Chapter X.—It Cannot Be Shown that God Does Not Will a Resurrection.
For that which is not accordant with His will is
so either as being unjust or as unworthy of Him. And again, the
injustice regards either him who is to rise again, or some other
than he. But it is evident that no one of the beings exterior to
him, and that are reckoned among the things that have existence,
is injured. Spiritual natures (νοηταὶ
φύσεις) cannot be injured by
the resurrection of men, for the resurrection of men is no hindrance to
their existing, nor is any loss or violence inflicted on them by it; nor,
again, would the nature of irrational or inanimate beings sustain wrong,
for they will have no existence after the resurrection, and no wrong
can be done to that which is not. But even if any one should suppose
them to exist for ever, they would not suffer wrong by the renewal of
human bodies: for if now, in being subservient to the nature of men and
their necessities while they require them, and subjected to the yoke and
every kind of drudgery, they suffer no wrong, much more, when men have
become immortal and free from want, and no longer need their service,
and when they are themselves liberated from bondage, will they suffer no
wrong. For if they had the gift of speech, they would not bring against
the Creator the charge of making them, contrary to justice,
154inferior to men because they did not
share in the same resurrection. For to creatures whose nature is not alike
the Just Being does not assign a like end. And, besides, with creatures
that have no notion of justice there can be no complaint of injustice. Nor
can it be said either that there is any injustice done as regards the
man to be raised, for he consists of soul and body, and he suffers no
wrong as to either soul or body. No person in his senses will affirm
that his soul suffers wrong, because, in speaking so, he would at the
same time be unawares reflecting on the present life also; for if now,
while dwelling in a body subject to corruption and suffering, it has
had no wrong done to it, much less will it suffer wrong when living in
conjunction with a body which is free from corruption and suffering. The
body, again, suffers no wrong; for if no wrong is done to it now while
united a corruptible thing with an incorruptible, manifestly will it
not be wronged when united an incorruptible with an incorruptible. No;
nor can any one say that it is a work unworthy of God to raise up and
bring together again a body which has been dissolved: for if the worse
was not unworthy of Him, namely, to make the body which is subject to
corruption and suffering, much more is the better not unworthy, to make
one not liable to corruption or suffering.