Letter 100: Against theNovatians Say to the disciple of Novatian’s pride: why are you foolishly boasting as if [you were] clean?
Isidore of Pelusium→Syros Reader|c. 392 AD|Isidore of Pelusium|Human translated
humor
Excessive eating is not nourishment but surfeit, and is both called and recognized as such. Surfeit is the father of insolence, and insolence the father of passions, as is recorded to have occurred in the wilderness of old. "For they were filled," it says, "and rose up to play." Therefore, lest we play at intemperance, through which even forgetfulness of God is risked, let us bridle its cause -- surfeit -- by attending to necessary and moderate eating, through which both our strength will be sustained and the war of gluttonous drunkenness will have no power.
Against theNovatians Say to the disciple of Novatian’s pride: why are you foolishly boasting as if [you were] clean? Why are you pretending that you are sinless? Why deny the (fault) common to nature? Isaiah declares himself unclean; David knows that every man is a liar and that all were conceived and carried in the womb in sin. God Himself knows that human beings are devotedly attached to evil and require only the mercy of divine kindness- and do you arrogantly boast of being clean? Either then give over lying or from what you are doing be exposed as a laughing-stock or indeed mightily shameful.
Excessive eating is not nourishment but surfeit, and is both called and recognized as such. Surfeit is the father of insolence, and insolence the father of passions, as is recorded to have occurred in the wilderness of old. "For they were filled," it says, "and rose up to play." Therefore, lest we play at intemperance, through which even forgetfulness of God is risked, let us bridle its cause -- surfeit -- by attending to necessary and moderate eating, through which both our strength will be sustained and the war of gluttonous drunkenness will have no power.
Human translation - Roger Pearse (additional translations)