29. What can be more distinct than this statement? What could
possibly be thought or said whether by Origen or by any of those whom
you say that you condemn, which would be clearer than this, that the
inequality of conditions which exists among those who are born into
this world is ascribed to the justice of God? You say that the cause of
the salvation or perdition of each soul is to be found in itself, that
is, in the passions and dispositions which it has shown in its previous
life in that new Jerusalem which is the mother of us all. “But
this too,” he will say no doubt, “is not said by myself. I
described it as the opinion of another: moreover, I used the expression
‘they seize upon the opportunity.’” Well, I do not
deny that you make it appear that you are speaking of another. But you
have not denied that this man about whom you are speaking is in
agreement and accord with you: you have not said that he is in
opposition or hostility to you. For, when you use this formula of
‘another’ in reference to one who is really opposed to you,
you habitually, after setting down a few of his words, at once impugn
and overthrow them: you do this in the case of Marcion, Valentinus,
Arius and others. But when, as in this instance, you use, indeed, this
formula of ‘another,’ but report his words fortified by the
strongest assertions and by the most abundant testimonies of Scripture,
is it not evident even to us who are so slow of understanding, and whom
you speak of as ‘moles,’ that he whose words you set down
and do not overthrow, is no other than yourself, and that we have here
a case of the figure well known to rhetoricians, when they use another
man’s person to set forth their own opinions. Such figures are
resorted to by rhetoricians when they are afraid of offending
particular people, or when they wish to avoid exciting ill-will against
themselves. But, if you think that you have avoided blame by putting
for451ward
‘another’ as the author of these statements, how much more
free from it is he whom you accuse. For his mode of action is much more
cautious. He is not content with merely saying, “This is what
others say,” or “so some men think,” but, “As
to this or that I do not decide, I only suggest,” and, “If
this seems to any one more probable, let him hold to it, putting the
other aside.” He has been very careful in his statements, as you
know; and yet you summon him to be tried and condemned. You think that
you have escaped because you speak of ‘another’: but the
points on which you condemn him are precisely those in which you follow
and imitate him.