41. However, let him act in
these matters as he himself thinks lawful or expedient. Let me
recapitulate in the end of this book what I have said in a scattered
way in my own defence. He had said of me that it seemed as if I could
not be a heretic without him; I therefore set forth my belief and, in
respect of the resurrection of the dead I proved that he rather than I
was in error, since he spoke of the resurrection body as frail. I
shewed also that he did away with the distinction of sex in the other
world, saying that bodies would become souls women men. I next revealed
the causes which had led to my translation—very proper causes in
my opinion; I shewed that it was not because I was stimulated by
contentiousness, nor because I was desirous of glory, but because I was
incited by the fear of God, that I imported a store of old Greek
material to be used in the new Latin construction, that I furbished up
the old armour which had become enveloped in rust, not with a view to
excite a civil war but to repel a hostile attack. I then introduced the
chief matter on which they have laid their forgers’ hands, the
adulterous blasphemy against the Son of God and the Holy Spirit, a
thing quite alien from me, but brought in by these men in their
wickedness as I shewed by quotations.