (the
incidents of) being destroyed, thrown down, and kept down--even to that to which
it also appertains to be lifted and raised up again; although He was at the
same time bearing about with Him "a soul that was trembling even unto death,"(4)
but which did not fall through death, because even the Scripture informs us
that "He spoke of His body."(5) So that it is the flesh which falls by death; and
accordingly it derives its name, cadaver, from cadendo.(6) The soul, however,
has no trace of a fall in its designation, as indeed there is no mortality in
its condition. Nay it is the soul which communicates its ruin to the body when it
is breathed out of it, just as it is also destined to raise it up again from
the earth when it shall re-enter it. That cannot fall which by its entrance
raises; nor can that droop which by its departure causes ruin. I will go further,
and say that the soul does not even fall into sleep along with the body, nor
does it with its companion even lie down in repose. For it is agitated in dreams,
and disturbed: it might, however, rest, if it lay down; and lie down it
certainly would, if it fell. Thus that which does not fall even into the likeness of
death, does not succumb to the reality thereof. Passing now to the other word
mortuorum, I wish you to look carefully, and see to what substance it is
applicable. Were we to allow, under this head, as is sometimes held by the heretics,
that the soul is mortal, so that being mortal it shall attain to a resurrection;
this would afford a presumption that the flesh also, being no less mortal,
would share in the same resurrection. But our present point is to derive from the
proper signification of this word an idea of the destiny which it indicates.
Now, just as the term resurrection is predicated of that which falls--that is, the
flesh--so will there be the same application of the word dead, because what is
called "the resurrection of the dead" indicates the rising up again of that
which is fallen down. We learn this from the case of Abraham, the father of the
faithful, a man who enjoyed close intercourse with God. For when he requested of
the sons of Heth a spot to bury Sarah in, he said to them, "Give me the
possession of a burying place with you, that I may bury my dead,"(7)--meaning, of
course, her flesh; for he could not have desired a place to bury her soul in, even
if the soul is to be deemed mortal, and even if it could bear to be described
by the word "dead." Since, then, this word indicates the body, it follows that
when "the resurrection of the dead" is spoken of, it is the rising again of
men's bodies that is meant.
CHAP. XIX.--THE SOPHISTICAL SENSE PUT BY HERETICS ON THE PHRASE "RESURRECTION
OF THE DEAD," AS IF IT MEANT THE MORAL CHANGE OF A NEW LIFE.
Now this consideration of the phrase in question, and its
signification--besides maintaining, of course, the true meaning of the important words--must
needs contribute to this further result, that whatever obscurity our adversaries
throw over the subject under the pretence of figurative and allegorical
language, the truth will stand out in clearer light, and out of uncertainties certain
and definite rules will be prescribed. For some, when they have alighted on a
very usual form of prophetic statement, generally expressed in figure and
allegory, though not always, distort into some imaginary sense even the most clearly
described doctrine of the resurrection of the dead, alleging that even death
itself must be understood in a spiritual sense. They say that which is commonly
supposed to be death is not really so,--namely, the separation of body and soul:
it is rather the ignorance of God, by reason of which man is dead to God, and
is not less buried in error than he would be in the grave. Wherefore that also
must be held to be the resurrection, when a man is reanimated by access to the
truth, and having dispersed the death of ignorance, and being endowed with new
life by God, has burst forth from the sepulchre of the old man, even as the
Lord likened the scribes and Pharisees to "whited sepulchres."(1) Whence it
follows that they who have by faith attained to the resurrection, are with the Lord
after they have once put Him on in their baptism. By such subtlety, then, even
in conversation have they often been in the habit of misleading our brethren, as
if they held a resurrection of the dead as well as we. Woe, say they, to him
who has not risen in the present body; for they fear that they might alarm their
hearers if they at once denied the resurrection. Secretly, however, in their
minds they think this: Woe betide the simpleton who during his present life
fails to discover the mysteries of heresy; since this, in their view, is the
resurrection. There are however, a great many also, who, claiming to hold a
resurrection after the soul's departure, maintain that going out of the sepulchre means
escaping out of the world, since in their view the world is the habitation of
the dead--that is, of those who know not God; or they will go so far as to say
that it actually means escaping out of the body itself, since they imagine that
the body detains the soul, when it is shut up in the death of a worldly life,
as in a grave.
CHAP. XX.--FIGURATIVE SENSES HAVE THEIR FOUNDATION IN LITERAL FACT. BESIDES,
THE ALLEGORICAL STYLE IS BY NO MEANS THE ONLY ONE FOUND IN THE PROPHETIC
SCRIPTURES, AS ALLEGED BY THE HERETICS.
Now, to upset all conceits of this sort, let me dispel at once the
preliminary idea on which they rest--their assertion that the prophets make all their
announcements in figures of speech. Now, if this were the case, the figures
themselves could not possibly have been distinguished, inasmuch as the verities
would not have been declared, out of which the figurative language is stretched.
And, indeed, if all are figures, where will be that of which they are the
figures? How can you hold up a mirror for your face, if the face nowhere exists?
But, in truth, all are not figures, but there are also literal statements; nor are
all shadows, but there are bodies too: so that we have prophecies about the
Lord Himself even, which are clearer than the day For it was not figuratively
that the Virgin conceived in her womb; nor in a trope did she bear Emmanuel, that
is, Jesus, God with us.(2) Even granting that He was figuratively to take the
power of Damascus and the spoils of Samaria,(3) still it was literally that He
was to "enter into judgment with the elders and princes of the people."(4) For
in the person of Pilate "the heathen raged," and in the person of Israel "the
people imagined vain things;" "the kings of the earth" in Herod, and the rulers
in Annas and Caiaphas, were gathered together against the Lord, and against His
anointed."(5) He, again, was "led as a sheep to the slaughter, and as a sheep
before the shearer," that is, Herod, "is dumb, so He opened not His mouth."(6)
"He gave His back to scourges, and His cheeks to blows, not turning His face
even from the shame of spitting."(7) "He was numbered with the transgressors;"(8)
"He was pierced in His hands and His feet;"(9) "they cast lots for his
raiment"(10) "they gave Him gall, and made Him drink vinegar;" "they shook their heads,
and mocked Him;" "He was appraised by the traitor in thirty pieces of
silver."(13) What figures of speech does Isaiah here give us? What tropes does David?
What allegories does Jeremiah? Not even of His mighty works have they used
parabolic language. Or else, were not the eyes of the blind opened? did not the
tongue of the dumb recover speech?(14) did not the relaxed hands and palsied knees
become strong,(15) and the lame leap as an hart?(16) No doubt we are accustomed
also to give a spiritual significance to these statements of prophecy,
according to the analogy of the physical diseases which were healed by the Lord; but
still they were all fulfilled literally: thus showing that the prophets foretold
both senses, except that very many of their words can only be taken in a pure
and simple signification, and free from all allegorical obscurity; as when we
hear of the downfall of nations and cities, of Tyre and Egypt, and Babylon and
Edom, and the navy of Carthage; also when they foretell Israel's own
chastisements and pardons, its captivities, restorations, and at last its final
dispersion. Who would prefer affixing a metaphorical interpretation to all these events,
instead of accepting their literal truth? The realities are involved in the
words, just as the words are read in the realities. Thus, then, (we find that) the
allegorical style is not used in all parts of the prophetic record, although
it occasionally occurs in certain portions of it.
CHAP. XXI.--NO MERE METAPHOR IN THE PHRASE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD. IN
PROPORTION TO THE IMPORTANCE OF ETERNAL TRUTHS, IS THE CLEARNESS OF THEIR SCRIPTURAL
ENUNCIATION.
Well, if it occurs occasionally in certain portions of it, you will say,
then why not in that phrase,(1) where the resurrection might be spiritually
understood? There are several reasons why not. First, what must be the meaning of
so many important passages of Holy Scripture, which so obviously attest the
resurrection of the body, as to admit not even the appearance of a figurative
signification? And, indeed, (since some passages are more obscure than others), it
cannot but be right--as we have shown above(2)--that uncertain statements should
be determined by certain ones, and obscure ones by such as are clear and
plain; else there is fear that, in the conflict of certainties and uncertainties, of
explicitness and obscurity, faith may be shattered, truth endangered, and the
Divine Being Himself be branded as inconstant. Then arises the improbability
that the very mystery on which our trust wholly rests, on which also our
instruction entirely depends, should have the appearance of being ambiguously announced
and obscurely propounded, inasmuch as the hope of the resurrection, unless it
be clearly set forth on the sides both of punishment and reward, would fail to
persuade any to embrace a religion like ours, exposed as it is to public
detestation and the imputation of hostility to others. There is no certain work where
the remuneration is uncertain. There is no real apprehension when the peril is
only doubtful. But both the recompense of reward, and the danger of losing it,
depend on the issues of the resurrection. Now, if even those purposes of God
against cities, and nations, and kings, which are merely temporal, local, and
personal in their character, have been proclaimed so clearly in prophecy, how is
it to be supposed that those dispensations of His which are eternal, and of
universal concern to the human race, should be void of all real light in
themselves? The grander they are, the clearer should be their announcement, in order
that their superior greatness might be believed. And I apprehend that God cannot
possibly have ascribed to Him either envy, or guile, or inconsistency, or
artifice, by help of which evil qualities it is that all schemes of unusual grandeur
are litigiously promulgated.
CHAP. XXII.--THE SCRIPTURES FORBID OUR SUPPOSING EITHER THAT THE RESURRECTION
IS ALREADY PAST, OR THAT IT TAKES PLACE IMMEDIATELY AT DEATH. OUR HOPES AND
PRAYERS POINT TO THE LAST GREAT DAY AS THE PERIOD OF ITS ACCOMPLISHMENT.
We must after all this turn our attention to those scriptures also which
forbid our belief in such a resurrection as is held by your Animalists (for I
will not call them Spiritualists),(3) that it is either to be assumed as taking
place now, as soon as men come to the knowledge of the truth, or else that it is
accomplished immediately after their departure from this life. Now, forasmuch
as the seasons of our entire hope have been fixed in the Holy Scripture, and
since we are not permitted to place the accomplishment thereof, as I apprehend,
previous to Christ's coming, our prayers are directed towards(4) the end of this
world, to the passing away thereof at the great day of the Lord--of His wrath
and vengeance--the last day, which is hidden (from all), and known to none but
the Father, although announced beforehand by signs and wonders, and the
dissolution of the elements, and the conflicts of nations. I would turn out the words
of the prophets, if the Lord Himself had said nothing (except that prophecies
were the Lord's own word); but it is more to my purpose that He by His own mouth
confirms their statement. Being questioned by His disciples when those things
were to come to pass which He had just been uttering about the destruction of
the temple, He discourses to them first of the order of Jewish events until the
overthrow of Jerusalem, and then of such as concerned all nations up to the
very end of the world. For after He had declared that "Jerusalem was to be trodden
down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles should be
fulfilled,"(5)--meaning, of course, those which were to be chosen of God, and gathered in
with the remnant of Israel--He then goes on to proclaim, against this world and
dispensation (even as Joel had done, and Daniel, and all the prophets with one
consent(6)), that "there should be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the
stars, distress of nations with perplexity, the sea and the waves roaring,
men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are
coming on the earth."(1) "For," says He, "the powers of heaven shall be shaken;
and then shall they see the Son of man coming in the clouds, with power and
great glory. And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up
your heads, for your redemption draweth nigh."(2) He spake of its "drawing
nigh," not of its being present already; and of "those things beginning to come to
pass," not of their having happened: because when they have come to pass, then
our redemption shall be at hand, which is said to be approaching up to that
time, raising and exciting our minds to what is then the proximate harvest of our
hope. He immediately annexes a parable of this in "the trees which are
tenderly sprouting into a flower-stalk, and then developing the flower, which is the
precursor of the fruit."(3) "So likewise ye," (He adds), "when ye shall see all
these things come to pass, know ye that the kingdom of heaven is nigh at
hand."(4) "Watch ye, therefore, and pray always, that ye may be accounted worthy to
escape all those things, and to stand before the Son of man;"(5) that is, no
doubt, at the resurrection, after all these things have been previously
transacted. Therefore, although there is a sprouting in the acknowledgment of all this
mystery, yet it is only in the actual presence of the Lord that the flower is
developed and the fruit borne. Who is it then, that has aroused the Lord, now at
God's right hand so unseasonably and with such severity "shake terribly" (as
Isaiah(6) expresses it ("that earth," which, I suppose, is as yet unshattered? Who
has thus early put "Christ's enemies beneath His feet" (to use the lan-guage
of David(7)), making Him more hurried than the Father, whilst every crowd in our
popular assemblies is still with shouts consigning "the Christians to the
lions?"(8) Who has yet beheld Jesus descending from heaven in like manner as the
apostles saw Him ascend, according to the appointment of the two angels?(9) Up to
the present moment they have not, tribe by tribe, smitten their breasts,
looking on Him whom they pierced.(10) No one has as yet fallen in with Elias;(11) no
one has as yet escaped from Antichrist;(12) no one has as yet had to bewail
the downfall of Babylon.(13) And is there now anybody who has risen again, except
the heretic? He, of course, has already quitted the grave of his own
corpse--although he is even now liable to fevers and ulcers; he, too, has already
trodden down his enemies--although he has even now to struggle with the powers of the
world. And as a matter of course, he is already a king--although he even now
owes to Caesar the things which are Caesar's.(14)
CHAP. XXIII.--SUNDRY PASSAGES OF ST. PAUL, WHICH SPEAK OF A SPIRITUAL
RESURRECTION, COMPATIBLE WITH THE FUTURE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY, WHICH IS EVEN
ASSUMED IN THEM.
The apostle indeed teaches, in his Epistle to the Colossians, that we were
once dead, alienated, and enemies to the Lord in our minds, whilst we were
living in wicked works;(15) that we were then buried with Christ in baptism, and
also raised again with Him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath
raised Him from the dead.(16) "And you, (adds he), when ye were dead in sins and
the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath He quickened together with Him, having
forgiven you all trespasses."(17) And again: "If ye are dead with Christ from
the elements of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to
ordinances?"(18) Now, since he makes us spiritually dead--in such a way,
however, as to allow that we shall one day have to undergo a bodily death,--so,
considering indeed that we have been also raised in a like spiritual sense, he
equally allows that we shall further have to undergo a bodily resurrection. In so
many words(19) he says: "Since ye are risen with Christ, seek those things which
are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God. Set your affection
on things above, not on things on the earth."(20) Accordingly, it is in our mind
that he shows that we rise (with Christ), since it is by this alone that we
are as yet able to reach to heavenly objects. These we should not "seek," nor
"set our affection on," if we had them already in our possession. He also adds:
"For ye are dead"--to your sins, he means, not to yourselves--"and your life is
hid with Christ in God."(21) Now that life is not yet apprehended which is
hidden. In like manner John says: "And it doth not yet appear what we shall be: we
know, however, that when He shall be manifest, we shall be like Him."(1) We are
far indeed from being already what we know not of; we should, of course, be
sure to know it if we were already (like Him). It is therefore the contemplation
of our blessed hope even in this life by faith (that he speaks of)--not its
presence nor its possession, but only its expectation. Concerning this expectation
and hope Paul writes to the Galatians: "For we through the Spirit wait for the
hope of righteousness by faith."(2) He says "we wait for it," not we are in
possession of it. By the righteousness of God, he means that judgment which we
shall have to undergo as the recompense of our deeds. It is in expectation of this
for himself that the apostle writes to the Philippians: "If by any means,"
says he, "I might attain to the resurrection of the dead. Not as though I had
already attained, or were already perfect."(3) And yet he had believed, and had
known all mysteries, as an elect vessel and the great teacher of the Gentiles; but
for all that he goes on to say: "I, however, follow on, if so be I may
apprehend that for which I also am apprehended of Christ."(4) Nay, more: "Brethren,"
(he adds), "I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing (I do),
forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things
which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of blamelessness,(5)
whereby I may attain it;" meaning the resurrection from the dead in its proper
time. Even as he says to the Gala-tians: "Let us not be weary in well-doing: for
in due season we shall reap."(6) Similarly, concerning Onesiphorus, does he also
write to Timothy: "The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy in that
day;"(7) unto which day and time he charges Timothy himself "to keep what had been
committed to his care, without spot, unrebukable, until the appearing of the
Lord Jesus Christ: which in His times He shall show, who is the blessed and only
Potentate, the King of kings and Lord of lords,"(8) speaking of (Him as) God It
is to these same times that Peter in the Acts refers, when he says: "Repent ye
therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times
of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; and He shall send
Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: whom the heaven must receive
until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of
His holy prophets."(9)
CHAP. XXIV.--OTHER PASSAGES QUOTED FROM ST. PAUL, WHICH CATEGORICALLY ASSERT
THE RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH AT THE FINAL JUDGMENT.
The character of these times learn, along with the Thessalonians. For we
read: "How ye turned from idols to serve the living and true God, and to wait
for His Son from heaven, whom He raised from the dead, even Jesus."(10) And
again: "For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? Are not even ye in the
presence of our Lord God, Jesus Christ, at His coming?"(11) Likewise: "Before
God, even our Father, at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, with the whole
company of His saints."(12) He teaches them that they must "not sorrow concerning
them that are asleep," and at the same time explains to them the times of the
resurrection, saying, "For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so
them also which sleep in Jesus shall God bring with Him. For this we say unto
you by the word of the Lord, that we which are alive and remain unto the coming
of our Lord, shall not prevent them that are asleep. For the Lord Himself
shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with
the trump of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise first: then we which are
alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the
Lord in the air; and so shall we be ever with the Lord."(13) What archangel's
voice, (I wonder), what trump of God is now heard, except it be, forsooth, in
the entertainments of the heretics? For, allowing that the word of the gospel may
be called "the trump of God," since it was still calling men, yet they must at
that time either be dead as to the body, that they may be able to rise again;
and then how are they alive? Or else caught up into the clouds; and how then
are they here? "Most miserable," no doubt, as the apostle declared them, are they
"who in this life only" shall be found to have hope:(14) they will have to be
excluded while they are with premature haste seizing that which is promised
after this life; erring concerning the truth, no less than Phygellus and
Hermogenes.(15) Hence it is that the Holy Ghost, in His greatness, foreseeing clearly
all such interpretations as these, suggests (to the apostle), in this very
epistle of his to the Thessalonians, as follows: "But of the times and the seasons,
brethren, there is no necessity for my writing unto you. For ye yourselves know
perfectly, that the day of the Lord cometh as a thief in the night. For when
they shall say, 'Peace,' and 'All things are safe,' then sudden destruction shall
come upon them."(1) Again, in the second epistle he addresses them with even
greater earnestness: "Now I beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto Him, that ye be not soon shaken
in mind, nor be troubled, either by spirit, or by word," that is, the word of
false prophets, "or by letter," that is, the letter of false apostles, "as if
from us, as that the day of the Lord is at hand. Let no man deceive you by any
means. For that day shall not come, unless indeed there first come a falling
away," he means indeed of this present empire, "and that man of sin be revealed,"
that is to say, Antichrist, "the son of perdition, who opposeth and exalteth
himself above all that is called God or religion; so that he sitteth in the temple
of God, affirming that he is God. Remember ye not, that when I was with you, I
used to tell you these things? And now ye know what detaineth, that he might be
revealed in his time. For the mystery of iniquity doth already work; only he
who now hinders must hinder, until he be taken out of the way."(2) What obstacle
is there but the Roman state, the falling away of which, by being scattered
into ten kingdoms, shall introduce Antichrist upon (its own ruins)? "And then
shall be revealed the wicked one, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of
His mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming: even him whose
coming is after the working of Satan, with all power, and signs, and lying
wonders, and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish."(3)
CHAP. XXV.--ST. JOHN, IN THE APOCALYPSE, EQUALLY EXPLICIT IN ASSERTING THE
SAME GREAT DOCTRINE.
In the Revelation of John, again, the order of these times is spread out
to view, which "the souls of the martyrs" are taught to wait for beneath the
altar, whilst they earnestly pray to be avenged and judged:(4) (taught, I say, to
wait), in order that the world may first drink to the dregs the plagues that
await it out of the vials of the angels,(5) and that the city of fornication may
receive from the ten kings its deserved doom,(6) and that the beast Antichrist
with his false prophet may wage war on the Church of God; and that, after the
casting of the devil into the bottomless pit for a while,(7) the blessed
prerogative of the first resurrection may be ordained from the thrones;(8) and then
again, after the consignment of him to the fire, that the judgment of the final
and universal resurrection may be determined out of the books.(9) Since, then,
the Scriptures both indicate the stages of the last times, and concentrate the
harvest of the Christian hope in the very end of the world, it is evident,
either that all which God promises to us receives its accomplishment then, and thus
what the heretics pretend about a resurrection here falls to the ground; or
else, even allowing that a confession of the mystery (of divine truth) is a
resurrection, that there is, without any detriment to this view, room for believing
in that which is announced for the end. It moreover follows, that the very
maintenance of this spiritual resurrection amounts to a presumption in favour of
the other bodily resurrection; for if none were announced for that time, there
would be fair ground for asserting only this purely spiritual resurrection.
Inasmuch, however, as (a resurrection) is proclaimed for the last time, it is proved
to be a bodily one, because there is no spiritual one also then announced. For
why make a second announcement of a resurrection of only one character, that
is, the spiritual one, since this ought to be undergoing accomplishment either
now, without any regard to different times, or else then, at the very conclusion
of all the periods? It is therefore more competent for us even to maintain a
spiritual resurrection a the commencement of a life of faith, who acknowledge
the full completion thereof at the end of the world
CHAP. XXVI.--EVEN THE METAPHORICAL DESCRIPTIONS OF THIS SUBJECT IN THE
SCRIPTURES POINT TO THE BODILY RESURRECTION, THE ONLY SENSE WHICH SECURES THEIR
CONSISTENCY AND DIGNITY.
To a preceding objection, that the Scriptures are allegorical, I have
still one answer to make--that it is open to us also to defend the bodily character
of the resurrection by means of the language of the prophets, which is equally
figurative. For consider that primeval sentence which God spake when He called
man earth; saying, "Earth thou art, and to earth shalt thou return."(10) In
respect, of course, to his fleshly substance, which had been taken out of the
ground, and which was the first to receive the name of man, as we have already
shown,(1) does not this passage give one instruction to interpret in relation to
the flesh also whatever of wrath or of grace God has determined for the earth,
because, strictly speaking, the earth is not exposed to His judgment, since it
has never done any good or evil? "Cursed," no doubt, it was, for it drank the
blood of man;(2) but even this was as a figure of homicidal flesh. For if the
earth has to suffer either joy or injury, it is simply on man's account, that he
may suffer the joy or the sorrow through the events which happen to his
dwelling-place, whereby he will rather have to pay the penalty which, simply on his
account, even the earth must suffer. When, therefore, God even threatens the
earth, I would prefer saying that He threatens the flesh: so likewise, when He makes
a promise to the earth, I would rather understand Him as promising the flesh;
as in that passage of David: "The Lord is King, let the earth be
glad,"(3)--meaning the flesh of the saints, to which appertains the enjoyment of the kingdom
of God. Then he afterwards says: "The earth saw and trembled; the mountains
melted like wax at the presence of the Lord,"--meaning, no doubt the flesh of the
wicked; and (in a similar sense) it is written: "For they shall look on Him
whom they pierced."(4) If indeed it will be thought that both these passages were
pronounced simply of the element earth, how can it be consistent that it should
shake and melt at the presence of the Lord, at whose royal dignity it before
exulted? So again in Isaiah, "Ye shall eat the good of the land,"(5) the
expression means the blessings which await the flesh when in the kingdom of God it
shall be renewed, and made like the angels, and waiting to obtain the things
"which neither eye hath seen, nor ear heard, and which have not entered into the
heart of man."(6) Otherwise, how vain that God should invite men to obedience by
the fruits of the field and the elements of this life, when He dispenses these
to even irreligious men and blasphemers; on a general condition once for all
made to man, "sending rain on the good and on the evil, and making His sun to
shine on the just and on the unjust!"(7) Happy, no doubt, is faith, if it is to
obtain gifts which the enemies of God and Christ not only use, but even abuse,
"worshipping the creature itself in opposition to the Creator!"(8) You will
reckon, (I suppose) onions and truffles among earth's bounties, since the Lord
declares that "man shall not live on bread alone!"(9) In this way the Jews lose
heavenly blessings, by confining their hopes to earthly ones, being ignorant of the
promise of heavenly bread, and of the oil of God's unction, and the wine of
the Spirit, and of that water of life which has its vigour from the vine of
Christ. On exactly the same principle, they consider the special soil of Judaea to
be that very holy land, which ought rather to be interpreted of the Lord's
flesh, which, in all those who put on Christ, is thenceforward the holy land; holy
indeed by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost, truly flowing with milk and honey by
the sweetness of His assurance, truly Judaean by reason of the friendship of
God. For "he is not a Jew which is one outwardly, but he who is one
inwardly."(10) In the same way it is that both God's temple and Jerusalem (must be
understood) when it is said by Isaiah: "Awake, awake, O Jerusalem! put on the strength
of thine arm; awake, as in thine earliest time,"(11) that is to say, in that
innocence which preceded the fall into sin. For how can words of this kind of
exhortation and invitation be suitable for that Jerusalem which killed the
prophets, and stoned those that were sent to them, and at last crucified its very
Lord? Neither indeed is salvation promised to any one land at all, which must needs
pass away with the fashion of the whole world. Even if anybody should venture
strongly to contend that paradise is the holy land, which it may be possible to
designate as the land of our first parents Adam and Eve, it will even then
follow that the restoration of paradise will seem to be promised to the flesh,
whose lot it was to inhabit and keep it, in order that man may be recalled thereto
just such as he was driven from it.
CHAP. XXVII.--CERTAIN METAPHORICAL TERMS EXPLAINED OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE
FLESH.
We have also in the Scriptures robes mentioned as allegorizing the hope of
the flesh. Thus in the Revelation of John it is said: "These are they which
have not defiled their clothes with women,"(12)--indicating, of course, virgins,
and such as have become "eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake."(13)
Therefore they shall be "clothed in white raiment,"(1) that is, in the bright beauty
of the unwedded flesh. In the gospel even, "the wedding garment" may be regarded
as the sanctity of the flesh.(2) And so, when Isaiah tells us what sort of
"fast the Lord hath chosen," and subjoins a statement about the reward of good
works, he says: "Then shall thy light break forth as the morning, and thy
garments,(3) shall speedily arise;"(4) where he has no thought of cloaks or stuff
gowns, but means the rising of the flesh, which he declared the resurrection of,
after its fall in death. Thus we are furnished even with an allegorical defence of
the resurrection of the body. When, then, we read, "Go, my people, enter into
your closets for a little season, until my anger pass away,"(5) we have in the
closets graves, in which they will have to rest for a little while, who shall
have at the end of the world departed this life in the last furious onset of the
power of Antichrist. Why else did He use the expression closets, in preference
to some other receptacle, if it were not that the flesh is kept in these
closets or cellars salted and reserved for use, to be drawn out thence on a suitable
occasion? It is on a like principle that embalmed corpses are set aside for
burial in mausoleums and sepulchres, in order that they may be removed therefrom
when the Master shall order it. Since, therefore, there is consistency in thus
understanding the passage (for what refuge of little closets could possibly
shelter us from the wrath of God?), it appears that by the very phrase which he
uses, "Until His anger pass away,"(5) which shall extinguish Antichrist, he in
fact shows that after that indignation the flesh will come forth from the
sepulchre, in which it had been deposited previous to the bursting out of the anger.
Now out of the closets nothing else is brought than that which had been put into
them, and after the extirpation of Antichrist shall be busily transacted the
great process of the resurrection.
CHAP. XXVIII.--PROPHETIC THINGS AND ACTIONS, AS WELL AS WORDS, ATTEST THIS
GREAT DOCTRINE.
But we know that prophecy expressed itself by things no less than by
words. By words, and also by deeds, is the resurrection foretold. When Moses puts
his hand into his bosom, and then draws it out again dead, and again puts his
hand into his bosom, and plucks it out living,(6) does not this apply as a
presage to all mankind?--inasmuch as those three signs(7) denoted the threefold
power of God: when it shall, first, in the appointed order, subdue to man the old
serpent, the devil,(8) however formidable; then, secondly, draw forth the flesh
from the bosom of death;(9) and then, at last, shall pursue all blood (shed) in
judgment.(10) On this subject we read in the writings of the same prophet,
(how that) God says: "For your blood of your lives will I require of all wild
beasts; and I will require it of the hand of man, and of his brother's hand."(11)
Now nothing is required except that which is demanded back again, and nothing is
thus demanded except that which is to be given up; and that will of course be
given up, which shall be demanded and required on the ground of vengeance. But
indeed there cannot possibly be punishment of that which never had any
existence. Existence, however, it will have, when it is restored in order to be
punished. To the flesh, therefore, applies everything which is declared respecting the
blood, for without the flesh there cannot be blood. The flesh will be raised
up in order that the blood may be punished. There are, again, some statements
(of Scripture) so plainly made as to be free from all obscurity of allegory, and
yet they strongly require(12) their very simplicity to be interpreted. There
is, for instance, that passage in Isaiah: "I will kill, and I will make
alive."(13) Certainly His making alive is to take place after He has killed. As,
therefore, it is by death that He kills, it is by the resurrection that He will make
alive. Now it is the flesh which is killed by death; the flesh, therefore, will
be revived by the resurrection. Surely if killing means taking away life from
the flesh, and its opposite, reviving, amounts to restoring life to the flesh,
it must needs be that the flesh rise again, to which the life, which has been
taken away by killing, has to be restored by vivification.
CHAP. XXIX.--EZEKIEL'S VISION OF THE DRY BONES QUOTED.
Inasmuch, then, as even the figurative portions of Scripture, and the
arguments of facts, and some plain statements of Holy Writ, throw light upon the
resurrection of the flesh (although without specially naming the very substance),
how much more effectual for determining the question will not those passages
be which indicate the actual substance of the body by expressly mentioning it!
Take Ezekiel: "And the hand of the Lord," says he, "was upon me; and the Lord
brought me forth in the Spirit, and set me in the midst of a plain which was full
of bones; and He led me round about them in a circuit: and, behold, there were
many on the face of the plain; and, lo, they were very dry. And He said unto
me, Son of man, will these bones live? And I said, O Lord God, Thou knowest. And
He said unto me, Prophesy upon these bones; and thou shalt say, Ye dry bones,
hear the word of the Lord. Thus saith the Lord God to these bones, Behold, I
bring upon you the breath of life, and ye shall live: and I will give unto you
the spirit, and I will place muscles over you, and I will spread skin upon you;
and ye shall live, and shall know that I am the Lord. And I prophesied as the
Lord commanded me: and while I prophesy, behold there is a voice, behold also a
movement, and bones approached bones. And I saw, and behold sinews and flesh
came up over them, and muscles were placed around them; but there was no breath in
them. And He said unto me, Prophesy to the wind, son of man, prophesy and say,
Thus saith the Lord God, Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe in
these dead men, and let them live. So I prophesied to the wind, as He commanded
me, and the spirit entered into the bones, and they lived, and stood upon their
feet, strong and exceeding many. And the Lord said unto me, Son of man, these
bones are the whole house of Israel. They say themselves, Our bones are become
dry, and our hope is perished, and we in them have been violently destroyed.
Therefore prophesy unto them, (and say), Behold, even I will open your sepulchres,
and will bring you out of your sepulchres, O my people, and will bring you
into the land of Israel: and ye shall know how that I the Lord opened your
sepulchres, and brought you, O my people, out of your sepulchres; and I will give my
Spirit unto you, and ye shall live, and shall rest in your own land: and ye
shall know how that I the Lord have spoken and done these things, saith the
Lord."(1)
CHAP. XXX.--THIS VISION INTERPRETED BY TERTULLIAN OF THE RESURRECTION OF THE
BODIES OF THE DEAD. A CHRONOLOGICAL ERROR OF OUR AUTHOR, WHO SUPPOSES THAT
EZEKIEL IN HIS CH. XXXI. PROPHESIED BEFORE THE CAPTIVITY.
I am well aware how they torture even this prophecy into a proof of the
allegorical sense, on the ground that by saying, "These bones are the whole house
of Israel," He made them a figure of Israel, and removed them from their
proper literal condition; and therefore (they contend) that there is here a
figurative, not a true prediction of the resurrection, for (they say) the state of the
Jews is one of humiliation, in a certain sense dead, and very dry, and
dispersed over the plain of the world. Therefore the image of a resurrection is
allegorically applied to their state, since it has to be gathered together, and
recompacted bone to bone (in other words, tribe to tribe, and people to people), and
to be reincorporated by the sinews of power and the nerves of royalty, and to
be brought out as it were from sepulchres, that is to say, from the most
miserable and degraded abodes of captivity, and to breathe afresh in the way of a
restoration, and to live thenceforward in their own land of Judaea. And what is to
happen after all this? They will die, no doubt. And what will there be after
death? No resurrection from the dead, of course, since there is nothing of the
sort here revealed to Ezekiel. Well, but the resurrection is elsewhere foretold:
so that there will be one even in this case, and they are rash in applying this
passage to the state of Jewish affairs; or even if it do indicate a different
recovery from the resurrection which we are maintaining, what matters it to me,
provided there be also a resurrection of the body, just as there is a
restoration of the Jewish state? In fact, by the very circumstance that the recovery of
the Jewish state is prefigured by the reincorporation and reunion of bones,
proof is offered that this event will also happen to the bones themselves; for
the metaphor could not have been formed from bones, if the same thing exactly
were not to be realized in them also. Now, although there is a sketch of the true
thing in its image, the image itself still possesses a truth of its own: it
must needs be, therefore, that must have a prior existence for itself, which is
used figuratively to express some other thing. Vacuity is not a consistent basis
for a similitude, nor does nonentity form a suitable foundation for a parable.
It will therefore be right to believe that the bones are destined to have a
rehabiliment of flesh and breath, such as it is here said they will have, by
reason indeed of which their renewed state could alone express the reformed
condition of Jewish affairs, which is pretended to be the meaning of this passage. It
is. however, more characteristic of a religious spirit to maintain the truth on
the authority of a literal interpretation, such as is required by the sense of
the inspired passage. Now, if this vision had reference to the condition of the
Jews, as soon as He had revealed to him the position of the bones, He would at
once have added, "These bones are the whole house of Israel," and so forth.
But immediately on showing the bones, He interrupts the scene by saying somewhat
of the prospect which is most suited to bones; without yet naming Israel, He
tries the prophet's own faith: "Son of man, can these bones ever live?" so that
he makes answer: "O Lord, Thou knowest." Now God would not, you may be sure,
have tried the prophet's faith on a point which was never to be a real one, of
which Israel should never hear, and in which it was not proper to repose belief.
Since, however, the resurrection of the dead was indeed foretold, but Israel, in
the distrust of his great unbelief, was offended at it; and, whilst gazing on
the condition of the crumbling grave, despaired of a resurrection; or rather,
did not direct his mind mainly to it, but to his own harassing
circumstances,--therefore God first instructed the prophet (since he, too, was not free from
doubt), by revealing to him the process of the resurrection, with a view to his
earnest setting forth of the same. He then charged the people to believe what He
had revealed to the prophet, telling them that they were themselves, though
refusing to believe their resurrection, the very bones which were destined to rise
again. Then in the concluding sentence He says, "And ye shall know how that I
the Lord have spoken and done these things," intending of course to do that of
which He had spoken; but certainly not meaning to do that which He had spoken
of, if His design had been to do something different from what He had said.
CHAP. XXXI.--OTHER PASSAGES OUT OF THE PROPHETS APPLIED TO THE RESURRECTION OF
THE FLESH.
Unquestionably, if the people were indulging in figurative murmurs that
their bones were become dry, and that their hope had perished--plaintive at the
consequences of their dispersion--then God might fairly enough seem to have
consoled their figurative despair with a figurative promise. Since, however, no
injury had as yet alighted on the people from their dispersion, although the hope
of the resurrection had very frequently failed amongst them, it is manifest
that it was owing to the perishing condition of their bodies that their faith in
the resurrection was shaken. God, therefore was rebuilding the faith which the
people were pulling down. But even if it were true that Israel was then
depressed at some shock in their existing circumstances, we must not on that account
suppose that the purpose of revelation could have rested in a parable: its aim
must have been to testify a resurrection, in order to raise the nation's hope to
even an eternal salvation and an indispensable restoration, and thereby turn
off their minds from brooding over their present affairs. This indeed is the aim
of other prophets likewise. "Ye shall go forth," (says Malachi), "from your
sepulchres, as young calves let loose from their bonds, and ye shall tread down
your enemies."(1) And again, (Isaiah says): "Your heart shall rejoice, and your
bones shall spring up like the grass,"(2) because the grass also is renewed by
the dissolution and corruption of the seed. In a word, if it is contended that
the figure of the rising bones refers properly to the state of Israel, why is
the same hope announced to all nations, instead of being limited to Israel only,
of reinvesting those osseous remains with bodily substance and vital breath,
and of raising up their dead out of the grave? For the language is universal:
"The dead shall arise, and come forth from their graves; for the dew which cometh
from Thee is medicine to their bones."(3) In another passage it is written:
"All flesh shall come to worship before me, saith the Lord."(4) When? When the
fashion of this world shall begin to pass away. For He said before: "As the new
heaven and the new earth, which I make, remain before me, saith the Lord, so
shall your seed remain."(5) Then also shall be fulfilled what is written
afterwards: "And they shall go forth" (namely, from their graves), "and shall see the
carcases of those who have transgressed: for their worm shall never die, nor
shall their fire be quenched; and they shall be a spectacle to all flesh"(6) even
to that which, being raised again from the dead and brought out from the grave,
shall adore the Lord for this great grace.
CHAP. XXXII.--EVEN UNBURIED BODIES WILL BE RAISED AGAIN. WHATEVER BEFALLS THEM
GOD WILL RESTORE THEM AGAIN. JONAH'S CASE QUOTED IN ILLUSTRATION OF GOD'S
POWER.
But, that you may not suppose that it is merely those bodies which are
consigned to tombs whose resurrection is foretold, you have it declared in
Scripture: "And I will command the fishes of the sea, and they shall cast up the bones
which they have devoured; and I will bring joint to joint, and bone to bone."
You will ask, Will then the fishes and other animals and carnivorous birds be
raised again, in order that they may vomit up what they have consumed, on the
ground of your reading in the law of Moses, that blood is required of even all
the beasts? Certainly not. But the beasts and the fishes are mentioned in
relation to the restoration of flesh and blood, in order the more emphatically to
express the resurrection of such bodies as have even been devoured, when redress is
said to be demanded of their very devourers. Now I apprehend that in the case
of Jonah we have a fair proof of this divine power, when he comes forth from
the fish's belly uninjured in both his natures--his flesh and his soul. No doubt
the bowels of the whale would have had abundant time during three days for
consuming and digesting Jonah's flesh, quite as effectually as a coffin, or a tomb,
or the gradual decay of some quiet and concealed grave; only that he wanted to
prefigure even those beasts (which symbolize) especially the men who are
wildly opposed to the Christian name, or the angels of iniquity, of whom blood will
be required by the full exaction of an avenging judgment. Where, then, is the
man who, being more disposed to learn than to assume, more careful to believe
than to dispute, and more scrupulous of the wisdom of God than wantonly bent on
his own, when he hears of a divine purpose respecting sinews and skin, and
nerves and bones, will forthwith devise some different application of these words,
as if all that is said of the substances in question were not naturally intended
for man? For either there is here no reference to the destiny of man--in the
gracious provision of the kingdom (of heaven), in the severity of the
judgment-day, in all the incidents of the resurrection; or else, if there is any
reference to his destiny, the destination must necessarily be made in reference to
those substances of which the man is composed, for whom the destiny is reserved.
Another question I have also to ask of these very adroit transformers of bones
and sinews, and nerves and sepulchres: Why, when anything is declared of the
soul, do they not interpret the soul to be something else, and transfer it to
another signification?--since, whenever any distinct statement is made of a bodily
substance, they will obstinately prefer taking any other sense whatever, rather
than that which the name indicates. If things which pertain to the body are
figurative, why are not those which pertain to the soul figurative also? Since,
however, things which belong to the soul have nothing allegorical in them,
neither therefore have those which belong to the body. For man is as much body as he
is soul; so that it is impossible for one of these natures to admit a
figurative sense, and the other to exclude it.
CHAP. XXXIII.--SO MUCH FOR THE PROPHETIC SCRIPTURES. IN THE GOSPELS, CHRIST'S
PARABLES, AS EXPLAINED BY HIMSELF, HAVE A CLEAR REFERENCE TO THE RESURRECTION
OF THE FLESH.
This is evidence enough from the prophetic Scriptures. I now appeal to the
Gospels. But here also I must first meet the same sophistry as advanced by
those who contend that the Lord, like (the prophets), said everything in the way
of allegory, because it is written: "All these things spake Jesus in parables,
and without a parable spake He not unto them,"(1) that is, to the Jews. Now the
disciples also asked Him, "Why speakest Thou in parables?"(2) And the Lord gave
them this answer: "Therefore I speak unto them in parables: because they
seeing, see not; and hearing, they hear not, according to the prophecy of
Esaias."(3) But since it was to the Jews that He spoke in parables, it was not then to
all men; and if not to all, it follows that it was not always and in all things
parables with Him, but only in certain things, and when addressing a particular
class. But He addressed a particular class when He spoke to the Jews. It is
true that He spoke sometimes even to the disciples in parables. But observe how
the Scripture relates such a fact: "And He spake a parable unto them."(4) It
follows, then, that He did not usually address them in parables; because if He
always did so, special mention would not be made of His resorting to this mode of
address. Besides, there is not a parable which you will not find to be either
explained by the Lord Himself, as that of the sower, (which He interprets) of the
management of the word of God;(5) or else cleared by a preface from the writer
of the Gospel, as in the parable of the arrogant judge and the importunate
widow, which is expressly applied to earnestness in prayer;(6) or capable of being
spontaneously understood,(7) as in the parable of the fig-tree, which was
spared a while in hopes of improve-ment--an emblem of Jewish sterility. Now, if
even parables obscure not the light of the gospel, how unlikely it is that plain
sentences and declarations, which have an unmistakeable meaning, should signify
any other thing than their literal sense! But it is by such declarations and
sentences that the Lord sets forth either the last judgment, or the kingdom, or
the resurrection: "It shall be more tolerable," He says, "for Tyre and Sidon in
the day of judgment than far you."[1] And "Tell them that the kingdom of God is
at hand."[2] And again, "It shall be recompensed to you at the resurrection of
the just."[3] Now, if the mention of these events (I mean the judgment-day,
and the kingdom of God, and the resurrection) has a plain and absolute sense, so
that nothing about them can be pressed into an allegory, neither should those
statements be forced into parables which describe the arrangement, and the
process, and the experience of the kingdom of God, and of the judgment, and of the
resurrection. On the contrary, things which are destined for the body should be
carefully understood in a bodily sense,--not in a spiritual sense, as having
nothing figurative in their nature. This is the reason why we have laid it down
as a preliminary consideration, that the bodily substance both of the soul and
of the flesh is liable to the recompense, which will have to be awarded in
return for the co-operation of the two natures, that so the corporeality of the soul
may not exclude the bodily nature of the flesh by suggesting a recourse to
figurative descriptions, since both of them must needs be regarded as destined to
take part in the kingdom, and the judgment, and the resurrection. And now we
proceed to the special proof of this proposition, that the bodily character of
the flesh is indicated by our Lord whenever He mentions the resurrection, at the
same time without disparagement to the corporeal nature of the soul,--a point
which has been actually admitted but by a few.
CHAP. XXXIV.--CHRIST PLAINLY TESTIFIES TO THE RESURRECTION OF THE ENTIRE MAN.
NOT IN HIS SOUL ONLY, WITHOUT THE BODY.
To begin with the passage where He says that He is come to "to seek and to
save that which is lost."[4] What do you suppose that to be which is lost?
Man, undoubtedly. The entire man, or only a part of him? The whole man, of course.
In fact, since the trangression which caused man's ruin was committed quite as
much by the instigation of the soul from concupiscence as by the action of the
flesh from actual fruition, it has marked the entire man with the sentence of
transgression, and has therefore made him deservedly amenable to perdition. So
that he will be wholly saved, since he has by sinning been wholly lost. Unless
it be true that the sheep (of the parable) is a" lost" one, irrespective of its
body; then its recovery may be effected without the body. Since, however, it
is the bodily substance as well as the soul, making up the entire animal, which
was carried on the shoulders of the Good Shepherd, we have here unquestionably
an example how man is restored in both his natures. Else how unworthy it were
of God to bring only a moiety of man to salvation--and almost less than that;
whereas the munificence of princes of this world always claims for itself the
merit of a plenary grace! Then must the devil be understood to be stronger for
injuring man, ruining him wholly? and must God have the character of comparative
weakness, since He does not relieve and help man in his entire state? The
apostle, however, suggests that "where sin abounded, there has grace much more
abounded."[5] How, in fact, can he be regarded as saved, who can at the same time be
said to be lost--lost, that is, in the flesh, but saved as to his soul? Unless,
indeed, their argument now makes it necessary that the soul should be placed
in a "lost" condition, that it may be susceptible of salvation, on the ground
that is properly saved which has been lost. We, however, so understand the soul's
immortality as to believe it "lost," not in the sense of destruction, but of
punishment, that is, in hell. And if this is the case, then it is not the soul
which salvation will affect, since it is "safe"already in its own nature by
reason of its immortality, but rather the flesh, which, as all readily allow, is
subject to destruction. Else, if the soul is also perishable (in this sense), in
other words, not immortal--the condition of the flesh--then this same condition
ought in all fairness to benefit the flesh also, as being similarly mortal and
perishable, since that which perishes the Lord purposes to save. I do not care
now to follow the clue of our discussion, so far as to consider whether it is
in one of his natures or in the other that perdition puts in its claim on man,
provided that salvation is equally distributed over the two substances, and
makes him its aim in respect of them both. For observe, in which substance so-ever
you assume man to have perished, in the other be does not perish. He will
therefore be saved in the substance in which he does not perish, and yet obtain
salvation in that in which he does perish. You have (then) the restoration of the
entire man, inasmuch as the Lord purposes to save that part of him which
perishes, whilst he will not of course lose that portion which cannot be lost, Who
will any longer doubt of the safety of both natures, when one of them is to
obtain salvation, and the other is not to lose it? And, still further, the Lord
explains to us the meaning of the thing when He says: "I came not to do my own
will, but the Father's, who hath sent me."[1] What, I ask, is that will? "That of
all which He hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again
at the last day."[2] Now, what had Christ received of the Father but that which
He had Himself put on? Man, of course, in his texture of flesh and soul.
Neither, therefore, of those parts which He has received will He allow to perish;
nay, no considerable portion--nay, not the least fraction, of either. If the
flesh be, as our opponents slightingly think, but a poor fraction, then the flesh
is safe, because not a fraction of man is to perish; and no larger portion is in
danger, because every portion of man is in equally safe keeping with Him. If,
however, He will not raise the flesh also up at the last day, then He will
permit not only a fraction of man to perish, but (as I will venture to say, in
consideration of so important a part) almost the whole of him. But when He repeats
His words with increased emphasis, "And this is the Father's will, that every
one which seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, may have eternal life: and I
will raise him up at the last day,"[3]--He asserts the full extent of the
resurrection. For He assigns to each several nature that reward which is suited to its
services: both to the flesh, for by it the Son was "seen;" and to the soul, for
by it He was "believed on." Then, you will say, to them was this promise given
by whom Christ was "seen." Well, be it so; only let the same hope flow on from
them to us! For if to them who saw, and therefore believed, such fruit then
accrued to the operations of the flesh and the soul, how much more to us! For
more "blessed," says Christ, "are they who have not seen, and yet have
believed;"[4] since, even if the resurrection of the flesh must be denied to them, it must
at any rate be a fitting boon to us, who are the more blessed. For how could
we be blessed, if we were to perish in any part of us?