Page:The Great Encyclical Letters of Pope Leo XIII.djvu/44

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Gregory of Nyssa[1]praise and commend a like mode of disputation in Basil the Great; while Jerome especially commends it in Quadratus, a disciple of the Apostles, in Aristides, Justin, Irenaeus, and very many others.[2] Augustine says: "Do we not see Cyprian, that mildest of doctors and most blessed of martyrs, going out of Egypt laden with gold and silver and vestments? And Lactantius, also and Victorinus, Optatus and Hilary? And, not to speak of the living, how many Greeks have done likewise?"[3] But if natural reason first sowed this rich field of doctrine before it was rendered fruitful by the power of Christ, it must assuredly become more prolific after the grace of the Saviour has renewed and added to the native faculties of the human mind. And who does not see that a plain and easy road is opened up to faith by such a method of philosophic study?

But the advantage to be derived from such a school of philosophy is not to be confined within these limits. The foolishness of those men who by these good things that are seen could not understand Him, that is, neither by attending to the works could have acknowledged who was the workman.[4] In the first place, then, this great and noble fruit is gathered from human reason, that it demonstrates that God is; for the greatness of the beauty and of the creature the Creator of them may be seen so as to be known thereby.[5] Again, it shows God to excel in the height of all perfections, especially in infinite wisdom before which nothing lies hidden, and in absolute justice which no depraved affection could possibly shake; and that God, therefore, is not only true but truth itself, which can neither deceive nor be deceived. Whence it clearly follows that human reason finds the fullest faith and authority united in the word of God. In like manner,

  1. Carm. i. Iamb. 3.
  2. Epist. ad Magn.
  3. De Doctr. christ., l. ii. c. 40.
  4. Wisdom xiii. 1.
  5. Ibid. xiii. 5.