|
GraciousCall.org - Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love
<<
Contents
>>
Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love by Saint Augustine
CHAPTER
XXIII. The Reality of the Resurrection
84. Now, with respect to the resurrection of the body--and by this I do not
mean the cases of resuscitation after which people died again, but a
resurrection to eternal life after the fashion of Christ's own body--I have not
found a way to discuss it briefly and still give satisfactory answers to all
the questions usually raised about it. Yet no Christian should have the
slightest doubt as to the fact that the bodies of all men, whether already or
yet to be born, whether dead or still to die, will be resurrected.
85. Once this fact is established, then, first of all, comes the question about
abortive fetuses, which are indeed "born" in the mother's womb, but are never
so that they could be "reborn." For, if we say that there is a resurrection for
them, then we can agree that at least as much is true of fetuses that are fully
formed. But, with regard to undeveloped fetuses, who would not more readily
think that they perish, like seeds that did not germinate?[192]
But who, then, would dare to deny--though he would not dare to affirm it
either--that in the resurrection day what is lacking in the forms of things
will be filled out? Thus, the perfection which time would have accomplished
will not be lacking, any more than the blemishes wrought by time will still be
present. Nature, then, will be cheated of nothing apt and fitting which time's
passage would have brought, nor will anything remain disfigured by anything
adverse and contrary which time has wrought. But what is not yet a whole will
become whole, just as what has been disfigured will be restored to its full
figure.
86. On this score, a corollary question may be most carefully discussed by the
most learned men, and still I do not know that any man can answer it, namely:
When does a human being begin to live in the womb? Is there some form of hidden
life, not yet apparent in the motions of a living thing? To deny, for example,
that those fetuses ever lived at all which are cut away limb by limb and cast
out of the wombs of pregnant women, lest the mothers die also if the fetuses
were left there dead, would seem much too rash. But, in any case, once a man
begins to live, it is thereafter possible for him to die. And, once dead,
wheresoever death overtook him, I cannot find the basis on which he would not
have a share in the resurrection of the dead.
87. By the same token, the resurrection is not to be denied in the cases of
monsters which are born and live, even if they quickly die, nor should we
believe that they will be raised as they were, but rather in an amended nature
and free from faults. Far be it from us to say of that double-limbed man
recently born in the Orient--about whom most reliable brethren have given
eyewitness reports and the presbyter Jerome, of holy memory, has left a written
account[193]
--far be it from us, I say,
to suppose that at the resurrection there will be one double man, and not
rather two men, as there would have been if they had actually been born twins.
So also in other cases, which, because of some excess or defect or gross
deformity, are called monsters: at the resurrection they will be restored to
the normal human physiognomy, so that every soul will have its own body and not
two bodies joined together, even though they were born this way. Every soul
will have, as its own, all that is required to complete a whole human body.
88. Moreover, with God, the earthly substance from which the flesh of mortal
man is produced does not perish. Instead, whether it be dissolved into dust or
ashes, or dispersed into vapors and the winds, or converted into the substance
of other bodies (or even back into the basic elements themselves), or has
served as food for beasts or even men and been turned into their flesh--in an
instant of time this matter returns to the soul that first animated it, and
that caused it to become a man, to live and to grow.
89. This earthly matter which becomes a corpse upon the soul's departure will
not, at the resurrection, be so restored that the parts into which it was
separated and which have become parts of other things must necessarily return
to the same parts of the body in which they were situated--though they do
return to the body from which they were separated. Otherwise, to suppose that
the hair recovers what frequent clippings have taken off, or the nails get back
what trimming has pared off, makes for a wild and wholly unbecoming image in
the minds of those who speculate this way and leads them thus to disbelieve in
the resurrection. But take the example of a statue made of fusible metal: if it
were melted by heat or pounded into dust, or reduced to a shapeless mass, and
an artist wished to restore it again from the mass of the same material, it
would make no difference to the wholeness of the restored statue which part of
it was remade of what part of the metal, so long as the statue, as restored,
had been given all the material of which it was originally composed. Just so,
God--an artist who works in marvelous and mysterious ways--will restore our
bodies, with marvelous and mysterious celerity, out of the whole of the matter
of which it was originally composed. And it will make no difference, in the
restoration, whether hair returns to hair and nails to nails, or whether the
part of this original matter that had perished is turned back into flesh and
restored to other parts of the body. The main thing is that the providence of
the [divine] Artist takes care that nothing unbecoming will result.
90. Nor does it follow that the stature of each person will be different when
brought to life anew because there were differences in stature when first
alive, nor that the lean will be raised lean or the fat come back to life in
their former obesity. But if this is in the Creator's plan, that each shall
retain his special features and the proper and recognizable likeness of his
former self--while an equality of physical endowment will be preserved--then
the matter of which each resurrection body is composed will be so disposed that
none shall be lost, and any defect will be supplied by Him who can create out
of nothing as he wills.
But if in the bodies of those rising again there is to be an intelligible
inequality, such as between voices that fill out a chorus, this will be managed
by disposing the matter of each body so to bring men into their place in the
angelic band and impose nothing on their senses that is inharmonious. For
surely nothing unseemly will be there, and whatever is there will be fitting,
and this because the unfitting will simply not be.
91. The bodies of the saints, then, shall rise again free from blemish and
deformity, just as they will be also free from corruption, encumbrance, or
handicap. Their facility [
facilitas
] will be as complete as their
felicity [
felicitas
]. This is why their bodies are called "spiritual,"
though undoubtedly they will be bodies and not spirits. For just as now the
body is called "animate" [
animale
], though it is a body and not a
"spirit" [
anima
], so then it will be a "spiritual body," but still a
body and not a spirit.
Accordingly, then, as far as the corruption which weighs down the soul and the
vices through which "the flesh lusts against the spirit"[194]
are concerned, there will be no
"flesh," but only body, since there are bodies that are called "heavenly
bodies."[195]
This is why it is said,
"Flesh and blood shall not inherit the Kingdom of God," and then, as if to
expound what was said, it adds, "Neither shall corruption inherit
incorruption."[196]
What the writer
first called "flesh and blood" he later called "corruption," and what he first
called "the Kingdom of God" he then later called "incorruption."
But, as far as the substance of the resurrection body is concerned, it will
even then still be "flesh." This is why the body of Christ is called "flesh"
even after the resurrection. Wherefore the apostle also says, "What is sown a
natural body [
corpus animale
] rises as a spiritual body [
corpus
spirituale
]."[197]
For there will
then be such a concord between flesh and spirit--the spirit quickening the
servant flesh without any need of sustenance therefrom--that there will be no
further conflict within ourselves. And just as there will be no more external
enemies to bear with, so neither shall we have to bear with ourselves as
enemies within.
92. But whoever are not liberated from that mass of perdition (brought to pass
through the first man) by the one Mediator between God and man, they will also
rise again, each in his own flesh, but only that they may be punished together
with the devil and his angels. Whether these men will rise again with all their
faults and deformities, with their diseased and deformed members--is there any
reason for us to labor such a question? For obviously the uncertainty about
their bodily form and beauty need not weary us, since their damnation is
certain and eternal. And let us not be moved to inquire how their body can be
incorruptible if it can suffer--or corruptible if it cannot die. For there is
no true life unless it be lived in happiness; no true incorruptibility save
where health is unscathed by pain. But where an unhappy being is not allowed to
die, then death itself, so to say, dies not; and where pain perpetually
afflicts but never destroys, corruption goes on endlessly. This state is
called, in the Scripture, "the second death."[198]
93. Yet neither the first death, in which the soul is compelled to leave its
body, nor the second death, in which it is not allowed to leave the body
undergoing punishment, would have befallen man if no one had sinned. Surely,
the lightest of all punishments will be laid on those who have added no further
sin to that originally contracted. Among the rest, who have added further Sins
to that one, they will suffer a damnation somewhat more tolerable in proportion
to the lesser degree of their iniquity.
<<
Contents
>>
|