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| Of the Damnation of the Devil and His Adherents; And a Sketch of the Bodily Resurrection of All the Dead, and of the Final Retributive Judgment. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 14.—Of the Damnation of
the Devil and His Adherents; And a Sketch of the Bodily
Resurrection of All the Dead, and of the Final Retributive
Judgment.
After this mention of the closing
persecution, he summarily indicates all that the devil, and the
city of which he is the prince, shall suffer in the last
judgment. For he says, “And the devil who seduced them is cast
into the lake of fire and brimstone, in which are the beast and the
false prophet, and they shall be tormented day and night for ever
and ever.” We have already said that by the beast is well
understood the wicked city. His false prophet is either
Antichrist or that image or figment of which we have spoken in the
same place. After this he gives a brief narrative of the last
judgment itself, which shall take place at the second or bodily
resurrection of the dead, as it had been revealed to him: “I
saw a throne great and white, and One sitting on it from whose face
the heaven and the earth fled away, and their place was not
found.” He does not say, “I saw a throne great and white, and
One sitting on it, and from His face the heaven and the earth fled
away,” for it had not happened then, i.e., before the
living and the dead were judged; but he says that he saw Him
sitting on the throne from whose face heaven and earth fled away,
but afterwards. For when the judgment is finished, this heaven
and earth shall cease to be, and there will be a new heaven and a
new earth. For this world shall pass away by transmutation, not
by absolute destruction. And therefore the apostle says, “For
the figure of this world passeth away. I would have you be
without anxiety.”1383 The figure, therefore, passes
away, not the nature. After John had said that he had seen One
sitting on the throne from whose face heaven and earth fled, though
not till afterwards, he said, “And I saw the dead, great and
small: and the books were opened; and another book was opened,
which is the book of the life of each man: and the dead were
judged out of those things which were written in the books,
according to their deeds.” He said that the books were opened,
and a book; but he left us at a loss as to the nature of this book,
“which is,” he says, “the book of the life of each man.”
By those books, then, which he first mentioned, we are to
understand the sacred books old and new, that out of them it might
be shown what commandments God had enjoined; and that book of the
life of each man is to show what commandments each man has done or
omitted to do. If this book be materially considered, who can
reckon its size or length, or the time it would take to read a book
in which the whole life of every man is recorded? Shall there be
present as many angels as men, and shall each man hear his life
recited by the angel assigned to him? In that case there will be
not one book containing all the lives, but a separate book for
every life. But our passage requires us to think of one only.
“And another book was opened,” it says. We must therefore
understand it of a certain divine power, by which it shall be
brought about that every one shall recall to memory all his own
works, whether good or evil, and shall mentally survey them with a
marvellous rapidity, so that this knowledge will either accuse or
excuse conscience, and thus all and each shall be simultaneously
judged. And this divine power is called a book, because in it we
shall as it were read all that it causes us to remember. That he
may show who the dead, small and great, are who are to be judged,
he recurs to this which he had omitted or rather deferred, and
says, “And the sea presented the dead which were in it; and death
and hell gave up the dead which were in them.” This of course
took place before the dead were judged, yet it is mentioned
after. And so, I say, he returns again to what he had omitted.
But now he preserves the order of events, and for the sake of
exhibiting it repeats in its own proper place what he had already
said regarding the dead who were judged. For after he had said,
“And the sea presented the dead which were in it, and death and
hell gave up the dead which were in them,” he immediately
subjoined what he had already said, “and they were judged every
man according to their works.” For this is just what he had
said before, “And the dead were judged according to their
works.”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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