De Principiis.

 De Principiis.

 Book I

 Book I.

 Chapter II.—On Christ.

 Chapter III.—On the Holy Spirit.

 Chapter IV.—On Defection, or Falling Away.

 Chapter V.—On Rational Natures.

 Chapter VI.—On the End or Consummation.

 Chapter VII.—On Incorporeal and Corporeal Beings.

 Chapter VIII.—On the Angels.

 Fragment from the First Book of the de Principiis.

 Another Fragment from the Same.

 Book II

 Book II.

 Chapter II.—On the Perpetuity of Bodily Nature.

 Chapter III.—On the Beginning of the World, and Its Causes.

 Chapter IV.—The God of the Law and the Prophets, and the Father of Our Lord Jesus Christ, is the Same God.

 Chapter V.—On Justice and Goodness.

 Chapter VI.—On the Incarnation of Christ.

 Chapter VII.—On the Holy Spirit.

 Chapter VIII.—On the Soul (Anima).

 Chapter IX.—On the World and the Movements of Rational Creatures, Whether Good or Bad And on the Causes of Them.

 Chapter X.—On the Resurrection, and the Judgment, the Fire of Hell, and Punishments.

 1. Let us now briefly see what views we are to form regarding promises. It is certain that there is no living thing which can be altogether inactive a

 Book III

 Book III.

 Translated from Latin of Rufinus.

 Translation from the Greek.

 Chapter II.—On the Opposing Powers.

 Chapter III.—On Threefold Wisdom.

 Chapter IV.—On Human Temptations.

 Chapter V.—That the World Took Its Beginning in Time.

 Chapter VI.—On the End of the World.

 IV

 Book IV.

 Translated from the Greek.

 From the Latin.

 Elucidations.

Chapter II.—On the Perpetuity of Bodily Nature.

1. On this topic some are wont to inquire whether, as the Father generates an uncreated Son, and brings forth a Holy Spirit, not as if He had no previous existence, but because the Father is the origin and source of the Son or Holy Spirit, and no anteriority or posteriority can be understood as existing in them; so also a similar kind of union or relationship can be understood as subsisting between rational natures and bodily matter. And that this point may be more fully and thoroughly examined, the commencement of the discussion is generally directed to the inquiry whether this very bodily nature, which bears the lives and contains the movements of spiritual and rational minds, will be equally eternal with them, or will altogether perish and be destroyed. And that the question may be determined with greater precision, we have, in the first place, to inquire if it is possible for rational natures to remain altogether incorporeal after they have reached the summit of holiness and happiness (which seems to me a most difficult and almost impossible attainment), or whether they must always of necessity be united to bodies. If, then, any one could show a reason why it was possible for them to dispense wholly with bodies, it will appear to follow, that as a bodily nature, created out of nothing after intervals of time, was produced when it did not exist, so also it must cease to be when the purposes which it served had no longer an existence.

2. If, however, it is impossible for this point to be at all maintained, viz., that any other nature than the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit can live without a body, the necessity of logical reasoning compels us to understand that rational natures were indeed created at the beginning, but that material substance was separated from them only in thought and understanding, and appears to have been formed for them, or after them, and that they never have lived nor do live without it; for an incorporeal life will rightly be considered a prerogative of the Trinity alone. As we have remarked above, therefore, that material substance of this world, possessing a nature admitting of all possible transformations, is, when dragged down to beings of a lower order, moulded into the crasser and more solid condition of a body, so as to distinguish those visible and varying forms of the world; but when it becomes the servant of more perfect and more blessed beings, it shines in the splendour of celestial bodies, and adorns either the angels of God or the sons of the resurrection with the clothing of a spiritual body, out of all which will be filled up the diverse and varying state of the one world. But if any one should desire to discuss these matters more fully, it will be necessary, with all reverence and fear of God, to examine the sacred Scriptures with greater attention and diligence, to ascertain whether the secret and hidden sense within them may perhaps reveal anything regarding these matters; and something may be discovered in their abstruse and mysterious language, through the demonstration of the Holy Spirit to those who are worthy, after many testimonies have been collected on this very point.