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| Chapter XXI. Exposition of St. Paul's Words.--1 Tim. vi. 20. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXI.
Exposition of St. Paul’s
Words.—1 Tim. vi. 20.
[51.] Such being the
case, when I think over these things, and revolve them in my mind again
and again, I cannot sufficiently wonder at the madness of certain men,
at the impiety of their blinded understanding, at their lust of error,
such that, not content with the rule of faith delivered once for all,
and received from the times of old, they are every day seeking one
novelty after another, and are constantly longing to add, change, take
away, in religion, as though the doctrine, “Let what has once for
all been revealed suffice,” were not a heavenly but an earthly
rule,—a rule which could not be complied with except by continual
emendation, nay, rather by continual fault-finding; whereas the divine
Oracles cry aloud, “Remove not the landmarks, which thy fathers
have set,”495 and “Go not
to law with a Judge,”496 and “Whoso
breaketh through a fence a serpent shall bite him,”497 and that saying of the Apostle
wherewith,
as with a
spiritual sword, all the wicked novelties of all heresies often have
been, and will always have to be, decapitated, “O Timothy, keep
the deposit, shunning profane novelties of words and oppositions of the
knowledge falsely so called, which some professing have erred
concerning the faith.”498
[52.] After words such as these, is there any one
of so hardened a front, such anvil-like impudence, such adamantine
pertinacity, as not to succumb to so huge a mass, not to be crushed by
so ponderous a weight, not to be shaken in pieces by such heavy blows,
not to be annihilated by such dreadful thunderbolts of divine
eloquence? “Shun profane novelties,” he says. He does not
say shun “antiquity.” But he plainly points to what ought
to follow by the rule of contrary. For if novelty is to be shunned,
antiquity is to be held fast; if novelty is profane, antiquity is
sacred. He adds, “And oppositions of science falsely so
called.” “Falsely called” indeed, as applied to the
doctrines of heretics, where ignorance is disguised under the name of
knowledge, fog of sunshine, darkness of light. “Which some
professing have erred concerning the faith.” Professing what?
What but some (I know not what) new and unheard-of doctrine. For thou
mayest hear some of these same doctors say, “Come, O silly
wretches, who go by the name of Catholics, come and learn the true
faith, which no one but ourselves is acquainted with, which same has
lain hid these many ages, but has recently been revealed and made
manifest. But learn it by stealth and in secret, for you will be
delighted with it. Moreover, when you have learnt it, teach it
furtively, that the world may not hear, that the Church may not know.
For there are but few to whom it is granted to receive the secret of so
great a mystery.” Are not these the words of that harlot who, in
the proverbs of Solomon, calls to the passengers who go right on their
ways, “Whoso is simple let him turn in hither.” And as for
them that are void of understanding, she exhorts them saying:
“Drink stolen waters, for they are sweet, and eat bread in secret
for it is pleasant.” What next? “But he knoweth not that
the sons of earth perish in her house.”499
Who are those “sons of earth”? Let the apostle explain:
“Those who have erred concerning the
faith.”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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