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AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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
- 2026-03-20v2.1.0-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 Ruricius [Ruricius of Limoges, a cultivated aristocrat who later became bishop].
The path to writing to you, which my lack of skill had blocked, has been opened by love — and by that sovereign...
Our traveler and letter-carrier keeps wearing the same familiar ruts of the road — the distance that separates our...
You insist, my dear son, that my pen should break through the boundary of the earlier letters and push on into new...
You have asked me many times — since Theodoric, King of the Goths [Theodoric II, r.