Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 4.djvu/387

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Book i.]
THE MISCELLANIES.
383

jured ointment and purple, deeming and calling them rightly treacherous garments and treacherous unguents; since neither is that mode of preparing food right where there is more of seasoning than of nutriment; nor is that style of speech elegant which can please rather than benefit the hearers. Pythagoras exhorts us to consider the Muses more pleasant than the Sirens, teaching us to cultivate wisdom apart from pleasure, and exposing the other mode of attracting the soul as deceptive. For sailing past the Sirens one man has sufficient strength, and for answering the Sphinx another one, or, if you please, not even one.[1] We ought never, then, out of desire for vainglory, to make broad the phylacteries. It suffices the gnostic[2] if only one hearer is found for him. You may hear therefore Pindar the Bœotian, who writes, "Divulge not before all the ancient speech. The way of silence is sometimes the surest. And the mightiest word is a spur to the fight." Accordingly, the blessed apostle very appropriately and urgently exhorts us "not to strive about words to no profit, but to the subverting of the hearers, but to shun profane and vain babblings, for they increase unto more ungodliness, and their word will eat as doth a canker."[3]


  1. The story of Œdipus being a myth.
  2. The possessor of true divine knowledge.
  3. 2 Tim. ii. 14, 16, 17.