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+*The Project Gutenberg Etext of A Theologico-Political Treatise*
+This is Part II
+#7 in our series by Spinoza [Originally Published Anonymously]
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+Translated by R. H. M. Elwes
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+A Theologico-Political Treatise [Part II]
+
+by Benedict de Spinoza
+
+Also known as Baruch Spinoza
+
+Translated by R. H. M. Elwes
+
+July, 1997 [Etext #990]
+[Date last updated: July 31, 2005]
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+*The Project Gutenberg Etext of A Theologico-Political Treatise*
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+
+Part 1 - Chapters I to V - 1spnt10.txt
+Part 2 - Chapters VI to X - 2spnt10.txt
+Part 3 - Chapters XI to XV - 3spnt10.txt
+Part 4 - Chapters XVI to XX - 4spnt10.txt
+
+
+
+Sentence Numbers, shown thus (1), have been added by volunteer.
+
+
+
+
+
+A Theologico-Political Treatise
+Part 2 - Chapters VI to X
+by Baruch Spinoza
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A Theologico-Political Treatise
+Part 2 - Chapters VI to X
+by Baruch Spinoza
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS:
+
+CHAPTER VI - Of Miracles.
+
+Confused ideas of the vulgar on the subject.
+
+A miracle in the sense of a contravention of natural laws an absurdity.
+
+In the sense of an event, whose cause is unknown,
+less edifying than an event better understood.
+
+God's providence identical with the course of nature.
+How Scripture miracles may be interpreted.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII - Of the Interpretation of Scripture.
+
+Current systems of interpretation erroneous.
+
+Only true system to interpret it by itself.
+
+Reasons why this system cannot now be carried out in its entirety.
+
+Yet these difficulties do not interfere with our understanding
+the plainest and most important passages.
+
+Rival systems examined - that of a supernatural
+faculty being necessary - refuted.
+
+That of Maimonides.
+
+Refuted.
+
+Traditions of the Pharisees and the Papists rejected.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. - Of the authorship of the Pentateuch,
+and the other historical books of the Old Testament.
+
+The Pentateuch not written by Moses.
+
+His actual writings distinct.
+
+Traces of late authorship in the other historical books.
+
+All the historical books the work of one man.
+
+Probably Ezra.
+
+Who compiled first the book of Deuteronomy.
+
+And then a history, distinguishing the books by the names of their subjects.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. - Other questions about these books.
+
+That these books have not been thoroughly revised and made to agree.
+
+That there are many doubtful readings.
+
+That the existing marginal notes are often such.
+
+The other explanations of these notes refuted.
+
+The hiatus.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.- An Examination of the remaining books of
+the Old Testament according to the preceding method.
+
+Chronicles, Psalms, Proverbs.
+
+Isaiah, Jeremiah.
+
+Ezekiel, Hosea.
+
+Other prophets, Jonah, Job.
+
+Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther.
+
+The author declines to undertake a similar detailed
+examination of the New Testament.
+
+Author's Endnotes to the Treatise
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. - OF MIRACLES.
+
+(1) As men are accustomed to call Divine the knowledge which transcends
+human understanding, so also do they style Divine, or the work of God,
+anything of which the cause is not generally known: for the masses think
+that the power and providence of God are most clearly displayed by events
+that are extraordinary and contrary to the conception they have formed of
+nature, especially if such events bring them any profit or convenience: they
+think that the clearest possible proof of God's existence is afforded when
+nature, as they suppose, breaks her accustomed order, and consequently they
+believe that those who explain or endeavour to understand phenomena or
+miracles through their natural causes are doing away with God and His
+providence. (2) They suppose, forsooth, that God is inactive so long as
+nature works in her accustomed order, and vice versa, that the power of
+nature and natural causes are idle so long as God is acting: thus they
+imagine two powers distinct one from the other, the power of God and the
+power of nature, though the latter is in a sense determined by God, or (as
+most people believe now) created by Him. (3) What they mean by either, and
+what they understand by God and nature they do not know, except that they
+imagine the power of God to be like that of some royal potentate, and
+nature's power to consist in force and energy.
+
+(4) The masses then style unusual phenomena, "miracles," and partly from
+piety, partly for the sake of opposing the students of science, prefer to
+remain in ignorance of natural causes, and only to hear of those things
+which they know least, and consequently admire most. (5) In fact, the common
+people can only adore God, and refer all things to His power by removing
+natural causes, and conceiving things happening out of their due course, and
+only admires the power of God when the power of nature is conceived of as in
+subjection to it.
+
+(6) This idea seems to have taken its rise among the early Jews who saw the
+Gentiles round them worshipping visible gods such as the sun, the moon, the
+earth, water, air, &c., and in order to inspire the conviction that such
+divinities were weak and inconstant, or changeable, told how they themselves
+were under the sway of an invisible God, and narrated their miracles,
+trying further to show that the God whom they worshipped arranged the whole
+of nature for their sole benefit: this idea was so pleasing to humanity that
+men go on to this day imagining miracles, so that they may believe
+themselves God's favourites, and the final cause for which God created and
+directs all things.
+
+(7) What pretension will not people in their folly advance! (8) They have no
+single sound idea concerning either God or nature, they confound God's
+decrees with human decrees, they conceive nature as so limited that they
+believe man to be its chief part! (9) I have spent enough space in setting
+forth these common ideas and prejudices concerning nature and miracles, but
+in order to afford a regular demonstration I will show -
+
+(10) I. That nature cannot be contravened, but that she preserves a fixed
+and immutable order, and at the same time I will explain what is meant by a
+miracle.
+
+(11) II. That God's nature and existence, and consequently His providence
+cannot be known from miracles, but that they can all be much better
+perceived from the fixed and immutable order of nature.
+
+(12) III. That by the decrees and volitions, and consequently the providence
+of God, Scripture (as I will prove by Scriptural examples) means nothing but
+nature's order following necessarily from her eternal laws.
+
+(13) IV. Lastly, I will treat of the method of interpreting Scriptural
+miracles, and the chief points to be noted concerning the narratives of
+them.
+
+(14) Such are the principal subjects which will be discussed in this
+chapter, and which will serve, I think, not a little to further the object
+of this treatise.
+
+(15) Our first point is easily proved from what we showed in Chap. IV. about
+Divine law - namely, that all that God wishes or determines involves eternal
+necessity, and truth, for we demonstrated that God's understanding is
+identical with His will, and that it is the same thing to say that God wills
+a thing, as to say, that He understands it; hence, as it follows
+necessarily, from the Divine nature and perfection that God understands a
+thing as it is, it follows no less necessarily that He wills it as it is.
+(16) Now, as nothing is necessarily true save only by, Divine decree, it is
+plain that the universal laws of nature are decrees of God following from
+the necessity and perfection of the Divine nature. (17) Hence, any event
+happening in nature which contravened nature's universal laws, would
+necessarily also contravene the Divine decree, nature, and understanding; or
+if anyone asserted that God acts in contravention to the laws of nature, he,
+ipso facto, would be compelled to assert that God acted against His own
+nature - an evident absurdity. (18) One might easily show from the same
+premises that the power and efficiency, of nature are in themselves the
+Divine power and efficiency, and that the Divine power is the very essence
+of God, but this I gladly pass over for the present.
+
+(19) Nothing, then, comes to pass in nature (N.B. I do not mean here by
+"nature," merely matter and its modifications, but infinite other things
+besides matter.) in contravention to her universal laws, nay, everything
+agrees with them and follows from them, for whatsoever comes to pass, comes
+to pass by the will and eternal decree of God; that is, as we have just
+pointed out, whatever comes to pass, comes to pass according to laws and
+rules which involve eternal necessity and truth; nature, therefore, always
+observes laws and rules which involve eternal necessity, and truth, although
+they may not all be known to us, and therefore she keeps a fixed and mutable
+order. (20) Nor is there any sound reason for limiting the power and
+efficacy of nature, and asserting that her laws are fit for certain
+purposes, but not for all; for as the efficacy, and power of nature, are the
+very, efficacy and power of God, and as the laws and rules of nature are the
+decrees of God, it is in every way to be believed that the power of nature
+is infinite, and that her laws are broad enough to embrace everything
+conceived by, the Divine intellect; the only alternative is to assert that
+God has created nature so weak, and has ordained for her laws so barren,
+that He is repeatedly compelled to come afresh to her aid if He wishes that
+she should be preserved, and that things should happen as He desires: a
+conclusion, in My opinion, very far removed from reason. (21) Further, as
+nothing happens in nature which does not follow from her laws, and as her
+laws embrace everything conceived by the Divine intellect, and lastly, as
+nature preserves a fixed and immutable order; it most clearly follows that
+miracles are only intelligible as in relation to human opinions, and merely
+mean events of which the natural cause cannot be explained by a reference to
+any ordinary occurrence, either by us, or at any rate, by the writer and
+narrator of the miracle.
+
+(22) We may, in fact, say that a miracle is an event of which the causes
+annot be explained by the natural reason through a reference to ascertained
+workings of nature; but since miracles were wrought according to the
+understanding of the masses, who are wholly ignorant of the workings of
+nature, it is certain that the ancients took for a miracle whatever they
+could not explain by the method adopted by the unlearned in such cases,
+namely, an appeal to the memory, a recalling of something similar, which is
+ordinarily regarded without wonder; for most people think they sufficiently
+understand a thing when they have ceased to wonder at it. (23) The ancients,
+then, and indeed most men up to the present day, had no other criterion for
+a miracle; hence we cannot doubt that many things are narrated in Scripture
+as miracles of which the causes could easily be explained by reference to
+ascertained workings of nature. (24) We have hinted as much in Chap. II., in
+speaking of the sun standing still in the time of Joshua, and to say on the
+subject when we come to treat of the interpretation of miracles later on in
+this chapter.
+
+(25) It is now time to pass on to the second point, and show that we cannot
+gain an understanding of God's essence, existence, or providence by means of
+miracles, but that these truths are much better perceived through the fixed
+and immutable order of nature. (26) I thus proceed with the demonstration.
+(27) As God's existence is not self-evident (6) it must necessarily be
+inferred from ideas so firmly and incontrovertibly true, that no power can
+be postulated or conceived sufficient to impugn them. (28) They ought
+certainly so to appear to us when we infer from them God's existence, if we
+wish to place our conclusion beyond the reach of doubt; for if we could
+conceive that such ideas could be impugned by any power whatsoever, we
+should doubt of their truth, we should doubt of our conclusion, namely, of
+God's existence, and should never be able to be certain of anything. (29)
+Further, we know that nothing either agrees with or is contrary to nature,
+unless it agrees with or is contrary to these primary ideas; wherefore if we
+would conceive that anything could be done in nature by any power whatsoever
+which would be contrary to the laws of nature, it would also be contrary to
+our primary ideas, and we should have either to reject it as absurd, or else
+to cast doubt (as just shown) on our primary ideas, and consequently on the
+existence of God, and on everything howsoever perceived. (30) Therefore
+miracles, in the sense of events contrary to the laws of nature, so far from
+demonstrating to us the existence of God, would, on the contrary, lead us to
+doubt it, where, otherwise, we might have been absolutely certain of it, as
+knowing that nature follows a fixed and immutable order.
+
+(31) Let us take miracle as meaning that which cannot be explained through
+natural causes. (32) This may be interpreted in two senses: either as that
+which has natural causes, but cannot be examined by the human intellect; or
+as that which has no cause save God and God's will. (33) But as all things
+which come to pass through natural causes, come to pass also solely
+through the will and power of God, it comes to this, that a miracle, whether
+it has natural causes or not, is a result which cannot be explained by its
+cause, that is a phenomenon which surpasses human understanding; but from
+such a phenomenon, and certainly from a result surpassing our understanding,
+we can gain no knowledge. (34) For whatsoever we understand clearly and
+distinctly should be plain to us either in itself or by means of something
+else clearly and distinctly understood; wherefore from a miracle or a
+phenomenon which we cannot understand, we can gain no knowledge of God's
+essence, or existence, or indeed anything about God or nature; whereas when
+we know that all things are ordained and ratified by God, that the
+operations of nature follow from the essence of God, and that the laws of
+nature are eternal decrees and volitions of God, we must perforce conclude
+that our knowledge of God, and of God's will increases in proportion to our
+knowledge and clear understanding of nature, as we see how she depends on
+her primal cause, and how she works according to eternal law. (35) Wherefore
+so far as our understanding goes, those phenomena which we clearly and
+distinctly understand have much better right to be called works of God, and
+to be referred to the will of God than those about which we are entirely
+ignorant, although they appeal powerfully to the imagination, and compel
+men's admiration.
+
+(36) It is only phenomena that we clearly and distinctly understand, which
+heighten our knowledge of God, and most clearly indicate His will and
+decrees. (37) Plainly, they are but triflers who, when they cannot explain a
+thing, run back to the will of God; this is, truly, a ridiculous way of
+expressing ignorance. (38) Again, even supposing that some conclusion could
+be drawn from miracles, we could not possibly infer from them the existence
+of God: for a miracle being an event under limitations is the expression of
+a fixed and limited power; therefore we could not possibly infer from an
+effect of this kind the existence of a cause whose power is infinite, but at
+the utmost only of a cause whose power is greater than that of the said
+effect. (39) I say at the utmost, for a phenomenon may be the result of many
+concurrent causes, and its power may be less than the power of the sum of
+such causes, but far greater than that of any one of them taken
+individually. (40) On the other hand, the laws of nature, as we have
+shown, extend over infinity, and are conceived by us as, after a fashion,
+eternal, and nature works in accordance with them in a fixed and immutable
+order; therefore, such laws indicate to us in a certain degree the infinity,
+the eternity, and the immutability of God.
+
+(40) We may conclude, then, that we cannot gain knowledge of the existence
+and providence of God by means of miracles, but that we can far better infer
+them from the fixed and immutable order of nature. (41) By miracle, I here
+mean an event which surpasses, or is thought to surpass, human
+comprehension: for in so far as it is supposed to destroy or interrupt the
+order of nature or her laws, it not only can give us no knowledge of God,
+but, contrariwise, takes away that which we naturally have, and makes us
+doubt of God and everything else.
+
+(42) Neither do I recognize any difference between an event against the laws
+of nature and an event beyond the laws of nature (that is, according to
+some, an event which does not contravene nature, though she is inadequate to
+produce or effect it) - for a miracle is wrought in, and not beyond nature,
+though it may be said in itself to be above nature, and, therefore,
+must necessarily interrupt the order of nature, which otherwise we conceive
+of as fixed and unchangeable, according to God's decrees. (43) If,
+therefore, anything should come to pass in nature which does not follow from
+her laws, it would also be in contravention to the order which God has
+established in nature for ever through universal natural laws: it would,
+therefore, be in contravention to God's nature and laws, and, consequently,
+belief in it would throw doubt upon everything, and lead to Atheism.
+
+(44) I think I have now sufficiently established my second point, so that we
+can again conclude that a miracle, whether in contravention to, or beyond,
+nature, is a mere absurdity; and, therefore, that what is meant in Scripture
+by a miracle can only be a work of nature, which surpasses, or is believed
+to surpass, human comprehension. (45) Before passing on to my third point, I
+will adduce Scriptural authority for my assertion that God cannot be known
+from miracles. (46) Scripture nowhere states the doctrine openly, but it can
+readily be inferred from several passages. (47) Firstly, that in which Moses
+commands (Deut. xiii.) that a false prophet should be put to death, even
+though he work miracles: "If there arise a prophet among you, and giveth
+thee a sign or wonder, and the sign or wonder come to pass, saying, Let us
+go after other gods . . . thou shalt not hearken unto the voice of that
+prophet; for the Lord your God proveth you, and that prophet shall be put to
+death." (48) From this it clearly follows that miracles could be wrought
+even by false prophets; and that, unless men are honestly endowed with the
+true knowledge and love of God, they may be as easily led by miracles to
+follow false gods as to follow the true God; for these words are added: "For
+the Lord your God tempts you, that He may know whether you love Him with all
+your heart and with all your mind."
+
+(49) Further, the Israelites, from all their miracles, were unable to form a
+sound conception of God, as their experience testified: for when they had
+persuaded themselves that Moses had departed from among them, they
+petitioned Aaron to give them visible gods; and the idea of God they had
+formed as the result of all their miracles was - a calf!
+
+(50) Asaph, though he had heard of so many miracles, yet doubted of the
+providence of God, and would have turned himself from the true way, if he
+had not at last come to understand true blessedness. (See Ps. lxxxiii.) (51)
+Solomon, too, at a time when the Jewish nation was at the height of its
+prosperity, suspects that all things happen by chance. (See Eccles. iii:19,
+20, 21; and chap. ix:2, 3, &c.)
+
+(52) Lastly, nearly all the prophets found it very hard to reconcile the
+order of nature and human affairs with the conception they had formed of
+God's providence, whereas philosophers who endeavour to understand things by
+clear conceptions of them, rather than by miracles, have always found the
+task extremely easy - at least, such of them as place true happiness solely
+in virtue and peace of mind, and who aim at obeying nature, rather than
+being obeyed by her. (53) Such persons rest assured that God directs nature
+according to the requirements of universal laws, not according to the
+requirements of the particular laws of human nature, and trial, therefore,
+God's scheme comprehends, not only the human race, but the whole of nature.
+
+(54) It is plain, then, from Scripture itself, that miracles can give no
+knowledge of God, nor clearly teach us the providence of God. (55) As to the
+frequent statements in Scripture, that God wrought miracles to make Himself
+plain to man - as in Exodus x:2, where He deceived the Egyptians, and gave
+signs of Himself, that the Israelites might know that He was God,- it does
+not, therefore, follow that miracles really taught this truth, but only that
+the Jews held opinions which laid them easily open to conviction by
+miracles. (56) We have shown in Chap. II. that the reasons assigned by the
+prophets, or those which are formed from revelation, are not assigned
+in accordance with ideas universal and common to all, but in accordance with
+the accepted doctrines, however absurd, and with the opinions of those to
+whom the revelation was given, or those whom the Holy Spirit wished to
+convince.
+
+(57) This we have illustrated by many Scriptural instances, and can further
+cite Paul, who to the Greeks was a Greek, and to the Jews a Jew. (58) But
+although these miracles could convince the Egyptians and Jews from their
+standpoint, they could not give a true idea and knowledge of God, but only
+cause them to admit that there was a Deity more powerful than anything known
+to them, and that this Deity took special care of the Jews, who had just
+then an unexpectedly happy issue of all their affairs. (59) They could not
+teach them that God cares equally for all, for this can be taught only by
+philosophy: the Jews, and all who took their knowledge of God's providence
+from the dissimilarity of human conditions of life and the inequalities of
+fortune, persuaded themselves that God loved the Jews above all men, though
+they did not surpass their fellows in true human perfection.
+
+(60) I now go on to my third point, and show from Scripture that the decrees
+and mandates of God, and consequently His providence, are merely the order
+of nature - that is, when Scripture describes an event as accomplished by
+God or God's will, we must understand merely that it was in accordance with
+the law and order of nature, not, as most people believe, that nature had
+for a season ceased to act, or that her order was temporarily interrupted.
+(61) But Scripture does not directly teach matters unconnected with its
+doctrine, wherefore it has no care to explain things by their natural
+causes, nor to expound matters merely speculative. (62) Wherefore our
+conclusion must be gathered by inference from those Scriptural narratives
+which happen to be written more at length and circumstantially than usual.
+(63) Of these I will cite a few.
+
+(64) In the first book of Samuel, ix:15, 16, it is related that God revealed
+to Samuel that He would send Saul to him, yet God did not send Saul to
+Samuel as people are wont to send one man to another. (65) His "sending" was
+merely the ordinary course of nature. (66) Saul was looking for the asses he
+had lost, and was meditating a return home without them, when, at the
+suggestion of his servant, he went to the prophet Samuel, to learn from him
+where he might find them. (67) From no part of the narrative does it appear
+that Saul had any command from God to visit Samuel beyond this natural
+motive.
+
+(68) In Psalm cv. 24 it is said that God changed the hearts of the
+Egyptians, so that they hated the Israelites. (69) This was evidently a
+natural change, as appears from Exodus, chap.i., where we find no slight
+reason for the Egyptians reducing the Israelites to slavery.
+
+(70) In Genesis ix:13, God tells Noah that He will set His bow in the cloud;
+this action of God's is but another way of expressing the refraction and
+reflection which the rays of the sun are subjected to in drops of water.
+
+(71) In Psalm cxlvii:18, the natural action and warmth of the wind, by which
+hoar frost and snow are melted, are styled the word of the Lord, and in
+verse 15 wind and cold are called the commandment and word of God.
+
+(72) In Psalm civ:4, wind and fire are called the angels and ministers of
+God, and various other passages of the same sort are found in Scripture,
+clearly showing that the decree, commandment, fiat, and word of God are
+merely expressions for the action and order of nature.
+
+(73) Thus it is plain that all the events narrated in Scripture came to pass
+naturally, and are referred directly to God because Scripture, as we have
+shown, does not aim at explaining things by their natural causes, but only
+at narrating what appeals to the popular imagination, and doing so in the
+manner best calculated to excite wonder, and consequently to impress the
+minds of the masses with devotion. (74) If, therefore, events are found in
+the Bible which we cannot refer to their causes, nay, which seem entirely to
+contradict the order of nature, we must not come to a stand, but assuredly
+believe that whatever did really happen happened naturally. (75) This view
+is confirmed by the fact that in the case of every miracle there were many
+attendant circumstances, though these were not always related, especially
+where the narrative was of a poetic character.
+
+(76) The circumstances of the miracles clearly show, I maintain, that
+natural causes were needed. (77) For instance, in order to infect the
+Egyptians with blains, it was necessary that Moses should scatter ashes in
+the air (Exod. ix: 10); the locusts also came upon the land of Egypt by a
+command of God in accordance with nature, namely, by an east wind blowing
+for a whole day and night; and they departed by a very strong west wind
+(Exod. x:14, 19). (78) By a similar Divine mandate the sea opened a way for
+the Jews (Exo. xiv:21), namely, by an east wind which blew very strongly all
+night.
+
+(79) So, too, when Elisha would revive the boy who was believed to be dead,
+he was obliged to bend over him several times until the flesh of the child
+waxed warm, and at last he opened his eyes (2 Kings iv:34, 35).
+
+(80) Again, in John's Gospel (chap. ix.) certain acts are mentioned as
+performed by Christ preparatory to healing the blind man, and there are
+numerous other instances showing that something further than the absolute
+fiat of God is required for working a miracle.
+
+(81) Wherefore we may believe that, although the circumstances attending
+miracles are not related always or in full detail, yet a miracle was never
+performed without them.
+
+(82) This is confirmed by Exodus xiv:27, where it is simply stated that
+"Moses stretched forth his hand, and the waters of the sea returned to their
+strength in the morning," no mention being made of a wind; but in the song
+of Moses (Exod. xv:10) we read, "Thou didst blow with Thy wind (i.e. with a
+very strong wind), and the sea covered them." (83) Thus the attendant
+circumstance is omitted in the history, and the miracle is thereby enhanced.
+
+(84) But perhaps someone will insist that we find many things in Scripture
+which seem in nowise explicable by natural causes, as for instance, that the
+sins of men and their prayers can be the cause of rain and of the earth's
+fertility, or that faith can heal the blind, and so on. (85) But I think
+I have already made sufficient answer: I have shown that Scripture does not
+explain things by their secondary causes, but only narrates them in the
+order and the style which has most power to move men, and especially
+uneducated men, to devotion; and therefore it speaks inaccurately of God and
+of events, seeing that its object is not to convince the reason, but to
+attract and lay hold of the imagination. (86) If the Bible were to describe
+the destruction of an empire in the style of political historians, the
+masses would remain unstirred, whereas the contrary is the case when it
+adopts the method of poetic description, and refers all things
+immediately to God. (87) When, therefore, the Bible says that the earth is
+barren because of men's sins, or that the blind were healed by faith, we
+ought to take no more notice than when it says that God is angry at men's
+sins, that He is sad, that He repents of the good He has promised and done;
+or that on seeing a sign he remembers something He had promised, and other
+similar expressions, which are either thrown out poetically or related
+according to the opinion and prejudices of the writer.
+
+(88) We may, then, be absolutely certain that every event which is truly
+described in Scripture necessarily happened, like everything else, according
+to natural laws; and if anything is there set down which can be proved in
+set terms to contravene the order of nature, or not to be deducible
+therefrom, we must believe it to have been foisted into the sacred writings
+by irreligious hands; for whatsoever is contrary to nature is also contrary
+to reason, and whatsoever is contrary to reason is absurd, and, ipso facto,
+to be rejected.
+
+(89) There remain some points concerning the interpretation of miracles to
+be noted, or rather to be recapitulated, for most of them have been already
+stated. (90) These I proceed to discuss in the fourth division of my
+subject, and I am led to do so lest anyone should, by wrongly interpreting a
+miracle, rashly suspect that he has found something in Scripture contrary to
+human reason.
+
+(91) It is very rare for men to relate an event simply as it happened,
+without adding any element of their own judgment. (92) When they see or hear
+anything new, they are, unless strictly on their guard, so occupied with
+their own preconceived opinions that they perceive something quite
+different from the plain facts seen or heard, especially if such facts
+surpass the comprehension of the beholder or hearer, and, most of all, if he
+is interested in their happening in a given way.
+
+(93) Thus men relate in chronicles and histories their own opinions rather
+than actual events, so that one and the same event is so differently related
+by two men of different opinions, that it seems like two separate
+occurrences; and, further, it is very easy from historical chronicles to
+gather the personal opinions of the historian.
+
+(94) I could cite many instances in proof of this from the writings both of
+natural philosophers and historians, but I will content myself with one only
+from Scripture, and leave the reader to judge of the rest.
+
+(95) In the time of Joshua the Hebrews held the ordinary opinion that the
+sun moves with a daily motion, and that the earth remains at rest; to this
+preconceived opinion they adapted the miracle which occurred during their
+battle with the five kings. (96) They did not simply relate that that day
+was longer than usual, but asserted that the sun and moon stood still, or
+ceased from their motion - a statement which would be of great service to
+them at that time in convincing and proving by experience to the Gentiles,
+who worshipped the sun, that the sun was under the control of another deity
+who could compel it to change its daily course. (97) Thus, partly through
+religious motives, partly through preconceived opinions, they conceived of
+and related the occurrence as something quite different from what really
+happened.
+
+(98) Thus in order to interpret the Scriptural miracles and understand from
+the narration of them how they really happened, it is necessary to know the
+opinions of those who first related them, and have recorded them for us in
+writing, and to distinguish such opinions from the actual impression made
+upon their senses, otherwise we shall confound opinions and judgments with
+the actual miracle as it really occurred: nay, further, we shall confound
+actual events with symbolical and imaginary ones. (99) For many things are
+narrated in Scripture as real, and were believed to be real, which were in
+fact only symbolical and imaginary. (100) As, for instance, that God came
+down from heaven (Exod. xix:28, Deut. v:28), and that Mount Sinai smoked
+because God descended upon it surrounded with fire; or, again that Elijah
+ascended into heaven in a chariot of fire, with horses of fire; all these
+things were assuredly merely symbols adapted to the opinions of those who
+have handed them down to us as they were represented to them, namely, as
+real. (101) All who have any education know that God has no right hand nor
+left; that He is not moved nor at rest, nor in a particular place, but that
+He is absolutely infinite and contains in Himself all perfections.
+
+(102) These things, I repeat, are known to whoever judges of things by the
+perception of pure reason, and not according as his imagination is affected
+by his outward senses. (103) Following the example of the masses who imagine
+a bodily Deity, holding a royal court with a throne on the convexity of
+heaven, above the stars, which are believed to be not very, far off from the
+earth.
+
+(104) To these and similar opinions very many narrations in Scripture are
+adapted, and should not, therefore, be mistaken by philosophers for
+realities.
+
+(105) Lastly, in order to understand, in the case of miracles, what actually
+took place, we ought to be familiar with Jewish phrases and metaphors;
+anyone who did not make sufficient allowance for these, would be continually
+seeing miracles in Scripture where nothing of the kind is intended by the
+writer; he would thus miss the knowledge not only of what actually happened,
+but also of the mind of the writers of the sacred text. (106) For instance,
+Zechariah speaking of some future war says (chap. xiv;7): "It shall be one
+day which shall be known to the Lord, not day, nor night; but at even time
+it shall be light." In these words he seems to predict a great miracle, yet
+he only means that the battle will be doubtful the whole day, that the issue
+will be known only to God, but that in the evening they will gain the
+victory: the prophets frequently used to predict victories and defeats of
+the nations in similar phrases. (107) Thus Isaiah, describing the
+destruction of Babylon, says (chap. xiii.): "The stars of heaven, and the
+constellations thereof, shall not give their light; the sun shall be
+darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her light to
+shine." (108) Now I suppose no one imagines that at the destruction of
+Babylon these phenomena actually occurred any more than that which the
+prophet adds, "For I will make the heavens to tremble, and remove the earth
+out of her place."
+
+(109) So, too, Isaiah in foretelling to the Jews that they would return from
+Babylon to Jerusalem in safety, and would not suffer from thirst on their
+journey, says: "And they thirsted not when He led them through the deserts;
+He caused the waters to flow out of the rocks for them; He clave the rocks,
+and the waters gushed out." (110) These words merely mean that the Jews,
+like other people, found springs in the desert, at which they quenched their
+thirst; for when the Jews returned to Jerusalem with the consent of Cyrus,
+it is admitted that no similar miracles befell them.
+
+(111) In this way many occurrences in the Bible are to be regarded merely as
+Jewish expressions. (112) There is no need for me to go through them in
+detail; but I will call attention generally to the fact that the Jews
+employed such phrases not only rhetorically, but also, and indeed chiefly,
+from devotional motives. (113) Such is the reason for the substitution of
+"bless God" for "curse God" in 1 Kings xxi:10, and Job ii:9, and for all
+things being referred to God, whence it appears that the Bible seems to
+relate nothing but miracles, even when speaking of the most ordinary
+occurrences, as in the examples given above.
+
+(114) Hence we must believe that when the Bible says that the Lord hardened
+Pharaoh's heart, it only means that Pharaoh was obstinate; when it says that
+God opened the windows of heaven, it only means that it rained very hard,
+and so on. (115) When we reflect on these peculiarities, and also on the
+fact that most things are related very shortly, with very little details and
+almost in abridgments, we shall see that there is hardly anything in
+Scripture which can be proved contrary to natural reason, while, on the
+other hand, many things which before seemed obscure, will after a little
+consideration be understood and easily explained.
+
+(116) I think I have now very clearly explained all that I proposed to
+explain, but before I finish this chapter I would call attention to the fact
+that I have adopted a different method in speaking of miracles to that which
+I employed in treating of prophecy. (117) Of prophecy I have asserted
+nothing which could not be inferred from promises revealed in Scripture,
+whereas in this chapter I have deduced my conclusions solely from the
+principles ascertained by the natural light of reason. (118) I have
+proceeded in this way advisedly, for prophecy, in that it surpasses human
+knowledge, is a purely theological question; therefore, I knew that I could
+not make any assertions about it, nor learn wherein it consists, except
+through deductions from premises that have been revealed; therefore I was
+compelled to collate the history of prophecy, and to draw therefrom certain
+conclusions which would teach me, in so far as such teaching is possible,
+the nature and properties of the gift. (119) But in the case of miracles, as
+our inquiry is a question purely philosophical (namely, whether anything can
+happen which contravenes or does not follow from the laws of nature), I was
+not under any such necessity: I therefore thought it wiser to unravel the
+difficulty through premises ascertained and thoroughly known by could also
+easily have solved the problem merely from the doctrines and fundamental
+principles of Scripture: in order that everyone may acknowledge this, I will
+briefly show how it could be done.
+
+(120) Scripture makes the general assertion in several passages that
+nature's course is fixed and unchangeable. (121) In Ps. cxlviii:6, for
+instance, and Jer. xxxi:35. (122) The wise man also, in Eccles. i:10,
+distinctly teaches that "there is nothing new under the sun," and in verses
+11, 12, illustrating the same idea, he adds that although something
+occasionally happens which seems new, it is not really new, but "hath been
+already of old time, which was before us, whereof there is no remembrance,
+neither shall there be any remembrance of things that are to come with
+those that come after." (123) Again in chap. iii:11, he says, "God hath made
+everything beautiful in his time," and immediately afterwards adds, "I know
+that whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever; nothing can be put to it,
+nor anything taken from it."
+
+(124) Now all these texts teach most distinctly that nature preserves a
+fixed and unchangeable order, and that God in all ages, known and unknown,
+has been the same; further, that the laws of nature are so perfect, that
+nothing can be added thereto nor taken therefrom; and, lastly, that miracles
+only appear as something new because of man's ignorance.
+
+(125) Such is the express teaching of Scripture: nowhere does Scripture
+assert that anything happens which contradicts, or cannot follow from the
+laws of nature; and, therefore, we should not attribute to it such a
+doctrine.
+
+(126) To these considerations we must add, that miracles require causes and
+attendant circumstances, and that they follow, not from some mysterious
+royal power which the masses attribute to God, but from the Divine rule and
+decree, that is (as we have shown from Scripture itself) from the laws and
+order of nature; lastly, that miracles can be wrought even by false
+prophets, as is proved from Deut. xiii. and Matt. xxiv:24.
+
+(127) The conclusion, then, that is most plainly put before us is, that
+miracles were natural occurrences, and must therefore be so explained as to
+appear neither new (in the words of Solomon) nor contrary to nature, but, as
+far as possible, in complete agreement with ordinary events. (128) This can
+easily be done by anyone, now that I have set forth the rules drawn from
+Scripture. (129) Nevertheless, though I maintain that Scripture teaches this
+doctrine, I do not assert that it teaches it as a truth necessary to
+salvation, but only that the prophets were in agreement with ourselves on
+the point; therefore everyone is free to think on the subject as he
+likes, according as he thinks it best for himself, and most likely to
+conduce to the worship of God and to singlehearted religion.
+
+(130) This is also the opinion of Josephus, for at the conclusion of the
+second book of his "Antiquities," he writes: Let no man think this story
+incredible of the sea's dividing to save these people, for we find it in
+ancient records that this hath been seen before, whether by God's
+extraordinary will or by the course of nature it is indifferent. (131) The
+same thing happened one time to the Macedonians, under the command of
+Alexander, when for want of another passage the Pamphylian Sea divided to
+make them way; God's Providence making use of Alexander at that time as His
+instrument for destroying the Persian Empire. (132) This is attested by all
+the historians who have pretended to write the Life of that Prince. (133)
+But people are at liberty to think what they please."
+
+(134) Such are the words of Josephus, and such is his opinion on faith in
+miracles.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. - OF THE INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE
+
+(1) When people declare, as all are ready, to do, that the Bible is the Word
+of God teaching man true blessedness and the way of salvation, they
+evidently do not mean what they, say; for the masses take no pains at all to
+live according to Scripture, and we see most people endeavouring to hawk
+about their own commentaries as the word of God, and giving their best
+efforts, under the guise of religion, to compelling others to think as they
+do: we generally see, I say, theologians anxious to learn how to wring their
+inventions and sayings out of the sacred text, and to fortify, them with
+Divine authority. (2) Such persons never display, less scruple or
+more zeal than when they, are interpreting Scripture or the mind of the Holy
+Ghost; if we ever see them perturbed, it is not that they fear to attribute
+some error to the Holy Spirit, and to stray from the right path, but that
+they are afraid to be convicted of error by, others, and thus to overthrow
+and bring into contempt their own authority. (3) But if men really believed
+what they verbally testify of Scripture, they would adopt quite a different
+plan of life: their minds would not be agitated by so many contentions, nor
+so many hatreds, and they would cease to be excited by such a blind and rash
+passion for interpreting the sacred writings, and excogitating novelties
+in religion. (4) On the contrary, they would not dare to adopt, as the
+teaching of Scripture, anything which they could not plainly deduce
+therefrom: lastly, those sacrilegious persons who have dared, in several
+passages, to interpolate the Bible, would have shrunk from so great a
+crime, and would have stayed their sacrilegious hands.
+
+(5) Ambition and unscrupulousness have waxed so powerful, that religion is
+thought to consist, not so much in respecting the writings of the Holy
+Ghost, as in defending human commentaries, so that religion is no longer
+identified with charity, but with spreading discord and propagating
+insensate hatred disguised under the name of zeal for the Lord, and eager
+ardour.
+
+(6) To these evils we must add superstition, which teaches men to despise
+reason and nature, and only to admire and venerate that which is repugnant
+to both: whence it is not wonderful that for the sake of increasing the
+admiration and veneration felt for Scripture, men strive to explain it so as
+to make it appear to contradict, as far as possible, both one and the other:
+thus they dream that most profound mysteries lie hid in the Bible, and weary
+themselves out in the investigation of these absurdities, to the neglect of
+what is useful. (7) Every result of their diseased imagination they
+attribute to the Holy Ghost, and strive to defend with the utmost zeal and
+passion; for it is an observed fact that men employ their reason to defend
+conclusions arrived at by reason, but conclusions arrived at by the passions
+are defended by the passions.
+
+(8) If we would separate ourselves from the crowd and escape from
+theological prejudices, instead of rashly accepting human commentaries for
+Divine documents, we must consider the true method of interpreting Scripture
+and dwell upon it at some length: for if we remain in ignorance of this we
+cannot know, certainly, what the Bible and the Holy Spirit wish to teach.
+
+(9)I may sum up the matter by saying that the method of interpreting
+Scripture does not widely differ from the method of interpreting nature - in
+fact, it is almost the same. (10) For as the interpretation of nature
+consists in the examination of the history of nature, and therefrom
+deducing definitions of natural phenomena on certain fixed axioms, so
+Scriptural interpretation proceeds by the examination of Scripture, and
+inferring the intention of its authors as a legitimate conclusion from its
+fundamental principles. (11) By working in this manner everyone will
+always advance without danger of error - that is, if they admit no
+principles for interpreting Scripture, and discussing its contents save such
+as they find in Scripture itself - and will be able with equal security to
+discuss what surpasses our understanding, and what is known by the natural
+light of reason.
+
+(12) In order to make clear that such a method is not only correct, but is
+also the only one advisable, and that it agrees with that employed in
+interpreting nature, I must remark that Scripture very often treats of
+matters which cannot be deduced from principles known to reason: for it is
+chiefly made up of narratives and revelation: the narratives generally
+contain miracles - that is, as we have shown in the last chapter, relations
+of extraordinary natural occurrences adapted to the opinions and judgment of
+the historians who recorded them: the revelations also were adapted to the
+opinions of the prophets, as we showed in Chap. II., and in themselves
+surpassed human comprehension. (13) Therefore the knowledge of all these -
+that is, of nearly the whole contents of Scripture, must be sought from
+Scripture alone, even as the knowledge of nature is sought from nature. (14)
+As for the moral doctrines which are also contained in the Bible, they may
+be demonstrated from received axioms, but we cannot prove in the same manner
+that Scripture intended to teach them, this can only be learned from
+Scripture itself.
+
+(15) If we would bear unprejudiced witness to the Divine origin of
+Scripture, we must prove solely on its own authority that it teaches true
+moral doctrines, for by such means alone can its Divine origin be
+demonstrated: we have shown that the certitude of the prophets depended
+chiefly on their having minds turned towards what is just and good,
+therefore we ought to have proof of their possessing this quality before we
+repose faith in them. (16) From miracles God's divinity cannot be proved, as
+I have already shown, and need not now repeat, for miracles could be
+wrought by false prophets. (17) Wherefore the Divine origin of Scripture
+must consist solely in its teaching true virtue. (18) But we must come to
+our conclusion simply on Scriptural grounds, for if we were unable to do so
+we could not, unless strongly prejudiced accept the Bible and bear
+witness to its Divine origin.
+
+(19) Our knowledge of Scripture must then be looked for in Scripture only.
+
+(20) Lastly, Scripture does not give us definition of things any more than
+nature does: therefore, such definitions must be sought in the latter case
+from the diverse workings of nature; in the former case, from the various
+narratives about the given subject which occur in the Bible.
+
+(21) The universal rule, then, in interpreting Scripture is to accept
+nothing as an authoritative Scriptural statement which we do not perceive
+very clearly when we examine it in the light of its history. (22) What I
+mean by its history, and what should be the chief points elucidated, I will
+now explain.
+
+(23) The history of a Scriptural statement comprises -
+
+(23) I. The nature and properties of the language in which the books of the
+Bible were written, and in which their authors were, accustomed to speak.
+(24) We shall thus be able to investigate every expression by comparison
+with common conversational usages.
+
+(25) Now all the writers both of the Old Testament and the New were Hebrews:
+therefore, a knowledge of the Hebrew language is before all things
+necessary, not only for the comprehension of the Old Testament, which was
+written in that tongue, but also of the New: for although the latter was
+published in other languages, yet its characteristics are Hebrew.
+
+(26) II. An analysis of each book and arrangement of its contents under
+heads; so that we may have at hand the various texts which treat of a given
+subject. (27) Lastly, a note of all the passages which are ambiguous or
+obscure, or which seem mutually contradictory.
+
+(28) I call passages clear or obscure according as their meaning is inferred
+easily or with difficulty in relation to the context, not according as their
+truth is perceived easily or the reverse by reason. (29) We are at work not
+on the truth of passages, but solely on their meaning. (30) We must take
+especial care, when we are in search of the meaning of a text, not to be led
+away by our reason in so far as it is founded on principles of natural
+knowledge (to say nothing of prejudices): in order not to confound the
+meaning of a passage with its truth, we must examine it solely by means of
+the signification of the words, or by a reason acknowledging no foundation
+but Scripture.
+
+(31) I will illustrate my meaning by an example. (32) The words of Moses,
+"God is a fire" and "God is jealous," are perfectly clear so long as we
+regard merely the signification of the words, and I therefore reckon them
+
+among the clear passages, though in relation to reason and truth they are
+most obscure: still, although the literal meaning is repugnant to the
+natural light of reason, nevertheless, if it cannot be clearly overruled on
+grounds and principles derived from its Scriptural "history," it, that is,
+the literal meaning, must be the one retained: and contrariwise if these
+passages literally interpreted are found to clash with principles derived
+from Scripture, though such literal interpretation were in absolute harmony
+with reason, they must be interpreted in a different manner, i.e.
+metaphorically.
+
+(33) If we would know whether Moses believed God to be a fire or not, we
+must on no account decide the question on grounds of the reasonableness or
+the reverse of such an opinion, but must judge solely by the other opinions
+of Moses which are on record.
+
+(34) In the present instance, as Moses says in several other passages that
+God has no likeness to any visible thing, whether in heaven or in earth, or
+in the water, either all such passages must be taken metaphorically, or else
+the one before us must be so explained. (35) However, as we should depart as
+little as possible from the literal sense, we must first ask whether this
+text, God is a fire, admits of any but the literal meaning - that is,
+whether the word fire ever means anything besides ordinary natural fire.
+(36) If no such second meaning can be found, the text must be taken
+literally, however repugnant to reason it may be: and all the other
+passages, though in complete accordance with reason, must be brought into
+harmony with it. (37) If the verbal expressions would not admit of being
+thus harmonized, we should have to set them down as irreconcilable, and
+suspend our judgment concerning them. (38) However, as we find the name fire
+applied to anger and jealousy (see Job xxxi:12) we can thus easily reconcile
+the words of Moses, and legitimately conclude that the two propositions God
+is a fire, and God is jealous, are in meaning identical.
+
+(39) Further, as Moses clearly teaches that God is jealous, and nowhere
+states that God is without passions or emotions, we must evidently infer
+that Moses held this doctrine himself, or at any rate, that he wished to
+teach it, nor must we refrain because such a belief seems contrary to
+reason: for as we have shown, we cannot wrest the meaning of texts to suit
+the dictates of our reason, or our preconceived opinions. (40) The whole
+knowledge of the Bible must be sought solely from itself.
+
+(41) III. Lastly, such a history should relate the environment of all the
+prophetic books extant; that is, the life, the conduct, and the studies of
+the author of each book, who he was, what was the occasion, and the epoch of
+his writing, whom did he write for, and in what language. (42) Further,
+it should inquire into the fate of each book: how it was first received,
+into whose hands it fell, how many different versions there were of it, by
+whose advice was it received into the Bible, and, lastly, how all the books
+now universally accepted as sacred, were united into a single whole.
+
+(43) All such information should, as I have said, be contained in the
+"history" of Scripture. (44) For, in order to know what statements are set
+forth as laws, and what as moral precepts, it is important to be acquainted
+with the life, the conduct, and the pursuits of their author: moreover,
+it becomes easier to explain a man's writings in proportion as we have more
+intimate knowledge of his genius and temperament.
+
+(45) Further, that we may not confound precepts which are eternal with those
+which served only a temporary purpose, or were only meant for a few, we
+should know what was the occasion, the time, the age, in which each book was
+written, and to what nation it was addressed.(46) Lastly, we should have
+knowledge on the other points I have mentioned, in order to be sure,
+in addition to the authenticity of the work, that it has not been tampered
+with by sacrilegious hands, or whether errors can have crept in, and, if so,
+whether they have been corrected by men sufficiently skilled and worthy of
+credence. (47) All these things should be known, that we may not be led away
+by blind impulse to accept whatever is thrust on our notice, instead of only
+that which is sure and indisputable.
+
+(48) Now when we are in possession of this history of Scripture, and have
+finally decided that we assert nothing as prophetic doctrine which does not
+directly follow from such history, or which is not clearly deducible from
+it, then, I say, it will be time to gird ourselves for the task of
+investigating the mind of the prophets and of the Holy Spirit. (49) But in
+this further arguing, also, we shall require a method very like that
+employed in interpreting nature from her history. (50) As in the examination
+of natural phenomena we try first to investigate what is most universal
+and common to all nature - such, for instance, as motion and rest, and their
+laws and rules, which nature always observes, and through which she
+continually works - and then we proceed to what is less universal; so, too,
+in the history of Scripture, we seek first for that which is most universal,
+and serves for the basis and foundation of all Scripture, a doctrine, in
+fact, that is commended by all the prophets as eternal and most profitable
+to all men. (51) For example, that God is one, and that He is omnipotent,
+that He alone should be worshipped, that He has a care for all men, and that
+He especially loves those who adore Him and love their neighbour as
+themselves, &c. (52) These and similar doctrines, I repeat, Scripture
+everywhere so clearly and expressly teaches, that no one was ever in doubt
+of its meaning concerning them.
+
+(53) The nature of God, His manner of regarding and providing for things,
+and similar doctrines, Scripture nowhere teaches professedly, and as eternal
+doctrine; on the contrary, we have shown that the prophets themselves did
+not agree on the subject; therefore, we must not lay down any doctrine as
+Scriptural on such subjects, though it may appear perfectly clear on
+rational grounds.
+
+(54) From a proper knowledge of this universal doctrine of Scripture, we
+must then proceed to other doctrines less universal, but which,
+nevertheless, have regard to the general conduct of life, and flow from the
+universal doctrine like rivulets from a source; such are all particular
+external manifestations of true virtue, which need a given occasion for
+their exercise; whatever is obscure or ambiguous on such points in Scripture
+must be explained and defined by its universal doctrine; with regard to
+contradictory instances, we must observe the occasion and the time in which
+they were written. (55) For instance, when Christ says, "Blessed are they
+that mourn, for they shall be comforted" we do not know, from the actual
+passage, what sort of mourners are meant; as, however, Christ afterwards
+teaches that we should have care for nothing, save only for the kingdom of
+God and His righteousness, which is commended as the highest good (see
+Matt. vi;33), it follows that by mourners He only meant those who mourn for
+the kingdom of God and righteousness neglected by man: for this would be the
+only cause of mourning to those who love nothing but the Divine kingdom and
+justice, and who evidently despise the gifts of fortune. (56) So, too, when
+Christ says: "But if a man strike you on the right cheek, turn to him the
+left also," and the words which follow.
+
+(57) If He had given such a command, as a lawgiver, to judges, He would
+thereby have abrogated the law of Moses, but this He expressly says He did
+not do (Matt. v:17). (58) Wherefore we must consider who was the speaker,
+what was the occasion, and to whom were the words addressed. (59) Now Christ
+said that He did not ordain laws as a legislator, but inculcated precepts as
+a teacher: inasmuch as He did not aim at correcting outward actions so
+much as the frame of mind. (60) Further, these words were spoken to men who
+were oppressed, who lived in a corrupt commonwealth on the brink of ruin,
+where justice was utterly neglected. (61) The very doctrine inculcated here
+by Christ just before the destruction of the city was also taught by
+Jeremiah before the first destruction of Jerusalem, that is, in similar
+circumstances, as we see from Lamentations iii:25-30.
+
+(62) Now as such teaching was only set forth by the prophets in times of
+oppression, and was even then never laid down as a law; and as, on the other
+hand, Moses (who did not write in times of oppression, but - mark this -
+strove to found a well-ordered commonwealth), while condemning envy and
+hatred of one's neighbour, yet ordained that an eye should be given for
+an eye, it follows most clearly from these purely Scriptural grounds that
+this precept of Christ and Jeremiah concerning submission to injuries was
+only valid in places where justice is neglected, and in a time of
+oppression, but does not hold good in a well-ordered state.
+
+(63) In a well-ordered state where justice is administered every one is
+bound, if he would be accounted just, to demand penalties before the judge
+(see Lev:1), not for the sake of vengeance (Lev. xix:17, 18), but in order
+to defend justice and his country's laws, and to prevent the wicked
+rejoicing in their wickedness. (64) All this is plainly in accordance with
+reason. (65) I might cite many other examples in the same manner, but I
+think the foregoing are sufficient to explain my meaning and the utility of
+this method, and this is all my present purpose. (66) Hitherto we have only
+shown how to investigate those passages of Scripture which treat of
+practical conduct, and which, therefore, are more easily examined, for on
+such subjects there was never really any controversy among the writers of
+the Bible.
+
+(67) The purely speculative passages cannot be so easily, traced to their
+real meaning: the way becomes narrower, for as the prophets differed in
+matters speculative among themselves, and the narratives are in great
+measure adapted to the prejudices of each age, we must not, on any, account
+infer the intention of one prophet from clearer passages in the writings of
+another; nor must we so explain his meaning, unless it is perfectly plain
+that the two prophets were at one in the matter.
+
+(68) How we are to arrive at the intention of the prophets in such cases I
+will briefly explain. (69) Here, too, we must begin from the most universal
+proposition, inquiring first from the most clear Scriptural statements what
+is the nature of prophecy or revelation, and wherein does it consist; then
+we must proceed to miracles, and so on to whatever is most general till we
+come to the opinions of a particular prophet, and, at last, to the meaning
+of a particular revelation, prophecy, history, or miracle. (70) We have
+already pointed out that great caution is necessary not to confound the mind
+of a prophet or historian with the mind of the Holy Spirit and the truth
+of the matter; therefore I need not dwell further on the subject. (71) I
+would, however, here remark concerning the meaning of revelation, that the
+present method only teaches us what the prophets really saw or heard, not
+what they desired to signify or represent by symbols. (72) The latter may be
+guessed at but cannot be inferred with certainty from Scriptural premises.
+
+(73) We have thus shown the plan for interpreting Scripture, and have, at
+the same time, demonstrated that it is the one and surest way of
+investigating its true meaning. (74) I am willing indeed to admit that those
+persons (if any such there be) would be more absolutely certainly right, who
+have received either a trustworthy tradition or an assurance from the
+prophets themselves, such as is claimed by the Pharisees; or who have a
+pontiff gifted with infallibility in the interpretation of Scripture, such
+as the Roman Catholics boast. (75) But as we can never be perfectly sure,
+either of such a tradition or of the authority of the pontiff, we cannot
+found any certain conclusion on either: the one is denied by the oldest sect
+of Christians, the other by the oldest sect of Jews. (76) Indeed, if we
+consider the series of years (to mention no other point) accepted by the
+Pharisees from their Rabbis, during which time they say they have handed
+down the tradition from Moses, we shall find that it is not correct, as I
+show elsewhere. (77) Therefore such a tradition should be received with
+extreme suspicion; and although, according to our method, we are bound to
+consider as uncorrupted the tradition of the Jews, namely, the meaning of
+the Hebrew words which we received from them, we may accept the latter while
+retaining our doubts about the former.
+
+(78) No one has ever been able to change the meaning of a word in ordinary
+use, though many have changed the meaning of a particular sentence. (79)
+Such a proceeding would be most difficult; for whoever attempted to change
+the meaning of a word, would be compelled, at the same time, to explain all
+the authors who employed it, each according to his temperament and
+intention, or else, with consummate cunning, to falsify them.
+
+(80) Further, the masses and the learned alike preserve language, but it is
+only the learned who preserve the meaning of particular sentences and books:
+thus, we may easily imagine that the learned having a very rare book in
+their power, might change or corrupt the meaning of a sentence in it, but
+they could not alter the signification of the words; moreover, if anyone
+wanted to change the meaning of a common word he would not be able to keep
+up the change among posterity, or in common parlance or writing.
+
+(81) For these and such-like reasons we may readily conclude that it would
+never enter into the mind of anyone to corrupt a language, though the
+intention of a writer may often have been falsified by changing his phrases
+or interpreting them amiss. (82) As then our method (based on the principle
+that the knowledge of Scripture must be sought from itself alone) is the
+sole true one, we must evidently renounce any knowledge which it cannot
+furnish for the complete understanding of Scripture. (83) I will now point
+out its difficulties and shortcomings, which prevent our gaining a complete
+and assured knowledge of the Sacred Text.
+
+(84) Its first great difficulty consists in its requiring a thorough
+knowledge of the Hebrew language. (85) Where is such knowledge to be
+obtained? (86) The men of old who employed the Hebrew tongue have left none
+of the principles and bases of their language to posterity; we have from
+them absolutely nothing in the way of dictionary, grammar, or rhetoric.
+
+(87) Now the Hebrew nation has lost all its grace and beauty (as one would
+expect after the defeats and persecutions it has gone through), and has only
+retained certain fragments of its language and of a few books. (88) Nearly
+all the names of fruits, birds, and fishes, and many other words have
+perished in the wear and tear of time. (89) Further, the meaning of many
+nouns and verbs which occur in the Bible are either utterly lost, or are
+subjects of dispute. (90) And not only are these gone, but we are lacking in
+a knowledge of Hebrew phraseology. (91) The devouring tooth of time has
+destroyed turns of expression peculiar to the Hebrews, so that we know them
+no more.
+
+(92) Therefore we cannot investigate as we would all the meanings of a
+sentence by the uses of the language; and there are many phrases of which
+the meaning is most obscure or altogether inexplicable, though the component
+words are perfectly plain.
+
+(93) To this impossibility of tracing the history of the Hebrew language
+must be added its particular nature and composition: these give rise to so
+many ambiguities that it is impossible to find a method which would
+enable us to gain a certain knowledge of all the statements in Scripture,
+[Endnote 7]. (94) In addition to the sources of ambiguities common to all
+languages, there are many peculiar to Hebrew. (95) These, I think, it worth
+while to mention.
+
+(96) Firstly, an ambiguity often arises in the Bible from our mistaking one
+letter for another similar one. (97) The Hebrews divide the letters of the
+alphabet into five classes, according to the five organs of the month
+employed in pronouncing them, namely, the lips, the tongue, the teeth, the
+palate, and the throat. (98) For instance, Alpha, Ghet, Hgain, He, are
+called gutturals, and are barely distinguishable, by any sign that we know,
+one from the other. (99) El, which signifies to, is often taken for hgal,
+which signifies above, and vice versa. (100) Hence sentences are often
+rendered rather ambiguous or meaningless.
+
+(101) A second difficulty arises from the multiplied meaning of conjunctions
+and adverbs. (102) For instance, vau serves promiscuously for a particle of
+union or of separation, meaning, and, but, because, however, then: ki, has
+seven or eight meanings, namely, wherefore, although, if, when, inasmuch as,
+because, a burning, &c., and so on with almost all particles.
+
+(103) The third very fertile source of doubt is the fact that Hebrew verbs
+in the indicative mood lack the present, the past imperfect, the pluperfect,
+the future perfect, and other tenses most frequently employed in other
+languages; in the imperative and infinitive moods they are wanting in all
+except the present, and a subjunctive mood does not exist. (104) Now,
+although all these defects in moods and tenses may be supplied by certain
+fundamental rules of the language with ease and even elegance, the ancient
+writers evidently neglected such rules altogether, and employed
+indifferently future for present and past, and vice versa past for future,
+and also indicative for imperative and subjunctive, with the result of
+considerable confusion.
+
+(105) Besides these sources of ambiguity there are two others, one very
+important. (106) Firstly, there are in Hebrew no vowels; secondly, the
+sentences are not separated by any marks elucidating the meaning or
+separating the clauses. (107) Though the want of these two has generally
+been supplied by points and accents, such substitutes cannot be accepted by
+us, inasmuch as they were invented and designed by men of an after age whose
+authority should carry no weight. (108) The ancients wrote without points
+(that is, without vowels and accents), as is abundantly testified; their
+descendants added what was lacking, according to their own ideas of
+Scriptural interpretation; wherefore the existing accents and points are
+simply current interpretations, and are no more authoritative than any other
+commentaries.
+
+(109) Those who are ignorant of this fact cannot justify the author of the
+Epistle to the Hebrews for interpreting (chap. xi;21) Genesis (xlvii:31)
+very differently from the version given in our Hebrew text as at present
+pointed, as though the Apostle had been obliged to learn the meaning of
+Scripture from those who added the points. (110) In my opinion the latter
+are clearly wrong. (111) In order that everyone may judge for himself, and
+also see how the discrepancy arose simply from the want of vowels, I will
+give both interpretations. (112)Those who pointed our version read, "And
+Israel bent himself over, or (changing Hqain into Aleph, a similar letter)
+towards, the head of the bed." (113) The author of the Epistle reads, "And
+Israel bent himself over the head of his staff," substituting mate for mita,
+from which it only differs in respect of vowels. (114) Now as in this
+narrative it is Jacob's age only that is in question, and not his illness,
+which is not touched on till the next chapter, it seems more likely that the
+historian intended to say that Jacob bent over the head of his staff (a
+thing commonly used by men of advanced age for their support) than that he
+bowed himself at the head of his bed, especially as for the former reading
+no substitution of letters is required. (115) In this example I have desired
+not only to reconcile the passage in the Epistle with the passage in
+Genesis, but also and chiefly to illustrate how little trust should be
+placed in the points and accents which are found in our present Bible, and
+so to prove that he who would be without bias in interpreting Scripture
+should hesitate about accepting them, and inquire afresh for himself. (116)
+Such being the nature and structure of the Hebrew language, one may easily
+understand that many difficulties are likely to arise, and that no possible
+method could solve all of them. (117) It is useless to hope for a way out of
+our difficulties in the comparison of various parallel passages (we have
+shown that the only method of discovering the true sense of a passage out of
+many alternative ones is to see what are the usages of the language), for
+this comparison of parallel passages can only accidentally throw light on a
+difficult point, seeing that the prophets never wrote with the express
+object of explaining their own phrases or those of other people, and also
+because we cannot infer the meaning of one prophet or apostle by the meaning
+of another, unless on a purely practical question, not when the matter is
+speculative, or if a miracle, or history is being narrated. (118) I might
+illustrate my point with instances, for there are many inexplicable phrases
+in Scripture, but I would rather pass on to consider the difficulties and
+imperfections of the method under discussion.
+
+(119) A further difficulty attends the method, from the fact that it
+requires the history of all that has happened to every book in the Bible;
+such a history we are often quite unable to furnish. (120) Of the authors,
+or (if the expression be preferred), the writers of many of the books, we
+are either in complete ignorance, or at any rate in doubt, as I will point
+out at length. (121) Further, we do not know either the occasions or the
+epochs when these books of unknown authorship were written; we cannot say
+into what hands they fell, nor how the numerous varying versions
+originated; nor, lastly, whether there were not other versions, now lost.
+(122) I have briefly shown that such knowledge is necessary, but I passed
+over certain considerations which I will now draw attention to.
+
+(123) If we read a book which contains incredible or impossible narratives,
+or is written in a very obscure style, and if we know nothing of its author,
+nor of the time or occasion of its being written, we shall vainly endeavour
+to gain any certain knowledge of its true meaning. (124) For being in
+ignorance on these points we cannot possibly know the aim or intended aim of
+the author; if we are fully informed, we so order our thoughts as not to be
+in any way prejudiced either in ascribing to the author or him for whom the
+author wrote either more or less than his meaning, and we only take into
+consideration what the author may have had in his mind, or what the time and
+occasion demanded. (125) I think this must be tolerably evident to all.
+
+(126) It often happens that in different books we read histories in
+themselves similar, but which we judge very differently, according to the
+opinions we have formed of the authors. (127) I remember once to have read
+in some book that a man named Orlando Furioso used to drive a kind of winged
+monster through the air, fly over any countries he liked, kill unaided vast
+numbers of men and giants, and such like fancies, which from the point of
+view of reason are obviously absurd. (128) A very similar story I read in
+Ovid of Perseus, and also in the books of Judges and Kings of Samson, who
+alone and unarmed killed thousands of men, and of Elijah, who flew through
+the air, said at last went up to heaven in a chariot of fire, with horses of
+fire. (129) All these stories are obviously alike, but we judge them very
+differently. (130) The first only sought to amuse, the second had a
+political object, the third a religious object.(131) We gather this simply
+from the opinions we had previously formed of the authors. (132) Thus it
+is evidently necessary to know something of the authors of writings which
+are obscure or unintelligible, if we would interpret their meaning; and for
+the same reason, in order to choose the proper reading from among a great
+variety, we ought to have information as to the versions in which the
+differences are found, and as to the possibility of other readings having
+been discovered by persons of greater authority.
+
+(133) A further difficulty attends this method in the case of some of the
+books of Scripture, namely, that they are no longer extant in their original
+language. (133) The Gospel according to Matthew, and certainly the Epistle
+to the Hebrews, were written, it is thought, in Hebrew, though they no
+longer exist in that form. (134) Aben Ezra affirms in his commentaries that
+the book of Job was translated into Hebrew out of another language, and that
+its obscurity arises from this fact. (135) I say nothing of the apocryphal
+books, for their authority stands on very inferior ground.
+
+(136) The foregoing difficulties in this method of interpreting Scripture
+from its own history, I conceive to be so great that I do not hesitate to
+say that the true meaning of Scripture is in many places inexplicable, or at
+best mere subject for guesswork; but I must again point out, on the other
+hand, that such difficulties only arise when we endeavour to follow the
+meaning of a prophet in matters which cannot be perceived, but only
+imagined, not in things, whereof the understanding can give a clear idea,
+and which are conceivable through themselves:, [Endnote 8], matters which by
+their nature are easily perceived cannot be expressed so obscurely as to be
+unintelligible; as the proverb says, "a word is enough to the wise." (137)
+Euclid, who only wrote of matters very simple and easily understood, can
+easily be comprehended by anyone in any language; we can follow his
+intention perfectly, and be certain of his true meaning, without having a
+thorough knowledge of the language in which he wrote; in fact, a quite
+rudimentary acquaintance is sufficient. (138) We need make no researches
+concerning the life, the pursuits, or the habits of the author; nor need we
+inquire in what language, nor when he wrote, nor the vicissitudes of his
+book, nor its various readings, nor how, nor by whose advice it has been
+received.
+
+(139) What we here say of Euclid might equally be said of any book which
+treats of things by their nature perceptible: thus we conclude that we can
+easily follow the intention of Scripture in moral questions, from the
+history we possess of it, and we can be sure of its true meaning.
+
+(140) The precepts of true piety are expressed in very ordinary language,
+and are equally simple and easily understood. (141) Further, as true
+salvation and blessedness consist in a true assent of the soul - and we
+truly assent only to what we clearly understand - it is most plain that we
+can follow with certainty the intention of Scripture in matters relating to
+salvation and necessary to blessedness; therefore, we need not be much
+troubled about what remains: such matters, inasmuch as we generally cannot
+grasp them with our reason and understanding, are more curious than
+profitable.
+
+(142) I think I have now set forth the true method of Scriptural
+interpretation, and have sufficiently explained my own opinion thereon.
+(143) Besides, I do not doubt that everyone will see that such a method only
+requires the aid of natural reason. (144) The nature and efficacy of the
+natural reason consists in deducing and proving the unknown from the known,
+or in carrying premises to their legitimate conclusions; and these are the
+very processes which our method desiderates. (145) Though we must admit that
+it does not suffice to explain everything in the Bible, such imperfection
+does not spring from its own nature, but from the fact that the path
+which it teaches us, as the true one, has never been tended or trodden by
+men, and has thus, by the lapse of time, become very difficult, and almost
+impassable, as, indeed, I have shown in the difficulties I draw attention
+to.
+
+(146) There only remains to examine the opinions of those who differ from
+me. (147) The first which comes under our notice is, that the light of
+nature has no power to interpret Scripture, but that a supernatural faculty
+is required for the task. (148) What is meant by this supernatural faculty I
+will leave to its propounders to explain. (149) Personally, I can only
+suppose that they have adopted a very obscure way of stating their complete
+uncertainty about the true meaning of Scripture. (150) If we look at their
+interpretations, they contain nothing supernatural, at least nothing but the
+merest conjectures.
+
+(151) Let them be placed side by side with the interpretations of those who
+frankly confess that they have no faculty beyond their natural ones; we
+shall see that the two are just alike - both human, both long pondered over,
+both laboriously invented. (152) To say that the natural reason is
+insufficient for such results is plainly untrue, firstly, for the reasons
+above stated, namely, that the difficulty of interpreting Scripture arises
+from no defect in human reason, but simply from the carelessness (not to say
+malice) of men who neglected the history of the Bible while there were still
+materials for inquiry; secondly, from the fact (admitted, I think, by all)
+that the supernatural faculty is a Divine gift granted only to the faithful.
+(153) But the prophets and apostles did not preach to the faithful only, but
+chiefly to the unfaithful and wicked. (154) Such persons, therefore, were
+able to understand the intention of the prophets and apostles, otherwise the
+prophets and apostles would have seemed to be preaching to little boys and
+infants, not to men endowed with reason. (155) Moses, too, would have given
+his laws in vain, if they could only be comprehended by the faithful, who
+need no law. (156) Indeed, those who demand supernatural faculties for
+comprehending the meaning of the prophets and apostles seem truly lacking in
+natural faculties, so that we should hardly suppose such persons the
+possessors of a Divine supernatural gift.
+
+(157) The opinion of Maimonides was widely different. (158) He asserted
+that each passage in Scripture admits of various, nay, contrary,
+meanings; but that we could never be certain of any particular one till we
+knew that the passage, as we interpreted it, contained nothing contrary or
+repugnant to reason. (159) If the literal meaning clashes with reason,
+though the passage seems in itself perfectly clear, it must be interpreted
+in some metaphorical sense. (160) This doctrine he lays down very plainly in
+chap. xxv. part ii. of his book, "More Nebuchim," for he says: "Know that we
+shrink not from affirming that the world hath existed from eternity,
+because of what Scripture saith concerning the world's creation. (161) For
+the texts which teach that the world was created are not more in number than
+those which teach that God hath a body; neither are the approaches in this
+matter of the world's creation closed, or even made hard to us: so that we
+should not be able to explain what is written, as we did when we showed
+that God hath no body, nay, peradventure, we could explain and make fast the
+doctrine of the world's eternity more easily than we did away with the
+doctrines that God hath a beatified body. (162) Yet two things hinder me
+from doing as I have said, and believing that the world is eternal.
+(163) As it hath been clearly shown that God hath not a body, we must
+perforce explain all those passages whereof the literal sense agreeth not
+with the demonstration, for sure it is that they can be so explained. (164)
+But the eternity of the world hath not been so demonstrated, therefore
+it is not necessary to do violence to Scripture in support of some common
+opinion, whereof we might, at the bidding of reason, embrace the contrary."
+
+(165) Such are the words of Maimonides, and they are evidently sufficient to
+establish our point: for if he had been convinced by reason that the world
+is eternal, he would not have hesitated to twist and explain away the words
+of Scripture till he made them appear to teach this doctrine. (166) He would
+have felt quite sure that Scripture, though everywhere plainly denying the
+eternity of the world, really intends to teach it. (167) So that, however
+clear the meaning of Scripture may be, he would not feel certain of having
+grasped it, so long as he remained doubtful of the truth of what, was
+written. (168) For we are in doubt whether a thing is in conformity with
+reason, or contrary thereto, so long as we are uncertain of its truth,
+and, consequently, we cannot be sure whether the literal meaning of a
+passage be true or false.
+
+(169) If such a theory as this were sound, I would certainly grant that some
+faculty beyond the natural reason is required for interpreting Scripture.
+(170) For nearly all things that we find in Scripture cannot be inferred
+from known principles of the natural reason, and, therefore, we should be
+unable to come to any conclusion about their truth, or about the real
+meaning and intention of Scripture, but should stand in need of some
+further assistance.
+
+(171) Further, the truth of this theory would involve that the masses,
+having generally no comprehension of, nor leisure for, detailed proofs,
+would be reduced to receiving all their knowledge of Scripture on the
+authority and testimony of philosophers, and, consequently, would be
+compelled to suppose that the interpretations given by philosophers were
+infallible.
+
+(172) Truly this would be a new form of ecclesiastical authority, and a new
+sort of priests or pontiffs, more likely to excite men's ridicule than their
+veneration. (173) Certainly our method demands a knowledge of Hebrew for
+which the masses have no leisure; but no such objection as the foregoing can
+be brought against us. (174) For the ordinary Jews or Gentiles, to whom the
+prophets and apostles preached and wrote, understood the language, and,
+consequently, the intention of the prophet or apostle addressing them; but
+they did not grasp the intrinsic reason of what was preached, which,
+according to Maimonides, would be necessary for an understanding of it.
+
+(175) There is nothing, then, in our method which renders it necessary that
+the masses should follow the testimony of commentators, for I point to a set
+of unlearned people who understood the language of the prophets and
+apostles; whereas Maimonides could not point to any such who could arrive at
+the prophetic or apostolic meaning through their knowledge of the causes
+of things.
+
+(176) As to the multitude of our own time, we have shown that whatsoever is
+necessary to salvation, though its reasons may be unknown, can easily be
+understood in any language, because it is thoroughly ordinary and usual; it
+is in such understanding as this that the masses acquiesce, not in the
+testimony of commentators; with regard to other questions, the ignorant and
+the learned fare alike.
+
+(177) But let us return to the opinion of Maimonides, and examine it more
+closely. In the first place, he supposes that the prophets were in entire
+agreement one with another, and that they were consummate philosophers and
+theologians; for he would have them to have based their conclusions on the
+absolute truth. (178) Further, he supposes that the sense of Scripture
+cannot be made plain from Scripture itself, for the truth of things is not
+made plain therein (in that it does not prove any thing, nor teach the
+matters of which it speaks through their definitions and first causes),
+therefore, according to Maimonides, the true sense of Scripture cannot be
+made plain from itself, and must not be there sought.
+
+(179) The falsity of such a doctrine is shown in this very chapter, for we
+have shown both by reason and examples that the meaning of Scripture is only
+made plain through Scripture itself, and even in questions deducible from
+ordinary knowledge should be looked for from no other source.
+
+(180) Lastly, such a theory supposes that we may explain the words of
+Scripture according to our preconceived opinions, twisting them about, and
+reversing or completely changing the literal sense, however plain it may be.
+(181) Such licence is utterly opposed to the teaching of this and the
+preceding chapters, and, moreover, will be evident to everyone as rash and
+excessive.
+
+(182) But if we grant all this licence, what can it effect after all?
+Absolutely nothing. (183) Those things which cannot be demonstrated, and
+which make up the greater part of Scripture, cannot be examined by reason,
+and cannot therefore be explained or interpreted by this rule; whereas,
+on the contrary, by following our own method, we can explain many questions
+of this nature, and discuss them on a sure basis, as we have already shown,
+by reason and example. (184) Those matters which are by their nature
+comprehensible we can easily explain, as has been pointed out, simply by
+means of the context.
+
+(185) Therefore, the method of Maimonides is clearly useless: to which we
+may add, that it does away with all the certainty which the masses acquire
+by candid reading, or which is gained by any other persons in any other way.
+(186) In conclusion, then, we dismiss Maimonides' theory as harmful,
+useless, and absurd.
+
+(187) As to the tradition of the Pharisees, we have already shown that it is
+not consistent, while the authority of the popes of Rome stands in need of
+more credible evidence; the latter, indeed, I reject simply on this ground,
+for if the popes could point out to us the meaning of Scripture as surely as
+did the high priests of the Jews, I should not be deterred by the fact that
+there have been heretic and impious Roman pontiffs; for among the Hebrew
+high-priests of old there were also heretics and impious men who gained the
+high- priesthood by improper means, but who, nevertheless, had Scriptural
+sanction for their supreme power of interpreting the law. (See
+Deut. xvii:11, 12, and xxxiii:10, also Malachi ii:8.)
+
+(188) However, as the popes can show no such sanction, their authority
+remains open to very grave doubt, nor should anyone be deceived by the
+example of the Jewish high-priests and think that the Catholic religion also
+stands in need of a pontiff; he should bear in mind that the laws of Moses
+being also the ordinary laws of the country, necessarily required some
+public authority to insure their observance; for, if everyone were free to
+interpret the laws of his country as he pleased, no state could stand, but
+would for that very reason be dissolved at once, and public rights would
+become private rights.
+
+(189) With religion the case is widely different. Inasmuch as it consists
+not so much in outward actions as in simplicity and truth of character, it
+stands outside the sphere of law and public authority. (190) Simplicity and
+truth of character are not produced by the constraint of laws, nor by
+the authority of the state, no one the whole world over can be forced or
+legislated into a state of blessedness; the means required for such a
+consummation are faithful and brotherly admonition, sound education, and,
+above all, free use of the individual judgment.
+
+(191) Therefore, as the supreme right of free thinking, even on religion, is
+in every man's power, and as it is inconceivable that such power could be
+alienated, it is also in every man's power to wield the supreme right and
+authority of free judgment in this behalf, and to explain and interpret
+religion for himself. (192) The only reason for vesting the supreme
+authority in the interpretation of law, and judgment on public affairs in
+the hands of the magistrates, is that it concerns questions of public right.
+(193) Similarly the supreme authority in explaining religion, and in passing
+judgment thereon, is lodged with the individual because it concerns
+questions of individual right. (194) So far, then, from the authority of the
+Hebrew high-priests telling in confirmation of the authority of the Roman
+pontiffs to interpret religion, it would rather tend to establish individual
+freedom of judgment. (195) Thus in this way also, we have shown that our
+method of interpreting Scripture is the best. (196) For as the highest power
+of Scriptural interpretation belongs to every man, the rule for such
+interpretation should be nothing but the natural light of reason which is
+common to all - not any supernatural light nor any external authority;
+moreover, such a rule ought not to be so difficult that it can only be
+applied by very skilful philosophers, but should be adapted to the natural
+and ordinary faculties and capacity of mankind. (197) And such I have shown
+our method to be, for such difficulties as it has arise from men's
+carelessness, and are no part of its nature.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. - OF THE AUTHORSHIP OF THE PENTATEUCH AND THE OTHER
+HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
+
+(1) In the former chapter we treated of the foundations and principles of
+Scriptural knowledge, and showed that it consists solely in a trustworthy
+history of the sacred writings; such a history, in spite of its
+indispensability, the ancients neglected, or at any rate, whatever they may
+have written or handed down has perished in the lapse of time, consequently
+the groundwork for such an investigation is to a great extent, cut from
+under us. (2) This might be put up with if succeeding generations had
+confined themselves within the limits of truth, and had handed down
+conscientiously what few particulars they had received or discovered without
+any additions from their own brains: as it is, the history of the Bible is
+not so much imperfect as untrustworthy: the foundations are not only too
+scanty for building upon, but are also unsound. (3) It is part of my purpose
+to remedy these defects, and to remove common theological prejudices. (4)
+But I fear that I am attempting my task too late, for men have arrived at
+the pitch of not suffering contradiction, but defending obstinately whatever
+they have adopted under the name of religion. (5) So widely have these
+prejudices taken possession of men's minds, that very few, comparatively
+speaking, will listen to reason. (6) However, I will make the attempt, and
+spare no efforts, for there is no positive reason for despairing of success.
+
+(7) In order to treat the subject methodically, I will begin with the
+received opinions concerning the true authors of the sacred books, and in
+the first place, speak of the author of the Pentateuch, who is almost
+universally supposed to have been Moses. (8) The Pharisees are so firmly
+convinced of his identity, that they account as a heretic anyone who differs
+from them on the subject. (9) Wherefore, Aben Ezra, a man of enlightened
+intelligence, and no small learning, who was the first, so far as I know,
+to treat of this opinion, dared not express his meaning openly, but confined
+himself to dark hints which I shall not scruple to elucidate, thus throwing,
+full light on the subject.
+
+(10) The words of Aben Ezra which occur in his commentary on Deuteronomy are
+as follows: "Beyond Jordan, &c . . . If so be that thou understandest the
+mystery of the twelve . . . moreover Moses wrote the law . . . The
+Canaanite was then in the land . . . . it shall be revealed on the mount of
+God . . . . then also behold his bed, his iron bed, then shalt thou know
+the truth." (11) In these few words he hints, and also shows that it was not
+Moses who wrote the Pentateuch, but someone who lived long after him, and
+further, that the book which Moses wrote was something different from any
+now extant.
+
+(12) To prove this, I say, he draws attention to the facts:
+
+(13) 1. That the preface to Deuteronomy could not have been written by
+Moses, inasmuch as he ad never crossed the Jordan.
+
+(14) II. That the whole book of Moses was written at full length on the
+circumference of a single altar (Deut. xxvii, and Josh. viii:37), which
+altar, according to the Rabbis, consisted of only twelve stones: therefore
+the book of Moses must have been of far less extent than the Pentateuch.
+(15) This is what our author means, I think, by the mystery of the twelve,
+unless he is referring to the twelve curses contained in the chapter of
+Deuteronomy above cited, which he thought could not have been contained in
+the law, because Moses bade the Levites read them after the recital of the
+law, and so bind the people to its observance. (16) Or again, he may have
+had in his mind the last chapter of Deuteronomy which treats of the death of
+Moses, and which contains twelve verses. (17) But there is no need to dwell
+further on these and similar conjectures.
+
+(18) III. That in Deut. xxxi:9, the expression occurs, "and Moses wrote the
+law:" words that cannot be ascribed to Moses, but must be those of some
+other writer narrating the deeds and writings of Moses.
+
+(19) IV. That in Genesis xii:6, the historian, after narrating that Abraham
+journeyed through the and of Canaan, adds, "and the Canaanite was then in
+the land," thus clearly excluding the time at which he wrote. (20) So that
+this passage must have been written after the death of Moses, when the
+Canaanites had been driven out, and no longer possessed the land.
+
+(21) Aben Ezra, in his commentary on the passage, alludes to the difficulty
+as follows:- "And the Canaanite was then in the land: it appears that
+Canaan, the grandson of Noah, took from another the land which bears his
+name; if this be not the true meaning, there lurks some mystery in the
+passage, and let him who understands it keep silence." (22) That is, if
+Canaan invaded those regions, the sense will be, the Canaanite was then in
+the land, in contradistinction to the time when it had been held by another:
+but if, as follows from Gen. chap. x. Canaan was the first to inhabit the
+land, the text must mean to exclude the time present, that is the time at
+which it was written; therefore it cannot be the work of Moses, in
+whose time the Canaanites still possessed those territories: this is the
+mystery concerning which silence is recommended.
+
+(23) V. That in Genesis xxii:14 Mount Moriah is called the mount of God,
+[Endnote 9], a name which it did not acquire till after the building of the
+Temple; the choice of the mountain was not made in the time of Moses, for
+Moses does not point out any spot as chosen by God; on the contrary, he
+foretells that God will at some future time choose a spot to which this name
+will be given.
+
+(24) VI. Lastly, that in Deut. chap. iii., in the passage relating to Og,
+king of Bashan, these words are inserted: "For only Og king of Bashan
+remained of the remnant of giants: behold, his bedstead was a bedstead of
+iron: is it not in Rabbath of the children of Ammon? nine cubits was the
+length thereof, and four cubits the breadth of it, after the cubit of a
+man." (25) This parenthesis most plainly shows that its writer lived long
+after Moses; for this mode of speaking is only employed by one treating of
+things long past, and pointing to relics for the sake of gaining credence:
+moreover, this bed was almost certainly first discovered by David, who
+conquered the city of Rabbath (2 Sam. xii:30.) (26) Again, the historian a
+little further on inserts after the words of Moses, "Jair, the son of
+Manasseh, took all the country of Argob unto the coasts of Geshuri and
+Maachathi; and called them after his own name, Bashan-havoth-jair, unto this
+day." (27) This passage, I say, is inserted to explain the words of Moses
+which precede it. (28) "And the rest of Gilead, and all Bashan, being the
+kingdom of Og, gave I unto the half tribe of Manasseh; all the region of
+Argob, with all Bashan, which is called the land of the giants." (29) The
+Hebrews in the time of the writer indisputably knew what territories
+belonged to the tribe of Judah, but did not know them under the name of the
+jurisdiction of Argob, or the land of the giants. (30) Therefore the writer
+is compelled to explain what these places were which were anciently so
+styled, and at the same time to point out why they were at the time of his
+writing known by the name of Jair, who was of the tribe of Manasseh, not of
+Judah. (31) We have thus made clear the meaning of Aben Ezra and also the
+passages of the Pentateuch which he cites in proof of his contention. (32)
+However, Aben Ezra does not call attention to every instance, or even the
+chief ones; there remain many of greater importance, which may be cited.
+(33) Namely (I.), that the writer of the books in question not only speaks
+of Moses in the third person, but also bears witness to many details
+concerning him; for instance, "Moses talked with God;" "The Lord spoke with
+Moses face to face; " "Moses was the meekest of men" (Numb. xii:3); "Moses
+was wrath with the captains of the host; "Moses, the man of God, "Moses, the
+servant of the Lord, died;" "There was never a prophet in Israel like
+unto Moses," &c. (34) On the other hand, in Deuteronomy, where the law which
+Moses had expounded to the people and written is set forth, Moses speaks and
+declares what he has done in the first person: "God spake with me " (Deut.
+ii:1, 17, &c.), "I prayed to the Lord," &c. (35) Except at the end of the
+book, when the historian, after relating the words of Moses, begins again to
+speak in the third person, and to tell how Moses handed over the law which
+he had expounded to the people in writing, again admonishing them, and
+further, how Moses ended his life. (36) All these details, the manner of
+narration, the testimony, and the context of the whole story lead to the
+plain conclusion that these books were written by another, and not by Moses
+in person.
+
+(37) III. We must also remark that the history relates not only the manner
+of Moses' death and burial, and the thirty days' mourning of the Hebrews,
+but further compares him with all the prophets who came after him, and
+states that he surpassed them all. (38) "There was never a prophet in Israel
+like unto Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face." (39) Such testimony
+cannot have been given of Moses by, himself, nor by any who immediately
+succeeded him, but it must come from someone who lived centuries afterwards,
+especially, as the historian speaks of past times. (40) "There was never a
+prophet," &c. (41) And of the place of burial, "No one knows it to this
+day."
+
+(42) III. We must note that some places are not styled by the names they
+bore during Moses' lifetime, but by others which they obtained subsequently.
+(43) For instance, Abraham is said to have pursued his enemies even unto
+Dan, a name not bestowed on the city till long after the death of Joshua
+(Gen. xiv;14, Judges xviii;29).
+
+(44) IV. The narrative is prolonged after the death of Moses, for in
+Exodus xvi:34 we read that "the children of Israel did eat manna forty
+years until they came to a land inhabited, until they came unto the borders
+of the land of Canaan." (45) In other words, until the time alluded to in
+Joshua vi:12.
+
+(46) So, too, in Genesis xxxvi:31 it is stated, "These are the kings that
+reigned in Edom before there reigned any king over the children of Israel."
+(47) The historian, doubtless, here relates the kings of Idumaea before that
+territory was conquered by David [Endnote 10] and garrisoned, as we read
+in 2 Sam. viii:14. (48) From what has been said, it is thus clearer than the
+sun at noonday that the Pentateuch was not written by Moses, but by someone
+who lived long after Moses. (49) Let us now turn our attention to the books
+which Moses actually did write, and which are cited in the Pentateuch; thus,
+also, shall we see that they were different from the Pentateuch. (50)
+Firstly, it appears from Exodus xvii:14 that Moses, by the command of God,
+wrote an account of the war against Amalek. (51) The book in which he did so
+is not named in the chapter just quoted, but in Numb. xxi:12 a book is
+referred to under the title of the wars of God, and doubtless this war
+against Amalek and the castrametations said in Numb. xxxiii:2 to have been
+written by Moses are therein described. (52) We hear also in Exod. xxiv:4 of
+another book called the Book of the Covenant, which Moses read before the
+Israelites when they first made a covenant with God. (53) But this book or
+this writing contained very little, namely, the laws or commandments of God
+which we find in Exodus xx:22 to the end of chap. xxiv., and this no one
+will deny who reads the aforesaid chapter rationally and impartially. (54)
+It is there stated that as soon as Moses had learnt the feeling of the
+people on the subject of making a covenant with God, he immediately wrote
+down God's laws and utterances, and in the morning, after some ceremonies
+had been performed, read out the conditions of the covenant to an assembly
+of the whole people. (55) When these had been gone through, and doubtless
+understood by all, the whole people gave their assent.
+
+(56) Now from the shortness of the time taken in its perusal and also from
+its nature as a compact, this document evidently contained nothing more than
+that which we have just described. (57) Further, it is clear that Moses
+explained all the laws which he had received in the fortieth year after the
+exodus from Egypt; also that he bound over the people a second time to
+observe them, and that finally he committed them to writing (Deut. i:5;
+xxix:14; xxxi:9), in a book which contained these laws explained, and the
+new covenant, and this book was therefore called the book of the law of God:
+the same which was afterwards added to by Joshua when he set forth the fresh
+covenant with which he bound over the people and which he entered into
+with God (Josh. xxiv:25, 26).
+
+(58) Now, as we have extent no book containing this covenant of Moses and
+also the covenant of Joshua, we must perforce conclude that it has perished,
+unless, indeed, we adopt the wild conjecture of the Chaldean paraphrast
+Jonathan, and twist about the words of Scripture to our heart's content.
+(59) This commentator, in the face of our present difficulty, preferred
+corrupting the sacred text to confessing his own ignorance. (60) The passage
+in the book of Joshua which runs, "and Joshua wrote these words in the
+book of the law of God," he changes into "and Joshua wrote these words
+and kept them with the book of the law of God." (61) What is to be done with
+persons who will only see what pleases them? (62) What is such a proceeding
+if it is not denying Scripture, and inventing another Bible out of our own
+heads? (63) We may therefore conclude that the book of the law of God which
+Moses wrote was not the Pentateuch, but something quite different, which the
+author of the Pentateuch duly inserted into his book. (64) So much is
+abundantly plain both from what I have said and from what I am about to add.
+(65) For in the passage of Deuteronomy above quoted, where it is related
+that Moses wrote the book of the law, the historian adds that he handed it
+over to the priests and bade them read it out at a stated time to the whole
+people. (66) This shows that the work was of much less length than the
+Pentateuch, inasmuch as it could be read through at one sitting so as to be
+understood by all; further, we must not omit to notice that out of all the
+books which Moses wrote, this one book of the second covenant and the song
+(which latter he wrote afterwards so that all the people might learn it),
+was the only one which he caused to be religiously guarded and preserved.
+(67) In the first covenant he had only bound over those who were present,
+but in the second covenant he bound over all their descendants also (Dent.
+xxix:14), and therefore ordered this covenant with future ages to be
+religiously preserved, together with the Song, which was especially
+addressed to posterity: as, then, we have no proof that Moses wrote any
+book save this of the covenant, and as he committed no other to the care of
+posterity; and, lastly, as there are many passages in the Pentateuch which
+Moses could not have written, it follows that the belief that Moses was the
+author of the Pentateuch is ungrounded and even irrational. (68) Someone
+will perhaps ask whether Moses did not also write down other laws when they
+were first revealed to him - in other words, whether, during the course of
+forty years, he did not write down any of the laws which he promulgated,
+save only those few which I have stated to be contained in the book of the
+first covenant. (69) To this I would answer, that although it seems
+reasonable to suppose that Moses wrote down the laws at the time when he
+wished to communicate them to the people, yet we are not warranted to take
+it as proved, for I have shown above that we must make no assertions in such
+matters which we do not gather from Scripture, or which do not flow as
+legitimate consequences from its fundamental principles. (70) We must not
+accept whatever is reasonably probable. (71) However even reason in this
+case would not force such a conclusion upon us: for it may be that the
+assembly of elders wrote down the decrees of Moses and communicated them to
+the people, and the historian collected them, and duly set them forth in his
+narrative of the life of Moses. (72) So much for the five books of Moses: it
+is now time for us to turn to the other sacred writings.
+
+(73) The book of Joshua may be proved not to be an autograph by reasons
+similar to those we have just employed: for it must be some other than
+Joshua who testifies that the fame of Joshua was spread over the whole
+world; that he omitted nothing of what Moses had taught (Josh. vi:27; viii.
+last verse; xi:15); that he grew old and summoned an assembly of the whole
+people, and finally that he departed this life. (74) Furthermore, events are
+related which took place after Joshua's death. (75) For instance, that the
+Israelites worshipped God, after his death, so long as there were any old
+men alive who remembered him; and in chap. xvi:10, we read that "Ephraim and
+Manasseh did not drive out the Canaanites which dwelt in Gezer, but the
+Canaanite dwelt in the land of Ephraim unto this day, and was tributary to
+him." (76) This is the same statement as that in Judges, chap. i., and the
+phrase "unto this day" shows that the writer was speaking of ancient times.
+(77) With these texts we may compare the last verse of chap. xv., concerning
+the sons of Judah, and also the history of Caleb in the same chap. v:14.
+(78) Further, the building of an altar beyond Jordan by the two tribes and a
+half, chap. xxii:10, sqq., seems to have taken place after the death of
+Joshua, for in the whole narrative his name is never mentioned, but the
+people alone held council as to waging war, sent out legates, waited for
+their return, and finally approved of their answer.
+
+(79) Lastly, from chap. x:14, it is clear that the book was written many
+generations after the death of Joshua, for it bears witness, there was
+never any, day like unto, that day, either before or after, that the Lord
+hearkened to the voice of a man," &c. (80) If, therefore, Joshua wrote any
+book at all, it was that which is quoted in the work now before us,
+chap. x:13.
+
+(81) With regard to the book of Judges, I suppose no rational person
+persuades himself that it was written by the actual Judges. (82) For the
+conclusion of the whole history contained in chap. ii. clearly shows that it
+is all the work - of a single historian. (83) Further, inasmuch as the
+writer frequently tells us that there was then no king in Israel, it is
+evident that the book was written after the establishment of the monarchy.
+
+(84) The books of Samuel need not detain us long, inasmuch as the narrative
+in them is continued long after Samuel's death; but I should like to draw
+attention to the fact that it was written many generations after Samuel's
+death. (85) For in book i. chap. ix:9, the historian remarks in a,
+parenthesis, "Beforetime, in Israel, when a man went to inquire of God, thus
+he spake: Come, and let us go to the seer; for he that is now called a
+prophet was beforetime called a seer."
+
+(86) Lastly, the books of Kings, as we gather from internal evidence, were
+compiled from the books of King Solomon (I Kings xi:41), from the chronicles
+of the kings of Judah (1 Kings xiv:19, 29), and the chronicles of the kings
+of Israel.
+
+(87) We may, therefore, conclude that all the books we have considered
+hitherto are compilations, and that the events therein are recorded as
+having happened in old time. (88) Now, if we turn our attention to the
+connection and argument of all these books, we shall easily see that they
+were all written by a single historian, who wished to relate the antiquities
+of the Jews from their first beginning down to the first destruction of the
+city. (89) The way in which the several books are connected one with the
+other is alone enough to show us that they form the narrative of one and the
+same writer. (90) For as soon as he has related the life of Moses, the
+historian thus passes on to the story of Joshua: "And it came to pass after
+that Moses the servant of the Lord was dead, that God spake unto Joshua,"
+&c., so in the same way, after the death of Joshua was concluded, he passes
+with identically the same transition and connection to the history of the
+Judges: "And it came to pass after that Joshua was dead, that the children
+of Israel sought from God," &c. (91) To the book of Judges he adds the story
+of Ruth, as a sort of appendix, in these words: "Now it came to pass in the
+days that the judges ruled, that there was a famine in the land."
+
+(92) The first book of Samuel is introduced with a similar phrase; and so is
+the second book of Samuel. (93) Then, before the history of David is
+concluded, the historian passes in the same way to the first book of Kings,
+and, after David's death, to the Second book of Kings.
+
+(94) The putting together, and the order of the narratives, show that they
+are all the work of one man, writing with a create aim; for the historian
+begins with relating the first origin of the Hebrew nation, and then sets
+forth in order the times and the occasions in which Moses put forth his
+laws, and made his predictions. (95) He then proceeds to relate how the
+Israelites invaded the promised land in accordance with Moses' prophecy
+(Deut. vii.); and how, when the land was subdued, they turned their backs on
+their laws, and thereby incurred many misfortunes (Deut. xxxi:16, 17). (96)
+He tells how they wished to elect rulers, and how, according as these rulers
+observed the law, the people flourished or suffered (Deut. xxviii:36);
+finally, how destruction came upon the nation, even as Moses had foretold.
+(97) In regard to other matters, which do not serve to confirm the law, the
+writer either passes over them in silence, or refers the reader to other
+books for information. (98) All that is set down in the books we have
+conduces to the sole object of setting forth the words and laws of Moses,
+and proving them by subsequent events.(99) When we put together these three
+considerations, namely, the unity of the subject of all the books, the
+connection between them, and the fact that they are compilations made many
+generations after the events they relate had taken place, we come to the
+conclusion, as I have just stated, that they are all the work of a single
+historian. (100) Who this historian was, it is not so easy to show; but I
+suspect that he was Ezra, and there are several strong reasons for adopting
+this hypothesis.
+
+(101) The historian whom we already know to be but one individual brings his
+history down to the liberation of Jehoiakim, and adds that he himself sat at
+the king's table all his life - that is, at the table either of Jehoiakim,
+or of the son of Nebuchadnezzar, for the sense of the passage is ambiguous:
+hence it follows that he did not live before the time of Ezra. (102) But
+Scripture does not testify of any except of Ezra (Ezra vii:10), that he
+"prepared his heart to seek the law of the Lord, and to set it forth, and
+further that he was a ready scribe in the law of Moses." (103) Therefore, I
+can not find anyone, save Ezra, to whom to attribute the sacred books.
+
+(104) Further, from this testimony concerning Ezra, we see that he prepared
+his heart, not only to seek the law of the Lord, but also to set it forth;
+and, in Nehemiah viii:8, we read that "they read in the book of the law of
+God distinctly, and gave the sense, and caused them to understand the
+reading."
+
+(105) As, then, in Deuteronomy, we find not only the book of the law of
+Moses, or the greater part of it, but also many things inserted for its
+better explanation, I conjecture that this Deuteronomy is the book of the
+law of God, written, set forth, and explained by Ezra, which is referred to
+in the text above quoted. (106) Two examples of the way matters were
+inserted parenthetically in the text of Deuteronomy, with a view to its
+fuller explanation, we have already given, in speaking of Aben Ezra's
+opinion. (107) Many others are found in the course of the work: for
+instance, in chap. ii:12: "The Horims dwelt also in Seir beforetime; but the
+children of Esau succeeded them, when they had destroyed them from before
+them, and dwelt in their stead; as Israel did unto the land of his
+possession, which the Lord gave unto them." (108) This explains verses 3 and
+4 of the same chapter, where it is stated that Mount Seir, which had come to
+the children of Esau for a possession, did not fall into their hands
+uninhabited; but that they invaded it, and turned out and destroyed the
+Horims, who formerly dwelt therein, even as the children of Israel had done
+unto the Canaanites after the death of Moses.
+
+(109) So, also, verses 6, 7, 8, 9, of the tenth chapter are inserted
+parenthetically among the words of Moses. Everyone must see that verse 8,
+which begins, "At that time the Lord separated the tribe of Levi,"
+necessarily refers to verse 5, and not to the death of Aaron, which is only
+mentioned here by Ezra because Moses, in telling of the golden calf
+worshipped by the people, stated that he had prayed for Aaron.
+
+(110) He then explains that at the time at which Moses spoke, God had chosen
+for Himself the tribe of Levi in order that He may point out the reason for
+their election, and for the fact of their not sharing in the inheritance;
+after this digression, he resumes the thread of Moses' speech. (111) To
+these parentheses we must add the preface to the book, and all the passages
+in which Moses is spoken of in the third person, besides many which we
+cannot now distinguish, though, doubtless, they would have been plainly
+recognized by the writer's contemporaries.
+
+(112) If, I say, we were in possession of the book of the law as Moses wrote
+it, I do not doubt that we should find a great difference in the words of
+the precepts, the order in which they are given, and the reasons by which
+they are supported.
+
+(113) A comparison of the decalogue in Deuteronomy with the decalogue in
+Exodus, where its history is explicitly set forth, will be sufficient to
+show us a wide discrepancy in all these three particulars, for the fourth
+commandment is given not only in a different form, but at much greater
+length, while the reason for its observance differs wholly from that stated
+in Exodus. (114) Again, the order in which the tenth commandment is
+explained differs in the two versions. (115) I think that the differences
+here as elsewhere are the work of Ezra, who explained the law of God to his
+contemporaries, and who wrote this book of the law of God, before anything
+else; this I gather from the fact that it contains the laws of the country,
+of which the people stood in most need, and also because it is not joined to
+the book which precedes it by any connecting phrase, but begins with the
+independent statement, "these are the words of Moses." (116) After this task
+was completed, I think Ezra set himself to give a complete account of the
+history of the Hebrew nation from the creation of the world to the entire
+destruction of the city, and in this account he inserted the book of
+Deuteronomy, and, possibly, he called the first five books by the name of
+Moses, because his life is chiefly contained therein, and forms their
+principal subject; for the same reason he called the sixth Joshua, the
+seventh Judges, the eighth Ruth, the ninth, and perhaps the tenth, Samuel,
+and, lastly, the eleventh and twelfth Kings. (117) Whether Ezra put the
+finishing touches to this work and finished it as he intended, we will
+discuss in the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX - OTHER QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE SAME BOOKS: NAMELY, WHETHER THEY
+WERE COMPLETELY FINISHED BY EZRA, AND, FURTHER, WHETHER THE MARGINAL
+NOTES WHICH ARE FOUND IN THE HEBREW TEXTS WERE VARIOUS READINGS.
+
+(1) How greatly the inquiry we have just made concerning the real writer of
+the twelve books aids us in attaining a complete understanding of them, may
+be easily gathered solely from the passages which we have adduced in
+confirmation of our opinion, and which would be most obscure without it. (2)
+But besides the question of the writer, there are other points to notice
+which common superstition forbids the multitude to apprehend. (3) Of these
+the chief is, that Ezra (whom I will take to be the author of the aforesaid
+books until some more likely person be suggested) did not put the finishing
+touches to the narrative contained therein, but merely collected the
+histories from various writers, and sometimes simply set them down, leaving
+their examination and arrangement to posterity.
+
+(4) The cause (if it were not untimely death) which prevented him from
+completing his work in all its portions, I cannot conjecture, but the fact
+remains most clear, although we have lost the writings of the ancient Hebrew
+historians, and can only judge from the few fragments which are still
+extant. (5) For the history of Hezekiah (2 Kings xviii:17), as written in
+the vision of Isaiah, is related as it is found in the chronicles of the
+kings of Judah. (6) We read the same story, told with few exceptions,
+[Endnote 11], in the same words, in the book of Isaiah which was contained
+in the chronicles of the kings of Judah (2 Chron. xxxii:32). (7) From this
+we must conclude that there were various versions of this narrative of
+Isaiah's, unless, indeed, anyone would dream that in this, too, there lurks
+a mystery. (8) Further, the last chapter of 2 Kings 27-30 is repeated in the
+last chapter of Jeremiah, v.31-34.
+
+(9) Again, we find 2 Sam. vii. repeated in I Chron. xvii., but the
+expressions in the two passages are so curiously varied [Endnote 12], that
+we can very easily see that these two chapters were taken from two different
+versions of the history of Nathan.
+
+(10) Lastly, the genealogy of the kings of Idumaea contained in Genesis
+xxxvi:31, is repeated in the same words in 1 Chron. i., though we know that
+the author of the latter work took his materials from other historians, not
+from the twelve books we have ascribed to Ezra. (10) We may therefore be
+sure that if we still possessed the writings of the historians, the matter
+would be made clear; however, as we have lost them, we can only examine the
+writings still extant, and from their order and connection, their various
+repetitions, and, lastly, the contradictions in dates which they contain,
+judge of the rest.
+
+(11) These, then, or the chief of them, we will now go through. (12) First,
+in the story of Judah and Tamar (Gen. xxxviii.) the historian thus begins:
+"And it came to pass at that time that Judah went down from his brethren."
+(13) This time cannot refer to what immediately precedes [Endnote 13], but
+must necessarily refer to something else, for from the time when Joseph was
+sold into Egypt to the time when the patriarch Jacob, with all his family,
+set out thither, cannot be reckoned as more than twenty-two years, for
+Joseph, when he was sold by his brethren, was seventeen years old, and when
+he was summoned by Pharaoh from prison was thirty; if to this we add the
+seven years of plenty and two of famine, the total amounts to twenty-two
+years. (14) Now, in so short a period, no one can suppose that so many
+things happened as are described; that Judah had three children, one after
+the other, from one wife, whom he married at the beginning of the period;
+that the eldest of these, when he was old enough, married Tamar, and that
+after he died his next brother succeeded to her; that, after all this,
+Judah, without knowing it, had intercourse with his daughter-in-law, and
+that she bore him twins, and, finally, that the eldest of these twins became
+a father within the aforesaid period. (15) As all these events cannot have
+taken place within the period mentioned in Genesis, the reference must
+necessarily be to something treated of in another book: and Ezra in this
+instance simply related the story, and inserted it without examination among
+his other writings.
+
+(16) However, not only this chapter but the whole narrative of Joseph and
+Jacob is collected and set forth from various histories, inasmuch as it is
+quite inconsistent with itself. (17) For in Gen. xlvii. we are told that
+Jacob, when he came at Joseph's bidding to salute Pharaoh, was 130 years
+old. (18) If from this we deduct the twenty-two years which he passed
+sorrowing for the absence of Joseph and the seventeen years forming Joseph's
+age when he was sold, and, lastly, the seven years for which Jacob served
+for Rachel, we find that he was very advanced in life, namely, eighty four,
+when he took Leah to wife, whereas Dinah was scarcely seven years old when
+she was violated by Shechem, [Endnote 14]. (19) Simeon and Levi were aged
+respectively eleven and twelve when they spoiled the city and slew all the
+males therein with the sword.
+
+(20) There is no need that I should go through the whole Pentateuch. (21) If
+anyone pays attention to the way in which all the histories and precepts in
+these five books are set down promiscuously and without order, with no
+regard for dates; and further, how the same story is often repeated,
+sometimes in a different version, he will easily, I say, discern that all
+the materials were promiscuously collected and heaped together, in order
+that they might at some subsequent time be more readily examined and reduced
+to order. (22) Not only these five books, but also the narratives contained
+in the remaining seven, going down to the destruction of the city, are
+compiled in the same way. (23) For who does not see that in Judges ii:6 a
+new historian is being quoted, who had also written of the deeds of Joshua,
+and that his words are simply copied? (24) For after our historian has
+stated in the last chapter of the book of Joshua that Joshua died and was
+buried, and has promised, in the first chapter of Judges, to relate what
+happened after his death, in what way, if he wished to continue the thread
+of his history, could he connect the statement here made about Joshua with
+what had gone before?
+
+(25) So, too, 1 Sam. 17, 18, are taken from another historian, who assigns a
+cause for David's first frequenting Saul's court very different from that
+given in chap. xvi. of the same book. (26) For he did not think that David
+came to Saul in consequence of the advice of Saul's servants, as is
+narrated in chap. xvi., but that being sent by chance to the camp by his
+father on a message to his brothers, he was for the first time remarked by
+Saul on the occasion of his victory, over Goliath the Philistine, and was
+retained at his court.
+
+(27) I suspect the same thing has taken place in chap. xxvi. of the same
+book, for the historian there seems to repeat the narrative given in chap.
+xxiv. according to another man's version. (28) But I pass over this, and go
+on to the computation of dates.
+
+(29) In I Kings, chap. vi., it is said that Solomon built the Temple in the
+four hundred and eightieth year after the exodus from Egypt; but from the
+historians themselves we get a much longer period, for:
+ Years.
+Moses governed the people in the desert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
+Joshua, who lived 110 years, did not, according to Josephus and
+ others' opinion rule more than . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 26
+Cusban Rishathaim held the people in subjection . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
+Othniel, son of Kenag, was judge for . . . . . . . . . . . [Endnote 15] 40
+Eglon, King of Moab, governed the people . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
+Ehucl and Shamgar were judges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
+Jachin, King of Canaan, held the people in subjection . . . . . . . . . 20
+The people was at peace subsequently for . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 40
+It was under subjection to Median . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 7
+It obtained freedom under Gideon for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
+It fell under the rule of Abimelech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
+Tola, son of Puah, was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
+Jair was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 22
+The people was in subjection to the Philistines and Ammonites . . . . . 18
+Jephthah was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
+Ibzan, the Bethlehemite, was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 7
+Elon, the Zabulonite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
+Abclon, the Pirathonite . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
+The people was again subject to the Philistines . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
+Samson was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [Endnote 16] 20
+Eli was judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
+The people again fell into subjection to the Philistines,
+ till they were delivered by Samuel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
+David reigned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
+Solomon reigned before he built the temple . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . 4
+
+(30) All these periods added together make a total of 580 years. (31) But to
+these must be added the years during which the Hebrew republic flourished
+after the death of Joshua, until it was conquered by Cushan Rishathaim,
+which I take to be very numerous, for I cannot bring myself to believe that
+immediately after the death of Joshua all those who had witnessed his
+miracles died simultaneously, nor that their successors at one stroke bid
+farewell to their laws, and plunged from the highest virtue into the depth
+of wickedness and obstinacy.
+
+(32) Nor, lastly, that Cushan Rishathaim subdued them on the instant; each
+one of these circumstances requires almost a generation, and there is no
+doubt that Judges ii:7, 9, 10, comprehends a great many years which it
+passes over in silence. (33) We must also add the years during which Samuel
+was judge, the number of which is not stated in Scripture, and also the
+years during which Saul reigned, which are not clearly shown from his
+history. (34) It is, indeed, stated in 1 Sam. xiii:1, that he reigned two
+years, but the text in that passage is mutilated, and the records of his
+reign lead us to suppose a longer period. (35) That the text is mutilated I
+suppose no one will doubt who has ever advanced so far as the threshold of
+the Hebrew language, for it runs as follows: "Saul was in his -- year, when
+he began to reign, and he reigned two years over Israel." (36) Who, I say,
+does not see that the number of the years of Saul's age when he began to
+reign has been omitted? (37) That the record of the reign presupposes a
+greater number of years is equally beyond doubt, for in the same book, chap.
+xxvii:7, it is stated that David sojourned among the Philistines, to whom he
+had fled on account of Saul, a year and four months; thus the rest of the
+reign must have been comprised in a space of eight months, which I think
+no one will credit. (38) Josephus, at the end of the sixth book of his
+antiquities, thus corrects the text: Saul reigned eighteen years while
+Samuel was alive, and two years after his death. (39) However, all the
+narrative in chap. Xiii. is in complete disagreement with what goes before.
+(40) At the end of chap. vii. it is narrated that the Philistines were so
+crushed by the Hebrews that they did not venture, during Samuel's life, to
+invade the borders of Israel; but in chap. xiii. we are told that the
+Hebrews were invaded during the life of Samuel by the Philistines, and
+reduced by them to such a state of wretchedness and poverty that they were
+deprived not only of weapons with which to defend themselves, but also of
+the means of making more. (41) I should be at pains enough if I were to try
+and harmonize all the narratives contained in this first book of Samuel so
+that they should seem to be all written and arranged by a single historian.
+(42) But I return to my object. (43) The years, then, during which Saul
+reigned must be added to the above computation; and, lastly, I have not
+counted the years of the Hebrew anarchy, for I cannot from Scripture gather
+their number. (44) I cannot, I say, be certain as to the period occupied by
+the events related in Judges chap. xvii. on till the end of the book.
+
+(45) It is thus abundantly evident that we cannot arrive at a true
+computation of years from the histories, and, further, that the histories
+are inconsistent themselves on the subject. (46) We are compelled to confess
+that these histories were compiled from various writers without previous
+arrangement and examination. (47) Not less discrepancy is found between the
+dates given in the Chronicles of the Kings of Judah, and those in the
+Chronicles of the Kings of Israel; in the latter, it is stated that Jehoram,
+the son of Ahab, began to reign in the second year of the reign of Jehoram,
+the son of Jehoshaphat (2 Kings i:17), but in the former we read that
+Jehoram, the son of Jehoshaphat, began to reign in the fifth year of
+Jehoram, the son of Ahab (2 Kings viii:16). (48) Anyone who compares the
+narratives in Chronicles with the narratives in the books of Kings, will
+find many similar discrepancies. (49) These there is no need for me to
+examine here, and still less am I called upon to treat of the commentaries
+of those who endeavour to harmonize them. (50) The Rabbis evidently let their
+fancy run wild. (51) Such commentators as I have, read, dream, invent, and
+as a last resort, play fast and loose with the language. (52) For instance,
+when it is said in 2 Chronicles, that Ahab was forty-two years old when he
+began to reign, they pretend that these years are computed from the reign of
+Omri, not from the birth of Ahab. (53) If this can be shown to be the real
+meaning of the writer of the book of Chronicles, all I can say is, that he
+did not know how to state a fact. (54) The commentators make many other
+assertions of this kind, which if true, would prove that the ancient Hebrews
+were ignorant both of their own language, and of the way to relate a plain
+narrative. (55) I should in such case recognize no rule or reason in
+interpreting Scripture, but it would be permissible to hypothesize to one's
+heart's content.
+
+(56) If anyone thinks that I am speaking too generally, and without
+sufficient warrant, I would ask him to set himself to showing us some fixed
+plan in these histories which might be followed without blame by other
+writers of chronicles, and in his efforts at harmonizing and interpretation,
+so strictly to observe and explain the phrases and expressions, the order
+and the connections, that we may be able to imitate these also in our
+writings (17). (57) If he succeeds, I will at once give him my hand, and he
+shall be to me as great Apollo; for I confess that after long endeavours I
+have been unable to discover anything of the kind. (58) I may add that I set
+down nothing here which I have not long reflected upon, and that, though I
+was imbued from my boyhood up with the ordinary opinions about the
+Scriptures, I have been unable to withstand the force of what I have urged.
+
+(59) However, there is no need to detain the reader with this question, and
+drive him to attempt an impossible task; I merely mentioned the fact in
+order to throw light on my intention.
+
+(60) I now pass on to other points concerning the treatment of these books.
+(61) For we must remark, in addition to what has been shown, that these
+books were not guarded by posterity with such care that no faults crept in.
+(62) The ancient scribes draw attention to many doubtful readings, and some
+mutilated passages, but not to all that exist: whether the faults are
+of sufficient importance to greatly embarrass the reader I will not now
+discuss. (63) I am inclined to think that they are of minor moment to those,
+at any rate, who read the Scriptures with enlightenment: and I can
+positively, affirm that I have not noticed any fault or various reading in
+doctrinal passages sufficient to render them obscure or doubtful.
+
+(64) There are some people, however, who will not admit that there is any
+corruption, even in other passages, but maintain that by some unique
+exercise of providence God has preserved from corruption every word in the
+Bible: they say that the various readings are the symbols of profoundest
+mysteries, and that mighty secrets lie hid in the twenty-eight hiatus which
+occur, nay, even in the very form of the letters.
+
+(65) Whether they are actuated by folly and anile devotion, or whether by
+arrogance and malice so that they alone may be held to possess the secrets
+of God, I know not: this much I do know, that I find in their writings
+nothing which has the air of a Divine secret, but only childish
+lucubrations. (66) I have read and known certain Kabbalistic triflers, whose
+insanity provokes my unceasing as astonishment. (67) That faults have crept
+in will, I think, be denied by no sensible person who reads the passage
+about Saul, above quoted (1 Sam. xiii:1) and also 2 Sam. vi:2: "And David
+arose and went with all the people that were with him from Judah, to bring
+up from thence the ark of God."
+
+(68) No one can fail to remark that the name of their destination, viz.,
+Kirjath-jearim [Endnote 18], has been omitted: nor can we deny that
+2 Sam. xiii:37, has been tampered with and mutilated. "And Absalom fled, and
+went to Talmai, the son of Ammihud, king of Geshur. (69) And he mourned for
+his son every day. So Absalom fled, and went to Geshur, and was there three
+years." (70) I know that I have remarked other passages of the same kind,
+but I cannot recall them at the moment.
+
+(71) That the marginal notes which are found continually in the Hebrew
+Codices are doubtful readings will, I think, be evident to everyone who has
+noticed that they often arise from the great similarity, of some of the
+Hebrew letters, such for instance, as the similarity between Kaph and Beth,
+Jod and Van, Daleth and Reth, &c. (72) For example, the text in
+2 Sam. v:24, runs "in the time when thou hearest," and similarly in
+Judges xxi:22, "And it shall be when their fathers or their brothers come
+unto us often," the marginal version is "come unto us to complain."
+
+(73) So also many various readings have arisen from the use of the letters
+named mutes, which are generally not sounded in pronunciation, and are taken
+promiscuously, one for the other. (74) For example, in Levit. xxv:29, it is
+written, "The house shall be established which is not in the walled city,"
+but the margin has it, "which is in a walled city."
+
+(75) Though these matters are self-evident, [Endnore 6], it is necessary, to
+answer the reasonings of certain Pharisees, by which they endeavour to
+convince us that the marginal notes serve to indicate some mystery, and were
+added or pointed out by the writers of the sacred books. (76) The first of
+these reasons, which, in my, opinion, carries little weight, is taken from
+the practice of reading the Scriptures aloud.
+
+(77) If, it is urged, these notes were added to show various readings which
+could not be decided upon by posterity, why has custom prevailed that the
+marginal readings should always be retained? (78) Why has the meaning which
+is preferred been set down in the margin when it ought to have been
+incorporated in the text, and not relegated to a side note?
+
+(79) The second reason is more specious, and is taken from the nature of the
+case. (80) It is admitted that faults have crept into the sacred writings by
+chance and not by design; but they say that in the five books the word for a
+girl is, with one exception, written without the letter "he," contrary to
+all grammatical rules, whereas in the margin it is written correctly
+according to the universal rule of grammar. (81) Can this have happened by
+mistake? Is it possible to imagine a clerical error to have been committed
+every, time the word occurs? (82) Moreover, it would have been easy, to
+supply the emendation. (83) Hence, when these readings are not accidental
+or corrections of manifest mistakes, it is supposed that they must have been
+set down on purpose by the original writers, and have a meaning. (84)
+However, it is easy to answer such arguments; as to the question of custom
+having prevailed in the reading of the marginal versions, I will not spare
+much time for its consideration: I know not the promptings of superstition,
+and perhaps the practice may have arisen from the idea that both readings
+were deemed equally good or tolerable, and therefore, lest either should be
+neglected, one was appointed to be written, and the other to be read. (85)
+They feared to pronounce judgment in so weighty a matter lest they should
+mistake the false for the true, and therefore they would give preference to
+neither, as they must necessarily have done if they had commanded one only
+to be both read and written. (86) This would be especially the case where
+the marginal readings were not written down in the sacred books: or the
+custom may have originated because some things though rightly written down
+were desired to be read otherwise according to the marginal version, and
+therefore the general rule was made that the marginal version should be
+followed in reading the Scriptures. (87) The cause which induced the scribes
+to expressly prescribe certain passages to be read in the marginal version,
+I will now touch on, for not all the marginal notes are various readings,
+but some mark expressions which have passed out of common use, obsolete
+words and terms which current decency did not allow to be read in a public
+assembly. (88) The ancient writers, without any evil intention, employed no
+courtly paraphrase, but called things by their plain names. (891)
+Afterwards, through the spread of evil thoughts and luxury, words which
+could be used by the ancients without offence, came to be considered
+obscene. (90) There was no need for this cause to change the text of
+Scripture. (91) Still, as a concession to the popular weakness, it became
+the custom to substitute more decent terms for words denoting sexual
+intercourse, exereta, &c., and to read them as they were given in the
+margin.
+
+(92) At any rate, whatever may have been the origin of the practice of
+reading Scripture according to the marginal version, it was not that the
+true interpretation is contained therein. (93) For besides that, the
+Rabbins in the Talmud often differ from the Massoretes, and give other
+readings which they approve of, as I will shortly show, certain things are
+found in the margin which appear less warranted by the uses of the Hebrew
+language. (94) For example, in 2 Samuel xiv:22, we read, "In that the king
+hath fulfilled the request of his servant," a construction plainly
+regular, and agreeing with that in chap. xvi. (95) But the margin has it
+"of thy servant," which does not agree with the person of the verb. (96)
+So, too, chap. xvi:25 of the same book, we find, "As if one had inquired at
+the oracle of God," the margin adding "someone" to stand as a nominative to
+the verb. (97) But the correction is not apparently warranted, for it is
+a common practice, well known to grammarians in the Hebrew language, to use
+the third person singular of the active verb impersonally.
+
+(98) The second argument advanced by the Pharisees is easily answered from
+what has just been said, namely, that the scribes besides the various
+readings called attention to obsolete words. (99) For there is no doubt
+that in Hebrew as in other languages, changes of use made many words
+obsolete and antiquated, and such were found by the later scribes in the
+sacred books and noted by them with a view to the books being publicly read
+according to custom. (100) For this reason the word nahgar is always found
+marked because its gender was originally common, and it had the same meaning
+as the Latin juvenis (a young person). (101) So also the Hebrew capital was
+anciently called Jerusalem, not Jerusalaim. (102) As to the pronouns himself
+and herself, I think that the later scribes changed vau into jod (a very
+frequent change in Hebrew) when they wished to express the feminine gender,
+but that the ancients only distinguished the two genders by a change of
+vowels. (103) I may also remark that the irregular tenses of certain verbs
+differ in the ancient and modern forms, it being formerly considered a mark
+of elegance to employ certain letters agreeable to the ear.
+
+(104) In a word, I could easily multiply proofs of this kind if I were not
+afraid of abusing the patience of the reader. (105) Perhaps I shall be asked
+how I became acquainted with the fact that all these expressions are
+obsolete. (106) I reply that I have found them in the most ancient Hebrew
+writers in the Bible itself, and that they have not been imitated by
+subsequent authors, and thus they are recognized as antiquated, though the
+language in which they occur is dead. (107) But perhaps someone may press
+the question why, if it be true, as I say, that the marginal notes of the
+Bible generally mark various readings, there are never more than two
+readings of a passage, that in the text and that in the margin, instead of
+three or more; and further, how the scribes can have hesitated between two
+readings, one of which is evidently contrary to grammar, and the other a
+plain correction.
+
+(108) The answer to these questions also is easy: I will premise that it is
+almost certain that there once were more various readings than those now
+recorded. (119) For instance, one finds many in the Talmud which the
+Massoretes have neglected, and are so different one from the other that
+even the superstitious editor of the Bomberg Bible confesses that he cannot
+harmonize them. (110) "We cannot say anything," he writes, "except what we
+have said above, namely, that the Talmud is generally in contradiction to
+the Massorete." (111) So that we are nor bound to hold that there never were
+more than two readings of any passage, yet I am willing to admit, and
+indeed I believe that more than two readings are never found: and for the
+following reasons:-(112) (I.) The cause of the differences of reading only
+admits of two, being generally the similarity of certain letters, so that
+the question resolved itself into which should be written Beth, or Kaf,
+Jod or Vau, Daleth or Reth: cases which are constantly occurring, and
+frequently yielding a fairly good meaning whichever alternative be adopted.
+(113) Sometimes, too, it is a question whether a syllable be long or short,
+quantity being determined by the letters called mutes. (114) Moreover, we
+never asserted that all the marginal versions, without exception, marked
+various readings; on the contrary, we have stated that many were due to
+motives of decency or a desire to explain obsolete words. (115) (II.) I am
+inclined to attribute the fact that more than two readings are never found
+to the paucity of exemplars, perhaps not more than two or three, found by
+the scribes. (116) In the treatise of the scribes, chap. vi., mention is
+made of three only, pretended to have been found in the time of Ezra, in
+order that the marginal versions might be attributed to him.
+
+(117) However that may be, if the scribes only had three codices we may
+easily imagine that in a given passage two of them would be in accord, for
+it would be extraordinary if each one of the three gave a different reading
+of the same text.
+
+(118) The dearth of copies after the time of Ezra will surprise no one who
+has read the 1st chapter of Maccabees, or Josephus's "Antiquities," Bk. 12,
+chap. 5. (119) Nay, it appears wonderful considering the fierce and daily
+persecution, that even these few should have been preserved. (120) This
+will, I think, be plain to even a cursory reader of the history of those
+times.
+
+(121) We have thus discovered the reasons why there are never more than two
+readings of a passage in the Bible, but this is a long way from supposing
+that we may therefore conclude that the Bible was purposely written
+incorrectly in such passages in order to signify some mystery. (122) As to
+the second argument, that some passages are so faultily written that they
+are at plain variance with all grammar, and should have been corrected in
+the text and not in the margin, I attach little weight to it, for I am not
+concerned to say what religious motive the scribes may have had for acting
+as they did: possibly they did so from candour, wishing to transmit the few
+exemplars of the Bible which they had found exactly in their original state,
+marking the differences they discovered in the margin, not as doubtful
+readings, but as simple variants. (123) I have myself called them doubtful
+readings, because it would be generally impossible to say which of the two
+versions is preferable.
+
+(124) Lastly, besides these doubtful readings the scribes have (by leaving a
+hiatus in the middle of a paragraph) marked several passages as mutilated.
+(125) The Massoretes have counted up such instances, and they amount to
+eight-and-twenty. (126) I do not know whether any mystery is thought to lurk
+in the number, at any rate the Pharisees religiously preserve a certain
+amount of empty space.
+
+(127) One of such hiatus occurs (to give an instance) in Gen. iv:8, where it
+is written, "And Cain said to his brother . . . . and it came to pass while
+they were in the field, &c.," a space being left in which we should expect
+to hear what it was that Cain said.
+
+(128) Similarly there are (besides those points we have noticed) eight-and-
+twenty hiatus left by the scribes. (129) Many of these would not be
+recognized as mutilated if it were not for the empty space left. But I have
+said enough on this subject.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. - AN EXAMINATION OF THE REMAINING BOOKS OF
+THE OLD TESTAMENT ACCORDING TO THE PRECEDING METHOD.
+
+(1) I now pass on to the remaining books of the Old Testament. (2)
+Concerning the two books of Chronicles I have nothing particular or
+important to remark, except that they were certainly written after the time
+of Ezra, and possibly after the restoration of the Temple by Judas
+Maccabaeus [Endnote 19]. (2) For in chap. ix. of the first book we find a
+reckoning of the families who were the first to live in Jerusalem, and in
+verse 17 the names of the porters, of which two recur in Nehemiah. (3) This
+shows that the books were certainly compiled after the rebuilding of the
+city. (4) As to their actual writer, their authority, utility, and doctrine,
+I come to no conclusion. (5) I have always been astonished that they have
+been included in the Bible by men who shut out from the canon the books of
+Wisdom, Tobit, and the others styled apocryphal. (6) I do not aim at
+disparaging their authority, but as they are universally received I will
+leave them as they are.
+
+(7) The Psalms were collected and divided into five books in the time of the
+second temple, for Ps. lxxxviii. was published, according to Philo-Judaeus,
+while king Jehoiachin was still a prisoner in Babylon; and Ps. lxxxix. when
+the same king obtained his liberty: I do not think Philo would have made the
+statement unless either it had been the received opinion in his time, or
+else had been told him by trustworthy persons.
+
+(8) The Proverbs of Solomon were, I believe, collected at the same time, or
+at least in the time of King Josiah; for in chap. xxv:1, it is written,
+"These are also proverbs of Solomon which the men of Hezekiah, king of
+Judah, copied out." (9) I cannot here pass over in silence the audacity
+of the Rabbis who wished to exclude from the sacred canon both the Proverbs
+and Ecclesiastes, and to put them both in the Apocrypha. (10) In fact, they
+would actually have done so, if they had not lighted on certain passages in
+which the law of Moses is extolled. (11) It is, indeed, grievous to think
+that the settling of the sacred canon lay in the hands of such men; however,
+I congratulate them, in this instance, on their suffering us to see these
+books in question, though I cannot refrain from doubting whether they have
+transmitted them in absolute good faith; but I will not now linger on this
+point.
+
+(10) I pass on, then, to the prophetic books. (11) An examination of these
+assures me that the prophecies therein contained have been compiled from
+other books, and are not always set down in the exact order in which they
+were spoken or written by the prophets, but are only such as were collected
+here and there, so that they are but fragmentary.
+
+(12) Isaiah began to prophecy in the reign of Uzziah, as the writer himself
+testifies in the first verse. (13) He not only prophesied at that time, but
+furthermore wrote the history of that king (see 2 Chron. xxvi:22) in a
+volume now lost. (13) That which we possess, we have shown to have been
+taken from the chronicles of the kings of Judah and Israel.
+
+(14) We may add that the Rabbis assert that this prophet prophesied in the
+reign of Manasseh, by whom he was eventually put to death, and, although
+this seems to be a myth, it yet shows that they did not think that all
+Isaiah's prophecies are extant.
+
+(15) The prophecies of Jeremiah, which are related historically are also
+taken from various chronicles; for not only are they heaped together
+confusedly, without any account being taken of dates, but also the same
+story is told in them differently in different passages. (16) For instance,
+in chap. xxi. we are told that the cause of Jeremiah's arrest was that he
+had prophesied the destruction of the city to Zedekiah who consulted him.
+(17) This narrative suddenly passes, in chap xxii., to the prophet's
+remonstrances to Jehoiakim (Zedekiah's predecessor), and the prediction he
+made of that king's captivity; then, in chap. xxv., come the revelations
+granted to the prophet previously, that is in the fourth year of Jehoiakim,
+and, further on still, the revelations received in the first year of the
+same reign. (18) The continuator of Jeremiah goes on heaping prophecy
+upon prophecy without any regard to dates, until at last, in chap. xxxviii.
+(as if the intervening chapters had been a parenthesis), he takes up the
+thread dropped in chap. xxi.
+
+(19) In fact, the conjunction with which chap. xxxviii. begins, refers to
+the 8th, 9th, and 10th verses of chap. xxi. Jeremiah's last arrest is then
+very differently described, and a totally separate cause is given for his
+daily retention in the court of the prison.
+
+(20) We may thus clearly see that these portions of the book have been
+compiled from various sources, and are only from this point of view
+comprehensible. (21) The prophecies contained in the remaining chapters,
+where Jeremiah speaks in the first person, seem to be taken from a
+book written by Baruch, at Jeremiah's dictation. (22) These, however, only
+comprise (as appears from chap. xxxvi:2) the prophecies revealed to the
+prophet from the time of Josiah to the fourth year of Jehoiakim, at which
+period the book begins. (23) The contents of chap. xlv:2, on to chap.
+li:59, seem taken from the same volume.
+
+(24) That the book of Ezekiel is only a fragment, is clearly indicated by
+the first verse. (25) For anyone may see that the conjunction with which it
+begins, refers to something already said, and connects what follows
+therewith. (26) However, not only this conjunction, but the whole text
+of the discourse implies other writings. (27) The fact of the present work
+beginning the thirtieth year shows that the prophet is continuing, not
+commencing a discourse; and this is confirmed by the writer, who
+parenthetically states in verse 3, "The word of the Lord came often unto
+Ezekiel the priest, the son of Buzi, in the land of the Chaldeans," as if to
+say that the prophecies which he is about to relate are the sequel to
+revelations formerly received by Ezekiel from God. (28) Furthermore,
+Josephus, 11 Antiq." x:9, says that Ezekiel prophesied that Zedekiah should
+not see Babylon, whereas the book we now have not only contains no such
+statement, but contrariwise asserts in chap. xvii. that he should be taken
+to Babylon as a captive, [Endnote 20].
+
+(29) Of Hosea I cannot positively state that he wrote more than is now
+extant in the book bearing his name, but I am astonished at the smallness of
+the quantity, we possess, for the sacred writer asserts that the prophet
+prophesied for more than eighty years.
+
+(30) We may assert, speaking generally, that the compiler of the prophetic
+books neither collected all the prophets, nor all the writings of those we
+have; for of the prophets who are said to have prophesied in the reign of
+Manasseh and of whom general mention is made in 2 Chron. xxxiii:10, 18, we
+have, evidently, no prophecies extant; neither have we all the prophecies of
+the twelve who give their names to books. (31) Of Jonah we have only, the
+prophecy concerning the Ninevites, though he also prophesied to the children
+of Israel, as we learn in 2 Kings xiv:25.
+
+(32) The book and the personality of Job have caused much controversy. (33)
+Some think that the book is the work of Moses, and the whole narrative
+merely allegorical. (34) Such is the opinion of the Rabbins recorded in the
+Talmud, and they are supported by, Maimonides in his "More Nebuchim." (35)
+Others believe it to be a true history, and some suppose that Job lived in
+the time of Jacob, and was married to his daughter Dinah. (36) Aben Ezra,
+however, as I have already stated, affirms, in his commentaries, that the
+work is a translation into Hebrew from some other language: I could wish
+that he could advance more cogent arguments than he does, for we might then
+conclude that the Gentiles also had sacred books. (37) I myself leave the
+matter undecided, but I conjecture Job to have been a Gentile, and a man of
+very stable character, who at first prospered, then was assailed with
+terrible calamities, and finally, was restored to great happiness. (38) (He
+is thus named, among others, by Ezekiel, xiv:12.) (39) I take it that the
+constancy of his mind amid the vicissitudes of his fortune occasioned many
+men to dispute about God's providence, or at least caused the writer of the
+book in question to compose his dialogues; for the contents, and also the
+style, seem to emanate far less from a man wretchedly ill and lying among
+ashes, than from one reflecting at ease in his study. (40) I should also be
+inclined to agree with Aben Ezra that the book is a translation, for its
+poetry seems akin to that of the Gentiles; thus the Father of Gods summons a
+council, and Momus, here called Satan, criticizes the Divine decrees with
+the utmost freedom. (41) But these are mere conjectures without any solid
+foundation.
+
+(42) I pass on to the book of Daniel, which, from chap. viii. onwards,
+undoubtedly contains the writing of Daniel himself. (43) Whence the first
+seven chapters are derived I cannot say; we may, however, conjecture that,
+as they were first written in Chaldean, they are taken from Chaldean
+chronicles. (44) If this could be proved, it would form a very striking
+proof of the fact that the sacredness of Scripture depends on our
+understanding of the doctrines therein signified, and not on the words, the
+language, and the phrases in which these doctrines are conveyed to us;
+and it would further show us that books which teach and speak of whatever is
+highest and best are equally sacred, whatever be the tongue in which they
+are written, or the nation to which they belong.
+
+(45) We can, however, in this case only remark that the chapters in question
+were written in Chaldee, and yet are as sacred as the rest of the Bible.
+
+(46) The first book of Ezra is so intimately connected with the book of
+Daniel that both are plainly recognizable as the work of the same author,
+writing of Jewish history from the time of the first captivity onwards. (47)
+I have no hesitation in joining to this the book of Esther, for the
+conjunction with which it begins can refer to nothing else. (48) It cannot
+be the same work as that written by Mordecai, for, in chap. ix:20-22,
+another person relates that Mordecai wrote letters, and tells us their
+contents; further, that Queen Esther confirmed the days of Purim in their
+times appointed, and that the decree was written in the book that is (by a
+Hebraism), in a book known to all then living, which, as Aben Ezra and the
+rest confess, has now perished. (49) Lastly, for the rest of the acts of
+Mordecai, the historian refers us to the chronicles of the kings of
+Persia. (50) Thus there is no doubt that this book was written by the same
+person as he who recounted the history of Daniel and Ezra, and who wrote
+Nehemiah, [Endnote 21], sometimes called the second book of Ezra. (51) We
+may, then, affirm that all these books are from one hand; but we have no
+clue whatever to the personality of the author. (52) However, in order to
+determine whence he, whoever he was, had gained a knowledge of the histories
+which he had, perchance, in great measure himself written, we may remark
+that the governors or chiefs of the Jews, after the restoration of the
+Temple, kept scribes or historiographers, who wrote annals or chronicles of
+them. (53) The chronicles of the kings are often quoted in the books of
+Kings, but the chronicles of the chiefs and priests are quoted for the first
+time in Nehemiah xii:23, and again in 1 Macc. xvi:24. (54) This is
+undoubtedly the book referred to as containing the decree of Esther and the
+acts of Mordecai; and which, as we said with Aben Ezra, is now lost. (55)
+From it were taken the whole contents of these four books, for no other
+authority is quoted by their writer, or is known to us.
+
+(56) That these books were not written by either Ezra or Nehemiah is plain
+from Nehemiah xii:9, where the descendants of the high priest, Joshua are
+traced down to Jaddua, the sixth high priest, who went to meet Alexander the
+Great, when the Persian empire was almost subdued (Josephus, "Ant." ii.
+108), or who, according to Philo-Judaeus, was the sixth and last high priest
+under the Persians. (57) In the same chapter of Nehemiah, verse 22, this
+point is clearly brought out: "The Levites in the days of Eliashib, Joiada,
+and Johanan, and Jaddua, were recorded chief of the fathers: also the
+priests, to the reign of Darius the Persian" - that is to say, in the
+chronicles; and, I suppose, no one thinks, [Endnote 22], that the lives of
+Nehemiah and Ezra were so prolonged that they outlived fourteen kings of
+Persia. (58) Cyrus was the first who granted the Jews permission to rebuild
+their Temple: the period between his time and Darius, fourteenth and last
+king of Persia, extends over 230 years. (59) I have, therefore, no doubt
+that these books were written after Judas Maccabaeus had restored the
+worship in the Temple, for at that time false books of Daniel, Ezra, and
+Esther were published by evil-disposed persons, who were almost certainly
+Sadducees, for the writings were never recognized by the Pharisees, so far
+as I am aware; and, although certain myths in the fourth book of Ezra are
+repeated in the Talmud, they must not be set down to the Pharisees, for all
+but the most ignorant admit that they have been added by some trifler: in
+fact, I think, someone must have made such additions with a view to casting
+ridicule on all the traditions of the sect.
+
+(60) Perhaps these four books were written out and published at the time I
+have mentioned with a view to showing the people that the prophecies of
+Daniel had been fulfilled, and thus kindling their piety, and awakening a
+hope of future deliverance in the midst of their misfortunes. (61) In
+spite of their recent origin, the books before us contain many errors, due,
+I suppose, to the haste with which they were written. (62) Marginal
+readings, such as I have mentioned in the last chapter, are found here as
+elsewhere, and in even greater abundance; there are, moreover, certain
+passages which can only be accounted for by supposing some such cause as
+hurry.
+
+(63) However, before calling attention to the marginal readings, I will
+remark that, if the Pharisees are right in supposing them to have been
+ancient, and the work of the original scribes, we must perforce admit that
+these scribes (if there were more than one) set them down because they
+found that the text from which they were copying was inaccurate, and did yet
+not venture to alter what was written by their predecessors and superiors.
+(64) I need not again go into the subject at length, and will, therefore,
+proceed to mention some discrepancies not noticed in the margin.
+
+(65) I. Some error has crept into the text of the second chapter of Ezra,
+for in verse 64 we are told that the total of all those mentioned in the
+rest of the chapter amounts to 42,360; but, when we come to add up the
+several items we get as result only 29,818. (66) There must, therefore, be
+an error, either in the total, or in the details. (67) The total is probably
+correct, for it would most likely be well known to all as a noteworthy
+thing; but with the details, the case would be different. (68) If, then, any
+error had crept into the total, it would at once have been remarked, and
+easily corrected. (69) This view is confirmed by Nehemiah vii., where this
+chapter of Ezra is mentioned, and a total is given in plain correspondence
+thereto; but the details are altogether different - some are larger, and
+some less, than those in Ezra, and altogether they amount to 31,089.
+(70) We may, therefore, conclude that both in Ezra and in Nehemiah the
+details are erroneously given. (71) The commentators who attempt to
+harmonize these evident contradictions draw on their imagination, each to
+the best of his ability; and while professing adoration for each letter and
+word of Scripture, only succeed in holding up the sacred writers to
+ridicule, as though they knew not how to write or relate a plain narrative.
+(72) Such persons effect nothing but to render the clearness of Scripture
+obscure. (73) If the Bible could everywhere be interpreted after their
+fashion, there would be no such thing as a rational statement of which
+the meaning could be relied on. (74) However, there is no need to dwell on
+the subject; only I am convinced that if any historian were to attempt to
+imitate the proceedings freely attributed to the writers of the Bible, the
+commentators would cover him with contempt. (75) If it be blasphemy to
+assert that there are any errors in Scripture, what name shall we apply to
+those who foist into it their own fancies, who degrade the sacred writers
+till they seem to write confused nonsense, and who deny the plainest and
+most evident meanings? (76) What in the whole Bible can be plainer than the
+fact that Ezra and his companions, in the second chapter of the book
+attributed to him, have given in detail the reckoning of all the Hebrews who
+set out with them for Jerusalem? (77) This is proved by the reckoning being
+given, not only of those who told their lineage, but also of those who were
+unable to do so. (78) Is it not equally clear from Nehemiah vii:5, that the
+writer merely there copies the list given in Ezra? (79) Those, therefore,
+who explain these pas sages otherwise, deny the plain meaning of Scripture -
+nay, they deny Scripture itself. (80) They think it pious to reconcile one
+passage of Scripture with another - a pretty piety, forsooth, which
+accommodates the clear passages to the obscure, the correct to the faulty,
+the sound to the corrupt.
+
+(81) Far be it from me to call such commentators blasphemers, if their
+motives be pure: for to err is human. But I return to my subject.
+
+(82) Besides these errors in numerical details, there are others in the
+genealogies, in the history, and, I fear also in the prophecies. (83) The
+prophecy of Jeremiah (chap. xxii.), concerning Jechoniah, evidently does not
+agree with his history, as given in I Chronicles iii:17-19, and especially
+with the last words of the chapter, nor do I see how the prophecy, "thou
+shalt die in peace," can be applied to Zedekiah, whose eyes were dug out
+after his sons had been slain before him. (84) If prophecies are to be
+interpreted by their issue, we must make a change of name, and read
+Jechoniah for Zedekiah, and vice versa (85) This, however, would be too
+paradoxical a proceeding; so I prefer to leave the matter unexplained,
+especially as the error, if error there be, must be set down to the
+historian, and not to any fault in the authorities.
+
+(86) Other difficulties I will not touch upon, as I should only weary the
+reader, and, moreover, be repeating the remarks of other writers. (87) For
+R. Selomo, in face of the manifest contradiction in the above-mentioned
+genealogies, is compelled to break forth into these words (see his
+commentary on 1 Chron. viii.): "Ezra (whom he supposes to be the author of
+the book of Chronicles) gives different names and a different genealogy to
+the sons of Benjamin from those which we find in Genesis, and describes most
+of the Levites differently from Joshua, because he found original
+discrepancies." (88) And, again, a little later: "The genealogy of Gibeon
+and others is described twice in different ways, from different tables of
+each genealogy, and in writing them down Ezra adopted the version given in
+the majority of the texts, and when the authority was equal he gave both."
+(89) Thus granting that these books were compiled from sources originally
+incorrect and uncertain.
+
+(90) In fact the commentators, in seeking to harmonize difficulties,
+generally do no more than indicate their causes: for I suppose no sane
+person supposes that the sacred historians deliberately wrote with the
+object of appearing to contradict themselves freely. (91) Perhaps I
+shall be told that I am overthrowing the authority of Scripture, for that,
+according to me, anyone may suspect it of error in any passage; but, on the
+contrary, I have shown that my object has been to prevent the clear and
+uncorrupted passages being accommodated to and corrupted by the faulty ones;
+neither does the fact that some passages are corrupt warrant us in
+suspecting all. (92) No book ever was completely free from faults, yet I
+would ask, who suspects all books to be everywhere faulty? (93) Surely no
+one, especially when the phraseology is clear and the intention of the
+author plain.
+
+(94) I have now finished the task I set myself with respect to the books of
+the Old Testament. (95) We may easily conclude from what has been said, that
+before the time of the Maccabees there was no canon of sacred books,
+[Endnote 23], but that those which we now possess were selected from a
+multitude of others at the period of the restoration of the Temple by the
+Pharisees (who also instituted the set form of prayers), who are alone
+responsible for their acceptance. (96) Those, therefore, who would
+demonstrate the authority of Holy Scripture, are bound to show the authority
+of each separate book; it is not enough to prove the Divine origin of a
+single book in order to infer the Divine origin of the rest. (97) In that
+case we should have to assume that the council of Pharisees was, in its
+choice of books, infallible, and this could never be proved. (98) I am led
+to assert that the Pharisees alone selected the books of the Old Testament,
+and inserted them in the canon, from the fact that in Daniel ii. is
+proclaimed the doctrine of the Resurrection, which the Sadducees denied;
+and, furthermore, the Pharisees plainly assert in the Talmud that they so
+selected them. (99) For in the treatise of Sabbathus, chapter ii., folio 30,
+page 2, it is written: R. Jehuda, surnamed Rabbi, reports that the experts
+wished to conceal the book of Ecclesiastes because they found therein words
+opposed to the law (that is, to the book of the law of Moses). (100) Why did
+they not hide it? (101) "Because it begins in accordance with the law, and
+ends according to the law;" and a little further on we read: "They sought
+also to conceal the book of Proverbs." (102) And in the first chapter of the
+same treatise, fol. 13, page 2: "Verily, name one man for good, even he who
+was called Neghunja, the son of Hezekiah: for, save for him, the book of
+Ezekiel would been concealed, because it agreed not with the words of the
+law."
+
+(103) It is thus abundantly clear that men expert in the law summoned a
+council to decide which books should be received into the canon, and which
+excluded. (104) If any man, therefore, wishes to be certified as to the
+authority of all the books, let him call a fresh council, and ask every
+member his reasons.
+
+(105) The time has now come for examining in the same manner the books in
+the New Testament; but as I learn that the task has been already performed
+by men highly skilled in science and languages, and as I do not myself
+possess a knowledge of Greek sufficiently exact for the task; lastly, as we
+have lost the originals of those books which were written in Hebrew, I
+prefer to decline the undertaking. (106) However, I will touch on those
+points which have most bearing on my subject in the following chapter.
+
+
+
+
+End of Part 2.
+
+
+
+
+AUTHOR'S ENDNOTES TO THE THEOLOGICO-POLITICAL TREATISE
+Part 2 - Chapters VI to X
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+Endnote 6. (1) We doubt of the existence of God, and consequently of
+all else, so long as we have no clear and distinct idea of God, but only a
+confused one. (2) For as he who knows not rightly the nature of a triangle,
+knows not that its three angles are equal to two right angles, so he who
+conceives the Divine nature confusedly, does not see that it pertains to the
+nature of God to exist. (3) Now, to conceive the nature of God clearly and
+distinctly, it is necessary to pay attention to a certain number of very
+simple notions, called general notions, and by their help to associate the
+conceptions which we form of the attributes of the Divine nature. (4) It
+then, for the first time, becomes clear to us, that God exists necessarily,
+that He is omnipresent, and that all our conceptions involve in themselves
+the nature of God and are conceived through it. (5) Lastly, we see that all
+our adequate ideas are true. (6) Compare on this point the prolegomena to
+book, "Principles of Descartes's philosophy set forth geometrically."
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+Endnote 7. (1) "It is impossible to find a method which would enable us to
+gain a certain knowledge of all the statements in Scripture." (2) I mean
+impossible for us who have not the habitual use of the language, and have
+lost the precise meaning of its phraseology.
+
+Endnote 8. (1) "Not in things whereof the understanding can gain a clear and
+distinct idea, and which are conceivable through themselves." (2) By things
+conceivable I mean not only those which are rigidly proved, but also those
+whereof we are morally certain, and are wont to hear without wonder, though
+they are incapable of proof. (3) Everyone can see the truth of Euclid's
+propositions before they are proved. (4) So also the histories of things
+both future and past which do not surpass human credence, laws,
+institutions, manners, I call conceivable and clear, though they cannot be
+proved mathematically. (5) But hieroglyphics and histories which seem to
+pass the bounds of belief I call inconceivable; yet even among these last
+there are many which our method enables us to investigate, and to discover
+the meaning of their narrator.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Endnote 9. (1) "Mount Moriah is called the mount of God." (2) That is by the
+historian, not by Abraham, for he says that the place now called "In the
+mount of the Lord it shall be revealed," was called by Abraham, "the Lord
+shall provide."
+
+Endnote 10. (1) "Before that territory [Idumoea] was conquered by David."
+(2) From this time to the reign of Jehoram when they again separated from
+the Jewish kingdom (2 Kings viii:20), the Idumaeans had no king, princes
+appointed by the Jews supplied the place of kings (1 Kings xxii:48), in fact
+the prince of Idumaea is called a king (2 Kings iii:9).
+
+(3) It may be doubted whether the last of the Idumaean kings had begun to
+reign before the accession of Saul, or whether Scripture in this chapter of
+Genesis wished to enumerate only such kings as were independent. (4) It is
+evidently mere trifling to wish to enrol among Hebrew kings the name of
+Moses, who set up a dominion entirely different from a monarchy.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Endnote 11. (1) "With few exceptions." (2) One of these exceptions is found
+in 2 Kings xviii:20, where we read, "Thou sayest (but they are but vain
+words)," the second person being used. (3) In Isaiah xxxvi:5, we read "I
+say (but they are but vain words) I have counsel and strength for war," and
+in the twenty-second verse of the chapter in Kings it is written, "But if ye
+say," the plural number being used, whereas Isaiah gives the singular. (4)
+The text in Isaiah does not contain the words found in 2 Kings xxxii:32. (5)
+Thus there are several cases of various readings where it is impossible to
+distinguish the best.
+
+Endnote 12. (1) "The expressions in the two passages are so varied." (2) For
+instance we read in 2 Sam. vii:6, "But I have walked in a tent and in a
+tabernacle." (3) Whereas in 1 Chron. xvii:5, "but have gone from tent to
+tent and from one tabernacle to another." (4) In 2 Sam. vii:10, we read, "to
+afflict them," whereas in 1 Chron. vii:9, we find a different expression. (5)
+I could point out other differences still greater, but a single reading of
+the chapters in question will suffice to make them manifest to all who are
+neither blind nor devoid of sense.
+
+Endnote 13. (1) "This time cannot refer to what immediately precedes." (2)
+It is plain from the context that this passage must allude to the time when
+Joseph was sold by his brethren. (3) But this is not all. (4) We may draw
+the same conclusion from the age of Judah, who was than twenty-two years old
+at most, taking as basis of calculation his own history just narrated. (5)
+It follows, indeed, from the last verse of Gen. xxx., that Judah was born in
+the tenth of the years of Jacob's servitude to Laban, and Joseph in the
+fourteenth. (6) Now, as we know that Joseph was seventeen years old when
+sold by his brethren, Judah was then not more than twenty-one. (7) Hence,
+those writers who assert that Judah's long absence from his father's
+house took place before Joseph was sold, only seek to delude themselves and
+to call in question the Scriptural authority which they are anxious to
+protect.
+
+Endnote 14. (1) "Dinah was scarcely seven years old when she was violated by
+Schechem." (2) The opinion held by some that Jacob wandered about eight or
+ten years between Mesopotamia and Bethel, savours of the ridiculous; if
+respect for Aben Ezra, allows me to say so. (3) For it is clear that Jacob
+had two reasons for haste: first, the desire to see his old parents;
+secondly, and chiefly to perform, the vow made when he fled from his brother
+(Gen. xxviii:10 and xxxi:13, and xxxv:1). (4) We read (Gen. xxxi:3), that
+God had commanded him to fulfill his vow, and promised him help for
+returning to his country. (5) If these considerations seem conjectures
+rather than reasons, I will waive the point and admit that Jacob, more
+unfortunate than Ulysses, spent eight or ten years or even longer, in this
+short journey. (6) At any rate it cannot be denied that Benjamin was born in
+the last year of this wandering, that is by the reckoning of the objectors,
+when Joseph was sixteen or seventeen years old, for Jacob left Laban seven
+years after Joseph's birth. (7) Now from the seventeenth year of Joseph's
+age till the patriarch went into Egypt, not more than twenty-two years
+elapsed, as we have shown in this chapter. (8) Consequently Benjamin, at the
+time of the journey to Egypt, was twenty-three or twenty- four at the most.
+(9) He would therefore have been a grandfather in the flower of his age
+(Gen. xlvi:21, cf. Numb. xxvi:38, 40, and 1 Chron. viii;1), for it is
+certain that Bela, Benjamin's eldest son, had at that time, two sons, Addai
+and Naa-man. (10) This is just as absurd as the statement that Dinah was
+violated at the age of seven, not to mention other impossibilities
+which would result from the truth of the narrative. (11) Thus we see that
+unskillful endeavours to solve difficulties, only raise fresh ones, and make
+confusion worse confounded.
+
+Endnote 15. (1) "Othniel, son of Kenag, was judge for forty years." (2)
+Rabbi Levi Ben Gerson and others believe that these forty years which the
+Bible says were passed in freedom, should be counted from the death of
+Joshua, and consequently include the eight years during which the people
+were subject to Kushan Rishathaim, while the following eighteen years
+must be added on to the eighty years of Ehud's and Shamgar's judgeships. (3)
+In this case it would be necessary to reckon the other years of subjection
+among those said by the Bible to have been passed in freedom. (4) But the
+Bible expressly notes the number of years of subjection, and the number of
+years of freedom, and further declares (Judges ii:18) that the
+Hebrew state was prosperous during the whole time of the judges. (5)
+Therefore it is evident that Levi Ben Gerson (certainly a very learned man),
+and those who follow him, correct rather than interpret the Scriptures.
+
+(6) The same fault is committed by those who assert, that Scripture, by this
+general calculation of years, only intended to mark the period of the
+regular administration of the Hebrew state, leaving out the years of anarchy
+and subjection as periods of misfortune and interregnum. (7) Scripture
+certainly passes over in silence periods of anarchy, but does not, as they
+dream, refuse to reckon them or wipe them out of the country's annals. (8)
+It is clear that Ezra, in 1 Kings vi., wished to reckon absolutely all the
+years since the flight from Egypt. (9) This is so plain, that no one versed
+in the Scriptures can doubt it. (10) For, without going back to the
+precise words of the text, we may see that the genealogy of David given at
+the end of the book of Ruth, and I Chron. ii., scarcely accounts for so
+great a number of years. (11) For Nahshon, who was prince of the tribe of
+Judah (Numb. vii;11), two years after the Exodus, died in the desert, and
+his son Salmon passed the Jordan with Joshua. (12) Now this Salmon,
+according to the genealogy, was David's great-grandfather. (13) Deducting,
+then, from the total of 480 years, four years for Solomon's reign, seventy
+for David's life, and forty for the time passed in the desert, we find that
+David was born 366 years after the passage of the Jordan. (14) Hence we
+must believe that David's father, grandfather, great-grandfather, and great-
+great-grandfather begat children when they were ninety years old.
+
+Endnote 16. (1) "Samson was judge for twenty years." (2) Samson was born
+after the Hebrews had fallen under the dominion of the Philistines.
+
+Endnote 17. (1) Otherwise, they rather correct than explain Scripture.
+
+Endnote 18. (1) "Kirjath-jearim." Kirjath-jearim is also called Baale of
+Judah. (2) Hence Kimchi and others think that the words Baale Judah, which I
+have translated "the people of Judah," are the name of a town. (3) But this
+is not so, for the word Baale is in the plural. (4) Moreover, comparing this
+text in Samuel with I Chron. Xiii:5, we find that David did not rise up
+and go forth out of Baale, but that he went thither. (5) If the author of
+the book of Samuel had meant to name the place whence David took the ark, he
+would, if he spoke Hebrew correctly, have said, "David rose up, and set
+forth from Baale Judah, and took the ark from thence."
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Endnote 19. (1) "After the restoration of the Temple by Judas Maccaboeus."
+(2) This conjecture, if such it be, is founded on the genealogy of King
+Jeconiah, given in 1 Chron. iii., which finishes at the sons of Elioenai,
+the thirteenth in direct descent from him: whereon we must observe that
+Jeconiah, before his captivity, had no children; but it is probable that he
+had two while he was in prison, if we may draw any inference from the names
+he gave them. (3) As to his grandchildren, it is evident that they were born
+after his deliverance, if the names be any guide, for his grandson, Pedaiah
+(a name meaning God hath delivered me), who, according to this chapter, was
+the father of Zerubbabel, was born in the thirty-seventh or thirty-eighth
+year of Jeconiah's life, that is thirty-three years before the restoration
+of liberty to the Jews by Cyrus. (4) Therefore Zerubbabel, to whom Cyrus
+gave the principality of Judaea, was thirteen or fourteen years old. (5) But
+we need not carry the inquiry so far: we need only read attentively
+the chapter of 1 Chron., already quoted, where (v. 17, sqq.) mention is made
+of all the posterity of Jeconiah, and compare it with the Septuagint version
+to see clearly that these books were not published, till after Maccabaeus
+had restored the Temple, the sceptre no longer belonging to the house of
+Jeconiah.
+
+Endnote 20. (1) "Zedekiah should be taken to Babylon." (2) No one could then
+have suspected that the prophecy of Ezekiel contradicted that of Jeremiah,
+but the suspicion occurs to everyone who reads the narrative of Josephus.
+(3) The event proved that both prophets were in the right.
+
+Endnote 21. (1) "And who wrote Nehemiah." (2) That the greater part of the
+book of Nehemiah was taken from the work composed by the prophet Nehemiah
+himself, follows from the testimony of its author. (See chap. i.). (3) But
+it is obvious that the whole of the passage contained between chap. viii.
+and chap. xii. verse 26, together with the two last verses of chap. xii.,
+which form a sort of parenthesis to Nehemiah's words, were added by the
+historian himself, who outlived Nehemiah.
+
+Endnote 22. (1) "I suppose no one thinks" that Ezra was the uncle of the
+first high priest, named Joshua (see Ezra vii., and 1 Chron. vi:14), and
+went to Jerusalem from Babylon with Zerubbabel (see Nehemiah xii:1). (2) But
+it appears that when he saw, that the Jews were in a state of anarchy, he
+returned to Babylon, as also did others (Nehem. i;2), and remained there
+till the reign of Artaxerxes, when his requests were granted and he went a
+second time to Jerusalem. (3) Nehemiah also went to Jerusalem with Zerubbabel
+in the time of Cyrus (Ezra ii:2 and 63, cf. x:9, and Nehemiah x:1). (4) The
+version given of the Hebrew word, translated "ambassador," is not supported
+by any authority, while it is certain that fresh names were given to those
+Jews who frequented the court. (5) Thus Daniel was named Balteshazzar,
+and Zerubbabel Sheshbazzar (Dan. i:7). (6) Nehemiah was called Atirsata,
+while in virtue of his office he was styled governor, or president.
+(Nehem. v. 24, xii:26.)
+
+Endnote 23. (1) "Before the time of the Maccabees there was no canon of
+sacred books." (2) The synagogue styled "the great" did not begin before the
+subjugation of Asia by the Macedonians. (3) The contention of Maimonides,
+Rabbi Abraham, Ben-David, and others, that the presidents of this synagogue
+were Ezra, Daniel, Nehemiah, Haggai, Zechariah, &c., is a pure fiction,
+resting only on rabbinical tradition. (4) Indeed they assert that the
+dominion of the Persians only lasted thirty-four years, and this is their
+chief reason for maintaining that the decrees of the "great synagogue," or
+synod (rejected by the Sadducees, but accepted by the Pharisees) were
+ratified by the prophets, who received them from former prophets, and so in
+direct succession from Moses, who received them from God Himself. (5) Such
+is the doctrine which the Pharisees maintain with their wonted obstinacy.
+(6) Enlightened persons, however, who know the reasons for the convoking of
+councils, or synods, and are no strangers to the differences between
+Pharisees and Sadducees, can easily divine the causes which led to the
+assembling of this great synagogue. (7) It is very certain that no prophet
+was there present, and that the decrees of the Pharisees, which they style
+their traditions, derive all their authority from it.
+
+
+End of Endnotes to Part II. - Chapters VI to X.
+
+
+
+
+End of Part II of
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of A Theologico-Political Treatise
+
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