39. But lately, O blindness,
I worshipped images produced from the furnace, gods made on anvils and
by hammers, the bones of elephants, paintings, wreaths on aged
trees;33093309 whenever I
espied an anointed stone and one bedaubed with olive oil, as if some
power resided in it I worshipped it, I addressed myself to it and
begged blessings from a senseless stock.33103310 And these very gods of whose
existence I had convinced myself, I treated with gross insults, when I
believed them to be wood, stone, and bones, or imagined that they dwelt
in the substance of such objects. Now, having been led into the
paths of truth by so great a teacher, I know what all these things are,
I entertain honourable thoughts concerning those which are worthy, I
offer no insult to any divine name; and what is due to each, whether
inferior33113311 or superior, I
assign with clearly-defined gradations, and on distinct
authority. Is Christ, then, not to be regarded by us as God? and
is He, who in other respects may be deemed the very greatest,
not 424to be honoured with
divine worship, from whom we have already received while alive so great
gifts, and from whom, when the day comes, we expect greater
ones?