36. Wherefore, if either our
reasoning or our discourse hath in any way moved you, and if you
have, as I believe, a true care for yourself, I would you would
listen to me, and with pious faith, lively hope, and simple
charity, entrust yourself to good teachers of Catholic
Christianity; and cease not to pray unto God Himself, by Whose
goodness alone we were created, and suffer punishment by His
justice, and are set free by His mercy. Thus there will be wanting
to you neither precepts and treatises of most learned and truly
Christian men, nor books, nor calm thoughts themselves, whereby you
may easily find what you are seeking. For do you abandon utterly
those wordy and wretched men, (for what other milder name can I
use?) who, whilst they seek to excess whence is evil, find nothing
but evil. And on this question they often rouse their hearers to
inquire; but after that they have been roused, they teach them such
lessons as that it were preferable even to sleep for ever, than
than thus to be awake. For in place of lethargic they make them
frantic, between which diseases, both being usually fatal, there is
still this difference, that lethargic persons die without doing
violence to others; but the frantic person many who are sound, and
specially they who wish to help him, have reason to fear. For
neither is God the author of evil, nor hath it ever repented Him
that He hath done aught, nor is He troubled by storm of any passion
of soul, nor is a small part of earth His Kingdom: He neither
approves nor commands any sins or wickedness, He never lies. For
these and such like used to move us, when they used them to make
great and threatening assaults, and charged this as being the
system of teaching of the Old Testament, which is most false. Thus
then I allow that they do right in censuring these. What then have
I learnt? What think you, save that, when these are censured, the
Catholic system of teaching is not censured. Thus what I had learnt
among them that is true, I hold, what is false that I had thought I
reject. But the Catholic Church hath taught me many other things
also, which those men of bloodless bodies, but coarse minds, cannot
aspire unto; that is to say, that God is not corporeal, that no
part of Him can be perceived by corporeal eyes, that nothing of His
Substance or Nature can any way suffer violence or change, or is
compounded or formed; and if you grant me these, (for we may not
think otherwise concerning God,) all their devices are overthrown.
But how it is, that neither God begot or created evil, nor yet is
there, or hath there been ever, any nature and substance, which God
either begot not or created not, and yet that He setteth us free
from evil, is proved by reasons so necessary, that it cannot at all
be matter of doubt; especially to you and such as you; that is, if
to a good disposition there be added piety and a certain peace of
mind, without which nothing at all can be understood concerning so
great matters. And here there is no rumor concerning smoke, and I
know not what Persian vain fable, unto which it is enough to lend
an ear, and soul not subtile, but absolutely childish. Far
altogether, far otherwise is the truth, than as the Manichees dote.
But since this discourse of ours hath gone much further than I
thought, here let us end the book; in which I wish you to remember,
that I have not yet begun to refute the Manichees, and that I have
not yet assailed that nonsense; and that neither have I unfolded
any thing great concerning the Catholic Church itself, but that I
have only wished to root out of you, if I could, a false notion
concerning true Christians that was maliciously or ignorantly
suggested to us, and to arouse you to learn certain great and
divine things. Wherefore let this volume be as it is; but when your
soul becomes more 366calmed, I shall perhaps be more
ready in what remains.17611761
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