Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 12.djvu/97

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Book ii.]
THE MISCELLANIES.
83

husband. What, then, is the law? In order to check the impetuosity of the passions, it commands the adulteress to be put to death, on being convicted of this; and if of priestly family, to be committed to the flames.[1] And the adulterer also is stoned to death, but not in the same place, that not even their death may be in common. And the law is not at variance with the gospel, but agrees with it. How should it be otherwise, one Lord being the author of both? She who has committed fornication liveth in sin, and is dead to the commandments; but she who has repented, being as it were born again by the change in her life, has a regeneration of life; the old harlot being dead, and she who has been regenerated by repentance having come back again to life. The Spirit testifies to what has been said by Ezekiel, declaring, "I desire not the death of the sinner, but that he should turn."[2] Now they are stoned to death; as through hardness of heart dead to the law which they believed not. But in the case of a priestess the punishment is increased, because "to whom much is given, from him shall more be required."[3]

Let us conclude this second book of the Stromata at this point, on account of the length and number of the chapters.

  1. Lev. xx. 10; Deut. xxii. 22; Lev. xxix. 9.
  2. Ezek. xxxiii. 11.
  3. Luke xii. 48.