4. Of lies are many sorts,
which indeed 483all, universally, we ought to
hate. For there is no lie that is not contrary to truth. For, as
light and darkness, piety and impiety, justice and iniquity, sin
and right-doing, health and weakness, life and death, so are truth
and a lie contrary the one to the other. Whence by how much we love
the former, by so much ought we to hate the latter. Yet in truth
there be some lies which to believe does no harm: although even by
such sort of lie to wish to deceive, is hurtful to him that tells
it, not to him that believes it. As though, if that brother, the
servant of God, Fronto, in the information which he gave thee,
should (though far be the thought!) say some things falsely; he
would have hurt himself assuredly, not thee, although thou, without
iniquity of thine, hadst believed all, upon his telling it.
Because, whether those things did so take place or not so, yet they
have not any thing, which if a person believe to have been so,
though it were not so, he by the rule of truth and doctrine of
eternal salvation should be judged worthy of blame. Whereas, if a
person tell a lie which if any believe he will be an heretic
against the doctrine of Christ, by so much is he who tells the lie
more hurtful, by how much he that believes it is more miserable.
See then, what manner of thing it is, if against the doctrine of
Christ we shall tell a lie which whoso believes shall perish, in
order that we may catch the enemies of the same doctrine, to the
end we may bring them to the truth, while we recede from it; nay
rather, when we catch liars by lying, teach worse lies. For it is
one thing what they say when they lie, another when they are
deceived. For, when they teach their heresy, they speak the things
in which they are deceived; but when they say that they think what
they do not think, or that they do not think what they do think,
they say the things in which they lie. In that any believeth them,
what though he do not find them out, himself perisheth not. For it
is no receding from the catholic rule, if, when a heretic lyingly
professes the catholic doctrines, one believes him to be a
catholic: and therefore it is not pernicious to him; because he is
mistaken in the mind of a man, of which, when latent, he cannot
judge, not in the faith of God which it is his duty to keep safe
planted within him. Moreover, when they teach their heresy, whoso
shall believe them, in thinking it truth, will be partaker, as of
their error, so of their damnation. So it comes to pass, that when
they fable their nefarious dogmas in which they are with deadly
error deceived, then whoso believeth them is lost: whereas when we
preach catholic dogmas, in which we hold the right faith, then if
he shall believe, that man is found, whoso was lost. But when, they
being Priscillianists, do, in order that they may not betray their
venom, lyingly give themselves out to be of us; whoever of us
believes them, even while they escape detection, himself perseveres
a Catholic: we on the other hand, if, in order to attain to the
discovery of them, we falsely give ourselves out for
Priscillianists, because we shall praise their dogmas as though
they were our own, whoso shall believe the same, will either be
confirmed among them, or will be transferred to them in the
meantime straightway: but what the coming hour may bring forth,
whether they shall be afterwards set free therefrom by us when
speaking true things, who were deceived by us when speaking false;
and whether they will be willing to hear one teaching whom they
have thus experienced telling a lie, who can know for certain? who
can be ignorant that this is uncertain? Whence it is gathered, that
it is more pernicious, or to speak more mildly, that it is more
perilous for Catholics to lie that they may catch heretics, than
for heretics to lie that they may not be found out by Catholics.
Because, whoso believes Catholics when they tell a lie to tempt
people, is either made or confirmed a heretic; but whoso believes
heretics when they tell a lie to conceal themselves, doth not cease
to be a Catholic. But that this may become more plain, let us
propose some cases by way of example, and from those writings in
preference which thou hast sent me to read.