About This Book
A philosophical dialogue examines objections that delayed divine punishment encourages wrongdoers and discourages victims; the respondent argues that human judgment cannot fully measure divine governance, that delay manifests forbearance and allows for repentance or useful services by the guilty. He maintains postponed penalties can serve public or corrective purposes, often begin as inward anguish or conscience rather than outward suffering, and may produce effects transmitted across families or communities much like inherited benefits. The speaker insists visible temporal penalties are needed to deter disbelief in posthumous justice and supports these claims with moral examples and practical analogies to illustrate remedial and preventive consequences.
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