”Now liberty is the coming up to a state which owns no master [ἀδέσποτόν] and is self-regulating; it is that with which we were gifted by God at the beginning[...]"

”Now liberty [ἐλευθερία] is the coming up to a state which owns no master [ἀδέσποτόν] and is self-regulating [αὐτοκρατὲς]; it is that with which we were gifted by God at the beginning, but which has been obscured by the feeling of shame arising from indebtedness. Liberty too is in all cases one and the same essentially; it has a natural attraction to itself. It follows, then, that as everything that is free will be united with its like, and as virtue is a thing that has no master, that is, is free, everything that is free will be united with virtue. But, further, the Divine Being is the fountain of all virtue. Therefore, those who have parted with evil will be united with Him; and so, as the Apostle says (I Cor. 15.28), God will be "all in all "; for this utterance seems to me plainly to confirm the opinion we have already arrived at, for it means that God will be instead of all other things, and in all.” (De Anima et Resurrectione, PG 46.101-105, NPNF p. 452)

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Nein!(?) A negative "point of contact" in the Epistle to Diognetus?

Why "contra fatum"?