The Conditionalist Faith of Our Fathers, vol. 1
PART III (Chapters 29-43)
Th. Platonic Postulate
29. Greek Philosophy Reaches Summit of Pagan Thinking | 529 |
I. Greek Thinking Exhausts Uninspired Speculative Reasoning | 529 |
1. Imprinted Immortal-Soulism on World Thought | 529 |
2. First Confined to Poets and Philosophers; Never Generally Held | 531 |
3. Early Teaching Portrays Joyless Afterworld | 531 |
4. Five Stages in Philosophical Development | 531 |
5. This Chapter Based on Recognized Authorities | 533 |
II. Preliminary Stage—Initiated by Poets, Cults, and Mysteries | 534 |
1. Homer: Persistence of Life Beyond Death | 534 |
2. Transmigration Theory Introduced by Dionysiac Cult | 536 |
3. Orphics: Permeated With Pantheism and Reincarnationism | 537 |
III. Philosophical Developments—Ionic, Eleatic, and Pythagorean Positions | 540 |
1. Ionian School: “Air,” “Water,” “Fire,” “Infinite” | 540 |
2. Eleatic School: Philosophy Becomes Pantheistic | 541 |
3. Heraclitus: Soul Is Immortal Spark From Eternal Fire | 543 |
4. Pythagoras: Eternity of Soul and Successive Transmigrations | 545 |
30. Sophists React Against Conflicting Speculative Schools | 547 |
I. Paralleling Tragic and Lyric Poets Buttress Positions | 547 |
1. Tides of Poetic Opinion Ebb and Flow | 547 |
2. Pindar: Soul Is “Image of Eternity” | 548 |
II. Inevitable Reaction Under Compromisers, Atomists, and Sophists | 549 |
1. Empedocles: Doomed by Sin to Transmigrations | 549 |
2. Anaxagoras: Dualism and Dissolution of the Soul | 551 |
3. Atomists: Conscious Existence Disappears at Death | 553 |
4. Sophists: Bring Speculative Philosophy to a Standstill | 554 |
5. Such a Survey Justifiable and Essential | 556 |
6. Unparalleled Impact of Grecian Philosophy | 557 |
31. Plato—Pagan Fountainhead of Innate-Immortality Streams | 558 |
I. Interest Centered in Origin, Nature, and Destiny of Soul | 560 |
1. Supreme Attempts to Interpret Riddle of Life | 560 |
2. Impact on Jewish and Christian Thought | 560 |
3. Background and Essence of Plato’s Immortal-Soulism | 562 |
4. Present Life One Episode in Endless Sequence | 562 |
5. Three Main Arguments of Indefeasible Immortality | 563 |
II. Complex Involvements of Plato’s Immortality Postulates | 564 |
1. Origin and Nature of the Cosmos | 564 |
2. Conflicting Recitals of Creation of Man | 564 |
3. Epitome of Plato’s Concept of Soul | 566 |
4. Twofold Souls, Fixed Number, arid Transmigration | 568 |
5. Weird Aggregation of Platonic Concepts | 569 |
6. Mythical Tale of the Judgment Invoked | 569 |
7. Dualism Involved in “Two” Eternal Souls | 571 |
32. Pagan Philosophy’s Basic Arguments for Immortal-Soulism | 573 |
I. The “Phaedo”—Peak of Plato’s Teaching on the Soul | 573 |
1. Immortal-Soulism Not Originally Held by Plato | 573 |
2. Distinctive Angles of Three Dialogues | 574 |
3. “The Soul Is the Man” | 574 |
4. Socrates Welcomes Death as “Initiation” to Afterlife | 575 |
5. Death Declared “Final Step” Into “True Being” | 575 |
6. Death: “Separation” of Soul From “Body” | 576 |
7. Popular View: Soul Perishes at Death | 576 |
8. Living Are Born “Only From the Dead” | 577 |
9. Soul Declared “Immortal,” “Indestructible,” “Indissoluble” | 577 |
10. Postulate of Soul’s Pre-existence Involved | 577 |
11. Souls Must Have Existed Before Birth | 578 |
12. “Soul” Invisible, Unchangeable; “Body” Visible, Changing | 579 |
13. Souls “Imprisoned” in Succession of Animal Bodies | 579 |
14. Soul “Wears Out” Succession of “Many Bodies” | 580 |
15. Soul as Instrumental “Harmony” Argument Dismissed | 581 |
16. Soul’s Immortality Connotes Indestructibility | 582 |
17. Fancied Fate of Incorrigibly Wicked | 582 |
18. Drinks the Hemlock and Faces “Journey” | 584 |
33. Immortal Human Souls Part of World-Soul | 585 |
I. “Phaedrus”—Mythical Flights of Composite Winged Souls | 585 |
1. Crucial Conflicts Between “Parts” of Soul | 585 |
2. Tripartite Division of Soul Built on “Myth” | 585 |
3. “Fault” in “Wings” and “Black Steed” | 586 |
4. Soul Not “Derived,” Hence Not “Destructible” | 587 |
5. “Two Souls“: One “Good,” One “Evil” | 587 |
6. “Self-motion” Is “Essence” of Soul | 588 |
7. “Immortal Soul” Plus “Mortal Body” Equals “Living Being” | 588 |
8. Wing Their Way With the Gods | 589 |
9. Vicissitudes of Disembodied Souls and Wings | 589 |
10. Time Schedule of Progressive Incarnations | 589 |
11. Second Incarnation After Thousand Years | 590 |
12. Souls Become Like the Gods They Follow | 591 |
II. “Timaeus”—“Human Soul” Diluted Part of “World-Soul” | 592 |
1. Plato’s Theory of Universe and Man | 592 |
2. “World-Soul” With Stars as “Divine Souls” | 593 |
3. Dualism: Evil Will Never Cease to Be | 594 |
4. “Soul” Is Source of All Motion | 595 |
5. “Intermediate” Existence Between “Being” and “Becoming” | 595 |
6. Immortal Part of Man Fashioned by Primal Creator | 596 |
7. Successive Births in Scale of Transmigratory Degradation | 597 |
8. All Animated Life Included in “Living Beings” | 598 |
9. Man’s “Immortal Soul” Declared Housed in Head | 598 |
34. Skeptical Reactions Erupt Against Platonism | 599 |
I. Aristotle Abandons Plato’s Postulate of “Personal” Immortality | 599 |
1. Questions Plato’s Reasoning on Immortality | 600 |
2. Aristotle in Sharp Contrast With Plato | 601 |
3. Soul Is the “Principle of Life” | 602 |
4. Only Divine Reason Is Immortal | 602 |
5. Separated Soul Has No “Independent Existence” | 603 |
6. Tripartite Nature: Body, Soul, and Mind | 604 |
7. Rohde Summarizes Aristotle’s Position | 604 |
8. Zeller on Pre-existence, Incarnations, and “Personal Immortality” | 604 |
9. Westcott Agrees With Zeller, Rohde, and Draper | 605 |
10. Other Scholars Agree in Foregoing Evaluations | 605 |
11. Centuries-old Conflict Over Aristotle’s Position | 606 |
II. Widespread Opposition by Stoics, Epicureans, and Skeptics | 607 |
1. Stoicism: Materialistic Pantheism; Ultimate Loss of Personality | 607 |
2. Periodic Reabsorptions Into Deity | 608 |
3. The Soul a Fragment of the Divine | 608 |
4. Eternal Soul-Essence Loses Personal Individuality | 609 |
5. Hopelessness and Inadequacy of Stoicism | 610 |
III. Epicureanism—Gross Materialism and Cessation of Soul | 610 |
1. Death Brings Permanent Cessation of Life | 610 |
2. World Formations Result of Blind Chance | 611 |
3. Pleasure Canonized Without Restraint | 612 |
4. Separated Soul Utterly Ceases | 612 |
5. May Reappear as Another Person | 613 |
6. Irreconcilable Clashes Between Stoics and Epicureans | 613 |
IV. Skeptics—Pyrrho Undermines Basis of Immortal-Soulism | 614 |
35. Pathetic Despair Predominant Among Roman Thinkers | 617 |
I. Widespread Revolt Against Platonic Positions | 617 |
1. Barren Comfort of Stoics, Epicureans, and Skeptics | 618 |
2. Manilius: Holds a Fatalistic Pantheism | 619 |
3. Cicero: Vacillates Between Belief and Doubt | 619 |
II. Lucretius—Bleak Materialism and Eternal Death-Sleep | 621 |
1. Book Synopsis Reveals Stark Materialism | 622 |
2. The Terrifying Issues of “Death” | 623 |
3. The “Idle Fancy of Fools” | 623 |
4. “Rarified Wind” Leaves Body at Death | 624 |
5. Both Spirit and Body Are Mortal | 624 |
6. Ridicules “Immortal Spirits” Seeking Bodies | 624 |
7. Death: Eternal Sleep With No Awakening | 624 |
III. Skepticism, Pantheism, Emanation, Refusion—All Intermingled | 625 |
1. Catullus and Horace: Death, Sleep of Eternal Night | 625 |
2. Vergil: Spark of World-Soul Fire Returns to Source | 626 |
3. Ovid: Divine Spark Gave Being to Man | 626 |
4. Seneca: Uncertainty and Contradiction Mark Witness | 627 |
5. Pliny: Pantheistic Universe; Man Part of God | 627 |
6. Epictetus: Refusion of Soul Immediate at Death | 628 |
7. Plutarch: Idea of Annihilation Is Intolerable | 628 |
8. Marcus Aurelius: Soul Reabsorbed Into World-Soul | 629 |
9. Tacitus: Believer in Fatalistic Principle | 629 |
10. Conclusion: Both Views Lead to Extinction of Personality | 630 |
36. Alexandrian Jews Forsake Ancestral Platform | 632 |
I. The Tragedy of the Great Departure | 632 |
II. Character and Significance of Apocryphal and Pseudepigraphal Teachings | 633 |
1. Prophets Followed by Priests and Priestly Struggles | 633 |
2. Apocryphal and Apocalyptic Writings Appear | 637 |
3. Pseudepigrapha Invokes Prestige of Former Prophets | 638 |
4. Influenced by Thinking of Surrounding Nations | 639 |
5. Apocrypha Excluded From Palestinian Canon | 639 |
6. Extensive Coverage Justified and Imperative | 640 |
III. Historical Background of Jewish Captivities and Decline | 640 |
1. Subjugation by Babylon, Then by Persia | 640 |
2. Syrian Oppression and Maccabean Revolt | 641 |
3. Rome’s Dominance, Jerusalem’s Destruction, and the Diaspora | 641 |
IV. Triple Exposure to Immortality Postulate in Three Captivities | 643 |
1. Egyptian Immortal-Soulism and Transmigration | 643 |
2. Persian Retributionism and Deadly Dualism | 644 |
3. Greek Immortalism Based on Philosophical Speculation | 644 |
4. Antiochus Seeks to Replace Jewish Usages With Grecian | 644 |
5. Apocryphal Writings Emerge During Maccabean Period | 645 |
6. Pagan Dualism Makes Its Impress | 646 |
V. Alexandria—Intellectual Center of Learned World | 647 |
1. Alexander’s Vision of Greek Intellectual Dominance | 647 |
2. Ptolemies and Seleucids Struggle for Mastery | 647 |
3. Hebrew Students Inducted Into Greek Learning | 649 |
VI. Process Whereby the Jews Changed Their Anthropology | 649 |
1. Shifting From the Ancestral Foundations | 649 |
2. Presented Religious Views in Philosophical Setting | 650 |
3. Transmitted From Jews to Christians | 650 |
4. Philo Fuses It Into a System | 651 |
VII. Source of Revolutionary Concepts of Unseen World | 652 |
1. Revolutionary Concepts Developed in Time of Maccabees | 652 |
2. Persian Impact Strengthens Resurrection Concept | 653 |
3. Speculations Crystallize as to Intermediate State | 653 |
4. Climax Reached in Platonic Concepts Under Philo | 654 |
5. Eternal-Hell Concept a Pagan Invention | 655 |
6. Successive Exiles Leave Permanent Impress | 655 |
37. Alien Note Injected Into Inter-Testament Writings | 657 |
I. Pseudo-Sibyllines-—“Mortal” Man’s Role in Drama of the Ages | 659 |
1. A Reflection of One View of the Soul | 659 |
2. Portrayed Drama of the Judgment | 660 |
II. Fateful Destiny of AH Mankind Portrayed | 661 |
1. Man Is Mortal; God Is Immortal | 661 |
2. Fateful Judgment Day Tries “Mortal” Men | 662 |
3. Resurrected After Fire Reduces to Ashes | 662 |
4. Four World Powers and Eschatological End | 663 |
III. Variant Positions Presented by Minor Writers | 664 |
1. “Tobit“: Grave Is Eternal in Annihilation Effects | 664 |
2. “Sirach“: No Remembrance in the Grave | 664 |
3. “Judith”—Supports Eternal-Torment Concept | 665 |
IV. Differing Books of Maccabees Exemplify Divergencies | 666 |
1. “2 Maccabees”—Innate Immortality With Prayers for Dead | 667 |
2. Believes Both in Immortality and in Resurrection | 667 |
3. Prayer to and Sacrifices for the Dead Commended | 667 |
4. Vicarious Suffering Expiates God’s Anger | 668 |
5. Hope of “Seven Brothers” Based on Resurrection | 668 |
38. Innate Immortality Established by Last Century B.C | 671 |
I. “The Book of Jubilees”—Soul Survives; Resurrection Abandoned | 671 |
1. Innate Immortality Already Firmly Established | 672 |
2. Body Rests; Spirit Lives On Independently | 672 |
II. “4 Maccabees”—Presses Immortal-Soulism Beyond All Predecessors | 673 |
1. Men Go to Respective Rewards at Death | 673 |
2. Righteous Immediately Received Into Heaven | 674 |
3. Wicked Punished With Eternal Torture | 674 |
III. “The Wisdom of Solomon”—Strange Combination of Glaring Contradictions | 675 |
1. Curious Admixture of Truth and Error | 676 |
2. Immortality Is for the Righteous Only | 676 |
3. “Translation” of Some Is Alluded to | 677 |
4. Destruction of Wicked Is Utter End | 677 |
5. Immortality Is Fruit of Righteousness and Obedience | 677 |
IV. Innate Immortality and Noxious Involvements | 678 |
1. Unabashedly Avows Innate Immortality | 678 |
2. “Wisdom” the Source of Immortality | 679 |
3. The Righteous Only Seem to Die | 679 |
4. Assumes Pre-existence of the Soul | 680 |
39. Majority Adhere to Historic Conditionalism | 681 |
I. “Ethiopic Enoch”—Underworld Torments End in Annihilation | 681 |
1. Somber Scenes of Judgment Day Depicted | 682 |
2. Resurrection Expressly Portrayed | 682 |
3. Wicked to Be Utterly Consumed | 683 |
4. Torments of Accursed in Underworld | 684 |
II. “Slavonic Enoch”—Eternal Heaven and Unending Hell for Immortal Souls | 685 |
1. First Jewish Propounder of “Six-Thousand-Year” Theory | 685 |
2. Souls Prepared for Eternity Before World’s Formation | 686 |
3. Free Will, Death, Punishment, and Reward | 686 |
4. Righteous “Live Eternally” in Paradise | 686 |
5. “Merciless Tortures” Are “Eternal Inheritance” of Wicked | 686 |
III. “Syriac Baruch”—Conditionalist View; Righteous Sleep Till Resurrection | 687 |
1. Death, Sleep, and Resurrection | 688 |
2. Eschatological View of the Last Things | 688 |
3. Righteous Dead Sleep Until Messiah’s Return | 689 |
IV. Sets Forth the Conditionalist School of Immortality | 689 |
1. Epitome of Baruch’s Hope of Judaism | 689 |
2. Prays for End of Mortality and Corruption | 690 |
3. Coming Judgment and Messiah’s Advent | 690 |
4. Resurrection and Assemblage of Righteous Dead | 690 |
5. The Dust Gives Up the Dead | 691 |
6. The Punishment of the Wicked | 691 |
7. Body Raised Immortal and Incorruptible | 691 |
8. A “Terminable Retribution” Indicated | 692 |
40. “2 Esdras” Maintains the Conditionalist View | 693 |
I. “2 Esdras”—Immortalization of Righteous and Destruction of Wicked | 693 |
1. History Explained in Light of Original Sin | 694 |
2. World’s End, Final Judgment, and Results | 694 |
3. “Mortal” World Succeeded by “Immortal” Age | 695 |
II. Documented Evidence of Ezra’s Conditionalist Position | 696 |
1. “Mortal Man” in a “Corruptible World” | 696 |
2. “New Age” and the Intermediate State | 696 |
3. Righteous to Live, While Ungodly Perish | 697 |
4. General Resurrection and Final Judgment | 697 |
5. “Sleepers” in the “Dust” Called Forth | 697 |
6. The Wicked Are Doomed to Destruction | 697 |
7. Wicked, as a “Flame,” Ultimately “Extinguished” | 698 |
8. “Treasures of Immortality” Made Manifest to Ezra | 699 |
9. Wicked Brought to “Death by Torment” | 699 |
10. Wicked Perish Because of Disobedience | 700 |
11. Ezra’s Single Prophecy Deals With Eschatology | 700 |
12. Time’s Last Hours, and Mortality | 701 |
41. Neoplatonism’s Development—Jewish, Pagan, and Christian | 703 |
I. Alexandria—Seat of Two Paralleling Schools | 703 |
1. Greek Philosophy Takes Root in Roman Empire | 703 |
2. Neoplatonic School Result of Eclectic Choice | 704 |
3. Alexandria the Center of Conflicting Cultures | 705 |
4. Pagan Neoplatonisrn Becomes Anti-Christian | 706 |
II. Pagan Neoplatonism—Greek Philosophy’s Last Stand | 707 |
1. Philo: Precursor, Builds Upon Emanation Theory | 707 |
2. Lucius: Asserts “World-Soul” Principle | 708 |
3. Numenius: Incarnations Punishments for Previous-Life Sins | 708 |
4. Ammonius: Lays Foundations for Neoplatonism | 709 |
5. Plotinus: Orientalism. Dualism, Emanation, Reabsorption | 709 |
6. Porphyry: Skeptic, Vet Holding to Universal Soul | 713 |
7. Iamblichus: Mytchology, Astrology, Necromancy | 713 |
8. Julian: Suppresses Christianity, Exalts Paganism | 714 |
9. Proclus: Mystic Union of Soul With Deity | 714 |
III. Paralleling Christian Catechetical School | 715 |
1. Alexandrian Center Exerts Powerful Influence | 715 |
2. Characterized by Speculation and Allegorization | 716 |
3. Shadows Deepen Into Midnight of Middle Ages | 716 |
42. Philo Judaeus Fuses Platonic Philosophy With Judaic Doctrine | 718 |
I. Alexandria, Seat of Two Paralleling Schools | 718 |
1. On Borderline of Old and New | 718 |
2. Blends Various Views Into Single System | 719 |
3. Pre-eminent Champion of Immortal-Soulism | 719 |
II. Basic Features of Philo’s Teaching Concerning Man | 720 |
1. “Revelation” the Distinguishing Principle of Neoplatonism | 720 |
2. Philo’s Concept of God Was a Synthesis | 722 |
3. Greek and Hebrew Thought Blended by Allegorization | 722 |
4. Strange Conflicting Concepts of Logos | 723 |
5. Flash Pictures of Philo’s Immortal-Soulism | 724 |
6. Philo’s Responsibility in the Great Departure | 726 |
III. Scope and Significance of Philo’s Innovation | 727 |
1. Contrives “Agreement” of Biblical and Philosophical “Truth” | 727 |
2. Strikes at Origin and Destiny of Man | 728 |
3. Genesis Narrative of Creation Vitiated | 729 |
4. Like All Living Creatures Man Has “Animal” Soul | 730 |
5. Man Also Has Immortal “Rational Soul” | 731 |
6. Curious Theory of “Unbodied Souls” | 732 |
7. Role of Unbodied Soul-Angels | 733 |
8. Definition and Function of Rational Soul | 734 |
9. Immortality Defined as “Eternal Persistence” | 734 |
10. Resurrection and Immortality of Soul | 735 |
11. Definitive Meaning of “Fatherland” of Soul | 735 |
12. Souls Return to Realm of “Unbodied” | 736 |
13. Merges Immortality and Resurrection | 737 |
14. Endless Punishment of the Wicked | 737 |
15. Attested by Scholarly Authorities | 739 |
16. Twin Streams Merge at Alexandria | 740 |
43. Dead Sea Scrolls—Permeated Throughout With Conditionalism | 741 |
I. Timing and Teaching of Essene Brotherhood | 742 |
1. Views of the People of the Scrolls | 743 |
2. Like Waldenses of Medieval Times | 743 |
3. Approaching End of Present Age | 744 |
4. Major Emphasis Is on Last Things | 745 |
5. Prominent Place Given to Angels | 745 |
II. Comprehensive Witness of Scrolls on Man’s Nature and Destiny | 746 |
1. Sinners “Perish”; Righteous “Destined” for “Life Eternal” | 746 |
2. Righteous Stand in God’s Presence Forever | 746 |
3. Man Created for Eternity | 747 |
4. No “Escape” for Wicked in “Final Doom” | 747 |
III. Fate of Wicked Is Utter Extinction | 748 |
1. Wicked to Be “Found No More,” “Cut off.” Wiped Out | 748 |
2. Burned Until They Be “Destroyed” | 749 |
3. Righteous “Never Die”; Wicked “Wither” | 749 |
4. Angels Brought to Judgment and Hell | 750 |
IV. Eternal Redemption and Utter Extinction | 750 |
1. “Dust” Return to “Dust” | 750 |
2. “Perdition Eternal” vs. “Enduring” for All Time | 750 |
3. Iniquity Cannot Exist in God’s Presence | 751 |
4. “Mortal Flesh” Redeemed Forevermore | 751 |
V. Wicked Cease and Wrong Disappears Forever | 752 |
1. Wicked Will Cease to Exist | 752 |
2. Final Clash of Good and Evil | 752 |
3. “Everlasting Redemption” vs. “Annihilation” | 752 |
4. Wrong Will Disappear Forever | 753 |
5. Significance of the Great Digression in Jewry | 753 |