0' the torments and agonies suffered by those who having sinned have not completed a worthy and adequate repentance, according to the Gospel parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus. For it is clear that he is thinking of this parable when he says, `either purged in fire
0' (i.e. the Rich Man), `or refreshed with the dew of blessing
0' (i.e. Lazarus). But that sentence of the Judgment, `They shall go, these into everlasting punishment, but the just into life everlasting,
0' has no place as yet in these sufferings." In other words, the commentator sees here the doctrine of Purgatory, as held by the Roman Church. And when we compare the other passages in Gregory about the "cleansing fire," especially that De Anima et Resurrectione, 247 B, we shall see that he contemplates the judgment ("the incorruptible tribunal") as coming not only after the Resurrection, but also after the chastising process. Not till the Judgment will the moral value of each life be revealed; the chastising is a purely natural process. But then the belief in a Judgment coming after everything rather contradicts the Universalism with which he has been charged, for what necessity would there be for it, if the chastising was successful in every instance? With regard to the nature of this "fire," it is spiritual or material with him according to the context. The invisible natures will be punished with the one, the visible (i. e. the World) with the other: although this destruction is not always preserved by him. See E. Moeller (on Gregory's Doctrine on Human Nature), p. 100.
0' should be able to show its resemblance to the Archetype. For if, while the Archetype transcends comprehension, the essence of `the image
0' were comprehended, the contrary character of the attributes we behold in them would prove the defect of `the image
0'; but since the essence of our Mind eludes our knowledge, it has an exact resemblance to the Supreme essence, figuring as it does by its own unknowableness the incomprehensible Being." Therefore, Gregory goes to the interior facts of our nature for the actual proof of theological doctrine. God is "spirit" because of the spirituality of the soul. The "generation" of the Son is proved by the Will emanating from the Reason. Gregory follows this line even more resolutely than Origen. He was the first Father who sought to explain the Trinity by the triple divisions of the soul which Platonism offered. Cf. his treatise De eo quod sit ad immutabilitatem, &c., p. 26.
12 Rom. xi. 33, Rom. xi. 34.
13 1 Cor. ii. 15.
14 1 Cor. i. 5.
15 Gen. i. 27.
16 twn ginomenwn. The Latin has overlooked this; "Haec autem omnia huc spectant ut," &c. (Sifanus).
17 h fusij i. e. the intellectual fusij mentioned above. If this were translated "Nature," it would contradict what has just been said about the body. It is plain that fusij contains a much larger meaning always than our sole equivalent for it; fusij is applied even to the Divine essence.
18 genealogein.
19 twn proj ti pwj exein thn yuxhn.
20 peritth. Sifanus must have had peri ti in his Cod.; "sed mentis circa aliquam rem actio."
21 S. John i. 4.
22 For an explanation of such a restriction, see Bingham, vol. viii. p. 109 (ed. 1720).
23 epiprosqoushj.
24 2 Cor. iii. 2.
25 Heb. v. 14.
26 para thn prwthn (i. e. wran).
27 Ps. xix. 1.
28 This mysticism of Gregory is an extension of Origen's view that there are direct affinities or analogies between the visible and invisible world. Gregory here and elsewhere proposes to find in the facts of nature nothing less than analogies with the energies, and so with the essence, of the Deity. The marks stamped upon the Creation translate these energies into language intelligible to us: just as the energies in their turn translate the essence, as he insists on in his treatise against Eunomius. This world, in effect, exists only in order to manifest the Divine Being. But the human soul, of all that is created, is the special field where analogies to the Creator are to be sought, because we feel both by their energies alone; both the soul and God are hid from us, in their essence. "Since," he says (De Hom Opif. c. xi.) "one of the attributes we contemplate in the Divine nature is incomprehensibility of essence, itis clearly necessary that in this point `the image
29 S. Matt. xxvi. 24.
30 eij apeiron parateinetai. Such passages as these must be set against others in Gregory, such as the concluding part of the De Anima et Resurrectione, in arriving at an exact knowledge of his views about a Universal ' Apokatastasij.
31 paqh.
32 Read with L. Sifanus, mh katallhlw trofh.
33 eij plhqwrikhn ahdian ekpiptwn.
34 qewrhma.
35 Reading en tw atelei thj hlikiaj.
36 Reading sumptwmatwn (for sumpomatwn. Morell).
37 tufou (tou stufou, Paris Edit. i. e. "of their astringency")
38 dia thj aisxraj apotisewj ton emeton anekinhsan.
39 thn sesofismenhn thj filarguriaj anagkhn.
40 peplanhmenw.
41 epiplatunesqai.
42 ouk exontej pou thn anagkhn thj appwstiaj tauthj epanenegwsi.
43 emparoinei.
44 kefalaion; lit. "a sum total:" cf. below, epi kefalaiw sunapteon, "we must summarize."
45 The text is in confusion here: but the Latin supplies: "Nothing reasonable fails in reason; nothing wise, in wisdom; neither virtue nor truth could admit of that which is not goods," &c.
46 Rom. iii. 3-9; Rom. iv. 1, Rom. vi. 2; Rom. ix. 14-24; Rom. xi. 22-36.