14. Wherefore I cannot indeed
say, of females who have fallen away from a better purpose, in case
they shall have married, that they are adulteries, not marriages;
but I plainly would not hesitate to say, that departures and
fallings away from a holier chastity, which is vowed unto the Lord,
are worse than adulteries. For if, what may no way be doubted, it
pertains unto an offense against Christ, when a member of Him
keepeth not faith to her husband; how much graver offense is it
against Him, when unto Himself faith is not kept, in a matter which
He requires when offered, Who had not required that it should be
offered. For when each fails to render that which, not by force of
command, but by advice of counsel, he vowed, by so much the more
doth he increase the unrighteousness of the wrong done to his vow,
by how much the less necessity he had to vow. These matters I for
this reason treat of, that you may not think either that second
marriages are criminal, or that any marriages whatsoever, being
marriages, are an evil. Therefore let this be your mind, not that
you condemn them, but that you despise them. Therefore the good of
widowed chastity is becoming after a brighter fashion, in that in
order to make vow and profession of it, females may despise what is
both pleasing and lawful. But after profession of vow made they
must continue to rein in, and overcome, what is pleasing, because
it is no longer lawful.