14. It is said that on a recent occasion where the letters of
Theophilus exposing the errors of Origen were read, our friend stopped
his ears, and along with all present pronounced a distinct condemnation
upon the author of so much evil; and that he said that up to that
moment he had never known that Origen had written anything so wrong. I
say nothing against this: I do not make the observation which perhaps
another might make, that it was impossible for him to be ignorant of
that which he had himself translated, and an apology for which by a
heretic he had published under the name of a martyr, whose defence also
he had undertaken in his own book; as to which I shall have some
adverse remarks to make later on if I have time to write them. I only
make one observation which does not admit of contradiction. If it is
possible that he should have misunderstood what he translated, why is
it not possible that I should have been ignorant of the book
Περὶ
᾽Αρχῶν which I
had not before read, and that I should have only read those Homilies
which I translated, and in which he himself testifies that there is
nothing wrong? But if, contrary to his expressed opinion, he now finds
fault with me for those things for which he before had given me praise,
he will be in a strait between two; either he praised me, believing me
to be a heretic but confessing that he shared my opinion; or else, if
he praised me before as orthodox, his present accusations come to
nothing, and are due to sheer malice. But perhaps it was only as my
friend that he formerly was silent about my errors, and now that he is
angry with me brings to light what he had concealed.