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- Chapter 21 . -Of The Power Delegated To Demons For The Trial And Glorification Of The Saints, Who Conquer Not By Propitiating The Spirits Of The Air, But By Abiding In God.
Chapter 21 .--Of the Power Delegated to Demons for the Trial and Glorification of the Saints, Who Conquer Not by Propitiating the Spirits of the Air, But by Abiding in God.
"Pay vows to Juno: overbear
Her queenly soul with gift and prayer." [415]
In conformity with this opinion, Porphyry -- expressing, however, not so much his own views as other people's -- says that a good god or genius cannot come to a man unless the evil genius has been first of all propitiated, implying that the evil deities had greater power than the good; for, until they have been appeased and give place, the good can give no assistance; and if the evil deities oppose, the good can give no help; whereas the evil can do injury without the good being able to prevent them. This is not the way of the true and truly holy religion; not thus do our martyrs conquer Juno, that is to say, the powers of the air, who envy the virtues of the pious. Our heroes, if we could so call them, overcome Hêrê, not by suppliant gifts, but by divine virtues. As Scipio, who conquered Africa by his valor, is more suitably styled Africanus than if he had appeased his enemies by gifts, and so won their mercy.