Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| That, According to Plotinus, Men, Whose Body is Mortal, are Less Wretched Than Demons, Whose Body is Eternal. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 10.—That, According to
Plotinus, Men, Whose Body is Mortal, are Less Wretched Than Demons,
Whose Body is Eternal.
Plotinus, whose memory is quite
recent,348
348 Plotinus died in 270 A.D. For his relation to Plato, see
Augustin’s Contra Acad. iii. 41. | enjoys the
reputation of having understood Plato better than any other of his
disciples. In speaking of human souls, he says, “The Father in
compassion made their bonds mortal;”349 that is to say, he considered it
due to the Father’s mercy that men, having a mortal body, should
not be forever confined in the misery of this life. But of this
mercy the demons have been judged unworthy, and they have received,
in conjunction with a soul subject to passions, a body not mortal
like man’s, but eternal. For they should have been happier than
men if they had, like men, had a mortal body, and, like the gods, a
blessed soul. And they should have been equal to men, if in
conjunction with a miserable soul they had at least received, like
men, a mortal body, so that death might have freed them from
trouble, if, at least, they should have attained some degree of
piety. But, as it is, they are not only no happier than men,
having, like them, a miserable soul, they are also more wretched,
being eternally bound to the body; for he does not leave us to
infer that by some progress in wisdom and piety they can become
gods, but expressly says that they are demons forever.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|