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| Of that Death Which Can Affect an Immortal Soul, and of that to Which the Body is Subject. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 2.—Of that Death Which
Can Affect an Immortal Soul, and of that to Which the Body is
Subject.
But I see I must speak a little
more carefully of the nature of death. For although the human
soul is truly affirmed to be immortal, yet it also has a certain
death of its own. For it is therefore called immortal, because,
in a sense, it does not cease to live and to feel; while the body
is called mortal, because it can be forsaken of all life, and
cannot by itself live at all. The death, then, of the soul takes
place when God forsakes it, as the death of the body when the soul
forsakes it. Therefore the death of both—that is, of the whole
man—occurs when the soul, forsaken by God, forsakes the body.
For, in this case, neither is God the life of the soul, nor the
soul the life of the body. And this death of the whole man is
followed by that which, on the authority of the divine oracles, we
call the second death. This the Saviour referred to when He said,
“Fear Him which is able to destroy both soul and body in
hell.”578 And since
this does not happen before the soul is so joined to its body that
they cannot be separated at all, it may be matter of wonder how the
body can be said to be killed by that death in which it is not
forsaken by the soul, but, being animated and rendered sensitive by
it, is tormented. For in that penal and everlasting punishment,
of which in its own place we are to speak more at large, the soul
is justly said to die, because it does not live in connection with
God; but how can we say that the body is dead, seeing that it lives
by the soul? For it could not otherwise feel the bodily torments
which are to follow the resurrection. Is it because life of every
kind is good, and pain an evil, that we decline to say that that
body lives, in which the soul is the cause, not of life, but of
pain? The soul, then, lives by God when it lives well, for it
cannot live well unless by God working in it what is good; and the
body lives by the soul when the soul lives in the body, whether
itself be living by God or no. For the wicked man’s life in the
body is a life not of the soul, but of the body, which even dead
souls—that is, souls forsaken of God—can confer upon bodies,
how little so-ever of their own proper life, by which they are
immortal, they retain. But in the last damnation, though man does
not cease to feel, yet because this feeling of his is neither sweet
with pleasure nor wholesome with repose, but painfully penal, it is
not without reason called death rather than life. And it is
called the second death because it follows the first, which sunders
the two cohering essences, whether
these be God and the soul, or
the soul and the body. Of the first and bodily death, then, we
may say that to the good it is good, and evil to the evil. But,
doubtless, the second, as it happens to none of the good, so it can
be good for none.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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