Purgatory: Canto 25, The Ascent to the Seventh Circle
Good morning, Pilgrims. I've caught up with you, having lingered perhaps too long in gazing at the tree, a glutton with time since being thrown off track on the day we entered the sixth cornice. I pray that those of us who purify themselves in this fire of the seventh cornice will be edified by the experience, for to desire is the most natural of human impulses, and those we'll meet here are those who desired too much the fruits of the creation even if they didn't partake in them to a degree that would have increased their hunger. We begin the canto with this question, though -- how can incorporeal shades lose the aspect of well-being and be diminished in their frame and stature? I remember one of our pilgrims had this question early on when it was noticed that Dante passed through Ciacco but was able grab and kick other shades. What's the relationship between corporeality with incorporeality, you asked, and here Statius has answered it for us. Ciacco was so consumed with his mass in life that in death his mass had no substance -- on the sixth cornice, the substance of the souls is wasted as they "waisted" themselves in life.
When Dante prompts Virgil with the question, Virgil answers that it's not that hard of a thing to ascertain but defers to Statius, who has both grace and reason, for the fuller explanation. Statius says that the soul is like a blood that gets into the veins and takes a form and shape of the container that holds it (a response that almost makes Dante the father of hematology -- had he separated veins and arteries and noticed that the heart pumps the blood around the body, he would have discovered the circulatory system three hundred years before William Harvey ended the 1,400-year reign of Galen's anatomy in 1628 with the publication of De motu cordis. It's Galen, then, who in the second century posited the idea of "the threefold circulation of the blood and the theory of humours (blood, phlegm, choler/yellow bile, and melancholy/black bile) that contributed to mental and physical state," whose model Dante is following when he writes "quelle per le vene vàne" in relation to the circulation of the blood. Dante also had no access to the findings of Velasius, who believed that the brain and nervous system were the center of the person rather than the Aristotleian idea of the heart. Naturally, then, he would have considered the heart the center of being with all the allegorical implications that bears, and Galen's belief that the body was the instrument of the soul resonates well with the idea that Statius, who died 107 years before Galen died, is espousing here (for he would have had to have learned of it either on the banks of the Tiber or while he was waiting the period of his life in ante-Purgatory). Galen, for all his belief in one God, likely joined Virgil in Limbo since he was not a Christian (unless he was closeted like Statius) when he died.
The crux of Statius's explanation lies in the generation of the soul from virtue -- the soul is virtue's embodiment (and that explains the focus on this mountain of replenishing virtue through the process of purification since the will of man which is free often chooses the wrong good and sometimes so much of it that the self-good he has chosen turns into a communal evil as we've seen below -- which makes pretty clear sense if we consider that the whole of virtue is greater than the sum of its parts and that if the parts stray from it in varying degrees once separated from the vine, they can do nothing but recoagulate (see the emphasis on the rebuilding of community all the way up this mountain) when grafted back onto it). The incarnation of virtue, then, necessarily forms that shell, or body, we recognize when we glance into the mirror, and it retains the shape even after the shell returns to dust like a plaster statue will remain in its form even after the mold that created it has been stripped away. While our bodies were formed by our parents, then, the soul is formed only by God's grace, so that the perfect soul resides in imperfect (because mortal) flesh with all the imperfections that flesh may cast upon the soul -- to develop a perfect flesh, at least one parent would have to be immortal, and perhaps in this we find the mystery that St. Leander of Seville fought so hard to preserve in his fight against the Arian heresy that denied the divinity of Christ -- two natures in one flesh.
At the end of this explanation, we mark the fire of chastity which purges burning desire, and the whip that these souls shout in mutual acclamation, one body, one voice, in praise of the Lord who says to each "Please come to me" as the poet who calls on death to reunite him with the love and grace of those who've left him behind -- Consummatem est post hic cornice! In this, Dante and Pope have found common purpose of expression, for Pope begins his fourth epistle in exhortation:
Take Nature's path, and mad opinions leave;
All states can reach it, and all heads conceive;
Obvious her goods, in no extreme they dwell;
There needs but thinking right, and meaning well;
And mourn our various portions as we please,
Equal is common sense, and common ease.
All else beyond a couple of splashes in Lethe and Eunoe belongs to God!
S.


10 Comments:
Dante indentifies man as having the perfect blood. It is the active blood. I think the feminist of today would really enjoy this one. Dante draws from Thomas all this understanding and of course they did not have the understanding or technology we have today. If they waited till the brain was formed that could be a dangerous understanding in light of when human life begins.
I like his use of man as shade in purgatory. We become a shade of our old self to become a new self. A shade of what we once were thus the sense still come into play. The sense which we did not learn to master on our time here on eart. It is in a sense a transparent body which we can not hide any of our feelings. Sort of like those who show their feelings on their sleeve. It is thus readily seen by others.
“It is a process,” I can hear Father Isaac True say, “It is a process!” Dante’s understanding of the birth of a soul speaks of a process and different states of being. Likewise, chastity is born our of a process, “husbands and wives who were chaste as virtue and marriage vows require.” There are different steps to each stage in man’s growth and development. God created man in his image and likeness and man’s vocation is to respond in a like manner through his love for God and in how he rightly orders and lives his life. At the very top of his goodness, at the very end of the journey is the ultimate goodness, God. Man can achieve his end only by engaging in the process, by learning the steps of each stage of development with in the process. To understand pure love, chaste love, God’s love, one encounters a process: human, character, spiritual, psychological, hormonal, and physiological. Step by step, man is equipped with the basics of pure love and the many dimensions and aspects of love and expressions of love. Giving into any form of love that does not lead to the ultimate end, God, is not from God, it is not for the good of man; it is destroy man and his relationship with God and others. Understanding the value of another human being, man or woman, and the beauty of their whole person, created in the image and likeness of God, is the way to chaste love. Lust is the counterpoint to decency and goodness. Our desires and feelings should lead us to God and to process according to his ways, anything less will surely lead us far away from what we need most chaste love.
Dante's (through Statius) explanation of the relation between the body and the soul, particularly in human regeneration, was neccessarily dependent on the natural science of his day. We may chuckle at it, but then what will people centuries from now think of our ideas of such natural processes? Theology, as Scripture, is developed within the limitations of the knowledge of the time.
It is heartening that Dante includes in models of chastity not only the virgin Mary, but chaste husbands and wives as well. No objection from contemporary theologians here.
I think you've got a good thought there, atskro -- these folks are "shades" of their former selves working towards salvation by filling themselves with the virtues that were depleted as they progressed through life in pursuit of the wrong good. We all have it within us to be saints, and Christ instructed us to go and sin no more. This means, of course, that it's possible. Let your real self do now what your shade will otherwise have to do later, and you'll achieve the beatific vision every waking minute.
S.
There's good homily material here, Marioneteer, and, YES!, it is a process. Your posting reminds me of a saying attributed to Benjamin Franklin, who said at the drafting of the Declaration of Independence that if we don't hang together, we shall all, most certainly, hang separately. Let love be your litmus test, then -- whatever love is directed away from God is pretty useless. A proper love for God's creation -- for the earth, for the animals, for the community of which you're a part and for the communities beyond your reach -- is a proper love for God. No need, then, to shun the things of this world but to go forth and, like Calvin expressed, redeem them for God, the creator of all things. Because we are limited by our senses, by our intellect, and by our faith in the ways in which we can love God directly, we have to learn to engage God through and beyond those limitations. Fortunately, God gives us no task beyond our ability to bear it, and all of us have sufficient grace to achieve the beatific vision.
S.
As a man called to the vocation of marriage, Fr. Earl, I agree wholeheartedly with the idea of exercising chastity within it. I take this to mean not that I should close off avenues of sexual expression with my wife but that I value and cherish those expressions as an exclusive privilege of our union as one flesh. It is this realization that will keep me from exploring sexual desires brought about by outside presences in my life -- the Internet, the physical places I frequent, the relative anonymity I enjoy at the conferences I attend, etc. If I can translate that presence of mind into other things I might desire -- wealth, recognition, vengeance -- then I can stave off other sins, too, perhaps. It's worth the pursuit not because of the reward of eternity but because we actually live better here during the process.
S.
I read over your blog, and i found it inquisitive, you may find My Blog interesting. My blog is just about my day to day life, as a park ranger. So please Click Here To Read My Blog
http://www.juicyfruiter.blogspot.com
Do you want free porn? Contact my AIM SN 'p1nkness' just say 'give me some pics now!'.
No age verification required, totally free! Just send an instant message to AIM screen name "p1nkness".
Any message you send is fine!
AIM abuse can be reported here.
Get any Desired College Degree, In less then 2 weeks.
Call this number now 24 hours a day 7 days a week (413) 208-3069
Get these Degrees NOW!!!
"BA", "BSc", "MA", "MSc", "MBA", "PHD",
Get everything within 2 weeks.
100% verifiable, this is a real deal
Act now you owe it to your future.
(413) 208-3069 call now 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
شات دردشه دردشة منتديات حواء بطاقات حب شات خليجي شات عربي شات سعودي خدمات مسجات شات صوتي تبادل نصي دليل مواقع دليل مواقع مواقع سعودية مواقع اماراتية مواقع عراقية مواقع كويتية مواقع عمانية مواقع قطرية سياحة مواقع يمنية مواقع بحرينية دليل مواقع برامج دردشات تحميل العاب العاب بنات شات سعودي شات عربي شات خايجي دردشة سعودية دردشة عربية دردشة خليجية شات كتابي دردشة كتابية
Post a Comment
<< Home