Chapter II.-On the
Perpetuity of
Bodily Nature.
1. On this
topic some are
wont to
inquire whether, as the
Father generates an
uncreated Son, and
brings forth a
Holy Spirit, not as if He had no
previous existence, but because the
Father is the
origin and
source of the
Son or
Holy Spirit, and no
anteriority or
posteriority can be
understood as
existing in them; so also a
similar kind of
union or
relationship can be
understood as
subsisting between
rational natures and
bodily matter. And that this
point may be more
fully and
thoroughly examined, the
commencement of the
discussion is
generally directed to the
inquiry whether this very
bodily nature, which
bears the
lives and
contains the
movements of
spiritual and
rational minds, will be
equally eternal with them, or will
altogether perish and be
destroyed. And that the
question may be
determined with
greater precision, we have, in the first
place, to
inquire if it is
possible for
rational natures to
remain altogether incorporeal after they have
reached the
summit of
holiness and
happiness (which seems to me a most
difficult and almost
impossible attainment), or whether they must always of
necessity be
united to
bodies. If, then, any one could
show a
reason why it was
possible for them to
dispense wholly with
bodies, it will
appear to
follow, :
hat as a
bodily nature,
created out of nothing after
intervals of
time, was
produced when it did not
exist, so also it must
cease to be when the
purposes which it
served had no
longer an
existence.
2. If, however, it is
impossible for this
point to be at all
maintained,
viz., that any other
nature than the
Father,
Son, and
Holy Spirit can
live without a
body, the
necessity of
logical reasoning compels us to
understand that
rational natures were indeed
created at the beginning, but that
material substance was
separated from them only in
thought and
understanding, and
appears to have been
formed for them, or after them, and that they never have
lived nor do
live without it; for an
incorporeal life will
rightly be
considered a
prerogative of the
Trinity alone. As we have
remarked above, therefore, that
material substance of this
world,
possessing a
nature admitting of all
possible transformations, is, when
dragged down to
beings of a
lower order,
moulded into the
crasser and more
solid condition of a
body, so as to
distinguish those
visible and
varying forms of the
world; but when it becomes the
servant of more
perfect and more
blessed beings, it
shines in the
splendour of
celestial bodies, and
adorns either the
angels of
God or the
sons of the
resurrection with the
clothing of a
spiritual body, out of all which will be
filled up the
diverse and
varying state of the one
world. But if any one should
desire to
discuss these
matters more
fully, it will be
necessary, with all
reverence and
fear of
God, to
examine the
sacred Scriptures with
greater attention and
diligence, to
ascertain whether the
secret and
hidden sense within them
may perhaps
reveal anything
regarding these
matters; and something
may be
discovered in their
abstruse and
mysterious language, through the
demonstration of the
Holy Spirit to those who are
worthy, after many
testimonies have been
collected on this very
point.