TO CONSENTIUS: AGAINST LYING. [CONTRA MENDACIUM.]
From the Retractations, Book II. Chap. 60.
" Then(1) also I wrote a Book against Lying, the occasion of which work
was this. In order to discover the Priscillianist heretics, who think it right to
conceal their heresy not only by denial and lies, but even by perjury, it
seemed to certain Catholics that they ought to pretended themselves
Priscillianists, in order that they might penetrate their lurking places. In prohibition of
which thing, I composed this book. It beans: Multa mihi a misisti."
1. A great deal for me to read hast thou sent, my dearest brother
Consentius: a great deal for me to read: to the which while I am preparing an answer,
and am drawn off first by one, then by another, more urgent occupation, the year
has measured out its course, and has thrust me into such straits, that I must
answer in what sort I may, lest the time for sailing being now favorable, and
the bearer desirous to return, I should too long detain him. Having therefore
unrolled and read through all that Leonas, servant of God, brought me from thee,
both soon after I received it, and afterwards when about to dictate this reply,
and having weighed it with all the consideration in my power, I am greatly
delighted with thy eloquence, and I memory of the holy Scripture, and cleverness
of wit, and the resentment with which thou bitest negligent Catholics, and the
zeal with which thou gnashest against even latent heretics. But I am not
persuaded that it is right to unearth them out of their hiding places by our telling
lies. For to what end do we take such pains in tracking them out and running
them down, but that having taken them and brought them forth into open day, we may
either teach them the truth, or at least having convicted them by the truth,
may not allow them to hurt others? to this end, therefore, that their lie may be
blotted out, or shunned, and God's truth increased. How then by a lie shall I
rightly be able to prosecute lies? Or is it by robbery that robberies and by
sacrilege that sacrileges, and by adultery that adulteries, are to be prosecuted?
"But if the truth of God shall abound by my lie," are we too to say, "Let us
do evil that good may come?"(2) A thing which thou seest how the Apostle
detesteth. For what else is, "Let us lie, that we may bring heretic liars to the
truth," but, "Let us do evil that good may come?" Or, is a lie sometimes good, or
sometimes a lie not evil? Why then is it written, " Thou hatest, Lord, all that
work iniquity; Thou wilt destroy all that speak leasing."(3) For he hath not
excepted some, or said indefinitely, "Thou wilt destroy them that speak leasing;"
so as to permit some, not all, to be understood: but it is an universal
sentence that he hath passed, saying, "Thou wilt destroy all who speak leasing." Or,
because it is not said. Thou wilt destroy all who speak all leasing, or, who
speak any leasing whatsoever; is it therefore to be thought that there is place
allowed for some lie; to wit, that there should be some leasing, and them who
speak it, God should not destroy, but destroy them all which speak unjust leasing,
not what lie soever, because there is found also a just lie, which as such
ought to be matter of praise, not of crime?
2. Perceivest thou not how much this reasoning aideth the very persons
whom as great game we make ado to catch by our lies? For, as thyself hast shown,
this is the sentiment of the Priscillianists to prove which, they apply
testimonies from the Scriptures exhorting their followers to lie, as though by the
examples of Patriarchs, Prophets, Apostles, Angels; not hesitating to add even the
Lord Christ Himself; and deeming that they cannot otherwise prove their
falsehood truthful, unless they pronounce Truth to be a liar. It must be refuted,
this; not imitated: nor ought we to be partners with the in that evil in which they
are convicted to be worse than other heretics. For they alone, or at least
they in the greatest degree, are found to make a dogma of lying for the purpose of
hiding their truth, as they call it: and this so great evil therefore to
esteem just, because they say that in the heart must be held that which is true, but
with the mouth to utter unto aliens a false thing, is no sin; and that this is
written, "Who speaketh the truth in his heart: "(1) as though this were enough
for righteousness, even though a person do with his mouth speak a lie, when
not his neighbor but a stranger is he that heareth it. On this account they think
the Apostle Paul, when he had said, "Putting away lying, speak ye truth," to
have immediately added, "Every man with his neighbor, for we are members one of
another."(2) Meaning, that with them who are not our neighbors in society of
the truth, nor, so to say, our co-member(3) it is lawful and right to speak a lie.
3. Which sentence dishonoreth the holy Martyrs, nay rather taketh away
holy martyrdoms altogether. For they would do more justly and wisely, according to
these men, not to confess to their persecutors that they were Christians, and
by confessing make them murderers: but rather by telling a lie, and denying
what they were, should both themselves keep safe the convenience of the flesh and
purpose of the heart, and not allow those to accomplish the wickedness which
they had conceived in their mind. For they were not their neighbors in the
Christian faith, that with them it should be their duty to speak the truth in their
mouth which they spake in their heart; but moreover enemies of Truth itself. For
if Jehu (whom it seems they do prudently to single out unto themselves to look
unto as an example of lying) falsely gave himself out for a servant of Baal,
that he might slay Baal's servants: how much more justly, according to their
perversity, might, in time of persecution, the servants of Christ falsely give
themselves out, for servants of demons, that the servants of demons might not slay
servants of Christ; and sacrifice to idols that men might not be killed, it
Jehu sacrificed to Baal that he might kill men? For what harm would it do them,
according to the egregious doctrine of these speakers of lies, if they should
lyingly pretend a worship of the Devil in the body, when the worship of God was
preserved in the heart? But not so have the Martyrs understood the Apostle, the
true, the holy Martyrs. They saw and held that which is written, "With the
heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto
salvation;" and, "In their mouth was found no lie:"(5) and so they departed
irreproachable, to that place where to be tempted by liars any further they will
not fear; because they will not have liars any more in their heavenly
assemblies, either for strangers or neighbors. As for that Jehu, by an impious lie and a
sacrilegious sacrifice making inquisition for impious and sacrilegious men for
to kill them, they would not imitate him, no, not though the Scripture had said
nothing concerning him, what manner of man he was. But, seeing it is written
that he had not his heart right with God;(6) what profited it him, that for some
obedience which, concerning the utter destruction of the house of Ahab, he
exhibited for the lust of his own domination. he received some amount of
transitory wages in a temporal kingdom? Let, rather, the truth-telling sentence of the
Martyrs be thine to defend: to this I exhort thee, my brother, that thou mayst
be against liars, not say, that thou mayest find how needful to be shunned is
that which, with laudable zeal indeed towards impious men, that they may be
caught and corrected, or avoided, but yet too incautiously, is thought fit to be
taught.
4. Of lies are many sorts, which indeed all, universally, we ought to
hate. For there is no lie that is not contrary to truth. For, as light and
darkness, piety and impiety, judge and iniquity, sin and right-doing, heath and
weakness, life and death, so are truth and a lie contrary the one to the other. Whence
by how much we love the former, by so much ought we to hate the latter. Yet in
truth there be some lies which to believe does no harm: although even by such
son of lie to wish to deceive, is hurtful to him that tells it, not to him that
believes it. As though, if that brother, the servant of God, Fronto, in the
information which he gave thee, should (though far be the thought!) say some
things falsely; he would have hurt himself assuredly, not thee, although thou,
without iniquity of thine, hadst believed all, upon his telling it. Because,
whether those things did so take place or not so, yet they have not any thing, which
if a person believe to have been so, though it were not so, he by the rule of
truth and doctrine of eternal salvation should be judged worthy of blame.
Whereas, if a person tell a lie which if any believe he will be an heretic against
the doctrine of Christ, by so much is he who tells the lie more hurtful, by how
much he that believes it is more miserable. See then, what manner of thing it
is, if against the doctrine of Christ we shall tell a lie which whoso believes
shall perish, in order that we may catch the enemies of the same doctrine, to the
end we may bring them to the truth, while we recede from it; nay rather, when
we catch liars by lying, teach worse lies. For it is one thing what they say
when they lie, another when they are deceived. For, when they teach their heresy,
they speak the things in which they are deceived; but when they say that they
think what they do not think, or that they do not think what they do think,
they say the things in perisheth not. For it is no receding from the catholic
rule, if, when a heretic lyingly professes the catholic doctrines, one believes him
to be a catholic: and therefore it is not pernicious to him; because he is
mistaken in the mind of a man, of which, when latent, he cannot judge, not in the
faith of God which it is his duty to keep safe planted within him. Moreover,
when they teach their heresy, whoso shall believe them, in thinking it truth,
will be partaker, as of their error, so of their damnation. So it comes to pass,
that when they fable their nefarious dogmas in which they are with deadly error
deceived, then whoso believeth them is lost: whereas when we preach catholic
dogmas, in which we hold the right faith, then if he shall believe, that man is
found, whoso was lost. But when, they being Priscillianists, do, in order that
they may not betray their venom, lyingly give themselves out to be of us;
whoever of us believes them, even while they escape detection, himself perseveres a
Catholic: we on the other hand, if, in order to attain to the discovery of them,
we falsely give ourselves out for Priscillianists, because we shall praise
their dogmas as though they were our own, whoso shall believe the same, will
either be confirmed among them, or will be transferred to them in the meantime
straightway: but what the coming hour may bring forth, whether they shall be
afterwards set free therefrom by us when speaking true things, who were deceived by us
when speaking false; and whether they will be willing to hear one teaching
whom they have thus experienced telling a lie,who can know for certain? who can be
ignorant that this is uncertain? Whence it is gathered, that it is more
pernicious, or to speak more mildly, that it is more perilous for Catholics to lie
that they may catch heretics, than for heretics to lie that they may not be found
out by Catholics.s. Because, whoso believes Catholics when they tall a lie to
tempt people, is either made or confirmed a heretic; but whoso believes
heretics when they tall a lie to conceal themselves, doth not cease to be a Catholic.
But that this may become more plain, let us propose some cases by way of
example, and from those writings in preference which thou hast sent me to read.
5. Well then, let us set before our eyes a cunning spy as he makes up to
the person whom he has already perceived to be a Priscillianist; he begins with
Dictinius the bishop, and lyingly bepraises either his life, if he knew him, or
his fame, if he knew him not; this is more tolerable thus far, because
Dictinius is accounted to have been a Catholic, and to have been corrected of that
error. Then, passing on to Priscillian, (for this comes next in the art of lying,)
he shall make reverend mention of him, of an impious and detestable person,
condemned for his nefarious wickedness and crimes! In which reverend mention, if
haply the person for whom this sort of net is spread, had not been a firm
Priscillianist, by this preaching of him, he will be confirmed. But when the spy
shall go on to discourse of the other matters, and saying that he pities them whom
the author of darkness hath invoked in such darkness of error, that they
acknowledge not the honor of their own soul, and the brightness of their divine
ancestry: then speaking of Dictinius's Book, which is called "the Pound," because
it treats, first and last, of a dozen questions, being as the ounces which go to
the pound, shall extol it with such praise, as to protest that such a "Pound"
(in which awful blasphemies are contained) is more precious than many thousands
of pounds of gold; truly, this astuteness of him who tells the lie slays the
soul of him who believes it, or, that being slain already, doth in the same
death sink, and hold it down. But, thou wilt say, "afterwards it shall be set at
liberty." What if it come not to pass, either upon something intervening that
prevents what was begun from being completed, or through obstinacy of an heretical
mind denying the same things over again, although of some it had already begun
to make confession? especially because, if he shall find out that he has been
tampered with by a stranger, he will just the more boldy study to conceal his
sentiments by a lie, when he shall have learned much more certainly that this is
done without blame, even by the example of the very person who tampered with
him. This, truly, in a man who thinks it right to hide the truth by telling a
lie, with what face can we blame, and dare to condemn what we teach?
6. It remains, then, that what the Priscillianists think, according to the
nefarious falsity of their heresy, of God, of the soul, of the body, and the
rest, we hesitate not with truthful pity to condemn; but what they think of the
right of telling a lie to hide the truth is to be to us and them (which God
forbid!) a common dogma. This is so great an evil, that even though this attempt
of ours, whereby we desire by means of a lie to catch them and change them,
should so prosper that we do catch and change them, there is no gain that can
compensate the damage of making ourselves wrong with them in order to set them
right. For through this lie shall both we be in that respect perverse, and they but
half corrected; seeing that their thinking it right to tell a lie on behalf of
the truth is a fault which we do not correct in them, because we have learned
and do teach the same thing, and lay it down that it is fit to be done, in order
that we may be able to attain to the amending of them. Whom yet we amend not,
for their fault, with which they think right to hide the truth, we take not
away, rather we make ourselves faulty when by such a fault we seek them; nor do we
find how we can believe them, when converted, to whom, while perverted, we
have lied; lest haply what was done to them that they might be caught, they do to
us when caught; not only because to do it hath been their wont, but because in
us also, to whom they come, they find the same.
7. And, what is more miserable, even they, already made as it were our
own, cannot find how they may believe us. For if they suspect that even in the
catholic doctrines themselves we speak lyingly, that we may conceal I know not
what other thing which we think true; of course to one suspecting the like thou
shalt say, I did this then only to catch thee: but what wilt thou answer when he
says, Whence then do I know whether thou art not doing it even now, lest thou
be caught by me? Or indeed, can any man be made to believe that a man does not
lie not to be caught, who lies to catch? Seest thou whither this evil tends?
that is, that not only we to them, and they to us, but every brother to every
brother shall not undeservedly become suspected? And so while that which is aimed
at by means of the lie, is that faith may be taught, the thing which is brought
about is, rather, that there shall be no having faith in any man. For if we
speak even against God when we tell a lie, what so great evil will people be able
to discover in any lie, that, as though it were a most wretched thing, we
should be bound in every way to eschew it?
8. But now observe how more tolerable in comparison with us is the lying
of the Priscillianists, When they know that they speak deceitfully: whom by our
own lying we think right to deliver from those false things in which they by
erring are decayed. A Priscillianist saith, that the soul is a part of God, and
of the same nature and substance with Him. This is a great and detestable
blasphemy. For it follows that the nature of God may be taken captive, deceived,
cheated, disturbed, and defiled, condemned and tortured. But if that man also sixth
tiffs, who from so great an evil desires to deliver a man by a lie, let us see
what is the difference between the one blasphemer and the other. "Very much,"
sayest thou: " for this the Priscillianist saith, also believing it so: but the
catholic not so believing, though so speaking." The one, then, blasphemes
without knowing,the other with knowledge: the one against science, the other
against conscience; the one hath the blindness of thinking false things, but in them
hath at least the will of saying true things; the other in secret seeth truth,
and willingly speaketh false. "But the one;" thou wilt say, " teacheth this,
that he may make men partakers of his error his error and madesss:11 the latter
saith it that from that error and madness he may deliver men." Now I have
already shown above how hurtful is this very thing which people believe will do good:
but meanwhile if we weigh in these two the present evils, (for the future good
which a catholic seeks from correcting a heretic is uncertain,) who sins
worse? he who deceives a man without knowing it, or he who blasphemes God, knowing
it? Assuredly which is the worse, that man understands, who with solicitous
piety preferreth God to man. Add to this, that, if God may be blasphemed in order
that we may bring men to praise Him, without doubt we do by our example and
doctrine invite men not only to praise, but also to blaspheme God: because they
whom through blasphemies against God we plot to bring to the praises of God,
verily, if we do bring them, will learn not only to praise, but also to blaspheme.
These be the benefits we confer on them whom, by blaspheming not ignorantly but
with knowledge, we deliver from heretics! And whereas the Apostle delivered men
to Satan himself that they might learn not to blaspheme,1 we endeavor to
rescue men from Satan, that they may learn to blaspheme not with ignorance, but with
knowledge. And upon ourselves, their masters, we bring this so great bane,
that, for the sake of catching heretics, we first become, which is certain,
blasphemers of God, in order that we may for the sake of delivering them, which is
uncertain, be able to be teachers of His truth.
9. When therefore we teach ours to blaspheme God that the Priscillianists
may believe them theirs, let us see what evil themselves say when they
therefore lie that we may believe them ours. They anathematize Priscillian, and detest
him according to our mind; they say that the soul is a creature of God, not a
part; they execrate the Priscillianists' false martyrdoms; the catholic bishops
by whom that heresy has been stripped, attacked, prostrated, they extol with
great praises, and so forth. Behold, themselves speak truth when they lie: not
that the very thing which is a lie can be true at the same time; but when in one
thing they lie, in another they speak truth: for when, in saying they are of
us, they lie, of the catholic faith they speak truth. And therefore they, that
they may not be found out for Priscillianists, speak in lying manner the truth:
but we, that we may find them out, not only speak lyingly, that we may be
believed to belong to them; but we also speak false things which we know to belong to
their error. Therefore as for them, when they wish to be thought of us, it is
both false in part, and true in part, what they say; for it is false that they
are of us, but true that the soul is not a part of God: but as for us, when we
wish to be thought to belong to them, it is false, both the one and the other
that we say, both that we are Priscillianists, and that the soul is a part of
God. They, then, praise God, not blaspheme, when they conceal themselves; and
when they do not so, but utter their own sentiments, they know not that they
blaspheme. So that if they be converted to the catholic faith, they console
themselves, because they can say what the Apostle said: who when among other things he
had said, "I was before a blasphemer; but," saith he, "I obtained mercy,
because I did it ignorantly."[2] We on the contrary, in order that they may open
themselves to us, if we utter this as if it were a just lie for deceiving and
catching them, do assuredly both say that we belong to the blaspheming
Priscillianists, and that they may believe us, do without excuse of ignorance blaspheme. For
a catholic, who by blaspheming wishes to be thought a heretic, cannot say, "I
did it ignorantly."
10. Ever, my brother, in such cases, it behoves with fear to recollect,
"Whose shall deny Me before men, I will deny him before My Father which is in
heaven."[3] Or truly is it no denying of Christ before men, to deny Him before
Priscillianists, that when they hide themselves, one may by a blasphemous lie
strip them and catch them? But who doubts, I pray thee, that Christ is denied, when
so as He is in truth, we say that He is not; and so as the Priscillianist
believes Him, we say that He is?
11. "But, hidden wolves," thou wilt say, "clad in sheep's clothing, and
privily and grievously wasting the Lord's flock, can we no otherwise find out."
Whence then have the Priscillianists become known, ere this way of hunting for
them with lies was ex-cogitated? Whence was their very author, more cunning
doubtless, and therefore more covert, got at in his bed ? Whence so many and so
great persons made manifest and condemned, and the others innumerable partly
corrected, partly as if corrected, and in the Church's compassion gathered into her
fold? For many ways giveth the Lord, when He hath compassion, whereby we may
come to the discovery of them: two of which are more happy than others; namely,
that either they whom they have wished to seduce, or they whom they had already
seduced, shall, when they repent and are converted, point them out. Which is
more easily effected, if their nefarious error, not by lying tricks, but by
truthful reasonings be overthrown. In the writing of which it behoves thee to bestow
thy pains, since God hath bestowed the gift that thou canst do this: which
wholesome writings whereby their insane perversity is destroyed, becoming more and
more known, and being by catholics, whether prelates who speak in the
congregations, or any studious men full of zeal for God, every where diffused, these
will be holy nets in which they may be caught truthfully, not with lies hunted
after. For so being taken, either, of their own accord, they will confess what
they have been, and others whom they know to be of the evil fellowship they will
either kindly[1] correct, or mercifully betray. Or else, if they shall be
ashamed to confess what with long-continued simulation they have concealed, by the
hidden hand of God healing them shall they be made whole.
12. "But," thou wilt say, "we more easily penetrate their concealment if
we pretend to be ourselves what they are." If this were lawful or expedient,
Christ might have instructed his sheep that they should come clad in wolves'
clothing to the wolves, and by the cheat of this artifice discover them: which He
hath not said, no, not when He foretold that He would send them forth in the
midst of wolves.[2] But thou wilt say: " They needed not at that time to have
inquisition made for them, being most manifest wolves; but their bite and savageness
were to be endured." What, when foretelling later times, He said that ravening
wolves would come in sheep's clothing? Was there not room there to give this
advice and say, And do ye, that ye may find them out, assume wolves' clothing,
but within be ye sheep still? Not this saith He: but when he had said, "Many
will come to you in sheep's clothing, but within are ravening wolves;" a He went
on to say, not, By your lies, but, "By their fruits ye shall know them." By
truth must we beware of, by truth must we take, by truth must we kill, lies. Be it
far from us, that the blasphemies of the ignorant we by wittingly blaspheming
should overcome: far from us, that the evils of deceitful men we by imitating
should guard against. For how shall we guard against them if in order to guard
against them we shall have them? For if in order that he may be caught who
blasphemes unwittingly, I shall blaspheme wittingly, worse is the thing I do than
that which I catch. If in order that he may be found who denies Christ
unwittingly, I shall deny Him wittingly, to his undoing will he follow me whom I shall so
find, since in order that I may find him out, I first am undone.
13. Or haply is it so, that he who plots in this way to find out
Priscillianists, denies not Christ, forasmuch as with his mouth he utters what with his
heart he believes not? As if truly (which I also said a little above) when it
was said, "With the heart man believeth unto righteousness," it was added to no
purpose, "with the mouth confession is made unto salvation ?"[4] Is it not so
that almost all who have denied Christ before the persecutors, held in their
heart what they believed of Him ? And yet, by not confessing with the mouth unto
salvation, they perished, save they which through penitence have lived again ?
Who can be so vain,[5] as to think that the Apostle Peter had that in his heart
which he had on his lips when he denied Christ? Surely in that denial he held
the truth within and uttered the lie without. Why then did he wash away with
tears the denial which he uttered with his mouth, if that sufficed for salvation
that with the heart he believed ? Why, speaking the truth in his heart, did he
punish with so bitter weeping the lie which he brought forth with his mouth,
unless because he saw it to be a great and deadly evil, that while with his heart
he believed unto righteousness, with his mouth he made not confession unto
salvation?
14. Wherefore, that which is written, "Who speaketh the truth in his
heart," 6 is not so to be taken, as if, truth being retained in the heart, in the
mouth one may speak a lie. But the reason why it is said, is, because it is
possible that a man may speak with his mouth a truth which profiteth him nothing, if
he hold it not in his heart, that is, if what he speaketh, himself believe
not; as the heretics, and, above all, these same Priscillianists do, when they do,
not indeed believe the catholic faith, but yet speak it, that they may be
believed to be of us. They speak therefore the truth in their mouth, not in their
heart. On this account were they to be distinguished from him of whom it is
written, "He that speaketh truth in his heart." Now this truth the catholic as in
his heart he speaketh, because so he believeth, so also in his mouth ought he,
that so he may preach it; but against it, neither in 'heart nor in mouth have
falsehood, that both with the heart he may believe unto righteousness, and with
the mouth may make confession unto salvation. For also in that psalm, after it
had been said. "Who speaketh truth in his heart," presently this is added, "Who
hath used no deceit in his tongue." 7
15. And as for that saying of the Apostle, "Putting away lying, speak
every man truth with his neighbor, for we are members one of another," far be it
that we should so understand it, as though he had permitted to speak a lie with
those who are not yet with us members of the body of Christ. But the reason why
it is said, is, because each one of us ought to account every man to be that
which he wishes Film to become, although he be not yet become such; as the Lord
showed the alien Samaritan to be neighbor to him unto whom he showed mercy." [2]
A neighbor then, and not an alien, is that man to be accounted, with whom our
concern is that he remain not an alien; and if on the score of his not being
yet made partaker of our Faith and Sacrament, there be some truths that must be
concealed from him, yet is that no reason why false things should be told him.
16. For there were even in the Apostles' times some who preached the truth
not in truth, that is, not with truthful mind: of whom the Apostle saith that
they preached Christ not chastely, but of envy and strife. And on this account
even at that time some were tolerated while preaching truth not with a chaste
mind: yet not any have been praised as preaching falsehood with a chaste mind.
Lastly, he saith of those, "Whether in pretence or in truth Christ be preached:
", but in no wise would he say, In order that Christ may after be preached, let
Him be first denied.
17. Wherefore, though there be indeed many ways in which latent heretics
may be sought out, without vituperating the catholic faith or praising heretical
impiety, yet if there were no other way at all of drawing out heretical
impiety from its caverns, but that the catholic tongue should deviate from the
straight path of truth; more tolerable were it that that should be hid, than that
this should be precipitated; more tolerable that the foxes should lurk in their
pits unseen, than for the sake of catching them the huntsmen should fall into the
pit of blasphemy; more tolerable that the perfidy of Priscillianists should be
covered with the veil of truth, than that the faith of catholics, lest it
should of lying Priscillianists be praised, should of believing catholics be
denied. For if lies, not of whatsoever kind, but blasphemous lies, are therefore just
because they are committed with intent to detect hidden heretics; it will be
possible at that rate, if they be commuted with the same intention, that there
should be chaste adulteries. For put the case that of a number of lewd
Priscillianists, some woman should cast her eye upon a catholic Joseph, and promise him
that she will betray their hidden retreats if she obtain from him that he lie
with her, and it be certain that if he consent unto her she will make good her
promise: shall we judge that it ought to be done? Or shall we understand that by
no means must such a price be paid in purchase of that kind of merchandise?
Why then do we not rout out heretics, in order to their being caught, by the
flesh committing lasciviousness in adultery, and yet think fight to rout them out
by a mouth committing fornication in blasphemy? For either it will be lawful to
defend both the one and the other with equal reason, that these things be
therefore said to be not unjust, because they were done with intention of finding
out the unjust: or if sound doctrine willeth not even for the sake of finding out
heretics that we should have to do with unchaste women, albeit only in body,
not in mind, assuredly not even for the sake of finding out heretics willeth it
that by us, albeit only in voice not in mind, either unclean heresy were
preached, or the chaste Catholic Church blasphemed. Because even the very sovereignty
of the mind, to which every inferior motion of the man ought to be obedient,
will not lack deserved opprobrium, when a thing is done that ought not to be
done, whether by member or by word. Although even when it is done by word, it is
done by member: because the tongue is a member, by which the word is made; nor
is any deed of ours by any member brought to the birth unless it is first
conceived in the heart; or rather being by our inwardly thinking upon and consenting
unto it already brought to the birth, it is brought forth abroad in our doing
of it, by a member. It is therefore no excusing the mind from the deed, when any
thing is said to be done not after the purpose of the mind,[4] which yet were
not done, unless the mind decreed it to be done.
18. It does indeed make very much difference, for what cause, with what
end, with what intention a thing be done: but those things which are dearly sins,
are upon no plea of a good cause. with no seeming good end, no alleged good
intention, to be done. Those works, namely of me, which are not in themselves
sins, are now good, now evil, according as their causes are good or evil; as, to
give food to a poor man is a good work, if it be done because of pity, with
right faith; as to lie with a wife, when it is done for the sake of generation, if
it be done with faith to beget subjects for regeneration. These and the like
works according to their causes are good or evil, because the self-same, if they
have evil causes, are turned into sins: as, if for boasting sake a poor man is
fed; or for lasciviousness a man lies with his wife; or children are begotten,
not that they may be nurtured for God, but for the devil. When, however, the
works in themselves are evil, such as thefts, fornications, blasphemies, or other
such; who is there that will say, that upon good causes they may be done, so
as either to be no sins, or, what is more absurd, just sins? Who is there that
would say, That we may have to give to the poor, let us commit thefts upon the
rich: or, Let us sell false witness, especially if innocent men are not hurt
thereby, but rather guilty men are rescued from the judges who would condemn them?
For two good things are done by selling of this lie, that money may be taken
wherewith a poor man may be fed, and a judge deceived that a man be not
punished. Even in the matter of wills, if we can, why not suppress the true, and forge
false wills that inheritances or legacies may not come to unworthy persons, who
do no good with them; but rather to those by whom the hungry are fed, the
naked clothed, strangers entertained, captives redeemed, Churches builded? For why
should not those evil things be done for the sake of these good things, if, for
the sake of these good things, those are not evil at all? Nay, further, if
lewd and rich women are likely to enrich moreover their lovers and paramours, why
should not even these parts and arts be undertaken by a man of merciful heart,
to use them for so good a cause as that he may have whence to below upon the
needy; and not hear the Apostle saying, "Let him that stole steal no more, but
rather let him labor, working with his hands that which is good, that he may have
to give to him that needeth? "[1] If indeed not only theft itself, but also
false witness and adultery and every evil work will be not evil but good, if it
be done for the sake of being the means of doing good. Who can say these things,
except one who endeavors to subvert human affairs and all manners and laws?
For of what most heinous deed, what most foul crime, what most impious sacrilege,
may it not be said that it is possible for it to be done rightly and justly;
and not only with impunity, but even gloriously, that in perpetrating threof not
only no punishments should be feared, but there should be hope even of
rewards: if once we shall concede in all evil works of men, that not what is done, but
wherefore done, must be the question; and this, to the end that whatever are
found to have been done for good causes, not even they should be judged to be
evil? But if justice deservedly a thief, albeit he shall say and shew that he
therefore withdrew superfluities from a rich that he might afford necessaries to
a poor man; if deservedly she punisheth a forger, albeit he prove that he
therefore corrupted another's will, that he might be heir, who should thence make
large alms, not he who should make none; if deservedly she punisheth an adulterer
yea, though he shall demonstrate that of mercy he did commit adultery, that
through her with whom he did it he might deliver a man from death; lastly, to
draw nearer to the m@r in question, if deservedly she punishment him who hath with
that intent mixed in adulterous embrace with some woman, privy to the
turpitude of the Priscillianists, that he might enter into their concealments; I pray
thee, when the Apostle saith, "Neither yield ye your members instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin;'' [2] and therefore neither hands, nor members of
generation, nor other members, can it be right to yield unto flagitious deeds with
intent that we may be able to find out Priscillanists; what hath our tongue, what
our whole mouth, what the organ of the voice, offended us, that we should yield
these as instruments to sin, and to so great a sin, in which, that we may
apprehend and rescue Priscillianists from blaspheming in ignorance, we, without
excuse of ignorance, are to blaspheme our God?
19. Some man will say, "So then any thief whatever is to be accounted
equal with that thief who steals with will of mercy?" Who would say this? But of
these two it does not follow that any is good, because one is worse. He is worse
who steals through coveting, than he who steals through pity: but if all theft
be sin, from all theft we must abstain. For who can say that people may sin,
even though one sin be damnable, another venial? but now we are asking, if a man
shall do this or that, who will not sin or will sin? not, who will sin more
heavily or lightly. For even thefs themselves are more lightly punished by law
than crimes of lust: they are, however, both sins, albeit the one lighter, the
other heavier; so that a theft which is committed of concupiescence is held to be
lighter than an act of lust which is committed for doing a good turn. Namely,
in their own kind these become lighter than other sins of the same kind, which
appear to be committed with a good intention; when yet the same compared with
sins of another kind lighter in respect of the kind itself, are found to be
heavier. It is a heavier sin to commit theft of avarice than of mercy; and likewise
it is a heavier sin to perpetrate lewdness of luxury, than of mercy; and yet is
it a heavier sin to commit adultery of mercy. than to commit theft of avarice.
Nor is it our concern now, what is lighter or what heavier, but what are sins
or are not. For no man can say that it was a duty for a sin to be done, where
it is clearly a sin; but we say that it is a duty, if the sin were done so or
so, to forgive or not to forgive.
20. But, what must be confessed, to human minds certain compensative sins
do cause such embarrassment, that they are even thought meet to be praised, and
rather to be called right deeds. For who can doubt it to be a great sin, if a
father prostitute his own daughters to the fornications of the impious? And yet
hath there arisen a case in which a just man thought it his duty to do this,
when the Sodomites with nefarious onset of lust were rushing upon his guests.
For he said, "I have two daughters which have not known man; I will bring them
out to you, and do ye to them as is good in your eyes only unto these men do ye
no wrong, for that they have come under covering of my roof."[1] What shall we
say here? Do we not so abhor the wickedness which the Sodomites were attempting
to do to the guests of the just man, that, whatever were done so this were not
done, he should deem right to be done? Very much also moveth us the person of
the doer, which by merit of righteousness was obtaining deliverance from Sodom,
to say that, since it is a less evil for women to suffer lewdness than for men,
it even pertained to the righteousness of that just man, that to his daugters
he chose this rather to be done, than to his guests; not only willing this in
his mind, but also offering it in word, and, if they should assent, ready to
fulfill it in deed. But then, if we shall open this way to sins, that we are to
commit less sins, in order that others may not commit greater; by a broad
boundary, nay rather, with no boundary at all, but with a tearing up and removing of
all bounds, in infinite space, will all sins enter in and reign. For, when it
shall be defined, that a man is to sin less, that another may not sin more; then,
of l course, by our committing thefts shall other men's committing of lewdness
be guarded against, and incest by lewdness; and if any impiety shall seem even
worse than incest even incest shall be pronounced meet to be done by us, if in
such wise it can be wrought that that impiety be not commuted by others: and
in each several kind of sins, both thefts for thefts, and lewdness for lewdness,
and incest for incest, shall be accounted meet to be done: our own sins for
other men's, not only less for greater, but even if it come to the very highest
and worst fewer for more; if the stress of affairs so turns, that otherwise
other men would not abstain from sin unless by our sinning, somewhat less indeed,
but still sinning; so that in every case where an enemy who shall have power of
this sort shall say, "Unless thou be wicked, I will be more wicked, or unless
thou do this wickedness, I will do more such," we must seem to admit wickedness
in ourselves, if we wish to refrain (others) from wickedness. To be wise in
this sort, what is it but to lose one's wits, or rather, to be downright mad ?
Mine own iniquity, not another's, whether perpetrated upon me or upon others, is
that from which I must beware of damnation. For "the soul that sinneth, it shall
die?
21. If then to sin, that others may not commit a worse sin, either against
us or against any, without doubt we ought not; it is to be considered in that
which Lot did, whether it be an example which we ought to imitate, or rather
one which we ought to avoid. For it seems meet to be more looked into and noted,
that, when so horrible an evil from the most flagitious impiety of the
Sodomites was impending over his guests, which he Wished to ward off and was not able,
to such a degree may even that just man's mind have been disturbed, that he was
willing to do that which, not man's fear with its misty temper, but God's Law
in its tranquil serenity, if it be consulted by us, will cry aloud, must not be
done, and will command rather that we be so cautious not to sin ourselves,
that we sin not through fear of any sins whatever of other men. For that just man,
by fearing other men's sins, which cannot defile except such as consent
thereto, was so perturbed that he did not attend to his own sin, in that he was
willing to subject his daughters to the lusts of impious men. These things, when we
read in holy Scriptures, we must not, for that we believe them done, therefore
believe them meet to be done; lest we violate precepts while we
indiscriminately follow precedents. Or, truly, because David swore to put Nabal to death, and,
upon more considerate clemency, did it not,[1] shall shah we therefore say
that he is to be imitated, so that we may swear to do a thing which afterwards we
may see to be not meet to be done ? But as fear perturbed the one, so that he
was willing to prostitute his daughters, so did anger the other, that he swore
rashly. In short, if it were allowed us to inquire of them both, by asking them
to tell us why they did these things, the one might answer, "Fearfulness and
trembling came upon me, and darkness covered me;"[2] the other too might say,
"Mine eye was troubled through wrath:[3]" so that we should not marvel either that
the one in the darkness of fear, or the other with troubled eye, saw not what
was meet to have been seen that they might not do what was not meet to have
been done.
22. And to holy David indeed it might more justly be said, that he ought
not to have been angry; no, not with one however ungrateful and rendering evil
for good; yet if, as man, anger did steal over him, he ought not to have let it
so prevail, that he should swear to do a thing which either by giving way to
his rage he should do, or by breaking his oath leave undone. But to the other,
set as he was amid the libidinous frenzy of the Sodomites, who would dare to say,
"Although thy guests in thine own house, whither to enter in thou by most
violent humanity hast compelled them, be laid hold upon by lewd men, and being
deforced be carnally known as women, fear thou not a whit, care for it not a whir,
have no dread, no horror, no trembling?" What man, even a companion of those
wretches, would dare to say this to the pious host? But assuredly it would be
most rightly said, "Do what thou canst, that the thing be not done which thou
deservedly fearest: but let not this fear of thine drive thee to do a thing which
if thy daughters be willing that it be done unto them, they will through thee do
wickedness with the Sodomites, if unwilling, will through thee from the
Sodomites suffer violence. Commit not thou a great crime of thine own, while thou
dreadest a greater crime of other men; for be the difference as great as thou wilt
between thine own and that of others, this will be thine own, that other
men's." Unless perchance in defending this man one should so crowd himself into a
corner, as to say, "Since to receive a wrong is better than to do one, and those
guests were not about to do but to suffer a wrong, that just man chose that his
daughters should suffer wrong rather than his guests, acting upon his rights
as his daughters' lord; and he knew that it would be no sin in them if the thing
were done, because they would but bear them which did the sin, not consenting
unto them, and so without sin of their own. In fine, they did not offer
themselves (albeit better females than males) to be carnally known instead of those
guests, lest they should be rendered guilty, not by the suffering of others'
lust, but by consenting of their own will: nor yet did their father permit it to be
done unto himself, when they essayed to do it, because he would not betray his
guests to them, (albeit there had been less of evil, if it were done to one
man than to two;) but as much as he could he .resisted, lest himself also should
be defiled by any assent of his own, though even if the frenzy of others' lust
had prevailed by strength of body, it would not have defiled him so long as he
consented not. Now as the daughters sinned not, neither did he sin in their
persons, because he was not making them to sin, if they should be deforced against
their will, but only to bear them that did the sin. Just as if he should offer
his slaves to be beaten by ruffians, that his guests might not suffer the
wrong of beating." Of which matter I shall not dispute, because it would take long
to argue, whether even a master may justly use his right of power over his
slave, so as to cause an unoffending slave to be smitten, that his unoffending
friend may not be beaten in his house by violent bad men. But certainly, as
concerning David, it is no wise right to say that he ought to have sworn to do a thing
which afterwards he would perceive that he ought not to do. Whence it is clear
that we ought not to take all that we read to have been done by holy or just
men, and transfer the same to morals, but hence too we must learn how widely
that saying of the Apostle extends, and even to what persons it reaches:
"Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such an one
in the spirit of meekness, considering thyself also, lest thou be tempted.''[4]
The being overtaken in a fault happens, either while one does not see at the
time what is right to be done, or while, seeing it, one is overcome; that is,
that a sin is done, either for that the truth is hidden, or for that infirmity
compelleth.
23. But in all our doings, even good men are very greatly embarrassed in
the mater of compensative sins; so that these are not esteemed to be sins, if
they have such causes for the which they be done, and in the which it may seem to
be rather sin, if they be left undone. And chiefly as concerning lies hath it
come to this pass in the opinion of men that those lies are not accounted sins,
nay rather are believed to be rightly done, when one tells a lie for the
benefit of him for whom it is expedient to be deceived, or lest a person should hurt
others, who seems likely to hurt unless he be got rid of by lies. In defense
of these kinds of lies, very many examples from holy Scripture are accounted to
lend their support. It is not, however, the same thing to hide the truth as it
is to utter a lie. For although every one who lies wishes to hide what is true,
yet not every one who wishes to hide what is true, tells a lie. For in general
we hide truths not by telling a lie, but by holding our peace. For the Lord
lied not when He said, "I have many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear
them now."1 He held His peace from true things, not spoke false things; for the
hearing of which truths He judged them to be less fit. But if He had not
indicated this same to them, that is, that they were not able to bear the things
which He was unwilling to speak, He would indeed hide nevertheless somewhat of
truth but that this may be rightly done we should peradventure not know, or not
have so great an example to confirm us. Whence, they who assert that it is
sometimes meet to lie, do not conveniently mention that Abraham did this concerning
Sarah, whom he said to be his sister. For he did not say, She is not my wife, but
he said, "She is my sister;"2 because she was in truth so near akin, that she
might without a lie be called a sister. Which also afterwards he confirmed,
after she had been given back by him who had taken her, answering him and saying,
"And indeed she is my sister, by father, not by mother;" that is, by the
father's kindred, not the mother's. Somewhat therefore of truth he left untold, not
told aught of falsehood, when he left wife untold, and told of sister. This
also did his son Isaac: for him too we know to have gotten a wife near of kin.3 It
is not then a lie, when by silence a true thing is kept back, but when by
speech a false thing is put forward.
24. Touching Jacob, however, that which he did at his mother's bidding, so
as to seem to deceive his father, if with diligence and in faith it be
attended to, is no lie, but a mystery, The which if we shall call lies, all parables
also, and figures designed for the signifying of any things soever, which are
not to be taken according to their proper meaning, but in them is one thing to be
understood from another, shall be said to be lies: which be far from us
altogether. For he who thinks this, may also in regard of tropical expressions of
which there are so many, bring in upon all of them this calumny; so that even
metaphor, as it is called, that is, the usurped transferring of any word from its
proper object to an object not proper, may at this rate be called a lie. For
when he speaks of waving corn-fields, of vines putting forth gems,4 of the bloom
of youth, of snowy hairs; without doubt the waves, the gems, the bloom, the
snow, for that we find them not in those objects to which we have from other
transferred these words, shall by these persons be accounted lies. And Christ a Rock,
and the stony heart of the Jews; also, Christ a Lion, and the devil a lion,
and innumerable such like, shall be said to be lies.5 Nay, this tropical
expression reaches even to what is called antiphrasis, as when a thing is said to
abound which does not exist, a thing said to be sweet which is sour; "Lucus quod non
luceat, Parcae quod non parcant.'' Of which kind is that in holy Scripture,
"If he will not bless[6] Thee to Thy face;" which the devil saith to the Lord
concerning holy Job, and the meaning is "curse." By which word also the feigned
crime of Naboth is named by his calumniators; for it is said that he "blessed7
the king," that is, cursed. All these modes of speaking shall be accounted lies,
if figurative speech or action shall be set down as lying. But if it be no lie,
when things which signify one thing by another are referred to the
understanding of a truth, assuredly not only that which Jacob did or said to his father
that he might be blessed, but that too which Joseph spoke as if in mockery of his
brothers,[3] and David's reigning of madness,9 must be judged to be no lies,
but prophetical speeches and actions, to be referred to the understanding of
those things which are true; which are covered as it were with a garb of figure on
purpose to exercise the sense of the pious inquirer, and that they may not
become cheap by lying bare and on the surface. Though even the things which we
have learned from other places, where they are spoken openly and manifestly,
these, when they are brought out from their hidden retreats, do, by our (in some
sort) discovering of them, become renewed, and by renewal sweet. Nor is it that
they are begrudged to the learners, in that they are in these ways obscured; but
are presented in a more winning manner, that being as it were withdrawn, they
may be desired more ardently, and being desired may with more pleasure be found.
Yet true things, not false, are spoken; because true things, not false, are
signified, whether by word or by deed; the things that are signified namely,
those are the things spoken. They are accounted lies only because people do not
understand that the true things which are signified are the things said, but
believe that false things are the things said. To make this plainer by examples,
attend to this very thing that Jacob did. With skins of the kids, no doubt, he did
cover his limbs; if we seek the immediate cause, we shall account him to have
lied; for he did this, that he might be thought to be the man he was not: but
if this deed be referred to that for the signifying of which it was really done,
by skins of the kids are signified sins; by him who covered himself therewith,
He who bare not His own, but others' sins. The truthful signification,
therefore, can in no wise be rightly called a lie. And as in deed, so also in word.
Namely, when his father said to him, "Who art thou my son?"1 he answered, "I am
Esau, thy first-born." This, if it be referred to those two twins, will seem a
lie; but if to that for the signifying of which those deeds and words are
written, He is here to be understood, in His body, which is His Church, Who, speaking
of this thing, saith, "When ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and
all the prophets in the kingdom of God, and yourselves cast out. And they shall
come from the east and from the west and from the north and from the south, and
shall sit down in the kingdom of God; and, behold, there are last which shall
be first, and there are first which shall be last."[2] For so in a certain sort
the younger brother did bear off the primacy of the eider brother, and transfer
it to himself. Since then things so true, and so truthfully, be signified,
what is there here that ought to be accounted to have been done or said lyingly?
For when the things which are signified are not in truth things which are not,
but which are, whether past or present or future, without doubt it is a true
signification, and no lie. But it takes too long in the matter of this prophetical
signification by stripping off the shell to search out all,3 wherein truth
hath the palm, because as by being signified they were fore-announced, so by
ensuing have they become clear.
25. Nor have I undertaken that in the present discourse, as it more
pertains to thee, who hast laid open the hiding-places of the Priscillianists, so far
as relates to their false and perverse dogmas; that they may not seem to have
been in such sort investigated as if they were meet to be taught, not to be
argued against. Make it therefore more thy work that they be beaten down and laid
low, as thou hast made it, that they should be betrayed and laid open; lest
while we wish to get at the discovery of men practising falsehood, we allow the
falsehoods themselves, as if insuperable, to stand their ground; when we ought
rather even in the hearts of latent heretics to destroy falsehoods, than by
sparing falsehoods to find out the deceivers who practise falsehood. Moreover, among
those dogmas of theirs which are to be subverted, is this which they
dogmatize, namely, that in order to hide religion religious people ought to lie, to that
degree that not only concerning other matters, not pertaining to doctrine of
religion, but concerning religion itself, it is meet to lie, that it may not
become exposed to aliens; to wit, that one may deny Christ, in order that one may
in the midst of His enemies be in secret a Christian. This impious and
nefarious dogma do thou likewise, I beseech thee, overthrow; to bolster up which they
in their argumentations do gather from the Scriptures testimonies to make it
appear that lies are not only to be pardoned and tolerated, but even honored. To
thee therefore it pertains, in refuting that detestable sect, to show that those
testimonies of Scripture are so to be received, that either thou shalt teach
those to be no lies which are accounted to be such, if they be understood in
that manner in which they ought to be understood; or, that those are not to be
imitated which be manifestly lies; or in any wise at last, that concerning those
matters at least which pertain to doctrine of religion, it is in no wise meet to
tell a lie. For thus are they truly from the very foundation overthrown, while
that is overthrown wherein they lurk: that in that very matter they be judged
least fit for us to follow, most fit to be shunned, in that they, for the
hiding of their heresy, do profess themselves liars. This it is in them that must
from the very first be assaulted, this which is, as it were, their fitting
bulwark must with blows of Truth be battered and cast down. Nor must we afford them
another lurking-place, which they had not, wherein they may take refuge, to wit,
that being perhaps betrayed of them whom they have essayed to seduce but could
not, they should say, "We only wanted to try them, because prudent Catholics
have taught that to find out heretics it is right to do this." But it is
necessary with somewhat more earnest be-speaking of thy favor to say why this seems to
me a tripartite method of disputing against those who want to apply the divine
Scriptures as advocates of their lies; to wit, by showing that some which are
there accounted to be lies, are not what they are accounted, if rightly
understood; next, that if there be there any manifest lies, they are not meet to be
imitated; thirdly, contrary to all opinions of all persons who think it pertains
to the duty of a good man sometimes to lie, that it must in every way be held
that in doctrine of religion there must in no wise a lie be told. For these are
the three things to follow up which I shortly before recommended, and in some
sort enjoined thee.
26. To show then that some things in the Scriptures which are thought to
be lies are not what they are thought, if they be rightly understood, let it not
seem to thee to tell little against them, that it is not from Apostolic but
from Prophetical books that they find as it were precedents of lying. For all
those which they mention by name, in which each lied, are read in those books in
which not only words but many deeds of a figurative meaning are recorded,
because it was also in a figurative sense that they were done. But in figures that
which is spoken as a seeming lie, being well understood, is found to be a truth.
The Apostles, however, in their Epistles spoke in another sort, and in another
sort are written the Acts of the Apostles, to wit, because now the New
Testament was revealed, which was veiled in those prophetic figures. In short, in all
those Apostolic Epistles, and in that large book in which their acts are
narrated with canonical truth, we do not find any person lying, such that from him a
precedent can be set forth by these men for license of lying For that simulation
of Peter and Barnabas with which they were compelling the Gentiles to Judaize,
was deservedly reprehended and set right, both that it might not do harm at
the time, and that it might not weigh with posterity as a thing to be imitated.
For when the Apostle Paul saw that they walked not uprightly according to the
truth of the Gospel, he said to Peter in the presence of them all, "If thou,
being a Jew, livest as the Gentiles; and not as do the Jews, how compellest thou
the Gentiles to Judaize?"1 But in that which himself did, to the intent that by
retaining and acting upon certain observances of the law after the Jewish
custom he might show that he was no enemy to the Law and to the Prophets, far be it
from us to believe that he did so as a liar. As indeed concerning this matter
his sentence is sufficiently well known, whereby it was settled that neither
Jews who then believed in Christ were to be prohibited from the traditions of
their fathers, nor Gentiles when they became Christians to be compelled
thereunto: in order that those sacred rites2 which were well known to have been of God
enjoined, should not be shunned as sacrileges; nor yet accounted so necessary,
now that the New Testament was revealed, as though without them whoso should be
converted unto God, could not be saved. For there were some who thought so and
preached, albeit after Christ's Gospel received; and to these had feignedly
consented both Peter and Barnabas, and so were compelling the Gentiles to
Judaize. For it was a compelling, to preach them to be so necessary as if, even after
the Gospel received, without them were no salvation in Christ. This the error
of certain did suppose, this Peter's fear did feign, this Paul's liberty did
beat down. What therefore he saith, "I am made all things to all, that I might
gain all,"3 that did he, by suffering with others, not by lying. For each becomes
as though he were that person whom he would fain succor, when he succoreth with
the same pity wherewith he would wish himself to be succored, if himself were
set in the same misery. Therefore he becomes as though he were that person, not
for that he deceives him, but for that he thinks himself as him. Whence is
that of the Apostle, which I have before rehearsed, "Brethren, if a man be
overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the spirit of
meekness, considering thyself lest thou also be tempted.''[4] For if, because he
said, "To the Jews became I as a Jew, and to them which were under the law as
under the law,''[5] he is therefore to be accounted to have in a lying manner
taken up the sacraments of the old law, he ought in the same manner to have taken
up, in a lying way, the idolatry of the Gentiles, because he hath said that to
them which were without law he became as without law; which thing in any wise he
did not. For he did not any where sacrifice to idols or adore those figments
and not rather freely as a martyr of Christ show that they were to be detested
and eschewed. From no apostolic acts or speeches, therefore, do these men allege
things meet for imitation as examples of lying. From prophetical deeds or
words, then, the reason why they seem to themselves to have what they may allege,
is only for that they take figures prenunciative to be lies, because they are
sometimes like unto lies. But when they are referred to those things for the
signifying of which they were so done or said, they are found to be significations
full of truth, and therefore in no wise to be lies. A lie, namely, is a false
signification with will of deceiving. But that is no false signification, where,
although one thing is signified by another, yet the thing signified is a true
thing, if it be rightly understood.
27. There are some things of this sort even of our Saviour in the Gospel,
because the Lord of the Prophets deigned to be Himself also a Prophet. Such are
those where, concerning the woman which had an issue of blood, He said, "Who
touched Me?"1 and of Lazarus. "Where have ye laid him?"2 He asked, namely, as if
not knowing that which in any wise He knew. And He did on this account feign
that He knew not, that He might signify somewhat else by that His seeming
ignorance: and since this signification was truthful, it was assuredly not a lie. For
those were signified, whether by her which had the issue, or by him which had
been four days dead, whom even He Who knew all things did in a certain sort
know not. For both she bore the type of the people of the Gentiles, whereof the
prophecy had gone before, "A people whom I have not known hath served Me:"3 and
Lazarus, removed from the living, did as it were in that place lie in
significative similitude where He lay, Whose voice that is, "I am cast out of the sight
of thine eyes."4 And with that intent, as though it were not known by Christ,
both who she was and where he was laid, by His words of interrogating a figure
was enacted and by truthful signification all lying left apart.
28. Hence is also that which thou hast mentioned that they speak of, that
the Lord Jesus, after He was risen, walked in the way with two disciples; and
upon their drawing near to the village whither they were going, He made as
though He would have gone farther: where the Evangelist, saying, "But He Himself
reigned that He would go further,"5 hath put that very word in which liars too
greatly delight, that they may with impunity lie: as if every thing that is
feigned is a lie, whereas in a truthful way, for the sake of signifying one thing by
another, so many things use to be feigned. If then there had been no other
thing that Jesus signified, in that He feigned to be going further, with reason
might it be judged to be a lie: but then if it be rightly understood and referred
to that which He willed to signify, it is a mystery. Else will all things be
lies which, on account of a certain similitude of things to be signified,
although they never were done, are related to have been done. Of which sort is that
concerning the two sons of one man, the eider who tarried with his father, and
the younger who went into a far country, which is narrated so much at length.[6]
In which sort of fiction, men have put even human deeds or words to irrational
animals and things without sense, that by this sort of feigned narrations but
true significations, they might in more winning manner intimate the things which
they wished. Nor is it only in authors of secular letters, as in Horace,[7]
that mouse speaks to mouse, and weasel to fox, that through a fictitious
narration a true signification may be referred to the matter in hand; whence the like
fables of Aesop being referred to the same end, there is no man so untaught as
to think they ought to be called lies: but in Holy Writ also, as in the book of
Judges, the trees seek them a king, and speak to the olive, to the fig and to
the vine and to the bramble.[8] Which, in any wise, is all feigned, with intent
that one may get to the thing which is intended, by a reigned narration indeed,
yet not a lying one, but with a truthful signification. This I have said on
account of that which is written concerning Jesus, "And Hmself feigned to be
going further:" lest any from this word, like the Priscillianists, wishing to have
license of lying, should contend that beside others even Christ did lie. But
whoso would understand what He by feigning that did prefigure, let him attend to
that which He by acting did effect. For when afterwards He did go further,
above all heavens, yet deserted He not His disciples. In order to signify this
which in the future He did as God, at the present He reigned to do that as Man. And
therefore was a veritable signification caused in that feigning to go before,
because in this departure the verity of that signification did follow after.
Let him therefore contend that Christ did lie by feigning, who denieth that He
fulfilled by doing that which He signified.
29. Because, therefore, lying heretics find not in the books of the New
Testament any precedents of lying which are meet to be imitated, they esteem
themselves to be most copious in their disputation wherein they opine that it is
right to lie, when from the old prophetical books, because it doth not appear
therein, save to the few who understand, to what must be referred the
significative sayings and doings which as such be true, they seem to themselves to find out
and allege many that be lies. But desiring to have, wherewith they may defend
themselves, precedents of deceit seemingly meet to be imitated, they deceive
themselves, and "their iniquity lieth unto itself.1 Those persons, however, of
whom it is not there to be believed that they wished to prophesy, if in doing or
saying they feigned aught with will of deceiving, however it may be that from
the very things also which they did or said somewhat prophetical may be shapen
out, being by His omnipotence afore deposited therein as a seed and
pre-disposed, Who knoweth how to turn to good account even the ill-deeds of men, yet as far
as regards the persons themselves, without doubt they lied. But they ought not
to be esteemed meet for imitation simply for that they are found in those
books which are deservedly called holy and divine: for those books contain the
record of both the ill deeds and the good deeds of men; the one to be eschewed,
the other to be followed after: and some are so put, that upon them is also
sentence passed; some, with no judgment there expressed, are left permitted for us
to judge of: because it was meet that we should not only be nourished by that
which is plain, but exercised by that which is obscure.
30. But why do these persons think they may imitate Tamar telling a lie,
and not think they may imitate Judah committing fornication?2 For there they
have read both, and nought of these hath that Scripture either blamed or praised,
but has merely narrated both, and to our judgment dismissed both: but it is
marvellous if it hath permitted aught of these to be imitated with impunity. For,
that Tamar not through lust of playing the harlot, but through wish of
conceiving seed, did tell the lie, we know. But fornication also, howbeit Judah's was
not such, yet some man's may be such whereby to procure that a man may be
delivered, just as her lie was in order that a man might be conceived; is it right
then to commit fornication on this account, if on that account it is thought that
it was right to lie? Not therefore concerning lying only, but concerning all
works of men in which there arise as it were compensative sins, must we consider
what sentence we ought to pass; lest we open a way not only to small sins
whatsoever, but even to all wickednesses, and there remain no outrageous,
flagitious, sacrilegious deed, in which there may not arise a cause upon which it may
rightly seem a thing meet to be done, and so universal probity of life be by that
opinion subverted.
31. But he who says that some lies are just, must be judged to say no
other than that some sins are just, and therefore some things are just which are
unjust: than which what can be more absurd? For whence is a thing a sin, but for
that it is contrary to justice? Be it said then that some sins are great, some
small, because it is true; and let us not listen to the Stoics who maintain all
to be equal: but to say that some sins are unjust, some just, what else is it
than to say that there be some unjust, some just iniquities? When the Apostle
John saith, "Every man who doeth sin, doeth also iniquity and sin is iniquity."3
It is impossible therefore that a sin should be just, unless when we put the
name of sin upon another thing in which one doth not sin, but either doeth or
suffereth aught for sin. Namely, both sacrifices for sins are named "sins," and
the punishments of sins are sometimes called sins. These doubtless can be
understood to be just sins, when just sacrifices are spoken of, or just punishments.
But those things which are done against God's law cannot be just. It is said
unto God, "Thy law is truth:"4 and consequently, what is against truth cannot be
just. Now who can doubt that every lie is against truth? Therefore there can
be no just lie. Again, what man doth not see clearly that every thing which is
just is of the truth? And John crieth out, "No lie is of the truth."5 No lie
therefore is just. Wherefore, when from holy Scriptures are proposed to us
examples of lying, either they are not lies, but are thought to be so while they are
not understood; or, if lies they be, they are not meet to be imitated, because
they cannot be just.
32. But, as for that which is written, that God did good to the Hebrew
midwives, and to Rahab the harlot of Jericho,[6] this was not because they lied,
but because they were merciful to God's people. That therefore which was
rewarded in them was, not their deceit, but their benevolence; benignity of mind, not
iniquity of lying.7 For, as it would not be marvellous and absurd if God on
account of good works after done by them should be willing to forgive some evil
works at another time before committed, so it is not to be marvelled at that God
beholding at one time, in one cause, both these, that is, the thing done of
mercy and the thing done of deceit, did both reward the good, and for the sake of
this good forgive that evil. For if sins which are done of carnal
concupiscence, not of mercy, are for the sake of after works of mercy remitted,[1] why are
not those through merit of mercy remitted which of mercy itself are committed?
For more grievous is a sin which with purpose of hurting, than that which with
purpose of helping, is wrought. And consequently if that is blotted out by a
work of mercy thereafter following, why is this, which is less heinous, not
blotted out by the mercy itself of the man, both going before that he may sin, and
going along with him while he sins? So indeed it may seem: but in truth it is one
thing to say, "I ought not to have sinned, but I will do works of mercy
whereby I may blot out the sin which I did before;" and another to say, "I ought to
sin, because I cannot else show mercy." It is, I say, one thing to say, "Because
we have already sinned, let us do good," and another to say," Let us sin, that
we may do good." There it is said, "Let us do good, because we have done
evil;" but here, "Let us do evil that good may come."2 And, consequently, there we
have to drain off the sink of sin, here to beware of a doctrine which teacheth
to sin.
33. It remains then that we understand as concerning those women, whether
in Egypt or in Jericho, that for their humanity and mercy they received a
reward, in any wise temporal, which indeed itself, while they wist not of it, should
by prophetical signification prefigure somewhat eternal. But whether it be
ever right, even for the saving of a man's life, to tell a lie, as it is a
question in resolving which even the most learned do weary themselves, it did vastly
surpass the capacity of those poor women, set in the midst of those nations, and
accustomed to those manners. Therefore their ignorance in this as well as in
those other things of which they were alike unknowing, but which are to be known
by the children not of this world but of that which is to come, the patience
of God did bear withal: Who yet, for their human kindness which they had shown
to His servants, rendered unto them rewards of an earthly sort, albeit
signifying somewhat of an heavenly. And Rahab, indeed, delivered out of Jericho, made
transition into the people of God, where, being proficient, she might attain to
eternal and immortal prizes which are not to be sought by any lie. Yet at that
time when she did for the Israelite spies that good, and, for her condition of
life, laudable work, she was not as yet such that it should be required of her,
"In your mouth let Yea be yea, Nay nay."3 But as for those midwives, albeit
Hebrewesses, if they savored only after the flesh, what or how great is the good
they got of their temporal reward in that they made them houses, unless by
making proficiency they attained unto that house of which is sung unto God, "Blessed
are they that dwell in thine house; for ever and ever they will praise thee?"4
It must be confessed, however, that it approacheth much unto righteousness,
and though not yet in reality, even now in respect of hopefulness and disposition
that mind is to be praised, which never lies except with intention and will to
do good to some man, but to hurt no man. But as for us, when we ask whether it
be the part of a good man sometimes to lie, we ask not concerning a person
pertaining to Egypt, or to Jericho, or to Babylon, or still to Jerusalem itself,
the earthly, which is in bondage with her children;5 but concerning a citizen of
that city which is above and free, our mother, eternal in the heavens. And to
our asking it is answered, "No lie is of the truth.''[6] The sons of that city,
are sons of the Truth. That city's sons are they of whom it is written, "In
their mouth was found no lie:"[7] son of that city is he of whom is also written,
"A son receiving the word shall be far from destruction: but receiving, he
hath received that for himself, and nothing false proceedeth out of his mouth."[8]
These sons of Jerusalem on high, and of the holy city eternal, if ever, as
they be men, a lie of what kind soever doth worm itself into them, they ask humbly
for pardon, not therefrom seek moreover glory.
34. But some man will say, Would then those midwives and Rahab have done
better if they had shown no mercy, by refusing to lie? Nay verily, those Hebrew
women, if they were such as that sort of persons of whom we ask whether they
ought ever to tell a lie, would both eschew to say aught false, and would most
frankly refuse that foul service of killing the babes. But, thou wilt say,
themselves would die. Yea, but see what follows. They would die with an heavenly
habitation for their incomparably more ample reward than those houses which they
made them on earth could be: they would die, to be in eternal felicity, after
enduring of death for most innocent truth. What of her in Jericho? Could she do
this? Would she not, if she did not by telling a lie deceive the inquiring
citizens, by speaking truth betray the lurking guests ? Or could she say [1] to their
questionings, I know where they are; but I fear God, I will not betray them ?
She could indeed say this, were she already a true Israelites in whom was no
guile: [2] which thing she was about to be, when through the mercy of God passing
over into the city of God. But they, hearing this (thou wilt say), would slay
her, would search the house. But did it follow that they would also find them,
whom she had diligently concealed ? For in the foresight of this, that most
cautious woman had placed them where they would have been able to remain
undiscovered if she, telling a lie, should not be believed. So both she, if after all
she had been slain by her countrymen for the work of mercy, would have ended this
life, which must needs come to an end, by a death precious in the sight of the
Lord,[3] and towards them her benefit had not been in vain. But, thou wilt
say, " What if the men who sought them, in their thorough-going search had come to
the place where he had concealed them?" In this fashion it may be said: What
if a most vile and base woman, not only telling, but swearing a lie, had not got
them to believe her? Of course even so would the things have been like to come
to pass, through fear of which she lied. And where do we put the will and
power of God? or haply was He not able to keep both her, neither telling a lie to
her own townsmen, nor betraying men of God, and them. being His, safe from all
harm? For by Whom also after the woman's lie they were guarded, by Him could
they, even if she had not lied, have in any wise been guarded. Unless perchance we
have forgotten that this did come to pass in Sodom, where males burning
rewards males with hideous lust could not so much as find the door of the house in
which were the men they sought; when that just man, in a case altogether most
similar, would not tell a lie for his guests, whom he knew not to be Angels, and
feared lest they should suffer a violence worse than death. And doubtless, he
might have given the seekers the like answer as that woman gave in Jericho. For
it was in precisely the like manner that they sought by interrogating. But that
just person was not willing that for the bodies of his guests his soul should
be spotted by his own telling of a lie, for which bodies he was willing that
the bodies of his daughters by iniquity of others' lust should be deforced.[4]
Let then a man do even for the temporal safety of men what he can; but when it
comes to that point that to consult for such saving of them except by sinning is
not in his power, thenceforth let him esteem himself not to have what he may
do, when he shall perceive that only to be left him which he may not rightly do.
Therefore, touching Rahab in Jericho, because she entertained strangers, men of
God, because in entertaining of them she put herself in peril, because she
believed on their God, because she diligently hid them where she could, because
she gave them most faithful counsel of returning by another way, let her be
praised as meet to be imitated even by the citizens of Jerusalem on high. But in
that she lied, although somewhat therein as prophetical be intelligently
expounded, yet not as meet to be imitated is it wisely pro-pounded: albeit that God hath
those good things memorably honored, this evil thing mercifully overlooked.
35. Since these things are so, because it were too long to treat
thoroughly of all that in that " Pound "[5] of Dictinius are set down as seemeth to me
that this is the rule to which not only these, but whatever such there be, must
be reduced. Namely, either what is believed to be a lie must be shown not to be
such; whether it be where a truth is left untold, and yet no falsehood told;
or where a true signification willeth one thing to be understood of another,
which kind of figurative either sayings or doings abounds in the prophetical
writings. Or, those which are convicted to be lies, must be proved to be not meet to
be imitated: and if any (as other sins) should stealthily creep in upon us, we
are not to attribute righteousness to them, but to ask pardon for them. So
indeed it seems to me, and to this sentence the things above disputed do compel me.
36. But for that we are men and among men do live, and I confess that I am
not yet in the number of them whom compensative sins embarrass not, it oft
befalleth me in human affairs to be overcome by human feeling, nor am I able to
resist when it is said to me, " Lo, here is a sick man in peril of his life with
a grievous disease, whose strength will no more be able to bear it, if the
death of his only and most dear son be announced to him; he asks of thee whether
his son liveth, and thou knowest that be is departed this life; what wilt thou
reply, when, whatever thou shall say beside one of these three; either, He is
dead; or, He liveth; or, I know not; he believes no other than that he is dead;
which thing he perceives thee to be afraid to tell, and unwilling to tell a lie?"
It comes to the same thing, if thou altogether hold thy peace. But of those
three, two are false, He liveth, and, I know not; and they cannot be said by thee
but by telling a lie. Whereas if thou shall say that one thing which is true,
that is, that he is dead, and the man be so perturbed that death follow, people
will cry out that thou hast killed him And who can bear men casting up to him
what, a mischief it is to shun a lie that might save life, and to choose truth
which murders a man? I am moved by these objections exceedingly, but it were
marvelous whether also wisely. For, when I shall set before the eyes of my heart
(such as they be) the intellectual [1] beauty of Him out of Whose mouth nothing
false proceedeth, albeit where truth in her radiance doth more and more
brighten upon me, there my weak and throbbing sense is beaten back: yet I am with
love of that surpassing comeliness so set on fire, that I despise all human
regards which would thence recall me. But it is much that this affection persevere to
that degree, that in temptation it lack not its effect Nor cloth it move me
while contemplating that luminous Good in which is no darkness of a lie, that,
when we refuse to lie, and men through heating of a truth do die, truth is called
a murderer. For if a lewd woman crave of thee the gratification of her lust,
and, when thou consentest not, she perturbed with the fierceness of her love
should die, will chastity also be a murderer? Or, truly, because we read, "We are
a sweet savor of Christ in every place, both in them which are saved and in
them which perish;" [2] to the one, indeed, a savor of life unto life, to others a
savor of death unto death; shall we pronounce even the savor of Christ to be a
murderer? But, for that we, being men, are in questions and contradictions of
this sort for the most part overcome or wearied out by our feeling as men, for
that very reason hath the Apostle also presently subjoined, "And who is
sufficient for these things?"
37. Add to this, (and here is cause to cry out more piteously,) that, if
once we grant it to have been tight for the saving of that sick man's life to
tell him the lie, that his son was alive, then, by little and little and by
minute degrees, the evil so grows upon us, and by slight accesses to such a heap of
wicked lies does it, in its almost imperceptible encroachments, at last come,
that no place can ever be any where found on which this huge mischief, by
smallest additions rising into boundless strength, might be resisted. Wherefore, most
providently is it written, "He that despiseth small things shall fall by
little and little."[3] Nay more: for these persons who are so enamored of this life,
that they hesitate not to prefer it to truth, that a man may not die, say
rather, that a man who must some time die may die somewhat later, would have us not
only to lie, but even to swear fasely; to wit, that, test the vain health of
man should somewhat more quickly pass away, we should take the name of the Lord
our God in vain ! And there are among them learned men who even fix rules, and
set bounds when it is a duty, when not a duty, to commit perjury! O, where are
ye, fountains of tears ? And what shall we do ? whither go ? where hide us from
the ire of truth, if we not only neglect to shun lies, but dare moreover to
teach perjuries ? For look they well to it, who uphold and defend lying, what
kind, or what kinds, of lying they shall delight to justify: at least in the
worship of God let them grant that there must be no lying; at least let them keep
themselves from perjuries and blasphemies; at least there, where God's name,
where God as witness, where God's oath [4] is interposed, where God's religion is
the matter of discourse or colloquy, let none lie, none praise, none teach and
enjoin, none justify a lie: of the other kinds of lies let him choose him out
that which he accounteth to be the mildest and most innocent kind of lying, he
who will have it to be right to lie. This I know, that even he who teaches that
it is meet to tell lies, wishes to be thought to teach a truth. For if it be
false which he teaches, who would care to give heed to false doctrine, in which
both he deceives that teaches and he is deceived that learns ? But if, in order
that he may be able to find some disciple, he upholds that he teaches a truth
when he readies that it is meet to lie, how will that lie be of the truth, when
the Apostle John reclaimeth, "No lie is of the truth ?" [5] It is therefore not
true, that it is sometimes right to lie; and that which is not true to no man
is at all to be persuaded.
38. But infirmity pleadeth its part, and with favor of the crowds
proclaims itself to have a cause invincible. Where it contradicts, and says, "What way
is there among men, who without doubt by being deceived are turned aside from a
deadly harm to others or themselves, to succor men in peril, if our affection
as men may not incline us to lie ?" If it will hear me patiently, this crowd of
mortality, crowd of infirmity, I will say somewhat in answer on the behalf of
truth. Surely at the least pious, true, holy chastity is not otherwise than of
the truth: and whoso acts against it, acts against truth. Why then, if
otherwise it be not possible to succor men in peril, do I not also commit whoredom,
which is therefore contrary to truth, for that it is contrary to chastity, and
yet, to succor men in peril, do speak a lie which most openly is contrary to truth
itself ? Wherein hath chastity so highly deserved at our hands, and truth
offended us ? When all chastity is of the truth, and not the body's but the mind's
chastity is truth, yea, in the mind dwelleth even the body's chastity. Lastly,
as I shortly before said, and say again, whoever for the recommending and
defending of any lie speaks against me, what speaks he, if he speaks not truth ? Now
if he is therefore to be heard because he speaks truth, how wishes he to make
me, by speaking truth, a liar? How does lying take unto itself truth as its
patroness ? Or, is it for her own adversary that she conquers, that by herself she
may be conquered ? Who can bear this absurdity ? In no wise therefore may we
say, that they who assert that it is sometimes fight to lie, in asserting that
are truthful; lest, what is most absurd and foolish to believe, truth should
teach us to be liars. For what sort of thing is it, that no man learns of chastity
that we may commit adultery; that we may offend God none learns of piety; that
we may do any man harm, none learns of kindness; and that we may tell lies, we
are to learn of truth! But then if this thing truth teaches not, it is not
true; if not true, it is not meet to be learned; if not meet to be learned, never
therefore is it meet to tell a lie.
39. But, some man will say, "Strong meat is for them that are perfect."
[1] For in many things a relaxation by way of indulgence is allowed to infirmity,
although in her utmost sincerity the things be nowise pleasing to truth. Let
him say this, whoever dreads not the consequences which are to be dreaded, if
once there shall be in any way any lies permitted. In nowise, however, must they
be permitted to climb up to such a height as to reach to perjuries and
blasphemies: nor must any plea whatever be held out, for which it should be fight that
perjury should be committed, or, what is more execrable, that God should be
blasphemed. For it does not follow that because the blaspheming is only in
pretence and a lie, therefore He is not blasphemed. For at this rate it might be said
that perjury is not committed, because it is by a lie that it is committed: for
who can be by truth a perjurer ? So also by truth can no man be a blasphemer.
Doubtless it is a milder kind of false sweating, when a person does not know
that thing to be false and believes it to be true, which he swears: like as also
Saul blasphemed more excusably, because he did it ignorantly.[2] But the reason
why it is worse to blaspheme than to perjure one's self, is, that in false
swearing God is taken to witness a false thing, but in blaspheming false things
are spoken of God Himself. Now by so much is a man more inexcusable, whether
perjurer or blasphemer, by how much the more, while asserting the things wherein
they perjure or blaspheme, they know or believe them to be false. Whoever
therefore says that for an imperilled man's temporal safety or life a lie may be told,
doth too much himself swerve from the path of eternal safety and life, if he
says that on that behalf one may even swear by God, or even blaspheme God.
40. But sometimes a peril to eternal salvation itself is put forth against
us; [3] which peril, they cry out, we by telling a lie, if otherwise if cannot
be, must ward off. As, for instance, if a person who is to be baptized be in
the power of impious and infidel men, and cannot be got at that he may be washed
with the layer of regeneration, but by deceiving his keepers with a lie. From
this most invidious cry, by which we are compelled, not for a man's wealth or
honors in this world which are fleeting by, not for the life itself of this
present time, but for the eternal salvation of a human being, to tell a lie,
whither shall I betake me for refuge but unto thee, O truth ? And by thee is put
forth before me,[4] Chastity. For why, if those keepers may be enticed to admit us
to baptize the man, by our committing lewdness, do we refuse to do things
contrary to chastity, and yet, if by a lie they may be deceived, consent to do
things contrary to truth ? when without doubt no man would faithfully think chastity
amiable, but because it is enjoined of truth ? So then, to get at a man to
baptize him, let the keepers be deceived by lying, if truth bid it. But how can
truth bid in order that a man may be baptized, that we should tell a lie, if
chastity biddeth not, in order that a man be baptized, that we should commit
whoredom? Now why doth chastity not bid this, but because this truth teacheth not? If
then, save what truth teacheth, we ought not to do, when truth teacheth not
even for the sake of baptizing a man to do what is contrary to chastity, how
shall she teach us to do for the sake of baptizing a man what is contrary to
herself, the truth ? But like as eyes not strong enough to look upon the sun yet do
gladly look upon the objects which are by the sun enlightened, so, souls which
have already strength to delight in the beauty of chastity are yet not
straightway able to consider in her very self that truth whence charity hath her light,
insomuch that when it cometh to the doing of somewhat that is adverse to truth,
they should so start back in horror as they do start back in horror if aught
be proposed to be done that is adverse to chastity. But that son, who, receiving
the word shall be far from perdition, and nothing false cometh forth of his
mouth,[1] accounts it as much debarred from him if, to the succoring of his
fellow man he be urged to pass through a lie, as if it were through the deed of
lewdness. And the Father heareth and granteth his prayer that he may avail without
a lie to succor whom the Father Himself, Whose judgments are un-searchable,
willeth to be succored. Such a son therefore so keeps watch against a lie, as he
doth against sin. For indeed sometimes the name of lie is put for the name of
sin: whence is that saying, "All men are liars." [3] For it is so said, as if it
were said, "All men are sinners." And that: "But if the truth of God hath
abounded through my lie.'' [3] And therefore, when he lies as a man he sins as a
man, and will be held by that sentence in which it is said, "All men are liars;"
and, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not
in us." [4] But when nothing false cometh forth of his mouth, according to that
grace will it so be, of which is said: "He that is born of God, sinneth not."
[5] For were this nativity by itself alone in us, no man would sin: and when it
shall be alone, no man will sin. But now, we as yet drag on that which we were
born corruptible: although, according to that which we are new-born, if we
walk aright, from day to day we are renewed inwardly.[6] But when this corruptible
shall have put on incorruption, life will swallow it up wholly, and not a
sting of death will remain.[7] Now this sting of death is sin.
41. Either then we are to eschew lies by right doing, or to confess them
by repenting: but not, while they unhappily abound in our living, to make then
more by teaching also. But let him who thinks this, choose out whereby he may
help his fellow man being in peril, to what safety he will, what kinds soever of
lies; provided yet even of such men we obtain our demand, that upon no cause
must we be carried on to false-swearing and to blaspheming. These wickednesses at
least let us judge either greater than deeds of lewdness, or certainly not
smaller. For indeed it is worth thinking of, that very often men, where they
suspect them of adultery, challenge their wives to an oath: which surely they would
not do, unless they believed that even they who were not afraid to perpetrate
adultery, might be afraid of perjury. Because in fact also some lewd women who
were not afraid by unlawful embraces to deceive their husbands, have been afraid
to call God deceitfully to witness unto those same husbands whom they had
deceived. What cause then can there be, that a chaste and religious person should
be unwilling by adultery to help a man to baptism, yet be willing to help him by
perjury, which even adulterers are wont to dread? And then, if it be shocking
to do this by perjuring one's self, how much rather by blaspheming? Far be it
then from a Christian to deny and blaspheme Christ, that he may make another man
a Christian; and by losing himself seek to find one, whom, if he teach him
such things, he may cause to be lost when found. The book then which is called
"the Pound," thou must in twos method refute and destroy; namely, that head of it
in which they dogmatize that for the purpose of concealing religion a lie may
be told, this thou shall understand must be the first to be amputated; in such
manner, that their testimonies by which they labor to advance the Holy Books as
patrons of their lies, thou must demonstrate partly not to be lies, partly,
even those which are such, to be not meet to be imitated: and if infirmity usurps
to herself thus much, that somewhat shall be venially permitted unto her which
truth approve not, yet that thou unshakenly hold and defend, that in divine
religion it is at no time whatever right to tell a lie. And, as for concealed
heretics, that, as we are not to find out concealed adulterers by committing of
adulteries, nor murderers by committing of murders, nor practisers of black arts
[8] by practising of black arts, so neither must we seek to find out liars by
telling lies or blasphemers by blaspheming: according to the reasonings which we
have in this volume so copiously set forth, that unto the goal of the same,
which we fixed to be in this place, we have with difficulty come at last.