CHAPTER XVII.
How the saints have profitably employed a lie like hellebore.
AND so we ought to regard a lie and to employ it as if its nature were that of hellebore; which is useful if taken when some
deadly disease is threatening, but if taken without being required by some great danger is the cause of immediate death. For
so also we read that holy men and those most approved by God employed lying, so as not only to incur no guilt of sin from
it, but even to attain the greatest goodness; and if deceit could confer glory on them, what on the
other hand would the truth have brought them but condemnation? Just as Rahab, of whom Scripture gives a record not only
of no good deed but actually of unchastity, yet simply for the lie, by means of which she preferred to hide the spies instead
of betraying them, had it vouchsafed to her to be joined with the people of God in everlasting blessing. But if she had preferred
to speak the truth and to regard the safety of the citizens, there is no doubt that she and all her house would not have
escaped the coming destruction, nor would it have been vouchsafed to her to be inserted in the progenitors of our Lord's
nativity,941941
and reckoned in the list of the patriarchs, and through her descendants that followed, to become the mother of the Saviour
of all. Again Dalila, who to provide for the safety of her fellow citizens betrayed the truth she had discovered, obtained
in exchange eternal destruction, and has left to all men nothing but the memory of her sin. When then any grave danger hangs
on confession of the truth, then we must take to lying as a refuge, yet in such a way as to be for our
salvation troubled by the guilt of a humbled conscience. But where there is no call of the utmost necessity present, there
a lie should be most carefully avoided as if it were something deadly: just as we said of a cup of hellebore which is indeed
useful if it is only taken in the last resort when a deadly and inevitable disease is threatening, while if it is taken when
the body is in a state of sound and rude health, its deadly properties at once go to find out the vital parts. And this was
clearly shown of Rahab of Jericho, and the patriarch Jacob; the former of whom could only escape death by means of this
remedy, while the latter could not secure the blessing of the first-born without it. For God is not only the Judge and inspector
of our words and actions, but He also looks into their purpose and aim. And if He sees that anything has been done or promised
by some one for the sake of eternal salvation and shows insight into Divine contemplation, even though it may appear to men
to be hard and unfair, yet He looks at the inner goodness of the heart and regards the desire of the will rather than
the actual words spoken, because He must take into account the aim of the work and the disposition of the doer, whereby, as
was said above, one man may be justified by means of a lie, while another may be guilty of a sin of everlasting death by telling
the truth. To which end the patriarch Jacob also had regard when he was not afraid to imitate the hairy appearance of his
brother's body by wrapping himself up in skins, and to his credit acquiesced in his mother's instigation of a lie for
this object. For he saw that in this way there would be bestowed on him greater gains of blessing and righteousness than by
keeping to the path of simplicity: for he did not doubt that the stain of this lie would at once be washed away by the flood
of the paternal blessing, and would speedily be dissolved like a little cloud by the breath of the Holy Spirit; and that richer
rewards of merit would be bestowed on him by means of this dissimulation which he put on than by means of the truth, which
was natural to him.