Chapter VIII.—Wickedness Attributed to the Gods by Heathen Writers.
For, denying that there are gods, they again
acknowledge their existence, and they said they committed grossly
wicked deeds. And, first, of Jove the poets euphoniously sing the wicked
actions. And Chrysippus, who talked a deal of nonsense, is he not found
publishing that Juno had the foulest intercourse with Jupiter? For why
should I recount the impurities of the so-called mother of the gods,
or of Jupiter Latiaris thirsting for human blood, or the castrated
Attis; or of Jupiter, surnamed Tragedian, and how he defiled himself,
as they say, and now is worshipped among the Romans as a god? I am
silent about the temples of Antinous, and of the others whom you call
gods. For when related to sensible persons, they excite laughter. They
who elaborated such a philosophy regarding either the non-existence of
God, or promiscuous intercourse and beastly concubinage, are themselves
condemned by their own teachings. Moreover, we find from the writings
they composed that the eating of human flesh was received among them;
and they record that those whom they honour as gods were the first to
do these things.