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Chapter XI. ---- The Opposite Extravagance Exposed. That is Christ with a Soul Composed of Flesh ---- Corporeal, Though Invisible. Christ's Soul, Like Ours, Distinct from Flesh, Though Clothed in It. |
Chapter XI. ---- The Opposite Extravagance Exposed. That is Christ with a Soul Composed of Flesh ---- Corporeal, Though Invisible. Christ's Soul, Like Ours, Distinct from Flesh, Though Clothed in It.
[1] But
we meet another argument of theirs, when we raise the question why Christ, in
assuming a flesh composed of soul, should seem to have had a soul that was made
of flesh? For God, they say, desired to make the soul visible to men, by
enduing it with a bodily nature, although it was before invisible; of its own
nature, indeed, it was incapable of seeing anything, even its own self, by
reason of the obstacle of this flesh, so that it was even a matter of doubt
whether it was born or not. The soul, therefore (they further say), was made
corporeal in Christ, in order that we might see it when undergoing birth, and
death, and (what is more) resurrection. [2] But
yet, how was this possible, that by means of the flesh the soul should
demonstrate itself to itself or to us, when it could
not possibly be ascertained that it would offer this mode of exhibiting itself
by the flesh, until the thing came into existence to which it was unknown,
that is to say, the flesh? It
received darkness, forsooth, in order to be able to shine! Now,
let us first turn our attention to
this point, whether it was requisite that the soul should exhibit itself in the
manner contended for;
and next consider whether
their previous position be
that the soul is wholly invisible
(inquiring further) whether this invisibility is the result of its
incorporeality, or whether it actually possesses some sort of body peculiar to
itself. [3] And yet, although
they say that it is invisible, they determine it to be corporeal, but having
somewhat that is invisible. For if it has nothing invisible how can it be said
to be invisible? But even its existence is an impossibility, unless it has that
which is instrumental to its existence.
Since, however, it exists, it must
needs have a something through which it exists. [4] If it has this something, it must be its body.
Everything which exists is a bodily existence sui generis. Nothing lacks
bodily existence but that which is non-existent. If, then, the soul has an
invisible body, He who had proposed to make it
visible would certainly have done
His work better
if He had made that part of it
which was accounted invisible, visible; because then there would have been no
untruth or weakness in the case, and neither of these flaws is suitable to God.
(But as the case stands in the hypothesis) there is untruth, since He
has set forth the soul as being a different thing from what it really is; and
there is weakness, since He was unable to make it appear
to be that which it is. [5] No one who wishes to exhibit
a man covers him with a veil
or a mask. This, however, is
precisely what has been done to the soul, if it has been clothed with a
covering belonging to something else, by being converted into flesh. But even
if the soul is, on their hypothesis, supposed
to be incorporeal, so that the
soul, whatever it is, should by some mysterious force of the reason
be quite unknown, only not be a
body, then in that case it were not beyond the power of God ---- indeed it
would be more consistent with His plan ---- if He displayed
the soul in some new sort of body,
different from that which we all have in common, one of which we should have
quite a different notion,
(being spared the idea that)
He had set His mind on
making, without an adequate cause,
a visible soul instead of
an invisible one ---- a fit
incentive, no doubt, for such questions as they start,
by their maintenance of a human
flesh for it.
[6] Christ, however, could not
have appeared among men except as a man. Restore, therefore, to Christ, His
faith; believe that He who willed to walk the earth as a man exhibited
even a soul of a thoroughly human condition, not making it of flesh, but
clothing it with flesh.