SECT. II. The books, that have any names affixed to them, were writ by those persons whose names they bear.
We say then, that the writings, about which there is no dispute amongst Christians, and which have any particular person’s name affixed to them, are that author’s whose title they are marked with; because the first writers, such as Justin, Irenæus, Clemens,382382 and others after them, quote these books under those names; and besides, Tertullian says,383383 that in his time some of the original copies of those books were extant: and because all the churches received them as such, before there were any public councils held: neither did any heathens or Jews raise any controversy, as if they were not the works of those whose they were said to be. And Julian openly confesses,384384 that those were Peter’s, Paul’s, Matthew’s, Murk’s, and Luke’s, which 127were read by the Christians under those names. Nobody in his senses makes any doubt of Homer’s or Virgil’s works being theirs, by reason of the constant testimony of the Greeks concerning the one, and of the Latins concerning the other: how much more then ought we to stand by the testimony of almost all the nations in the world for the authors of these books?