43. These things which you
have said are read by all who know Latin, and you yourself request them
to read them: such sayings, I mean as these: that all rational
creatures, as can be imagined by taking a single rational animal as an
example, are to be formed anew into one body, just as if the members of
a single man after being torn apart should be formed anew by the art of
Æsculapius into the same solid body as before: that there will be
among them as amongst the members of the body various offices, which
you specify, but that the body will be one, that is, of one nature:
this one body made up of all things you call the original church, and
to this you give the name of the body of Christ; and further you say
that one member of this church will be the apostate angel, that is, of
course, the devil, who is to be formed anew into that which he was
first created: that man in the same way, who is another of the members,
will be recalled to the culture of the garden of Eden as its original
husbandman. All those things you say one after the other, without
bringing in the person of that ‘other’ whom you usually
introduce when you speak of such matters cautiously, and like one
treading warily, so as to make men think that you had some hesitation
in deciding matters so secret and abstruse. Origen indeed, the man
whose disciple you do not deny that you are, and whose betrayer you
confess yourself to be, always did this, as we see, in dealing with
such matters. But you, as if you were the angel speaking by the mouth
of Daniel or Christ by that of Paul, give a curt and distinct opinion
on each point, and declare to the ears of mortals all the secrets of
the ages to come. Then you speak thus to us: “O multitude of the
faithful, place no faith in any of the ancients. If Origen had some
thoughts about the more secret facts of the divine purposes, let none
of you admit them. And similarly if one of the Clements said any such
things, whether he who was a disciple of the apostle or he of the
church of Alexandria who was the master of Origen himself; yes even if
they were said by the great Gregory of Pontus, a man of apostolic
virtues, or by the other Gregory, of Nazianzus, and Didymus the
seeing29222922 prophet, both of them my teachers,
than whom the world has possessed none more deeply taught in the faith
of Christ. All these have erred as Origen has erred; but let them be
forgiven, for I too have erred at times, and I am now behaving myself
as a penitent, and ought to be forgiven. But Origen, since he said
the 459same
things which I have said, shall receive no forgiveness though he has
done penance; nay, for saying the things which we all have said, he
alone shall be condemned. He it is who has done all the mischief; he
who betrayed to us the secret of all that we say or write, of all which
makes us seem to speak learnedly, of all that was good in Greek but
which we have made bad in Latin. Of all these let no man listen to a
single one. Accept those things alone which you find in my
Commentaries, and especially in those on the Epistle to the Ephesians,
in which I have most painfully confuted the doctrines of Origen. My
researches have reached this result, that you must believe and hold the
resurrection of the flesh in this sense that men’s bodies will be
turned into spirits and their wives into men; and that before the
foundation of the world souls existed in heaven, and thence, for
reasons known to God alone, were brought down into this valley of
tears, and were inserted into this body of death; that, in the end of
the ages the whole of nature, being reasonable, will be fashioned again
into one body as it was in the beginning, that man will be recalled
into Paradise, and the apostate angel will be exalted above Peter and
Paul, since they, being but men, must be placed in the lower position
of paradise, while he will be restored to be that which he was
originally created; and that all shall together make up the Church of
the first born in heaven, and, while placed each in his separate
office, shall be equally members of Christ: but all of them taken
together will be the perfect body of Christ. Hold then to these things,
my faithful and discreet disciples, and guard them as my unhesitating
definitions of truth; but for the same doctrines pronounce your
condemnation upon Origen; so you will do well. Fare ye
well.”