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60: THE IMMORTALITY OF THE SPIRIT (1) 223 |
Having shown that the spirit of man exists,
1
we must
prove its immortality.
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The immortality of the spirit is mentioned in the Holy
Books; it is the fundamental basis of the divine religions.
Now punishments and rewards are said to be of two kinds:
first, the rewards and punishments of this life; second,
those of the other world. But the paradise and hell of existence
are found in all the worlds of God, whether in this
world or in the spiritual heavenly worlds. Gaining these
rewards is the gaining of eternal life. That is why Christ
said, “Act in such a way that you may find eternal life, and
that you may be born of water and the spirit, so that you
may enter into the Kingdom.”
2
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The rewards of this life are the virtues and perfections
which adorn the reality of man. For example, he was dark
and becomes luminous; he was ignorant and becomes
wise; he was neglectful and becomes vigilant; he was asleep
and becomes awakened; he was dead and becomes
living; he was blind and becomes a seer; he was deaf and
becomes a hearer; he was earthly and becomes heavenly;
he was material and becomes spiritual. Through these rewards
he gains spiritual birth and becomes a new creature.
He becomes the manifestation of the verse in the Gospel
where it is said of the disciples that they “were born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man,
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but of God”
3
—that is to say, they were delivered from the
animal characteristics and qualities which are the characteristics
of human nature, and they became qualified
with the divine characteristics, which are the bounty of
God. This is the meaning of the second birth. For such
people there is no greater torture than being veiled from
God, and no more severe punishment than sensual vices,
dark qualities, lowness of nature, engrossment in carnal
desires. When they are delivered through the light of faith
from the darkness of these vices, and become illuminated
with the radiance of the sun of reality, and ennobled with
all the virtues, they esteem this the greatest reward, and
they know it to be the true paradise. In the same way they
consider that the spiritual punishment—that is to say, the
torture and punishment of existence—is to be subjected to
the world of nature; to be veiled from God; to be brutal
and ignorant; to fall into carnal lusts; to be absorbed in
animal frailties; to be characterized with dark qualities,
such as falsehood, tyranny, cruelty, attachment to the affairs
of the world, and being immersed in satanic ideas.
For them, these are the greatest punishments and tortures.
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Likewise, the rewards of the other world are the eternal
life which is clearly mentioned in all the Holy Books, the
divine perfections, the eternal bounties and everlasting
felicity. The rewards of the other world are the perfections
and the peace obtained in the spiritual worlds after
leaving this world, while the rewards of this life are the
real luminous perfections which are realized in this world,
and which are the cause of eternal life, for they are the very
progress of existence. It is like the man who passes from
the embryonic world to the state of maturity and becomes
the manifestation of these words: “Blessed, therefore, be
God, the most excellent of Makers.”
4
The rewards of the
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other world are peace, the spiritual graces, the various
spiritual gifts in the Kingdom of God, the gaining of the
desires of the heart and the soul, and the meeting of God in
the world of eternity. In the same way the punishments of
the other world—that is to say, the torments of the other
world—consist in being deprived of the special divine
blessings and the absolute bounties, and falling into the
lowest degrees of existence. He who is deprived of these
divine favors, although he continues after death, is considered
as dead by the people of truth.
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The logical proof of the immortality of the spirit is this,
that no sign can come from a nonexisting thing—that is to
say, it is impossible that from absolute nonexistence signs
should appear—for the signs are the consequence of an
existence, and the consequence depends upon the existence
of the principle. So from a nonexisting sun no light
can radiate; from a nonexisting sea no waves appear; from
a nonexisting cloud no rain falls; a nonexisting tree yields
no fruit; a nonexisting man neither manifests nor produces
anything. Therefore, as long as signs of existence appear,
they are a proof that the possessor of the sign is existent.
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Consider that today the Kingdom of Christ exists.
From a nonexisting king how could such a great kingdom
be manifested? How, from a nonexisting sea, can the
waves mount so high? From a nonexisting garden, how
can such fragrant breezes be wafted? Reflect that no effect,
no trace, no influence remains of any being after its members
are dispersed and its elements are decomposed,
whether it be a mineral, a vegetable or an animal. There is
only the human reality and the spirit of man which, after
the disintegration of the members, dispersing of the particles,
and the destruction of the composition, persists and
continues to act and to have power.
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This question is extremely subtle: consider it attentively.
This is a rational proof which we are giving, so that
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the wise may weigh it in the balance of reason and justice.
But if the human spirit will rejoice and be attracted to the
Kingdom of God, if the inner sight becomes opened, and
the spiritual hearing strengthened, and the spiritual feelings
predominant, he will see the immortality of the spirit
as clearly as he sees the sun, and the glad tidings and signs
of God will encompass him.
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1. | Cf. “The Difference between Man and the Animal,” p. 185. [ Back To Reference] |
2. | Cf. John 3:5. [ Back To Reference] |
3. | John 1:13. [ Back To Reference] |
4. | Qur’án 23:14. [ Back To Reference] |