Contents

« Prev SECT. XXV. From whence it follows, that the end… Next »

SECT. XXV. From whence it follows, that the end of man is happiness after this life.

IF then the soul be of such a nature as contains in it no principles of corruption; and God has given us many tokens, by which we ought to understand, that his will is it should remain after the body; there can be no end of man proposed more worthy of him, than the happiness of that state; and this is what Plato and the Pythagoreans said, that the end of man was to be made most like to God.185185   Which the stoics had from Plato, as Clemens remarks, Strom. v. Thus, what happiness is, and how to be secured, men may make some conjectures; but if there be any thing concerning it revealed from God, that ought to be esteemed roost trite and most certain.


« Prev SECT. XXV. From whence it follows, that the end… Next »
VIEWNAME is workSection