12. Thus has the question
been on both sides considered and treated; and still it is not easy
to pass sentence: but we must further lend diligent hearing to
those who say, that no deed is so evil, but that in avoidance of a
worse it ought to be done; moreover that the deeds of men include
not only what they do, but whatever they consent to be done unto
them. Wherefore, if cause have arisen that a Christian man should
choose to burn incense to idols, that he might not consent to
bodily defilement which the persecutor threatened him withal,
unless he should do so, they think they have a right to ask why he
should not also tell a lie to escape so foul a disgrace. For the
consent itself to endure violation of the person rather than to
burn incense to idols, this, they say, is not a passive thing, but
a deed; which rather than do, he chose to burn incense. How much
more readily then would he have chosen a lie, if by a lie he might
ward off from a holy body so shocking a disgrace?