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2. When Moses had
discoursed thus to them according to the direction of God, the multitude,
grieved, and were in affliction; and entreated Most to procure their
reconciliation to God,and to permit them no longer to wander in the wilderness,
but bestow cities upon them. But he replied, that God would not admit of any
such trial, for that God was not moved to this determination from any human
levity or anger, but that he had judicially condemned them to that punishment.
Now we are not to disbelieve that Moses, who was but a single person, pacified
so many ten thousands when they were in anger, and converted them to a mildness
temper; for God was with him, and prepared way to his persuasions of the
multitude; and as they had often been disobedient, they were now sensible that
such disobedience was disadvantageous to them and that they had still thereby
fallen into calamities.
3. But this man was
admirable for his virtue, and powerful in making men give credit to what he
delivered, not only during the time of his natural life, but even there is
still no one of the Hebrews who does not act even now as if Moses were present,
and ready to punish him if he should do any thing that is indecent; nay, there
is no one but is obedient to what laws he ordained, although they might be
concealed in their transgressions. There are also many other demonstrations
that his power was more than human, for still some there have been, who have
come from the parts beyond Euphrates, a journey of four months, through many
dangers, and at great expenses, in honor of our temple; and yet, when they had
offered their oblations, could not partake of their own sacrifices, because
Moses had forbidden it, by somewhat in the law that did not permit them, or
somewhat that had befallen them, which our ancient customs made inconsistent
therewith; some of these did not sacrifice at all, and others left their
sacrifices in an imperfect condition; many were not able, even at first, so
much as to enter the temple, but went their ways in this as preferring a
submission to the laws of Moses before the fulfilling of their own
inclinations, they had no fear upon them that anybody could convict them, but
only out of a reverence to their own conscience.
Thus this legislation, which
appeared to be divine, made this man to be esteemed as one superior to his own
nature. Nay, further, a little before the beginning of this war, when Claudius
was emperor of the Romans, and Ismael was our high priest, and when so great a
famine (27) was come upon us, that one
tenth deal [of wheat] was sold for four drachmae, and when no less than seventy
cori of flour were brought into the temple, at the feast of unleavened bread,
(these cori are thirty-one Sicilian, but forty-one Athenian medimni,) not one
of the priests was so hardy as to eat one crumb of it, even while so great a
distress was upon the land; and this out of a dread of the law, and of that
wrath which God retains against acts of wickedness, even when no one can accuse
the actors. Whence we are not to wonder at what was then done, while to this
very day the writings left by Moses have so great a force, that even those that
hate us do confess, that he who established this settlement was God, and that
it was by the means of Moses, and of his virtue; but as to these matters, let
every one take them as he thinks fit.
Footnotes
(27) See Antiq, B. XX. Ch. 2. sect,
6 and Acts 11:28.
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