15. The whole stress, then,
of this question comes to this; whether it be true universally that
no sin of another, committed upon thee, is to be imputed to thee,
if, being able to avoid it by a lighter sin of thine own, thou do
it not; or whether there be an exception of all bodily defilement.
No man says that a person is defiled by being murdered, or cast
into prison, or bound in chains, or scourged, or afflicted with
other tortures and pains, or proscribed and made to suffer most
grievous losses even to utter nakedness, or stripped of honors, and
subjected to great disgrace by reproaches of whatsoever kind;
whatever of all these a man may have unjustly suffered, no man is
so senseless as to say that he is thereby defiled. But if he have
filth poured all over him, or poured into his mouth, or crammed
into him, or if he be carnally used like a woman; then almost all
men regard him with a feeling of horror, and they call him defiled
and unclean. One must conclude then that the sins of others, be
they what they may, those always excepted which defile him on whom
they are committed, a man must not seek to avoid by sin of his own,
either for himself or for any other, but rather he must put up with
them, and suffer bravely; and if by no sins of his own he ought to
avoid them, therefore not by a lie: but those which by being
committed upon a man do make him unclean, these we are bound to
avoid even by sinning ourselves; and for this reason those things
are not to be called sins, which are done for the purpose of
avoiding that uncleanness. For whatever is done, in consideration
that the not doing it were just cause of blame, that thing is not
sin. Upon the same principle, neither is that to be called
uncleanness when there is no way of avoiding it; for even in that
extremity he who suffers it has what he may do aright, namely,
patiently bear what he cannot avoid. Now no man while acting aright
can be defiled by any corporal contagion. For the unclean in the
sight of God is every one who is unrighteous; clean therefore is
every one who is righteous; if not in the sight of men, yet in the
sight of God, Who judges without error. Nay, even in the act of
suffering that defilement with power given of avoiding it, it is
not by the mere contact that the man is defiled; but by the sin of
refusing to avoid it when he might. For that would be no sin,
whatever might be done for the avoiding of it. Whoever therefore,
for the avoiding of it, shall tell a lie, sinneth not.