10. As concerning purity of
body; here indeed a very honorable regard seems to come in the way,
and to demand a lie in its behalf; to wit, that if the assault of
the ravisher may be escaped by means of a lie, it is indubitably
right to tell it: but to this it may easily be answered, that there
is no purity of body except as it depends on integrity of mind;
this being broken, the other must needs fall, even though it seem
intact; and for this reason it is not to be reckoned among temporal
things, as a thing that might be taken away from people against
their will. By no means therefore must the mind corrupt itself by a
lie for the sake of its body, which it knows remaineth incorrupt if
from the mind itself incorruptness depart not. For that which by
violence, with no lust foregoing, the body suffereth, is rather to
be called deforcement than corruption. Or if all deforcement is
corruption, then not every corruption hath turpitude, but only that
which lust hath procured, or to which lust hath consented. Now by
how much the mind is more excellent than the body, so much the more
heinous is the wickedness if that be corrupted. There, then, purity
can be preserved, because there none but a voluntary corruption can
have place. For assuredly if the ravisher assault the body, and
there is no escaping him either by contrary force, or by any
contrivance or lie, we must needs allow that purity cannot be
violated by another’s lust. Wherefore, since no man doubts that
the mind is better than the body, to integrity of body we ought to
prefer integrity of mind, which can be preserved for ever. Now who
will say that the mind of him who tells a lie hath its integrity?
Indeed lust itself is rightly defined, An appetite of the mind by
which to eternal goods any temporal goods whatever are preferred.
Therefore no man can prove that it is at any time right to tell a
lie, unless he be able to show that any eternal good can be
obtained by a lie. But since each man departs from eternity just in
so far as he departs from truth, it is most absurd to say, that by
departing therefrom it is possible for any man to attain to any
good. Else if there be any eternal good which truth compriseth not,
it will not be a true good, therefore neither will it be good,
because it will be false. But as the mind to the body, so must also
truth be preferred to the mind itself, so that the mind should
desire it not only more than the body, but even more than its own
self. So will the mind be more entire and chaste, when it shall
enjoy the immutability of truth rather than its own mutability. Now
if Lot,2327
being so
righteous a man that he was meet
2328
to
entertain even
Angels, offered
his
daughters to the
lust of the Sodomites, to the intent, that the
bodies of
women rather than of men might be
corrupted by them; how
much more diligently and constantly ought the mind’s chasteness
in the truth to be preserved, seeing it is more truly preferable to
its body, than the body of a man to the body of a
woman?
E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH