through it, and is so near it; and that its life is but a foolishness of wisdom, by means of which life wisdom manifests itself, that it may be known what wisdom is. Its will is gone from God into selfhood, and boasts itself of its own power, and sees not how its power has beginning and end, that it is but a play, by which mirror (play) wisdom beholds itself for a time in the folly of the wise; and, finally, through such pain of the godless, folly in the case of the wise breaks to pieces, in that they begin to hate the frail, foolish life, and to die with Reason, and to give up the will to God. 38. This, earthly Reason regards as a folly, especially when it sees that God also in the wise abandons their earthly folly, and lets the body of such folly, wherein the folly beheld itself, go down without help to the grave. Therefore it supposes this man has received no deliverance from God : Seeing he trusted in Him, his faith must certainly have been false, else He had surely delivered him in his lifetime. 39. Moreover, because it feels not its punishment immediately, it supposes there is no longer possible any serious earnest here; and knows not that the longer the more it comprehends itself in folly, and becomes in itself a strong source of eternal pain. So that, when for it the light of outer Nature perishes, wherein for a time it has strutted in selfhood, it then stands by itself in darkness and pain, so that its false, own desire is a mere rough, stinging, hard sharpness and contrary will. 40. It hopes during this time in an external