e,
believed the doctrine of the expiation of certain sins after death,
and prayed for the faithful departed. This must be allowed, even
though it should be pretended that her visions were not from God.
But neither St. Austin, nor any other ancient father, ever
entertained the least suspicion on that head. Nor can we presume
that the goodness of God would permit one full of such ardent love
at him to be imposed upon in a point of this nature. The Oxonian
editor of these acts knew not what other answer to make to this
ancient testimony, than that St. Perpetua seems to have been
Montanist (p. 14.) But this unjust censure Oodwell (Diss. Cypr. A.
n. 8, p. 15) and others have confuted. And could St. Austin, with
the whole Catholic church, have ranked a Montanist among the most
illustrious martyrs? That father himself, in many places of his
works, clearly explains the same doctrine of the Catholic faith,
concerning a state of temporary sufferings in the other world, and
conformably to it speaks of these visions. (L. de Orig. Animae, l. 1,
c. 10, p. 343, and l. 4, c. 18, p. 401, t. 10, &c.) He says, that
Dinocrates must have received baptism, but afterwards sinned,
perhaps by having been seduced by his pagan father into some act of
superstition, or by lying, or by some other faults of which children
in that tender age may be guilty. Illus aetatis pueri at mentiri et
verum iniqui, at confiteri et negare jam possum. Lib. 1. c. 10. See
Orsi Diss. de Actis SS. Perpetuae et Felicitatis. Florentiae 1738, {}.
4. Pro ordine venatorum. Venatores, is the name given to those that
were armed to encounter the beast; who put themselves in ranks, with
whips in their hands, and each of them gave a last to the Bestiarii,
or those condemned to the beasts, whom they obliged to pass naked
before them in the middle of the pit of arena.
5. Analect. t. 3, p. 403.
6. Victor, l. 1, p. 4.
{540}
ST. PAUL. ANCHORET.
FROM his ignorance of secular learning, and his extraordinary humility,
he was surnamed the Simple. He served God in the world to the age of
sixty, in the toils of a poor and laborious country life. The
incontinency of his wife contributed to wean his soul from all earthly
ties. Checks and crosses which men meet with in this life are great
graces. God's sweet providence sows our roads with thorns, that we may
learn to despise
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