39. If your reply to him
had been couched in terms like these, would you not have ministered
grace and edification both to him, since he has been initiated into the
fear of God, and to all your other readers, whereas these invectives of
yours are the cause of sadness and confusion to all who fear God, since
they see you a prey to this hideous lust of detraction, and me driven
to the wretched necessity of recrimination. But, as I have said, this
evidence was unnecessary. You yourself in the books you published
against Jovinian, at one time assert, as can be shewn, the same things
which you blamed in him, while at another you fall into the opposite
extreme, and declare marriage to be so disgraceful a state that its
stain cannot even be washed away by the blood of martyrdom. But, if it
appeared to you an easy thing for your friend to procure what amounts
to a correction of the dogma of the Manichæans as it was
originally expressed in these books, and that when they were already
published and placed in the hands of many persons to copy, what
difficulty would there have been in my correcting a work which was not
my own but a translation of that of another man, if any mistakes could
be pointed out in it, I will not say by reason, but even by envy?
especially when it was 479still in rough sheets, which I had not read over again or
corrected, and which were not published when your friends took
possession of them. Was it an impossibility to get these writings
corrected which were then in an uncorrected state? But the sting does
not proceed from that quarter; he would have found nothing to blame
there. It proceeds wholly from the fact that he was afraid that it
might come to light what is the source of all that he says, and whence
he gains the reputation of a learned man and a great expounder of the
Scriptures.