17. But yet if the option
were proposed to the man who chose to burn incense to idols rather
than yield his body to abominable lust, that, if he wished to avoid
that, he should violate the fame of Christ by some lie; he would be
most mad to do it. I say more: that he would be mad, if, to avoid
another man’s lust, and not to have that done upon his person
which he would suffer with no lust of his own, he should falsify
Christ’s Gospel with false praises of Christ; more eschewing that
another man should corrupt his body, than himself to corrupt the
doctrine of sanctification of souls and bodies. Wherefore, from the
doctrine of religion, and from those utterances universally, which
are uttered on behalf of the doctrine of religion, in the teaching
and learning of the same, all lies must be utterly kept aloof. Nor
can any cause whatever be found, one should think, why a lie should
be told in matters of this kind, when in this doctrine it is not
right to tell a lie for the very purpose of bringing a person to it
the more easily. For, once break or but slightly diminish the
authority of truth, and all things will remain doubtful: which
unless they be believed true, cannot be held as certain. It is
lawful then either to him that discourses, disputes, and preaches
of things eternal, or to him that narrates or speaks of things
temporal pertaining to edification of religion and piety, to
conceal at fitting time whatever seems fit to be concealed: but to
tell a lie is never lawful, therefore neither to conceal by telling
a lie.