31. But let this
pass, for what follows is of more importance. I thank God that he has
relieved me from a very serious burden of suspicion. Perhaps I seemed
to some people to be acting contentiously and calumniously when I
insinuated that, according to a figure of rhetoric, when he spoke of
‘another’ he meant himself. But to prevent all further
doubt from resting in the minds of his hearers, he has himself declared
that it is so. Like a truly good teacher, who would not wish any
ambiguity about his sayings to remain in the minds of his pupils, he
has been so good as to shew quite clearly who that ‘other’
was of whom he had spoken before. He therefore says, “But, as it
stands, the addition of the preposition ‘before’ leads us
to explain it according to the ideas which we argued in a former place
to be necessary.” You see, he means that it is we, and not some
other, no one knows who, as you may have thought, who in the former
place argued thus, when we were expounding the words “Who hath
blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in
Christ.” It was to meet the case of the less intelligent persons,
who might think that what was there said was spoken by some one else,
to prevent any error on the point remaining in the minds of those whom
he had begged to read these books so that they might see what his
opinion of Origen was, that he now acknowledges this opinion as his
own, and, no longer speaking of ‘another,’ says what we
have quoted before; namely, that, as God had before blessed us with all
spiritual blessing in Christ in the heavenly places, and had chosen us
before the foundation of the world; so also we are said to have trusted
in Christ at that former time in which we were elected and
predestinated and blessed in heaven. He himself therefore, as it seems
to me, has by his own testimony, absolved me from all suspicion of
speaking a calumny when I say that that ‘other’ is no
‘other’ than himself.