Chapter VI.-On the End or
Consummation.
1. An end or
consummation would seem to be an
indication of the
perfection and
completion of
things. And this
reminds us here, that if there be any one
imbued with a
desire of
reading and
understanding subjects of such
difficulty and
importance, he
ought to
bring to the
effort a
perfect and
instructed understanding,
lest perhaps, if he has had no
experience in
questions of this
kind, they
may appear to him as
vain and
superfluous; or if his
mind be
full of
preconceptions and
prejudices on other
points, he
may judge these to be
heretical and
opposed to the
faith of the
Church,
yielding in so
doing not so much to the
convictions of
reason as to the
dogmatism of
prejudice. These
subjects, indeed, are
treated by us with
great solicitude and
caution, in the
manner rather of an
investigation and
discussion, than in that of
fixed and
certain decision. For we have
pointed out in the
preceding pages those
questions which must be
set forth in
clear dogmatic propositions, as I
think has been done to the
best of my
ability when
speaking of the
Trinity. But on the
present occasion our
exercise is to be
conducted, as we
best may, in the
style of a
disputation rather than of
strict definition.
The end of the
world, then, and the
final consummation, will
take place when every one shall be
subjected to
punishment for his
sins; a
time which
God alone
knows, when He will
bestow on each one what he
deserves. We
think, indeed, that the
goodness of
God, through His
Christ,
may recall all His
creatures to one end, even His
enemies being conquered and
subdued. For thus
says holy Scripture, "The
Lord said to My
Lord,
Sit Thou at My
right hand, until I make Thine
enemies Thy
footstool." And if the
meaning of the
prophet's
language here be less
clear, we
may ascertain it from the
Apostle Paul, who
speaks more
openly, thus: "For
Christ must
reign until He has
put all
enemies under His
feet." But if even that
unreserved declaration of the
apostle do not
sufficiently inform us what is
meant by "
enemies being placed under His
feet,"
listen to what he
says in the
following words, "For all
things must be
put under Him." What, then, is this "
putting under" by which all
things must be made
subject to
Christ? I am of
opinion that it is this very
subjection by which we also
wish to be
subject to Him, by which the
apostles also were
subject, and all the
saints who have been
followers of
Christ. For the
name "
subjection," by which we are
subject to
Christ,
indicates that the
salvation which
proceeds from Him
belongs to His
subjects,
agreeably to the
declaration of
David, "Shall not my
soul be
subject unto
God? From Him
cometh my
salvation."
2.
Seeing, then, that such is the end, when all
enemies will be
subdued to
Christ, when
death-the last
enemy-shall be
destroyed, and when the
kingdom shall be
delivered up by
Christ (to whom all
things are
subject) to
God the
Father; let us, I
say, from such an end as this,
contemplate the
beginnings of
things. For the end is always like the beginning: and, therefore, as there is one end to all
things, so
ought we to
understand that there was one beginning; and as there is one end to many
things, so there
spring from one beginning many
differences and
varieties, which again, through the
goodness of
God, and by
subjection to
Christ, and through the
unity of the
Holy Spirit, are
recalled to one end, which is like unto the beginning: all those,
viz., who,
bending the
knee at the
name of
Jesus, make
known by so
doing their
subjection to Him: and these are they who are in
heaven, on
earth, and under the
earth: by which
three classes the whole
universe of
things is
pointed out, those,
viz., who from that one beginning were
arranged, each according to the
diversity of his
conduct, among the
different orders, in
accordance with their
desert; for there was no
goodness in them by
essential being, as in
God and His
Christ, and in the
Holy Spirit. For in the
Trinity alone, which is the
author of all
things, does
goodness exist in
virtue of
essential being; while others
possess it as an
accidental and
perishable quality, and only then
enjoy blessedness, when they
participate in
holiness and
wisdom, and in
divinity itself. But if they
neglect and
despise such
participation, then is each one, by
fault of his own
slothfulness, made, one more
rapidly, another more
slowly, one in a
greater, another in a less
degree, the
cause of his own
downfall. And since, as we have
remarked, the
lapse by which an
individual falls away from his
position is
characterized by
great diversity, according to the
movements of the
mind and will, one
man falling with
greater ease, another with more
difficulty, into a
lower condition; in this is to be
seen the
just judgment of the
providence of
God, that it should
happen to every one according to the
diversity of his
conduct, in
proportion to the
desert of his
declension and
defection.
Certain of those, indeed, who
remained in that beginning which we have
described as
resembling the end which is to
come,
obtained, in the
ordering and
arrangement of the
world, the
rank of
angels; others that of
influences, others of
principalities, others of
powers, that they
may exercise power over those who
need to have
power upon their
head. Others, again,
received the
rank of
thrones,
having the
office of
judging or
ruling those who
require this; others
dominion,
doubtless, over
slaves; all of which are
conferred by
Divine Providence in
just and
impartial judgment according to their
merits, and to the
progress which they had made in the
participation and
imitation of
God. But those who have been
removed from their
primal state of
blessedness have not been
removed irrecoverably, but have been
placed under the
rule of those
holy and
blessed orders which we have
described; and by
availing themselves of the
aid of these, and
being remoulded by
salutary principles and
discipline, they
may recover themselves, and be
restored to their
condition of
happiness. From all which I am of
opinion, so
far as I can
see, that this
order of the
human race has been
appointed in
order that in the
future world, or in
ages to
come, when there shall be the
new heavens and
new earth,
spoken of by
Isaiah, it
may be
restored to that
unity promised by the
Lord Jesus in His
prayer to
God the
Father on
behalf of His
disciples: "I do not
pray for these alone, but for all who shall
believe on Me through their
word: that they all.
may be one, as Thou,
Father,
art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also
may be one in Us; " and again, when He
says: "That they
may be one, even as We are one; I in them, and Thou in Me, that they
may be made
perfect in one." And this is further
confirmed by the
language of the
Apostle Paul: "Until we all
come in the
unity of the
faith to a
perfect man, to the
measure of the
stature of the
fulness of
Christ." And in
keeping with this is the
declaration of the same
apostle, when he
exhorts us, who even in the
present life are
placed in the
Church, in which is the
form of that
kingdom which is to
come, to this same
similitude of
unity: "That ye all
speak the same
thing, and that there be no
divisions among you; but that ye be
perfectly joined together in the same
mind and in the same
judgment."
3. It is to be
borne in
mind, however, that
certain beings who
fell away from that one beginning of which we have
spoken, have
sunk to such a
depth of
unworthiness and
wickedness as to be
deemed altogether undeserving of that
training and
instruction by which the
human race, while in the
flesh, are
trained and
instructed with the
assistance of the
heavenly powers; and
continue, on the
contrary, in a
state of
enmity and
opposition to those who are
receiving this
instruction and
teaching. And hence it is that the whole of this
mortal life is
full of
struggles and
trials,
caused by the
opposition and
enmity of those who
fell from a
better condition without at all
looking back, and who are
called the
devil and his
angels, and the other
orders of
evil, which the
apostle classed among the
opposing powers. But whether any of these
orders who
act under the
government of the
devil, and
obey his
wicked commands, will in a
future world be
converted to
righteousness because of their
possessing the
faculty of
freedom of will, or whether
persistent and
inveterate wickedness may be
changed by the
power of
habit into
nature, is a
result which you yourself,
reader,
may approve of, if neither in these
present worlds which are
seen and
temporal, nor in those which are
unseen and are
eternal, that
portion is to
differ wholly from the
final unity and
fitness of
things. But in the meantime, both in those
temporal worlds which are
seen, as well as in those
eternal worlds which are
invisible, all those
beings are
arranged, according to a
regular plan, in the
order and
degree of their
merits; so that some of them in the first, others in the
second, some even in the last
times, after
having undergone heavier and
severer punishments,
endured for a
lengthened period, and for many
ages, so to
speak,
improved by this
stern method of
training, and
restored at first by the
instruction of the
angels, and
subsequently by the
powers of a
higher grade, and thus
advancing through each
stage to a
better condition,
reach even to that which is
invisible and
eternal,
having travelled through, by a
kind of
training, every
single office of the
heavenly powers. From which, I
think, this will
appear to
follow as an
inference, that every
rational nature may, in
passing from one
order to another,
go through each to all, and
advance from all to each, while made the
subject of
various degrees of
proficiency and
failure according to its own
actions and
endeavours,
put forth in the
enjoyment of its
power of
freedom of will.
4. But since
Paul says that
certain things are
visible and
temporal, and others besides these
invisible and
eternal, we
proceed to
inquire how those
things which are
seen are
temporal-whether because there will be nothing at all after them in all those
periods of the
coming world, in which that
dispersion and
separation from the one beginning is
undergoing a
process of
restoration to one and the same end and
likeness; or because, while the
form of those
things which are
seen passes away, their
essential nature is
subject to no
corruption. And
Paul seems to
confirm the latter
view, when he
says, "For the
fashion of this
world passeth away."
David also
appears to
assert the same in the
words, "The
heavens shall
perish, but Thou shalt
endure; and they all shall
wax old as a
garment, and Thou shalt
change them like a
vesture, and like a
vestment they shall be
changed." For if the
heavens are to be
changed,
assuredly that which is
changed does not
perish, and if the
fashion of the
world passes away, it is by no
means an
annihilation or
destruction of their
material substance that is
shown to
take place, but a
kind of
change of
quality and
transformation of
appearance.
Isaiah also, in
declaring prophetically that there will be a
new heaven and a
new earth,
undoubtedly suggests a
similar view. For this
renewal of
heaven and
earth, and this
transmutation of the
form of the
present world, and this
changing of the
heavens will
undoubtedly be
prepared for those who are
walking along that
way which we have
pointed out above, and are
tending to that
goal of
happiness to which, it is
said, even
enemies themselves are to be
subjected, and in which
God is
said to be "all and in all." And if any one
imagine that at the end
material,
i.e.,
bodily,
nature will be
entirely destroyed, he cannot in
may respect meet my
view, how
beings so
numerous and
powerful are
able to
live and to
exist without
bodies, since it is an
attribute of the
divine nature alone-i.
e., of the
Father,
Son, and
Holy Spirit-to exist without any
material substance, and without
partaking in any
degree of a
bodily adjunct. Another, perhaps,
may say that in the end every
bodily substance will be so
pure and
refined as to be like the
aether, and of a
celestial purity and
clearness. How
things will be, however, is
known with
certainty to
God alone, and to those who are His
friends through
Christ and the
Holy Spirit.