CHAPTER XXVIII.
The answer telling in what cases the determination is to be kept fixedly, and in what cases it may be broken if need be.
JOSEPH: We do not lay this down with regard to those fundamental commands, without which our salvation cannot in any way exist,
but with regard to those which we can either relax or hold fast to without endangering our state, as for instance, an unbroken
and strict fast, or total abstinence from wine or oil, or entire prohibition to leave one's cell, or incessant attention to
reading and meditation, all of which can be practised at pleasure, without damage to our
profession and purpose, and, if need be, can be given up without blame. But we must most resolutely make up our minds
to observe those fundamental commands, and not even, if need arise, to avoid death in their cause, with regard to which we
must immovably assert: "I have sworn and am purposed." And this should be done for the preservation of love, for which all
things else should be disregarded lest the beauty and perfection of its calm should suffer a stain. In the same way we must
swear for
the purity of our chastity, and we ought to do the same for faith, and sobriety and justice, to all of which we must cling
with unchangeable persistence, and to forsake which even for a little is worthy of blame. But in the case of those bodily
exercises, which are said to be profitable for a little,986986
we must, as we said, decide in such a way that, if there occurs any more decided opportunity for a good act, which would
lead us to relax them, we need not be bound by any rule about them, but may give them up and freely adopt what is more useful.
For in the case of those bodily exercises, if they are dropped for a time, there is no danger: but to have given up these
others even for a moment is deadly.