Chapter X.-On the
Resurrection, and the
Judgment, the
Fire of
Hell, and
Punishments.
1. But since the
discourse has
reminded us of the
subjects of a
future judgment and of
retribution, and of the
punishments of
sinners, according to the
threatenings of
holy Scripture and the
contents of the
Church's
teaching-viz., that when the
time of
judgment comes,
everlasting fire, and
outer darkness, and a
prison, and a
furnace, and other
punishments of like.
nature, have been
prepared for
sinners-let us
see what our
opinions on these
points ought to be. But that these
subjects may be
arrived at in
proper order, it seems to me that we
ought first to
consider the
nature of the
resurrection, that we
may know what that (
body) is which shall
come either to
punishment, or to
rest, or to
happiness; which
question in other
treatises which we have
composed regarding the
resurrection we have
discussed at
greater length, and have
shown what our
opinions were
regarding it. But now, also, for the
sake of
logical order in our
treatise, there will be no
absurdity in
restating a few
points from such
works,
especially since some
take offence at the
creed of the
Church, as if our
belief in the
resurrection were
foolish, and
altogether devoid of
sense; and these are
principally heretics, who, I
think, are to be
answered in the
following manner. If they also
admit that there is a
resurrection of the
dead, let them
answer us this, What is that which
died? Was it not a
body? It is of the
body, then, that there will be a
resurrection. Let them next
tell us if they
think that we are to make
use of
bodies or not. I
think that when the
Apostle Paul says, that "it is
sown a
natural body, it will
arise a
spiritual body," they cannot
deny that it is a
body which
arises, or that in the
resurrection we are to make
use of
bodies. What then? If it is
certain that we are to make
use of
bodies, and if the
bodies which have
fallen are
declared to
rise again (for only that which before has
fallen can be
properly said to
rise again), it can be a
matter of
doubt to no one that they
rise again, in
order that we
may be
clothed with them a
second time at the
resurrection. The one
thing is
closely connected with the other. For if
bodies rise again, they
undoubtedly rise to be
coverings for us; and if it is
necessary for us to be
invested with
bodies, as it is
certainly necessary, we
ought to be
invested with no other than our own. But if it is
true that these
rise again, and that they
arise "
spiritual"
bodies, there can be no
doubt that they are
said to
rise from the
dead, after
casting away
corruption and
laying aside mortality; otherwise it will
appear vain and
superfluous for any one to
arise from the
dead in
order to
die a
second time. And this,
finally,
may be more
distinctly comprehended thus, if one
carefully consider what are the
qualities of an
animal body, which, when
sown into the
earth,
recovers the
qualities of a
spiritual body. For it is out of the
animal body that the very
power and
grace of the
resurrection educe the
spiritual body, when it
transmutes it from a
condition of
indignity to one of
glory.
2. Since the
heretics, however,
think themselves
persons of
great learning and
wisdom, we shall
ask them if every
body has a
form of some
kind,
i.e., is
fashioned according to some
shape. And if they shall
say that a
body is that which is
fashioned according to no
shape, they will
show themselves to be the most
ignorant and
foolish of
mankind. For no one will
deny this,
save him who is
altogether without any
learning. But if, as a
matter of
course, they
say that every
body is
certainly fashioned according to some
definite shape, we shall
ask them if they can
point out and
describe to us the
shape of a
spiritual body; a
thing which they can by no
means do. We shall
ask them, moreover, about the
differences of those who
rise again.How will they
show that
statement to be
true, that there is "one
flesh of
birds, another of
fishes;
bodies celestial, and
bodies terrestrial; that the
glory of the
celestial is one, and the
glory of the
terrestrial another; that one is the
glory of the
sun, another the
glory of the
moon, another the
glory of the
stars; that one
star differeth from another
star in
glory; and that so is the
resurrection of the
dead? " According to that
gradation, then, which
exists among
heavenly bodies, let them
show to us the
differences in the
glory of those who
rise again; and if they have
endeavoured by any
means to
devise a
principle that
may be in
accordance with the
differences in
heavenly bodies, we shall
ask them to
assign the
differences in the
resurrection by a
comparison of
earthly bodies. Our
understanding of the
passage indeed is, that the
apostle,
wishing to
describe the
great difference among those who
rise again in
glory,
i.e., of the
saints,
borrowed a
comparison from the
heavenly bodies,
saying, "One is the
glory of the
sun, another the
glory of the
moon, another the
glory of the
stars." And
wishing again to
teach us the
differences among those who shall
come to the
resurrection, without
having purged themselves in this
life,
i.e.,
sinners, he
borrowed an
illustration from
earthly things,
saying, "There is one
flesh of
birds, another of
fishes." For
heavenly things are
worthily compared to the
saints, and
earthly things to
sinners. These
statements are made in
reply to those who
deny the
resurrection of the
dead,
i.e., the
resurrection of
bodies.
3. We now
turn our
attention to some of our own (
believers), who, either from
feebleness of
intellect or
want of
proper instruction,
adopt a very
low and
abject view of the
resurrection of the
body. We
ask these
persons in what
manner they
understand that an
animal body is to be
changed by the
grace of the
resurrection, and to become a
spiritual one; and how that which is
sown in
weakness will
arise in
power; how that which is
planted in
dishonour will
arise in
glory; and that which was
sown in
corruption, will be
changed to a
state of
incorruption. Because if they
believe the
apostle, that a
body which
arises in
glory, and
power, and
incorruptibility, has already become
spiritual, it
appears absurd and
contrary to his
meaning to
say that it can again be
entangled with the
passions of
flesh and
blood,
seeing the
apostle manifestly declares that "
flesh and
blood shall not
inherit the
kingdom of
God, nor shall
corruption inherit incorruption." But how do they
understand the
declaration of the
apostle, "We shall all be
changed? "This
transformation certainly is to be
looked for, according to the
order which we have
taught above; and in it,
undoubtedly, it becomes us to
hope for something
worthy of
divine grace; and this we
believe will
take place in the
order in which the
apostle describes the
sowing in the
ground of a "
bare grain of
corn, or of any other
fruit," to which "
God gives a
body as it
pleases Him," as
soon as the
grain of
corn is
dead. For in the same
way also our
bodies are to be
supposed to
fall into the
earth like a
grain; and (that
germ being implanted in them which
contains the
bodily substance) although the
bodies die, and become
corrupted, and are
scattered abroad, yet by the
word of
God, that very
germ which is always
safe in the
substance of the
body,
raises them from the
earth, and
restores and
repairs them, as the
power which is in the
grain of
wheat, after its
corruption and
death,
repairs and
restores the
grain into a
body having stalk and
ear. And so also to those who shall
deserve to
obtain an
inheritance in the
kingdom of
heaven, that
germ of the
body's
restoration, which we have before
mentioned, by
God's
command restores out of the
earthly and
animal body a
spiritual one,
capable of
inhabiting the
heavens; while to each one of those who
may be of
inferior merit, or of more
abject condition, or even the
lowest in the
scale, and
altogether thrust aside, there is yet
given, in
proportion to the
dignity of his
life and
soul, a
glory and
dignity of
body,-nevertheless in such a
way, that even the
body which
rises again of those who are to be
destined to
everlasting fire or to
severe punishments, is by the very
change of the
resurrection so
incorruptible, that it cannot be
corrupted and
dissolved even by
severe punishments. If, then, such be the
qualities of that
body which will
arise from the
dead, let us now
see what is the
meaning of the
threatening of
eternal fire.
4. We
find in the
prophet Isaiah, that the
fire with which each one is
punished is
described as his own; for he
says, "
Walk in the
light of your own
fire, and in the
flame which ye have
kindled." By these
words it seems to be
indicated that every
sinner kindles for himself the
flame of his own
fire, and is not
plunged into some
fire which has been already
kindled by another, or was in
existence before himself. Of this
fire the
fuel and
food are our
sins, which are
called by the
Apostle Paul wood, and
hay, and
stubble." And I
think that, as
abundance of
food, and
provisions of a
contrary kind and
amount,
breed fevers in the
body, and
fevers, too, of
different sorts and
duration, according to the
proportion in which the
collected poison supplies material and
fuel for
disease (the
quality of this
material,
gathered together from
different poisons,
proving the
causes either of a more
acute or more
lingering disease); so, when the
soul has
gathered together a
multitude of
evil works, and an
abundance of
sins against itself, at a
suitable time all that
assembly of
evils boils up to
punishment, and is
set on
fire to
chastisements; when the
mind itself, or
conscience,
receiving by
divine power into the
memory all those
things of which it had
stamped on itself
certain signs and
forms at the
moment of
sinning, will
see a
kind of
history, as it were, of all the
foul, and
shameful, and
unholy deeds which it has done,
exposed before its
eyes: then is the
conscience itself
harassed, and,
pierced by its own
goads, becomes an
accuser and a
witness against itself. And this, I
think, was the
opinion of the
Apostle Paul himself, when he
said, "Their
thoughts mutually accusing or
excusing them in the
day when
God will
judge the
secrets of
men by
Jesus Christ, according to my
Gospel." From which it is
understood that around the
substance of the
soul certain tortures are
produced by the
hurtful affections of
sins themselves.
5. And that the
understanding of this
matter may not
appear very
difficult, we
may draw some
considerations from the
evil effects of those
passions which are
wont to
befall some
souls, as when a
soul is
consumed by the
fire of
love, or
wasted away by
zeal or
envy, or when the
passion of
anger is
kindled, or one is
consumed by the
greatness of his
madness or his
sorrow; on which
occasions some,
finding the
excess of these
evils unbearable, have
deemed it more
tolerable to
submit to
death than to
endure perpetually torture of such a
kind. You will
ask indeed whether, in the
case of those who have been
entangled in the
evils arising from those
vices above
enumerated, and who, while
existing in this
life, have been
unable to
procure any
amelioration for themselves, and have in this
condition departed from the
world, it be
sufficient in the
way of
punishment that they be
tortured by the
remaining in them of these
hurtful affections,
i.e., of the
anger, or of the
fury, or of the
madness, or of the
sorrow, whose
fatal poison was in this
life lessened by no
healing medicine; or whether, these
affections being changed, they will be
subjected to the
pains of a
general punishment. Now I am of
opinion that another
species of
punishment may be
understood to
exist; because, as we
feel that when the
limbs of the
body are
loosened and
torn away from their
mutual supports, there is
produced pain of a most
excruciating kind, so, when the
soul shall be found to be beyond the
order, and
connection, and
harmony in which it was
created by
God for the
purposes of
good and
useful action and
observation, and not to
harmonize with itself in the
connection of its
rational movements, it must be
deemed to
bear the
chastisement and
torture of its own
dissension, and to
feel the
punishments of its own
disordered condition. And when this
dissolution and
rending asunder of
soul shall have been
tested by the
application of
fire, a
solidification undoubtedly into a
firmer structure will
take place, and a
restoration be
effected.
6. There are also many other
things which
escape our
notice, and are
known to Him alone who is the
physician of our
souls. For if, on
account of those
bad effects which we
bring upon ourselves by
eating and
drinking, we
deem it
necessary for the
health of the
body to make
use of some
unpleasant and
painful drug, sometimes even, if the
nature of the
disease demand,
requiring the
severe process of the
amputating knife; and if the
virulence of the
disease shall
transcend even these
remedies, the
evil has at last to be
burned out by
fire; how much more is it to be
understood that
God our
Physician,
desiring to
remove the
defects of our
souls, which they had
contracted from their
different sins and
crimes, should
employ penal measures of this
sort, and should
apply even, in
addition, the
punishment of
fire to those who have
lost their
soundness of
mind!
Pictures of this
method of
procedure are found also in the
holy Scriptures. In the
book of
Deuteronomy, the
divine word threatens sinners with the
punishments of
fevers, and
colds, and
jaundice, and with the
pains of
feebleness of
vision, and
alienation of
mind and
paralysis, and
blindness, and
weakness of the
reins. If any one, then, at his
leisure gather together out of the whole of
Scripture all the
enumerations of
diseases which in the
threatenings addressed to
sinners are
called by the
names of
bodily maladies, he will
find that either the
vices of
souls, or their
punishments, are
figuratively indicated by them. To
understand now, that in the same
way in which
physicians apply remedies to the
sick, in
order that by
careful treatment they
may recover their
health,
God so
deals towards those who have
lapsed and
fallen into
sin, is
proved by this, that the
cup of
God's
fury is
ordered, through the
agency of the
prophet Jeremiah, to be
offered to all
nations, that they
may drink it, and be in a
state of
madness, and
vomit it
forth. In
doing which, He
threatens them,
saying, That if any one
refuse to
drink, he shall not be
cleansed. By which
certainly it is
understood that the
fury of
God's
vengeance is
profitable for the
purgation of
souls. That the
punishment, also, which is
said to be
applied by
fire, is
understood to be
applied with the
object of
healing, is
taught by
Isaiah, who
speaks thus of
Israel: "The
Lord will
wash away the
filth of the
sons or
daughters of
Zion, and shall
purge away the
blood from the
midst of them by the
spirit of
judgment, and the
spirit of
burning." Of the
Chaldeans he thus
speaks: "Thou hast the
coals of
fire;
sit upon them: they will be to thee a
help." And in other
passages he
says, "The
Lord will
sanctify in a
burning fire" and in the
prophecies of
Malachi he
says, "The
Lord sitting will
blow, and
purify, and will
pour forth the
cleansed sons of
Judah."
7. But that
fate also which is
mentioned in the
Gospels as
overtaking unfaithful stewards who, it is
said, are to be
divided, and a
portion of them
placed along with
unbelievers, as if that
portion which is not their own were to be
sent elsewhere,
undoubtedly indicates some
kind of
punishment on those whose
spirit, as it seems to me, is
shown to be
separated from the
soul. For if this
Spirit is of
divine nature,
i.e., is
understood to be a
Holy Spirit, we shall
understand this to be
said of the
gift of the
Holy Spirit: that when, whether by
baptism, or by the
grace of the
Spirit, the
word of
wisdom, or the
word of
knowledge, or of any other
gift, has been
bestowed upon a
man, and not
rightly administered,
i.e., either
buried in the
earth or
tied up in a
napkin, the
gift of the
Spirit will
certainly be
withdrawn from his
soul, and the other
portion which
remains, that is, the
substance of the
soul, will be
assigned its
place with
unbelievers,
being divided and
separated from that
Spirit with whom, by
joining itself to the
Lord, it
ought to have been one
spirit. Now, if this is not to be
understood of the
Spirit of
God, but of the
nature of the
soul itself, that will be
called its
better part which was made in the
image and
likeness of
God; whereas the other
part, that which afterwards, through its
fall by the
exercise of
free-will, was
assumed contrary to the
nature of its
original condition of
purity,-this
part, as
being the
friend and
beloved of
matter, is
punished with the
fate of
unbelievers. There is also a
third sense in which that
separation may be
understood, this
viz., that as each
believer, although the
humblest in the
Church, is
said to be
attended by an
angel, who is
declared by the
Saviour always to
behold the
face of
God the
Father, and as this
angel was
certainly one with the
object of his
guardianship; so, if the latter is
rendered unworthy by his
want of
obedience, the
angel of
God is
said to be
taken from him, and then that
part of
him-the part,
viz., which
belongs to his
human nature-being rent away from the
divine part, is
assigned a
place along with
unbelievers, because it has not
faithfully observed the
admonitions of the
angel allotted it by
God.
8. But the
outer darkness, in
nay judgment, is to be
understood not so much of some
dark atmosphere without any
light, as of those
persons who,
being plunged in the
darkness of
profound ignorance, have been
placed beyond the
reach of any
light of the
understanding. We must
see, also,
lest this perhaps should be the
meaning of the
expression, that as the
saints will
receive those
bodies in which they have
lived in
holiness and
purity in the
habitations of this
life,
bright and
glorious after the
resurrection, so the
wicked also, who in this
life have
loved the
darkness of
error and the
night of
ignorance,
may be
clothed with
dark and
black bodies after the
resurrection, that the very
mist of
ignorance which had in this
life taken possession of their
minds within them,
may appear in the
future as the
external covering of the
body.
Similar is the
view to be
entertained regarding the
prison. Let these
remarks, which have been made as
brief as
possible, that the
order of our
discourse in the meantime might be
preserved,
suffice for the
present occasion.