27. But now hear, what I
trust I shall by this time more easily persuade you of. In a matter
of religion, that is, of the worship and knowledge of God, they are
less to be followed, who forbid us to believe, making most ready
professions of reason. For no one doubts that all men are either
fools or wise.17441744 But now I
call wise, not clever and gifted men, but those, in whom there is,
so much as may be in man, the knowledge of man himself and of God
most surely received, and a life and manners suitable to that
knowledge; but all others, whatever be their skill or want of
skill, whatever their manner of life, whether to be approved or
disapproved, I would account in the number of fools. And, this
being so, who of moderate understanding but will clearly see, that
it is more useful and more healthful for fools to obey the precepts
of the wise, than to live by their own judgment? For everything
that is done, if it be not rightly done, is a sin, nor can that any
how be rightly done which proceeds not from right reason. Further,
right reason is very virtue. But to whom of men is virtue at hand,
save to the mind of the wise? Therefore the wise man alone sins
not. Therefore every fool sins, save in those actions, in which he
hath obeyed a wise man: for all such actions proceed from right
reason, and, so to say, the fool is not to be accounted master of
his own action, he being, as it were, the instrument and that which
ministers17451745 to the
wise man. Wherefore, if it be better for all men not to sin than to
sin; assuredly all fools would live better, if they could be slaves
of the wise. And, if no one doubts that this is better in lesser
matters, as in buying and selling, and cultivating the ground, in
taking 361a wife, in undertaking and bringing17461746 up children, lastly, in the
management of household property, much more in religion. For both
human matters are more easy to distinguish between, than divine;
and in all matters of greater sacredness and excellence, the
greater obedience and service we owe them, the more wicked and the
more dangerous is it to sin. Therefore you see henceforth17471747 that
nothing else is left us, so long as we are fools, if our heart be
set on an excellent and religious life, but to seek wise men, by
obeying whom we may be enabled both to lessen the great feeling of
the rule of folly, whilst it is in us, and at the last to escape
from it.