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The Fire
of Hell
by Origen
We find in the prophet Isaiah, that the fire
with which each one is punished is described as his
own; for he says, "Walk in the light of your own
fire, and in the flame which ye have kindled." By
these words it seems to be indicated that every
sinner kindles for himself the flame of his own
fire, and is not plunged into some fire which has
been already kindled by another, or was in
existence before himself. Of this fire the fuel and
food are our sins, which are called by the Apostle
wood, and hay, and stubble. And I think that, as
abundance of food, and provisions of a contrary
kind and amount, breed fevers in the body, and
fevers, too, of different sorts and duration
according to the proportion in which the collected
poison supplies material and fuel for disease (the
quality of this material, gathered together from
different poisons, proving the causes either of a
more acute or more lingering disease); so, when the
soul has gathered together a multitude of evil
works, and an abundance of sins against itself, at
a suitable time all that assembly of evils boils up
to punishment, and is set on fire to chastisements;
when the mind itself, or conscience, receiving by
divine power into the memory all those things of
which it had stamped on itself certain signs and
forms at the moment of sinning, will see a kind of
history, as it were, of all the foul, and shameful,
and unholy deeds which it has done, exposed before
its eyes: then is the conscience itself harassed,
and, pierced by its own goads, becomes an accuser
and a witness against itself. And this, I think,
was the opinion of the Apostle Paul himself, when
he said, "Their thoughts mutually accusing or
excusing them in the day when God will judge the
secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my
Gospel." From which it is understood that around
the substance of the soul certain tortures are
produced by the hurtful affections of sins
themselves.
And that the understanding of this matter may
not appear very difficult, we may draw some
considerations from the evil effects of those
passions which are wont to befall some souls, as
when a soul is consumed by the fire of love, or
wasted away by zeal or envy, or when the passion of
anger is kindled, or one is consumed by the
greatness of his madness or his sorrow; on which
occasions some, finding the excess of these evils
unbearable, have deemed it more tolerable to submit
to death than to endure perpetually torture of such
a kind. You will ask indeed whether, in the case of
those who have been entangled in the evils arising
from those vices above enumerated, and who, while
existing in this life, have been unable to procure
any amelioration for themselves, and have in this
condition departed from the world, it be sufficient
in the way of punishment that they be tortured by
the remaining in them of these hurtful affections,
i.e., of the anger, or of the fury, or of the
madness, or of the sorrow, whose fatal poison was
in this life lessened by no healing medicine; or
whether, these affections being changed, they will
subjected to the pains of a general punishment. Now
I am of the opinion that another species of
punishment may be understood to exist; because, as
we feel that when the limbs of the body are
loosened and torn away from their mutual supports,
there is produced pain of a most excruciating kind,
so, when the soul shall be found to be beyond the
order, and connection, and harmony in which it was
created by God for the purposes of good and useful
action and observation, and not to harmonize with
itself in the connection of its rational movements,
it must be deemed to bear the chastisement and
torture of its own dissension, and to feel the
punishments of its own disordered condition. And
when this dissolution and rendering asunder of soul
shall have been tested by the application of fire,
a solidification undoubtedly into a firmer
structure will take place, and a restoration be
effected.
Excerpted from De
Principiis, by Origen
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The
Westminster Handbook to Origen, by John Anthony
McGuckin
Origen
Spirit and Fire: A Thematic Anthology of His
Writings, by Hans Urs Von Balthasar
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