It is simple in such a way that all things that can be said of its essence are one and the same in it: and nothing can be said of its substance except in terms of what it is.
IS it to be inferred, then, that if the supreme Nature is so
many goods, it will therefore be compounded of more goods than one? Or is it
true, rather, that there are not more goods than one, but a single good
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Since, then, that Nature is by no means composite and yet is by all means those so many goods, necessarily all these are not more than one, but are one. Any one of them is, therefore, the same as all, whether taken all at once or separately. Therefore, just as whatever is attributed to the essence of the supreme Substance is one; so this substance is whatever it is essentially in one way, and by virtue of one consideration. For, when a man is said to be a material body, and rational, and human, these three things are not said in one way, or in virtue of one consideration. For, in accordance with one fact, be is a material body; and in accordance with another, rational; and no one of these, taken by itself, is the whole of what man is.
That supreme Being, however, is by no means anything in such
a way that it is not this same thing, according to another way, or another
consideration; because, whatever it is essentially in any way, this is all of
what it is. Therefore, nothing that is truly said of the supreme Being is
accepted in terms of quality or quantity, but only in terms of what it
is. For, whatever it is in terms of either quality or quantity
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It is without beginning and without end.
FROM what time, then, as this so simple Nature which creates and animates all things existed, or until what time is it to exist? Or rather, let us ask neither from what time, nor to what time, it exists; but is it without beginning and without end? For, if it has a beginning, it has this either from or through itself, or from or through another, or from or through nothing.
But it is certain, according to truths already made plain, that in no wise does it derive existence from another, or from nothing; or exist through another, or through nothing. In no wise, therefore, has it had inception through or from another, or through or from nothing.
Moreover, it cannot have inception from or through itself, although it exists from and through itself. For it so exists from and through itself, that by no means is there one essence which exists from and through itself, and another through which, and from which, it exists. But, whatever begins to exist from or through something, is by no means identical with that from or through which it begins to exist. Therefore, the supreme Nature does not begin through or from, itself.
Seeing, then, that it has a beginning neither through nor
from itself, and neither through nor from nothing, it assuredly has no
beginning at all. But neither will it have an end. For, if it is to have end,
it is not supremely immortal and supremely incorruptible
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Furthermore, if it is to have an end, it will perish either willingly or against its will. But certainly that is not a simple, unmixed good, at whose will the supreme good perishes. But this Being is itself the true and simple, unmixed good. Therefore, that very Being, which is certainly the supreme good, will not die of its own will. If, however, it is to perish against its will, it is not supremely powerful, or all-powerful. But cogent reasoning has asserted it to be powerful and all-powerful. Therefore, it will not die against its will. Hence, if neither with nor against its will the supreme Nature is to have an end, in no way will it have an end.
Again, if the supreme nature has an end or a beginning, it is not true eternity, which it has been irrefutably proved to be above.
Then, let him who can conceive of a time when this began to
be true, or when it was not true, namely, that something was destined to be; or
when this shall cease to be true, and shall not be true, namely, that something
has existed. But, if neither of these suppositions is conceivable, and both
these facts cannot exist without truth, it is impossible even to conceive that
truth has either beginning or end. And then, if truth had a beginning, or shall
have an end; before it began it was true that truth did not exist, and after it
shall be ended it will be true that truth will not exist. Yet, anything that is
true cannot exist without truth. Therefore, truth existed before truth
existed, and truth will exist after truth shall be ended, which is a most
contradictory conclusion. Whether, then,
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