37. Add to this, (and here is
cause to cry out more piteously,) that, if once we grant it to have
been right for the saving of that sick man’s life to tell him the
lie, that his son was alive, then, by little and little and by
minute degrees, the evil so grows upon us, and by slight accesses
to such a heap of wicked lies does it, in its almost imperceptible
encroachments, at last come, that no place can ever be any where
found on which this huge mischief, by smallest additions rising
into boundless strength, might be resisted. Wherefore, most
providently is it written, “He that despiseth small things shall
fall by little and little.”24612461 Nay more: for these persons who
are so enamored of this life, that they hesitate not to prefer it
to truth, that a man may not die, say rather, that a man who must
some time die may die somewhat later, would have us not only to
lie, but even to swear fasely; to wit, that, lest the vain health
of man should somewhat more quickly pass away, we should take the
name of the Lord our God in vain! And there are among them learned
men who even fix rules, and set bounds when it is a duty, when not
a duty, to commit perjury! O, where are ye, fountains of tears? And
what shall we do? whither go? where hide us from the ire of truth,
if we not only neglect to shun lies, but dare moreover to teach
perjuries? For look they well to it, who uphold and defend lying,
what kind, or what kinds, of lying they shall delight to justify:
at least in the worship of God let them grant that there must be no
lying; at least let them keep themselves from perjuries and
blasphemies; at least there, where God’s name, where God as
witness, where God’s oath24622462 is interposed, where God’s
religion is the matter of discourse or colloquy, let none lie, none
praise, none teach and enjoin, none justify a lie: of the other
kinds of lies let him choose him out that which he accounteth to be
the mildest and most innocent kind of lying, he who will have it to
be right to lie. This I know, that even he who teaches that it is
meet to tell lies, wishes to be thought to teach a truth. For if it
be false which he teaches, who would care to give heed to false
doctrine, in which both he deceives that teaches and he is deceived
that learns? But if, in order that he may be able to find some
disciple, he upholds that he teaches a truth when he teaches that
it is meet to lie, how will that lie be of the truth, when the
Apostle John reclaimeth, “No lie is of the truth?”24632463 It is
therefore not true, that it is sometimes right to lie; and that
which is not true to no man is at all to be persuaded.