Letter 7: You have asked about my views on the soul, and I will give them to you directly, since I have never seen the point...
Faustus to the beloved Avitus, in Christ.
You have asked about my views on the soul, and I will give them to you directly, since I have never seen the point of writing about theology in a way that requires the reader to deduce your actual position.
I believe the soul is created, not eternal. I believe it is not strictly incorporeal in the way the philosophical tradition has claimed. When I say "not incorporeal," I am trying to express something that I think the tradition has obscured with Greek philosophy: that the soul is real, that it occupies space in some meaningful sense, that it is genuinely part of the created order rather than a divine emanation that happens to be temporarily lodged in matter.
The reason this matters: if the soul is truly incorporeal — if it is essentially spirit in the philosophical sense — then the resurrection of the body becomes philosophically problematic. What would a pure spirit need a body for? The Christian doctrine of resurrection requires that the soul have a real relationship with the body, a relationship that death disrupts and resurrection restores. A soul that has no bodily character has no such relationship.
I recognize that this view is not the consensus, and I expect to be argued with. I am not setting it forward as definitive. I am setting it forward as a serious attempt to think through what Christian doctrine actually requires us to say about the soul, rather than simply inheriting a framework from Plato.
Your brother,
Faustus
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.
Latin / Greek Original
Original text not yet available in this corpus.
This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.
View sourceRevision history
- 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import
Initial corpus import from Unspecified import source.
Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.mlat.uzh.ch/MLS/xanfang.php?tabelle=Faustus_Regiensis_cps2
Related Letters
To Eutropius [a Gallo-Roman aristocrat who had been appointed to a prefecture].
A fragment of a letter in which Simplicius addresses the emperor on the increasingly troubled situation in the...
8 cf. Corinth. II 6, 14 sq.
How are your Nitiobroges and Vesunnici [the peoples of Agen and Perigueux] — between whom there is always a holy...
The synodal decree of Pope Hilary.