Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Chapter L PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter L.
But since he reproaches us with too great an
anxiety about the body, let him know that when that feeling is a wrong
one we do not share in it, and when it is indifferent we only long for
that which God has promised to the righteous. But Celsus
considers that we are inconsistent with ourselves when we count the
body worthy of honour from God, and therefore hope for its
resurrection, and yet at the same time expose it to tortures as though
it were not worthy of honour. But surely it is not without honour
for the body to suffer for the sake of godliness, and to choose
afflictions on account of virtue: the dishonourable thing would
be for it to waste its powers in vicious indulgence. For the
divine word says: “What is an honourable seed? The
seed of man. What is a dishonourable seed? The seed of
man.”4941 Moreover,
Celsus thinks that he ought not to reason with those who hope for the
good of the body, as they are unreasonably intent upon an object which
can never satisfy their expectations. He also calls them gross
and impure men, bent upon creating needless dissensions. But
surely he ought, as one of superior humanity, to assist even the rude
and depraved. For society does not exclude from its pale the
coarse and uncultivated, as it does the irrational animals, but our
Creator made us on the same common level with all mankind. It is
not an undignified thing, therefore, to reason even with the coarse and
unrefined, and to try to bring them as far as possible to a higher
state of refinement—to bring the impure to the highest
practicable degree of purity—to bring the unreasoning multitude
to reason, and the diseased in mind to spiritual
health.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|