30. It seems needless to make any answer to that part of his
indictment in which he says that the works of the Martyr Pamphilus,
expressed as they are with so much faithful474ness and piety, are either not
to be considered genuine or if genuine, to be treated with contempt. Is
there any one to whose authority he will bow? Is there any one whom he
will refrain from abusing? All the old Greek writers of the church,
according to him, have erred. As to the Latins, how he disparages them,
how he attacks them one by one, both those of the old and those of
modern times, any one who reads his various work knows well. Now even
the Martyrs fail to gain any respect from him. “I do not
believe,” he says “that this is really the work of the
Martyr.” If such an argument were admitted in the case of the
works of any writer, how can we prove their genuineness in any
particular case? If I were to say, It is not true that books of
Miscellanies are Origen’s as you maintain, how can they be proved
to be his? His answer is, From their likeness to the rest. But, just
as, when a man wants to forge some one’s signature, he imitates
his handwriting, so he who wishes to introduce his own thoughts under
another man’s name, is sure to imitate the style of him whose
name he has assumed. But, to pass over for brevity’s sake all
that might with great justice be said on this point, if you were
determined to be so bold as to question the works of the Martyr, you
ought to have brought out publicly the actual statements which seemed
to you liable to question, and then every reader could have seen what
was absurd in them and what was reasonable, what was unsuitable to or
against the system of the Apostles; and especially the great impiety,
whatever it may have been, in expiation of which you tell us that the
Martyr shed his blood. A man who read those actual words would be able
to say, not, as now, on your judgment but on his own, either that the
martyr had gone wrong, or that a treatise which was so full of
absurdity and unbelief had been composed by some one else. But, as it
is, you know well that if the writings which you impugn are read by any
one, the blame will be turned back upon him who has unjustly found
fault; and therefore you do not cite the passages which you impugn, but
with that ‘censor’s rod’ of yours, and by your own
arrogant authority, you make your decrees in this style: “Let
this book be cast out of the libraries, let that book be retained; and
again, if today a book is accepted, tomorrow if any one but myself has
praised it, let it be cast out, and with it the man who praised it. Let
this one be counted as Catholic, even though he seems at times to have
gone wrong; let that man have no pardon for his error, even though he
has said the same things as myself, and let no man translate him nor
read him, for fear he should recognize my plagiarisms. This man indeed
was a heretic, but he was my master. And this other, though he is a
Jew, and of the Synagogue of Satan, and is hired to sell words for
gain, yet he is my master who must be preferred to all others, because
it is among the Jews alone that the truth of the Scriptures
dwells.” If the universal Church had with one voice conferred on
you this authority, and had demanded of you that you should be the
judge of each and all, would it not have been your duty to refuse to
allow so heavy and perilous a burden to be laid upon you? But now we
have made such progress in the daily habit of disparaging others that
we no longer spare even the martyrs. But let us suppose that the work
is not that of the martyr Pamphilus, but of some other unknown member
of the church; did he, whoever he may have been, employ his own words,
I ask, so that we are called upon to defer to the merits of the writer?
No. He sets out quotations from the works of Origen himself, and
exhibits his opinion upon each question not in the words of the
apologist but in those of the accused himself; and, just as in the
present treatise what I have quoted from your writings carried much
more force than what I have said myself, so also the defence of Origen
lies not in the authority of his apologist, but in his own words. The
question of authorship is superfluous, when the defence is so conducted
as to dispense with the author’s aid.