Chapter VII.—The Resurrection-Body Different from the Present.
Nay, suppose we were to grant that the nourishment coming
from these things (let it be so called, as more accordant with the common
way of speaking), although against nature, is yet separated and changed
into some one of the moist or dry, or warm or cold, matters which the
body contains, our opponents would gain nothing by the concession:
for the bodies that rise again are reconstituted from the parts which
properly belong to them, whereas no one of the things mentioned is
such a part, nor has it the form or place of a part; nay, it does not
remain always with the parts of the body which are nourished, or rise
again with the parts that rise, since no longer does blood, or phlegm,
or bile, or breath, contribute anything to the life. Neither, again,
will the bodies nourished then require the things they once required,
seeing that, along with the want and corruption of the bodies nourished,
the need also of those things by which they were nourished is taken away.
To this must be added, that if we were to suppose the change arising
from such nourishment to reach as far as flesh, in that case too there
would be no necessity that the flesh recently changed by food of that
kind, if it became united to the body of some other man, should again
as a part contribute to the formation of that body, since neither the
flesh which takes it up always retains what it takes, nor does the
flesh so incorporated abide and remain with that to which it was added,
but is subject to a great variety of changes,—at one time being
dispersed by toil or care, at another time being wasted by grief or
trouble or disease, and by the distempers arising from being heated
or chilled, the humours which are changed with the flesh and fat not
receiving the nourishment so as to remain what they are. But while such
are the changes to which the flesh is subject, we should find that flesh,
nourished by food unsuited to it, suffers them in a much greater degree;
now swelling out and growing fat by what it has received, and then again
rejecting it in some way or other, and decreasing in bulk, from one or
more of the causes already mentioned; and that that alone remains in
the parts which is adapted to bind together, or cover, or warm the flesh
that has been chosen by nature, and adheres to those parts by which it
sustains the life which is according to nature, and fulfils the labours
of that life. So that whether the investigation in which we have just
been engaged be fairly judged of, or the objections urged against our
position be conceded, in neither case can it be shown that what is said
by our opponents is true, nor can the bodies of men ever combine with
those of the same nature, whether at any time, through ignorance and
being cheated of their perception by some one else, men have partaken
of such a body, or of their own accord, impelled by want or madness,
they have defiled themselves with the
153body of one of like form; for we are
very well aware that some brutes have human forms, or have a nature
compounded of men and brutes, such as the more daring of the poets are
accustomed to represent.