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36. But the gods are said to
be immortal. Not by nature, then, but by the good-will and favour
of God their Father. In the same way, then, in which the
boon3649
3649
The ms. reading is utterly corrupt and
meaningless—immortalitatis largiter est donum dei certa
prolatis. Gelenius, followed by Canterus, Oberthür, and
Orelli, emended largi-tio…certe, as above. The two
Roman edd. read, -tatem
largitus…certam—“bestowed, assured immortality as
God’s gift on,” etc. | of immortality
is God’s gift to these who were assuredly
produced, 3650
3650 i.e.,
who must therefore have received it if they have it at all. | will He deign to
confer eternal life upon souls also, although fell death seems able to
cut them off and blot them out of existence in utter
annihilation. 3651
3651 Lit.,
“out, reduced to nothing with annihilation, not to be returned
from.” | The divine
Plato, many of whose thoughts are worthy of God, and not such as the
vulgar hold, in that discussion and treatise entitled the
Timæus, says that the gods and the world are corruptible by
nature, and in no wise beyond the reach of death, but that their being
is ever maintained 3652
3652
Lit., “they are held in a lasting bond,” i.e., of
being. | by the will of God, their King
and Prince; 3653
3653
Plato makes the supreme God, creator of the inferior deities,
assure these lesser gods that their created nature being in itself
subject to dissolution, His will is a surer ground on which to rely for
immortality, than the substance or mode of their own being
(Timæus, st. p. 41; translated by Cicero, de Univ.,
xi., and criticised de Nat. Deor., i. 8 and iii. 12). | for that that
even which has been duly clasped and bound together by the
surest bands is preserved only by God’s
goodness; and that by
no other than 3654
3654
The ms. and both Roman edd. read
neque ullo ab-olitio-nis unintelligibly, for which Gelenius
proposed nexusque abolitione—“and by the destruction
of the bond;” but the much more suitable reading in the margin of
Ursinus, translated above, ullo ab alio nis-i, has been adopted
by later edd. | by Him who
bound their elements together can they both be dissolved if
necessary, and have the command given which preserves their
being. 3655
3655
Lit., “be gifted with a saving order.” So the
ms., reading salutari iussione,
followed by both Rom. edd.; LB. and Orelli read
vinctione—“bond;” Gelenius, Canterus, Elmenh.,
and Oberthür, m-issione—“dismissal.” | If this is
the case, then, and it is not fitting to think or believe otherwise,
why do you wonder that we speak of the soul as neutral in its
character, when Plato says that it is so even with the
deities, 3656
3656
Lit., “that to the gods themselves the natures are
intermediate.” | but that their
life is kept up by God’s 3657 grace, without break or end? For
if by chance you knew it not, and because of its novelty it was unknown
to you before, now, though late, receive and learn from Him who
knows and has made it known, Christ, that souls are not the children of
the Supreme Ruler, and did not begin to be self-conscious, and to be
spoken of in their own special character after being created by
Him; 3658
3658
Cf. i. 48. On this passage Orelli quotes Irenæus, i. 21,
where are enumerated several gnostic theories of the creation of the
world and men by angels, who are themselves created by the “one
unknown Father.” Arnobius is thought, both by Orelli and
others, to share in these opinions, and in this discussion to hint at
them, but obscurely, lest his cosmology should be confounded by the
Gentiles with their own polytheistic system. It seems much more
natural to suppose that we have here the indefinite statement of
opinions not thoroughly digested. | but that some
other is their parent, far enough removed from the chief in rank and
power, of His court, however, and distinguished by His high and exalted
birthright. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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