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29: EXPLANATION OF VERSE TWENTY-TWO, CHAPTER FIFTEEN, OF THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL TO THE CORINTHIANS 118 |
Answer.—Know that there are two natures in man: the
physical nature and the spiritual nature. The physical
nature is inherited from Adam, and the spiritual nature is
inherited from the Reality of the Word of God, which is
the spirituality of Christ. The physical nature is born of
Adam, but the spiritual nature is born from the bounty of
the Holy Spirit. The first is the source of all imperfection;
the second is the source of all perfection.
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The Christ sacrificed Himself so that men might be
freed from the imperfections of the physical nature and
might become possessed of the virtues of the spiritual nature.
This spiritual nature, which came into existence
through the bounty of the Divine Reality, is the union of
all perfections and appears through the breath of the Holy
Spirit. It is the divine perfections; it is light, spirituality,
guidance, exaltation, high aspiration, justice, love, grace,
kindness to all, philanthropy, the essence of life. It is the
reflection of the splendor of the Sun of Reality.
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The Christ is the central point of the Holy Spirit: He is
born of the Holy Spirit; He is raised up by the Holy
Spirit; He is the descendant of the Holy Spirit—that is to
say, that the Reality of Christ does not descend from
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Adam; no, it is born of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, this
verse in Corinthians, “As in Adam all die, even so in
Christ shall all be made alive,” means, according to this
terminology, that Adam
1
is the father of man—that is to
say, He is the cause of the physical life of mankind; His
was the physical fatherhood. He is a living soul, but He is
not the giver of spiritual life, whereas Christ is the cause of
the spiritual life of man, and with regard to the spirit, His
was the spiritual fatherhood. Adam is a living soul; Christ
is a quickening spirit.
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This physical world of man is subject to the power of
the lusts, and sin is the consequence of this power of the
lusts, for it is not subject to the laws of justice and holiness.
The body of man is a captive of nature; it will act in accordance
with whatever nature orders. It is, therefore,
certain that sins such as anger, jealousy, dispute, covetousness,
avarice, ignorance, prejudice, hatred, pride and
tyranny exist in the physical world. All these brutal qualities
exist in the nature of man. A man who has not had a
spiritual education is a brute. Like the savages of Africa,
whose actions, habits and morals are purely sensual, they
act according to the demands of nature to such a degree
that they rend and eat one another. Thus it is evident that
the physical world of man is a world of sin. In this physical
world man is not distinguished from the animal.
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All sin comes from the demands of nature, and these
demands, which arise from the physical qualities, are not
sins with respect to the animals, while for man they are
sin. The animal is the source of imperfections, such as
anger, sensuality, jealousy, avarice, cruelty, pride: all
these defects are found in animals but do not constitute
sins. But in man they are sins.
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Adam is the cause of man’s physical life; but the Reality
of Christ—that is to say, the Word of God—is the cause of
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spiritual life. It is “a quickening spirit,” meaning that all
the imperfections which come from the requirements of
the physical life of man are transformed into human perfections
by the teachings and education of that spirit.
Therefore, Christ was a quickening spirit, and the cause of
life in all mankind.
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But the mass of the Christians believe that, as Adam ate
of the forbidden tree, He sinned in that He disobeyed, and
that the disastrous consequences of this disobedience have
been transmitted as a heritage and have remained among
His descendants. Hence Adam became the cause of the
death of humanity. This explanation is unreasonable and
evidently wrong, for it means that all men, even the
Prophets and the Messengers of God, without committing
any sin or fault, but simply because they are the posterity
of Adam, have become without reason guilty sinners, and
until the day of the sacrifice of Christ were held captive in
hell in painful torment. This is far from the justice of God.
If Adam was a sinner, what is the sin of Abraham? What is
the fault of Isaac, or of Joseph? Of what is Moses guilty?
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But Christ, Who is the Word of God, sacrificed Himself.
This has two meanings, an apparent and an esoteric
meaning. The outward meaning is this: Christ’s intention
was to represent and promote a Cause which was to educate
the human world, to quicken the children of Adam,
and to enlighten all mankind; and since to represent such a
great Cause—a Cause which was antagonistic to all the
people of the world and all the nations and kingdoms—meant that He would be killed and crucified, so Christ in
proclaiming His mission sacrificed His life. He regarded
the cross as a throne, the wound as a balm, the poison as
honey and sugar. He arose to teach and educate men, and
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so He sacrificed Himself to give the spirit of life. He
perished in body so as to quicken others by the spirit.
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The position of Christ was that of absolute perfection;
He made His divine perfections shine like the sun upon all
believing souls, and the bounties of the light shone and
radiated in the reality of men. This is why He says: “I am
the bread which descended from heaven; whosoever shall
eat of this bread will not die”
2
—that is to say, that
whosoever shall partake of this divine food will attain unto
eternal life: that is, every one who partakes of this bounty
and receives these perfections will find eternal life, will
obtain preexistent favors, will be freed from the darkness
of error, and will be illuminated by the light of His guidance.
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The form of the seed was sacrificed for the tree, but its
perfections, because of this sacrifice, became evident and
apparent—the tree, the branches, the leaves and the blossoms
being concealed in the seed. When the form of the
seed was sacrificed, its perfections appeared in the perfect
form of leaves, blossoms and fruits.
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1. | Abu’l-bashar, i.e., the father of man, is one of the titles given by the Muslims to Adam. [ Back To Reference] |
2. | Cf. John 6:41, 50, 58. [ Back To Reference] |