Chapter III.—He Who Could Create, Can Also Raise Up the Dead.
Moreover also, that His power is sufficient for the
raising of dead bodies, is shown by the creation of these same bodies. For
if, when they did not exist, He made at their first formation the bodies
of men, and their original elements, He will, when they are dissolved,
in whatever manner that may take place, raise them again with equal ease:
for this, too, is equally possible to Him. And it is no damage to the
argument, if some suppose the first beginnings to be from matter, or
the bodies of men at least to be derived from the elements as the first
materials, or from seed. For that power which could give shape to what
is regarded by them as shapeless matter, and adorn it, when destitute
of form and order, with many and diverse forms, and gather into one
the several portions of the elements, and divide the seed which was one
and simple into many, and organize that which was unorganized, and give
life to that which had no life,—that same power can reunite what
is dissolved, and raise up what is prostrate, and restore the dead to
life again, and put the corruptible into a state of incorruption. And
to the same Being it will belong, and to the same power and skill, to
separate that which has been broken up and distributed among a multitude
of animals of all kinds which are wont to have recourse to such bodies,
and glut their appetite upon them,—to separate this, I say, and
unite it again with the proper members and parts of members, whether it
has passed into some one of those animals, or into many, or thence into
others, or, after being dissolved along with these, has been carried
back again to the original elements, resolved into these according to
a natural law—a matter this
151which seems to have exceedingly
confounded some, even of those admired for wisdom, who, I cannot tell
why, think those doubts worthy of serious attention which are brought
forward by the many.