Chapter XXXV.—The Christians Condemn and Detest All Cruelty.
What man of sound mind, therefore, will affirm,
while such is our character, that we are murderers? For we cannot eat
human flesh till we have killed some one. The former charge, therefore,
being false, if any one should ask them in regard to the second, whether
they have seen what they assert, not one of them would be so barefaced
as to say that he had. And yet we have slaves, some more and some fewer,
by whom we could not help being seen; but even of these, not one has been
found to invent even such things against us. For when they know that we
cannot endure even to see a man put to death, though justly; who of them
can accuse us of murder or cannibalism? Who does not reckon among the
things of greatest interest the contests of gladiators and wild beasts,
especially those which are given by you? But we, deeming that to see
a man put to death is much the same as killing him, have abjured such
spectacles.830830
How, then, when we do not even look on, lest we should contract guilt
and pollution, can we put people to death? And when we say that those
women who use drugs to bring on abortion commit murder, and will have
to give an account to God831831 for the abortion, on
what principle should we commit murder? For it does not belong to the
same person to regard the very fœtus in the womb as a created being,
and therefore an object of God’s care, and when it has passed into
life, to kill it; and not to expose an infant, because those who expose
them are chargeable with child-murder, and on the other hand, when it
has been reared to destroy it. But we are in all things always alike
and the same, submitting ourselves to reason, and not ruling over it.