13. Do not tell me
that “you have found the same things treated by the same author
in other places in a catholic sense,” and thus send me to search
through the six thousand books of Origen which you charge the most
reverend Bishop Epiphanius with having read; but mention the passages
with exactness: nor will this suffice; you must produce the sentences
word for word. Origen is no fool, as I well know; he cannot contradict
himself. The net result arising from all this calculation is, then,
that what you cut out was not due to the heretics, but to Origen
himself, and that you translated the bad things he had written because
you considered them good; and that both the good and the bad things in
the book are to be set to your account, since you approved his writings
in the Prologue.