QUINTI SEPTIMII FLORENTIS TERTULLIANI LIBER DE ORATIONE.

 CAPUT PRIMUM.

 CAPUT II.

 CAPUT III.

 CAPUT IV.

 CAPUT V.

 CAPUT VI.

 CAPUT VII.

 CAPUT VIII.

 CAPUT IX .

 CAPUT X .

 CAPUT XI .

 CAPUT XII .

 CAPUT XIII .

 CAPUT XIV .

 CAPUT XV .

 CAPUT XVI .

 CAPUT XVII .

 CAPUT XVIII .

 CAPUT XIX .

 CAPUT XX .

 CAPUT XXI .

 CAPUT XXII .

 CAPUT XXIII .

 CAPUT XXIV .

 CAPUT XXV .

 CAPUT XXVI .

 CAPUT XXVII .

 CAPUT XXVIII .

 CAPUT ULTIMUM .

Chapter XII.—We Must Be Free Likewise from All Mental Perturbation.

Nor merely from anger, but altogether from all perturbation of mind, ought the exercise of prayer to be free, uttered from a spirit such as the Spirit unto whom it is sent. For a defiled spirit cannot be acknowledged by a holy Spirit,79    Eph. iv. 30. nor a sad by a joyful,80    John xvii. 14; Rom. xiv. 17. nor a fettered by a free.81    Ps. li. 12. No one grants reception to his adversary: no one grants admittance except to his compeer.

CAPUT XII .

Nec ab ira solummodo, sed omni omnino confusione animi libera debet esse orationis intentio, de tali spiritu emissa, qualis est spiritus, ad quem mittitur. Neque enim agnosci poterit a Spiritu Sancto spiritus inquinatus; aut tristis a laeto, aut impeditus a libero. Nemo adversarium recipit; nemo nisi comparem suum admittit.