Date: 1694
"The Soul is made of immortal Essence, incapable of Death," and will live "in a Mansion prepared by the Almighty for its Reception" after it is separated from the body
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
"Nay, so far were the Heathens, by the Light of Nature, from doubting the Immortality of the Soul, that Plato in his 'Phaedro' thus reasons; viz. What consists out of Elements (says he) is Immortal and can never dye. The Soul is not made of Elements, nor of created matter, but came from God, and ...
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
"Then may it be without difficulty granted, that the Body which has been a long Companion of the Souls, will once again enjoy it never more to be separated; for the Body at the Resurrection shall be incorruptible and so as far from a capacity of perishing any more as the Soul, made so by him, tha...
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The body, like a grasshopper that has grown old, may cast off his skin and "a lively new shrill insect will come forth of it"
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The body may be resurrected, like "a dying and sluggish Catterpiller" that becomes a lively painted Butterfly.
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The body may be resurrected, like an ant that becomes a "winged fly."
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The body may be resurrected, like the Silk-worm, which "after many days, seeming dead and motionless, becomes a Butterfly."
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
"But above all, the Phaenix , that the Learned Lactantius writes of, may put us in mind, if not confirm to us the Resurrection, for after she has lived in the Arabian Fields (as some affirm) about 600 Years, and finding her self wasted with Age and Infirmity, she gathers the ...
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The body may be resurrected like "Grain thrown into the Ground" that continues there "for a season, as if lost and dead, but when warmth and moisture gives it force, it springs up, and bears a hundred-fold" in the "Resurrection of the Spring."
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
A wife is another self, "one in whose Breast, as in a sage Cabinet, is reposed his inmost Secrets"
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]