Chapter III.-On the Beginning of the
World, and Its
Causes.
1. The next
subject of
inquiry is, whether there was any other
world before the one which now
exists; and if so, whether it was such as the
present, or
somewhat different, or
inferior; or whether there was no
world at all, but something like that which we
understand will be after the end of all
things, when the
kingdom shall be
delivered up to
God, even the
Father; which nevertheless
may havebeen the end of another
world,-of that, namely, after which this
world took its beginning; and whether the
various lapses of
intellectual natures provoked God to
produce this
diverse and
varying condition of the
world. This
point also, I
think, must be
investigated in a
similar way,
viz., whether after this
world there will be any (
system of)
preservation and
amendment,
severe indeed, and
attended with much
pain to those who were
unwilling to
obey the
word of
God, but a
process through which, by
means of
instruction and
rational training, those
may arrive at a
fuller understanding of the
truth who have
devoted themselves in the
present life to these
pursuits, and who, after
having had their
minds purified, have
advanced onwards so as to become
capable of
attaining divine wisdom; and after this the end of all
things will
immediately follow, and there will be again, for the
correction and
improvement of those who
stand in
need of it, another
world, either
resembling that which now
exists, or
better than it, or
greatly inferior; and how
long that
world, whatever it be that is to
come after this, shall
continue; and if there will be a
time when no
world shall anywhere
exist, or if there has been a
time when there was no
world at all; or if there have been, or will be several; or if it shall ever
come to
pass that there will be one
resembling another, like it in every
respect, and
indistinguishable from it.
2. That it
may appear more
clearly, then, whether
bodily matter can
exist during
intervals of
time, and whether, as it did not
exist before it was made, so it
may again be
resolved into
non-existence, let us
see, first of all, whether it is
possible for any one to
live without a
body. For if one
person can
live without a
body, all
things also
may dispense with them;
seeing our former
treatise has
shown that all
things tend towards one end. Now, if all
things may exist without
bodies, there will
undoubtedly be no
bodily substance,
seeing there will be no
use for it. But how shall we
understand the
words of the
apostle in those
passages, in which,
discussing the
resurrection of the
dead, he
says, "This
corruptible must
put on
incorruption, and this
mortal must
put on
immortality. When this
corruptible shall have
put on
incorruption, and this
mortal shall have
put on
immortality, then shall be
brought to
pass the
saying which is
written,
Death is
swallowed up in
victory! Where,
O death, is thy
victory?
O death, thy
sting has been
swallowed up: the
sting of
death is
sin, and the
strength of
sin is the
law." Some such
meaning, then, as this, seems to be
suggested by the
apostle. For can the
expression which he
employs, "this
corruptible," and "this
mortal," with the
gesture, as it were, of one who
touches or
points out,
apply to anything else than to
bodily matter? This
matter of the
body, then, which is now
corruptible shall
put on
incorruption when a
perfect soul, and one
furnished with the
marks of
incorruption, shall have
begun to
inhabit it. And do not be
surprised if we
speak of a
perfect soul as the
clothing of the
body (which, on
account of the
Word of
God and His
wisdom, is now
named incorruption), when
Jesus Christ Himself, who is the
Lord and
Creator of the
soul, is
said to be the
clothing of the
saints, according to the
language of the
apostle, "
Put ye on the
Lord Jesus Christ." As
Christ, then, is the
clothing of the
soul, so for a
kind of
reason sufficiently intelligible is the
soul said to be the
clothing of the
body,
seeing it is an
ornament to it,
covering and
concealing its
mortal nature. The
expression, then, "This
corruptible must
put on
incorruption," is as if the
apostle had
said, "This
corruptible nature of the
body must
receive the
clothing of
incorruption-a soul possessing in itself
incorruptibitity," because it has been
clothed with
Christ, who is the
Wisdom and
Word of
God. But when this
body, which at some
future period we shall
possess in a more
glorious state, shall have become a
partaker of
life, it will then, in
addition to
being immortal, become also
incorruptible. For whatever is
mortal is
necessarily also
corruptible; but whatever is
corruptible cannot also be
said to be
mortal. We
say of a
stone or a
piece of
wood that it is
corruptible, but we do not
say that it
follows that it is also
mortal. But as the
body partakes of
life, then because
life may be, and is,
separated from it, we
consequently name it
mortal, and according to another
sense also we
speak of it as
corruptible. The
holy apostle therefore, with
remarkable insight,
referring to the
general first
cause of
bodily matter, of which (
matter), whatever be the
qualities with which it is
endowed (now indeed
carnal, but by and by more
refined and
pure, which are
termed spiritual), the
soul makes
constant use,
says, "This
corruptible must
put on
incorruption." And in the
second place,
looking to the
special cause of the
body, he
says, "This
mortal must
put on
immortality." Now, what else will
in-corruption and
immortality be,
save the
wisdom, and the
word, and the
righteousness of
God, which
mould; and
clothe, and
adorn the
soul? And hence it
happens that it is
said, "The
corruptible will
put on
incorruption, and the
mortal immortality." For although we
may now make
great proficiency, yet as we only
know in
part, and
prophesy in
part, and
see through a
glass,
darkly, those very
things which we seem to
understand, this
corruptible does not yet
put on
incorruption, nor is this
mortal yet
clothed with
immorality; and as this
training of ours in the
body is
protracted doubtless to a
longer period, up to the
time,
viz., when those very
bodies of ours with which we are
enveloped may, on
account of the
word of
God, and His
wisdom and
perfect righteousness,
earn incorruptibility and
immortality, therefore is it
said, "This
corruptible must
put on
incorruption, and this
mortal must
put on
immortality."
3. But, nevertheless, those who
think that
rational creatures can at any
time lead an
existence out of the
body,
may here
raise such
questions as the
following. If it is
true that this
corruptible shall
put on
incorruption, and this
mortal put on
immortality, and that
death is
swallowed up at the end; this
shows that nothing else than a
material nature is to be
destroyed, on which
death could
operate, while the
mental acumen of those who are in the
body seems to be
blunted by the
nature of
corporeal matter. If, however, they are out of the
body, then they will
altogether escape the
annoyance arising from a
disturbance of that
kind. But as they will not be
able immediately to
escape all
bodily clothing, they are
just to be
considered as
inhabiting more
refined and
purer bodies, which
possess the
property of
being no
longer overcome by
death, or of
being wounded by its
sting; so that at last, by the
gradual disappearance of the
material nature,
death is both
swallowed up, and even at the end
exterminated, and all its
sting completely blunted by the
divine grace which the
soul has been
rendered capable of
receiving, and has thus
deserved to
obtain incorruptibility and
immortality. And then it will be
deservedly said by all, "
O death, where is thy
victory?
O death, where is thy
sting? The
sting of
death is
sin." If these
conclusions, then, seem to
hold good, it
follows that we must
believe our
condition at some
future time to be
incorporeal; and if this is
admitted, and all are
said to be
subjected to
Christ, this (
incorporeity) also must
necessarily be
bestowed on all to whom the
subjection to
Christ extends; since all who are
subject to
Christ will be in the end
subject to
God the
Father, to whom
Christ is
said to
deliver up the
kingdom; and thus it
appears that then also the
need of
bodies will
cease. And if it
ceases,
bodily matter returns to nothing, as formerly also it did not
exist.
Now let us
see what can be
said in
answer to those who make these
assertions. For it will
appear to be a
necessary consequence that, if
bodily nature be
annihilated, it must be again
restored and
created; since it seems a
possible thing that
rational natures, from whom the
faculty of
free-will is never
taken away,
may be again
subjected to
movements of some
kind, through the
special act of the
Lord Himself,
lest perhaps, if they were always to
occupy a
condition that was
unchangeable, they should be
ignorant that it is by the
grace of
God and not by their own
merit that they have been
placed in that
final state of
happiness; and these
movements will
undoubtedly again be
attended by
variety and
diversity of
bodies, by which the
world is always
adorned; nor will it ever be
composed (of anything)
save of
variety and
diversity,-an
effect which cannot be
produced without a
bodily matter.
4. And now I do not
understand by what
proofs they can
maintain their
position, who
assert that
worlds sometimes
come into
existence which are not
dissimilar to each other, but in all
respects equal. For if there is
said to be a
world similar in all
respects (to the
present), then it will
come to
pass that
Adam and
Eve will do the same
things which they did before: there will be a
second time the same
deluge, and the same
Moses will again
lead a
nation numbering nearly six hundred thousand out of
Egypt;
Judas will also a
second time betray the
Lord;
Paul will a
second time keep the
garments of those who
stoned Stephen; and everything which has been done in this
life will be
said to be
repeated,-a
state of
things which I
think cannot be
established by any
reasoning, if
souls are
actuated by
freedom of will, and
maintain either their
advance or
retrogression according to the
power of their will. For
souls are not
driven on in a
cycle which
returns after many
ages to the same
round, so as either to do or
desire this or that; but at whatever
point the
freedom of their own will
aims,
thither do they
direct the
course of their
actions. For what these
persons say is much the same as if one were to
assert that if a
medimnus of
grain were to be
poured out on the
ground, the
fall of the
grain would be on the
second occasion identically the same as on the first, so that every
individual grain would
lie for the
second time close beside that
grain where it had been
thrown before, and so the
medimnus would be
scattered in the same
order, and with the same
marks as formerly; which
certainly is an
impossible result with the
countless grains of a
medimnus, even if they were to be
poured out without
ceasing for many
ages. So therefore it seems to me
impossible for a
world to be
restored for the
second time, with the same
order and with the same
amount of
births, and
deaths, and
actions; but that a
diversity of
worlds may exist with
changes of no
unimportant kind, so that the
state of another
world may be for some
unmistakeable reasons better (than this), and for others
worse, and for others again
intermediate. But what
may be the
number or
measure of this I
confess myself
ignorant, although, if any one can
tell it, I would
gladly learn.
5. But this
world, which is itself
called an
age, is
said to be the
conclusion of many
ages. Now the
holy apostle teaches that in that
age which
preceded this,
Christ did not
suffer, nor even in the
age which
preceded that again; and I
know not that I am
able to
enumerate the
number of
anterior ages in which He did not
suffer. I will
show, however, from what
statements of
Paul I have
arrived at this
understanding. He
says, "But now once in the
consummation of
ages, He was
manifested to
take away
sin by the
sacrifice of Himself." For He
says that He was once made a
victim, and in the
consummation of
ages was
manifested to
take away
sin. Now that after this
age, which is
said to be
formed for the
consummation of other
ages, there will he other
ages again to
follow, we have
clearly learned from
Paul himself, who
says, "That in the
ages to
come He might
show the
exceeding riches of His
grace in His
kindness towards us." He has not
said, "in the
age to
come," nor "in the
two ages to
come," whence I
infer that by his
language many
ages are
indicated. Now if there is something
greater than
ages, so that among
created beings certain ages may be
understood, but among other
beings which
exceed and
surpass visible creatures, (
ages still
greater) (which perhaps will be the
case at the
restitution of all
things, when the whole
universe will
come to a
perfect termination), perhaps that
period in which the
consummation of all
things will
take place is to be
understood as something more than an
age. But here the
authority of
holy Scripture moves me, which
says, "For an
age and more." Now this
word "more"
undoubtedly means something
greater than an
age; and
see if that
expression of the
Saviour, "I will that where I am, these also
may be with Me; and as I and Thou are one, these also
may be one in Us,"
may not seem to
convey something more than an
age and
ages, perhaps even more than
ages of
ages,-that
period,
viz., when all
things are now no
longer in an
age, but when
God is in all.
6.
Having discussed these
points regarding the
nature of the
world to the
best of our
ability, it does not seem out of
place to
inquire what is the
meaning of the
term world, which in
holy Scripture is
shown frequently to have
different significations. For what we
call in
Latin mundus, is
termed in
Greek ko/
smoj, and
ko/
smoj signifies not only a
world, but also an
ornament.
Finally, in
Isaiah, where the
language of
reproof is
directed to the
chief daughters of
Sion, and where he
says, "Instead of an
ornament of a
golden head, thou
wilt have
baldness on
account of thy
works," he
employs the same
term to
denote ornament as to
denote the
world,
viz.,
ko/
smoj. For the
plan of the
world is
said to be
contained in the
clothing of the
high priest, as we
find in the
Wisdom of
Solomon, where he
says, "For in the
long garment was the whole
world." That
earth of ours, with its
inhabitants, is also
termed the
world, as when
Scripture says, "The whole
world lieth in
wickedness."
Clement indeed, a
disciple of the
apostles, makes
mention of those whom the
Greeks called '
Anti/
xqonej, and other
parts of the
earth, to which no one of our
people can
approach, nor can any one of those who are there
cross over to us, which he also
termed worlds,
saying, "The
ocean is
impassable to
men; and those are
words which are on the other
side of it, which are
governed by these same
arrangements of the
ruling God." That
universe which is
bounded by
heaven and
earth is also
called a
world, as
Paul declares: "For the
fashion of this
world will
pass away." Our
Lord and
Saviour also
points out a
certain other
world besides this
visible one, which it would indeed be
difficult to
describe and make
known. He
says, "I am not of this
world." For, as if He were of a
certain other
world, He
says, "I am not of this
world." Now, of this
world we have
said beforehand, that the
explanation was
difficult; and for this
reason, that there might not be
afforded to any an
occasion of
entertaining the
supposition that we
maintain the
existence of
certain images which the
Greeks call "
ideas: "for it is
certainly alien to our (
writers) to
speak of an
incorporeal world existing in the
imagination alone, or in the
fleeting.
world of
thoughts; and how they can
assert either that the
Saviour comes from thence, or that the
saints will
go thither, I do not
see. There is no
doubt, however, that something more
illustrious and
excellent than this
present world is
pointed out by the
Saviour, at which He
incites and
encourages believers to
aim. But whether that
world to which He
desires to
allude be
far separated and
divided from this either by
situation, or
nature, or
glory; or whether it be
superior in
glory and
quality, but
confined within the
limits of this
world (which seems to me more
probable), is nevertheless
uncertain, and in my
opinion an
unsuitable subject for
human thought. But from what
Clement seems to
indicate when he
says, "The
ocean is
impassable to
men, and those
worlds which are behind it,"
speaking in the
plural number of the
worlds which are behind it, which he
intimates are
administered and
governed by the same
providence of the Most
High God, he
appears to
throw out to us some
germs of that
view by which the whole
universe of
existing things,
celestial and
super-celestial,
earthly and
infernal, is
generally called one
perfect world, within which, or by which, other
worlds, if any there are, must be
supposed to be
contained. For which
reason he
wished the
globe of the
sun or
moon, and of the other
bodies called planets, to be each
termed worlds.
Nay, even that
pre-eminent globe itself which they
call the
non-wandering (
a0planh=), they nevertheless
desire to have
properly called world.
Finally, they
summon the
book of
Baruch the
prophet to
bear witness to this
assertion, because in it the
seven worlds or
heavens are more
clearly pointed out. Nevertheless, above that
sphere which they
call non-wandering (
a0planh=), they will have another
sphere to
exist, which they
say,
exactly as our
heaven contains all
things which are under it,
comprehends by its
immense size and
indescribable extent the
spaces of all the
spheres together within its more
magnificent circumference; so that all
things are within it, as this
earth of
oursis under
heaven. And this also is
believed to be
called in the
holy Scriptures the
good land, and the
land of the
living,
having its own
heaven, which is
higher, and in which the
names of the
saints are
said to be
written, or to have been
written, by the
Saviour; by which
heaven that
earth is
confined and
shut in, which the
Saviour in the
Gospel promises to the
meek and
merciful. For they would have this
earth of ours, which formerly was
named "
Dry," to have
derived its
appellation from the
name of that
earth, as this
heaven also was
named firmament from the
title of that
heaven. But we have
treated at
greater length of such
opinions in the
place where we had to
inquire into the
meaning of the
declaration, that in the beginning "
God made the
heavens and the
earth." For another
heaven and another
earth are
shown to
exist besides that "
firmanent" which is
said to have been made after the
second day, or that "
dry land" which was afterwards
called "
earth."
Certainly, what some
say of this
world, that it is
corruptible because it was made, and yet is not
corrupted, because the will of
God, who made it and
holds it together
lest corruption should
rule over it, is
stronger and more
powerful than
corruption,
may more
correctly be
supposed of that
world which we have
called above a "
non-wandering "
sphere, since by the will of
God it is not at all
subject to
corruption, for the
reason that it has not
admired any
causes of
corruption,
seeing it is the
world of the
saints and of the
thoroughly purified, and not of the
wicked, like that
world of ours. We must
see, moreover,
lest perhaps it is with
reference to this that the
apostle says, "While we
look not at the
things which are
seen, but at the
things which are not
seen; for the
things which are
seen are
temporal, but the
things which are
unseen are
eternal. For we
know that if our
earthly house of this
tabernacle were
dissolved, we have a
building of
God, an
house not made with
hands,
eternal in the
heavens." And when he
says elsewhere, "Because I shall
see the
heavens, the
works of Thy
fingers," and when
God said,
regarding all
things visible, by the
mouth of His
prophet, "My
hand has
formed all these
things," He
declares that that
eternal house in the
heavens which He
promises to His
saints was not made with
hands,
pointing out,
doubtless, the
difference of
creation in
things which are
seen and in those which are not
seen. For the same
thing is not to be
understood by the
expressions, "those
things which are not
seen," and "those
things which are
invisible." For those
things which are
invisible are not only not
seen, but do not even
possess the
property of
visibility,
being what the
Greeks call a0sw/
mata,
i.e.,
incorporeal; whereas those of which
Paul says, "They are not
seen,"
possess indeed the
property of
being seen, but, as he
explains, are not yet
beheld by those to whom they are
promised.
7.
Having sketched, then, so
far as we could
understand, these
three opinions regarding the end of all
things, and the
supreme blessedness, let each one of our
readers determine for himself, with
care and
diligence, whether any one of them can be
approved and
adopted. For it has been
said that we must
suppose either that an
incorporeal existence is
possible, after all
things have become
subject to
Christ, and through
Christ to
God the
Father, when
God, will be all and in all; or that when,
notwithstanding all
things have been made
subject to
Christ, and through
Christ to
God (with whom they
formed also one
spirit, in
respect of
spirits being rational natures), then the
bodily substance itself also
being united to most
pure and
excellent spirits, and
being changed into an
ethereal condition in
proportion to the
quality or
merits of those who
assume it (according to the
apostle's
words, "We also shall be
changed"), will
shine forth in
splendour; or at least that when the
fashion of those
things which are
seen passes away, and all
corruption has been
shaken off and
cleansed away, and when the whole of the
space occupied by this
world, in which the
spheres of the
planets are
said to be, has been
left behind and
beneath, then is
reached the
fixed abode of the
pious and the
good situated above that
sphere, which is
called non-wandering (
a0planh/
j), as in a
good land, in a
land of the
living, which will be
inherited by the
meek and
gentle; to which
land belongs that
heaven (which, with its more
magnificent extent,
surrounds and
contains that
land itself) which is
called truly and
chiefly heaven, in which
heaven and
earth, the end and
perfection of all
things,
may be
safely and most
confidently placed,-where,
viz., these, after their
apprehension and their
chastisement for the
offences which they have
undergone by
way of
purgation,
may, after
having fulfilled and
discharged every
obligation,
deserve a
habitation in that
land; while those who have been
obedient to the
word of
God, and have
henceforth by their
obedience shown themselves
capable of
wisdom, are
said to
deserve the
kingdom of that
heaven or
heavens; and thus the
prediction is more
worthily fulfilled, "
Blessed are the
meek, for they shall
inherit the
earth; " and, "
Blessed are the
poor in
spirit, for they shall
inherit the
kingdom of
heaven; " and the
declaration in the
Psalm, "He shall
exalt thee, and thou shalt
inherit the
land." For it is
called a
descent to this
earth, but an
exaltation to that which is on
high. In this
way, therefore, does a
sort of
road seem to be
opened up by the
departure of the
saints from that
earth to those
heavens; so that they do not so much
appear to
abide in that
land, as to
inhabit it with an
intention,
viz., to
pass on to the
inheritance of the
kingdom of
heaven, when they have
reached that
degree of
perfection also.