Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 3.djvu/45

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TO THE GREEKS.
33

says that the Cretans are liars.[1] Your assembly of many gods is nothing. Though their despiser Epicurus acts as a torchbearer,[2] I do not any the more conceal from the rulers that view of God which I hold in relation to His government of the universe. Why do you advise me to be false to my principles? Why do you who say that you despise death exhort us to use art in order to escape it? I have not the heart of a deer; but your zeal for dialectics resembles the loquacity of Thersites. How can I believe one who tells me that the sun is a red-hot mass and the moon an earth? Such assertions are mere logomachies, and not a sober exposition of truth. How can it be otherwise than foolish to credit the books of Herodotus relating to the history of Hercules, which tell of an upper earth from which the lion came down that was killed by Hercules? And what avails the Attic style, the sorites of philosophers, the plausibilities of syllogisms, the measurements of the earth, the positions of the stars, and the course of the sun? To be occupied in such inquiries is the work of one who imposes opinions on himself as if they were laws.


Chap. xxviii.Condemnation of the Greek legislation.

On this account I reject your legislation also; for there ought to be one common polity for all; but now there are as many different codes as there are states, so that things held disgraceful in some are honourable in others. The Greeks consider intercourse with a mother as unlawful, but this practice is esteemed most becoming by the Persian Magi; pæderasty is condemned by the Barbarians, but by the Romans, who endeavour to collect herds of boys like grazing horses, it is honoured with certain privileges.


Chap. xxix.Account of Tatian's conversion.

Wherefore, having seen these things, and moreover also having been admitted to the mysteries, and having everywhere

  1. Comp. Tit. i. 12. Callimachus is probably the author referred to, though others express the same opinion respecting the Cretans.
  2. Accommodating himself to the popular opinions, through fear.