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| The Flesh Will Be Associated with the Soul in Enduring the Penal Sentences of the Final Judgment. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XVII.—The Flesh Will Be Associated with the Soul in Enduring the
Penal Sentences of the Final Judgment.
“Every uneducated7379
person who agrees with our opinion will be apt to suppose that
the flesh will have to be
present at the final judgment even on this account, because
otherwise the soul would be incapable of suffering pain or pleasure, as
being incorporeal; for this is the common opinion. We on our part,
however, do here maintain, and in a special treatise on the subject
prove, that the soul is corporeal, possessing a peculiar kind of
solidity in its nature, such as enables it both to perceive and suffer.
That souls are even now susceptible of torment and of blessing in
Hades, though they are disembodied, and notwithstanding their
banishment from the flesh, is proved by the case of Lazarus. I have no
doubt given to my opponent room to say: Since, then, the soul has a
bodily substance of its own, it will be sufficiently endowed with the
faculty of suffering and sense, so as not to require the presence of
the flesh. No, no, (is my reply): it will still need the flesh; not as
being unable to feel anything without the help of the flesh, but
because it is necessary that it should possess such a faculty along
with the flesh. For in as far as it has a sufficiency of its own
for action, in so far has it likewise a capacity for suffering.
But the truth is, in respect of action, it labours under some amount of
incapacity; for in its own nature it has simply the ability to think,
to will, to desire, to dispose: for fully carrying out the purpose, it
looks for the assistance of the flesh. In like manner, it also requires
the conjunction of the flesh to endure suffering, in order that by its
aid it may be as fully able to suffer, as without its assistance it was
not fully able to act. In respect, indeed, of those sins, such as
concupiscence, and thought, and wish, which it has a competency of its
own to commit, it at once7380 pays the penalty of
them. Now, no doubt, if these were alone sufficient to constitute
absolute desert without requiring the addition of acts, the soul
would suffice in itself to encounter the full responsibility of the
judgment, being to be judged for those things in the doing of which it
alone had possessed a sufficiency. Since, however, acts too are
indissolubly attached to deserts; since also acts are ministerially
effected by the flesh, it is no longer enough that the soul apart from
the flesh be requited with pleasure or pain for what are actually works
of the flesh, although it has a body (of its own), although it has
members (of its own), which in like manner are insufficient for its
full perception, just as they are also for its perfect action.
Therefore as it has acted in each several instance, so proportionably
does it suffer in Hades, being the first to taste of judgment as it was
the first to induce to the commission of sin; but still it is waiting
for the flesh in order that it may through the flesh also compensate
for its deeds, inasmuch as it laid upon the flesh the execution of its
own thoughts. This, in short, will be the process of that judgment
which is postponed to the last great day, in order that by the
exhibition of the flesh the entire course of the divine vengeance may
be accomplished. Besides, (it is obvious to remark) there would be no
delaying to the end of that doom which souls are already tasting in
Hades, if it was destined for souls alone.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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