ON LYING. [DE MENDACIO.]
This book appears from its place in the Retractations to have been written
about A. D. 395, as it is the last work named in the first book, which
contains those which he wrote before he was Bishop. Some editions represent it as
addressed to Consentius, but not the MSS. The latter are probably right, as his
other work on the subject was written in answer to the inquiries of Consentius on
the case of the Priscillianists many years later.--Bened. Ed.
Retractations, Book I. last Chapter.
"I have also written a Book on Lying, which though it takes some pains to
understand, contains much that is useful for the exercise of the mind, and more
that is profitable to morals, in inculcating the love of speaking the truth.
This also I was minded to remove from my works, because it seemed to me obscure,
and intricate, and altogether troublesome; for which reason I had not sent it
abroad. And when I had afterwards written another book, under this title,
Against Lying, much more had I determined and ordered that the former should cease
to exist; which however was not done. Therefore in this retractation of my
works, as I have found this still in being, I have ordered that it should remain;
chiefly because therein are to be found some necessary things which in the other
are not. Why the other has for its title, Against Lying, but this, Of Lying,
the reason is this, that throughout the one is an open assault upon lying,
whereas great part of this is taken up with the discussion of the question for and
against. Both, however, are directed to the same object. This book begins thus:
"Magna quaestio est de Mendacio."
1. THERE is a great question about Lying, which often arises in the midst
of our every day business, and gives us much trouble, that we may not either
rashly call that a lie which is not such, or decide that it is sometimes right to
tell a tie, that is, a kind of honest, well-meant, charitable lie. This
question we will painfully discuss by seeking with them that seek: whether to any
good purpose, we need not take upon ourselves to affirm, for the attentive reader
will sufficiently gather from the course of the discussion. It is, indeed, very
full of dark corners, and hath many cavern-like windings, whereby it oft
eludes the eagerness of the seeker; so that at one moment what was found seems to
slip out of one's hands, and anon comes to light again, and then is once more
lost to sight. At last, however, the chase will bear down more surely, and will
overtake our sentence. Wherein it there is any error, yet as Truth is that which
setteth free from all error, and Falsehood that which entangleth in all error,
one never errs more safely, methinks, than when one errs by too much loving the
truth, and too much rejecting of falsehood. For they who find great fault say
it is too much, whereas peradventure Truth would say after all, it is not yet
enough. But whoso readest, thou wilt do well to find no fault until thou have
read the whole; so wilt thou have less fault to find. Eloquence thou must not
look for: we have been intent upon things, and upon dispatch in putting out of
hand a matter which nearly concerns our every day life, and therefore have had
small pains, or almost none, to bestow upon words.
2. Setting aside, therefore, jokes, which have never been accounted lies,
seeing they bear with them in the tone of voice, and in the very mood of the
joker a most evident indication that he means no deceit, although the thing he
utters be not true: touching which kind of discourse, whether it be meet to be
used by perfect minds, is another question which we have not at this time taken
in hand to clear; but setting jokes apart, the first point to be attended to,
is, that a person should not be thought to lie, who lieth not.
3. For which purpose we must see what a lie is. For not every one who says
a false thing lies, if he believes or opines that to be true which he says.
Now between believing and opining there is this difference, that sometimes he who
believes feels that he does not know that which he believes, (although he may
know himself to be ignorant of a thing, and yet have no doubt at all concerning
it, if he most firmly believes it:) whereas he who opines, thinks he knows
that which he does not know. Now whoever utters that which he holds in his mind
either as belief or as opinion, even though it be false, he lies not. For this he
owes to the faith of his utterance, that he thereby produce that which he
holds in his mind, and has in that way in which he produces it. Not that he is
without fault, although he lie not, if either he believes what he ought not to
believe, or thinks he knows what he knows not, even though it should be true: for
he accounts an unknown thing for a known. Wherefore, that man lies, who has one
thing in his mind and utters another in words, or by signs of whatever kind.
Whence also the heart of him who lies is said to be double; that is, there is a
double thought: the one, of that thing which he either knows or thinks to be
true and does not produce; the other, of that thing which he produces instead
thereof, knowing or thinking it to be false. Whence it comes to pass, that he may
say a false thing and yet not lie, if he thinks it to be so as he says although
it be not so; and, that he may say a true thing, and yet lie, if he thinks it
to be false and utters it for true, although in reality it be so as he utters
it. For from the sense of his own mind, not from the verity or falsity of the
things themselves, is he to be judged to lie or not to lie. Therefore he who
utters a false thing for a true, which however he opines to be true, may be called
erring and rash: but he is not rightly said to lie; because he has not a double
heart when he utters it, neither does he wish to deceive, but is deceived. But
the fault of him who lies, is, the desire of deceiving in the uttering of his
mind; whether he do deceive, in that he is believed when uttering the false
thing; or whether he do not deceive, either in that he is not believed, or in that
he utters a true thing with will to deceive, which he does not think to be
true: wherein being believed, he does not deceive though it was his will to
deceive: except that he deceives in so far as he is thought to know or think as he
utters.
4. But it may be a very nice question whether in the absence of all will
to deceive, lying is altogether absent. Thus, put the case that a person shall
speak a false thing, which he esteems to be false, on the ground that he thinks
he is not believed, to the intent, that in that way falsifying his faith he may
deter the person to whom he speaks, which person he perceives does not choose
to believe him. For here is a person who tells a lie with studied purpose of
not deceiving, if to tell a lie is to utter any thing otherwise than yon know or
think it to be. But if it be no lie, unless when something is uttered with wish
to deceive, that person lies not, who says a false thing, knowing or thinking
it to be false, but says it on purpose that the person to whom he speaks by not
believing him may not be deceived, because the speaker either knows or thinks
the other will not believe him. Whence if it appear to be possible that a
person should say a false thing on purpose that he to whom it is said may not be
deceived, on the other hand there is this opposite case, the case of a person
saying the truth on purpose that he may deceive. For if a man determines to say a
true thing because he perceives he is not believed, that man speaks truth on
purpose that he may deceive: for he knows or thinks that what is said may be
accounted false, just because it is spoken by him. Wherefore in saying a true thing
on purpose that it may be thought false, he says a true thing on purpose to
deceive. So that it may be inquired, which rather lies: he who says a false thing
that he may not deceive, or he who says a true thing that he may deceive? the
one knowing or thinking that he says a false thing, and the other knowing or
thinking that he says a true thing? For we have already said that the person who
does not know the thing to he false which he utters, does not lie if he thinks
it to be true; and that that person rather lies who utters even a true thing
when he thinks it false: because it is by the sense of their mind that they are to
be judged. Concerning these persons therefore, whom we have set forth, there
is no small question. The one, who knows or thinks he says a false thing, and
says it on purpose that he may not deceive: as, if he knows a certain road to be
beset by robbers, and fearing lest some person for whose safety he is anxious
should go by that road, which person he knows does not trust him, should tell
him that that road has no robbers, on purpose that he may not go by it, as he
will think there are robbers there precisely because the other has told him there
are none, and he is resolved not to believe him, accounting him a liar. The
other, who knowing or thinking that to be true which he says, says it on purpose
that he may deceive: for instance, if he tells a person who does not believe
him, that there are robbers in that road where he really knows them to be, that he
to whom he tells it may the rather go by that road and so fall among robbers,
because he thinks that to be false, which the other told him. Which then of
these lies? the one who has chosen to say a false thing that he may not deceive?
or the other who has chosen to say a true thing that he may deceive? that
one, who in saying a false thing aimed that he to whom he spake should follow the
truth? or this one, who in saying a true thing aimed that he to whom he spake
should follow a falsehood? Or haply have both lied? the one, because he wished
to say a false thing: the other, because he wished to deceive? Or rather, has
neither lied? not the one, because he had the will not to deceive: not the
other, because he had the will to speak the truth? For the question is not now
which of them sinned, but which of them lied: as indeed it is presently seen that
the latter sinned, because by speaking a truth he brought it about that a person
should fall among robbers, and that the former has not sinned, or even has
done good, because by speaking a false thing he has been the means of a person's
avoiding destruction. But then these instances may be turned the other way, so
that the one should be supposed to wish some more grievous suffering to the
person whom he wishes not to be deceived; for there are many cases of persons who
through knowing certain things to be true, have brought destruction upon
themselves, if the things were such as ought to have continued unknown to them: and
the other may be supposed to wish some convenience to result to the person whom
he wishes to be deceived; for there have been instances of persons who would
have destroyed themselves had they known some evil that had really befallen those
who were dear to them, and through deeming it false have spared themselves: and
so to be deceived has been a benefit to them, as to others it has been a hurt
to know the truth. The question therefore is not with what purpose of doing a
kindness or a hurt, either the one said a false thing that he might not deceive,
or the other a true thing that he might deceive: but, setting apart the
convenience or inconvenience of the persons spoken to, in so far as relates to the
very truth and falsehood, the question is, whether both of them or neither has
lied. For if a lie is an utterance with will of uttering a false thing, that man
has rather lied who willed to say a false thing, and said what he willed,
albeit he said it of set purpose not to deceive. But if a lie is any utterance
whatever with will to deceive; then not the former has lied, but the latter, who
even in speaking truth willed to deceive. And if a lie is an utterance with will
of any falsity, both have lied; because both the former willed his utterance to
be false, and tire latter willed a false thing to be believed concerning his
utterance which was true. Further, if a lie is an utterance of a person. wishing
to utter a false thing that he may deceive, neither has lied; because both the
former in saving a false thing had the will to make a true thing believed, and
the latter to say a true thing in order that he might make a false thing
believed. We shall be clear then of all rashness and all lying, if, what we know to
be true or right to be believed, we utter when need is, and wish to make that
thing believed which we utter. If, however, either thinking that to be true which
is false, or accounting as known that which is to us unknown, or believing
what we ought not to believe, or uttering it when need is not, we yet have no
other aim than to make that believed which we utter; we do not stand clear indeed
of the error of temerity, but we do stand clear of all lying. For there is no
need to be afraid of any of those definitions, when the mind has a good
conscience, that it utters that which to be true it either knows, or opines, or
believes, and that it has no wish to make any thing believed but that which it utters.
5. But whether a lié be at some times useful, is a much greater and more
concerning question. Whether, as above, it be a lie, when a person has no will
to deceive, or even makes it his business that the person to whom he says a
thing shall not be deceived although he did wish the thing itself which he uttered
to be false, but this on purpose that he might cause a truth to be believed
whether, again, it be a lie when a person willingly utters even a truth for the
purpose of deceiving; this may be doubted. But none doubts that it is a lie when
a person willingly utters a falsehood for the purpose of deceiving: wherefore a
false utterance put forth with will to deceive is manifestly a lie. But
whether this alone be a lie, is another question. Meanwhile, taking this kind of lie,
in which all agree, let us inquire, whether it be sometimes useful to utter a
falsehood with will to deceive. They who think it is, advance testimonies to
their opinion, by alleging the case of Sarah,(1) who, when she had laughed,
denied to the Angels that she laughed: of Jacob questioned by his father, and
answering that he was the elder son Esau:(2) likewise that of the Egyptian midwives,
who to save the Hebrew infants from being slain at their birth, told a lie, and
that with God's approbation and reward:(3) and many such like instances they
pick out, of lies told by persons whom you would not dare to blame, and so must
own that it may sometimes be not only not blameworthy, but even praiseworthy to
tell a lie. They add also a case with which to urge not only those who are
devoted to the Divine Books, but all men and common sense, saying, Suppose a man
should take refuge with thee, who by thy lie might be saved from death, wouldest
thou not tell it? If a sick man should ask a question which it is not
expedient that he should know, and might be more grievously afflicted even by thy
returning him no answer, wilt thou venture either to tell the truth to the
destruction of the man's life, or rather to hold thy peace, than by a virtuous and
merciful lie to be serviceable to his weak health? By these and such like arguments
they think they most plentifully prove, that if occasion of doing good require,
we may sometimes tell a lie.
6. On the other hand, those who say that we must never lie, plead much
more strongly, using first the Divine authority, because in the very Decalogue it
is written "Thou shall not bear false witness;"(4) under which general term it
comprises all lying: for whoso utters any thing bears witness to his own mind.
But lest any should contend that not every lie is to be called false witness,
what will he say to that which is written, "The mouth that lieth slayeth the
soul:"(5) and lest any should suppose that this may be understood with the
exception of some liars, let him read in another place, "Thou wilt destroy all that
speak leasing."(6) Whence with His own lips the Lord saith, "Let your
communication be yea, yea; nay, nay; for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil."(7)
Hence the Apostle also in giving precept for the putting off of the old man,
under which name all sins are understood, says straightway, "Wherefore putting
away lying, speak ye truth."(8)
7. Neither do they confess that they are awed by those citations from the
Old Testament which are alleged as examples of lies: for there, every incident
may possibly be taken figuratively, although it really did take place: and when
a thing is either done or said figuratively, it is no lie. For every utterance
is to be referred to that which it utters. But when any thing is either done
or said figuratively, it utters that which it signifies to those for whose
understanding it was put forth. Whence we may believe in regard of those persons of
the prophetical times who are set forth as authoritative, that in all that is
written of them they acted and spoke prophetically; and no less, that there is a
prophetical meaning in all those incidents of their lives which by the same
prophetic Spirit have been accounted worthy of being recorded in writing. As to
the midwives, indeed, they cannot say that these women did through the prophetic
Spirit, with purpose of signifying a future truth, tell Pharaoh one thing
instead of another, (albeit that Spirit did signify something, without their
knowing what was doing in their persons:) but, they say that these women were
according to their degree approved and rewarded of God. For if a person who is used to
tell lies for harm's sake comes to tell them for the sake of doing good, that
person has made great progress. But it is one thing that is set forth as
laudable in itself, another that in comparison with a worse is preferred. It is one
sort of gratulation that we express when a man is in sound health, another when
a sick man is getting better. In the Scripture, even Sodom is said to be
justified in comparison with the crimes of the people Israel. And to this rule they
apply all the instances of lying which are produced from the Old Books, and are
found not reprehended, or cannot be reprehended: either they are approved on
the score of a progress towards improvement and hope of better things, or in
virtue of some hidden signification they are not altogether lies.
8. For this reason, from the books of the New Testament, except the
figurative pre-significations used by our Lord, if thou consider the life and manners
of the Saints, their actions and sayings, nothing of the kind can be produced
which should provoke to imitation of lying. For the simulation of Peter and
Barnabas is not only recorded, but also reproved and corrected.(1) For it was not,
as some suppose,(2) out of the same simulation that even Paul the Apostle
either circumcised Timothy, or himself celebrated certain ceremonies(3) according
to the Jewish rite; but he did so, out of that liberty of his mind whereby he
preached that neither are the Gentiles the better for circumcision, nor the Jews
the worse. Wherefore he judged that neither the former should be tied to the
custom of the Jews, nor the Jews deterred from the custom of their fathers.
Whence are those words of his: "Is any man called being circumcised let him not
become uncircumcised. Is any called in uncircumcision? let him not be circumcised.
Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the
commandments of God. Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he was
called."(4) How can a man become uncircumcised after circumcision? but let him not
do so, saith he: let him not so live as if he had become uncircumcised, that
is, as if he had covered again with flesh the part that was bared, and ceased to
be a Jew; as in another place he saith, "Thy circumcision is become
uncircumcision."(5) And this the Apostle said, not as though he would compel either those
to remain in uncircumcision, or the Jews in the custom of their fathers: but
that neither these nor those should be forced to the other custom; and, each
should have power of abiding in his own custom, not necessity of so doing. For
neither if the Jew should wish, where it would disturb no man, to recede from
Jewish observances, would he be prohibited by the Apostle, since the object of his
counselling to abide therein was that Jews might not by being troubled about
superfluous things be hindered from coming to those things which are necessary to
salvation. Neither would it be prohibited by him, if any of the Gentiles
should wish to be circumcised for the purpose of showing that he does not detest the
same as noxious, but holds it indifferently, as a seal,(6) the usefulness of
which had already passed away with time; for it did not follow that, if there
were now no salvation to be had from it, there was destruction to be dreaded
therefrom. And for this reason, Timothy, having been called in uncircumcision, yet
because his mother was a Jewess and he was bound, in order to gain his kindred,
to show them that he had not learnt in the Christian discipline to abominate
the sacraments of the old Law, was circumcised by the Apostle;(7) that in this
way i they might prove to the Jews, that the reason why the Gentiles do not
receive them, is not that they are evil and were perniciously observed by the
Fathers, but because they are no longer necessary to salvation after the advent of
that so great Sacrament. which through so long times the whole of that ancient
Scripture in its prophetical prefigurations did travail in birth withal. For he
would circumcise Titus also, when the Jews urged this,(8) but that false
brethren, privily brought in, wished it to be done to the intent they might have it
to disseminate concerning Paul himself as a token that he had given place to
the truth of their preaching, who said that the hope of Gospel salvation is in
circumcision of the flesh and observances of that kind, and that without these
Christ profiteth no man: whereas on the contrary Christ would nothing profit
them, who should be circumcised because they thought that in it was salvation;
whence that saying, "Behold, I Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ
shall profit you nothing.(9) Out of this liberty, therefore, did Paul keep the
observances of his fathers, but with this one precaution and express
declaration, that people should not suppose that without these was no Christian
salvation. Peter, however, by his making as though salvation consisted in Judaism, was
compelling the Gentiles to judaize; as is shown by Paul's words, where he says,
"Why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?(10) For they would
be under no compulsion unless they saw that he observed them in such manner as
if beside them could be no salvation. Peter's simulation therefore is not to be
compared to Paul's liberty. And while we ought to love Peter for that he
willingly received correction, we must not bolster up lying even by the authority of
Paul, who both recalled Peter to the right path in the presence of them all,
lest the Gentiles through him should be compelled to judaize; and bare witness to
his own preaching, that whereas he was accounted hostile to the traditions of
the fathers in that he would not impose them on the Gentiles, he did not
despise to celebrate them himself according to the custom of his fathers, and therein
sufficiently showed that this has remained in them at the Coming of Christ;
that neither to the Jews they are pernicious, nor to the Gentiles necessary, nor
henceforth to any of mankind means of salvation.(1)
9. But if no authority for lying can be alleged, neither from the ancient
Books, be it because that is not a lie which is received to have been done or
said in a figurative sense, or be it because good men are not challenged to
imitate that which in bad men, beginning to amend, is praised in comparison with
the worse; nor yet from the books of the New Testament, because Peter's
correction rather than his simulation, even as his tears rather than his denial, is what
we must imitate: then, as to those examples which are fetched from common
life, they assert much more confidently that there is no trust to be given to
these. For first they teach, that a lie is iniquity, by many proofs of holy writ,
especially by that which is written, "Thou, Lord, hatest all workers of iniquity,
thou shall destroy them that speak leasing."(2) For either as the Scripture
is wont, in the following clause it expounds the former; so that, as iniquity is
a term of a wider meaning, leasing is named as the particular sort of iniquity
intended: or if they think there is any difference between the two, leasing is
by so much worse than iniquity as "thou wilt destroy" is heavier than "thou
hatest." For it may be that God hates a person to that degree more mildly, as not
to destroy him, but whom He destroys He hates the more exceedingly, by how
much He punisheth more severely. Now He hateth all who work iniquity: but all who
speak leasing He also destroyeth. Which thing being fixed, who of them which
assert this will be moved by those examples, when it is said, suppose a man
should seek shelter with thee who by thy lie may be saved from death? For that death
which men are foolishly afraid of who are not afraid to sin, kills not the
soul but the body, as the Lord teacheth in the Gospel; whence He charges us not to
fear that death:(3) but the mouth which lies kills not the body but the soul.
For in these words it is most plainly written, "The mouth that lieth slayeth
the soul."(4) How then can it be said without the greatest perverseness, that to
the end one man may have life of the body, it is another man's duty to incur
death of the soul? The love of our neighbor hath its bounds in each man's love of
himself. "Thou shall love," saith He, "thy neighbor as thyself."(5) How can a
man be said to love as himself that man, for whom that he may secure a temporal
life, himself loseth life eternal? Since if for his temporal life he lose but
his own temporal life, that is not to love as himself, but more than himself:
which exceeds the rule of sound doctrine. Much less then is he by telling a lie
to lose his own eternal for another's temporal life. His own temporal life, of
course, for his neighbor's eternal life a Christian man will not hesitate to
lose: for this example has gone before, that the Lord died for us. To this point
He also saith, "This is my commandment, that ye love one another as I have
loved you. Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends."(6) For none is so foolish as to say that the Lord did other than
consult for the eternal salvation of men, whether in doing what He hath charged us
to do, or in charging us to do what Himself hath done. Since then by lying
eternal life is lost, never for any man's temporal life must a lie be told. And as
to those who take it ill and are indignant that one should refuse to tell a
lie, and thereby slay his own soul in order that another may grow old in the
flesh; what if by our committing theft, what if by committing adultery, a person
might be delivered from death: are we therefore to steal, to commit whoredom?
They cannot prevail with themselves in a case of this kind: namely, if a person
should bring a halter and demand that one should yield to his carnal lust,
declaring that he will hang himself unless his request be granted: they cannot
prevail with themselves to comply for the sake of, as they say, saving a life. If
this is absurd and wicked, why should a man corrupt his own soul with a lie in
order that another may live in the body, when, if he were to give his body to be
corrupted with such an object, he would in the judgment of all men be held
guilty of nefarious turpitude? Therefore the only point to be attended to in this
question is, whether a lie be iniquity. And since this is asserted by the texts
above rehearsed, we must see that to ask, whether a man ought to tell a lie for
the safety of another, is just the same as asking whether for another's safety
a man ought to commit iniquity. But if the salvation of the soul rejects this,
seeing it cannot be secured but by equity, and would have us prefer it not only
to another's, but even to our own temporal safety: what remains, say they,
that should make us doubt that a lie ought not to be told under any circumstances
whatsoever? For it cannot be said that there is aught among temporal goods
greater or dearer than the safety and life of the body. Wherefore if not even that
is to be preferred to truth, what can be put in our way for the sake of which
they who think it is sometimes right to lie, can urge that a lie ought to be
told?
10. As concerning purity of body; here indeed a very honorable regard
seems to come in the way, and to demand a lie in its behalf; to wit, that if the
assault of the ravisher may be escaped by means of a lie, it is indubitably right
to tell it: but to this it may easily be answered, that there is no purity of
body except as it depends on integrity of mind; this being broken, the other
must needs fall, even though it seem intact; and for this reason it is not to be
reckoned among temporal things, as a thing that might be taken away from people
against their will. By no means therefore must the mind corrupt itself by a
lie for the sake of its body, which it knows remaineth incorrupt if from the mind
itself incorruptness depart not. For that which by violence, with no lust
foregoing, the body suffereth, is rather to be called deforcement than corruption.
Or if all deforcement is corruption, then not every corruption hath turpitude,
but only that which lust hath procured, or to which lust hath consented. Now by
how much the mind is more excellent than the body, so much the more heinous is
the wickedness if that be corrupted. There, then, purity can be preserved,
because there none but a voluntary corruption can have place. For assuredly if the
ravisher assault the body, and there is no escaping him either by contrary
force, or by any contrivance or lie, we must needs allow that purity cannot be
violated by another's lust. Wherefore, since no man doubts that the mind is better
than the body, to integrity of body we ought to prefer integrity of mind,
which can be preserved for ever. Now who will say that the mind of him who tells a
lie hath its integrity? Indeed lust itself is rightly defined, An appetite of
the mind by which to eternal goods any temporal goods whatever are preferred.
Therefore no man can prove that it is at any time right to tell a lie, unless he
be able to show that any eternal good can be obtained by a lie. But since each
man departs from eternity just in so far as he departs from truth, it is most
absurd to say, that by departing therefrom it is possible for any man to attain
to any good. Else if there be any eternal good which truth compriseth not, it
will not be a true good, therefore neither will it be good, because it will be
false. But as the mind to the body, so must also truth be preferred to the mind
itself, so that the mind should desire it not only more than the body, but even
more than its own self. So will the mind be more entire and chaste, when it
shall enjoy the immutability of truth rather than its own mutability. Now if
Lot,(1) being so righteous a man that he was meet(2) to entertain even Angels,
offered his daughters to the lust of the Sodomites, to the intent, that the bodies
of women rather than of men might be corrupted by them; how much more
diligently and constantly ought the mind's chasteness in the truth to be preserved,
seeing it is more truly preferable to its body, than the body of a man to the body
of a woman?
11. But if any man supposes that the reason why it is right for a person
to tell a lie for another is, that he may live the while, or not be offended in
those things which he much loveth, to the end he may attain unto eternal truth
by being taught: that man doth not understand, in the first place, that there
is no flagitious thing which be may not upon the same ground be compelled to
commit, as has been above demonstrated; and in the next place, that the authority
of the doctrine itself is cut off and altogether undone if those whom we essay
to bring thereunto, are by our lie made to think that it is somewhiles right to
lie. For seeing the doctrine which bringeth salvation consisteth partly in
things to be believed, partly in things to be understood; and there is no
attaining unto those things which are to be understood, unless first those things are
believed, which are to be believed; how can there be any believing one who
thinks it is sometimes right to lie, lest haply be lie at the moment when he
teacheth us to believe? For how can it be known whether he have at that moment some
cause, as he thinks, for a well-meant(3) lie, deeming that by a false story a
man may be frightened and kept from lust, and in this way account that by telling
a lie he is doing good even in spiritual things? Which kind of lie once
admitted and approved, all discipline of faith is subverted altogether; and this
being subverted, neither is there any attaining to understanding, for the receiving
of which that discipline nurtureth the babes: and so all the doctrine of truth
is done away, giving place to most licentious falsehood, if a lie, even
well-meant, may from any quarter have place opened for it to enter in. For either
whoso tells a lie prefers temporal advantages, his own or another's, to: truth;
than which what can be more perverse? or when by aid of a lie he wishes to make a
person fit for gaining the truth, he bars the approach to truth, for by
wishing when he lies to be accommodating,(1) it comes to pass that when he speaks the
truth, he cannot be depended upon. Wherefore, either we must not believe good
men, or we must believe those whom we think obliged sometimes to tell a lie, or
we must not believe that good men sometimes tell lies: of these three the
first is pernicious, the second foolish; it remains therefore that good men should
never tell lies.
12. Thus has the question been on both sides considered and treated; and
still it is not easy to pass sentence: but we must further lend diligent hearing
to those who say, that no deed is so evil, but that in avoidance of a worse it
ought to be done; moreover that the deeds of men include not only what they
do, but whatever they consent to be done unto them. Wherefore, if cause have
arisen that a Christian man should choose to burn incense to idols, that he might
not consent to bodily defilement which the persecutor threatened him withal,
unless he should do so, they think they have a right to ask why he should not also
tell a lie to escape so foul a disgrace. For the consent itself to endure
violation of the person rather than to burn incense to idols, this, they say, is
not a passive thing, but a deed; which rather than do, he chose to burn incense.
How much more readily then would he have chosen a lie, if by a lie he might
ward off from a holy body so shocking a disgrace?
13. In which proposition these points may well deserve to be questioned:
whether such consent is to be accounted as a deed: or whether that is to be
called consent which hath not approbation: or whether it be approbation, when it is
said, "It is expedient to suffer this rather than do that;" and whether the
person spoken of did right to burn incense rather than suffer violation of his
body; and whether it would be right rather to tell a lie, if that was the
alternative proposed, than to burn incense? But if such consent is to be accounted as
a deed, then are they murderers who have chosen rather to be put to death than
bear false witness, yea, what is worse, they are murderers of themselves. For
why, at this rate, should it not be said that they have slain themselves,
because they chose that this should be done to them that they might not do what they
were urged to do? Or, if it be accounted a worse thing to slay another than
himself, what if these terms were offered to a Martyr, that, upon his refusing to
bear false witness of Christ and to sacrifice to demons, then, before his eyes,
not some other man, but his own father should be put to death; his father
entreating him that he would not by his persevering permit that to be done? Is it
not manifest, that, upon his remaining steadfast in his purpose of most faithful
testimony, they alone would be the murderers who should slay his father, and
not he a parricide into the bargain? As therefore, in this case, the man would
be no party to this so heinous deed, for choosing, rather than violate his faith
by false testimony, that his own father should be put to death by others,
(yea, though that father were a sacrilegious person whose soul would be snatched
away to punishment;) so the like consent, in the former case, would not make him
a party to that so foul disgrace, if he refused to do evil himself, let others
do what they might in consequence of his not doing it. For what do such
persecutors say, but, "Do evil that we may not?" If the case were so, that our doing
evil would make them not to have done it, even then it would not be our duty by
doing wickedness ourselves to vote them harmless; but as in fact they are
already doing it when they say nothing of the kind,(2) why are they to have us to
keep them company in wickedness rather than be vile and noisome by themselves?
For that is not to be called consent; seeing that we do not approve what they do,
always wishing that they would not, and, as much as in us lies, hindering them
that they should not do it, and, when it is done, not only not committing it
with them, but with all possible detestation condemning the same.
14. "How," sayest thou, "is it not his doing as well as theirs, when they
would not do this, if he would do that?" Why, at this rate we go housebreaking
with house-breakers, because if we did not shut the door, they would not break
it open: and we go and murder with highwaymen, if it chance we know that they
are going to do it, because if we killed them out of hand, they would not kill
others. Or, if a person confess to us that he is going to commit a parricide, we
commit it along with him, if, being able, we do not slay him before he can do
the deed when we cannot in some other way prevent or thwart him. For it may be
said, word for word as before, "Thou hast done it as well as he; for he had not
done this, hadst thou done that." With my good will, neither ill should be
done; but only the one was in my power, and I could take care that this should not
be done; the other rested with another, and when by my good advice I could not
quench the purpose, I was not bound by my evil deed to thwart the doing. It is
therefore no approving of a sinner, that one refuses to sin for him; and
neither the one nor the other is liked by him who would that neither were done; but
in that which pertains to him, he hath the power to do it or not, and with that
he perpetrateth it not; in that which pertains to another, he hath only the
will to wish it or not, and with that he condemneth. And therefore, on their
offering those terms, and saying, "If thou burn not incense, this shalt thou
suffer;" if he should answer, "For me, I choose neither, I detest both, I consent
unto you in none of these things:" in uttering these and the like words, which
certainly, because they would be true, would afford them no consent no approbation
of his, let him suffer at their hands what he might, to his account would be
set down the receipt of wrongs, to theirs the commission of sins. "Ought he
then," it may be asked, "to suffer his person to be violated rather than burn
incense?" If the question be what he ought, he ought to do neither. For should I say
that he ought to do any of these things, I shall approve this or that, whereas
I reprobate both. But if the question be, which of these he ought in
preference to avoid, not being able to avoid both but able to avoid one or other: I will
answer, "His own sin, rather than another's; and rather a lighter sin being
his own, than a heavier being another's." For, reserving the point for more
diligent inquiry, and granting in the mean while that violation of the person is
worse than burning incense, yet the latter is his own, the former another's deed,
although he had it done to him; now, whose the deed, his the sin. For though
murder is a greater sin than stealing, yet it is worse to steal than to suffer
murder. Therefore, if it were proposed to any man that, if he would not steal he
should be killed, that is, murder should be committed upon him; being he could
not avoid both, he would prefer to avoid that which would be his own sin,
rather than that which would be another's. Nor would the latter become his act for
being committed upon him, and because he might avoid it if he would commit a sin
of his own.
15. The whole stress, then, of this question comes to this; whether it be
true universally that no sin of another, committed upon thee, is to be imputed
to thee, if, being able to avoid it by a lighter sin. of thine own, thou do it
not; or whether there be an exception of all bodily defilement. No man says
that a person is defiled by being murdered, or cast into prison, or bound in
chains, or scourged, or afflicted with other tortures and pains, or proscribed and
made to suffer most grievous losses even to utter nakedness, or stripped of
honors, and subjected to great disgrace by reproaches of whatsoever kind; whatever
of all these a man may have unjustly suffered, no man is so senseless as to say
that he is thereby defiled. But if he have filth poured all over him, or
poured into his mouth, or crammed into him, or if he be carnally used like a woman;
then almost all men regard him with a feeling of horror, and they call him
defiled and unclean. One must conclude then that the sins of others, be they what
they may, those always excepted which defile him on whom they are committed, a
man must not seek to avoid by sin of his own, either for himself or for any
other, but rather he must put up with them, and suffer bravely; and if by no sins
of his own he ought to avoid them, therefore not by a lie: but those which by
being committed upon a man do make him unclean, these we are bound to avoid
even by sinning ourselves; and for this reason those things are not to be called
sins, which are done for the purpose of avoiding that uncleanness. For whatever
is done, in consideration that the not doing it were just cause of blame, that
thing is not sin. Upon the same principle, neither is that to be called
uncleanness when there is no way of avoiding it; for even in that extremity he who
suffers it has what he may do aright, namely, patiently bear what he cannot avoid.
Now no man while acting aright can be defiled by any corporal contagion. For
the unclean in the sight of God is every one who is unrighteous; clean therefore
is every one who is righteous; if not in the sight of men, yet in the sight of
God, Who judges without error. Nay, even in the act of suffering that
defilement with power given of avoiding it, it is not by the mere contact that the man
is defiled; but by the sin of refusing to avoid it when he might. For that
would be no sin, whatever might be done for the avoiding of it. Whoever therefore,
for the avoiding of it, shall tell a lie, sinneth not.
16. Or, are some lies, also, to be excepted, so that it were better to
suffer this than to commit those? If so, then not every thing that is done in
order to the avoiding of that defilement ceases to be sin; seeing there are some
lies to commit which is worse than to suffer that foul violence. For, suppose
quest be making after a person that his body may be deflowered, and that it be
possible to screen him by a lie; who dares to say that even in such a case a lie
ought not be told? But, if the lie by which he may be concealed be one which may
hurt the fair fame of another, by bringing upon him a false accusation of that
very uncleanness, to suffer which the other is sought after; as, if it should
be said to the inquirer, "Go to such an one," (naming some chaste man who is a
stranger to vices of this kind,) "and he will procure for you one whom you will
find a more willing subject, for he knows and loves such;" and thereby the
person might be diverted from him whom he sought: I know not whether one man's
fair fame ought to be violated by a lie, in order that another's body may not be
violated by lust to which he is a stranger. And in general, it is never right to
tell a lie for any man, such as may hurt another, even if the hurt be slighter
than would be the hurt to him unless such a lie were told. Because neither
must another man's bread be taken from him against his will, though he be in good
health, and it is to feed one who is weak; nor must an innocent man, against
his will, be beaten with rods, that another may not be killed. Of course, if they
are willing, let it be done, because they are not hurt if they be willing that
so it should be: but whether, even with his own consent, a man's fair fame
ought to be hurt with a false charge of foul lusts, in order that lust may be
averted from another's body, is a great question. And I know not whether it be easy
to find in what way it can be just that a man's fair fame, even with his
consent, should be stained with a false charge of lust, any more than a man's body
should be polluted by the lust itself against his will.
17. But yet if the option were proposed to the man who chose to burn
incense to idols rather than yield his body to abominable lust, that, if he wished
to avoid that, he should violate the fame of Christ by some lie; he would be
most mad to do it. I say more: that he would be mad, if, to avoid another man's
lust, and not to have that done upon his person which he would suffer with no
lust of his own, he should falsify Christ's Gospel with false praises of Christ;
more eschewing that another man should corrupt his body, than himself to corrupt
the doctrine of sanctification of souls and bodies. Wherefore, from the
doctrine of religion, and from those utterances universally, which are uttered on
behalf of the doctrine of religion, in the teaching and learning of the same, all
lies must be utterly kept aloof. Nor can any cause whatever be found, one
should think, why a lie should be told in matters of this kind, when in this
doctrine it is not right to tell a lie for the very purpose of bringing a person to it
the more easily. For, once break or but slightly diminish the authority of
truth, and all things will remain doubtful: which unless they be believed true,
cannot be held as certain. It is lawful then either to him that discourses,
disputes, and preaches of things eternal, or to him that narrates or speaks of
things temporal pertaining to edification of religion and piety, to conceal at
fitting time whatever seems fit to be concealed: but to tell a lie is never lawful,
therefore neither to conceal by telling a lie.
18. This being from the very first and most firmly established, touching
other lies the question proceeds more securely. But by consequence we must also
see that all lies must be kept aloof which hurt any man unjustly: because no
man is to have a wrong, albeit a lighter one is done to him, that another may
have a heavier kept from him. Nor are those lies to be allowed, which, though they
hurt not another, yet do nobody any good, and are hurtful to the persons
themselves who gratuitously tell them. Indeed, these are the persons who are
properly to be called liars. For there is a difference between lying and being a liar.
A man may tell a lie unwillingly; but a liar loves to lie, and inhabits in his
mind in the delight of lying. Next to such are those to be placed who by a lie
wish to please men, not that they may do Wrong or bring reproach upon any man;
for we have already before put away that kind; but that they may be pleasant
in conversation. These, differ from the class in which we have placed liars in
this respect, that liars delight in lying, rejoicing in deceit for its own sake:
but these lust to please by agreeable talk, and yet would rather please by
saying things that were true, but when they do not easily find true things to say
that are pleasant to the hearers, they choose rather to tell lies than to hold
their tongues. Yet it is difficult for these sometimes to undertake a story
which is the whole of it false; but most commonly they interweave falsehood with
truth, where they are at a loss for something sweet. Now these two sorts of lies
do no harm to those who believe them, because they are not deceived concerning
any matter of religion and truth, or concerning any profit or advantage of
their own. It suffices them, to judge the thing possible which is told, and to
have faith in a man of whom they ought not rashly to think that he is telling a
lie. For where is the harm of believing that such an one's father or grandfather
was a good man, when he was not? or that he has served with the army even in
Persia, though he never set foot out of Rome? But to the persons who tell these
lies, they do much harm: to the former sort, because they so desert truth as to
rejoice in deceit: to the latter, because they want to please people better
than the truth.
19. These sorts of lies having been without any hesitation condemned, next
follows a sort, as it were by steps rising to something better, which is
commonly attributed to well-meaning and good people, when the person who lies not
only does no harm to another, but even benefits somebody. Now it is on this sort
of lies that the whole dispute turns, whether that person does harm to himself,
who benefits another in such sort as to act contrary to the truth. Or, if that
alone may be called truth which illustrateth the very minds of men with an
intimate and incommutable light, at least he acts contrary to some true thing,
because although the bodily senses are deceived, yet he acts contrary to a true
thing who says that a thing is so or not so, whereof neither his mind nor senses
nor his opinion or belief giveth him any report. Whether therefore he does not
hurt himself in so profiting another, or in that compensation not hurt himself
in which he profiteth the other, is a great question. If it be so, it should
follow that he ought to profit himself by a lie which damages no man. But these
things hang together, and if you concede that point, it necessarily draws in its
train some very embarrassing consequences. For should it be asked, what harm
it does to a person rolling in superfluous wealth, if from countless thousands
of bushels of wheat he lose one bushel, which bushel may be profitable as
necessary food to the person stealing it; it will follow that theft also may be
committed without blame, and false witness borne without sin. Than which, what can
be mentioned more perverse? Or truly, if another had stolen the bushel, and thou
sawest it done, and wert questioned, wouldest thou tell a lie with honesty for
the poor man, and if thou do it for thine own poverty wilt thou be blamed? As
if it were thy duty to love another more than thyself. Both then are
disgraceful, and must be avoided.
20. But haply some may think that there is an exception to be added; that
there be some honest lies which not only hurt no man, but profit some man,
excepting those by which crimes are screened and defended: so that the reason why
the aforesaid lie is disgraceful, is that, although it hurt no man, and profit
the poor, it screens a theft; but if it should in such sort hurt nobody and
profit somebody as not to screen and defend any sin, it would not be morally wrong.
As, put the case that some one should in thy sight hide his money that
he/night not lose it by theft or violence, and thereupon being questioned thou
shouldest tell a tie; thou wouldest hurt no man, and wouldest serve him who had need
that his money were hidden, and wouldest not have covered a sin by telling a
lie. For it is no sin if a man hide his property which he fears to lose. But, if
we therefore sin not in telling a lie, for that, while covering no man's sin, we
hurt nobody and do good to somebody, what are we about as concerning the sin
itself of a lie? For where it is laid down, "Thou shalt not steal," there is
also this, "Thou shall not bear false witness."(1) Since then each is severally
prohibited, why is false witness culpable if it cover a theft or any other sin,
but if without any screening of sin it be done by itself, then not culpable,
whereas stealing is culpable in and by itself, and so other sins? Or is it so that
to hide a sin is not lawful; to do it, lawful?
21. If this be absurd, what shall we say? Is it so, that there is no
"false witness," but when one tells a lie either to invent a crime against some man,
or to hide some man's crime, or in any way to oppress any man in judgment? For
a witness seems to be necessary to the judge for cognizance of the cause. But
if the Scripture named a "witness" only so far as that goes, the Apostle would
not say, "Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God; because we have
testified of God that He raised up Christ: whom He raised not up."(2) For so he shows
that it is false witness to tell a lie, yea, in falsely praising a person.
Or peradventure, doth the person who lies then utter false witness when he
either invents or hides any man's sin, or hurts any man in whatever way? For,
if a lie spoken against a man's temporal life is detestable, how much more one
against eternal life? as is every lie, if it take place in doctrine of
religion. And it is for this reason that the Apostle calls it false witness, if a man
tell a lie about Christ, yea, one which may seem to pertain to His praise. Now
if it be a lie that neither inventeth or hideth any man's sin, nor is answered
to a question of the judge, and hurteth no man, and profits some man, are we to
say that it is neither false witness, nor a reprehensible lie?
22. What then, if a homicide seek refuge with a Christian, or if he see
where the homicide have taken refuge, and be questioned of this matter by him who
seeks, in order to bring to punishment a man, the slayer of man? Is he to tell
a lie? For how does he not hide a sin by lying, when he for whom he lies has
been guilty of a heinous sin? Or is it because he is not questioned concerning
his sin, but about the place where he is concealed? So then to lie in order to
hide a person's sin is evil; but to lie in order to hide the sinner is not evil?
"Yea, surely:" says some one: "for a man sins not in avoiding punishment, but
in doing something worthy of punishment. Moreover, it pertaineth to Christian
discipline neither to despair of any man's amendment, nor to bar against any man
the way of repentance." What if thou be led to the judge, and then questioned
concerning the very place where the other is in hiding? Art thou prepared to
say, either, "He is not there," when thou knowest him to be there; or, "I know
not, and have not seen," what thou knowest and hast seen? Art thou then prepared
to bear false witness, and to slay thy soul that a manslayer may not be slain?
Or, up to the presence of the judge wilt thou lie, but when the judge questions
thee, then speak truth that thou be not a false witness? So then thou art
going to slay a man thyself by betraying him. Surely the betrayer too is one whom
the divine Scripture detesteth. Or haply is he no betrayer, who in answer to the
judge's interrogation gives true information; but would be a betrayar, if,
unasked, he should delate a man to his destruction? Put the case with respect to a
just and innocent man, that thou know where he is in hiding, and be questioned
by the judge; which man, however, has been ordered to be taken to execution by
a higher power, so that he who interrogates is charged with the execution of
the law, not the author of the sentence? Will it be no false witness that thou
shall lie for an innocent man, because the interrogator is not a judge, but only
charged with the execution? What if the author of the law interrogate thee, or
any unjust judge, making quest of an innocent man to bring him to punishment?
What wilt thou do? wilt thou be false witness, or betrayer? Or will he be a
betrayer, who to a just judge shall ultroneously delate a lurking homicide; and he
not so, who to an unjust judge, interrogating him of the hiding-place of an
innocent man whom he seeks to slay, shall inform against the person who has
thrown himself upon his honor? Or between the crime of false witness and that of
betrayal, wilt thou remain doubtful and unable to make up thy mind? Or by holding
thy peace or professing that thou wilt not tell, wilt thou make up thy mind to
avoid both? Then why not do this before thou come to the judge, that thou
mayest shun the lie also? For, having kept clear of a lie, thou wilt escape all
false witness; whether every lie be false witness, or not every: but by keeping
clear of all false witness in thy sense of the word, thou wilt not escape all
lying. How much braver then, how much more excellent, to say, "I will neither
betray nor lie?"
23. This did a former Bishop of the Church of Thagasta, Firmus by name,
and even more firm in will. For, when he was asked by command of the emperor,
through officers sent by him, for a man who was taking refuge with him, and whom
he kept in hiding with all possible care, he made answer to their questions,
that he could neither tell a lie, nor betray a man; and when he had suffered so
many torments of body, (for as yet emperors were not Christian,) he stood firm in
his purpose. Thereupon being brought before the emperor, his conduct appeared
so admirable, that he without any difficulty obtained a pardon for the man whom
he was trying to save. What conduct could be more brave and constant? But
peradventure some more timid person may say, "I can be prepared to bear any
torments, or even to submit to death, that I may not sin; but, since it is no sin to
tell a lie such that you neither hurt any man, nor bear false witness, and
benefit some man, it is foolish and a great sin, voluntarily and to no purpose to
submit to torments, and, when one's health and life may haply be useful, to fling
them away for nothing to people in a rage." Of whom I ask; Why he fears that
which is written, "Thou shall not bear false witness,"(1) and fears not that
which is said unto God, "Thou wilt destroy all them that speak leasing?"(2) Says
he, "It is not written, Every lie: but I understand it as if it were written,
Thou wilt destroy all that speak false witness." But neither there is it said,
All false witness. "Yes, but it is set there," saith he, "where the other things
are set down which are in every sort evil." What, is this the case with what is
set down there, "Thou shalt not kill?(3) "If this be in every sort evil, how
shall one clear of this crime even just men, who, upon a law given, have killed
many? "But," it is rejoined, "that man cloth not himself kill, who is the
minister of some just command." These men's fear, then, I do accept, that I still
think that laudable man who would neither lie, nor betray a man, did both better
understand that which is written, and what he understood did bravely put in
practice.
24. But one sometimes comes to a ease of this kind, that we are not
interrogated where the person is who is sought, nor forced to betray him, if he is
hidden in such manner, that he cannot easily be found unless betrayed: but we are
asked, whether he be in such a place or not. If we know him to be there, by
holding our peace we betray him, or even by saying that we will in no wise tell
whether he be there or not: for from this the questioner gathers that he is
there, as, if he were not, nothing else would be answered by him who would not lie
nor betray a man, but only, that he is not there. So, by our either holding our
peace, or saying such words, a man is betrayed, and he who seeks him hath but
to enter in, if he have the power, and find him: whereas he might have been
turned aside from finding him by our telling a lie. Wherefore if thou know not
where he is, there is no cause for hiding the truth, but thou must confess that
thou knowest not. But, if thou know where he is, whether he be in the place which
is named in the question or elsewhere; thou must not say, when it is asked
whether he be there or not, "I will not tell thee what thou askest," but thou must
say, "I know where he is, but I will never show." For if, touching one place
in particular thou answer not and profess that thou wilt not betray, it is just
as if thou shouldest point to that same place with thy finger: for a sure
suspicion is thereby excited. But if at the first thou confess that thou know where
he is, but will not tell, haply the inquisitor may be diverted from that place,
and begin now to: ply thee that the place where he is may be betrayed. For
which good faith and humanity whatever thou shall bravely bear, is judged to be
not only not culpable, but even laudable; save only these things which if a man
suffer he is said to suffer not bravely, but immodestly and foully. For this is
the last description of lie, concerning which we must treat more diligently.
25. For first to be eschewed is that capital lie and far to be fled from,
which is done in doctrine of religion; to which lie a man ought by no
consideration to be induced. The second, that he should hurt some man unjustly: which is
such that it profits no man and hurts some man. The third, which so profits
one as to hurt another, but not in corporal defilement. The fourth, that which is
done through only lust of lying and deceiving, which is an unmixed lie. The
fifth, what is done with desire of pleasing by agreeableness in talk. All these
being utterly eschewed and rejected, there follows a sixth sort which at once
hurts nobody and helps somebody; as when, if a person's money is to be unjustly
taken from him, one who knows where the money is, should say that he does not
know, by whomsoever the question be put. The seventh, which hurts none and
profits some: except if a judge interrogate: as when, not wishing to betray a man who
is sought for to be put to death, one should lie; not only a just and
innocent, but also a culprit; because it belongs to Christian discipline neither to
despair of any man's amendment, nor to bar the way of repentance against any. Of
which two sorts, which are wont to be attended with great controversy, we have
sufficiently treated, and have shown what was our judgment; that by taking the
consequences, which are honorably and bravely borne, these kinds also should be
eschewed by brave and faithful and truthful men and women. The eighth sort of
lie is that which hurts no man, and does good in the preserving somebody from
corporal defilement, at least that defilement which we have mentioned above. For
even to eat with unwashen hands the Jews thought defilement. Or if a person
think this also a defilement, yet not such that a lie ought to be told to avoid
it. But if the lie be such as to do an injury to any man, even though it screen a
man from that uncleanness which all men abhor and detest; whether a lie of
this kind may be told provided the injury done by the lie be such as consists not
in that sort of uncleanness with which we are now concerned, is another
question: for here the question is no longer about lying, but it is asked whether an
injury ought to be done to any man, even otherwise than by a lie, that the said
defilement may be warded off from another. Which I should by no means think:
though the case proposed be the slightest wrongs, as that which I mentioned
above, about a single measure of wheat; and though it be very embarrassing whether
it be our duty not to do even such an injury to any man, if thereby another may
be defended or screened from a lustful outrage upon his person. But, as I said,
this is another question: at present let us go on with what we have taken in
hand: whether a lie ought to be told, if even the inevitable condition be
proposed that we either do this, or suffer the deed of lust or some execrable
pollution; even though by lying we do no man harm.
26. Touching which matter, there will be some place open for
consideration, if first the divine authorities which forbid a lie be diligently discussed:
for if these give no place, we vainly seek a loophole; for we are bound to keep
in every way the command of God, and the will of God in all that through
keeping His command we may suffer, it is our duty with an even mind to follow: but if
by some relaxation any outlet be allowed, in such a case we are not to decline
a lie. The reason why the Divine Scriptures contain not only God's commands,
but the life and character of the just, is this: that, if haply it be hidden in
what way we are to take that which is enjoined, by the actions of the just it
may be understood. With the exception, therefore, of those actions which one may
refer to an allegorical significance, although none doubts that they really
took place, as is the case with almost all the occurrences in the books of the
Old Testament. For who can venture to affirm of any thing there, that it does not
pertain to a figurative foretelling? Seeing the Apostle, speaking of the sons
of Abraham, of whom of course it is most easily said that they were born and
did live in the natural order of propagating the people, (for not monsters and
prodigies were born, to lead the mind to some presignification,) nevertheless
asserteth that they signify the two Testaments;(1) and saith of that marvellous
benefit which God bestowed upon His people Israel to rescue them out of the
bondage in which they in Egypt were oppressed, and of the punishment which avenged
their sin on their journey, that these things befell them in a figure:(2) what
actions wilt thou find, from which thou mayest set aside that rule, and take
upon thee to affirm that they are not to be reduced to some figure? Excepting
therefore these, the things which in the New Testament are done by the Saints,
where there is a most evident commending of manners to our imitation, may avail as
examples for the understanding of the Scriptures, which things are digested in
the commands.
27. As, when we read in the Gospel, "Thou hast received a blow in the
face, make ready the other cheek."(3) Now as an example of patience can none be
found than that of the Lord Himself more potent and excellent; but He, when
smitten on the cheek, said not, Behold here is the other cheek, but He said, "If I
have spoken ill, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why smitest thou Me?"(4)
Where He shows that the preparation of the other cheek is to be done in the
heart. Which also the Apostle Paul knew. for he, too, when he was smitten on the
face before the high priest, did not say, Smite the other cheek: but, "God,"
saith he, "shall smite thee, thou whited wall: and sittest thou to judge me
according to law, and contrary to law commandest me to be smitten?"(5) with most deep
insight beholding that the priesthood of the Jews was already become such,
that in name it outwardly was clean and fair, but within was foul with muddy
lusts; which priesthood he saw in spirit to be ready to pass away through vengeance
of the Lord, when he spake those words: but yet he had his heart ready not only
to receive other blows on the cheek, but also to suffer for the truth any
torments whatever, with love of them from whom he should suffer the same.
28. It is also written, "But I say unto you, Swear not at all." But the
Apostle himself has used oaths in his Epistles.(6) And so he shows how that is to
be taken which is said, "I say unto you, Swear not at all:" that is, lest by
swearing one come to a facility in swearing, from facility to a custom, and so
from a custom there be a downfall into perjury. And therefore he is not found to
have sworn except in writing, where there is more wary forethought, and no
precipitate tongue withal. And this indeed came of evil, as it is said, "Whatever
is more than these is of evil:"(7) not however from evil of his own, but from
the evil of infirmity which was in them, in whom he even in this way endeavored
to work faith. For that he used an oath in speaking, while not writing, I know
not that any Scripture has related concerning him. And yet the Lord says,
"Swear not at all:" for He hath not granted license thereof to persons writing.
Howbeit, because to pronounce Paul guilty of violating the commandment, especially
in Epistles written and sent forth for the spiritual life and salvation of the
nations, were an impiety, we must understand that word which is set down, "At
all," to be set down for this purpose, that as much as in thee lies, thou affect
not, love not, nor as though it were for a good thing, with any delight
desire, an oath.
29. As that, "Take no thought for the morrow," and, "Take therefore no
thought what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink, or what ye shall put on."(8)
Now when we see that the Lord Himself had a bag in which was put what was
given,(9) that it might be kept for necessary uses as the time should require; and
that the Apostles themselves made much provision for the indigence of the
brethren, not only for the morrow, but even for the more protracted time of impending
dearth, as we read in the Acts of the Apostles;(1) it is sufficiently clear that
these precepts are so to be understood, that we are to do nothing of our work
as matter of necessity, through love of obtaining temporal things, or fear of
want.
30. Moreover, it was said to the Apostles that they should take nothing
with them for their journey, bat should live by the Gospel.(2) And in a certain
place too the Lord Himself signified why He said this, when He added, "The
laborer is worthy of his hire:"(3) where He sufficiently shows that this is
permitted, not ordered; lest haply he who should do this, namely, that in this work of
preaching the word he should take aught for the uses of this life from them to
whom he preached, should think he was doing any thing unlawful. And yet that it
may more laudably not be done is sufficiently proved in the Apostle Paul: who,
while he said, "Let him that is taught in the word, communicate unto him, that
teacheth in all things,"(4) and showed in many places that this is wholesomely
done by them to whom he preached the word, "Nevertheless," saith he, "I have
not used this power."(5) The Lord, therefore, when He spake those words, gave
power, not bound men by a command. So in general, what in words we are not able
to understand, in the actions of the Saints we gather how it is meet to be
taken, which would easily be drawn to the other side, unless it were recalled by
an example.
31. Thus then what is written, "The mouth that lieth, slayeth the
soul;"(6) of what mouth it speaketh, is the question. For in general when the Scripture
speaks of the mouth, it signifies the very seat of our conception(7) in the
heart, where is approved and decreed whatever also by the voice, when we speak
the truth, is uttered: so that he lieth with the heart who approveth a lie; yet
that man may possibly not lie with the heart, who uttereth other than is in his
mind, in such sort that he knows it to be for the sake of avoiding a greater
evil that he admitteth an evil, disapproving withal both the one and the other.
And they who assert this, say that thus also is to be understood that which is
written, "He that speaketh the truth in his heart:(5) because always in the
heart truth must be spoken; but not always in the mouth of the body, if any cause
of avoiding a greater evil require that other than is in the mind be uttered
with the voice. And that there is indeed a mouth of the heart, may be understood
even from this, that where there is speech, there a mouth is with no absurdity
understood: nor would it be right to say, "Who speaketh in his heart," unless it
were right to understand that there is also a mouth in the heart. Though in
that very place where it is written, "The mouth that lieth, slayeth the soul," if
the context of the lesson be considered, it may peradventure be taken for no
other than the mouth of the heart. For there is an obscure response there, where
it is hidden from men, to whom the mouth of the heart, unless the mouth of the
body sound therewith, is not audible. But that mouth, the Scripture in that
place saith, doth reach to the hearing of the Spirit of the Lord, Who hath filled
the whole earth; at the same time mentioning lips and voice and tongue in that
place; yet all these the sense permitteth not to be taken, but concerning the
heart, because it saith of the Lord, that what is spoken is not hidden from
Him: now that which is spoken with that sound which reacheth to our ears, is not
hidden from men either. Thus, namely, is it written: "The Spirit of wisdom is
loving, and will not acquit an evil-speaker of his lips: for of his reins God is
witness, and of his heart a true searcher, and of his tongue a hearer. For the
Spirit of the Lord hath filled the whole earth, and that which containeth all
things hath knowledge of the voice. Therefore he that speaketh unrighteous
things cannot be hid: but neither shall the judgment when it punisheth pass by him.
For in the thoughts of the ungodly shall there be interrogation; and the
hearing of his words shall come from the Lord, to the punishment of his
iniquities.(9) For the ear of jealousy heareth all things, and the tumult of murmurings will
not be hid. Therefore keep yourselves from murmuring, which profiteth nothing,
and from backbiting refrain your tongue: because an obscure response will not
go into the void.(10) But the mouth that lieth, slayeth the soul."(11) It seems
then to threaten them who think that to be obscure and secret, which they
agitate and turn over in their heart. And this, it would show, is so clear to the
ears of God, that it even calls it "tumult."
32. Manifestly also in the Gospel we find the mouth of the heart: so that
in one place the Lord is found to have mentioned the mouth both of the body and
of the heart, where he saith, "Are ye also yet without understanding? Do ye
not yet understand, that whatsoever entereth in at the mouth, goeth into the
belly, and is cast out into the draught? but those things which proceed out of the
mouth come forth from the heart, and they defile the man. For out of the heart
proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false
witness, blasphemies: these are the things which defile a man."(1) Here if thou
understand but one mouth, that of the body, how wilt thou understand, "Those things
which proceed out of the mouth, come forth from the heart;" since spitting also
and vomiting proceed out of the mouth? Unless peradventure a man is but then
defiled when he eateth aught unclean, but is defiled when he vomits it up. But if
this be most absurd, it remains that we understand the mouth of the heart to
have been expounded by the Lord, when He saith, "The things which proceed out of
the mouth, come forth from the heart." For being that theft: also can be, and
often is, perpetrated with silence of the bodily voice and mouth; one must be
out of his mind so to understand it as then to account a person to be
contaminated by the sin of theft, when he confesses or makes it known, but when he
commits it and holds his peace, then to think him undefiled. But, in truth, if we
refer what is said to the mouth of the heart, no sin whatever can be committed
tacitly: for it is not committed unless it proceed from that mouth which is within.
33. But, like as it is asked of what mouth the Scripture saith, "The mouth
that lieth, slayeth the soul," so it may be asked, of what lie. For it seems
to speak of that lie in particular, which consists in detraction. It says, "Keep
yourselves from murmuring, which profiteth nothing, and from detraction
refrain your tongue." Now this detraction takes place through malevolence, when any
man not only with mouth and voice of the body doth utter what he forgeth against
any, but even without speaking wisheth him to be thought such; which is in
truth to detract with the mouth of the heart; which thing, it saith, cannot be
obscure and hidden from God.
34. For what is written in another place, "Wish not to use every lie;"(2)
they say is not of force for this, that a person is not to use any lie.
Therefore, when one man shall say, that according to this testimony of Scripture we
must to that degree hold every sort and kind of lie in detestation, that even if
a man wish to lie, yea, though he lie not, the very wish is to be condemned;
and to this sense interpreteth, that it is not said, Do not use every lie, but,
"Do not wish to use every lie;" that one must not dare not only to tell, but not
even to wish to tell, any lie whatever: saith another man, "Nay, in that it
saith, Do not wish to use every lie, it willeth that from the mouth of the heart
we exterminate and estrange lying: so that while from some lies we must abstain
with the mouth of the body, as are those chiefly which pertain to doctrine of
religion; from some, we are not to abstain with the mouth of the body, if
reason of avoiding a greater evil require; but with the mouth of the heart we must
abstain utterly from every lie." Where it behoveth to be understood what is
said, "Do not wish:" namely, the will itself is taken as it were the mouth of the
heart, so that it concerneth not the mouth of the heart when in shunning a
greater evil we lie unwillingly. There is also a third sense in which thou mayest so
take this word, "not every," that, except some lies, it giveth thee leave to
lie. Like as if he should say, wish not to believe every man: he would not mean
to advise that none should be believed; but that not all, some however, should
be believed. And that which follows, "For assiduity thereof will not profit for
good," sounds as if, not lying, but assiduous lying, that is, the custom and
love of lying, should seem to be that which he would prohibit. To which that
person will assuredly slide down,(3) who either shall think that every lie may be
boldly used (for so he will shun not that even which is committed in the
doctrine of piety and religion; than which what more abominably wicked thing canst
thou easily find, not among all lies, but among all sins?) or to some lie (no
matter how easy, how harmless,) shall accommodate the inclination of the will; so
as to lie, not unwillingly for the sake of escaping a greater evil, but
willingly and with liking. So, seeing there be three things which may be understood in
this sentence, either "Every lie, not only tell thou not, but do not even wish
to tell:" or, "Do not wish, but even unwillingly tell a lie when aught worse
is to be avoided:" or, "Not every," to wit, that except some lies, the rest are
admitted: one of these is found to make for those who hold that one is never to
lie, two for those who think that sometimes one may tell a lie. But yet what
follows, "For assiduity thereof will not profit to good," I know not whether it
can countenance the first sentence of these three; except haply so, that while
it is a precept for the perfect not only not to lie, but not even to wish;
assiduity of lying is not permitted even to beginners. As if, namely, on laying
down the rule at no time whatever not merely to lie but so much as to have a wish
to lie, and this being gainsaid by examples, in regard that there are some lies
which have been even approved by great authority, it should be rejoined that
those indeed are lies of beginners, which have, in regard of this life, some
kind of duty of mercy; and yet to that degree is every lie evil, and by perfect
and spiritual minds in every way to be eschewed, that not even beginners are
permitted to have assiduous custom thereof. For we have already spoken concerning
the Egyptian midwives, that it is in respect of the promise of growth and
proficiency to better things that they while lying are spoken of with approval:
because it is some step towards loving the true and eternal saving of the soul, when
a person doth mercifully for the saving of any man's albeit mortal life even
tell a lie.
35. Moreover what is written "Thou wilt destroy all that speak
leasing:"(1) one saith that no lie is here excepted, but all condemned. Another saith: Yea
verily: but they who speak leasing from the heart, as we disputed above; for
that man speaketh truth in his heart, who hateth the necessity of lying, which
he understands as a penalty of the moral life. Another saith: All indeed will
God destroy who speak leasing, but not all leasing: for there is some leasing
which the Prophet was at that time insinuating, in which none is spared; that is,
if refusing to confess each one his sins, he defend them rather, and will not
do penance,(2) so that not content to work iniquity, he must needs wish to be
thought just, and succumb not to the medicine of confession: as the very
distinction of the words may seem to intimate no other, "Thou hatest all that work
iniquity;"(3) but wilt not destroy them if upon repenting they speak the truth in
confession, that by doing that truth they may come to the light; as is said in
the Gospel according to John, "But be that doeth truth cometh unto the light.(4)
Thou wilt destroy all who" not only work what Thou hatest, but also "speak
leasing;"(5) in holding out before them false righteousness, and not confessing
their sins in penitence.
36. For, concerning false witness, which is set down in the ten commands
of the Law, it can indeed in no wise be contended that love of truth may at
heart be preserved, and false witness brought forth to him unto whom the witness is
borne. For, when it is said to God only, then it is only in the heart that the
truth is to be embraced: but when it is said to man, then must we with the
mouth also of the body bring forth truth, because man is not an inspector of the
heart. But then, touching the witness itself, it is not unreasonably asked, to
whom one is a witness? For not to whomsoever we speak unto are we witnesses, but
to them to whom it is expedient and due that they by our means should come to
know or believe the truth; as is a judge, that he may not err in judging; or he
who is taught in doctrine of religion, that he may not err in faith, or by
very authority of the teacher waver in doubt. But when the person who interrogates
thee or wishes to know aught from thee seeks that which concerneth him not, or
which is not expedient for him tO know, he craveth not a witness, but a
betrayer. Therefore if to him thou tell a lie, from false witness peradventure thou
wilt be clear, but from a lie assuredly not. So then with this salvo, that to
bear false witness is never lawful, the question is, whether it be lawful
sometimes to tell a lie. Or if it be false witness to lie at all, it is to be seen
whether it admit of compensation, to wit, that it be said for the sake of avoiding
a greater sin: as that which is written, "Honor father and mother,"(6) under
stress of a preferable duty is disregarded; whence the paying of the last honors
of sepulture to a father, is forbidden to that man who by the Lord Himself is
called to preach the kingdom of God.
37. Likewise, touching that which is written, "A son which receiveth the
word shall be far from destruction: but receiving, he receiveth it for himself,
and no falsehood proceedeth out of his mouth:"(7) some one may say, that what
is here set down, "A son which receiveth the word," is to be taken for no other
than the word of God, which is truth. Therefore, "A son receiving the truth
shall be far from destruction," refers to that which is written, "Thou wilt
destroy all that speak leasing." But when it follows, "Receiving he receiveth for
himself," what other doth this insinuate than what the Apostle saith, "But let
every man prove his own work, and then he shah have glorying in himself and not in
another?"(1) For he that receiveth the word, that is, truth, not for himself,
but for men-pleasing, keepeth it not when he sees they can be pleased by a lie.
But whoso receiveth it for himself, no falsehood proceedeth out of his mouth:
because even when the way to please men is to lie, that man lieth not, who
receiving the truth not thereby to please them but to please God, hath received it
for himself. Therefore there is no reason why it should be said here He will
destroy all who speak leasing, but not all leasing: because all lies,
universally, are cut off in this saying, "And no falsehood proceedeth out of his mouth."
But another saith, it is to be so taken as the Apostle Paul took our Lord's
saying, "But I say unto you, Swear not at all."(2) For here also all swearing is
cut off; but from the mouth of the heart, that it should never be done with
approbation of the will, but through necessity of the weakness of another; that is,
"from the evil" of another, when it shows that he cannot otherwise be got to
believe what is said, unless faith be wrought by an oath; or, from that "evil" of
our own, that while as yet involved in the skins of this mortality we are not
able to show our heart: which thing were we able to do, of swearing there were
no need. Though moreover in this whole sentence, if the saying, "A son
receiving the word shall be far from destruction," be said of none other than that
Truth,(3) by Whom all things were made, which remaineth ever incommutable; then,
because the doctrine of Religion strives to bring men to the contemplation of
this Truth, it may seem that the saying, "And no falsehood proceedeth out of his
mouth," is said to this purpose, that he speaketh no falsehood thai pertaineth
to doctrine. Which sort of lie is upon no compensation whatever to be gone into,
and is utterly and before all to be eschewed. Or if the saying, "No
falsehood," is absurdly taken if it be not referred to every lie, the saying, "From his
mouth," should, as was argued above, be taken to mean the mouth of the heart, in
the opinion of him who accounts that sometimes one may tell a lie.
38. Certain it is, albeit all this disputation go from side to side, some
asserting that it is never right to lie, and to this effect reciting divine
testimonies: others gainsaying, and even in the midst of the very words of the
divine testimonies seeking place for a lie; yet no man can say, that he finds this
either in example or in word of the Scriptures, that any lie should seem a
thing to be loved, or not had in hatred; howbeit sometimes by telling a lie thou
must do that thou hatest, that what is more greatly to be detested may be
avoided. But then here it is that people err; they put the precious beneath the vile.
For when thou hast granted that some evil is to be admitted, that another and
more grievous may not be admitted; not by the rule of truth, but by his own
cupidity and custom cloth each measure the evil, accounting that to be the more
grievous, which himself more greatly dreads, not which is in reality more greatly
to be fled from. All this fault is engendered by perversity of loving. For
being there are two lives of ours; the one eternal, which is promised of God; the
other temporal, in which we now are: when a man shall have begun to love this
temporal more than that eternal, for the sake of this which he loveth he thinks
all things right to be done; and there are not any, in his estimation, more
grievous sins than those which do injury to this life, and either take away from
it any commodity unjustly and unlawfully, or by inflicting of death take it
utterly away. And so thieves, and robbers, and ruffians, and torturers, and
slayers, are more hated of them than lascivious, drunken, luxurious men, if these
molest no man. For they do not understand or at all care, that these do wrong to
God; not indeed to any inconvenience of Him, but to their own pernicious hurt;
seeing they corrupt His gifts bestowed upon them, even His temporal gifts, and by
their very corruptions turn away from eternal gifts: above all, if they have
already begun to be the Temple of God; which to all Christians the Apostle saith
thus: "Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God
dwelleth in you? Whoso shall corrupt God's temple, God will corrupt him. For the
temple of God is holy: which temple are ye."(4)
39. And all these sins, truly, whether such whereby an injury is done to
men in the comforts of this life, or whereby men corrupt themselves and hurt
none against his will: all these sins, then, even though they seem to mean well by
this temporal life to the procuring of any delight or profit, (for no man
commits any of these things with any other purpose and end;) yet in regard of that
life which is forever and ever, they do entangle and in all ways hinder. But
there are some of these that hinder the doers only, others likewise those on whom
they are done. For as to the things which people keep safe for the sake of
utility to this life, when these are taken away by injurious persons, they alone
sin and are hindered from eternal life who do this, not they to whom they do it.
Therefore, even if a person consent to the taking of them from him, either
that he may not do some evil, or that he may not in these very things suffer some
greater inconvenience; not only does he not sin, but in the one case he acts
bravely and laudably, in the other usefully and unblameably. But as to those
things which are kept for the sake of sanctity and religion, when injurious persons
wish to violate these, it is right, if the condition be proposed and the means
given, to redeem them even by sins of lesser moment, yet not by wrongs to
other men. And then do these things thenceforth cease to be sins, which are
undertaken in order to the avoidance of greater sins. For as in things useful, for
instance in pecuniary or any other corporal commodity, that is not called a loss
which is parted with in order to a greater gain; so in things holy, that is not
called sin which is admitted lest a worse be admitted. Or if that is called
toss, which one foregoes that he may not forego more; let this also be called sin,
while however the necessity of undertaking it in order to the eschewing of a
greater is no more to be doubted, than that, in order to avoid a greater loss,
it is right to suffer a smaller one.
40. Now the things which are to be kept safe for sanctity's sake are
these: pudicity of body, and chastity of soul,(1) and verity of doctrine. Pudicity
of body, without consent and permission of the soul, doth no man violate. For,
whatever against our will and without our empowering the same is by greater
force done upon our body, is no lewdness. Howbeit, of permitting there may be some
reason, but of consenting, none. For we consent, when we approve and wish: but
we permit even not willing, because of some greater turpitude to be eschewed.
Consent, truly, to corporal lewdness violates also chastity of mind. For the
mind's 2 chastity consists in a good will and sincere love, which is not
corrupted, unless when we love and desire that which Truth teaches ought not to be loved
and desired. We have therefore to guard the sincerity of love toward God and
our neighbor; for in this is chastity of mind sanctified: and we must endeavor
with all the strength in our power, and with pious supplication, that, when the
pudicity of our body is sought to be violated, not even that outermost sense of
the soul,(3) which is entangled with the flesh, may be touched with any
delight; but if it cannot this, at least the mind and thought(4) in not consenting
may have its chastity preserved entire. Now what we have to guard in chastity of
mind,(5) is, as pertaining to the love of our neighbor, innocence and
benevolence; as pertaining to the love of God, piety. Innocence is that we hurt no man;
benevolence, that we also do good to whom we can; piety, that we worship God.
But as for verity of doctrine, of religion and piety, that is not violated
unless by a lie; whereas the highest and inmost Verity Itself, Whose that doctrine
is, can in no wise be violated: which Truth to attain unto, and in It on every
wise to remain, and to It thoroughly to cleave, will not be permitted, but when
this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put
on immortality. But, because all piety in this life is practice by which we
tend to that life, which practice hath a guidance afforded unto it from that
doctrine, which in human words and signs(6) of corporal sacraments cloth insinuate
and intimate Truth herself: for this cause this also, which by lying is
possible to be corrupted, is most of all to be kept incorrupt; that so, if aught in
that chastity of mind be violated, it may have that wherefrom it may be repaired.
For once corrupt authority of doctrine, and there can be none either course or
recourse to chastity of mind.
41. There resulteth then from all these this sentence, that a lie which
doth not violate the doctrine of piety, nor piety itself, nor innocence, nor
benevolence, may on behalf of pudicity of body be admitted. And yet if any man
should propose to himself so to love truth, not only that which consists in
contemplation, but also in uttering the true thing, which each in its own kind of
things is true, and no otherwise to bring forth with the mouth of the body his
thought than in the mind it is conceived and beheld; so that he should prize the
beauty of truth-telling honesty, not only above gold and silver and jewels and
pleasant lands, but above this temporal life itself altogether and every good
thing of the body, I know not whether any could wisely say that that man errs. And
if he should prefer this and prize it more than all that himself hath of such
things; rightly also would he prefer it to the temporal things of other men,
whom by his innocence and benevolence he was bound to keep and to help. For he
would love perfect faith, not only of believing aright those things which by an
excellent authority and worthy of faith should to himself be spoken, but also of
faithfully uttering what himself should judge right to be spoken, and should
speak. For faith hath its name in the Latin tongue, from that the thing is done
which is said:(1) and thus it is manifest that one doth not exhibit when
telling a lie. And even if this faith be less violated, when one lies in such sort
that he is believed to no inconvenience and no pernicious hurt, with added
intention moreover of guarding either one's life or corporal purity; yet violated it
is, and a thing is violated which ought to be kept safe in chastity and
sanctity of mind. Whence we are constrained, not by opinion of men, which for the most
part is in error, but by truth itself, truth which is eminent above all, and
alone is most invincible, to prefer even to purity of body, perfect faith. For
chastity of mind is, love well ordered, which does not place the greater below
the smaller. Now it is less, whatever in the body than whatever in the mind can
be violated. For assuredly when for corporal chasteness a man tells a lie, he
sees indeed that his body is threatened with corruption, not from his own, but
from another's lust, but is cautious lest by permitting at least, he be a party.
That permission, however, where is it but in the mind? So then, even corporal
chasteness cannot be corrupted but in the mind; which not consenting nor
permitting, it can by no means be rightly said that corporal chasteness is violated
whatever in the body be perpetrated by another's lust. Whence it is gathered,
that much more must the chastity of the mind be preserved in the mind, in the
which is the guardianship of the pudicity of the body. Wherefore, what in us lies,
both the one and the other must by holy manners and conversation be walled and
hedged round, lest from another quarter it be violated. But when both cannot
be, which is to be slighted in comparison of which, who doth not see? when he
seeth which to which is to be preferred, the mind to the body, or the body to the
mind; and which is more to be shunned among sins, the permitting of another's
deed, or the committing of the deed thyself.
42. It clearly appears then, all being discussed, that those testimonies
of Scripture have none other meaning than that we must never at all tell a lie:
seeing that not any examples of lies, worthy of imitation, are found in the
manners and actions of the Saints, as regards those Scriptures which are referred
to no figurative signification, such as is the history in the Acts of the
Apostles. For all those sayings of our Lord in the Gospel, which to more ignorant
minds seem lies, are figurative significations. And as to what the Apostle says:
"I am made all things to all men, that I might gain all;"(2) the right
understanding is, that he did this not by lying, but by sympathy; so that he dealt with
them in liberating them with so great charity, as if he were himself in that
evil from which he wished to make them whole. There must therefore be no lying
in the doctrine of piety: it is a heinous wickedness, and the first sort of
detestable lie. There must be no lying of the second sort; because no man must have
a wrong done to him. There must be no lying of the third sort; because we are
not to consult any man's good to the injury of another. There must be no lying
of the fourth sort, that is, for the lust of lying, which of itself is vicious.
There must be no lying of the fifth sort, because not even the truth itself is
to be uttered with the aim of men-pleasing, how much less a lie, which of
itself, as a lie, is a foul thing? There must be no lying of the sixth sort; for it
is not right that even the truth of testimony be corrupted for any man's
temporal convenience and safety. But unto eternal salvation none is to be led by aid
of a lie. For not by the ill manners of them that convert him is he to be
converted to good manners: because if it is meet to be done towards him, himself
also ought when converted to do it toward others; and so is he converted not to
good, but to ill manners, seeing that is held out to be imitated by him when
converted, which was done unto him in converting him. Neither in the seventh sort
must there be any lying; for it is meet that not any man's commodity or
temporal welfare be preferred to the perfecting of faith. Not even if any man is so
ill moved by our right deeds as to become worse in his mind, and far more remote
from piety, are right deeds therefore to be foregone: since what we are chiefly
to hold is that whereunto we ought to call and invite them whom as our own
selves we love; and with most courageous mind we must drink in that apostolic
sentence: "To some we are a savor of life unto life, to others a savor of death
unto death; and who is sufficient for these things?"(3) Nor in the eighth sort
must there be lying: because both among good things chastity of mind is greater
than pudicity of body; and among evil things, that which ourselves do, than that
which we suffer to be done. In these eight kinds, however, a man sins less when
he tells a lie, in proportion as he emerges to the eighth: more, in proportion
as he diverges to the first. But whoso Shall think there is any sort of lie
that is not sin, will deceive himself foully, while he deems himself honest as a
deceiver of other men.
43. So great blindness, moreover, hath occupied men's minds, that to them
it is too little if we pronounce some lies not to be sins; but they must needs
pronounce it to be sin in some things if we refuse to lie: and to such a pass
have they been brought by defending lying, that even that first kind which is of
all the most abominably wicked they pronounce to have been used by the Apostle
Paul. For in the Epistle to the Galatians, written as it was, like the rest,
for doctrine of religion and piety, they say that he has told a lie, in the
passage where he says concerning Peter and: Barnabas, "When I saw that they walked
not uprightly according to the truth of the Gospel."(1) For, while they wish
to defend Peter from error, and from that pravity of way into which he had
fallen; the very way of religion in which is salvation for all men, they by
breaking and mincing the authority of the Scriptures do endeavor themselves to
overthrow. In which they do not see that it is not only lying, but perjury that they
lay to the charge of the Apostle in the very doctrine of piety, that is, in an
Epistle in which he preaches the Gospel; seeing that he there saith, before he
relates that matter, "What I write unto you, behold, before God, I lie not."(2)
But it is time that we set bounds to this disputation: in the consideration and
treatment whereof altogether there is nothing more meet to be, before all
else, borne in mind and made our prayer, than that which the same Apostle saith:
"God is faithful, Who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able to
bear, but will with the temptation make also a way to escape, that ye may be
able to bear it."(3)