oOA •v §rom ffle feifiran? of (professor -gamuef (JJtitfPer in (gtemorg of 3ubge ^amuef (Utiffer QjSrecfttnribge (preeenfeb fig ^amuef (Jtttffer (grecftinrtbge feong fo f0e fetfirarg of (Princeton Cfleofogtcaf £&eminarg 3/^7 a --•J TH E CHRONOLOGY O F T H E HEBREW BIBLE VINDICATED: The Facts compared with other Ancient Histories, and the Difficulties explained, From the Flood .to the Death of MO S E S. TOGETHER WITH Some Conjectures in Relation to EGYP% During that Period of TIME, ALSO Two Maps, in which are attempted to be fettled the Journeyings of the Children of ISRAEL. By ; tKe Right Reverend ROBERT, L^K^iisHop of CLOG HER, LONDON: Printed for J.Brindley, Bookfeller to His Royal Highnefs- the Prince of Wales, m New Bwd-ftreet , Mdccxlvii, \m7*4 A ^ K V 4 A fa V jwA jtte^ tvj &KC 4 *\s :vm S* b<*« 1 I m ■ i 4 *\ ^ A m Mi ■V "v& .^ ^ ^ ,0? ' 23 8 Elim, new Corondel J 5, 27 ., Encampment by the Red Sea J 6, 1 Num. 33, 10 10 Defert Explanation of the Maps, JO Defer t of Zin, now Valley of Ba- harum , — — ii Dopkah i — — , 12 Alum . ■ . 13 Rephidim. 14 Mount Sinai — 15 Paran . => . 16 Taberah ■ 17 Kibroth-Hataavah ■ 18 Hazeroth — 19 Rithmah, or Kadefh ■ 20 Rimmon Parez ■ 21 Libnah — — —=. 22 Riflah 1 1 ■ . 23 Kehelathath _— — . 24 Mount Sapher >■ , 25 Haradath, or Hazar Addar, or Adar, about Mid-way between Kadefh and Azmon — — — 16, 1 Num. 21, 12 • 21, 13 21, H 33> iS 10, 12 II, 1 III 4' II, 35 33> 17 33> 18 12, 16 -33» 19 33> 20 33> 21 33> 22 33> 23 26 Malceloth 27 Tahath 28 Tarah 29 Mithcah ■ _ 30 Hafhmonah, or Azmon, or Selmon 3 1 Beeroth Benejaaken ■ 32 Moferoth, or Mofera = 33 Benejaakan — — — 34 Horhagidgad, or Gudgodah — 35 Jotbathab, or Jotbath — 36 Ebrona m .. . 37 Eziongeber, or Dizahab — 38 Kadefh-Barneaj or Kadefh, or Rithmah ■ . 39 Mount Hoi j - 40 Tophel 33> 24 Jofh, 34, 4 15, 3 33> 25 33> 26 33> 27 . 33, 28 33> 29 Deut. 10, 6 ' Nu"i- 33> 30 Deut. 10, 6 33> 31 33> 32 10, 7 33» 33 10, 7 33> 34 33, 35 1, 1 33, 36 33> 37 Deut, i, 1 41 Zalmuna^ Explanation of the Maps. 41 Zalmuna, or Hafhmona, crAz- mon, or Selraon ■ ■■ ■ Num. 33, 41 4a Punon ■ ■ ■■ -- -"■■■ 33, 42 ♦3 °b ' ' 33> 43 44 Jim, or Jicaba;im 33, 44 45 ZercJ ' ■' ' ' 21, 12 2, 46 Arnon ■ 21, 12, 13 47 Beer ■ ■ > 21, 16 48 Jahaz 21, 23 49 Hcfhbor. ■ <— ■ - 21, 25 50 Jaazer 21, 32 51 Edrei — — — . 21, 33 52 Dibon Gad — — 33, 45 53 Almon Diblathaim, or Diblatb 33, 46 Fzek. 6, i£. 54 Mattanah — — — — 21, 18 55 Nahaliel — — 21, 19 56 Bamoth » — 21, 19 57 PlSGAH — — — 21, 20 The Line with the larger Dots is defigned to fhew the Track of Che dor homer and his Allies from Aj]:ta- roth, in the Country ©f Rephaim, through the Lands of the Zuzim, Emim, and Horites to Elparan, or the En- trance into the Plains of Paran, and back from thence through Kadejb and the Country of the AmaJekites to E?igeddi, and from thence to Dan, where they were defeated by Abraham, who followed them from He- bron, and purfued them unto Hobah, which is on the Left-hand of Damafcus, as mentioned Gen, xiv. ~^/(btaA n i^ti'/taJc&t 'J^H^Xerwn ( I ) INTRODUCTION. MR. Bedford in the Preface to his Scripture Chronology (a) finds fault with Sir Ifaac Newton for bringing the Hiftory of the Cre- ation too far forward. Of which he gives two Inflances, one of which is that Account of the Paftor Kings mentioned by Manetbo, who according to that Author were driven out of Egypt about three Hundred and thirty Years before the Exodus of the Jfraelites under Mofes. Which Event of the Paftor Kings Sir Ifaac Newton (b) refers to the Days of Eli and Samuel. The other is the Hiftory of the Conqueft of Canaan by Sefo- Jlris which Mr. Bedford fuppofes ought to be placed after the Time of the Exodus of the Jfraelites out of Egypt, and before the Conqueft of Canaan by Jojhua. But which Sir Ifaac Newton refers to the fifth Year of Rehoboam, fo as to make the Shijhak (c) of the Scriptures, and the Sefo- ftris of Herodotus {d) to be the fame Perfon. (a) T>age 2. (b) Newt. Chro n.p. 9. (0 2 Chron. xii. 2. (d) Herod. Eut. B For 2 INTRODUCTION. For what Reafon Sir Ifaac brings the Hiftory of the Pallor Shepherds fo low down as the Time of Samuel^ contrary to the pofitive Account of the only Author who mentions them, I cannot fay, for he does not give his Rea- fons, and I do not think he is to be juftined therein. But with regard to the fecond InfHnce he is certainly in the right, in making . the Sefqftris of Herodotus the fame Perfon with the Shijhak of the Scriptures j and that for this very Reafon, becaufe that Herodotus (from whom as Mr. Bedford acknowledges (e) the Account of all the Actions of Sefoftris is chiefly taken) places Sefoftris in the contemporary Age with Sokmon and Rehoboam ; for he makes him the Father and Predecefior in the Throne of Egypt to Pheron, who was fucceeded by Proteus, in whofe Reign happen'd the remarkable Event of the Trojan War (/). Which brings the Age in which Sefoftris lived to coincide directly with the Times of Solomon and Rehoboam. But as certain it is that, as Mr. Bedford obferves, Sir Ifaac (g) labours very hard to prove Sefoftris, the King of Egypt, whom he al- lows to be contemporary with Solomon and Rehoboam, to be the Son and SuccefTor of Pharaoh Amenophis, whom Manetbo afierts to be contemporary with Mofes. And the chief Reafon I can find for this, is becaufe the Name of the Son of Amenophis is Sethos. For, fays Sir Ifaac New- ton (£), " Corruptions of Names are very frequent in Hi- " iiory :• Sefoftris was otherwife called Sefocris, Sefocbis, (e) Pref. p. 4. (f) The War of Troy happened about One Hundred and eleven Years after the Founding of the Temple by Solomon. Newt. Cbron. ( g) P. 68, and 217. {h) P. 69. Sefoofsy INTRODUCTION. * Sefoofs, Sethqfis, Sefonchis, Sefonchqfis, Take away the c< Greek Termination and the Names become Sefofi, Sefoch, " Sefoos, Sethos, Sefonch : Which Names differ very little ** from Sefach. '* Certain it is, that the fame Perfon who is called Sefojiris by Herodotus is called Sefoojis (i) by Dio- dorus : Becaufe the fame Actions are attributed to him by Diodorus, that are mentioned of the other by Herodotus j and Sefoojis is placed in the Catalogue of Egyptian Kings by Diodorus between Meris and Pheron as Sefojiris is by Herodotus, It is certain alfo that it is the fame Perfon who is called Sufacus or Sefach (k) by Jofephus, that is called Sefojiris by Herodotus -, becaufe he finds fault with Herodotus for calling him Sefojiris^ and attributing to Sefojiris the Ac- tions of Sefach, But I cannot fee the leaft Reafon for fup- pofing Sethos the Son of Amenophis, to be the fame Perfon with the Sefojiris of Herodotus, but what would equally prove Seth the Son of Adam to be the fame Perfon with Sethos the Son of Amenophis, For take away the Greek Termination os, and there will be no Difference in the Names. And yet abfurd as this feems to be it is the only Reafon I can find why either Sir Ifmc or Mr. Bedford make the Sefojiris of Herodotus and the Sethos of Manetho to be the fame Perfon. For both (/) have fallen equally into the fame Error j though it has produced very different Effects in them. For Sir Ifaac judging with Reafon that the Sefojiris of Herodotus, muft be the fame Perfon with theShi/hak of the Scriptures, but falfely imagining that he was alfo the Sethos of Manetho, whofe Brother's Name (0 2fdedalus, Horner^ Ly» curgus, Solon, Plato, Pythagoras (0), Eudoxus, Democritus and Inopides. Orpheus (p) was concerned in the Argo- nautick Expedition, and therefore lived about one Genera- tion before the Trojan War. For Hercules Alcides, and Te- lamon (q) were both likewife Argonauts, and Tripto/emus the Son of Hercules, and Ajax the Son of Telamon were both concerned in the famous Siege of Troy. And of Confequence Sefoftris, who was two Generations before the War of Troy, flourifhed about one Generation before Or- pheus. Sefojlris came to the Crown fome Time before the Death of Solomon. For Jeroboam (r) when he was afraid of the Refentment of Solomon fled to Shijhak King of E- gypt for Protection, and a few Years afterwards, that is in the fifth Year of Rehoboam, Shijhak or Sefojlris invaded Ju- dea probably at the Inftigation of Rehoboam, and took Je- rufakm 5 and then proceeded in the Conqueft of Greece, &c. It is likely that Sefojlris had not been long in Poffeflion of the Crown of Egypt, when 'Jeroboam fled to him ; becaufe Solomon was married in his Youth to a Daughter of Pha- raoh King of Egypt afnd fhe was alive after the twenty- fourth Year of his Reign j for after he had finiflied the Building of the Temple, which was not till the eleventh Year of his Reign, he ' then built his own Palace, which was (s) thirteen Years in building, after which he built the Houfe (t) of the Foreft of Lebanon j and he made alfo an Houfe (u) for Pharaoh's Daughter whom he had '(0) Pythagcvras fhould have been placed before Plato. (p) Diod. & Apol. Rhod. (?) Ibid. (r) 1 Kings xi. 40. (*) Ibid. vii. 1. (/) lb. vri. 2- (») Ibid. vii. 8. taken INTRODUCTION. taken to Wife, like unto the Porch which he had builded for himfelf, in the Foreft of Lebanon, While therefore that Pharaoh was alive whofe Daughter Solomon had mar- ried it is not probable that Jeroboam would dare to fly to him. And it is probable that this Pharaoh, the Father of Solomon's Wife, was alive long after the Building of the Houfe for Pharaoh's Daughter, becaufe of the great Cor- refpondence and Intercourfe that was kept up between Egypt and Judea in Chariots and Horfes, and Lin- nen Yarn (*), which Solomon bought out of Egypt not long before the Defedion of Jeroboam. And therefore as it is more than probable, that the Pharaoh to whom Je- roboam fled for Protection was not Pharaoh the Father-in- law to Solomon, this Pharaoh muft have been fome new King over Egypt who knew not Solomon, and was there- fore eafily prevailed upon to protect Jeroboam, and make War againft Rehoboam the Son of Solomon. SOLO MO N (y) reigned Forty Years. In the fourth Year of his Reign he laid the Foundation of his Temple, four Hundred and eighty Years (z) after the Exodus of the Ifraelkes out of Egypt. The Exodus of the Children of Ifrael out of Egypt (a) was four Hundred and thirty Years after the Promife made to Abraham, when he de- parted from Harati to go into the Land of Canaan, which was in the Seventy-fixth Year of his Age (b) or when Abraham was Seventy-five compleat. Abrahatn was born (if we fuppofe him born when his Father I'erah was Se- venty Years old, Gen. xi. 26) two Hundred and ninety-two (*) 1 Kings x. 28; .29. (y) Ibid. xi. .42. 2 Chron. ix. 30- (z) j Kings iv. 1. (a) Exod. xii. 40. (b) Gen. xii. 4. Years INTRODUCTION. Years after the Flood ; fo that according to this Account Solomon died about One thoufand three hundred and thir- teen Years (r) after the Flood, about which Time or a few Years fooner we may fuppofe Sefojlris to have come to the Crown of Egypt. His PredecefTor was Meris, and the only PredecefTor we have named with any Degree of Certainty to Men's is Menes (d)y who is faid to have built Memphis. So that if we make an Allowance of Eighty, or fuppofe an Hundred Years for the Reign of thefe two Princes there will remain a Period of twelve Hundred Years in the Hiftory of Egypt, that is, from the Flood to the Building of Memphis by Menes entirely unaccounted for in Profane Hiftory. For Menes is faid by the Egyptian Hiftorians, to be the firft mortal Man that ever reigned in the World, and to have immediately fucceeded the Reign of the Gods. We have therefore no Method of fupplying this Hiatus in the Hiftory of Egypt, but by collecting thofe feveral Traditions which remain of the Tranfactions of the Gods, and of fome few of the moft early Kings, by comparing of which with the few Parti- culars of true Hiftory relating to Egypt, as mentioned acci- dentally in the Books of Mofes, we may poflibly conjecture fomething like the Truth. The firft Hiftorian who mentions any Thing of the Affairs of Egypt is Sanchoniatho, who is fuppofed to have written his Hiftory about the Time of Gideon [e)y the fifth fudge of Ifrael, who began to flourim about two Hundred (0 36+480+430+75+292=1 31 3. [d) Herod. 1. 2. Diod. I. 1. (e) Eufeb. Pr*p. Ev, Years INTRODUCTION. Years after the Exodus of the Ifraelites out of Egypt. But this Author, in whofe Vindication and Explanation Bifhop Cumberland has written an exprefs Treatife, and whofe hi- Horical Narratives many learned Pcrfons have confider'd as the genuine Hiftory of Phoenicia, feems to have had too much Regard paid to it. Since it is manifeft to a Demon- stration, that moft of the Particulars which deferve our At- tention are borrowed from the Hiftory of Mofes, only that the Original is very much debafed by the Copy, and is ftrange- ly mixed up with a bad Allay of the old Grecian Mythology and Phcenician Philofophy. He begins accordingly with fay- ing, that " the Principle of the Univerfe was a dark and a " windy Air, or aWind made of dark Air, and a turbulent " Evening Chaos : And that when this Wind fell in love with its own Principles, and a Mixture was made, that Mixture was called Defire or Cupid.— From whence came all the Seed of this Building, and the Generation of the " Univerfe." And again he fays, " But there were certain " Animals which had no Senfe, out of which were begot- " ten intelligent Animals, and were called Zophefemin, " that is, the Spies or Overfeers of Heaven, and were " formed alike in the Shape of an Egg. " Mr. Four- mont (f), in his Notes on Sanchoniatho, feems a little dif- pleafed at this Mention of the Egg, and is defirous of ha- ving it 'omitted. He allows indeed, that Sanchoniatho has borrowed his Notion of a Chaos from Hefiod j but I am furprized that a Perfon of Mr. Fourmonfs Learning fliould not know, that the Doctrine of the Production of all Things from an Egg was the current Opinion of the moft learned (/) Fourm. Reflex. Crit. L. 2. p. 12. C Heathens io INTRODUCTION. Heathens about the Time of Ariflophanes, who was con- temporary with Herodotus and Socrates. Nor do I think that any one can read the following Lines of Ariflophanes without perceiving that it was from one and the fame Mint that the Philofophy of Sanchoniatho and Ariflophanes' had its Origin : Xocog yjv kcci Nu£, *E(it&og tb ptXav ttoutov, kcci Tocpjotoog Ivpvg. 1 7} o , vo ocvjo, no u Dotvog vtv. Ep^Hg a ev ocrrtipocri KoX7roig Ttttjei sr^uTig-ov u7n;v£fMou wj> v\ f/teXocvoTrj^og 'Q. O'N. E<£ 8 wsfjiifJeXXofievocts apcctg tCXufiv "Epcog 6 T^o^eivog, StiXQuv vutqv "sfjeovyutv ypixrouv, etxug uvo^ooycsan olvocig. yOv]og ae yjx.ii Ttfje^oivji piyelg vwyiw, Kccjct rccprupov ivpvv Eveorjevo-e yivog yptTeoov, kcci 'Stdutov ccvvjyocytv eg (pug. Ti()OT£(JGv o vk vjv ytvog ctBavctTuv, "Wpiv'Epcog ) K«» Bi WOO KUT^ "S^VrfC t2 INTRODUCTION. 11 from him that Element which is over us, by reafon of " its excellent Beauty, is called Uranus, i.e. Heaven, and 11 had a Sifter of the fame Parents called Ge-t and by rea- " fon of her Beauty, the Earth had her Name given it."— And that " Hypjijlus, the Father of thefe dying in Flight " by wild Beafts, was confecrated, and his Children of- " fered Sacrifices and Libations to him." As to Berith, the Wife of Hypfifius, it is certain, that there was a Samaritan Idol of that Name in the Time of Abimelech, the Son of Gideon, one of the Judges of Ifrael, Jud. viii. 33 j ix. 46. But it is very remarkable, that San- cboniatho has confecrated a Deity no where to be met with in Hiftory, but in the Scriptures of the Old Teftament, where the Almighty God, Father of Heaven and Earth, is frequently called by the Name of \\hv Elioun, or in the Greek"lC$u?©*i Hypfijlus, the mofi High, Num. xxiv. 16. Deut. xxxii. 8. Pfal. vii. 175 ix. 25 xxi. y; xlvi. 4, &t; &c. &.c. And 1 think there is nothing can more plainly ihew, that this Treatife was written after the Time of Eli and Samuel, than this Author's faying, that this Hypjijius had a Temple carried about by one or more Yoke of Oxen in Phoenicia; which Story is manifeftly owing to the Ark of God, which was taken by the Phi 'lift 'ines in the Days of Eli, and fent back in the Time of Samuel, in a Cart drawn by Heifers, to the Children of Ifrae^ 1 Sam. iv. 11 ; vii. 1. I was indeed at firft almoftperfuaded, by the Opinion I had-of the learned Bifhop Cumberland, to believe that San- choniatko had met with fome traditionary Hiftory of the Line *>f ytfhrt) and was inclined- to perfift therein, when I re- collected INTRODUCTION. 13 collected that Atlas is mentioned both by Hejiod and Ovid as one of the Sons of Japhet. But when I found in the Sequel of this Hiftory that I/us or Chronus, the Brother of this Atlas, is faid to have been circumcifed, and to have offered up his only Son, whom he had by a Nymph called Anobret, which Word lignifies in Hebrew, fie that co?iceived by Grace, in Sacrifice to his Father Our anus ; this Account feemed to me fo manifestly borrowed from the Hiftory of Abraham, as to leave no manner of Doubt about its Origin. Not that I think the Hiftory of Chronus will agree in ge- neral with that of Abraham, as fome learned Men have laboured to prove ; but I cannot but think neverthelefs that the Author of this Treatife was fo far acquainted with the Books of Mofes, as to take feveral Hints from thence, and weave them into the Body of his Hiftory. Whether he changed the Names of the Perfonages through Ignorance or Defign I cannot fay, but it feems ma- nifeft to me that the Name of Jeoud which is by Phi- lo-Byblius (i) given to this Son of Chronus, whom he is faid to have offered in Sacrifice to Our anus, is borrowed from that of Judah, who was the Son of Jacob or If- rael, who is the Perfon faid by the fame Philo-Byblius to be meant by I/us or Chronus, though miftaken either ignorantly or wilfully for Ifaac and Abraham. For that fuch Miftakes were common among the traditionary Hi- flories of thofe early Times, is manifeft; from the Account given by Plutarch (k) of the Victory of Or us over T'yphon, when he mentions the Tradition, that when Typhon was con- [}) Eufeb. Praep. Evang. (k) Plut. de Hid. k Ofir. quered I4 INTRODUCTION. quered he fled away from Egypt and begat Hiercfolywus and Judaus. However, as there are fome remarkable Tradi- tions in this Treatife which feem conibnant to Truth and are iupported by parallel Accounts in real Hiftory, fo far I think it is allowable to quote him and make ufe of his Au- thority and no farther. The next Author who writes profefTedly of the Hiftory of Egypt is Herodotusi who wrote his Hiftory in the Reign of Artaxerxes Longimanus , (/) and as he fays about four hundred Years after the Time of Homer ; and who is very juftly ftiled the Father of Hiftory : For though the Records of Egypt were deftroyed by Cambyfes above one hundred Years before the Time of Herodotus, fo that as Sir Ifaac Newton obferves, " the Priefts of Egypt had fo magnified " their Antiquities hefore the Days of Herodotus, as to " tell him that from Menes to Men's there were three " hundred and thirty Kings, whofe Reigns took up as many " Ages, that is, eleven thoufand Years, and had filled up " the Interval with feigned Names, who had done nothing : Yet as he was the firft Hiftorian of Credit who has given us any Account of Egypt, he is certainly the moft to be de- pended upon j for as Sir Ifaac further obferves, '), {x) Jof. Antiq. I. 1 . c. 3. f. 6. ( y) It is affirmed by Didymus Rapaligerus Livianus^ an Italia*; Author, that this Treatife of Berofus was given to Junius at Gemay by Father George. of Armenia, a Dominican Friar, And 22 INTRODUCTION. And though I will not take upon me to vindicate the Inte- grity of Annim with regard to all his Actions, or every thing that he has publimed j yet fince this Fragment of Berofus, as far as it goes, agrees perfectly with the Account given of the Works of Berofus by Jofeplws, and as Annius was undoubt- edly a learned and inquiiitive Perfon, and lived at the Con- clufion of that Age of Ignorance and Barbarity which had over-run the Face of the Chriftian World in the fifteenth Century (i)j I cannot help thinking it probable that he might have an Opportunity of meeting with fome Books, which had been loft to the World for fome Generations, and though the entire Works of Berofus did not come to his Hands, yet that he might in fome private Study or publick Library have met with this imperfect Tranflation of them. Any Remains however of fo great an Author muft be efteemed as valuable Reliques by the learned World : If we confider them only as a Collection of antient traditions, which, except what we find in the Books of Mofes, are the only Guides we have to go by with regard to the particular /Eras of any Tranfactions, which happened in Egypt before the Time of Mcnes. STNCELLUS mentions an antient Chronicle that muft have been written, as Marfiam juftly remarks, fince the third Year of the hundred and feventh Olympiad, becaufe it men- tions Neclanebo, whofe Flight was about fifteen Years be- fore the Expedition of Alexander. Which Author, Syn- cellus fuppofes, led the fubfequent Authors, and particu- larly Manetho, into all his Errors about the Antiquity of the Egyptian Dynafties (a). (x) He died on the 13th of Novcmb. 1502. (a) Syncel. p. 51. Ed. Par. of INTRODUCTION. 23 The next Author who treates of the Affairs of Egypt is Ma- netho whofe Works are likewlfe loft, but there are fome Frag- ments preferved out of him by Jofephus j and Julius Afri- canus the firft Chriftian Chronologer has made a Contracti- on of him, which however differs in feveral Particulars from Jofephus. It is to be obferved of this Author that he wrote foon after the publishing of the Septuagint Vernon of the Jewijh Bible at Alexandria in Egypt, under the Reign of Pto- lemy Philadelphia, and feems in this Work of his to have had a Defign of bringing Difcredit on the Truth of that Hiftory by carrying up the Dynafties of the Egyptian Demi-gods who reigned in Egypt fo many Ages beyond the Flood, of which he takes no Notice 5 and at the fame time of flinging a . Slur upon the Jewijh Nation by reprefenting them as fprung from a Parcel of Lepers, who were expelled Egypt on Ac- count of their Impurity. For he fays, that in the Reign of ' Timaus Men of ignoble Birth out of the Eaftern Parts invaded Egypt by Force and fubdued it without the Egyptians ha- zarding a Battle ; that at length they made one of them- felves King whofe Name was Salatis, (he lived at Memphis and fortified Abaris, to fecure the eaftern Parts of Egypt from the Invafion of the Afyrians, ) and that thefe Kings, of whom he gives us the Names of five, were called Hycfos i. e. Shepherd Kings ; and that thefe and their Defcendents kept PoffefTion five hundred and eleven Years : That they were at length fubdued by Afphragmuthofs and mut up in Abaris : That his Son Ttummofis attempted to take them by Force, but at laft came to a Compofition with them, that they mould leave Egypt doing no Harm 5 and that thereup- on they went through the Wildernefs to Syria, and built the City of Jerufalem in Judea. That when thefe People were gone 24. INTRODUCTION. gone ioyerufakm, I'hitmmojisviho drove them out reigned twen- ty-five Years. Chebron 13. Amenophis 20, 7. Amejfes 21, 9. Mapbrcs 12, 9. Mephragmuthofis 25, 10. T'hmofis 9, 8. Amenophis 30,- 10. O/v/j 36, 5. Achencres 12, 1. Rathotis g, Acbencres 12, 5. Achencres 12, 3. At mats 41. Ramejfes 1, 4. Armcffcs Miamoun 66, 2. Amenophis 19, 6. In all 332, 8. •That in the Reign of the laft Egypt being infeited by aParcel of leprous and impure Perfons, this Prince was ordered by the Oracle to expel them out of his Kingdom. Upon which he drove them all into Abaris, the mofl Eaftern Part of Egypt, and employed them in quarrying of Stones for Building. That when they were gotten together and found the Place fit fot a Revolt, they began to rebel and ap- pointed themfelves a Ruler out of the Priefts of Heliopolis whofe Name was Ofarfiph ; but that when he was gone over to thefe People his Name was changed, and he was called Mcfcs. That at the End of thirteen Years Ameno- phis came upon them with a great Army, and after flay- ing a great many of them, purfued them as far as the Bounds of Syria. JOSEPHUS fays, that thofe Shepherd Kings of whom Manetho fpeaks, who were driven out of Egypt by Thummofis were the Jfraelites, the Forefathers of the yews, and that this latter Story is a Fiction of Manetho to blaft the Reputation of the yewifi Nation, and that Amenophis is a fictitious Name created out of Manetho own Head. But in my Opinion this latter Story though fet in fuch a light as fhews it was calculated to reflect upon Mofes, and thofe Perfons conducted by him out of Egypt, is more applicable to the I Iiflory of the Jfraelites , than that of the Shepherd INTRODUCTION. 25 Shepherd Kings. For their being fixed in the Eaftern Parts of Egypt, and fent to dig Stones in the Quarries, feems to fuit better with the Condition of the Ifradltes in Egypt, than that of their being Kings and having the Peo- ple of Egypt in Subjection. Manetho indeed feems to have confounded the Hiftory of Mofes and the Ifraelites, with an Affair which according to Diadems happened in Egypt during the Reign of one Aft if ernes, between the Time of Sefoftris and the Trojan War. Which Diodorits (b) relates after this Manner, that he, ABifanes, governed Egypt with great Equity, and retrained all Robberies after a new Man- ner, neither punifhing the Guilty with Death nor yet let- ting them efcape unpunifhed : For he ordered the Guilty to have their Nofes cut off, and confined them together in one Place, for which Purpofe he built the City of Rhinccc-* coura (c) in the moft Eaftern Bounds of the Kingdom be- tween Egypt and Arabia, and confined them all to that Place, where they were obliged to provide for their own Suftenance. This I take to be the Origin of Manetho' % calling the Ifraelites under Mofes a leprous and impure People. As to the Story of the Shepherd Kings, that is not fo eafily accounted for unlefs we fuppofe it may have taken its Rife from the fingle Hiftory of Abraham, the Time of whofe Continuance in Egypt is by Artapanns (d) an Heathen Hiftorian, as quoted by Alexander Polyhi/lor, (b) Diod. I. 1. ( Eufebius Pam- pbilus, and Symcellus, who are rather to be considered as Collectors and Compilers of the Hiflory of Egypt out of Manetho and Eratojlhencs, than original Hiflorians. And indeed all thefe Authors except Berofus are fo extravagant in the Number of Years which they afTign to the Duration of the Egyptian Empire, under the Reign of thefe Gods> that it is impoflible to reconcile them with any of the Facts recorded in true Hiflory ; and as Berofus is the only Author who has attempted to fynchronife them with the contempo- rary Actions of other Princes, I fhall fet down the Times of thefe Actions as recorded by him along with the Chro- nology of the Hiflory of the Hebrew Bible, to fee if we can Newt. Chron p 8i = INTRODUC t I O N. 3 1 can find cut from thence, when thefe Actions were redly performed, and what Conformity or Agreement they have with Truth ; the bell: Way of difcovering which, is to com- pare them with the Hiilory of Mofcs j which contains the only fatisfactory Account of thofe early Times, and where- in we may trace the Foundation and Origin of moft of the early Traditions which are to be found in the antient pro- fane Writers. By comparing of which Traditions with the Hiftory of Mops, as we mall be able to difcover the Origin of many of them, fo will the general Opinion and Currency of fuch Traditions in the Heathen World add Strength and Credit to the Hiilory of Mofes : which the more that it is enquired into, and the more it is compared with profane Hiftory, juft fo much the more it difcovers its own Truth and Excellency,. I have mentioned that I propofe fetting down the Hiftory of thefe Times according to the Chronology of the Hebrew Bible : Before I proceed therefore I think it necef- fary to give my Reafons why I prefer the Chronology of die Hebrew Bible to that of the Samaritan Pentateuch, the Septuagint Vernon, or Jofephus. There is very little Dif- ference in the Chronology of the Editions of the Bible after the Time of the Birth of Abraham, for all Editions allow the Exodus of the Children of Ifrael out of Egypt to have been four hundred and thirty Years (h) after the Departure of Abram from Haran. All Editions likewife agree in the Age of Abram when he came from Haran into Canaan that he was then feventy-five Years old, but the great Dif- ference between them is in the Time of the Birth of the Sons of the feveral Patriarchs from Noah down to Abra- (b) Exod. xii. 40. ham 3 2 INTRODUCTION. ham wherein they differ very greatly. And the Reafoft why I prefer the Chronology of the Hebrew Copy of the Bible to the Samaritan Pentateuch is this : Becaufe it feems reafonable to me to believe, that immediately after the Deluge the Defcendents of Noah would begin to get Chil- dren as foon as ever they were able \ and as their Lives be- gan to be fhortened I fhould apprehend they would rather lboner grow ripe for Generation than otherwife, as we find in Fact that all other Creatures do. Now if we confult the Chronology of the Hebrew Copy of the Bible, we fhall find this Analogy of Nature to have been regularly carried on, and the Birth of the Sons of the Patriarchs haitened in pro- portion as the Lengths of their Lives was fhortened. But the Samaritan Pentateuch reprefents this Affair quite other- wife, as will appear to any one who confults the follow- ing Tables, wherein it appears that the Poftdiluvian Pa- triarchs were near twice as old as the Antediluvian, before their Sons were born according to the Samaritan Pentateuch, though the Lives of the Antediluvians were at leaf! twice as long as thofe of the Poftdiluvians. Ages cf the Poft- diluvian Patriarchs an Patriarchs at the Lengths of at the Birth of their Lengths of Birth of their Sons. their Lives. Sons. their Lives, Ages of the Antediluvi Heb. Sam. Heb. Sam. Heb. Sam. Heb. Sam. Adam 130 130 93° 93° Sem IOO IOO 6c 0 600 Seth 105 105 912 912 Arpbaxt id 35 J35 438 43B Efios 90 90 905 905 Salab 3° 130 433 433 Coinan 70 70 910 910 Heber 34 T34 464 404 Mahakel 65 65 895 895 Peleg 30 130 239 239 'fared 162 62 962 847 Reu 32 132 239 239 Enoch 65 65 365 365 Serug 30 130 230 230 Methufelah 187 67 969 720 Nab or 29 79 148 148 Lantech 182 53 777 653 Terab 70 70 205 145 Noah 500 5C0 053 950 Abram Now INTRODUCTION. Now it is very obfervable, that there -is little or no sDirTcrence between the Hebrew and Samaritan Copies in the Lengths of the Lives of the Patriarchs j but that the great Difference is in the Time of their Age at the Birth of ^their Sons and Succeffors j from whence the Chronology of thofe Times is entirely to be computed. And I appeal to the Judgment of all Mankind to determine, (/) whether it is not more confonant to the general Courfe of Nature to fup- pofe that Arphaxad, Sa/ab, and Hcber, who lived but about four hundred Years a-piece, and Peleg, Reu and Serug who lived but about two hundred Years a-piece mould have Sons at the Age of thirty, thirty-two, thirty-four, or thirty-five, ra- ther than at one hundred thirty, one hundred thirty-two, one hundred thirty-four, and one hundred thirty-five j when Enos, Cainan and Mahaleel, who are allowed to have lived nine hundred Years each, are acknowledged on both Sides to have Sons at ninety, feventy, and fixty-five Years of Age ? It islikewife to be obferved that the Samaritan Ac- count of the Birth of the Sons of the Antediluvians (k) agrees pretty nearly with the Hebrew, only it makes them to have begotten their Sons more early than the Hebrew : As for Example, in the Birth of Enoch, who, the Hebrew fays, was born to his Father when he was one hundred and fixty- two Years of Age, the Samaritan Copy fays, his Father was but fixty-two at the fame Event. The Hebrew Copy (/) This Part of this Work having been written many Years ago, be- fore the Author had ever feen Bedford's Scripture Chronology, he was -*glad to find that Author make ufe of the fame Argument, as it is a Proof oi the Force as well as the Truth of this Method of Reafoning. Bed. C 5. -iV 21. (k) See the foregoing Table. F likewife 3-3 34 INTRODUCTION. likewile fays, that Methufelab was One Hundred eighty- feven, and Lamech One Hundred eighty-two when their Sons were born, whereas the Samaritan makes them but Sixty-feven and Fifty-three at the Birth of their Sons. I t is likevvife to be obferved, that with regard to the Time of the Birth of the Sons of the PoJidiluvia?isy the &7- maritan Copy agrees with the Hebrew in the odd Num- bers ; as for Example, Salah, Heber^Pe/eg, Reu, Serug and Nahor are faid in the Hebrew Copy to be born in the thirty-fifth, thirtieth, thirty-fourth, thirtieth, thirty-fecond and thirtieth Years of the Age of their refpective Fathers, which Numbers in the Samaritan Copy are one hundred thirty-five, one hundred thirty, one hundred thirty-four, one hundred thirty, one hundred thirty-two and one hundred thirty. So that if you take away the Hundred Years from each of thefe Numbers, which feem to have been added contrary to Reafon and Truth by the Miftake or rather Defign of the Tranfcriber, in order to increafe and leng- then out the Chronology of the Bible, the two Copies will agree exactly in thofe Particulars, and the Difference in the Chronology between thefe two Copies be for the moft part removed. The Septuagint Verfion of the Bible agrees nearly with the Samaritan in the Time of the Birth of the Sons of the Pqfldilwcian Patriarchs, only that it adds in a whole Life, be- tween Arphaxad and Salah> that is Cainan, whom that Ver- fion fuppofes to have lived three hundred Years, and to have begotten Salah when he was one hundred and thirty Years old. It likewife adds one hundred Years to the Age of Nachor INTRODUCTION. 35 Nachor when he begot Thara, and fuppofes him to be one hundred feventy-nine Years old at that Time, whereas the Samaritan fuppofes him only to be feventy-nine ; but then it is to be obferved that the^ fieptuavmt Yerfion adds likewife ail hundred Ifears to the Lives of moft of the Antediluvian Patriarchs before the Time of the Birth of their Sons ; by which Means that Verfion carries the Creation of Adam, and the Flood of Noah to the greateft Diftance of Time from the Deftruction of the Temple of any, either of the Copies or Verfions of the Bible, for the Syriack and Ara* hick Verfions both agree with the Hebrew : And indeed it feems to me abfurd to fuppofe, when Abraham is acknow- ledged by all the Verfions to be fo old and infirm at an hun- dred Years of Age as not to be able, without a Miracle, to have gotten a Son, that his Grandfather mould not have got his eldeft. Son till he was one hundred feventy-nine Years old. But it is to be obferved, that this Tranflation was made from the Hebrew at Alexandria in Egypt, under the Reign of Ptolemy Philadelphia, and that Manetho publimed his Egyptian Dynafties much about the fame Time, where- in the Hiftory of Egypt was carried feveral thoufands of Years farther than the Truth. I mould apprehend therefore, that fome Tranfcribers, out of a Fondnefs for An- tiquity, might add in thofe hundred Years at the Birth of the Sons of the Patriarchs, from whence the Copies of the Sa- maritan Pentateuch, which are come to our Hands, may after- wards have been corrupted ; for whoever confiders the great Affectation for Antiquity which then prevailed over the lite- rary World, will not perhaps think it extraordinary to have Attempts of this Kind made by Perfons who knew no other Method of defending the Nation of the Jews from being •thought a late upftart Generation. F 2 As 36 1NTRODUCTI ON. As for Jofephus he is fo very incorrect in all his numo- rical Accounts that there is no Manner of Dependence to be had upon his Chronology, iince the Sum total feldom or ever agrees with the Particulars. As for Example, he.. fays pofitively, that from the Creation to the Flood were two thoufand fix hundred fifty-fix Years, and yet the Par- ticulars when fummed up amount only to two thoufand two hundred fifty-fix. He likewife. fays, that the Number of Years from the Flood to the Birth of Abraham were two hundred ninety-two Years, and yet the Particulars when fummed up amount to nine hundred ninety-three. I am very fenfible that Dr. Mills and Mr. Whifion have taken a great deal of Pains to correct Jofephus' s Numbers, but in my O- pinion it is Labour in vain, fince all the Copies extant are hill of thefe Blunders. I. mall however only remark at pre- fent, that the Number of two hundred ninetyrtwo Years,, which Jofephus. fets down as the Sum total of all the Years from the Flood to the Birth of Abraham, and which agrees exactly with the Number affigned in the Hebrew Copy of the Bible, is the fame in all the Editions of Jofephus, though with regard to the Particulars thofe. Editions are far from agreeing. I mult like wife obferve, that if you throw out the hundred Years which are added in Jofephus' § Account, of the Particulars at the Time of the Birtk of each of the. Sons of the Patriarchs, then the Sum total (k) and the Par- ticulars {k) Jofephus fays, that Arphaxad was born 12 Years after the Flood : anJ* Salab when Arphaxad was 135: And Heber when Salah was 130: And. PeUg when Heler was 134 : And.-foa when Peleg was 130 : And Serug vhen Reu was 1 30 : And Nahor when Serug was 1 32 : And Terah when/- Nahor INTRODUCTION. ticulars will exactly agree ; which is no fmall Confirmation of the Truth of the Remark which I made on the Numbers in the Samaritan Copy, viz. that thefe Additions of the hundred Years at the Births of the Sons of the Patriarchs were inferted by fome Tranfcriber, who had a Mind to lengthen out the Chronology of the Mofaical Account, to reconcile it as much as poflible to the Egyptian Dynafties, Mahor was 120 : And Abraham when lerah was 70.=993. But take away the hundred Years from each and then it will be : J2+35-B°-h34+30+3°+32-j-20+70=293, 37 ( 39 ) o.-sf THE CHRONOLOGY OF THE HEBREW BIBLE VINDICATED, afa- ON the feventeenth Day of the feventh Month of the fix hundredth Year of Noah's Age, af- ter he had been five Months in the Ark, the Waters having abated, the Ark refled on the Mountain of Ararat, Gen. vii. 11.— viii. 4. JOSEP HUS fays, that in the Region of Charon (a), in the Kingdom of the Adiabene, fome of the Remains of the Ark was preferved to his Time, and mewed to the Curious. He likewife (b) quotes Berofus for faying, that in his Time there were fome Remains of this Ship on the (a) It was from this Region of Charon that Mofes Charonenfts, the Ar* msnian Writer, was fo called. {b) Jof. Ant. 1. 1. c. 3. Mountain 4 @ 7?.>e Chronology of the Mountain of the Cor dyer am in Armenia (c). He likewife quotes Nicolaus Damafcenus, another Heathen Writer, for ifavine, that there is a great Mountain in Armenia which is called Ban's, on which it was reported, that feveral People, who fled there in the Time of the Flood, were preferved ; and that there was one Perfon brought there in an Ark which remained for a long Time upon the Top of this Mountain, who perhaps, fays he, was the fame Perfon that is fpoken of by Mofes. The Hebrew, Septuagint and Samaritan Copies of the Bible call this Mountain the Mountains of Ararat. The Vulgar Latin and Syriac Verfions fay only, that the -Ark refted on the Mountains of Armenia. The Targum of Onke- los and the Arabick Verfion fay it refted on the Mountains of Car da, which are all only fo many different Names for the fame Mountains ; for Mofes Charonenfis, an Armenian Writer, fays, there is a Province in Armeiiia known by the Name of Ararat to this Day. He pretends to affign a Rea- fon for the Name, but his Story is plainly more modern than the Name. Thefe fame Mountains are likewife called the Cordyaan Mountains, from Corda or Forda, a Town fituated at the Foot of thefe Mountains. In the Time of Nicolaus Damafcenus this Mountain was likewife called the Mountain Baris, or the Mountain of the Ark. The Word Baris being an antient Word that fignified a Boat. Hero- dotus gives a long Defcription of an Egyptian Boat (d) which by them was called Baris. And Diodorus fays, that the (c) Vide Gen. vi. 3. by fome interpreted to relate to the Time taken up by Noah in building the Ark. {d) Herod. Euter. Boat Hebrew Bible vindicated. 4 1 Boat made ufe of by Charon to ferry the dead Bodies over the Lake (e) Acherufia, between Memphis and the Burying- place of the Egyptians, was called Bar is. And Stephens in his Thefaurus fays, that in the Language of Palejiine any Bililding that is fhut up on every Side is called Baris. On the twenty-feventh Day of the fecond Month of the Anno poll fix hundred and firft Year of Noah's Age, the Earth being dried, Gen. viii. 13, 14, 18. Noah and his Wife, and his three Sons, Japhet his eldeft Son, Gen.x. 21. Sem his fe- cond Son, and Hani or Cham his youngeft Son, Gen. ix. 24, 25. together with their three Wives, came out of the Ark, after they had been in it a Year and ten Days, Gen. viii. 13., 14, 18. and feven Months and ten Days after the Ark had firfl refted on Mount Ararat. Which Time feems to have been neceflary for the fettling of the Earth, and the growing of Grafs for the Ufe of thofe Animals which were to be turned out of the Ark. BERO SUS, as Jofephus obferves, agrees with Mofes in acknowledging the Deftruction of Mankind by a Flood in the fix hundredth Year of Noah's Age, and that Noah and his Family were preferved by an Ark of Wood, fome Part of which Ship was remaining in Armenia to his Time ; and that People carried off Pieces of the Bitumen which they made ufe of chiefly as Amulets. He likewife fays, that Noah was accompanied by his Wife and his three Sons, and their three Wives, whofe Names were Pandora, Noema, and Noeg/a, (fj which it is manifefl was a Grecian Addition to (e) Diod. 1. 1. c. 6. (/) Noemab in Hebrew fignifies (be Fair, be- ing derived from D^O Mem, Pulchritudo. G the a 2 The Chronology of the A. P. D. the Hiftory of Mofes, as appears from the Word Pandora 1 • He likewife fays, that Noah was alfo known by the Name of Chaos, Janus, Ogyges, Olybama & Arfa, that is, the Heavens arid the Sun : And that he was the Father of all the greater and letter Gods. He likewife fays, that Noah's Wife's Name was Titaa, and that me was alfo called Aretia, that is the Earth, which Name is plainly derived from the Hebrew Word ptf Aretz, which figni'fies the Earth. And the Name of Titaa feems to be of the fame Signification with Aretia, and together with that of Titans, which Name, according to Berofus, was given to all the Sons in general that were born to Noah after the Flood, to be derived from the Hebrew &® Tit, which fignifies jMW, or Earth. The Reafon of which Names being given to Noah and his Wife is not difficult to be accounted for, when we con- fider, that Noah was called by different Names (after the Confufion of Languages) in the feveral Countries to which his Progeny were difperfed ; and that he might have a Va- riety of Names given him on account of fome remarkable Part of the Hiftory that was related of him. Thus he was called Janus by. the Syrians, becaufe he planted a Vineyard and made Wine, Gen. ix. 20. the Word Janus, according to Berofus, fignifying among the Aramaans, or Syrians, a Planter or Maker of Wine. And in Hebrew it is certain, that the Word PJ Jain fignifies Wine. He was called Ogyges in latter Ages, but long before the Time of Berofu*, by the Miftake of thofe who did not diftinguifli between that univerfal Flood which was in the Days of Noah, and that partial one which was in Bceotia at the Time when Ogyges was King thereof. Which Flood of Noah, though not known to the Generality of the Greeks, was however acknow- Hebrew Bible vindicated. acknowledged by fome of the Learned ; for Plato, in his 77- A maus, introduces an Egyptian Priefl telling Solon, that before the particular Floods, which were known to the Greeks there was antiently one much greater, which deftroyed the whole Earth. Noah was alfo called Olybama and Arfa, or Uranus, Ccelum, Sol, which is the fame Thing, only in fo many different Languages, that is the Heaven and the Sun . and his Wife was called Titcea and Aretia, that is the Earth, from their prolifick Qualities j the Antients, according to their mythologick Genius, fuppofing all Things to have pro- ceeded from the Influence of the Heavens and the Sun upon the Earth. He was called alfo Chaos for the fame Reafon* by thofe who fuppofed all Things to proceed from a Chaos, That the Antients had a Deity whom they worfhipped under this Name is certain from Virgil, who fpeaking of Dido fays: Ter centum tonat ore Deos, Erebumque Chaofque. JEn. 4 , And again, Dii quibus imperium eft Animarum umbraque Jilentes Et Chaos & Phlegethon. JEn. 6. But it is not eafy to conceive, under what Form this Deity Was worfhipped ; for though Ovid (g), in his Met amor phofts, fpeaks of Chaos as a rude and undigefted Heap, yet in his Fafti, he fpeaks of him as a Perfon : Me Chaos Antiqui (namjum res prifca) vocabant. Tunc Ego qui fueram Globus, & fine imagine Moles, Infaciem re dii membraque digna Deo. Ovid. Faft. 1. i; (g) Rudis indigeftaque Moles, Ovid. Met. I 1. G 2 Nor 44 The C h ronology of the A. P. D. Nor do I know what Idea to form of Sanchoniatho's turbu± 1 • lent Evening Chaos, which he fuppofes to be boundlefs. Nei- ther do I know what to make of Ariftophanes's, Chaos, tho* he allows it to have Wings (h). It is likewife difficult to account for the Name, why this Deity mould be called Chaos. The Greek Lexicons derive this Word from x*miv> hiare, to gape or yawn, which Derivation feems to me very forced and unnatural. With the PermifTion therefore of the Learned, if they will indulge me in a Conjecture, and in thefe Affairs little more than Conjectures are to be had, I will attempt to account for it The Heathetis it is manifeft had their God Chaos, which Deity was probably worfhipped by the Greeks and Romans under an human Form ; for they never worfhipped any Thing elfe. If therefore any particular Perfon was meant by this God Chaos, one would, according to Berofus, be apt to think it muft be Noah. But then why mould he be cal- led Chaos ? As I fee no Reafon for this, I am rather inclined to think, that the Name of this God Chaos was borrowed from Xvoc^ Cnaos, the Grecian Name of Canaan the Grand- fon of Noah ; for originally Canaan was pronounced Cnaan and Philo-Byblius in Eufebius calls Canaan by the Name of Xva, and the Canaanites are by Stephanus Byzantinus called Xvdoi ; well therefore might Canaan be called Xvcc<&>, or the Canaanite,by way of Eminence and Diftinction. And as it was this Xva@o or Canaan who firft took PorTerTion of and plant- ed Phoenicia, and was the original Parent of all the Inhabi- tants thereof, he was in Length of Time efteemed by- the Phoenicians, not only as the firft Parent of the Human Race, but (b) X«f» 7r7*£o'fi/7«, Atift. Ornith, Hebrew Bible vindicated 45 But alfo as the Father of all the Gods ; and as it was from A' p* n- Phoenicia that the firft Heathen Deities were introduced into Ov^> Greece, hence came this Doctrine to be fpread alfo into Greece -, for Sanckcniatho, in his Phoenician Hiftory, informs us, that Sedec the Brother of Mefir was Father of the Ca- bin, who firft invented the Building of a TlXoiov, or com- pleat Ship -, which Sedec is manifeftly Canaan the Brother of Mejlr (or Mizraim) according to Mofes j and Herodotup informs us (/), that thefe Cabiri were the firft Heathen Deities that were introduced by Name into Greece j for he fays, that before the Pelafgians, (or Phoenicians,) came into* Greece, the Grecians facrificed and prayed to the Gods in ge- neral, without attributing either Name or Sirname to any Deity : But, that the Pelafgians introduced the Worfhip of the Cabirian Deities into Greece, firft at Samcfhracia and afterwards in Attica. Well therefore might the Grecians' make ufe of the Word Xv«©>, or for Softnefs of Pronun- ciation XaU, which was the Name of the Father of all their Gods, to denote the firft Author of Gods and Men. When Noah and his Wife and his three Sons, Japhet, Sent, Ham, and- their Wives, came out of the Ark, Noah was fix hundred Years of Age, and his three Sons were at leaft one hundred each; for they were all three born when Noah was five hundred Years old, Gen, v. 32. Tn the Books of Mofes, the Chronology of the Sons of Noah is only preferved in the Lineage of Sem, becaufe it was from this Branch that the promifed Seed of the Wo- man afterwards come which was to bruife the Serpent's Head, as declared, Gen. iii. 15. We may, however, fup- pofe, (i) Herod, lib. 2. 4.6 The Chronology of the A. P. D. pole that his other two Brothers lived much about the fame , Leneth of Time with Sem, that their Children and Grand- children were born much about the fame Diftances of Time with his Children and Grand-children, and that they lived proportionably as long. 3' And as we find, that Arphaxad the third Son of Sem, Gen. x. 22 , was born two Years after the Flood, Gen. xi. 10 ; we may fuppofe, that Gomer, the eldeft Son of Ja- phet ; and Cufj, the eldeft Son of Ham, were born at leaft a Year or two before this Time. 38. ARPHAXAD, when he had lived thirty-five Years, Gen. xi. 12, begat Selah, and we may fuppofe, that about or rather before this Time, Afikefiaz the Son of Gomer, and Seba the Son of Cufi, were born alfo, Gen. x. 3, 7. 68. SELAH having lived thirty Years begat Heber, Gen. xi. 14. NOAH, having planted a Vineyard and drank of the Wine thereof, was drunken, and was uncovered in his Tent, and Ham faw the Nakednefs of his Father, and told his two Brethren without : And Sem and Japhet took a Gar- ment and laid it upon their Shoulders, and went backwards, and faw not their Father's Nakednefs. And Noah awoke from his Wine, and knew what his youngeft Son had done unto him, Gen. ix. 20, &c. Thus far Mofes : But Berofus fays, that Cham having a Hatred to his Father took this Opportunity, of his Father Noah's Drunkennefs, to render him unfruitful by the Practice of fome magical Arts. The Iliftory of Mofes gives fome Reafon to believe, that Ham did Hebrew Bible vindicated. 47 did fomething more than barely fee his Father's Nakednefs ; A- p- D. for it is obferved, that when Noah awoke from his Wine, t J^^ he knew what his younger Son had done unto him. Pof- fibly, being a fhamelefs Man, he might himfelf have un- covered his Father's Nakednefs ; for Berofus obferves, that from his Impudence and Immodefty he was called Cham- Effenuus, EJfenua fignifying an immodeft and infamous Per- fon. But whatever it was that he did to his Father, it is manifeft, that this Circumftance of Ham's Behaviour to Noah has given Origin to the famous Story among the Mytholo- gies, of Saturn's having caftrated his Father Uranus -, as it is mentioned in Sanchoniatho and Hejiod, and all the fubfe- quent Writers. Berofus mentions, that one of the Names by which Noah was characterifed, was that of Uranus, or Caelum ; and he likewife declares, that Cham was called Sa- turnus, or Chronus. And what is very remarkable is, that Hefiod makes Saturnus the youngefl Son of Uranus, as Ham, according to Mofes, was the youngefl Son of Noah, Gen. ix. 24, 25. And fays alfo, as Berofus does, that he had a Hatred to his Father: For thus fpeaking of the Chil- dren of Uranus and Ge, he fays : T%$ es jus6' o7t\cto&Jo$ yevfjo Xoovoq dyK.vXo^']^ AetvoTctjog 7ruiauv. QocXepov 3 * The Chronology of the A. P. D. afraid of being dethroned by hi3 Children, from a propheti- 68 • cal Declaration of his Father Uranus: For thus Hefiod {ym^rsu fpeaking of Saturn fays : IlivQejo yoco Toclr,q re xcct 'Ov^ocvov a^oei//©- "OVVSKCC Ot 7re7TDu]o ltd V7T0 TTCllOl OOC^VCtl. Hefiod. Theog. v. 463, Audiverat enim ex 'terra & Ccelo ftellis mi cant e Quid Jibi fat ale ejfet a propria Jilio domari. Where the only Difference is, that the Mythologift has miftaken the Children of Saturn or Ham for his Brethren. The Words of the Curfe are, Curfed be Ham the Father of Canaan ; a Servant of Servants Jhall he be unto his Brethren, And Noah likewife faid, Blejfed be the Lord God of Sem, and Ham the Father of Canaan Jhall be his Servant. God fl: all enlarge Japhet, and he JJjall dwell in the Tents of Sem, and Ham the Father of Canaan fiall be his Servant '; Gen. ix. 26, 27. In the Original it is, Curfed be Canaan, but it is impomble, that thefe could have been the Words ipoken by Noah, becaufe it was not Canaan but Ham that was the Offender, even fuppofing Canaan to have been in Compa- ny, Gen. ix. 22, 24. And it is very remarkable, that in the preceeding Verfes, when the three Sons of Noah are fpoken of by Name, Sem and Japhet are fpoken of without any Addition, but Ham is twice diftinguifhed by the addi- tional Character of being the Father of Canaan, Gen. ix. 18, 22. Mofes might therefore purpofely omit, at the Time he wrote his Hiftory, the Name of Ham in this latter Part of the Story to mark to the Ifraelites the Sons of Sem, who were going to take PoffefTion of the Lands of Canaan, that Canaan was included in the Curfe given to his Father Ham. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 49 Jlanu But certain it is, that Ham could not have been A- P« &. omitted in the Curfe as pronounced by Noah, and therefore I have ventured to fuppofe the Curfe given at lead according to the Form of ExprefTion twice ufed before of Ham, though I am not fupported herein by any Edition of the Bible, except it be that of the Arabick Verfion. To which may further be added, that this Curfe was literally fulfilled in Ham as well as in Canaan, fince it is manifeft that E- gypt, or the Land of Ham, was made tributary to the Off- spring of Sem in the Perfon of Cambyfes and his Succeflbrs, and that afterwards the Tents of Sem were occupied by the Greeks and Romans, who being of the Pofterity of Japhet took Ponemon of the fame Country ; which Prophecy the Mythologifts interpreting of the immediate Defcendents of Saturn, or Ham, inftead of the Defcendents of "his two Brethren have thence formed the above-mentioned Fable ; for I apprehend it is not to be doubted, but that this my- thological Story of Saturn and his Father Uranus was bor- rowed from the Incident of the Behaviour of Ham towards his Father Noah, as mentioned in the Book of Mrfes. I have placed this Tranfaction of Noah and Ham be- tween the Birth of Heber and Peleg, becaufe I fuppofe Noah to have parted from his three Sons Japhet, Sem and Ham, foon after the Birth of Peleg ; and poflibly this Tranfaclion may have helped it forward. I t is not eafy however to aflign a Reafon why Ham *fhould have the Name of Saturnus, or Chronus, or which is the fame Thing, Time given to him, unlefs it were, that the firft Writers, for the firft hiftorical Writers among the Heathen were Poets, thought this a fit Name to be given to H the 50 T/je Chronology of the A'aq D ^ie ^l^ Founders °f States, in general, whofe true Names being forgotten, or loft in a Number of Names, the My- thologies made ufe of this as very proper to denote their Antiquity ; and from the fame Kind of Reafoning made Time the Offspring of Heaven and Earth. Hence, alio, it came to, paf;, that there were many Chromis'' s, or Saturns, almoft in every Kingdom one ; for Berofus takes Notice, that Nim- rod was called the Chromis of the Affyrians, as Ham was of the. Egyptians. Sanchoniatho gives us the Hiftory of Chro- mis the elder, and Chromis the younger, both in Phoenicia y and that there was a Chromis, or Saturn, belonging to the Jiland of Crete, both Apollodorus and Diodorus fufficiently teftify. Hence, alfo, it comes to pafs from this Samenefs of Name, that feveral Actions of thefe feveral Chronus's are often confounded, and collected together as the Tranfactions of one Man. Diodorus (m) takes Notice of three feveral Hercules' 's, and three Dionyfius's, whofe Actions are all con- founded in Hiftory, and the Actions of the former ftill added to thofe of the latter. And as the giving of one Name to different Perfons has occafioned great Confulion in the. mythological Hiftory of the Antients, fo likewife have the different Names, which were given to the fame Perfon, con- tributed to encreafe the Confufion. Thus we mail find Ham, or Hammon, according to Berofus, dethroning Sa- turnus; and Saturnus again dethroning Hammon, or Ham . becaufe the traditionary Authors, in the fubfequent Ages, not knowing or confidering that the Egyptian Saturnus,. Hammon and Ham were the fame Perfon, under different Names, were not able otherwife to reconcile the Accounts •they had received of thefe Perfons reigning in Egypt about ■(m) .Diod.lib. 3.x. 5. 1. 5. c. 2. the Hebrew B i b l e vindicated. 15 1 the lame Time, without making; them dethrone eacKi^'^D other. 68. HEBERj when he had lived thirty-four Years, begat 102. Peleg, in whofe Days the Earth was divided, Gen. xi. 16, x. 25. xChrcn. i. 9; the Word Peleg fignifying Difpe?-- Jion. At what Time, in the Days of Peleg, this Diiper- fion happened, is- not mentioned by Mofes; but let it hap- pen when it would, this Name might have been prophetic cally given him foon after his Birth, as Noah's was, and Jacob's, Gen. v. 29. xxvii. 36; though the Difperfion might not happen till feveral Years afterwards. However, as the Family of Noah was now increafed by five Generations of Defcent, I apprehend it was found neceffary to difperfe im- mediately after the Birth of Peleg , for if we confider the Number of Children born to Noah in the hundred and lecond Year after the Flood, we mail find them, by a mo* derate Computation, to amount to nineteen thoufand five hundred ninety-four Souls. For if we fuppofe Noah's Wife not to be paft Child-bearing, which it is probable me was not, finee Noahy who was probably the elder of the two^ lived three hundred and fifty Years afterwards- j and there- fore I do not fuppofe they left off having Children till about two hundred or two hundred and fifty Years before their Death j fince Women, at prefent, the Length of whofe Lives may be computed at threefcore and ten (n)y frequently bear Children after they are fifty Years of Age, and feven hundred bears near the fame Proportion to nine hundred and fifty as fifty does to feventy ; then * by this Method of Computation («) Pfalm xc. 10. * 50 : 70 : : 700 : 980. H 2 there 5 2 The Chronology of the A. P. D. there will be four breeding Women to repeople the World : And if we fuppofe each Woman to have a Child but once in twelve Months, at the End of thirty Years after the Flood, the Number of Noalfs Family will be one hundred twenty-eight ; and as we fuppofe thofe Children which were born the firft Year after the Flood, being now thirty Years old, to be marriageable, this will give us an annual Increafe of two breeding Women every Year, till the fixtieth Year after the Flood. And by following this Method of Com- putation, as we fuppofe there were fix breeding Women in the thirtieth Year, we fhall find, that in the fortieth Year after the Flood, the Number of breeding Women will be twenty-iix, and the Number of Souls, Males and Females Parents and Children, will be two hundred feventy-eight. In the fiftieth Year the Number of breeding Women will be forty-fix, and the Number of Souls fix hundred twenty- eight. In the fixtieth Year the Number of breeding Wo- men will be fixty-fix, and the Number of Souls one thou- fand one hundred feventy-eight. But now there will be an additional Number of Breeders, according to the Number of Children born in the thirtieth preceeding Year, they be- ing now thirty Years old, Half of whom we may fuppofe to be Females ; and by following the fame Method of Computa- tion, in the feventieth Year the Number of married Wo- men will be one hundred fifty- two, and the Number of People two thoufand one hundred forty- eighty in the eigh- tieth Year the Number of married Women will be three hundred thirty-feven, and the Number of Souls three thou- sand eight hundred and twelve ; in the ninetieth Year the Number of married Women will be fix hundred twenty- two, and the Number of Souls eight thoufand nine hundred eighty-eight s in the hundredth Year the Number of mar- ried Hebrew Bible vindicated* 5 3 ried Women will be one thoufand one hundred forty-nine, A- p- L\ and the Number of Souls feventeen thoufand two hundred . thirteen ; and in the hundred and fecond Year, v/hcn Pe- leg was born, the Number of married Women will be one thoufand three hundred twenty-two, and the Number of Souls nineteen thoufand five hundred ninety-four ; which is too great a Number of People to fubfift poffibly together, with any tolerable Conveniency in thofe early Ages of the World, when we confider, that their Flocks and their Herds increas- ed, at leaft, proportionably with themfelves, and would re- quire a large Space of Ground for their Support. Thus we find, that Abram and Lot, though their Families, when they returned out of Egypt, were much lefs numerous than that of Noah, yet, were obliged to feparate, in a Land flowing with Milk and Honey, for Want of fufficient Room, on Account of a Strife between the Herdmen of Abram'j Cattle, and the Herdmen of Lot'* Cattle, for the Land was not able to bear them, that they might dwell toge- ther ; for their Subjlance was great fo that they could ?iot dwell together, Gen. xiii. 6, 7, The fame is alfo obferved of Efau and Jacob, that after the Death of their Father Ifaac, Efau took his Wives and his Sons and his Daughters, and all the Perfons of his Houje, and his Cattle and all his Be aft s, and all his Subjlance which he had gotten (by his Fa- ther's Death) in the Land cf Canaan : and went into the Country from the Face of his Brother Jacob. For their Riches were more than that they might dwell together -, and the Land, wherein they were Strangers, could not bear them, becaufe of their Cattle, I suppose therefore, that Noah keeping along with himfelf thofe Sons and Grandfons, &c, who were born to him 5 4- The ^u RONOLOGY of th$ A. P. D. him . lince the Flood, amounting; to about tour thoufand eight hundred ninety-eight Souls, ftaid behind in the Eafl, and lent his three elder Sons, Japhet, Scm, Ham, with their Progeny, to feek Habitations for themfelves Weftward. And in Confirmation of this Opinion Tavemier, (o) in his Per pan Travels, fays, that Noah, according to the Tradi- tion of the Armenians, when he came out of the Ark, abode in that Country, and built the City of Nakfivan, about three Leagues from the Mountain upon which the Ark refted, from whence alfo it takes its Name ; for Nak, in the Arme- nian Tongue, fignines a Ship, and Sivan, re/ling, or repo- fing. And Mofes Charonenfs, the Armenian Hiftorian, fays, that the Name of the Place where Noah refted, after the De- fcent from the Ark, is called, in that Country Language> Nachidjhevan, o: the Place of Defcent ; and that there was another Town, in that Country, which was reported, by Tradition, to be called Seron, or the Place of Difperfion. Which Difperfion I take to be that which happened atthe Birth of Peleg, for We hear no more of Noab in the Hiftory of Mcfes after the undutiful Behaviour of his Son Ham, but that he lived after the Flood three hundred and fifty Years, Gen. ix. 28 -, for as the chief Intent in this Part of the , Writings of Mofes was to give an Hiftory of that Branch of the Defcendents of Ada?n, from which that Seed of the Wo* man was to be produced, who was to brnife the Serpefifs Head j he therefore takes no further Notice of Noah, but continues the Account of Japhet, Sem and Ham, till their Difperfion again from Babel, and then he drops the Hiftory . (£ or Afyto, sand Pathros, and Gz/ZW, out of wjhom came P?/ Num. xiii. 22 : For though it was called after his Great Grandfon Arba, Ham might have been the Occafion of its being built in his PafTage towards Egypt. It is faid by fome (/), that Adam was buried there -, but the traditio- nary Reports of the Jews, 'Turks and Arabians, concerning the antient Patriarchs, who lived as well after the Flood as before it, are fo numerous- and fo abfurd, that in my Opi- nion they have done great Hurt to Religion ; and where they are not fupported by the Hiftory of the Old Tejlament, I think it much more prudent not to take any Notice of them, than to do them the Honour of being mention- ed. The Authors of the Univerfdl Hifiory fuppofe thofe Ana- kirns, who were expell'd by Caleb from Hebron, as mention'd Jofi. xiv. 145 xv. 13, 14. to be defcended from Anah, one of the Defcendents of Seir, in the Land of Edom, who is (/) Vide Hieron. in Epitaph. Paula?, & in Qu. Heb- in Genef. & in locis Hebr. in Arbog. & Comment, in Matth. xxvii faid 64 The Chronology of the v l>- D. faid to have found Mules in the Wildernefs, Gen. xxxvi. £_?[. 24. And as tliis Anah was contemporary with the Sons of Efatt, they tlierefore fuppofe the Place where thefe Ana- us lived, at the Time of Caleb, to have been originally called Hebron, and afterwards to have had the Name of Kirjath-Arba given it from Arba the Father of this A- nah. (11) But it Ls manifeft, that this Suppofition cannot be true j becaufe that this Anah was the Son of Gibeon the Son of Seir, and not the Son of Arba, Gen. xxxvi. 20, 24: And that he did not live in Canaan, where Hebron was iituated, but in Mount Seir in the Land of Edom border- ing on the Wildernefs of Kadejlj, which Land Mofes, or Joflma, did not attempt to conquer, but were commanded not to meddle with it, no not fo much as with a Foot- breadth, Dent. ii. 4, 5 ; which Seir is therefore exprefly called an Horite, and not a Canaanite, Gen. xxxvi. 20, 21, 29. Thefe Authors indeed fay, that thefe Anahms conquered by Joffma and Caleb in Hebron, 'were cf an Origin diJlinB from the Canaanites, as is thought ; but the Scriptures are very pofitive to the contrary, for the Author (if the Book of Judges exprefly calls them Canaanites ; and as exprefly fays, that the original Name of this Place was Kirjath-Arba, and had the Name of Hebron, or Chebron^ given to it afterwards, Judg. i. 9, 10. Jojl?. xiv. 15. When Ham left Arba he moved flill farther South- ward, and fixed Iva his Grandfon by Ca?iaan, and his Po- sterity the Hivites, Avites, or Avims, by which Names they are indifferently called, in the moft Southern Part of (u) Univerfal Hift. Vol. I. p. 333. all Hebrew Bible vindicated. 65 all the Land of Canaan , from Gaza or Azzah to the Bor- A- P- !>• ders of Egypt, Deut. ii. 23. Thefe People lived in Haze- [3 r/w, that is, in Tents or Huts placed in a Tenure or cir- cular Form, fo as to leave an Area in the Middle, for fo the Word Hazerim properly iignifies, Lev. xxv. 3 1 . Jojh. xxi. 12. Where it was that Canaan fixed his own Habitation is not fo certain, for the Land of Canaan is defcribed to have reached from "Jordan Eaftward to the great Sea (the Me- diterranean) Weft ward j and from the Wildernefs of Sin'm the South to the entring in of Hamath in the North, Num. xxxiv. 1.— 12. or from Sidon to Gaza, Gen. x. 19 With which Berofu s agrees and fays, that Canaan fixed his Habitation from Damafcus to the Extremities of Palejline; which whole Tract of Land is frequently included un- der the Denomination of the Land of Canaan, Gen. xvii. 8. Lev. xxv. 38. Deut. xxxii. 49, &c. and was actually peopled by Canaan and his Children, and therefore all the Inhabi- tants of this Land, whether Amorites, or Hivites, or Hit- tites, or Jebufiies, Sec. are all in general included under the Appellation of Canaanites, Gen. xxiv. 3. Num. xxi. 3. Nehem. ix. 24 : And yet it is likewife manifeft, that there was a particular Part of this Land which was in a more extra- ordinary manner called the Land of Canaan, in Diftin- ction from the Reft of the Land of Canaan j the Inhabitants whereof were alfo particularly called Canaanites, and are frequently mentioned under that Denomination, as a fepa- rate and diftinct People from the Fveft of the Inhabitants of the Land, from the Hittite, and Amorite, and Perizzite, and Hivite, and Jebujite, as in Exod. iii. 8. and in numberlefs other Places. It feems, therefore, more than probable, that thefe Canaanites were fo call'd, as being Inhabitants of K that 66 lloe Chronology of the A. P. D. that Part of the Land of Canaan, where Canaan himfelf , J 3 T • fettled ; and were for this Reafon particularly diftin- guifhed by this Title. Now, in order to find out where this particular Part of the Lai. d of Canaan lay , we may ob- ferve, that when Abraham came afterwards into the Land of Canaan he is not mentioned to have refted any where, till he came to the Place of Sichem, unto the Plain of Morch -y and that Mofes there makes a particular Remark, that the Canaanite was then in the Land, Gen. xii. 6 ; that is, that the Inhabitants of this Part of the Land were par- ticularly fpecified by the Name of Canaanites. Afterwards Abraham removed from thence to a Mountain on the Eaft of Bethel, and pitched his Tent, having Bethel on the Weft and Hal on the Eaft j and when he came back to to this Place, upon his Return out of Egypt, it is obferved, that the Canaanite and Perizzite were then In the Land, Gen. xiii. i. — 7. that is, that the Inhabitants of this Part of the Land were partly Canaanites, and partly Perrlzltesy whence it may reafonably be concluded, that the Borders between the Canaanite and Perrlzlte were fomewhere hereabouts between Bethel and Hai ; but that Sichem was at that Time inhabited by none but Canaanites, though the Perrlzltes afterwards incroached upon them, and advanced their Borders even unto Sichem, Gen. xxxiv. 30. It is fur- ther to be obferved, that when Jojhiia came into the Land of Canaan to conquer it, and had taken Jericho, and burnt Hal, and had refcued Gibeon -3 then Jabin King of Ha- zor fent to Jobab King of Madon, and to the King of Simron, and to the King of Achfhaph, and to the Kings that were on the North of the Mountains, and of the Plains South of Chin?iereth) and in the Valley, and on the Borders Hebrew Bible vindicated. 67 Borders of Dor on the Weft, and to the Canaanites on the A- p- D» TOT Eaft and on the Weft , and to the Amcrite [x) and the .A. Hit tit e, and the Perizzite, and the Jebufite in the Moun- tains, and to the Hivite under Herman in the Land of Mizpeh. And they went out, &cc. Jo/h.x'i. 1. — 4, Now it is manifeft, that all thefe Kings and their feveral Nations were all Inhabitants of the Land of Canaan ; and yet here is the Canaanite fpoken of as a particular People, of which this Jabin who lived at Hazor was probably the King j for in the Time of Deborah, Jabin the then King of Hazor is called King of Canaan, Jud. iv. 24. who, as the moft potent of all the Princes here mentioned, or, as Jojhua exprefTes it, as Head of all thefe Kingdoms, Jojh. xi. 10. fummoned his neighbouring Kings all around to his Aid and Affiftance ; and from the Situation and Difpo/I- tion of thefe Allies and Confederates it appears, that Ca- naan, ftrictly fo called, was that Part of the Land of Ca- ?iaan, the northern Border of which patted from Si don by the entring in of Hamath to the River of Jordan. Its Eaftern Boundary feems to have the River Jordan with the Lakes Semechon and Gennefareth : Its Southern Borders were the Mountains South of Chinnereth or Gennefareth inhabited by the Hittite, Perizzite, and Jebufite ; and its Weftern Border was the Mediterranean Sea from Dor to Si don. The Canaanites are therefore faid to dwell by the Sea, Num. xiii. 29. Jojh. v. 1. and to dwell on the Eaft and on the Weft, Jojh. xi. 3. that is, ip. the Vallies on the Eaft and (x) See Num. xiii. 29. the Canaanites by the Sea. Q May not that mean the Sea of Tiberias ? K 2 Oil 68 The Chronology of the A. P. D. on the Weft, I Chron. xii. 15, or in the Vallics from the 1 3_j i Sea of Tiberias, or Gennefarcth on the Eaft, to the Medi- terranean Sea on the Weft ; which Portion of Land was af- terwards diftributed among the Tribes of Ephraim, Zebu- Ion, AJkur, Naphthali-, and the half Tribe of Manafjeh ; who were neverthelefs not able to drive the Canaanites [x) out of Bethfean (y), nor Ibleam, nor Dor, nor Endcr (z), nor Taanach (a), nor Megiddo, nor Gezer, nor Kitrori, nor Nahalol, nor Accho (b), nor Si don, nor Ahlab, nor Achzib (c), nor Helbah, nor Apheck (d), nor Rehob (e), nor Bethjhemefo {/), nor Bethanah : All which Towns lay with- in the Precincts of that Part of the Country which has iince been knpwn by the Names of Phoenicia, or Syro-Phce- nicia, that is, Phoenicia in *SyWtf. And accordingly we find the Syro- Phoenician Woman who came to our Saviour to defire him to heal her Daughter, Mark vii. 26. when he was in the Coafls of lyre and Sidon, called by St. Matthew, a Woman of Canaan, Mat. xv. 22. and Simon Zelotes, who was probably born and. bred at Nazareth in Galilee, Mat. (x) Jofh. xvii. 11. Jud. i. 27, 33. (y) Or Scytbopolis, which was probably the moft Southern Boundary of the Canaanites on the River Jordan as it was afterwards of Galilee. (z) Endor was at the Foot of Mount Hermon, on the Borders of, the Valley of Jezreel, now Efdraelon. [a) Taanach and Megiddo were near the River liijbon, at the Foot of. Mount Carmel, Jud. v. 19, 21. (b) Now Ptolemais. (c) Now Zib. (d) Apheck was in the Valley of Jjzreel, 1 Sam. xxix. 1. (e ) Rchob lay in the Road to Hamath in going from the South. (f) BetbJbemeJJj, probably Balbeck, in the Valley between Libanus and /fntilibanus, in the Limits afligned to the Tribe of Napbthali, Jofh. xix' 38, 39 was Heerew Bible vi?idicated. 69 xiii.54.--57. Markvi. 1.--5. is called, byway of Di- A« p- D- (Unction, Simon the Canaanite, Mat. x. 4. Mark iii. 18 '• ^^-^j So that Canaan at his firft Entrance into this Land probably fettlecL fomewhere about Hazcr in the North, and then by Degrees moved Southward as far as the Plain of Moreh, in the Country of Sichem, not far from whence he probably finished his Days, at Salem a City of Sichem^ Gen. xiv. 18. xxxiii. 18. BEROSUS fays, that in the fifteenth Year of Nim- ^5, rod, Oceanus with his Wife Thetis went into Egypt and fettled upon the Sea Coafts near the Nile, and that the Sea was called Oceanus after him. Now in order to find out who it was, and what it was that gave Foundation for this Tradition, I muft beg Leave to be indulged in a Con- jecture,, which I am encouraged to make from the Name of Peles, and the Situation of Pelufium. It is certain, that in the fifteenth Year of Nimrod, Peles the Father of the Phi- liftim, or, as he is called mPlutarch (/), Pelujius and Paleflinus, might have been about fixty or feventy Years of Age j and as certain it is, that Peldujium was fituated upon the Sea Coaft, where the raoft Eaffcern Branch of the Nile empties itfelf into the Sea ; from whence that Branch has been always called the Pelufiack Branch, and that Part of the Sea over-againfl it, has been always known by theName of the Pelufiack Mouth of the Nile ; but the Difficulty is, how to account for the Sea's being called Oceanus from thence. To which the Anfwer is, that this is a Miftake, and that the Sea was from hence called Pelagus, and not Oceanus ; but that in ii) Plut.de Hid. & ©fir. Length yc The Chronology of the A. P. D. Length of Time the Names were changed the one for the ^S* other, when the Origin of the Word was forgotten. It is known to be a common Practice with the Greeks, when one Hebrew Word can be render'd by two Greek Words, to ufe either of the Greek Words indifferently, though it fre- quently makes a great Alteration with regard to the Senfe ; of which many Inftances may be given both in the Old and New Teft anient. The Radical Word vihb, from whence Peles and Pelufium are derived, is in the Lexicons ren- dered by Vofoere, Volutare fe, to roll; and therefore, was a very proper Origin for the Greeks to borrow their Greek Word llixaycg from. And what further perfwades me, befides this traditional Hiftory of the Sea being named after one of the Sons of Noah, to think that the Greek Word YliXotyoi; is derived from Peles is, that the Greeks do not know from whence it is derived : The Etymologiils fay, YlzXctya; quaji TrjXctyog, lltpote TyXs Tys yys j but I am fure this is a far fetched Derivation. And as the Words UeXotyog and\Qfceavo£ were indifferently ufed by thtGreeks to fignify the Sea (/) 3 hence probably came this Piece of traditionary Hi- ftory of the Settlement of one of the Sons of Noah at the Mouth of the Nile to be told of Oceanus, inflead of Pe- lagns. (i) Arijiotle in his Treatife De Mundo fays, WiXxyor i\ to ph 't%u rnt 'OixHjuivr? *AtXxv\ixq\ xxXeTrcu Y.xi 'flxtavo?, Trspippttv ri^xq. And I can- not but obfervc, that this Exprefiion of Ariftotle's, W'ihxyvt; to zrtgippiov «ju£& items to confirm the Derivation above given of IlsXxyos from t^SD Patejh, Folvtre, volutare ft. HAM Hebrew Bible vindicated. 7 1 A. P. D. HAM having fettled his Grandfon C&fkal with his Great ^j"^ Grandfons Peles and Capthor, at the Entrance into Egypt, he then fixed his Son 1VD, Metfir, a little higher up, where he built Zcan, which fignifies Removal, about feven Years after the Building of Kirjiath-Arba, or Hebron, in Ca- naan, Gen.xxiii. 2. Num. xiii. 22. Join. xiv. 15, which City was alfo in after Ages called Tanis ; for the Greeks, whenever they pronounced a Word which began with the Hebrew Tfadi, pronounced it as a T, but the Phoenicians as an S, and hence the Town of Tfor came to be called by the Greeks Tyre, but by the Phoenicians Sor, as it is called to this Day. In like manner the Hebrew *¥& Metfir, is by Sajichoniatho, a Phoenician Writer, rendered Mtcup,. or Mi/or. So alfo Zoan or Tfoan came to be called by the Greeks Toan or Taan, and with a Greek Termination Ta- ?jis : But by the Phoenicians Soan, or Saan, as it is written in the Samaritan Pentateuch, Num. xiii. 22. Some Time after the Babylonijh Captivity, this Place obtained the Name of Heliopolis, or the City of the Sun, from its known Regard to the Worfhip of the Sun. That it obtained this Name about that Time is plain from hence ; becaufe the Prophet Ezekiel, who wrote during the Captivity, calls it by the Name of Zoan, and yet Herodotus } who wrote about one hundred, or one hundred and twenty Years afterwards calls it Heliopolis. Now it is obfervable, that both Diodo- rus and Herodotus fay, that Pfammitichus, who was the Predcceflbr (k) of Pharaoh-Necho who was conquered by Nebuchadnezzar , was the firfl of the Egyptian Princes that {k) Jer. xlvi, 2, 2 Chron. xxxvi. 11 — 21. 2 Kings xxiv. ;►- gave 7 2 7>5£ Chronology of the A. P. D. gave Encouragement to the Grecians to fettle in Egypt ^jjx^ And it is not likely, that the Egyptians would call their Cities by Grecian Names till fome Time after the Gre- cians were permitted to fettle there. It is not certain when it was that the Name of Metjir was changed into Pharaoh •, which is a Word of the fame Import, though -of different Sound j for, according to Sanchoniatho, Metjir iignifies well-freed, or thoroughly-freed, and Pharaoh in the Hebrew fignifies the fame Thing, being a Derivative from .JH£) Pharah, to free : But probably it was fome one of his Succeffors who at firft took this Name for Diftinction-fake, which continued as a royal Title afterwards to all his Suc- ceffors. However, it is to be remarked, that in the Lan- guage of the Scriptures Egypt is always called by the Name of the Land of Metfr, except twice or thrice in the Book of Pfalms, where it is called the Land of Ham (/) ; and the Egyptians are called Mizraim, which fignifies, ei- ther the Sons of Metfr, or the Inhabitants of the Land of Metfr, and indeed to this very Day, the Arabians call •the Lower Egypt by the Name of Metjir, or Meftre. HAM, having left his Son Metfr at Xoan, removed himfelf higher up into Egypt, till according to Berofus he fettled at Chemys, or Chamus, in the Upper Egypt, which City was fo called in Honour of him, he being indifferent- ly called either Ham, or Cham , and from hence that Part of Egypt is by the Ccpts, who are the Remains of the original Inhabitants, and poffefs the Upper Egypt, called Chami to this Day ; which City of Chemys I take to be the (/) Pfiil. Ixxviii. 12 ; cv. 23.; cvi. 22- fame Hebrew Bible vindicated. y 3 -fame with that which in Scripture, is called No-Amwon &- ?• &- (m), which literally fignifies the City, or Habitation of\ [4-5^ Ham t for that Ammon and Ham were only different Names for the fame Perfon, is manifefl from comparing Gen. xiv. 5. and 1 Chron.vf. 40. with Deut. ii. 20. This City was the Seat of Empire in the Upper Egypt, till it was removed from thence to Thebes j for here it was that Egyptus, that famous King of Egypt lived, from whom that Kingdom has ever fince received its Denomination j for Herodotus po- fitively calls his Brother Danaus, a Chemite {n). His Grandfon Pathros proceeded Itill higher up, and fettled at -Pathros, If. xi. 11. Jer. xliv. 1. the Situation of which Place it not certainly known, but probably was at or near Thebes. NEPH, or Nephat, the Father of the Naphtuhim ad- vanced ftill further, and went as high up as Syene, and fet- tled between Syene and Meroe ; whence that Region was from him called Napata, where Queen Candace afterwards reigned, according to Strabo (0). LUD with his Children the Ludim went higher up the Nile, and poffeffed themfelves of Ethiopia, and became fa- mous for drawing the Bow, If. lxvi. 19. Jer. xlvi.9. for which they continued famous to the Time of Cam byfes, of whom He- rodotus (p) tells the following Story : That Cambyfes having (m) It is mentioned as famous for its Populoufnefs and Riches by Ezek. xxx. 14, 15, 16. and Nahum iii. 3. (n) Her. 1. 2. (0) Strabo, Lib. 17. (p) Herod. Lib. iii. Thalia. L a Mind * << <( cc cc CC cc it H cc cc 74 The Chronology of the A. P. D. a Mind to invade Ethiopia, fent fome Perfons with Pre fen t> J45- to the King of Ethiopia, but with Inftru&ions to make proper Obfervations about the Country at the fame Time ; who being arrived, and having made their Prefents and their Speech, the Ethiopian King not doubting but they were Spies, returned this Anfwer. " It was not from any consideration of my Friendfhip that the King of Perfui fent you to me with thefe Prefents ; neither have you fpoken the Truth j but are come into my Kingdom as Spies. If Cambyfes was an honeft Man he would defire no more than his own, and not endeavour to reduce a People under Servitude who have never done him any Injury. However, give him this Bow from me, and let him know, that the King of Ethiopia advifes the King of Perfia to make War againft the Ethiopians, when the Perjians mail be able to draw fo ftrong a Bow." When he had faid thus, he loofened the String, and delivered the Bow to the AmbafTadors. From Lud this Country was called originally Lydia, If. lxvi. 19. Jer. xlvi. 9. Ezek. xxx.. 5', and its Inhabitants Ludim, . or Lydians 3 which Ludim are in the Jerufalem Tar gum, in Gen.x.i^. calledMareotes, which mould be read Meroites, that is, the. Inhabitants of Meroe, . the capital City of Ethiopia (q). LAAB with his Pofterity the Lehabim crofled over the: Nile, and went and fettled on the Weftern Side thereof, from whom came the Lehabim, or Lubim, mentioned 2 Chron. xii. 3. xvi. 8. as coming with Shifiac King of Egypt againft Rehoboam King of Judah : And from whom that Part of Africa which they inhabited has fince been called Libya. Where Anam fettled with his Children, the Ana-- (?) Herod. 1. 27, mini Hebrew Bible vindicated. j^ mim is not certain, but probably he alfo crofTed over the A- p- ^- Nile along with Laab, his Brother, and Phut his Uncle ; ^JJ^j and hence alfo, the Inhabitants who dwelt in this Part of Africa are probably, by the Prophet Ezekiel, called a min- gled People ; Ezek. xxx. 5. Pte however having cr oiled the Nile along with his Nephews Laab and Anam, went ftill further Weflward along the Coafts of the Mediterra- nean Sea; for according to Ptolemy there is a River in Mau- ritania which goes by the Name of Phut, which is alfo -confirm'd by St. Hieroni; who fays, that the adjacent Re- gion is alfo called Regio Phytenfis, or the Country of Phut {r). Mofes makes no Mention of any of the Sons of Phut-, and hence pombly arofe the Differences •about the Birth and Origin of Atlas, Antaeus, &c. who were probably derived from him 3 fome of whom be- ing great Warriors, became famous for handling the Shield, Jer. xlvi. 9. what we in our Tranflation render Libyans, •being in the Original the Sons of Phut. See alfo Ezek. xxx. 5. REU having lived thirty-two Years, begets Serug, 164, Ztf0r,deftroyedthem and dwelt in their itcad: Where thefe Avim dwelt is alfo manifeit to have been in the moft Southern Border of the Land of Canaan adjoining to Egypt, becaufe this Land of which the Avims were di£-« pofleffed, was afterwards called the Land of the Philiflines,. which undoubtedly bordered on Egypt. The Prophet Je- remiah therefore calls the Pbiliftines (5). the Remnant of the Country of Caphtor. And the prophet Amos (t) fays, that the Pbiliftines came from Caphtor. Now the Reafon why thefe Caphtorim are alio called Philijiim is this, becaufe Pe- les zndCaphtor [u) were Brothers, and Peles being the elder Brother had probably the more numerous Iflue at the Time of the Quarrel, and having afliiied his Brother Caphtor, who feems to have been the Hero of the Tran- faction, in overcoming the Avim, had the greateit Part of. the conquered Lands afligned unto him -, and from him and his Sons the Country of the difpoiTelTed Avim was after- wards called the Country of the Philiftim or Pbiliftines (x). TheUfe which I propofe to make of thefe Remarks is to difcover the Country of Caphtor, which of Confeqneace- muft have been in that Part of Egypt next adjoining the Lands of the Pbiliftines . His Situation muft therefore have been about Mount Caftus; which Herodotus defcribes as be- (s) Jer. xlvii. 4, (?) Amos h. 7. (u) Gen. x. 14. (x) Jof. .xiii. 3. The Chronology of the \. P.D. ing (y) the Boundary between Egypt and Palejline. And 42, AchiliesTafius (.?.) mentions his feeing at Pelujium, which iay near the Foot of Mount Cafv.s, an Image of Jupiter Ca- jius, in the Form of a young Man with a Pomegranate in his Hand ; which Pomegranate fays he comprehends a Myftery. But what-explains this Myftcry is, that Caphtor in Hebrew rignifies a Pomegranate. When therefore the Greeks came into this Country who never worfhipped either Beafls or , Plants, but ridiculed the Egyptians for fo doing, and found a Stone or an Altar dedicated to lome God with the hiero- glyphical Mark of a Pomegranate on it, they immediately erected the Statue of a Man inftead tnereof, and gave him the Emblem of the Pomegranate to hold in his Hand ; of which there is a Medal extant in the Collection of the E- lector Palatine, on one Side of which is reprefented a Man with a Pomegranate in his Hand, and on the Reverfe this Motto, ZEUC KACIOC 5 whence it appears, that this Jupiter Cajius mufl have originally been the God Caphtor. What we have therefore now to prove is, that the Town of Nyfa was built upon Mount Cajius, and then 1 think it cannot be doubted but that t his XX onyfius, or Lord of Nyj a, was al fo the famous Capbtcr who was worfhipped under the Character of Jupiter Cajius. Berojus only defcribes Nyfa as a City in Arabia $ but Diodorus [a) quotes Homer for fay- ing in his Hymns that Nyfa was built upon the Top of an healthful Mountain in Arabia at a Diftance from Phoenicia, but bordering upon Egypt. Which fixes the Situation of it directly on Mount Ca/ius, which alfo accounts for the Name of Nyfa being given to this Town, it probably being fo called on Account of its Situation upon the Top of an high i Ull j this Word in Hebrew (ignifying any thing that is high, i r ] Herod. 1. :. ( . . \chil. Tat. 1. 3. (a J DioJ. 1. 4. 0 1. Hebrew Bible vindicated, 79 or elevated, being derived from the Verb HiSO, Nafe, which A- p- £>• in Niph. and Pih. that is, when it is pronounced Nyfa ^j/j fignifies, according to Buxtcrf, Sn/hdit, extulit fr, ftbktui- eft, Elattts. Hence alio Virgil in his Mneids fays, Liber agens celfo Nyfa de vcrtice Tigres. /Enid. vi. v. 805.. B E RO SUS fays, that Dionyfms was educated at A^/tfj but Diodcrus with more Probability fays, that Ajr/i was built by him j it being more likely that a Perfon fhould be named after a Town of his own Building, than where he was barely educated. And that this Part of the Country, though in general it is fuppofed to belong to Egypt, yet in ftrictnefs was looked on to belong to Arabia, is plain- from hence, that when Mofes afterwards afked Leave of Pharaoh to go into the Wildernefs to facrifxe to Jehovah, though he refufed him Leave to go into the Wildernefs, yet he gave him Leave to facrifice in the Land, Ex. viii. 25. whence it is manifeft, that the Wildernefs of Etham, or Shnr, which almoft furrounded Mount Cafftus, was not deemed ftrictly fpeaking to belong to Egypt. And hence it is, that the Town of Nyfa which was fituated on Mount Cafjius is faid to be in Arabia j and Philofiratus calls it a City in India, this Word being applied, as Mr. Fourmont (z) obferves, to all Countries that were at a Diftance from Egypt. And hence probably, that is, from the Hiftory of Caphtor and his Conquefts came all the traditionary Stories of the Wars and Victories of Dionyfms in the Indies, Sec. GO Fourmont Reflex. Critic- torn, i. p. 108- After So The Chronology of the A. P. D. 24°- After a Reign of fixty-two Years (a) Belus King of Babylon died, and was fucceeded according to Berofus by his Son Ninus ; who deifying his Father and Mother erect- ed a Temple to them under the Character of Jupiter and Juno. 267. In the nineteenth Year of Ninus, Janus or Noah went into Italy , according to Berofus j which Tradition I fuppofe to have arifen from Vines being firft planted or cultivated in Italy about this Time j and that the Perfon who did this from thence obtained the Name of Janus, or the Wine- Riant er ; which Name gave Rife to the Tradition of Noah's having been there, Jain in Hebrew fignifying Wine. 0„^ Three Years after the Arrival of Janus, he drove his Son Saturnus or Ham out of Italy, who returning to Egypt married Rhea the Wife of Amnion, and expelling Amnion drove him to Crete. This Piece of Tradition feems entirely owing to the different Names of Saturnus, and Amnion, or Ham, having been given to the fame Perfon ; for as I ap- prehend, that this occafioned the Tradition of the Departure of Saturnus out of Egypt , Anno 242. to make Way for Amnion : So now Amnion is obliged to retreat, in Order to make Way for Saturnus, who is faid to have married Rhea the 271. Wife of Amnion, on whom he begot O/iris, who was born the Year following, while Saturnus reigned in Libya. (a) Eufebius fuppofes Belus and Ninus to be the fame Perfon, and that he died in the forty-eight Year of the Life of Thara, that is, in the two hundredth and fiftieth Year after the Flood- Eufcb.Chron. p. 9, In Hebrew Bible vindicated. 8 1 A. P. D. I n the forty-third Year of the Reign of Ninus, Diony- ^^Vj Jius the Son of Ammon and Almanthea expell'd Saturnus and Rhea , and adopting OJiris made him King of all Egypt , according to Berojus. I fuppofe therefore that about this Time there might have been fome Wars in Egypt, oc- cafioned by the Encroachment of the Avim on their Neigh- bours the Egyptians ; which Encroachment of the Avim on the Egyptians might poflibly give Occafion to the Tra- dition of the Paftor-Kings reigning in Egypt, as mentioned by Manetho, five hundred Years before the Time of Mofes. But Petes and Capthor having driven them out of Egypt they thereby eftablifhed Metfir, or OJiris, in his Throne at Zoan ; and purfuing the Avim into their own Country dif- pofTefTed them from thence, and eftablifhed themfelves in their Room, Dent. ii. 23. Amosxx.y. The traditionary Authors therefore of the following Age hearing much Talk of this Son of Ham, and fuppofing all Egypt to be under one King dethroned Ham to make Way for the Kingdom of Metfir, or OJiris ; whereas the Probability is, that Metfir and Ham were both contemporary Princes ; one reigning in the Upper, and the other in the Lower Egvpt at •the fame Time. For it is to be remarked, that the Copts who inhabit the Upper Egypt, call Egypt to this Day by the Name of Chami, whereas the Arabians who princioallv porTefs the Lower Egypt call it by the Name of Metjir, or Meftre. TERAH being now feventy Years of Age, and living 2g- at Ur of the Chaldees begat Abrahain, Gen. xi. 26. This however is not without its Difficulties; for it is laid, Gen. xi. M 32 8' 2 The Chronology of the A. P. D. 32. that Terah lived two hundred and five Years; and St. Stephen fays, Afts vii. 4. that Abram did not leave Hiiran to go into Canaan till after the Death of Terah : So that according to this Account Abram could not have been born till the one hundredth and thirtieth Year of his Father's Age. There mull therefore be fome Miftake in this Account, but where to place it is the Difficulty. In Order to re&ify which, moll of the (b)t later Chronologers, fmce Theo- doret and St. Auguftine, have fuppofed,. that Haran only was born to Terah when he was feventy Years of Age,, but that Nahor and Abram were born afterwards, and therefore de- fer the Birth of Abram to the one hundredth and thirtieth Year of his Father's Age. But as the Words of the Text will not poflibly bear this Interpretation; becaufe all antient Copies, Verfions, and Teflimonies ■unanimoufly agree in- faying, that (c) Terah lived feventy Tears and begat Abram, Nahor, and Haran ; and whereas all antient Copies, Verfi- ons, and Teflimonies agree, that Abram when he departed out of Haran was but (d) feventy-five Years old ; the Miflake mull of Confequence be in the Number of the Years of Terah 's Life; and if we look into the Samaritan Pentateuch we fliall find this Millake rectified : For there it is faid, that Terah when he died was one hundred and forty- five Years old (t3* t Life, iince before he died he had Great Grand-children by her, Gen. xxv. i — 6. It has indeed been thought by the Ge- nerality of Writers, among whom Jofephus is one, that Abraham did not take Keturah to Wife till after the Death of Sarah ; becaufe that the Words of Mofes feem to imply as much, when after fpeaking of the Death of Saraky he fays, (i) Then again Abraham took a Wife and her Name iv as Keturah. In anfwer to which it is to be obferved, that if Mofes had mentioned this Affair fooner it would have broken in upon the Thread of his Hiftory : And as (k) Ke- turah's Hiftory was of no great Confequence, the Account of it was therefore deferred ; but Hagar' s Hiftory, which was a Type of one of the Covenants, Gal. iv. 22. was neceflary to be told. It is likewife to be obferved, that thefe two Words of Wife and Concubine are frequently ufed inter- changeably for each other. For thus Hagar alfo is faid to be Wife to Abram, (/) And Sarai Abram's Wife took Hagar her Maid the Egyptian, and gave her to her Hujband Abratn to be his Wife. Thus alfo it is faid of Jacob and Bilhah ; for when Rachael faw that {he bare Jacob no Children, it is faid, that fie gave him Bilhah her Handmaid to Wife (m) ; fo alfo Leahy when (lie faw that me had left off bearing, (n) JJ:e took Zilpah her Maid and gave her Jacob to Wife. Thus alfo the Levite's Wife mentioned, Judg. xix. 1. is called his Concubine , though in the fame Chapter, v. 3. the Levite is called her Hufband. And her Father is, v. 4. called his Father-in-law, and the Levite, v. 5. is called his (i) Gen. xxv. i. (/•) Abraham's and JfljmacVs Deaths are told by way of Anticipation, Gen. xxv- 8, 17; for fear of breaking in upon the fubfequent Hiftory. (/) Gen- xvi. 3. (w) Gen. xxx- 1—4. (n) Gen. xxx. 9: Son- Hebrew Bibl e vindicated. 8 5 Son- in-law. And Keturah is called by both Names, that is, A. P. D. fhe is called both Abrams Wife and his Concubine. Thus t 343_^ Gen. xxv. 6. it is faid, that Abraham gave all that he had un- to Ifaac, but unto the Sons of the Concubines, which Abraham had, Abraham gave Gifts, and fent them away from Ifaac his Son (while he yet lived) Eafward into the Eaft Country. Now among the Sons of his Concubines there are none men- tioned but the Sons of Hagar and the Sons of Keturah ; whence it is plain, that the Sons of Keturah are put upon a Level with the Sons of Hagar, and that Keturah and Ha- gar are equally called his Concubines. It is alfo manifeft, that the Author of the Book of Chronicles thought Keturah only to have been Abraham's Concubine, becaufe he exprefly calls her fo, 1 Chron. i. 32. It is moreover faid, that he fent thefe Women and their Children away while he yet lived , and the Children of Keturah are in the preceeding Verfes reckoned down to the third Generation, Gen. xxv. 1 — 4. whereas there are but two Generations mentioned of the Sons of Hagar, Gen. xxv. 12--16. whence alfo it is ma- nifeft, that Abram^ook Keturah to Wife at leaft one Gene- ration of Defcent before he took Hagar. And it is more than probable that Abram had Keturah to Wife, at leaft during his Abode in the Land of Haran, and that he had Children by her while he abode there ; becaufe it is faid Gen. xii. 5. that Abram took Sarai his Wife and Let his Bro- ther's Son, and all their Subftance that they had gathered, and the Souls that they had gotten in Haran; and they went forth to go into the Land of Canaan, and into the Land of Canaan they came. Whereas Abram had no Children ei- ther by Sarah or Hagar, till fome Years after he had been in the Land of Canaan, It is moreover to be obferved, that Ifaac. 8 6 The Chronology of the A. P. J). Jfaac married about three Years after the Death of his Mo- '"4il_, ^ier Sarah, and that Abraham was probably not married at that Time ; becaufe Sarah's Tent was unoccupied. For when Rebecca was brought Home to Ifaac, it is pofitively laid, that he brought her into his Mother Sarah'* Tent, and took Rebecca and Jhe became his Wife, Gen. xxiv. 67. whereas had Abraham been then married to Keturah, (he would in all Probability have been put into PofTemon of Sa- rah's Tent. Befides, it feems irrational to think, that Abra- ham mould take any Perfon whatfoever to Wife after the Death of Sarah ; when we confider that Sarah did not die till fhe was one hundred and twenty-feven Years of Age, Gen. xxiii. 1. and Abraham was then ten Years older, that is, one hundred thirty-feven Years old j and yet thirty- feven Years before this Abraham is faid to be old and well ftricken in Age, Gen. xviii. 11, 12.— xxi. 2. And when Ifaac was promifed to him, he makes a Doubt about it, becaufe of his Age, fiying, Shall a Child be born unto him that is one hun- dred Years old? Gen. xvii. 17. and therefore St. Paul fays of him, that his Body was dead, or as good as dead, Rom. iv. 1 9. Heb. xi. 12. And therefore to fuppofe, that Abra- ham thirty-feven Years after this mould think of taking any one to Wife feems to me contradictory to his general Cha- racter. When it was, that is, in what Year of Abrairis Life Tc- rah and his Family journeyed from Ur of the Chaldees to fettle in Mejlpotamia is not certain, but we are fure that it was not till after the Death of Haran, Teral/s eldeft Son, Gen. xi. 28. the Grief for whofe Death, Jofephus fuppofes, was the Caufe that prevailed upon Terah to quit his native Country, Hebrew Bible vindicated. 8 7 Country, and go with his Son Abram into Mefcpotamia ; For A- p- D- tliough we are informed that the Anccftors of the Jews in J*^j general, w^r* ^ out from Chaldea, becaufe they wculd riot fellow the Gods of their Fathers which were in the Land of Chaldea, Judith v. 5 — 9 ; yet we have Reafon to believe, that this was owing to the virtuous and religious Principles of Abram rathes than of Terah -3 who, according to the Ac- count given of him in Joft. xxiv. 2,14. feems to have gone too much into the Idolatry of the Country. For there it is faid, Tour Fathers dwelt on the other Side of the Flood in eld Time, even Terah the Father of Abraham, and the Father of Nahor, and they ferved other Gods. New therefore fear the Lord, and ferve him in Sincerity and Truth, and put away the Gods which your Fathers ferred on the other Side oj the Flood and in Egypt. It is plain likewife, that this Tranf- migration could not have happened till fome confiderable Time after Abram's Marriage ; becaufe it is obferved of Sa- rai before fhe left Ur of the Chaldees, ih?Xfie was barren, Gen. xi. 305 however it mufc likewife have been fome con- fiderable Time before the Death of Terah -, becaufe it is faid-, Gen. xi, 31. that they came to Haran and dwelt there, and Judith v. 8. that they fed into Mefopotamia, and so- journed there many days j and Gen. xii. 5. there is Mention made of the Sub/lance they had gathered, and the Souls they had gotten in Haran. The original Name of this Place, to which Terah and his Family retired on his Banifhment from Ur of the Cbaldees, was Fadan-Aram, or the Field of Aram-, for Fadan in Arabick fignifies a Field (n) ; but it is indifferently after this (J>) Buxt- called 8 8 The Chronology of the A< p- D. called either Haran, or Padan-Aram ; as appears from com- ^JZ^j Paring Gen. xxvii, 43. with Gtvz. xxviii. 2 : For in the firft of thefe Places Rebecca fays to Jacob, Now therefore my Son obey my Voice : Flee thou to Laban my Brother to Haran. But in the latter Place Ifaac fays to Jacob, Arife, go to Padan- Aram to the Houfe of Bethuel thy Mother's Father j and take thee a Wife from thence of the Daughters of Laban thy Mo- thers Brother. See alfo Gen. xxv. 20. — xxviii. 5, 6, 7. — xxxi. 18.— xxxv. 9, 26. and compare them with Gen. xxviii. io.—xxix. 4. Which Place of Padan-Aram not being then inhabited by any Perfon of Confequence, Terah feems to have given it the Name of Haran in Honour of his eldefl Son Haran ; who according to the Obfervation of Jofephus was probably but lately dead, when Terah left Ur of the Chaldees. In this Place Terah himfelf afterwards died and was buried. And in Pofleflion of this Place Abram left his Brother Nahor when he went into the Land of Canaan ; whence this Place is alfo called, Gen. xxiv. 10. the City of "Na- hor in Mefopotamia. This Place is probably called at pre- fent Orpha (0), where there is a Well that is called Abra- ham's Well to this Day, and is about half Way between Rages of Media, now Edejfa, and Nineveh on the Tigris, now called MoJJel, NOAH having lived after the Flood three hundred and fifty Years died in the nine hundredth and fifty- firft Year of his Age. With which Account Berofus agrees exactly, only iuppoling him to have died in Italy under the Character of Janus, in the ninth Year of the Reign of Ninias, that {0) Rouwolf's Trav. p. 1 88, 197. is, Hebrew Bible vindicated 89 lis, when Ninias had reigned eight Years compleat. In this A- p- Di Year Berofus fays, that Ofiris and his Sifter and Wife IJJs, ^v-O having found out the Method of fowing Corn and planting •of Fruits, taught them to the People of Palefline-, and after he returned to Egypt, having invented the Plough, he went about the whole World inftruding People in this Art Ber. Hence it is more than probable that this Part of the Hiftory of Ofiris is taken from the Life of Caphtor ; who having by this Time fettled his new Colony of Phili /lines in the Country of Avim, taught the Inhabitants of Palejlme the Art of Plowing and Sowing, which himfelf had learned in Egypt. TERAH died aged one hundred and forty-five (p) : 368. And Abram being feventy-five Years old, Gen. xii. 4. the Lord appeared unto him andfaid, Get thee out of thy Coun- try, and from thy Kindred, and from thy Fathers Houfe, unto a Land that I will fhew thee : And I will make of thee a great Nation, and I will blefs thee and make thy Name great; and thou malt be a Blefling : And in thee fliall ail the Families of the Earth be bleffed (q). Which Promife was made four hundred and thirty Years before the giving Gx the Law at Mount Sinai, Gal. iii. 1 7. *So Abram leaving Nahor and his Family and the Reft of his Kindred, except Lot, behind him at Haran, took Sarai his Wife and Lot his Brother "Haran's Son, and they went forth to go into the Land of Canaan, and into the Land of Canaan they came, Gen. xii. 4, 5. Where it was that A- , (/>) Vide A. P. D- 293. (?) Gen. xii. 1--4, N hram go The Chronology of the A. PD.bram entred into the Land of Canaan is not mentioned'. 3^- but it is probable that he came into it North about, as Canaan did himfelf at firft, by the Entring in of Hamath ; and that the (hotter Road over the Mountains of Gilead, and crofs the River Jordan was not then found out. And the Reafon why I imagine this is ; becaufe it is faid, that Abram faffed through theLand unto thePlace o/*Sichem, and journeyed going on Jill towards the South, Gen. xii. 6, 9. whereas hadyf- bram entered into the Land of Canaan, by going over the River.. Jordan from Mount Gilead in his Way to Sicbem, he would have crojfed the Land and not gone through it. I like wife imagine, that he came into Canaan by the Entring in of Ha~ math ; becaufe Jufiin from Trogus Pompeius mentions A- bram as the fourth King of Damafcus (r) ; and that there is, fome Foundation for this Tradition of Abram's having lived fome Time at Damafcus feems reafonable to me from hence, becaufe he mentions his favourite Servant, who was born in his own Houfe, by the Name of Eliezer of Damafcus, Gen. xv. 2, 3. And I can fee no Reafon for his being called Eliezer of Damafcus^ but his being born in Abrams Houfe while .Abram lived at Damafcus. And Abram coming from bamafcus paffed through the Land to the Place of Sichem, unto the Plain of Moreh (s) ; , And Jehovah appeared unto Abram and faid, Unto thy Seed, will I give this Land: And there builded he an Altar unto Jehovah who appeared unto him. And he removed from thence unto a Mountain on the Eaft of Bethel, and pitched (r)Juft. 1. 36. c. 2. (0 Gen. xii. 6. his Hebrew Bible vindicated. 9 1 •his Tent, having Bethel on the Weft and Itai on the Eaft : A. P. D. And there he builded an Altar unto Jehovah (t) and called ^^^j upon the Name of Jehovah, And Abram journeyed going on flill towards the South, Gen. xii. 9. and there was a Fa- mine in the Land of Canaan ; and Abram went down into Egypt (u) to fojourn there; where it is to be obferved, that Abram at this Time only pa fed through the Land of Canaan, making no long Stay in any Place ; becaufe there was a Famine in the Land. It is likewife to be obferved, that nothing but Neceflity, or the pofitive Commands of God, could have drove him into Egypt-, where he was fo ap- prehenfive of his Life, as to defire his Wife to fay, that (he was his Sifter, for fear of being put to Death upon her Ac- count, Gen. xi. 11 — 13. Some Time after the Arrival of Abram in Egypt, fome of the Princes in Pharaoh's Court (x), having commended Sarai before Pharaoh , the Woman was taken into Pha- raoh's Houfe j whence it appears, that in that early Age of the World Concubinage was not thought a Sin, but that Princes and great Men might take as many Wives as they pleafed, and every oneelfe as many as they could maintain. And Jehovah plagued Pharaoh and his Houfe with great Plagues, becaufe of Sarai, Abram 's Wife ; and Pharaoh called Abram and faid, What is this thou haft done unto me ? Why didft thou not tell me that fhe was thy Wife ? Why faidft thou fhe is my Sifter ? So I might have taken her to me to Wife: Now therefore behold thy Wife take her and it) Gen- xii. 7, 8. (u) Gen. xii.. 10. (x) Gen. xii. 15- N 2 go g2 The Chronology of the A. P. D. go away (y). Whence it likewife appears that even in this 36^- Age of Liberty, with regard to . Concubinage the Marriage State was held facred. I t alfo is probable from this ready Obedience which Pharaoh paid' to the Admonitions of God, that the Know- ledge of the true God was not quite extinct at that Time in Egypt. Nor is there any Hint given as if Abram and the Egyptians might not eat together j though Abram was a Shepherd as much as Jacob his Grandfon. Ane \ Pharaoh, having commanded his Men concerning A- bram ; they feht him away, and his Wife and all that he had, . Gen. xii. 20. The Septuagint and Arabick Verfions of the Bible exprefs this with more Tendernefs than the Hebrew. The Septuagint fays, that Pharaoh commanded his Servants to conduct' him a Part of his Road, and then fend him away. And the Arabick fays, that Pharaoh commanded his Ser- vants to take proper Care of him and then difmifs him. It is. more than probable, that Pharaoh ordered Prefents to be made him at this Time both of Silver and Gold, becaufe it is obferved immediately after his Departure, that Abram was not only rich in Cattle, but alfo (z) in Silver and in Gold-, of which it is more than probable, that he had little or. none before his- Arrival in Egypt. And Abram (a) went up out of Egypt, he and his Wife, and all that he had, and Lot with him, and came into the South of the La?id of Canaan. And from the South he went up (j) Gen. xii. 17-19- (2) Gen. xiii. 2. (a). Gen. xiii. 1, &V-.. North- Hebrew Bible vindicated. 93 Northwards unto the Place where his Tent had been in the A. P. D. Beginning, between Bethel and Hat. And there was a , 3j_ Strife between the Herdmen of Abram? § Cattle, and the Herdmen of Let's Cattle, for the Land was not able to bear them that they might dwell together ; for their Subihmce was great, fo that they could not dwell together. And Abram (aid unto Lot, Let there be no Strife I pray thee between me and thee. Is not the whole Land before thee ? Separate thy [elf I pray thee from me ; if thou wilt take the Left Hand, then I will go to the Right ; or if thou depart to the Right Hand, then 1 will go to the Left. And Lot lifted up his Eyes, and behold all the Plain of Jordan, as thou comejl unto Zoar, that it was well watered every where, even as the Garden of Jeho- vah, like the Land of Egypt, before Jehovah deflroyed Sodom and Gomorrah. In the Original, the Words are otherwife placed, which the Tranflators have followed too rigorouily ; but whoever reads this Verfe, and confiders the Situation of the Places mentioned, muft be convinced, that this is the true Meaning of it : For the Land between Egypt and Zoar, inftead of being well watered was a fandy Defert, the City of "Zoar lying towards the South End of the Dead Sea being originally called Beta, Gen. xiv. 2. xix. 22. Then Lot chofe him all the Plain of Jordan, and Lot journeyed Eaft, , and pitched his Tent towards Sodom ; and Abram dwelled' in the Land of Canaan. . Where it is obfervable, that this- Country at this Time - was but thinly inhabited when Abram could fay to Lot, Is not the whole Land before thee ? which is an additional Con- firmation of the Preference- which ought to be given to the Chro- - 94 T^ Chronology of the A. P. D. Chronology of the Hebrew Bible before that of the SamarU taiiy or Scptuagint. And Jehovah laid unto Abram, after that L0/ was fepa- rated from him, jL//? up now thine Eyes and look from the Place where thou art, Northward and Southward, and Ea/l- ward and Wcjl ward. For all the Land which thou feef, to thee will I give it, and to thy feed for ever. Then Abram re- moved his Tent, and came and dwelt in the Plain of Mamre, which is in Hebron, and built there an Altar unto Jehovah. And it came to pafs, in the Days of Amraphel King of Shinar {b), that a War happened between Chedorlaomer King of Elam, and Bera King of Sodom, and Birfia King of Gomorrah, and Shibnah King of Admah, and Shemeber King of Zeboiim, and Beta King of Zoar, who had ferved Chedorlaomer twelve Years, but in the thirteenth rebelled. And in the fourteenth Year came Chedorlaomar with his Allies Amraphel King of Shinar, Arioch King of Ellafar, and Tidal King of Nations, and in their Way towards Ca- naan they firft attacked the Rephaim (c) who lived in AJJj- teroth-Karnaim on the Eaft Side of Jordan towards the North : Which Afitaroth (d) was the capital City of Og the King of Bajhan. And after they had conquered the Rephaim, they then proceeded Southward, ftill continuing on the fame Side of Jordan -, and attacked the Zuzim, or Zam-Zummins in Ham (e) j that is, the antient Inhabitants (b) Gen. xiv. i, &fV. (c) See the Map. ( d) Jolh xii. 4. xiii. li- (e) Deut. ii. 20- of Hebrew Bible vindicated, 95 of that Part of the Country on the Eaft of Jordan, which A. IVD. was afterwards pofferTed by the Sons of Amnion or Ham, the Son of Lot, from whom the capital City of the Country was called Ham : It being ufual with Mofes to mention an- tient Places by the Names which they were known" by at the Time of his Writing , though the Place was not known by that Name at the Time of the Tranfaction men- tioned , as appears manifeftly from comparing Gen. xiii. 10. with Gen. xix. 22. and Exod. xiv. 45. with Exod. xxi. 3, &c. &c. And from Ham, Chedorlaomar with his Confede- rates marching ftill further Southward on the fame Side of Jordan, attacked the Emims in the Plain of Kiriathaim ; which Country was afterwards pofferTed by the Moabites, whofe capital City was Ar (f). And from thence march- ing ftill Southward, they attacked the Horites, or the Inha- bitants of Mount Hor, in their Mount Seir, (which mews Mount Hor and Mount Seir to be the fame Place, though it did not obtain the Name of Mount Seir till many Years af- ter this) and drove them to El-Paran, or the Plain of Pa- ran, which is by the Wildernefs, And they returned from thence and came to Enmifipat, which is Kadejh, and fmote all the Country of the Amalekites, who dwelt alfo on Mount Hor or Mount Seir -, but as they were called Horites from the Place of their Habitation, fo were they called Amalekites from their Forefather Amaleck one of the De~ fcendents of Gujh, who inhabited all that Country originally from Havilah (g) until thou comefl to Shur, at (b) the Weft End of Mount Hor, over-againft Egypt. After this; they went and attacked the Amorites, who dwelt in Haze- (/) Num. xxi, 28. Deut. ii. 9. (g) 1 Sam. xv- 7. [b) Pocock's Trav. zen» 96 T6e Chronology of the A. P. D. zontamar, which is Engeddi ; and which lies (1) on the • , Borders of the Dead- Sea, about two Miles Eaft of Bethle- hem, in the Wildernefs (k) of Judab, And being come to Engeddi there went out the King of Sodom and his Allies, and they joined Battle with them in the Vale of Siddim j and Chedorlaomar and his Friends being Conquerors, took hot Abranis Nephew Prifoner, and leized his Goods, for he lived in Sodom. And there came one that had efcaped and told Abram the Hebrew, Gen. xiv. 13. where it is to be obferved, that this is the firft Time that the Word Hebrew is made ufe of. The Septuagint renders it Abram the Foreigner [arsoary]. And as Abram was but lately come to fettle among them, and as the Word *Q? Heber fignifies literally from beyond, being derived from ~\2V tranfivit, I therefore am of Opinion with thofe who derive this Appellation from that Origin, rather than from Heber the Son of Salah, from whom Abram had been derived fo long ago as fix Genera- tions of Defcent. And what greatly adds to the Probability of this Derivation of the Word, is, that Mofes frequently mentions Canaan by the Name of the Land in which they were (/) Strangers ; which is a Word of the fame Import with that of the Hebrews. And when Abram heard that Lot his Brother's Son was taken Captive, he armed his trained Servants born in his own Houfe three hundred eighteen, and purfued them unto Dan, and divided himfelf againft them, he and his Servants by Night, and fmote them, and brought back again -his Brother Lot, and his Goods, and the Women alfo, and the (/) Maund. Trav. {k) Jofh- xv. 32. (I) Gen. xxxvi.y- xvii.8-xxviii.4 People Hebrew Bible vindicated. 9 7 (/;/) People. Sir Jfaac Newton (».) remarks upon this, that A- p- D. " the Countries firft inhabited by Mankind were in thofe 3 • (C a Days fo thinly peopled, that four Kings from the Coafts of Shinar and Elam invaded and fpoiled the Rephaims, " and the Inhabitants of the Countries of Moab, Amnion, " Edom, and the Kingdoms of Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboiim j and yet were purfued and beaten by Abram with an armed Force of only three hundred and eighteen " Men, the whole Force which Abraham and the Princes " with him could raife." Where though it muft be al- lowed, that thofe Countries were in that early Age of the World but thinly peopled , yet this Matter of Fact is by no Means rightly ftated by Sir Ifaac; for the three hundred and eighteen Men, which are mentioned to have gone with Abram, are pofitively in all the Copies and Verfions faid to have been his own trained Servants, born in his own Houfe. It is faid moreover, that the three Princes Aner, Efchol, and Mamre were confederate with Abram (0). And accordingly they had a Share of the Plunder given to them as fuch, after the Victory was over, Gen. xiv. 24. It is like- wife to be obferved, that it was not in a pitched Battle that Abram and his Confederates engaged Chedorlaomar and his Confederates: But that Abram came upon them by- Surprize in the Night (p), when they leaft expected, and were unprepared for an Attack; and therefore that we can- not form from thence any Computation of the Number of People which were along with Chedorlaomar ; fince every Body knows what large and numerous Armies have been im) Gen. xiv. 14— 16- (») Newt- Chron. p. 185. (0) Gen. xiv. 13. ^ Gen- xiv. 15. O deftroyed gS The Chronology of the A. P. D. deftroyed by an Handful of Men breaking in upon them in 3^8- tne Dead of Night. Thus Gideon with three hundred Men defeated the Army of the Midianites (q), and the Amale- kites, and all the Children of the Eajl, who lay along in the Valley like Grafioppers for Multitudes, by coming upon them in the Night. Thus Joram (r) alfo, King of Judah,. went over to Zair and all the Chariots with him, and he rofe by Night and fmote the Edomites which compajfed ,bim about. And it is more than probable, that the great Slaugh- ter which Jonathan and his Armour-bearer made in the Hoft of the Philijlines, whereby they were entirely routed, i Sam. xiv. muft have been in the Night, though this Parti- cular is not mentioned; fince the Multitude are defcribed beating down one another, and every Man's Sword was aga'mfi his Fellow [s). Nor were Jonathan or his Armour-bearer- perceived as they went out of the Camp. And though the Watchmen of Saul brought him Word, that the Multitude, . of the Philiflines, melted away, and that they went on beat- ing down one another, yet Saul did not know what to do3. but numbered his little Army to fee who were abfent ; and probably did not venture to attack them till it was light e- nough in the Morning, thoroughly to difcover the Condi- tion of the Enemy. Hence the Author of the Book of Job, according to his ufual Elegancy in defcribing the Judg- ments of God, fays, He JJoall break in Pieces fnighty Men without Number, and fet others in their Stead. For he know- eth their Works, and he over tur net h them in the Night, fo that they are dejlroyed, Jobxxxiv. 25.. (?) Judg.viii. 7,9, 12, (r) 2 Kings viii. 21. ($) 1 Sam. xiv. 16,20. It Hebrew Bible vindicated. 99 a. p. d. 1 t is however probable, that thefe five Kings of Sodom, t 3__ Gommorah, Admah, Zeboiim, and Zc-ar were not very powerful Princes, being but lately fettled in this Country; and that they with their People were Colonies fent off a- bout fourteen Years before, from Chedorlaomer King of E- lam, or Perfia, and thence became tributary to him ; for their Names are not to be found among the Pofterity of .Canaan, the antient Inhabitants of this Country. I t is likewife probable, that this Amraphel, King of "Shinar, was not Ninias, King of Babylon in Shinar, but fome petty Prince on the Borders of Shinar joining the Kingdom of Elam -, becaufe he only comes as an Ally, or rather as a tributary Prince, to affift Chedorlaomer in reduc- ing thefe rebellious Princes to their tributary Subjection. For though Chedorlaomer was one of the SuccefTors of JE- lam, the eldeft Son of Sem ; yet as we read of the King- dom of Babylon being eftablifhed before the Kingdom of Elam, we have no Reafon to believe, that the Succeilbrs of Nimrod were ever reduced into Subjection to any other Prince, till they were conquered by the SuccefTors of AJlmrt and - made a Province of the Kingdom of AJfyria : In or about the Reign of Phul (t) King of AJfyria, whofe King- dom when he died was again divided, and he was fuc- ceeded at Nine'veh by Tiglath-ftlatfar, and at Babylon by NabonaJJar. As Abram (u) returned victorious, Melchifedec King of Salem, the Prieilof the mofthigh God, came to him at the O 2 Valley (0 Newt- Chron- p. 35. and 265, &c •(«) Gen xiv. 17, 19- ) oo 'The Chronology of the A. P. D. Valley of Shaveh, which is the King's Dale; and brought forth Bread and Wine, and bleffed him. Who this Mel- chifedec was has been very much debated, but in my Ap- prehenfion it could be no other than Canaan, the youngefl Son of Haw, who firir. fettled in this Country, and peopled it. For Arphaxad, the third Son of Sem, lived to the four hundredth and fortieth Year after the Flood [x) ; and therefore Cancan, the youngefl; Sen of Ham, Senfs younger Brother, may well be fuppofed to be alive at this Time. And as Sanchoniatbo fays, that the Phoejucian Name of the Brother of Metfir (who was the fecond Son of Ham) was Sedec , Canaan therefore mull: be this Melchi-Sedec, or King. Sedec ; or, as St. Paul interprets it, the King of Righteouf- nefs. For as Melchi or Melech, in Hebrew fignifies a King, fo Sedec fignifies Righteous or Juft. And that Sedec was the. Family Title, which was conferred on the Kings of this Place, as Pharaoh was on the Kings of Egypt y appears pro- bable from the Title of Adoni-Zedec (y) given to the King of the Jebujites, above fi ve hundred Years afterwards,, when Jojhua with the Children of Ifrael came to take Pof- feffion of the Land of Canaan-, Adoni-Zedec fignifying the Lord of Righteoufnefs, as Melchi-Sedec fignifies the King. Right eoufnefs. InYikzNlanvitxAbimelechfz) feemsto have been the Regal Title conferred on the Kings of the. Philiftines at Gerar ; and Jabin {a) the common Appellation of the Kings of Hazor. And as Canaan was the firfl: Parent o£ all the Inhabitants of that Country ; fo St. Paul fpeaking. {*) Gen.xi. i3> (y) Jofh. x. 13, (z) See Gen. xx. 2- and compare with Gen- xxvi. 1. {a) Jofli. xi. i- Jud. iv- 24. from. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 101 from the common Tradition of the Country fays, that he A- p- D« was 'Attcctco^ 9AfAiJTu(>j ^AyeveaXoyijog, that is, 'without Father , J$ *, without Mother, without Ance/lors, or a Genealogy, and not as we render it, without Defcent. Thus the Chinefe fay, that Fohi their fir ft King had no Father. And Seneca fpeaking of two of the antient Kings of Rome fays, that Servius had no Mother, and Ancus no Father ; which he afterwards explains by faying, that it was not known who was the Father of Ancus (b). Which explains alfo the: Meaning of Horace, when he fays, Perfuades hoc tibi vere, Ante Poteflatem Tulli at que ignobile Regnunr Multosfape Viros nullis majoribus ortos Et liixijfe probos, amplis & honor i bus auclos. HoR.Serm. 1. i.Sat. 6', And St.Paul fpeaking alfo from the fame vulgar Tradition, on' account of the great Length of Canaan's Life in comparifon to that of his Children, fays in the Eaftern Stile, who had' neither Beginning of Days nor End of Life, but like the Son of God abideth a Priefl continually. And therefore Eufebius (c) fpeaking of this fame Defcription of Melchifedec fays, 'Owe \xuv *a7^ TW *Vg§«w> n°t having according to Hi/lory, ei- ther Beginning of Days or End of Life. In thofe Days, before the Inftitution of the Levitical Priefthood, the~ Father of the Family was the Prieft of the Family : Canaan therefore muft of Courfe be univerfal Prieft of the mo.ft high (b) Senec Epift. 8> (<■) EufebDem. Ev,Lib. i. c. 5. God: 10 2 7pe Chronology of the A. P. D. God over that whole Country, and muft have continued fo 3 _• t during his Life ; the End of which not being known, he is therefore faid by the Pfiilmift (ex. 4.) to be a Prieft for ever, and by St. Paul (d) to abide a Prieft continually. As to the Payment of Tithes made to him by Abram out of the Spoils which he bad taken -} this was due to him as Prince oi^ the whole Country ; the Tithe or Tenth being the Prince'sDue. And Jofephus fays, that this Melchifedec was Prince of the Canaanites : Accordingly Mofes calls him King of Salem, and from him it probably was that this Valley of Shaveh was called the King's Dale. It will alio appear that the Tithe was the Prince's Due in other Countries as well .as Judea to any one that will confult Bed. Script. Chron. lib. 3. c. 4. f 98. Arijl. Prob. I. 3. f. 15. Oecon. I. 2..c. 2. Spen- der de rit. Heb. A3, c. 10. f. 1. Cicero in Ver, Or at. 5, . And the King of Sodom faid unto Abram, give me the Perfons, a?id take the Goods to thyfelf And Abram faid to the King of Sodom, I have lift up mine Hand to fehovah, 4he moft high God, the Poffeffor of Heaven and Earth, That I will not take even from a Thread to a Shoe-latchet, and that I will not take any thing that is thine. In the Original thefe Words run thus, / have lift up mine Hand to fehovah the moft high God, the PqfleJJbr of Heaven and Earth, If I take from a Thread to a Shoe-latchet, or if I take any thing that is thine: That is, I have called upon God to enrfe me, if I take, Sec, or as it is faid, Ruth i. 17. 1 Sam. xiv. 44. i" have prayed to God to do fo and fo to me, if I take, Sec. And hence it is that the Exprefhon of, If I dofuch a Thing, is both in the (d) Heb. vii. 3. Old Hebrew Bible vindicated. 103 Old and New Teftament, often put to denote an Oath, or A. P. D. to fignify that I have fworn not to do it. See alfo Dcut. i. ^~v-Lj 35. 1 Sam. Hi. 14. Ifai. \'\l 9. Pf. xcv. 11. Markvm. 12. Heb. iv. 3, And (/) after thefe Things the Word cf Jehovah came to Abram in a Vifion, faying, &c. This is the firft Time that God's Appearance in a Vifion is mentioned. And it is likewife remarkable, that the Perfon here appearing to Abram, and fpeaking unto him, is called the Word of Jeho- vah. Which Vifion had probably the fame Effect upon Abram , as is defcribed afterwards, v. 13. where it is faid, when the Sun was going down a deep Sleep fell upon Abrajn ; and lo, a Horror of great Darknefs fell upon hi?n. Becaufe the firft Words which the Lord fays unto Abram at this Time are, Fear not Abram. Daniel defer ibes himfelf in one thefe Vifions affected after a very extraordinary Manner, Dan. x. 8. And it is plain, that the Author of the Book of Job was no Stranger to them, by the Strength and Energy wherewith he defcribes them, Job iv. 13 — 16. And the Lord, in order to remind Abram of the Favours he had re- ceived from him j and in particular of this late Victory, faid unto Abram, I am thy Shield, and I will be alfo thy exceed* ing great Reward. And Abram when he had recovered from his Fright, faid, Lord Jehovah,. what wilt thou give me feeing I go childlefs? And the Word of Jehovah came (or fpa kef unto him, faying, One that cometh forth out of thine own- Bowels Jhall be thine Heir. And he, i. e. the Word of Je- hovah brought him forth and faid. Look now towards He a- (/) Gen xv. x. ven} . The C h r o n o l OG y of jhe vens &c. that is, while ^Lbram was In the Vifion he feemed to be brought forth ; and the Word of Jehovah laid, Look now towards Heaven and tell the Stars, if thou be able to number them j and he faid unto him, So jhall thy Seed be -, and he faid unto him, I am the 'Jehovah who brought thee out of Ur of the Chaldees to give thee this Land to inherit it. And he faid, Lord Jehovah whereby Jhall I know that I Jhall inhe- rit it? And he faid (g) unto him, Take me an Heifer of three Tears old, and a jl. e Goat of three Tears old, and a Ram of three Tears old, and a Turtle Dove, and a young Pigeon. Here the holy Penman Hops abruptly for fear of a tedious Repetition j but we are to fuppofe, that Abram was told in the Vifion what he was to do with this Heifer, and Goat, and Ram, and Turtle Dove, and Pigeon : And that what he did afterwards with them was purfuant to his Inftructions. For when he awoke out of his Vifion, it is faid, 'That he took unto him all thefe a?id divided them in the Midjl, and laid each Piece one agahijl another : but the Birds divided he not, that is, he did not cut afunder, as he did the larger Animals, and as the Word *\r\2 properly fignifies.; but he rent them afunder, by taking hold of them by the Wings, Lev. i. 17. for the Word which we there render cleave, fignifies to tear or rend a Thing, and is fo tranflated, Judg. xiv. 6. where Sampfn is defcribed rending a young Lion as he would have rent a Kid. And when the Fowls jcame down upou the CarcaiTes, Abram drove them away. And when the Sun was going down, (the Word of Jehovah .came again to Abram in a ViAon, and) a deep Sleep Jell upon ,(g) Gen xv 9. Abram ; H eb re w Btbl'e vindicated. 105 Abram; and lo, a Horror of great Darknefsfell upon him. A- £• D- And kef aid unto Abram, Know of a Surety, that thy Seed J^^j Jhall be a Stranger in a Land that is not theirs, and fall ferve them, and they fall aflidl them four hundred Tears. But in the fourth (h) Generation they fall come hither again, that is, from this Time to the End of their Servitude mall be four Generations, or about four hundred Years : Which Num- ber is not mentioned as the exact Number of Years, but as the neareft round Number, by taking one hundred Years for a Generation in a rough Method of Computation j for the exact Number of Years from the Promife made to A- bram to the Exodus was four hundred and thirty (/) j of which there were not yet ten Years elapfed, when this Vi- iion was mewed unto Abram. It is likewife mentioned in this Place, as if thefe four hundred Years were to be fpent in Egypt, and that the whole Time was to be fpent in Sla- very and Affliction j whereas from the Time of Jacob's En- trance into Egypt, to the Time of the Exodus was but two hundred and fifteen Years, and the Time of the Slavery lafted but about eighty Years, commencing a little before the Birth of Mofes, when the new King (k) arofe who knew not Jofeph. In the fame incorrect Manner of Speaking, Mofes fays, Now the fojourning of the Children of Ifrael, who dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty Tears (I) -y whereas the fojourning of the Children of Ifrael'm Egypt was but two hundred and fifteen Years ; and therefore the Septuagint Verfion of the Bible fays, That the fojourning of the Children of Ifrael in Egypt and Canaan was four hun- (h) Gen. xv. 16. (i) Exod. xii. 40, 41; Gal. iii. 17. Ik) Exed. i, 8. (/) Exod. xii. 40.. P dred 106 The Chronology of the A. P. D. dred and thirty Years, which has but half rectified the Ml- _ i flake, for Jacob was not married above two hundred and fixty-nine Years before the Exodus, and his Name was not changed into Ifracl till about twenty Years after his Mar- riage j fo that though Abram and his Poflerity might have ibjourned in Egypt and Caiman four hundred and thirty Years before the Exodus, the Children of Ifracl could not poffibly have done it. But as thefe are only verbal Incor- rectnerTes which arife entirely from the Method of Expreffi- on, no Body can poffibly infill upon them as Arguments to invalidate the Truth of the Mofaical Hiftory, who is not poiTefled with a low and cavilling Spirit of Criticifm; for they are all fet to Rights at once, by confulting the Samari- tan Pentateuch ; where it is faid, That the fojourning of the Children of Ifrael a?id their Fathers, in the Land of Canaan and in the Land of Egypt was four hundred and thirty Tears, Exod. xii. 40. And Abram having awaked from the Sleep and the Vifwn, when the Sun was down, and it was dark, behold, afmoaking , Furnace, and a burning Lamp pa fed between thefe divided Pieces of the Heifer, the Goat, the Ram, the Turtle Dove, and the Pigeon, And in that fame Day (m) Jehovah made a Co- venant with Abram, faying, Unto thy Seed have I given this Land, from the River of Egypt to the great River Euphrates. When thisCuftom began of making of Covenants by dividing the Parts of Creatures, andpaffing between the divided Parts, is not certain 5 this being the firfl Time of its being menti- oned. But it is certain, that it. continued afterwards to be a (m) Gen. xy- 17, 18 cufto- Hebrew Bible vindicated, 107 cuftomary Practice in making of Covenants, not only among A- p- D. the Jews (n) but alfo among the Heathens ; becaufe it is fre- 3 quently mentioned (0) in Homer, Apollodorus, Livy, and Plutarch) as the Form of Swearing whole Armies and large Bodies of Men, by making them march between the di- vided Parts of Creatures. The Meaning of which was to denote, that he who did not perform the Covenant agreed upon, made himfelf liable to be cut or torn in Pieces in like Manner as the Animal that was before him. And hence it comes to pafs, that in the New Teftament the Se- verity of God's Judgments are exprerled by a Word which iignifies, cutting a Man in /under > foxtfopfrei «JJcV, Mat, xxiv. 51. Luke xii. 46. Ten (p) Years after Abram' s firft Arrival in Canaan, ^jft. Sarai took Hagar her Hand-maid the Egyptian, and gave her to Abram to Wife, and faid unto Abratn, Behold now the Lord hath rejlrained me from Bearing : I pray thee go in unto my Maid j it may be that I may obtain Children by her. From this ParTage, and what afterwards happened to Jacob (q), with Regard to his two Wives and their two Hand- maidens it appears, that a married Woman's Property in her Slave, was inviolable even by the Hufband ; and that Abram and Jacob never attempted to meddle with their Wives Servants, till defired by their MiftrefTes. And that, even after this, Sarai difpofed of Hagar as of her Slave, and turned her out of Doors as me pleafed (r). It like- («) Jer. xxxiv. 18. {o) Vide Grot, in Mat. xxvi. 28. Patrick in Loc. and Mede's Difcourfes. (/>) Gen. xvi. 1—3. (f) Genxxx. 3---9. (r) Gen. xvi 6. xxi. io» P 2 wife 108 The Chronology of the A P. D wife appears, that the Children of the Slave were alfo ths 37^ Property of the Miftrefs, and belonged to her of Right, Hence Sarai fays, It may be 1 may obtain Children by her ;, which is alfo the Reafon given by Rachel (s) and Leah' So that the Maxim in the Civil Law Partus feguitur Venr- trem, feems to have rifen from a very antient Cuftom ; that is, that the Child of a female Slave, is a Slave, whe- ther begotten by a Bondman or a Free : And that the Child belongs to the Owner of the Female Slave. See alfo Exod. xxi. 4. where it is commanded, that if a Matter gives a Wife, that is, one of his own Female Slaves, who was no Hebrew, to be a Wife to an Hebrew Slave or Servant, the Hebrew fhall be releafed from his Bondage at the End of feven Years j but the Wife and her Children fhall continue to be her Matter's Property. Some Time after this, Hagar, when fhe found herfelf with Child, treated her Mittrefs with Contempt, and Sarai complained thereof to Abram, who faid unto her, Thy (t) Maid is in thy Hand, do to her as it pleafeth thee. And when Sarai dealt hardly with her, fhe fled from her Face, towards Egypt her native Country. And when fhe was come near to a Place afterwards called Beerfieba, to the Well Beer-lahai-rci, the Angel of Jehovah appeared unto her, and ordered her to return to her Miftrefs, promifing her a Son, whom fhe fhould call JJlmael; which Word is derived frem Shamah, to hear, and El, God ; Becaufe, fays he, the Lord hath heard your Complaint. And he will be a wild Man j his Hand will be againfi every Man, and every d) Gen. xxv. 3, 1* (0 Gen. xvi 6- Man's Hebrew Bible vindicated 109 Mans Band againjl him : And he pall dwell in the Frefence A; P. D. of all his Brethren. And Jhe called the Name cf the Jeho- JjJ^ vah that /pake to her, Thou Godfeefime. Where it is to be obferved, that the fame Perfon who is in ver. 9. 10, if. called an Angel, is in ver. 13. called Jehovah and Gcd ; whence it manifeftly appears, that Jehovah was not (as it was according to the Opinion of the Jews) an incommunic- able Name. As to the Fulfilling of this Prophecy, the Curious may confult Jack/on s Works (u), and Revelation' examined with Candour, but I mail only at prefent mention that the Defcendents of JJhmael, are thofe Arabians who are now well known by the Name of Wild Arabs : That they formerly went by the Name of Bagarens, as well as IJhmae-- lites ; but afterwards this Name was changed by theWeftern People into that of Saracens ; which fome think is derived from Sarah, as if they had a Mind to be thought the Pro- ^ geny of Sarah rather than of Hagar : But it is more pro- bable, becaufe this Word (x) is never ufed by the Eaftern People, or Authors, that this Name is derived from the Ara- bick Word Sarak (y), which fignifies to pal or plunder, than from Sarah the Wife of Abram-, and is therefore never ufed by the Eaftern People or Authors, becaufe it is a Term of Reproach. When (z) Abram was eighty-fix Years of Age Ifimael 379- was born from Hagar to Abram. (u) Jackfon, 1. i. c 25. (x) See Pocock's Travels, p. 136. (>•) Calm. Di&- Hagaren, (*) Gen. xvi. 16 NI- 1 1 o The Chronology of the A. P. D. 380. N1NIA& having reigned thirty-eight Years died, and was fucceeded by Arias. But before his Death he overcame Ham, according to Berofus, in a pitched Battle at the Head of the Bacirian Army. In which Battle Ham was killed. Berofus takes Notice that this Ham was alio known by the Name of Zoroaftres. This Piece of Tradition therefore may have taken Rife from the common Name of Saturnus being given in After-ages to this Zoroaftres King of the Baclrians, as well as to Ham, which Berofus, or thofe from whom he had his Information, miftook for Ham. Ctefius (b) fays> that this Zoroaftres King of the Baclrians v/as killed by Ni- nus the Hufband of Semiramis, and not by Ninias his Son. 392. When Ahram was ninety-nine Years old God renewed his Promife to him, and changed his Name from Abram to Abraham, becaufe he was to be a Father of many Nations, The Word Abram is derived in Hebrew from Ab, a Father, and Rom, which fignifies High. And the Change of his Name to Abraham is made by the Addition of the firft Syl- lable of the Word Hamon, which fignifies a Multitude. So that inftead of Ab-rom or Ab-ram, he was now called Ab- ra-ham, quad Ab-ra-Hamon. God likewife at this Time instituted (c) Circumcifion, and promifed him a Son by his Wife Sarah, whofe Name was at this Time changed from Sarai, which fignifies my Princejs, to Sarah, which fignifies the Princefs : And ordered her Son's Name to be called Jfaac, which fignifies he has laughed, becaufe Abrahatn laughed when this Son was promifed, Gen. xvii. 17. Abra- (/>) Dlod. 1. 2- c- 1. (c) Gen. xvii. 1— 21. ham He brew Bible vindicated. 1 1 1 i,am therefore took Jpmael his Son, and all that were born A< *'• l)- "02. in his Houfe, and all that were bought with his Money, (J^-^j every Male among the Men of Abraham's Houfe, and cir- cumcifed the Flefh of their Forefkin, in the felf-fame Day as God had faid unto him. It is to be obferved, that above fourteen Years before this Event Abraham's Houfehold was fo large as to afford him to carry out to Battle (d) three hundred eighteen trained Servants born in his own Hcufe, and to leave enough behind for the Protection of his Wife, and the reft of his Family. We cannot therefore fuppofe, that a Perfon of Abraham's Character and Condition in Life, in the hundredth Year of his Age, at the Head of fuch a Fa- mily, would gravely fubmit to fuch a fhameful, and painful Operation upon any Account whatfoever, lefs than the Com- mand of God. An Operation which at his Time of Life had no one worldly Reafon to plead for it. Which human Reafon therefore never would have devifed, nor human Pru- dence have allowed him to fubmit to, in a Land wherein they were Strangers, if it had not been commanded by God. * Herodotus (e) indeed reports, that the People of Pa- lefiine learned this Practice from the Egyptians, but the Books of Mofes were published above a thoufand Years be- fore Herodotus, it is therefore much more reafonable to think that Mofes was in the right than Herodotus, fince nothings lefs than a Command from God can rationally account for the Origin of this Cuftom. See Notes on Gen. xlv, 12 And (f) Jehovah appeared afterwards to Abraham in the Plains of Mamre, as he fat in the Tent Door in the Heat of (d) Gen- xiv. 14- (?) Herod Euter. (/) Gen. xviil- 1 the 1 1 2 The Chronology of the A. P. D. the Day ; and he lift up his Eyes and looked, and lo three ^l^j Men ftcod by him : And Abraham invited them to reft thcmfelves, and take a Morlel of Bread along with him. And Abraham haftned into the Tent unto Sarah, and faid, Make ready quickly three Meafurcs of fine Meal, knead it, and make Cakes upon the Hearth. Which (g) Rauwolf takes Notice of as the Cuftom to this Day in Mcfopotamia:, where they bake the Bread in the Allies, by heating the Dough, and turning it often till it acquires a little Hardnefs or Cruftinefs ; and then throwing Afhes over it, they make it into Cakes, about a Finger thick, and the Size of a Trencher. And that one of thefe Perfons, who ate and drank along with Abraham, had the Appellation of Jehovah conferred on him is plain from the Context ; for when one of thefe Men enquired for Sarah, and {aid, Lo Sarah thy Wife fiall have a Son ; upon which Sarah laughed within herfelf ; then Mofes faith, that Jehovah faid unto Abraham, why did Sarah laugh, is any thing too hard fir Jehovah f And when the Men rofe up from thence and looked towards So- dom, Abraham went with them to bring them on the Way. And two of them going forward by themfelves turned their Faces from thence, that is, from Abraham's Tent, and went towards Sodom ; but left the third in Converfaticn with Abraham, and Abraham food before Jehovah. Whence it is plain, that this Jehovah was not that God whofe Face no one can fee and live, Ex. xxxiii. 20. And Jehovah faid, Shall I hide from Abraham that T'hiyig which I do -, and then af- figning the Reafon for the many Favours conferred, and the ^re at Confidence repofed in Abraham, he fays, For I know (e) Pau. Trav. p. 186. him, Hebrew Bible vindicated 1 1 3 him, that he will command his Children ■, and his Hou/J:old af- A- ,J- D- ter him, a?id theyfiall keep the Way of Jehovah to do Jujiice ^j^/J^ and Judgment . And therefore the wife Son of Siracb fays accordingly (h), Abraham was a great Father of many Peo- ple ; in Glory was there none like unto him, who kept the Law of the Mofl High, and was in Covenant with him : He eftablifhed the Covenant in his Flefh, and when he was proved he was found faithful. Therefore he allured him with an Oath that he would blefs the Nations in his Seed. And then Jehovah informed Abraham of the Demuclion which he deligned to bring on Sodom and Gomorrah. And Jehovah went his Way as foon as he had left communing with Abraham. And the two (/) Angels who had left Abraham in thfc Appearance of Men came to Sodom in the Evening, and Lot fat in the Gate of Sodom, and invited the two Angels, who appeared only as Travellers, to take up their Lodgings in his Houfe. And the People of Sodom, probably being flruck with the beautiful Appearance of the young Men, would have prevailed with Lot to deliver up thefe Strangers to be abufed by them, which Lot would by no Means confent to ; but rather chofe to endeavour to appeafe them by profering two Maiden Daughters to them, thinking that a lefs Crime than the unnatural one, which they fought after, added to a Breach of Hofpitality. But the Angels, by finking them with Blindnefs, prevented all Mifchief ; for they wearied themfelves in vain to find the Door of the Houfe. And when the Morning arofe then the Angels haftened Lot, fay- ■(h) Eccluf. xliv. 19—21. (/) Gen. xix. i. 0*1 kfc ri4 TTm Chronology of the A. P. D. ing, Arife, take thy Wife, and thy two Daughters which are 392- here ; left thou be con fumed in the Iniquity of the City. Which Expreflion of thy two Daughters which are herey or as it is ra the Original, thy two Daughters which are found, mew that the two Sons-in-law of Lot mentioned, v, \-\. wrere not oons-in-law , who were efpoufed to thefe two Maiden Daughters, v. 8. as fome Commentators from Jofephus (k) hive imagined ; but Sons-in-law who were married to two Daughters of Lot, who were not there -} but probably were at home with their Hufbands, thinking that their Father Lot mocked, when he fpoke to them to fly for their Lives. And it was probably for the fame Fault that Lot's Wife was af- terwards fo feverely punimed, Gen. xix. 26. Luke xv'n. 3 1, 32.. the Angels being obliged to take him and his Wife and his two. Daughters by the Hand before they could get them out ©ftheHoufe. But Lot\ Wife flill more difobedient than the reft, turned back ; for fo it ought to be tranflated, the original Word being derived from *y\T\ Reverti, Redire, witk which the Syriack Verfion agrees: Andjhe became a Pillar of Salt ; which might be fo called, either becaufe it was a lad- ing Pillar, that is, a Stone, Pillar ; for as Salt contributes to the Prefervation of Things falted therewithr the He- brews made ufe of this Word to denote any Thing that was to continue long, thus a lafting Covenant, is called a Cove- nant of Salt, Num. xviii. 19. 2 Chron. xiii. 5. Or becaufe it was really compofed of a metallic Salt, that was as bard and durable as Stone. (i) Jofephi Ant. \-l* o 11. f. 4. For Hebrew Bible vindicated. 1 1 % A. P. D. For Pliny (/) fays, that in this Country there was a Kind 392- of metallic Salt that was dug out of the Mountains which was as durable as Marble -3 and that was frequently made ufe of in building of Houfes. And hence it probably came to pafs, that there was a City in this Diftricl:, that is, in the Wildernefs of Judah, not far from Engeddi, which was cal- led the City of Salty Jof. xv. 62. probably becaufe it Was built of this Kind of Stones. Or this ParTage may be un* derftood only to denote, that fhe was inftantly {truck dead and ftiff with Lightning. It being common for the He- brews to leave out the Particle As : For thus it is faid of Nabal, 1 Sam. xxv. 37. that bis Heart died in him, and he became a Stone ', infteadof as a Stone. Thus alfo it is faid of Mofes, Exod. vii. 1. that Jehovah made him a God to Pha- raoh, inftead of as a God. In like Manner, this Expreffi- on of Lot's Wife becoming a Pillar of Salt, may be under- ftood to mean that Jhe became as a Pillar of Salt, i. e. of metallic Salt or Stone. Which Pillar Jofephus (m) men- tions as extant in his Time, and fays that he faw it : And Philo Judceus calls it by the common Name of a Pillar of Stone : And more modern Travellers mention their having feen the Remains of this Pillar, between the Mountains of Engeddi and the Dead Sea. But this I apprehend mufl be fome Miflake, for the Definition of Lot's Wife mufl have happened between Sodom and Zoar, which is at the lower End, that is, the Southern End of the Dead or Salt- Seat whereas Engeddi is towards the Northern End of it, not far (0 Plin. Hift. Nat. t ft. (m) Jof Ant- 1. 1. c 11. See alfo Wifd. x. 6, i Q^2 from 1 1 6 The Chronology of the A. P- D. from the North-Weft Corner of it, about three Miles Eaft- | fix ^ Z2L-J ward of Bethlehem, which is not above fix Miles South of" Jcrufalem ; fo that if fhe was actually turned into a Pillar of Stone, it is more than probable this Pillar was never feen af- terwards, but was covered over with the Waters which,, after the Deftruction of Sodom, flooded that whole Country. And when Lot. was arrived as far as Zcar(n), then Je- hovah rained upon Sodom and Gomorrah, Brim/lone and Fire J rom Jehovah out of Heaven. Both Tacitus and Strabo (o) take Notice of this Deftruction of thefe Cities, and acknowledge, them to have been deftroyed by Fire from Heaven. It is Jikewiie remarkable, that there is one Jehovah reprefented as acting' by Authority from another Jehovah in Heaven. After this Abraham (p) journeyed from the Plain of Mamre into the South Country, and fojourned in Gerar ■■•■. probably for the fame Reafon that he had formerly travelled into Egypt, that is, on Account of a Famine : becaufe he travelled to this Place alfo as he did into Egypt in Peril of his Life j and therefore ordered his Wife Sarah to fay that the was his Sifter. Sarah was now with Child of Jfaac, though not vifibly fo, and was in the ninetieth Year of her Age; and yet was. fo remarkably beautiful, that Abi?nelech (n) This Town was originally called Bela, Gen. xiv. 2- But Lot hav- ing begged of the Angel to give him Leave to retire to this Place, becaufe, fays he, this City is near to flee unto, and it is a little one: Therefore the Name of the City was called Zoar, Gen. xix. 20, 22. which in. Hebrew. fignifies Little. (f) Tacit- Hift. I 5. Strab. lib. J 6. (/>) Gen, xx. 1. King Hebrew Bible vindicated. 1 1 7 King of Gerar fent for her, and took her from Abraham. A. P. D. But God came to Abimekch in a Dream by Night, and faid, JfJ^ Behold, thou art but a dead Man, for the Woman which thou haft' taken, is a Man' s Wife. But Abimelech had not come- near to her : And he faid, Jehovah wilt thou flay alfo a righ- teous Nation ? Said" he not wito me,ft:e is my Sifter ? And ft e,. cuenjhe herfelffaid, He is my Brother. Then Abimelech cal- led Abraham, and faid unto him, What haft thou done unto us ? And what have I offended thee, that thou haft brought on we> and my Kingdom a great Sin ? And Abramfaid, Becaufe I thought fur ely the Fear of God is not in this Place, and they willftay me for my Wife's Sake. This is the Excufe which- Abraham makes to Abimelech for denying his Wife, and fay- ing, that (he was his Sifter. From whence it appears in the: firft Place, that the World at this Time was fo well peopled,., that Brothers and Sifters did not marry; and that declaring a' Perfon to be one's Sifter, was an fufficient Aflertion to de- note that fhe could not be the Wife. Abraham however en- deavoured to excafe one Part of his Conduct to Abimelech y. by faying, that indeed fhe was his Sifter alfo ; She is, fays he, the Daughter of my Father, but net the Daughter oj my Mo~ ther : And fhe became my Wife. This however was a palpa- ble Prevarication, fince it is plain, that what Abraham in- tended, by defiring Sarah to fay, that fhe was his Sifter, was to make People think fhe was not his Wife. Whence how- ever it is manifeft, in the feeond Place, that the Confangui- nity of being Brother and Sifter by Half-blood only was at that Time no Bar to Marriage. It is likewife manifeft, in the third Place, that Abraham' 's Care for the Prefervation of his own Life was fomething too ftrong ; and that he pre- ferred the Hazard of lofing his Wifex to the Hazard of. loiing; 1 1 8 The Chronology of the A. P. D. lofing his Life. God had formerly commanded Abraham 392- to go out of his Country, and from his Kindred, and from his Father's Houfe, into a Land that he would mew him, Gen. xii. i. And it came to pafs,fays Abraham to Abimelech, When God caufed me to wander from my Father's Houfe, that 1 [aid imt o her (Sarah) this is thy Kindnefs, which thou Jhalt fiew unto me ; at every Place whither we flail come, fay of me, He is my Brother. Whence it appears, that, though God had ordered him to go into the Land of Canaan, this Device of denying his Wife, and directing her to fay, me was his Sifter, was his own Contrivance. And I make no Doubt, that it was this prevaricating Conduct of his, which betrayed a Diftruft of God in preferving his Life, that gave Occafion to this Kind of Diftrefs being inflicted upon him; and was the Reafon why God, at his firft going into Canaan, drove him by a Famine to the Court of Pharaoh in Egypt ; and now at the Time of his Wife's being with Child, when he had juft received the Promife of having an Heir by her, that he was driven by a Famine to the Court of Abimelech ; where (he was taken from him in human Probability never to be reftored him again. And if we fuppofe Abraham to have loved his Wife Sarah, what we may think, muft have been his Anxiety during the Time that Sarah was detained both by Pharaoh and by Abimelech? God indeed was pleafed to interpofe in both Cafes, to preferve .Sarah from the Contamination of her Lovers; but Abra- ham's Anxiety in the mean Time muft not have been the lefs, as he probably did not know how it would end. How- ever after this Difcourfe, which Abimelech had with Abra- ham, he honourably returned Sarah to her Hufband, and feat fome Prefents along with her, according to the Cuftom of Hebrew Bible vindicated. 1 i 9 of the Times ; but at the fame Time rebuked Sarah for A- ft D. going without a Veil, which was the diftinguifhing Mark ^J^Lj of a married Woman, Gen. xxiv. 65. faying, I have given thy Brother one thonjand Pieces of Silver y Behold, he is to thee a Covering of the Eyes , unto all that are with thee and with all ottyr : 'Thus fie was reproved. That is, this Perfon whom you call your Brother, I know to be your Hufband, or a Covering to your Eyes ; that is, one upon whofe Account you ought to wear a Veil, which is the proper and diftin- guifhing Drefs of a married Woman, as well to preferve you from thofe of your own Houfehold, as from all others -r thus was fie reproved. From whence however we may obferve, that the facred Hiftorian is far from concealing the Faults of thofe Perfons whofe Hiftory he writes ; Noah's Drunkennefs, Abraham's Fear for his Wife, Sarah's intem- perate Warmth againft her Maid Hagar, Lot's Incelt, Ja- cob's Treachery to his Brother Efauy Rachel's Theft of her Father's Teraphim, Judah's Incontinency, his own Excufes and Dilatorinefs in going to Egypt, and his Brother Aaron's Idolatry are all told with great Impartiality. And indeed there appears through the whole Narration fuch an Air of Sim- plicity, as cannot be accompanied by any Thing but Truth : For the Author feems no more ftudious to magnify the Vir- tues, than he does to conceal the Infirmities either of him- fel£ or of any body elfe of whom he writes. IS A AC (q) was born to Abraham and Sarah when he 39> was one hundred Years of Age, and (he ninety; which agrees exactly with the Time affigned for the Birth oflfaac by Po- (?) Gen xxl 53 xvii. 17, lyhiftor j 2 o The Chronology of the A. P D. ishifior from Demetrius, who fays, he was born twenty-five 393- Years after the firft Arrival of Abraham in the Land of Ca- naan. * 394. An d (r) Ifaac the Child grew and was weaned, probably when he was about a Year old ; for it is not very likely that Sarah ihould abound with Milk : And therefore he was probably weaned as foon as conveniently might be (s). And Abraham made a great Feaft the fame Day that Ifaac was weaned. And Sarah faw the Son oi Hagar the Egyptian, who (lie had born unto Abraham mocking (t). Wherefore 4 flie faid unto Abraham, Caji cut this Bond-woman and her Son : And the Thing -was very grievous in Abraham's Sight, 4 becaufe of his Son. And God faid unto Abraham, Let it not l# grievous in thy Sight, in all that Sarah hath faid unto thee, hearken unto her Voice. And Abraham rofe up early in the Morning and took Bread, and a Bottle of Water, and gave it ' unto Hagar, (putting it upon her Shoulder) and the Child, and fent her away : and f:e departed and wandered in the Wildernefs of Beerjheba. And the Water was fpent in the Bottle, and fie cajl the Child under one of the Shrubs. And fi:e went, and fat her down over-againf him. And the Angel of God called to Hagar out of Heaven and faid, Arife, lift up the Lad, and hold him in thine Hand. And God opened her Eyes, andfiiefaw a Well cf Water. And fie went, and filed the Bottle with Water, and gave the Lad Drink. I f Mr. Bayle had confulted the Original, he would not have had all that Pleafure of Exultation, which he takes in (r) Gen. xxi. 8. (s) Eufeb Praep. Ev. 1. 9. c. 21. (/) St- Paul fays, that liiwxe, he perfecuted him, or hurt him, Gal. iv. 29- the cc C( cc ({ cc Hebrew Bible vindicated. 121 the leaning Abfurdity of Abraham's being reprefented as A* p- D. putting a Boy of fifteen or fixteen Years of Age upon Ha- 393- ^r's Shoulder, when he fent her away. ft Is it not very ftrange (u), fays he, that his Mother was obliged to carry him on her Shoulder at that Age, to lay him under a lit- tle Tree, to take him up again, to take him in her Hands, and to give him fome Drink. Read that Place concern- ing IJhmael-, it reprefents a Child in fwadling Cloaths, or faid Hebrew Bible vindicate J. 129 laid (/') unto his young Men who attended him. Abide you A- p- &• here with the Afs, and I and the Lad will go yonder and L^_)'jJ worfhip, and come again to you that even the Rumour of this Tranfactlon might not be fpread abroad. It is like- wife to be obferved, that this Affair between Abraham and his Son had been tranfacted above four hundred forty Years before the Ifraelitcs came to take PoffefTion of the Land -of Canaan ; but that this Practice of the Ammonites and Mo- abites, in offering up their Children to Devils, was then but a new Practice among them, and therefore could not have been borrowed from a Fact which happened above four hundred Years before. For Mofes charges the Ifraelites, while they were in the Wildernefs in the Neighbourhood of the Ammonites, with facrificing unto Devils, not to God 3 - to Gods whom they knew not, to new Gods that came new- ly up, whom their Fathers feared not, Deut. xxiii.. 1 7. SARAH being one hundred and twenty- feven Years old 40 0, (k.) died in Kirjath-Arba, the fame is Hebron in the Land of Canaan ; and Abraham came to mourn and to weep for her : Now though it is faid, that Abraham came to mourn for Sarah, yet it is not to be fuppofed that Abraham and Sarah lived in different Parts of the Land of Canaan, but that they lived in different Tents only, Gen. xxiv. 67. and that upon her Death, he quitted hi& own Tent, and came to hers to mourn and to weep for her feven Days and feven - Nights, as was the Cuftom among the Hebrews, Gen. 1. io0 - 1 Sam. xiii. 13. Jobn. 13. Judith xvi. 24. And tho' it is mentioned that Sarah died in Kirjath-Arba^ the fame- (i) Gen. xxii. 4, 5. (k) Gen. xxiii. i, S is > 1 30 The Chronology of the A. P. D. is Hebron in the Land of Canaan j yet it is certain, that we 43°- have no Account bsfore this of Abraham's Removal from Beerfrba ; but it is more reafonable to think, that Abraham had before this removed from Beerfieba to Hebron, where he made his nrft Settlement in the Land of Canaan, and where it is certain that he fpent the Remainder of his Days, Gen. xxxv. 27. than to fuppofe that Sarah and he had part- ed Habitations. 433« When (/) Ifaac was forty Years of Age, his Father thought it proper to look out for a Wife for him among his own Kindred, and not among the neighbouring Idolaters ; he therefore, called his favourite Servant unto him, probably Eliezer of Damafcus, in order to fend him to Haran to look for a Wife for Ifaac ; and faid unto him, Put, I pray thee, thy Hand under my Thigh : I will make thee five ar, that thou wilt not take a Wife unto my Son of the Daughters of the Ca- naanites. It is generally thought, that Abraham exacted this Form of Swearing from his Servant, becaufe that it was the cuftomary Form practifed in thofe Times when any Perfon took an Oath, for which fome Commentators have found out a very myftical Reafon j but as I cannot find out any Authority they have for this Opinion, it feems therefore to me, 'to be no more than Abraham's Command to his Ser- vant to come and approach him, and fwear to him. For He- rodotus (m) fpeaking of the Egyptians, fays, that when the Egyptians falute one another in publick, they bow the Body reciprocally, and carry their Hands to each others Knee. If this was therefore the refpectful Method of Ap- 1 (/) Gen. xxiv. 1; xxv. 20. (■*») Herod. Euter* proach Hebrew Bible vindicated, 13 f pronch which was practifed amongft Equals, when they met A. P. D. in publick, it is- very reafonable to believe that either this or 433' fome other Ceremony like it, fuch as embracing the Knee, and putting the Hand under or round the Thigh, was con- flantly practiied by Inferiors whenever they approached their Mafters : And as this favourite Servant was pro- bably Eliczer of Dajnafais, who was a Slave that was born: to Abraham in his own Houfe, Gen. xv. 2, 3. there is no Mark of Refpect which could be too fervile for him to pay ; and therefore I apprehend this Expreflion of putting the Hand to the Knee, or under the Thigh, might be ufed as an equivalent Term for approaching j and that this Speech of Abraham means no more than this, Come near me, L will make theefivear, . ABRAHAM* Servant having fucceeded in his Mef- fage, brought home with him Rebekah, the Daughter of Bethuel the Son of Nahcr the Brother of Abraham -3 and as they approached towards Beerfieba, Jfaac went out to meet them, and Rebekah lighted off the Camel, and put on her Veil as being his efpoufed Wife, and Jfaac brought her into his Mother Sarah's Tent. Now it is more than probable, that about this Time Abraham, when he had fettled his Son Ifaac, mi^ht dif- mifs the Sons which he had by his Concubines, and fend them into the World to provide for themfelves 3 for after the Marriage oflfaac we hear no more of Abraham., hut of the Divifion which he made of his Fortune between his Children } which is the Reafon why his having taken Ketu- rah to his Wife is mentioned in this Place. To his Son S 2 Ifaac 132 The C11 ron o log y of the A. I'. D. JJaac therefore he gave all that he had, i.e. the Bulk of lm 43S* fortune. But to the Sons of his Concubines, i. e. of Ketu- rah and Ha gar he gave Gifts, and fent them away from Jl'aac his Son Eafhvard, unto the Eaft Country. And hence it comes to pafs, that the Midianites,, who were the Sons of Keturah, and the Jjhmaelites who were the Sons of Hagar, are frequently confounded together and put the one for the other ; becaufe they did not feparate their Tribes, but lived together. For IJhmacl is pofitively faid to have dwelt in the Wildernefs of Faran, where his Mother took him a Wife out of the Land of Egypt , Gen. xxi. 21. And yet Jethro., Mofes's Father-in-law, who could not have lived far from thence, is called a Prieft of the Land of Midian, Ex. ii. 15, 16; iii. 1. Again, when fofeph's Brethren fold him to the Merchants, it is faid, Then there pafled by Midianitifh Mer- chantmen ; and they, i. e. his Brethren, drew and lifted up Jofepb out of the Pit, and fold Jofeph to the Ifimaelites for twenty Pieces of Silver, Gen. xxxvii. 28. Again, when Gi- deon had deftroyed the Hoftof the Midianites, Judg. vii. 1. who came to attack and vex the Ifraelites, the Men of Jfrael faid unto Gideon : Rule thou over us, fir thou haji deli- vered us from the Hand of Midian. And Gideon faid unto ihem, / will not rule over you, the Lord Jl: all rule over you. But I would defire a Requejl of you, that you would give me every Man the Ear-rings of his Prey : For they had golden Ear-rings, becaufe they .mr0lsHMAELiTES,Jud. viii. 22-24. Nor do thefe Midianites or Ifitnaelites feem to have had any fixed Habitation -3 for they dwelt alfo among the Amalekites on Mount Hor, from Havilah to Shur, which is over-againft Egypt, as appears from comparing Gen. xxv. 1 8. with 1 Sam. xv. 7. and in Judg. vi. 33. the Amalekites and Midianites are men- Hebrew Bible vindicated. j 3 3 mentioned as one and the fame People, when they attacked A- P. D. the Ifraelites under Gideon. They dwelt alfo among the 433' Moabites on the Eaft of the Salt Sea, as appears from com- paring, Numb. xxv. ver. 1. with wr. 17. where Ifrael is faid to have committed Whoredom with the Daughters of Moab, and yet the Woman who is mentioned as being found guilty with Zimri the ifraelite, is called a Midianitifij Woman; whereupon the Lord fpake unto Mofes and faid, Vex the Midianites, and finite them. See alfo Numb. xxii. ?, 4, &c. And therefore Mofes, when he is defcribing their going forth from Abraham to fettle themfelves in the World, only mentions their going out Eajlward to make their Set- tlements in the Eajl Country at large, ARALIUS after he had reigned forty Years died, and 450, was fucceeded by Baleus, who is alfo called Xerxes, or the Conqueror. Berof. RE BE KAH having been barren for nineteen Years, 452. Jfaac intreated Jehovah for his Wife ; and Jehovah was in- treatedof him, and Rebekah his Wife conceived, and the Children ftruggled within her : and Hie faid, If it be fo, why am I thus f And fhe went to enquire of Jehovah, Gen, xxv. 22. which the Septuagint Verfion renders, 'E< Htu poi fieXXtt ytve (o)" But the Hiftory of Mofes fays no fuch Thing ; it takes no Notice of any Pain or Mifery that Re- bekah endured or underwent, only that fhe feeling an un- ufual and uncommon Commotion in her Womb could not apprehend the Reafon of it ; but imagining there muft be fomething extraordinary in it, fhe went to enquire of the Lord j for the Words of the Hebrew literally tranflated are, And fi:e faid, iffo, why I thus f And fihe went to enquire of the Lord; that is, fhe went to enquire into the Caufe or. Reafon of this ftxange Feel or Senfation. This is the firft Time that any one's going to enquire of the Lord is men- tioned in the Scriptures ; for though' God was pleafed to communicate himfelf frequently to Abraham by the Mi- niftration of Angels, it is no where mentioned that Abra- ham ever went to confult God. There are many Conjec- tures therefore formed by the Learned how Rebekah en- quired of the Lord. Some think, fhe went to confult Sem (p), fome that fhe went to confult Heber (q). But if fhe did any Thing more than offer up her own Prayers and Pe- («) Crit. Sac in loo (o) Univer. Hift. p. 436. (/>) Fagius in loc. . {q) Grotius in loc. titions Hebrew Bible vindicated, i 3 '5 "titions to God, it is more likely that (lie went to confult her A. P. D. Father-in-law Abraham, than any one elfej for he was the .45 2- Pried: as well as Prince of the Family, and was then alive, and lived with his Son Ifaac at Hebron, Gen. xxxv. 27. And going to enquire from a Prophet is in the Language of the Scriptures called enquiring from the Lord, Exod. xviii. 15. 1 Sam. ix. 9. But whatever Method it was that flie took to enquire from the Lord, it is manifeft that me received her Anfwer j for the Lord faid unto her, Two Nations are in thy Womb, and two mamier of People fiall be feparated from thy Bowels : and the one People fiall be jlronger than the other People, and the elder Jhall ferve the younger, Gen. xxv. 23. It is not mentioned, whether me ever told her Hufband Ifaac -of this Prediction ; but it is more than probable, that me did not, fince it is mentioned that Ifaac loved Efau (r) becaufe he did eat of his Venifon -, but Rebekah loved "Jacob. And it was probably owing to this Prediction, added to her Love for Jacob, that we find Rebekah afterwards fo watchful of her tlufband Ifaac in his Sicknefs, and fo follicitous to obtain that Blerling for Jacob, which Ifaac intended for his fa- vourite Efau, who is remarked for having been a cunning. Hunter -, but Jacob a plain Man, u e. as the original Word fignifies, -without Guile (s). RE BE KA H having been barren for nineteen Years and 453 • upwards, was at laft brought to Bed . of EJau and Jacob, Ifaac being now fixty Years old. Compare Gen. xxv. 20. with Gen. xxv. 26. ABRAHAM died, being one hundred feventy-five 468, Years old, Gen. xxv, 7. ESAU (r) Gen. xxv. 28. (s) Gen. xxv. 47 I 3 6 The Chronology of the E SAU (t) having been one Day hunting in the Field 3 r returned home very hungry and tired \ for fo the original Word properly fignifies, and not faint, as rendered in our. Tranflation ; which is too flrong an Expreffion for the Pur- pofe. And Efau, finding his Brother Jacob preparing fome Pottage, faid to him, Feed me with that fame Pcttage ; ., which Pottage being of a red Colour, and Efau faying only, Feed me with that Red, that fame Red, the Hebrew for which is Edom, was the Occafion afterwards of Efau being called by the Nick-name of Edom. And Jacob faid, Sell me this Day thy Birth-right. And Efau faid, Since I cannot expect to outlive the Term predicted for the Enjoyment of the Land of Canaan, but fhall die by the Courfe of Nature long before that Time, what Profit flail this Birth-right do to me? In our Tranflation the Words run thus : Behold I am at the Point to die ; and what Profit fall this Birth-right do to me V Which Expreffion is much ftronger than the Original, which only fays, Behold I approach towards Death -, which may be faid by any Man irt the ftrongeft Degree of Health. And to this Purpofe it is rendered by the Septuagint, Uopevopcci reXev- t«v, Vado morix and fo the reft of the Verfions. And Jacob kid, Swear to me this Day, that I fhall have it; and he fwore unto him, and he fold his Birth-right unto Jacob. Then- Jacob gave Efau Bread and Pottage of Lentils ; and he did eat and drink; and rofe up and went his Way : Thus Efau defpifed his Birth-right, i. e. by felling it for fuch a Trifle, From which ihort Narrative of this Tranfa&ion it appears* more than probable, that Efau took a Fancy to this Pottage, and that it was Humour more than Neceifity which made (*) Gen. xxv. 27, fcfr. him i Hebhew Bible vindicated. 137 him fo follicitous for it ; for though it is faid, that he was A P« D. y^/«/ with Hunger, yet if he had apply 'd to any of the ^ ' many Servants in his Father's Family, they mull have gotten him fomething to eat. But this Pottage ftruck him when he was in this hungry Mood ; and therefore he fays in a very particular and emphatical Manner, Feed me with that Red, that fame red 'Pottage. Then faid Jacob unto him, Sell me this Day thy Birth-right, and he fold his Birth-right unto Jacob. It is therefore alfo more than probable, from this Manner of ExprefTion, that thefe two Brothers had had frequent Difcourfe upon this Subject before this Time ; be- caufe Jacob does not explain, nor Efau enquire, what Part of his Birth-right it was that Jacob propofed to purchafe. whereas it is manifeft, that Efau did not fell to his Brother all his Birth-right ; for he did not part with his Birth-right to any of thofe Goods, or Flocks, or Herds, or moveable Subftance which belonged to his Father ; for Efau enjoyed thofe unmolefled at the Death of his Father, and carried them with him from Canaan to Mount Seir, Gen. xxxvi.6* —8. But the Right which Efau fold to Jacob, was his Right of Inheritance to any Land which his Father either was at that Time pofTefTed of in the Land of Canaan, or might in Length of Time be poiTerTed of by Virtue of thofe repeated Promifes which had been made by God to Abra- ham j which Efau feems not to have fet that Value upon which Jacob did ; and therefore Mofes adds, Thus Efau defpifed his Birth-right, ver. 34. Which is alfo the Occa- fion of the Author of the Epiftle to the Hebrews, calling Efau a profane (/) Perfon for felling his Birth-right, as be- traying thereby a Contempt for, or at lean: a Diffidence in [t) Htb. xii. 16 T the 1 38' 77je Chronology of the- A. P. D. the Promife.s of God. And accordingly, we find that upon 46^- the Death of Ifaac, Efau quitted Canaan, and left Jacob in PofTefiion of Hebron, where Abraham and Ifaac iiad fo- journed, and went and fettled at Mount Seir, {Jen. xxxv. 27—29. xxxvi. 6—8. 480. BA LEXIS, or Xerxes King of Babylon, died after .a Reign of thirty Years, .and was fucceeded by Armatritts. Beraf And there was a Famine (u) in the Land of Canaan, fcefides the firfb Famine that was in the Days of Abraham. And Ifaac went unto Abimelech King of the Philijlines, unto Gerar, in his Way towards Egypt. And the Lord appeared unto Ifaac, and faid, j ^ /)/w. J5f/'c/J //>y Dwelling ft:all be far from t£r Fatntfs of the Earth, and of the Dnv of Heaven from above. By tfa Sword JJ:a ft thou live and ft attferve thy Brother. Jnd it ft?all come to pafs w!;en thou ft:alt have the Dominion, thai rhouftwlt break his Yoke from off thy Nedi. In our Englijh Tranflation, and molt other Verfions of the Bible, Ifaac is made to fay to Efau, Thy Dwelling ftall be of the Fatnefs of the Earth, meaning thereby, that it fhould be in a fertile Soil; which cannot be the Meaning of the Blemng, becaufe Ifaac had already bleifed Jacob with Corn and with Wine ; and certain it is, that Efau lived by his Sword in Mount Seir, a wild and defolate Part far from the Fatnefs of the Earth, or the Dew of Heaven, which falleth not on high Mountain? near as much as it does upon Vallies ; for though Moun- tains are often covered with heavy Mifts, yet the fructifying foft and tender Dew does not fall fo frequently on them as on the low and ftill Vallies. And therefore the Prophet Malachi, fpeaking, in the Perfon of God, of the Habita- tion of Efau fays, / laid his Mountain and' his Heritage waftcfcr the Dragon of the Wildemefs, Mai. i. 3. And there- fore in the Conftruction of this Verfe from the Hebrew, thelPropofition Min muft. be looked upon as exclufive, and then all will be right. In this Diforder of the Dimncfs of jfaacs Eyes, Rebekah feems clofely to have attended him, with a View of getting her younger Son to be preferred to the Elder, as had been revealed to her mould come to pafs, Gen. xxv. 2 22 23. She feems therefore to have been upon the Watch when (he heard Ifaac fpeak to Efau, to look for Venifon, promifing his Blclfing, and directed Jacob immedi- ately what to do, and when he feemed diffident, left, if his Hebrew Bible vindicated. 14.3 his Fatiher found out the Deceit, he fhould brino- a Curfe A. P. L>. upon himfelf inftead of a Bleffingj for Jacob is characie- 529- rifed by Mofes as a P/<«« il£w, i. e. as the original Words fignify afimple honeft Man ; this Word is accordingly ren- dered by the Septuagint, "AttA*^, i. e. without Guile : She •then fays unto him,. Upon me be thy Curfe my Son-, mi ly obey my Voice. In which there feems to me a Confidence fome- thing more than natural .; and I cannot help thinking that God feems to have rewarded her Zeal by transferring the Blemng to Jacob, at the fame Time that he punifhes Efau's Indifference ; for though Efau feems exceedingly concerned when be heard that Jacob had taken away his Blefiing ; and that the one People mould be ftronger than the other Peo- ple ; and the Elder mould ferve the Younger : Which the Apoftle to the Romans explains, as if Rebekah underftood this Prediction to refer to the MeJJiah, or promifed Seed> which was to come out of the Loins of the Younger^ Rom. ix. 8—12. but how long it was before this Promife was to take Effect is not faid. Nor indeed were any of the Pro- mifes of Bleffings which were made to the Patriarchs, con- fined to their own Perfons, but to that of their Pofterity, And when the moft explicite Revelation of this Affair was made unto Abraham, it is faid, that it mall be four hundred Years before his Pofterity mail reap the leaft Benefit of thefe Promifes, and that in the mean Time they muft undergo Affliction and Servitude, Gen. xv. 13, 14. The Zeal in- deed with which Rebekah follicited the obtaining of this Bleffing for her Son Jacob, mewed the Value me put up- on it; and God feems to have rewarded her accordingly, by fuffering Ifaac to be impofed upon ; and, Rebeka/fs great U Regard 146 The Chronology*?/* the A. P. D. Regard for the Worfhip of the true God is fufficiently ma- nifeft from the Uneafinefs which Efau's Marriage with idolatrous Wives, gave her, Gen. xxvi. 35, xxvii. 46. But the Method which me purfued in obtaining this Blefling feems not quite fo commendable, fince the Artifice which was prefcribed by her, and practifed by "Jacobs was incon- fiftent with Truth and Honeity ; and I make no doubt, but that many of the Troubles which Jacob underwent were in- flicted on him upon this very Account, and that his long Servitude, whereby he was detained in Mefopotamia, and whereby his Mother was prevented from the Happinefs of ever feeing him again, was contrived by Providence as a Punimment on them both j but particularly on Rebekah, who always had an extraordinary Affection and Fondnefs for Jacob ; for it is more than probable, that me did not live to lee either him, or any of his Children j becaufe, when Jacob defired his Son Jofeph to bury him in the Cave of Macpelah, he faid, For (p) there they buried Ifaac tfWRebe- kah, his Wife, mid there I buried Leah : Whence it appears, that Rebekah had died, and was buried in the Abfence of Jacob; and poflibly it was upon the Death of Rebekah, that Deborah her Nurfe, who had quitted Hebron, and died at Bethel, came to meet Jacob on his Return home from. Haran to his Father at Hebron, Gen. xxxv. 8. This Event of Jacob's obtaining the Blefling came to pafs when Ifaac was one hundred thirty- fix Years of Age,andy^^ feventy-fix, that is fourteen Years before the Birth of J of ph. For as foon as Jacob had obtained it, Ifaac at the Defire of (p) Gen. lxix. 31*. Rebekah Hebrew B i b l e vindicated. 147 Rebekah (q) fent him off to Padan-Aram to get a Wife among A- P. D, his Relations : And Jofeph was born fourteen Years afterwards 5^ (r), that is> towards the End of his fourteen Years Service. Now it appears, that Jacob was ninety Years of Age when Jo- feph was born, becaufe Jofeph was (5) thirty Years of Age when he flood before Pharaoh, with whom he had lived during feven Years of Plenty, and three of Famine, when his Fa- ther Jacob came into Egypt. So that Jofeph was forty Years old when his Father arrived in Egypt. Now it is exprefly faid, that Jacob when he came into Egypt was (t) one hundred thirty Years of Age, and of confequence Jo- feph muft have been born when Jacob was ninety -} from which if you deduct fourteen Years, which was the Space of Time between the Birth of Jofeph and the Time of Ja- cob's getting the Bleffing, there will remain feventy-fix Years for the Age of Jacob when this Event came to pafs, and of confequence Ifaac was one hundred thirty-fix ; for he was (u) fixty Years old when Efau and Jacob were born, JACOB having fet out on his Journey in the Summer- time, came to a Place in the Land of (x) Canaan which Was called Luz, and having laid him down to fleep, with his Head upon a Stone, he dreamed and faw a Vifion of a Ladder with Angels afcending and defcending on it. And God flood above it, and renewed unto him the Promifes made before to Abraham and to Ifaac. And Jacob awoke^ and took the Stone that he had put for his Pillow and fet it {q) Gen. xxviii. 6. (r) Gen. xxx. 25,^26, xxxi. 41. (s) Gen, lxi. 46. (t) Gen. Ixvii. 28, («) Gen. xxv. 26* (*) Gen. xxxv. 6. U 2 UP p 148 The Chronology of tie A- P. D. Up for a Pillar, and poured Oil upon the Top of it, and ha 529- j called the Name of that Place Beth-el, that is, GW\f Hottfiy. which is the Reafon why thefe Stones which were erected as Marks of thofe Places having been dedicated to God? came to be called Bethels j and by a corrupt Pronunciation, of the Word, they were in Greek called (y) Bxfju\ioty which Sanchoniatho attributes to the Invention of Uranus and ex- plains by calling them animated Stones. And this is the Reafon why that Stone, which Rhea is fuppofed to have given Sa- turn to fwallow inftead of a Child, is called BolituXQ* j and not becaufe itwas covered with a woollen Garment, which is called Bcu'tvi in Greek as Hefychius (z) feems to have thought; And that thisCuftom of dedicating fingle Stones to God, was not confined to Judea is plain from (a) Clemens Alex- andrinus, who obferves, that before the Art of Carving wa3 invented, the Antients erected unwrought Pillars, and paid their Worfhip to them as to the Statues of the Gods. He- rodian (£) alfo mentions a Pillar, or large Stone, of a black Colour, and a conical Form at Antioch in Phoenicia , which was erected in Honour of the Sun. Paufanias (r) alfo men- tions feveral of thefe uncarved Pillars in Bceotia in Greece, and fays, they were the antient Statues erected to their Gods. And that this Cuftom continued till after the Time of the Prophet Ifaiah {d)> is plain from his making ufe of the Ex- preffion of erecting a Pillar to God to denote the Worfhip . of God. For, fays he, in that Day fhall there be an Altar to (y) Vide Sanchcn. (z) HcTych. Etym. See alfo Gen. xxxv. 15, and Joihua, xxiv. 26. {a) Clem. Alex. Strom. 1. 1. (b) Herod. ii 5. {c) Paufaii. in Roet- and in Achaic. (d.) If. xix. 19, 20. the Hebrew Bible vindicated. 149 the Lord in the midft of the Land of Egypt, and a Pillar A. P. D. at the Border thereof to the Lord. And it fhall be for a . 529- Sign, and for a Witnefs, unto the Lord of Hofts in the Land of Egypt. And Arnobius (e),. who flourifhed about three hundred thirty Years after Chrift, fays, that this Cu- ftom continued to his Time;, and that when he was &.- Heathen he never faw a Stone which had the Marks of Oil being poured upon it, that he did not look upon as fome- thing divine, and offered up his Prayers to it as fuch. — And Jacob vowed a Vow, faying, If God will be with me, fo that I come again in Peace to my Father's Houfe, then fiall Jeho- vah be my God ; that is, I will naffer no Idolatry in my Fa- mily. And this Stone which I have fet up for a Pillar JJj all be God's Houfe : And of all that thou fmlt give me, I will furely give the Tenth unto thee, Gen. xxviii. 10 — 22. How it was that he was to give the Tenth unto God is not faid ; but more than probable it is, that this was performed when Laban overtook him upon his Return from Haran, at which Time it isobferved, that (f) Jacob offered Sacrifices upon the- Mount, and called his Brethren to eat Bread. JACOB (g) then having purfued his Journey and paffed the River Jordan, with his Staff in his Hand, not far from the Place where the Brook Jabbock falls into it,. Gen. xxxii, 10 — 22. and having travelled further into the Eait, he at lafr. met Rachel at the Well of Haran, and was conducted to Laban' % Houfe when he was (h) feventy-fix Years of Age? where (e) Arnob. cont. Gent. 1. i. (/) Gen. xxxt. 54. (g) Gen, xxix. 1. (/') Alex. Polyhljlor, who lived in the Time of Sylla and Corn. Lintulu^ having been taken a Prifoner, and fold as a Captive to &rn, Loitulus, and by i 50 TJje Chronology of the A. P. D. where he ftaid a Month (i), before they come to an 529* Agreement about Jacob's entering into his Service in order to obtain Rachel for a Wife, which he did upon Condition that he mould ferve Lab an for feven Years, to which Jaccb agreed -y for they- feemed unto him but a few Days for the Love he had to her. And when the Days of Preparation for the Wedding were fulfilled ', which might be in about a Week's Time, Jacob demanded his Wife, but was put off with Leah inftead of Rachel, Gen. xxix. 1 — 25. It is gene- rally thought, that Jacob did not get his Wife till after his feven Years Service was ended, becaufe it is faid, that Jacob ferved feven Years for Rachel ; and they feemed to him but a few Days, for the Love he had unto her. And Jacob faid unto Laban, Give me my Wife, for my Days are fulfilled, that may go in unto her, Gen. xxix. 20, 21. But I apprehend that it is more reafonable to fuppofe that Leah was given him at the Week's End, as it is manifeft that Rachel was after- wards, Gen. xxix. 27. and becaufe that if this Marriage with Leah be deferred for feven Years, it will create many Difficulties net only in fettling the Births of the feveral Pa- triarchs, but alfo in finding Time for Judalfs Offspring between the Time of his Birth and his going into Egypt, For Leah muft have had feven Children in the feven Years, and yet muft in that Time be fo long without having any Child as to think that fhe had left off bearing, Gen. xxx. 9. by him manumitted, mentions from the Writings of Demetrius the Hifio- iian, that Jacob came to Cbarra when he was 77 Years of Age, which varies but a little from our Computation. Now Pliny, another Heathen, takes Notice of this Pclyhijhr as a Perfon of great Learning, and owns himfelf to haw made great Ufe of his Writings. Piin. Nat. Hift. Plin. 1. 7. See Eufeb. Piaep. Ev. 1 9. 21. {h) Gen. xxix- 14. and Hebrew Bible vindicated* x \t i and to have two Sons born to her Hand-maid Zilpah, be- A- p- D tween her Son Judah and her Son JJjachar, Gen. xxx. 9—18. -52^' And as to the Offspring of Judah, it is plain, that when he went into Egypt his Son Pharez had two Children, Gen. xlvi. 12. at which Time we cannot poffibly fypftaSs Pharez to be lefs than feventeen or iixteen Years of Age at the leaft. Pharez was not born till a Year after the Death of Onan. Gen. xxxviii. io, ii,6?£. Onan had been married before' he died, Gen. xxxviii. 8, 9. He muft therefore have been about fifteen Years of Age at the leaft when he died. And as Onan was the fecond Son of Judah, Gen. xxxviii. 3.. 4. we cannot fuppofe Judah to be lefs than feventeen or Iixteen Years of Age at the lead: when Onan was born, all which added together ( 1 6+ 1 5+ 1 + 1 6=48 ) make forty-eight Years between the Birth of Judah and Jacob' % going into Egypt. Now Jacob was one hundred thirty Years old when he went into Egypt. And therefore Judah muft have been born when Jacob was eighty-two Years old, which is about fix Years after the Time of his Arrival at Laban's Houfe : And as Judah wTas the fourth Son of Jacob by Leak, he mull of confequence have been married at leaft four Years before this, and therefore was probably married to Leah foon after his Arrival. But if we fuppofe Judah to have been feven- teen Years of Age when Ona?r\\is fecond Son was born, and Pharez to have been feventeen Years of Age, when Hamulh'fi fecond Son was born j then Jacob muft have been but eighty Years old when Judah his fourth Son was born, which is exactly four Years after his Arrival at Laban's Houfe, which will be quite confonant with the whole Hiftory if we fuppofe Leah given to Jacob at a Week's End after the Agreement, And as to the Demand made by Jacob for his Wife, fay- ing. 1 52 'Tlje Ch ronology of the A. P. D.fng, Give me my Wife, (for my Days are fulfilled) that 520- I may go in unto her, Gen. xxix. 20, 21 ; it mould feem as if the Words, .For my Days are fulfilled y mould be read without a Parenthefis ; and then they may be underftood of his demanding his Wife in a few Days after the Bar- gain was made with Laban for her, and therefore the Septuagint Verfion renders it thus : Give me my Wife j for the Days are fulfilled, that I may go in unto her. But Jacob having expoftulated with Laban on the Difappointment he met with in being put off with Leah inftead of Rachel, he then at the other Week's End ob- tained Rachel alfo for the other feven Years Service, Gen. xxix. 27. Whence it is plain, that the World was not (o well peopled at this Time as to have the marrying of two Sifters to be declared inceftuous, and made a Bar to their Cohabitation. The Degrees of Confanguinity which prohibited Marriage naturally, and with good Reafon, vari- ed as the WTorld grew more populous, till fixed in fome Proportion by the Levitical Law j for Jafaph, addidit, adjectt, auxit, be- caufe Rachel being prophetically infpired at the Time of his Birth faid, The Lord JJ:all add to me another Son, Gen. xxx. 23, 24- But Hebrew Bible vindicated. 153 a. P. D. But Jacob (!) being prcffed to flay longer to ferve ^fl^w Laban, For, faysLaban, 1 have learned by Experience, that the Lord hath blerTed me for thy Sake j Jacob agreed thereunto, upon Condition that Laban would give him all the fpeckled and fpotted Cattle. To which Laban con- ferred. And Jacob took him Rods of green Poplar, and of the Hafel and Chefnut-tree, and pilled white Strakes in them. And it came to pafs, that when the flronger Cat- tle did conceive, that Jacob laid the Rods before the Eyes of the Cattle in the Gutters. But when the Cattle were feeble he put them not in : So the feeble were Laban's, and the flronger were Jacob' s, Gen. xxx. 25 — 42. Againit which Contrivance of Jacobt fome modern Criticks have been pleafed to object, in very harm Terms, as if it was a Proof of Difhonefly and Knavery in Jacob. The Force of which Objection I own I do not fee, if we confider it only in a natural Light, fince the Bargain when agreed to was a fair one. But on the other Hand it appears, that Laban afterwards would not flick to the Bargain, but changed it by the meer Force of Authority according to his own Will ; and fometimes appointed the fpeckled Cattle, and fometimes the Ring-flraked only to be Jacob's Hire, Gen. xxxi. 8. So that if there was Difhonefly prac- tifed on either Side, it was on the Side of Laban rather than Jacob. But if we confider, that this Contrivance could not poffibly be of human Invention, Jacob's Conduct will be entirely vindicated ; and whoever tries will find the Event, as mentioned here, to be fupernatural. It was . (/) Gen. xxx. 27. X therefore 154 The Chronology^/ the A. P. D. therefore revealed to him in a Dream at the Time when, 543* j as he fays, an Angel of God fpake to him faying : Lift up new thine Eyes and fee, all the Rams which leap upon the Cattle are Ring-fraked, fpeckled and grifed : for I have feen all that Laban doth unto thee, Gen. xxxi. n, 12. And accordingly Jacob fpeaking to his Wives, when he was about to leave Laban fays, Tour Father hath deceived me, and changed my Wages ten times : but God fuffered him mt to hurt me. For if he faid thus, The. fpeckled Cattle fiall be thy Wages, then all the Cattle bare fpeckled : and if he faid thus, The ring-ft raked fiall be thy Hire j then bare all the Cattle ring-Jlraked. Thus God hath taken a- way the Cattle of your Father, and given them to me, Gen. xxxi. 7 — 9. Then he gives them an Account of his Dream. It muft therefore be underftood, that Almighty God, in order to repay Jacob for the ill Ufage he re- ceived from Laban, fent his Angel to inftrucl: him in this Device ; which would not have anfwered if it had not been directed by God. The Samaritan Pentateuch has therefore repeated this Dream, and inferted it between the thirty-fixth and thiity-feventh Verfes of the thirtieth Chapter, as well as between the tenth and fourteenth of the thirty-firft. But in my Opinion it ought to have been inferted rather between the twenty-eighth and twen- ty-ninth Verfes, that is, before Jacob made his Bargain with Laban rather than afterwards j when Laban had refufed to let him go, and dcfired him to name his own Terms, faying, Appoint me thy Wages, and 1 will give it, Gen. xxx. 28. Which it is more than probable he took (ome Time to confider of ; and during which Time it probably was that the Angel appeared to him in a Dream, as mentioned Gen. xxxi. 1 1 . In Hebrew Bible vindicated. 1 j 5 A« P. d, I n the thirtieth Year of Belochus, according to Berofus, 5jk3^ s Ofiris was fent for into Italy, where he ftaid ten Years, and left Lejirigon his Grandfon by Neptune to be their King. It is to be obferved, that about fixty Years before this Ifaac had plowed and fowed Corn in the Country of the Pbilifines, Gen. xxvi. 12. It is therefore probable, that about this Time the Art of Plowing and Sowing might have reached Italy, and becaufe among the Heathens the Invention of this Art was attributed to Ofiris, therefore Ofiris himfelf was by the later Traditions tranfported into Italy for this Purpofe. JACOB having ferved Laban (m) fix Years longer 549^ ftole away privately from Laban (n), but was purfued and overtaken by him j however, God, in a Dream, charged him by no Means to hurt Jacob j in the Hebrew Bible it is, Take thou heed that thou fpeak not to Jacob either good or bad, Gen. xxxi. 29. with which the Samaritan Pentateuch, the Arabick and Syriack Verlions, and the Targum of Onkelos agree, but the Septuagitit Verfion fays, Take care that you fpeak no Evil to Jacob. Which certainly is the Meaning of the Text ; and therefore Laban only reprimanded him in an affectionate Manner, for leaving him fo privately. Where- fore, fays he, didft thou flee away fecretly, and fleal away from ^me ? and didft not tell me, that I might have fent the away with Mirth, and with Songs and with Tabret, and with Harp ? And hajl not fuffered me to kifs my Sons and my Daughters'? And now though thou wouldft need be gone, be- (w) Gen- xxxi. 41. {n) Gen. xxxi- 20, 21* X 2 caufi i 5 6 Tlje Chronology of the A. P. D. caufe thou fore longeft after thy Father's Houfe j yet where- 549- fore haft thou jlolen my Gods? Gen. xxxi. 27, 30. Thefe Gods are Verfe the nineteenth called D*|nr) Terapkim, Images j for there it is faid, that Rachel had ftolen away the (Teraphim) Images that were her Father's. Now the Difficulty in this Place is to find what thefe Teraphim were, and what was the Ufe that Laban made of them, fince it is more than probable, that Laban worshipped the one true God> becaufeit is obferved, Gen. xxvi. 34, 35, that when Efau married the two Hlttite Wives, this was a Grief of Mind to Ifaac and Rebekah j upon which the ferufalem Targum remarks, that the Reafon of this was, becaufe they would not obey the Commands of Ifaac and Rebekah, in quit- ting their Idolatry, and conforming to the Worfhip of the true God; and therefore Rebekah faid to Ifaac (0), lam weary of my Life, becaufe of the Daughters of Heth : If Jacob take a Wife of the Daughters of Heth, fuch as thefe which are the Daughters of the Land, what good f hall my Life dome ? And Ifiac called Jacob and blejfed him, and charged him, and faid unto him, Thou fialt not take a Wife of the Daughters of Canaan. Arife go to Padan-Aram, to the Houfe of Bethuel thy Mother's Father ; and take thee a Wife from thence of the Daughters of Laban thy Mother s Brother, Gen. xxviii# 1, 2. When Rebekah therefore left her Father's Houfe, it is more than probable, that the whole Family were Wor- mippers of the true God : And therefore it is alfo probable, that Laban had not in fo fmall a Number of Years dege- nerated quite into Idolatry j nor would Rebekah, who was fo much incenfed agamft the Wives of Efau, and the [c) Gen. xxvii- 46. Daughters Hebrew Bible vindicated, ttj Daughters of Ketb, for being Idolaters, have fent her Son A. P. D. 'Jacob to Badan-Aram to leek for a Wife, if me had in 549- the leaf! fufpected, that La ban and his Family had forfak- en theWorfhip of the true God. And correfpondent here- to we find at this very Time, when Laban purfued Jacob, and overtook him, that he afterwards made a Covenant, and fwore by the God of Abraham, and the God of Nahor ; The God of their Father, fays he, judge betwixt us. What Ufe then can we fuppofe Lahan made of thefe Gods ? The Anfwer to which is that though Laban might chiefly worfhip the true God, the God of Abraham, yet he might have run fo far into the Superftition of the Coun- try as to be fond of Divination ; and that thefe Tera- phim were little Images which were made Ufe of for that Purpofe, appears manifeftly from Ezek. xxi, 21. where the King of Babylon is defcribed as practifing feveral Methods of Divination, of which this was one j for there it is faid, the King of Babylon Hood at the parting of the Ways, at the Heads of the two Ways, to ufe Divination : He made his Arrows bright, he confulted the Teraphim ; he looked in the Liver : As alfo from Zech. x. 2, where it is faid, For the Teraphim have fpokm Vanity, and the Diviners have feen a Lie. Which Practice of confulting the Teraphifn, was by many People thought not inconfiftent with the Worfhip of the true God. For thus we find Micah, who had an Houfe of Gods and an Ephod and Teraphim, confecrating a Levite to be his Prieft, and faying, Now know I that Jehovah will do me good feeing I have a Levite to my Brief, Judg. xvii, 13. And the Ufe that he made of thefe Gods we find by the Sequel was for Divination. For when the five Men who ffoe Chronology of the who were fent from the Tribe of Dan to Laijh to fpy out the Land, came to Mount Ephraim to the Houfe of Micah, and were informed by the Levite their Acquaintance, that he was hired by Micah to officiate as a Prieft ; they faid unto him, Afk Cowifd we pray thee of God, that we may know whether cur Way that we go fiall be profperous. And the Prieft faid unto them, Go in Peace : Before Jehovah is the Way wherein you go. Judg. xviii, 5,6. For their being cal- led D*r6tf, Elohim, Gods, Is no Argument that they had di- vine Worfhip or Adoration paid to them, which Word be- ing derived from btfy El> Power, is in the old Teftament ap- plied to Men and Angels, as well as the fupreme God, pro- perly fignifying no more than//6^ Powers. But certain it is, that they were applied to fuch fuperftitious Ufes as gave Occafion and Encouragement, if they did not give Rife to Idolatry. For of this Kind probably were thofe Gods which Terah and Nahor ferved on the other Side of the Flood, Jof. xxiv. 2 ; that is, when they were at Ur of the Chaldees on the other Side of the Euphrates. And yet it is manifeft, that both Terah and Nahor worfhipped at the fame Time the only living and true God ; as appears from Laban\ Covenant which he made with Jacob when he f#ore by the God of Terah, and the God of Nahor, and the God of Abraham, Gen. xxxi. 53. And upon which Ac- count it was, that is becaufe they would not forfake the Worfliip of the true God, that they were banifhed from their native Country, Judith, v. 5 — 9. Of the fame Kind probably were thofe Gods which Gideon fet up at Ophrah, which all Ifrael went a whoring after. Which Thing be- came a Snare to Gideon and to his Houfe, Judg. viii. 27. The original Words of the Bible fay only, that Gideon made an Hebrew Bible vindicated. 159 an Ephod, and put it in his City, even in Ophrah, &c. but the A- p- D. Ephod is here put to denote the Whole j fince the Ephod 549* which was only the Garment that the Prieft wore at the Time when he officiated or confulted thefe Gods fignified nothing without the Prieft, nor the Priefl without his Gods ; and therefore the Arabick Verfion of the Bible fays, that Gideon made an Image and fet it up in Ophrah, which Practice became afterwards fo common among the ljraeirtes, that the Prophet Hofea threatens them with the abolifhing of it as a national Punifhment, which was to be inflicted on them : For, fays he, the Children of Ifrael fhall abide many Days without a King, aud without a Prince, and without a Sacrifice, and without an Image, and without an Ephod, and without Seraphim, Hof. iii. 4. I t appears from Cicero, that the Ajjyrians were from the moil early Ages addicted to Judicial Aftrology j for he fays, Principio AJjyrii, ut ab ultimis aucloritatcm repetam, propter planitiem magnitudinemqae regionum quas incokbant, cum caelum ex omni parte patens, atque apertum intuerentur, trajecJiones motufque fiellarum obfervaruut ; qui bus not at is y quid cuique fignificaretur , memorice prodiderimt. ^a in natione Chaldaei non ex artis, fed ex gentis Vocabulo nomi- nati, diuturna obfervatione Syderum, fcientiam putantur ef- fecifj'e, ut prcedici pojfet, quid cuique eventurum, & quo qui f que fat 0 natus (m). And Abcn Ezra fays, that thofe among the Gentiles who fet up for a Skill in Judicial Aftrology made a Number of little Images, which they dedicated to certain Conftellations, by the Influences of (w) Civ. de Divin. lib. i, which 1 6o 'The Chronology of the A< P. D. which thcfc Images were fuppofed to be endowed with the J[*2^ Power of foretelling fomc particular Events. And Mai- monides fays (;/), that the Zabii among the Chaldeans had no other God?, but the Stars, to whom they made Statues and Images ; to the Sun golden, to the Moon filver, and fo to the reft of the Planets of the Metals dedicated to them ; which Images were fuppofed to derive an Influ- ence from the Stars to which they were dedicated, and had thence a Faculty of foretelling future Events. As Laban' s Family therefore came originally from Ur of the Chaldees, it is more than probable, that both his and Mi- cab's Seraphim were of this Sort j and that Rachael having been bred up in thefe Kind of fuperftitious Notions, either ftole thefe Teraphim for her own Ufe j or elfe pofftbly might have ftolen them to prevent her Father from finding out, by the Help of thefe Images, which Road Jacob took when he fled from Laban. I t is likewife probable, that thefe Images were fafhioned in a human Form ; becaufe that Image which Michal laid in David's Bed to deceive the MefTengers of Saul, is in the Original called aTeraphim, i Sam. xix. 13, which Image, though really no Teraphim, was yet fo called becaufe it was formed fomething in the Refemblance of the human Shape^ for thefe Teraphim both of Laban and Micah, though they were made after the human Form, were by no Means as large as Life, but muft only have been of a fmall Size, fince Rachael was able to hide them in the Camels Furni- ture when fhe fat down upon it, Gen. xxxi. 34. And («) Maim. More Nevoch. p. 3. c. 29. when Hebrew Bible vindicated. 16 1 when the fix hundred Danites who went up againft Laijh A- p- D. came to the Houfe of Micah, they fent in only Jive men, L-£^2] -ze^o w^/ #/> #») Gen. xxxviii. 1. Levi Hebrew Bible vindicated, 1 7 1 Levi may be fuppofed to be mentioned only as the principal A- P. D. Perfons and Contrivers of the Affair } and that it is more than 553- probable,that fome of Jacob's Servants, or Slaves, might at the Inftigation of their young Mafters be alfo Parties concerned in the Action. And as the Defign was a very treacherous one j fo we may believe, that it was executed in the molt treacherous Manner j by attacking Hatnor and Shechem, on a fudden, and as Jofephus fays, in the Night, when the Watch was ajleep (q), or poflibly when there was no Watch, for all the Males were circumcifed, and might be fleeping un- der an imagined Security of the Friendship and Protection of thefe very Perfons, who poflibly were in Sheche?n\ Houfe along with their Sifter, And when they had put Hatnor and Shecbem to Death, and had murdered all the Males in that Houfe, Ver. 26. might make a Signal to their Attendants, who were waiting at a Diftance, to come and join them in deftroying the Reft of the Males> and plundering the City. But when this Affair came to the Knowledge of Ja- tob> he faid to Simeon and Levi, Te have troubled me, to make me fink among the Inhabitants of the Land : And I being few in Number, they fall gather tkemfehes together againfi me, and flay me, amd I jhall be dejiroyed I and my Houfe* In this Diftrefs therefore, it is probable, that Jacob as ufual ap^ plied unto God, who faid unto Jacob, Arife, go up to Bethel, and dwell there. T'hen Jacob faid unto his Houfold, and to all that were with him, Put away the fir ange Gods that are among you, and be clean, and change your Garments (r) . What is (q) Jofeph. Ant. 1. 1. c. 21. (r) Gen. xxxv. i. Z 2 meant i j 2 The Chronology of the A. P. D. meant by putting away the ftrange Gods, is very plain, for 553- it is mentioned before that Rachel had ftolen Laban's flrange Gods; and probably Simeouam&Levi might have met with more flrange Gods, or, as it is in the Original, Gods of the Stran- gers, in the Plunder of Sbakm, Gen. xxxiv. 29. As there- fore the fuperftitious Ufe which was made of thefe Tcra- pllm tended to Idolatry, they are ordered to put them a- way. But it is not eafy to fay, what is meant by the Dire- ctions given of making themfelves clean, and changing their Garments. Becaufe we do not read hitherto of any Dire- ctions given about the Methods of Purification, or what they where to do in Order to make themfelves clean. The Word here made ufe of in the Original is the fame with that, which is generally ufed under the Law of Mofes for Perfons, who have been purified according to the Form pre- fcribed in that Law -3 Lev. xiii. 34. Num. xix. 19. Ezra vi. 20. But hitherto there were no Directions given : How then were they to purify themfelves ? As the Method of do- ing this does not appear ever to have been prefcribed be- fore 5 I luppofe thefe Directions, which Jacob gives to his Family, were dictated to him by the Angel, who ordered him to so to Bethel and build an Altar there to God, who appeared unto him when he fled from the Face of hrs Bro- ther Efau, on Account of getting his Bleffing from him ; and were prefcribed on this particular Occafion as a Me- thod appointed by God to expiate the Blood-guiltinefs which his Family had contracted by the Murder of the Sheche- mites. And as it was appointed afterwards in the Law of Mcfes, for every one who had touched one that was flain with a Sword in the open Fields, or a dead Body, or the Bone of a Man, or a Grave, that he mould purify himfelfy and Hebrew Bible vindicated. ffr and ivafj his Cloaths, and bathe hi mf elf in Water ■, and that A. P« £>• then he mould be clean in the Even, Num. xix. 16, 19. 553- So I fuppofe Jacob and his Family were ordered upon this particular Occafion to warn themfelves and change their Clothes, in order to their Purification. Where it is to be obferved that Jacob's Company now confifled of more Peo- ple than thofe he brought with him from Pada?i-Ara?ni for upon the Murder of the Shechemites by Simeon and Levi it is faid, that they fpoiled their City and took all their Wealth, and all their Little-Ones, and their Wives took they captive, and fpoiled even all that was in the Hcufe (r), which Women and Children were now made a Part of Ja- cob's Family : And as Baptifm, or Warning, was in After-times made ufe of as the cuflomary Form of receiving Female Pro- felytes into the Jewifj Church, it is more than probable, that this Cuflom took its Rife from the Direction here given to Jacob in the Reception of thefe Idolaters into his Family. And Jacob's Family and all that were with him having given unto Jacob all the flrange Gods which were in their Hands, and all the Ear-rings which were in their Ears, Jacob hid them under the Oak which was by Shcchem. Now as the Ear- rings which were delivered up to Jacob are here mentioned immediately with the flrange Gods, and were buried toge- ther along with them, it is more than probable, that thefe Ear-rings were applied alfo to fuperftitious Purpofes ; and were worn as Amulets, or Talifman?, with the Signature . of fome Planet, or falfe Deity imprelTed on them ; which they might be, if we fuppofe them only to be worn as Pen- dents from the Ears 5 but thofe Ear-rings which were worn; (r) Gen, xxxiv. 27—29. The Chronology of the in thofe anticnt Times were frequently joined together by a Plate of Gold which eroded over the Face, and ferved as an ornamental Frontlet to the Forehead : And therefore when Abraham's Steward gives an Account to Bcthud of his MefTage, and of meeting Rebekab at the Well, he fays, that he afked her whofe Daughter fhe was? And fhe faid, The Daughter of Bethnel Nahor 's Son, whom Milcah bare unto him ; then fays he, I pat the Ear-rings upon her Face, and the Bracelets upon her Hands, Gen. xxiv. 47. And up- on this Plate, thofe who were given to Superftition, had ibme ornamental Figure or Sentence engraved ; which was efteemed of more than ordinary Virtue -, and hence Mcfcs when he publifhed the Law to the Ifraelites commands them to treafure up thofe Words in their Hearts j and thou Jhalt bind them, fays he, for a Sign upon thine Hand, and they flail be as Frontlets between thine Eyes, Deut. vi. 8 . xi. 18. JACO B and his Family having fet forward on their Jour- ney i the Terror of God was upon the Cities that were round about them, and they did not purfue after the Sons of fa- cob. So facob came to Luz, which is in the Land of Canaan (that is, Bethel,) he and all the People that were with him* And he built there an Attar and called the Place El-Beth-el -} fthat is, The God of Bethel) j becaufe there God appeared unto him, when he fled from the Face of his Brother: This being the Place, where Jacob, in his PaiTage from Beer- jheba to Haran, faw in his Dream the Viiion of the Angels attending and defcending ; where he alfo took the Stone that he had put for his Pillow, and fet it up for a Pillar, and poured Oil upon the Top of it, and called the Name of that Hebrew Bible vindicated. 175 that PlaceBethel, Gen. xxviii. 10-19. At which Time when A- P- D. he was going to Haran to look for a Wife, he travelled light, and had neither Flocks nor Herds with him ; fo he only erected a Pillar by way of Mark or Memorial of the Place, and poured Oil thereon by way of an Offering, and of dedicating it to God's Service, and call'd it Beth-El, that is, God's Houfe. But now Jacob, in his Return to his Father's Houfe, having along with him a great Number of Flocks, and Herds, did not only offer up a Drink-of- fering of Wine and Oil upon the Bethel, which he had before erected, Gen. xxxv. 14. but he alfo built an Altar„ and dedicated it to El-Bethel, the God of Bethel. And from Bethel Jacob removed and journeyed to- wards Ephrah, which is Bethlehem, and Rachel died in La- bour of Benjamin, and Jacob fet a Pillar (j) for a Me- morial on her Grave. Which Pillar was probably a rough unhewn Stone fet upon an End ; the Tomb which is now fliewn to Travellers for Rachels Tomb (/) being undoubtedly a much more modern Compofition. The Cuftom of erecting Pillars or tall Stones fet upon an End over the Burial-places of the Dead, feems to havs been one of thofe Cuffoms which were derived from the Time of Noah, and to have been in Practice before the Flood 3 becaufe we can trace it in mod Parts of the World in the antienteft Times : As appears from a Paf- fage in Homer, where Minerva exciting Telemachus to go in queft of Ulyjjes, and fuppofing the worff that could happen, that is, that he mould come to a certain Know- (s) Gen. xxxv. 20, (*) Maund, Tray. ledge 176 "The Chronology of the A. P. D. ledge of the Death of his Father, me directs him to raifc 5 S3' a Pillar, or Signal to his Memory ; Zr^oc it St xwc-cci, Cjf<\ (.v), or as Mr. Pcfe has tranflated it : To the pale Shade Funereal Rites crdai?i : Plant the fair Column on the vacant Grave : A Hero's Honours let the Hero have. And hence in my Opinion came the Origin of Obelifks in Egypt, which abounding with the fineft Quarries in the World gave the Egyptians an Opportunity of pitching Stones of the largeft Size over the Burial-places of emi- nent Perfons. From Bethlehem Jfrael journeyed and fpread his Tent beyond the Tower of Edar. And from thence he came to his Father Ifaac, who during his Ab- fence had removed from Beerfieba unto Hebron in Mamre^ Gen. xxviii. 10 5 xxxv. 27. 3. In the fifth Year of the Reign of Baleus, Ofiris having been ten Years in Italy, returned to Egypt, and erected a Pillar in Memory of his Victories, and was foon afterwards killed by his Brother Typhon. Berof. A s for this Hiftory, which is here given us of Ofiris by Bercfus and others, I look upon it to be one entire tradi- tionary Fiction of the Grecian or Phoenician Mythologies, a long Time after the fuppofed ^Era for the Tranfaction of thefe Affairs ; and that there never was any fuch real Perfon (a) Horn. Odyff. 1. I. vcrf. 291 . as Hebrew Bible vindicated. l Jf as Ofris, but that this whole Hiftory is compofed of the A.P.D. Tranfactions of feveral great Men, fuch as Metf.r, Caph- 55%- tor, Sethos, Sefo/iris and others, though they lived at the Diilance of feveral hundred Years from each other. To give fome Air of Probability to which Fable the Gre- cian Mythologies collected the chief of the traditionary Facts of the moft famous Perfons, who had lived before that Time ; and fummed them up in the Character of Ofris, as of fome real Perfon. They therefore afcribed to him the civil Improvements in Hufbandry and Poli- ticks of Metfir or his Succeffors, and the warlike Ac- tions of Sethos, or Sefofris, and fome other antient He- roes. And as to the Manner of his Death, and De- ftruction by Typho, I apprehend when we proceed fur- ther in this Hiftory, it will be found to be borrowed from the Deftruction of Pharaoh in the Red Sea, at the Time of Mofes. JOSEPH, (x) being feventeen Years of Age, told <-6o, his Father of the evil Conduct of his Brethren. And' in the following Verfe it is obferved, that Jacob loved Jo- feph more than all his Children, becaufe he was the Son of his old Age, D^pt p Ben Zekenim, which literally interpreted fignifies, the Son of Elders, in the Plural Number, and not the Son of an old Man. And as Ben- jamin was feveral Years younger than Jofeph, if this had been the Reafon of Jacob's Love, Benjamin muft have been the Favourite, and not Jofeph. But as among the Hebrews it was cuftomary to exprefs the Likenefs of one (at) Gen. xxxvii. %, A a Thing 1 7 8 7%e Chronology of the A. P. D. Thing or Perfbn to another, by calling it the Son of 560. fL,c]1 a perfon or Thing j as profligate Pcrfons are called, Sins of Belial, Judg. xix. 22. Hof. x. 9. 1 Sam. ii. 12. 1 Kings xxi. 1 o. couragious Perfons are called the Sons of Valour, 2 Chron. xxviii. 6. and Sparks of Fire are called the Sons of the burning Coal, Job v. 7, &c. ©V. So Mofes calls Jofepb, the Son of Elders, on account of his own Wifdom and Prudence, and not on account of his Father's Age. And therefore the Targum of On- kelos renders this PafTage accordingly, Becaufe he was a wife Child. The Authors of the Univerfal Hiftory, who have Kkewife made this Remark, fay, that the Samaritan, Perfc, and Arabick Verfions have rendered this PafTage, Becaufe he was a wife and prudent Son. But in Fact it is quite other wife, for they have rendered it according to our Englifi Tranflation ; and only the Targum of On- kelos has rendered it as I have mentioned above. They likewife fay, that Jacob had two Sons younger than Jo- feph, viz. Zebulun and Benjamin, and that this laft was born above fifteen Years after him. Whereas I can fee no Foundation for fuppofing any of Jacob's Sons, but Benjamin, to be younger than Jofepb ; for after we have an Account of the Birth of Zebulun (z), and after him of the Birth of Dinah, it is then faid, that God re- membered Rachel, and God hearkened unto her, and opened her Womb, and fhe conceived, and bare a Son ; and fhe called his Name Jofepb. And it came to pafs (s) Gen. xxx. 20, 2.1. when Hebrew Bible vindkatecL 179 when Rachel had born Jcfeph, that Jacob faid unto La- A.P.D. Az», iSW /»* tfWtfy, ?to I may go into mine own Place, ,^^J and to my Country. Give me my Wives and my Chil- dren, and let we go (a). And with this Narration of the Fact, as told in the Hebrew Bible, the Samaritan Pe?i- tateuch, the Septuagint^ the Syriack and Arabick Ver- lions, the Targum of Onkelos, and the Hiftory of Jofe- phus unanimoufly agree, JOSEPH (b) having dreamed two remarkable Dreams told them to his Brethren, and his Father j who interpreting them greatly in his Favour, his Brethren en- vied him, and hated him yet the more. JACOB (c), living with his Father Ifaac at He- bron (d)y fent Jofeph afterwards to bring him ail Account of his Brethren, and their Flocks, which they attended, at the Piece of Ground near Shalem, which Jacob had purchafed from the Sons of Hamor. They (a) Gen. xxx. 22—26. (b) lb. xxxvii. 5 — 11. (r) In the Account of this Tranfaclion it is faid, in our Englifn Tranfiation, as in all the Verfions; Tbefe are the Generations of Jacob, Gen- xxxvii. 2- which arifes from too literal a Tranfiation of the Word fTn^n Toledotb, which does in general and literally fignify a Generation ; but it likewife is metaphorically applied to denote any Thing that is produced from another, and therefore Cafellus in his Lexicon renders it by the Latin Words, Eventus, Res Gefics, E'ulo- ri&, Accidentia. It fhould therefore be rendered, Tbh is the Hijhry of Jacob, &c See alfo, Gen. ii. 4. (dj Gen. xxxv. 27 ; xxxvii. 14. A a 2 took 180 7%e Chronology of the A. P.D. took this Opportunity of revenging themfelves on Jofeph^ 5"°* and fold him to fome MUianite Merchants who were travelling towards Egypt. Where thefe Merchants fold Jofeph to Potiphar, an Officer of Pharach, and Cap- tain of the Guard. POflPHAR (e) approving of Jofepb's Coridiia advanced him in his Houfe, and made him Overfeer thereof. And it came to pafs after thefe Things, that his Ma- tter's Wife caft her Eyes upon Jofeph, and follicited him to gratify her Paffions ; but 'Jofeph fearing God refifted her Temptations : However upon a falfe Reprefentation of this Fact to her Hufband, Jofeph was call: into Prifon, where he behaved himfelf fo well, that he was entrufted with the Care of the Prifoners. 571. And two Years (f) before he was fent for by Pha- raoh to Court, he interpreted the Dreams of two of the Officers of Pharaoh's Houfhold who were in the fame Prifon. ~~«t ISAAC (g) being one hundred and eighty Years old died, and was buried by his two Sons, Efau and Jacob. After the Mention of which, Mofes takes an Opportunity of giving fome Account of the Poflerity of Efau (/>). Wherein it may not be improper to take (e) Gen. 39. 1—6. (/) lb. 41. 1. ( g) lb. 35. 29. (b) lb. 36. I. Notice, Hebrew Bible vindicated, 1 8 i Notice, that one of the Progeny of Efau is mentioned A. P. D. under the Denomination of Seir the Horite (*'), but no 573* Mention is made either of his Father or Mother. It feems therefore reafonable to fuppofe his other Name to have been Jeujh (k), the eldeft Son of Efau by his Wife Ahdibamah. For Efau had three Wives; Judith (/ ) the Daughter of Beeri the Hittite, who was likewife called Adah (/»), by whom Efau had his firft-born Son Eli- fbaz{n) : His fecond Wife was Bajkemath [o) the Daugh- ter of Elm the Hittite j who was alio called Akoliba- mah (/>), the Daughter of Anah, the Daughter of Zi- beon : So that her Father's Name was Elcn, and her Mother's Anah j by whom Efau had his Sons Jeujh, and Jaalim, and Corah (q). His third Wife was Ma- halath (r), the Daughter of Ijhmael, Abraham's Son, the Sifter of Nabajcth-, who is alio called Bafiemath (s) Ifhfnaels Daughter, the Siller of Nabajoth 3 by whom Efau had his Son Reucl (/). N o w in the Hiftory given of die Pofterity of Efau in this thirty-fixth Chapter of Genefis, as well as in the £rft Chapter of the firft Book of Chronicles, there is an Account given of the Pofterity of Eliphaz ; and the Po- fterity of Reuel ; but nothing faid of Jeujh, the eldeft Son of Aholibamahy in either of thofe Places. But in the thirty-fixth Chapter of Genefis, immediately after (/) Gen. 36. 20. (*) lb. 36. 14, 18. (/) lb. 26. 34. (m) lb. ver. 4. (») lb. ver. 4, 10, 16. (0) lb. 26. 34. (/>) lb. 36. 14, 18. (q) lb. 36. 5, 14, 18. ft) lb. 28. 9. (s) lb. 36. 3. (t) lb. 36. 4, 10, 13, 17. giving 1 8 1 The Chiiono l»o g y of the A. P. D. giving an Account of the Poflerity of Efaiis two other 573- Wives, then Mofes adds : And thefe are the Sons cf Ahc- Hbamah Efaus Wife , Duke Jeufi> Duke faalim, Duke Korah : Thefe were the Dukes that came cf Aholibamah, the Daughter of Anah, Efaus Wife. And then he gives an Account of the Poflerity cf Seir. In like manner, the Author of the Book of Chronicles, in giving an Ac- count of the Poflerity of Efau, after he has given an Account of the Sons of Eliphaz, and the Sons of Reuel, adds : And the Sons of Seir, were Lotany and Shobal, and Zibeon, and Anah, &c. Where it is to be ob- ferved, that two of the Sons of this Seir are called after the Family Names of Aholibamah's Mother and Grand- father : So that Jeufj and Seir were probably one and the fame Perfon. Which Jeufi, or Seir, being the ■Perfon that conquered the Hcrites, or Inhabitants of Mount Hor, is therefore called Hori (u), and Seir the Horite (x). From whom, in all Probability, that Mountain came alfo afterwards to be called Mount Seir (y). As for the following Number of Kings who are faid in this Chapter to have reigned in the Land of Edom (z), before there reigned any King over the Children of Jfrael j I do not find fufficient Light in Hiflory to fay any Thing pofitive about them. (u) Gen. 36. 30. (*) lb. ver. 20. ($) Deut. I. 44. (z) Gen. 36. 31. But Hebrew Bible vindicated. 183 A.P.D. But Efau and J&ccb having buried their Father, ^573^ Mofcs then mentions, that they immediately feparated (a)y becaufe their Riehes were more than that they might dwell together ; for the Land wherein they were Strangers could not bear them, becaufe of their Cattle. So Efau took his Wives, and his Sons, and his Daugh- ters, and all the Perfons of his Houfe, and his Cattle,, and all his Beafls, and all his Subftance which he had gotten, i. e. by his Father's Death, in the Land of Canaan -y and went into the Country, unto Mount Seir, from the Face of his Brother, whom he left in the Pof- fefiion of that Birthright which he had formerly fold him for a Mefs of Pottage. In this Year Jofeph (b) being thirty Years old (c) was fent for out of Prifon to Pharaoh, to interpret his Dreams concerning the fat and lean Cows, and the full and thin Ears of Corn ; Pharaoh having firfr. fent for all the Magicians of Egypt, and all the Wife-men thereof: But there was none that could interpret them to Pharaoh, till Jofeph came j who interpreted his Dream unto him, and advifed him what he was to do in confequence thereof. And the Thing was good in the Eyes of Pharaoh, and in the Eyes of all his Servants, And Pharaoh faid unto his Servants, Can we find fuch a Man as this is, a Man in whom the Spirit of God is ? That is, a Man en- dowed with a god-like Wifdom : For thus this Expreffion is explained Dan. v. 11. when Belfhazzar's Queen ad- (a) Gen. 36. 7. (b) lb. 41. 8- U) lb, ver. 46. vifetk 184 ^ Chronology of the A.P.D. vifeth him to fend for Daniel, and fays, 'There is a Man 573- in thy Kingdom, in ivhcm is the Spirit of the Gods, and in the Days of thy Father, Light, and Underjlandi?ig, and Wifdom^ like the JVifdom of the Gods was found in him. And Pharaoh /aid unto Jofeph, For afmuch as God hath fbewed thee ail this, there is no?ie fo difcreet as thai art, Thou fialt be over my Houfe, only in my Throne will I be greater than thou. Where it is to be obferved, that Jujlin from Tragus Pompeius makes Mention of Jofeph asaPerfon very famous for interpreting of Dreams, and of the ill Ufage he received from his Brethren ; of his foretelling the Famine in Egypt ; and of his prudent Advice to the King to avoid the ill Confequences thereof (d). But he attributes this to his great Skill in Art Magick. And Pharaoh called Jcfeph's Name Zaphnah-Paane- ah -, it being an antient Cuftom among Eajiern Princes, to give new Names to their Favourites, as we find it praclifed in the Time, of Daniel, Dan. i. 7. and is the Practice of the Mogul's Country to this Day. And ac- cording to the Arabick Verfion, and Targum of Onkelos, this Name was given Jofeph on account of his interpreting Pharaolfs Dream. For they render it, A Revealer of Secrets, lie alfo gave him to Wife Afenah the Daugh- ter of Potiphera the Prieft of On y that is, of Heliopolis, as the StptuagintVevfion renders it, with which Eufebius in his Ommafticon agrees. And Alexander Pclyhi/lor from Demetrius fays, (e) that Jofepl/s Wife was the Daughter [d) Juft. 1. 36. C 2. (e) Euieb Pr.Tp. Ev. 1. 9. C. 2L. of Hebrew Bible vindicated. 185 of the Prieft of Heliopolis. The Authors of the Univerfal A. P. D. Hi/lory remark, that On here was Heliopolis, the chief City ^573^ of the Canton of that Name, called by Ptolemy, Onium, di- ftant about twenty Miles from Memphis. But it is certain, that the Onium mentioned by Ptolemy could have no Re- ference in the leaf* to that On, which was in the Time of Jofeph. For that Territory of Onium, of which Pto- lemy makes Mention, had its Name given it from Oriias (f) the fourth, the Son of Onias the third, High Prieft. of Jerufaleni\ who, being difobliged with his Country-men for not giving him alfo the High Priefthood, went into Egypt about one hundred and fifty Years before Chrift ; where infinuating himfelf into the Confidence of Ptolemy Philometor, and his Queen Cleopatra, he gained fo much Credit with them, as to be entrufted with the Command of their Troops ; and prevailed on them to give him Leave to build a Temple in the Heliopolitan Nome, after the Model of the Temple at Jerufalem -, which Temple King Ptolemy having endowed with large Revenues, and much Land, this Territory and Temple was from the Founder of it, called Onium, or Onion, not above one hundred and fifty Years before the Birth of our Saviour. After the Seven Years of Plenty foretold by Jofeph ^81. were expired, the Seven Years of Famine commenced (g). And as the Famine continued Jofeph firft fold his Corn for ready Money; and when that was all confum- ed, then the People were obliged to fell him their Cat- (/) Jof. Ant. I. 13. c. 6. & de Bell. Jud. I. 7. c. 30. & Cent. Ap. I. 2. (g) Gen. 41. 29, 53. B b tie i 8 6 Tie Chronology of the A.P D. t'.e for Corn; and afterwards their Lands. And he remov- 5° r- ed the People from one End of the Land of Egypt to tie other ■. that is, as it is in the Original, Frcm one End of the Land of Mizraim to the other. For Egypt w«:s not known by the Land of Egypt at that Time, nor are we to inppoie, that all Egypt was under the Dominion of one Prince, who lived at Zoan, or On ; fince, according to Herodotus (h), Thebais alone was firfl called by the Name of Egypt; which Name would never be communi- cated to the lower Part of that Country, till after the lower Part was conquered by fome Prince belonging to the up- per Part, from whom the Denomination of Egypt would become general. We ought rather to fuppofe, that the Pharaoh who then reigned at that Court where Jofeph was employed, was King of the Lower Egypt only, which was originally pofTefTed by Mezir, or Metfr, the Son of Ha/n, and from him and his Dependents was de- nominated the Land of Mezrhn, or, as we fpell it, Miz- raim.— Only the Lands of the Priefis bought he not. Dio- dorus fays (/'), that in antient Times Egypt was divided into Nomes, and that the Income of each Nome was di- vided into three Parts ; one of which was allotted to the Priefts, with which they were obliged to provide for the publick Sacrifices, as well as their own Maintenance. The Reafon therefore why the Lands of the Priefis were not bought along with the reft, was becaufe they were really the Lands of the Publick; and the Income thereof difpofed of to a publick Ufe, the Service of Religion. During the Famine therefore the Priejls had their Portion (b) Herod. 1. 2. (/) Diodor. 1. I. c. 3. of. Hebrew B i b l fi vindicated, 187 of Corn ajjigned them of "Pharaoh (k), that is, out of the A.P.D. King's Granaries j and did eat their Portion which Phara- 5 ** oh gave them. And their Cattle was employed as ufual for Sacrifices, And Jacob being diflrefled in Canaan for Want of Food (I) fent all his Sons into Egypt to buy Corn, except Benjamin j and Jofcph knew his Brethren, but they knew not him. So under the Pretence of their being Spies, af- ter he had fupplied them with Corn, he detained his Bro- ther Simeon in Bonds, till they returned and brought Ben- jamin. The Reafon why Simeon was detained rather than any of the reft, was probably as a Punifhment for his Wickednefs, and to bring him to a Senfe of his Guilt ; .fince in human Probability, it was he that firft propofed the Murder of Jofepb, Gen. xxxvii. 1 8. as he was the principal Perfon concerned in the Murder of the Sheche- mites , Gen. xxxiv. 25. The Famine having been two Years (;;;) in the Land, 582. i. e. this being the fecond Year of the Famine, Jojep/Ss Brethren returned with Benjamin (n). And Jcfepb, with- out difcovering himfelf to his Brethren, invited them to Dinner ; and the Servant fet on for Jofeph by himfelf, and for his Brethren by themfelves, and for the Egypti- ans which did eat with him, by themfelves : becaufe the Egyptians might not eat Bread with the Hebrews ; for that is an Abomination to the Egyptians (o).„ Where it (k) Gen. 47. 22. (/) lb. 42. 1. (m) lb. 45. 6. (n) lb. 43. 15. [0) lb. ver. 32. B b 2 is ! 88 The Chronology of the A.P.D. is to be obferved, that the Egyptians were at this Time 5^2' ( To far corrupted with Superflition and Idolatry, as to refufe eating animal Food along with the Hebrews, tho' we do not find, that in the Time of Abraha?n there is any Notice taken of their having any Diflike to him upon this Account j whereas now at the Time of Jofeph it is pofitively faid, that every Shepherd is an Abomination to the Egyptians (p). Which Abomination did not arife from any Averfion they had to the Hebrews as Shepherds, but becaufe they, as Shepherds, fed upon fuch animal Food as was by the Egyptians held to be facred. For when 'Jofeph told Pharaoh that his Brethren were Shep- herds, then Pharaoh faid : If thou knowefl any Man of Ac- tivity among ft them, make him Ruler over my Cattle (q). And towards the latter End of the Famine when the E- gvpiians had parted with all the ready Money, it is faid, that they brought their Cattle to Jofeph : And Jofeph gave them Bread in Exchange for Horfes, and for the Flocks, and for the Cattle of the Herds, and for the AfTes, Gen. xlvii. 17. Whence it is plain, that as the Egyptians were Matters of Flocks, and of Herds of Cattle, they muft have Shepherds amongft themfelves to take care of them ; and therefore that this Averfion of the Egyptians to Shep- herds was not on the Account of their Occupation, but be- caufe that all Shepherds, but the Egyptian Shepherds, killed their Cows and Sheep for common Ufes, and fed upon animal Food, which the Egyptians never eat but when offered up in Sacrifice, and that only of unblemifh- ed Males. Which afterwards arofe to fo violent a De- {p) Gen. 46. 34- (?) lb. ver. 33, 34 j 47. 6. gree Hebrew Bible vindicated. 189 grce of Superftition that Herodotus pbferves (r)t no Man A. P. D. or Woman among the Egyptians would ever be perfuaded 5ft2, to kifs a Grecian, fthat is, any one who commonly feeds on animal Food) on theMcuthj or to ufe the fame Knife, Pot, or Spit, or to eat the Flefli even of unblemifhed Cattle, which had been cut up with the Knife of a Greci- an. Where it is to be obferved, that Herodotus makes ufe of the Word Grecian juft as Mofes does the Word Shep- herd, to denote any one who lives upon animal Food. jfOSEPH's Brethren being returned, and having brought their Brother Benjamin, Jofeph ordered his Bre- thren to be again fupplied with Corn ; but at the fame Time directed his Cup to be put in the Mouth of Benja- min's Sack j under Pretence of fearching for which, they were afterwards purfued, and the Purfuers were ordered to fay, when they found the Cup, that this is the Cup out of which Jofeph drinketh, and to find out which he was forced to ufe Divination. The Englijh Tranflation as well as all the Verfions of the Bible fay, wherewith he di- vineth ; but the original Words are, "Q &TW ££>i"tt Kim which literally fignifies, Et pro quo conjefiando conjeclavit j that is, for which he ufed Divination. Which is the on- ly true Meaning of the Sentence ; and agrees perfectly well with what isfaid in the fifteenth Verfe of this Chap- ter, when upon their being brought back to Jofeph, he fays unto them, Wot you not that fuch a Man as lean cer- tainly divine? But his Divination would have been fpoil- ed, if the Cup wherewith he divined had been taken a- (r) Herod, 1. 2. way, 190 The Chronology of the A. P. D. way. Many of the Commentators on the Bible, among 502. ^ whom Gr otitis is one, feem much concerned, left it fhould be imagined, that Jofepb had practifed Divination j and therefore Grot i us fays (s), 9£uanquam vox WT\} in Lege d>: fuperjiitiqfis augur ationibus fumitur, credam tamen dim fuifle vocem media?)!, & fumi lie & infra 15, pro immijjis Divinitus prafagiis> ad quce Jofephm fe facrificio prapa?'#- hat : In facrificiis autem ufus Phi alee, &c. But it ought to be confidered, that there was no great Need for conjuring in Jofepb to find out his own Cup, which he had ordered to be put in the Mouth of Benjamin's Sack. But that act- ing at prefent in a feigned Character, his pretending to have divined was only an Excufe for finding out the Cup fo readily, left he might be fufpected for having put it there. And ior this fame Reafon they who were fent to purfue them were ordered to begin with opening the Sack of the eldeft (^), by which Means the Sack wherein it was hid was the laft that was opened. And the Reafon why this Cup was put into Benjamin's Sack, and that Jofepb did not difcover himfelf to his Brethren till after this Affair was probably this : Becaufe Jofepb had a Mind to try, whether his Brethren had any Principles of Virtue and Tendernefs left in them, either for their Father, or their Brother Benjamin. Benjamin was too young to have had any Share in felling of Jofepb. He orders therefore the Cup to be put into Benjamin a Sack. And the Terms which Pharaoh's Servants made with Jofeplfs Brethren upon fearching of their Sacks was; He with whom it is found fall be my Servant. If therefore upon Benjamin s (s) Grot, in loc. (/) Ge:"i. 44. 12. -being Hebrew Bible vindicated'. i 91 beins; feizcd to be made a Bond- {lave his Brothers had de- A.P.D. ferted him, and returned to their Father, he would have 5°: probably behaved after a different Kind of Manner than he did, when he found thofe endearing Expreffions of filial Piety, and brotherly Love, which flowed from them on their coming back. For had they efcaped, as it is plain they might, when Benjamin was feized ; Jofeph well knew, that it was in his Power both to fet Things to rights with his Father, and to be even with them (»). And when the Cup was found in Benjamin's Sack, then they rent their Cloaths, and laded every Man his Afs, and returned to the City (x). And Judah and his Brethren came to Jofeplfs Houfe, and they fell before him on the Ground. And upon Judah's Expoftulation, and earneft Defire to be detained as a Prifoner in the Room of Ben- jamin, for the Sake of his aged Father, who loved Ben- jamin (y) -, Jofeph being no longer able to refrain, com- manded all the Egyptians to go out of the Room while he made himfelf known to his Brethren. And he wept aloud; and the Egyptians and the Houfe of Pharaoh heard. And Jofeph faid unto his Brethren, I am Jofeph, doth my Father yet live? And hisBrethren could not anfwer him,for they were terrified at his Prefence. And Jofeph faid unto his Brethren, Come near to ??ie, 1 pray you ; and they came near : And he faid, I am Jofeph your Brother whom ye fold into Egypt. Now therefore be not grieved, nor angry with yourf elves, that ye fold me hither-, for God did fend me before you to preferveLife.-And behold your Eyes fee, a?id the. (u) Jof. Ant. 1. 2. c. 6, (x) Gen. 44. 13, &c. (y) Gen. 45. 1, Eyes i 9 2 Tlje Chronology of the A.P.D. Eyes of my Bret her Benjamin, that it is my Mouth that 5°2- fpeaketh unto you. Dr. Shaw, in his Preface to the Sup- plement of his Travels into the Baft, affirms, that the Rabbinical Commentators obferve upon this Verfe, that Jofepb gave his Brethren three Proofs of his being their Brother. The nrft was, the Token of Circumcifion, which he difcovered unto them by unfolding his Garment, when he ordered them to come near unto him. The Se- cond was his Refemblance to Benjamin his Brother by both Sides, both by Father and Mother, which they think appears from thefe Words, And behold your Eyes fee. The third Proof was his Language ; for he had now be- gan to talk with them in their own Tongue, having hi- therto converfed with them by an Interpreter, Gen. xlii. 23. He therefore adds j Behold, it is my Mouth that fpeak- eth unto you. Which Paflage, my learned Friend Dr. Shaw makes ufe of as an Argument to refute the Opinion of Herodotus (z), who fuppofes the Practice of Circumcifion to have been derived from the Egyptians to the Syrians, he being of Opinion, that this Tranfaction between Jofepb and his Brethren was a fufficient Proof that Circumcifion was not at that Time pracliied in Egypt ; otherwife fays he, why mould Jofepb order all the Egyptians to go out, and his Brethren to come near him, if he had not fomething to im- part of Secrefy and Importance ; which was not to be ex- pofed to the Ridicule or wanton Curiofity of the uncir- cumcited- Egyptia?is ; fince there appears to be nothing {%) Herod. Eut.. elfe Hebrew Bible vindicated. 193 elfe in this whole Narration, that could in any Manner A. P. I). offend, or indeed would not rather have excited the 5°2\ greater!: Pleafure and Satisfaction in the Egyptians. For, fays he, we learn, ver. 16. that as foon as it was known, that Jofeph's Brethren were come, it p leafed Pharaoh we/i and all his Servants. And in Confirmation of this Re- mark it may be added, that Jofph did not refrain from fhewing his Concern aloud when he difcovered himfelf to his Brethren, and that the Egyptians were only removed out of Eye-fight, but not out of Hearing; fince it is faid, that yofeph wept aloud; and the Egypt 1 an sy and the Hoafi of Pharaoh heard. But as nothing can be more abfurd nor more faife than many of the Remarks of the Rabbinical Commentators on the Old Tejlament, becaufe they lay as great a Strefs on the Traditions of the Elders as they do on the Letter of the Law ; by which they had even in our Saviour's Time, made the Commandments of God of none Effec~l {a) : I can- not fay, that it appears to me from this Text that "Jofeph did expofe his naked Perfon to his Brethren, it being fuf- ficient that he called them to come near to him, to ob- ferve him with more Accuracy and Freedom than they dur ft before look at him ; for till this Time hefpake rough- ly unto them (l?)y and whenever they fpake to him, they bowed down them f elves before him, with their Faces to the Earth [c). And as he and all his Brethren except Benja- ?nin were grown up to Manhood, before yofeph was fold (a) Matt. 15. 6. Mark 7. 13. (b) Gen, 42. 7. (c) lb. ver. 6; 43. 26 ; 44. 14. C c into 1 94. The Chronology of the A.P. D. into Egypt, when they were put in Mind of him they 582. could not fail but recollect him. And when he likewilc put them in Mind of that Fact of their felling him as a Sfeve, Gen. xlv. 4; which they had kept a Secret- even from their Brother Retiben, Gen. xxxvii. 29. they who had perpetrated it could not but be {truck with it. And when inftead of fpcaking to them by an Interpreter he fpake to them in the Hebrew Tongue, he then appealed cot only to them, but alfo to his Brother Benjamin who underftood the Hebrew Language, to convince him that he was his Brother, by faying unto them, Behold your Eyes fee, end the Ryes of my Brother Benjamin fee, that it is my Mouth that fpeaketh unto you, Gen. xlv. 12. the Word See, being often ufed metaphorically not only for knowing any thing or under]} anding it ; as it is faid of the Ifraelites in Egypt, that the Officers of the Children of Ij- rael did fee that they were in evil Cafe, after it was faid, Ye jhallnot minify ought from your Bricks of your daily Tafk, Exod. v. 19. But is alfo fometimes put for actual hearing, as in the prefent Cafe. Thus it is faid Exod. xx. 18. that all the Peopley^w the Thunderings and the Noife of the Trumpet. And as to the Origin of Circumcifion in Egypt, when fofeph after this was known univerfally to have been an Jfraelite, and that the circumcifed Ifraelites became fa- mous for the Numeroufnefs of their Pofterity ; it is not hard to conceive, that Circumcifion might from thence become a Fafhion in Egypt, and that when Herodotus wrote, who with all his Diligence could learn nothing certain Hebrew Bible vindicated. 19.5 certain of the Affairs of Egypt before the Reign of Menes A. P.D. at Memphis , which probably was not till five or fix hundred 5 2i Years after thisTranfaction; we need not wonder if he fhould be miftaken in the Origin of this Cuftom. See/\ 1 1 1. And Jacob now being fent for by his Son Jofepb, as he was going into Egypt he called in his Road at Beer- Jheba, and offered Sacrifices unto the God of his Father I- faac ; in the Grove which had been planted and confecra- ted by his Grandfather Abraham (d); and on the Altar which had been erected by Ifaac (e). And this is the Reafon probably why his calling on the Name of the God of Ifaac is particularly mentioned. And God (f) fpake unto Ifrael in the Vifions of the Night, and faid, Fear 7iot to go down into Egypt; for I will make of thee a great Nation. I will go down with thee into Egypt, and I will alfo furely bring thee again >' And Jofephfhall put his Hand upon thine Eyes. It may be wondered at, why God mould appear unto Jacob at this Time, to bid him not fear going into Egypt when he was fent for by his Son with the King's Confent after fo magnificent a Manner . and was in Expectation of meeting his beloved Son Jofepb, in the midft, of his Splendor. But it fhould be remarked, that Jacob had been bred up by his Mother from his In-, fancy, with an ardent Zeal for inheriting thofe Bleflings which had been promifed by God to his Grandfather A- braham and his Seed : The old Man might therefore be in doubt whether this going out of Canaan into Egypty with. (d) Gem 21. 33, 34. (e) lb. 26. 23—25. (/) lb. 46. 1 — 4. C c 2 his 1 9 6 The Chronology of the A. P. D. his whole Family, might not be looked upon by God, as ^J^j giving up his Expectation of thofe Bleflings and deferring his Title to all thofe Promifes for the Sake of fome tempo- ral Grandeur. And as Jacob's Character, in the beft of his Days, does not feem to have been that of a Hero ; it is more than probable, that that Part of the Revelation made by God to Abraham, wherein he declared that his Seed fhould be a Stranger in a Land that was not theirs, and that they fhould afflict them four hundred Years, Gen. xv. 13, came at this Time ftrong into his Mind; and that he might be under great Anxiety of Thought, not know- ing how foon, in an arbitrary Kingdom, Jofeph's Fortune might change into the Reverfe of what it was at prefent, and the predicted Days of Affliction and Servitude begin. Under thefe Circumftances therefore it is very probable, that as Sacrifices were attended with Prayers, he applied himfelf with great Earnefmefs to the God of his Father I- faac for Comfort and Confolation in his Diftrefs : Since it was in a Journey towards Egypt, in theLand of the Phi- liftines> and therefore probably in this very Place that the Promifes made to Abraham were renewed to Ifaac, Gen. xxvi. 1 — e. And accordingly Jacob meets with Com- fort from God, being afTuredin a Vifion of the Night, that tjiis Affliction mould not begin in his Days ; for that he mould die in Peace, and that his beloved Son Jofeph mould clofe his Eyes. And that he would make of him a great Nation j and at the appointed Time bring his Seed back into Canaan to the Land of Promife, Gen. xlvi. 1 — 4. ISRAEL Hebrew Bible vindicated. 1 97 A.P.D. ISRAEL being an hundred and thirty Years of Age, 583- Gen. xlvii. 9. arrived in Egypt with his whole Family in the third Year of the Famine (g) ; for Jofeph did not fend his Brethren to bring his Father out of Canaan, till the Famine had been two Years in the Land. And it is not probable, that he could remove his whole Family, and bring them into Egypt till fome Time in the Year (/6) following, Gen. xlvi. 26. It is faid, that all the Souls that came with Jacob into Egypt, which came of his Loins befides Jacob's Sons Wives, all the Souls were threefcore and fix. Whereas in the Verfe following it is faid ; All the Souls of the Houfe of Jacob, which came in- to Egypt were threefcore and ten. Now to reconcile thefe two Parages, it is to be obferved, that in the latter Ac- count the whole Houfe, or Progeny of Jacob, is enume- rated, viz. thirty-three Defcendents from Leah, fixteen from Zilpah, fourteen from Rachel, and feven from Bil- hah, Gen. xlvi. 15 — 25. all which make the Number of Seventy : But then two of thefe were dead, viz. Er and Onan, which Mofes takes particular Notice of when he reckons up the Offfpring of Jacob, Gen. xlvi. 12. And two more were already in Egypt, viz. the two Sons of Jofephy Mandjjeh and Ephraim, who are alfo enumerated among the Seventy that compofed the Offfpring ©f Jacob, Gen, xlvi. 20 5 but mull be deducted out of the Account, as (g) Gen. 45. 6. (b) Alexander Polyhijlor from Demetrius pofitively fays, it was in the third Year of the Famine that Jacob came into Egypt. Eufeb, Pra?p, Ev. 1. 9. c. 21. cad€, 1 9 8 The Chronology of the A. P.D. being too young to travel, and to go out and meet their 5°3\ Grandfather. So that though the Hcufe of Jacob confift- ed of feventy Souls, yet thofe who compofed the Caval- cade, and attended him in his Entrance into Egypt, were but fixty-fix. For it is pofitively mention'd, that Jofeph made ready his Chariot, and went up to meet Jfrael his Father, Gen. xlvi. 29. So that though he went to meet his Father, his two Sons Manaffeh and Ephraim were left behind, who with Er and Onan make the four, •which are to be deducted out of the Seventy. As to St. Stephens Account of the Number of the Lineage of Ja- cob when he went into Egypt which is given us by St. Luke, Acts vii. 14. where they are faid to be three- fcore and fifteen Souls it is manifeft, that the Evangelifl followed the Septuagint Verfion of the Bible, and not the original Hebrew Copy: For the Septuagint makes this Number feventy five, and fays, that the Sons of Jofeph . were nine Souls, ver. 27. inftead of two, and yet not rec- koning as above Er and Onan who were dead, makes the firfl Number of all the Souls which came with Jacob into Egypt to be but fixty-fix, as it is in the Hebrew Copy. Whereas if you add Er and Onan, and the nine Sons of Jofeph to this Number (if he had nine), then the Number ought by that Account to be feventy-feven, and not feventy-five. And Jacob fen t Judah before him unto Jofeph to dircB his Face unto G often-, and they came into the Land of G often. And Jofeph made ready his Chariot, and went up to meet Ifrael his Father to Gcft:en, Gen. xlvi. 28, 29. The Septua- gint Verfion which Jofephus hath followed in this Particular fays, Hebrew Bible vindicated. 199 fays, that Jacob fent Judah before him to Jofeph to direct A. P. D. his Face to Heroopolis in the Land of Ramcfes. And Jofeph t 5_ 3^ made ready his Chariot, and went up to meet Ifrael his Father at Heroopolis. But what furprifes me is the Error which Dr. Shaw is unwarily led into thereby. For fays lie, provided Jacob had directed his Journey from Beerjheba, to wards that Part of Egyyt which was called Zoan, it will be difficult to account for what is recorded by the Septiiagint and Jofephus, that his Son Jofeph met him at Heroopolis- For as this was a City of the Heliopolitan Nomos which bordered upon the Red Sea, where we have at prefent the Caftle and Garrifon of Adjeroute, it would lie directly in the Road to Memphis, but out of it in the Way to Zoan. Now to confute this Syftem of Dr. Shaw there needs no other Authority than Dr. Shaw's own Works j fince Zoan is particularly fpecified by the Pfalmijl as that Part of the Land of Egypt (i), where Mofes performed his Signs and his Wonders; and Dr. Shaw fuppofes Memphis (k) to have been fituated where Geeza now Hands on the We- ftern Shore of the Nile directly oppofite to Cairo, or Ra- mefesif)-, fothat it is almofl impoffible for any one to go to Memphis, without going through the Land of Zoan. Nor can I conceive how Dr. Shaw could fuppofe Adjeroute to be the direct Road between Beerfieba and Memphis or even any Part of the Lower Egypt, there be- ing a vaft Wildernefs between BeerJJ:eba and Adjeroute, as well as another between Adjeroute and Egypt ; whereas Mofes declares, the Road which leadeth by the Land of the Philsftines, that is, by the Coaft of the Mediterranean it) Pf. lxxviii. 12, 43. (k) Shaw, p. 341. (/) lb. p. 343. Sea, 200 TX^Chronology of the A.P.D. Sea, to be the near Road between Egypt and Canaail, 5°3- and which I apprehend to be the only Road that was ever practifed by any but the Ifraelites. And therefore God is faid to have led them about through the Way of the Wildcrnefs of the Red Sea, Exod xiii. 17. 18. But if I may be indulged in a Conjecture to rectify this Mi flake of the Septuagint and Jofephus I mould imagine, that Heroopolis has been inferted by Miftake inftead of He- liopolis ; fince it is very certain, that there was a City in Egypt which was called by the Hebrews Dim TV («*), that is, the City of Heres, or the City of the Sun, which being literally tranflated into Greek is 'H\k 1*0X1$, or He- Jiopolis : And that by a Miftake between the Sound of the two Words Heres and Heros, the Septuagint hath inferted 'Hguav iroKiq, that is, Heroopolis, inftead of Herefpolis, or Heliopolis : Since Heroopolis, from whence the Weflern Gulph of the Red Sea was by the Antients called the Hero- opolitick Gulph, did probably ftand not far from the moft northern End of it : And Dr. Shaw himfelf fuppofes it to be Adjeroute, which undoubtedly is fituated thereabouts. But then it mould alfo be faid that Jofeph went to conduct his Father to Here/polls inftead of going to meet him there. And when the Time drew nigh that Ifrael muft die, he called his Son Jofeph and faid unto him, Bury me not I pray thee in Egypt, but I will lie with my Fathers 5 and Jofeph faid, I will do as thou haft faid. And he faid, Swear unto me, and he fware unto him. And Ifrael bowed himfelf upon the Bed's-head, Gen. xlvii. 29—3 1 . • . {m) If. xix. 18. that 0 Hebrew Bible vindicated, .20 1 that is, as Ifrael was lying in his Bed, he made a Motion A. P. D. with his Head, as a Mark and Token of his Thanks to i 5°3-_ God, and of Approbation to Jofeph for the Promife he had made, as David did in the like Circumftances, 1 Kings i. 1 — 47. And after thefe Things when Ifrael grew ftill nearer his End, Jofeph came again to his Father, and brought his two Sons Manafj'eh and Ephraim along with him. And one told Jacob and faid, Behold thy Sonjofeph com- eth unto thee j and Ifrael fir engthened himfelf and fat up- on his Bed, and he blefled them that Day, faying, In thee fhall Ifrael blefs, and make thee as Ephraim and Manaf* feh -, a"d was obliged to recover the PofTeilion thereof afterwards, and to keep it with his Sword and his Bow. For that Jacob was again in PofTeffion of this Land ten D d Ye r 20 2- Tlje Chronology of the A. P. D. Years after his firft Purchafe of it, and in a few after he- had quitted it, is manifeft from Gen. xxxvii. 2, 1 2, 14. Be- caufe Jofepb was fent there when he was feventeen Years, old, to bring his Father an Account of the Conduct of hi* Brethren who fed their Fathers Flocks in Shechcm. JACOB having thus finished with his Son Jofeph,. and his two grand Children, Ephraim and Mafiafeh, he then called for the reft of his Sons, and faid, Gather ywrfehes. together that I may tell you that which fall befall you in the lajl Days. And to his eldeft Son Reu- ben he faid, Thou art my firft-born, my Might a?id the- Beginning of my Strength, the Excellency of my Dignity ,. and the Excellency of my Power. TJnftable as Water, thou Jhalt not excel, becaufe thou went eft up to thy Father's Bed. . Then fpeaking to Simeon and Levi, he fays, Simeon and Levi are Brethren: Injlruments of Cruelty are in their Ha- bitations. O my Soul, come not thou into their Secrets, un- to their AJfembly ?ni?ie Honour, be not thou united; for. in their Anger they few a Man, and in their Self will they digged down a Wall. Curfed be their Anger, fcr it was fierce ; and their Wrath for it was cruel. Then fpeaking to his fourth Son Judah, he fays j Judah, thou art he whom. thy Brethren Jhall praife ; thy Handjhatlbe on the Neck of thine Enemies j thy Father's Children fall bow before thee.. The Sceptre fall not depart from Judah nor a Law-giver- from between his Feet until Skiloh come, and unto him ft: all the Gathering of the People be, Sec. Gen.xlix. 1, &c. The natural Obfervation which follows from hence is this, that the Preference is here given to Judah over his three elder Hebrew Bible vindicated. '2 6-3 -elder Brothers> becaufe they had a&ed in fuch a Manner A. P.D. as not to deferve it; he was therefore put in the Pkce of 5^3- the elder Brother, and had theBleffing conferred on him, of having the Meffiah to defcend from his Loins, Meai of his Brother Reuben, who as the eldeft Son would pro- bably on that Account have been the Perfon, had he not forfeited it by his Mi&ehaviour. Hence alfo it appears- probable, that Seth who was- born in the one hundred and thirtieth Year of his Father's Age, was preferred be- fore any of the Sons of Adam that were born before hirn\ on Account of his Preeminence in Goodnefe ; as. Abra- ham was undoubtedly before his elder Brethren Harm and Nachor, becaufe as God himfelf remarks ; For, fays he, / know him that he will command his Children and his FLouf Jooid after him, and they f:all keep the Way of th Lord, to' do Jujlice and 'Judgment y that the Lord may bring upon -Abraham that which he hath fpoken of him, Gen, xviii. iov And when he had done fpeaking to them, it is obferved by Mofes^ that this is that their Father fpake utito them, and bleffed them ; every one according to his Bleffing he bleffed them. Againft which it is objected by fome that what Jacob faid to fome of his Sons, was a Curfe, rather than a Bleffing. It muft be acknowledged, that Jacob does, indeed fay to Reuben, that hejhall be unflable as Water, xlix. 4. and to Simeon and Levi, that he will divide them in Jacob, and feat ter them in Ifrael, ver. 7. But it ought to be obferved, that Mofes at the Beginning of the Chapter fays; that Jacob called unto his Sons and faid; Gather yourf elves together, that I may tell you that which fhall befall you in the lafl Day. Jacob did not fend for E> d 2 them 2 04 The Chronology of the A.. PD. them to blcfs them, or, as the common Exprefiion is, to 5 S3, give them his Blefling, but to reveal the Will of God to them, of ivhat Jhould befall them in the loft Days, with the Knowledge of which the old Man found himfelf in- fpired, at the Time of his Death, And though I make no doubt, when he had finifhed what God had impow- •ered him to declare, that he did not die without giving them his Blefling, that is, without recommending them to the Protection of their Creator : Yet with regard to the Intent for which he called them together, nothing could be more properly, or more emphatically exprefled, than to fay, Every one according to his Blefiing, he bleffed them-, fince as Balak faid to Balaam , The Word which God put- teth in his Mouth, whether it be Blefling or whether it be Curfing, that mujl he /peak, Numb. xxii. 38. Efpecially if we confider, that the Word "pn in the Hebrew Tongue, which is the Word here made ufe of by Mofes, fignifies both to blcfs and to curfe. 600. JACOB when he had been feventeen Years in Egypt died, being an hundred and forty-feven Years old, Gen. xxvii. 28. And Jcfeph commanded his Servants the Phy- ficians to embalm his Father, and the Phyficians embalm- ed Jfrael, and forty Days were fulfilled for him, (for fo are fulfilled the Days of thofe that are embalmed), and the Egyptians mourned j or him feventy Days, Gen. 1. 2, 3. That is, thirty days were taken up in drying the Body, and anointing it with Gums, or Rofin of Cedar, and o- ther Plants, according to Diodorus (d). Then after- ■t (), they wrapped it up in A.P.D. Nitre, for the Remainder of the feventy Days j which j ^^ he fays is the longefl Time that was allowed for embalm- ing. Diodorus fays (/), that the Time of Mourning for their Kings was feventy-two Days j and as it is more than probable, that Jacob was embalmed after the moil tedious and expenfive Manner, I fuppofe the Number of feventy Days fet down by Mofes is only the round Number, and that Jacob lay feventy-two Days under the Embalmers Hands, and attended by Mourners, before they moved the Body towards its Funeral. And when the Days of his Mourning were paft, Jo- feph, having Permiffion from Pharaoh, attended the Corps of his Father into Canaan, and came to the Threfoing- floor of Atad, which is beyond Jordan. Not that the Threihing- floor of Atad was further from Egypt than the River Jor- dan, but further from the Place where Mofes was when he wrote, or at leaft revifed this Book of Genefs. For it would be greatly out of the Way for Jofeph to crofs Jor- dan in his Road from Egypt to the Plains oiMamre, where Jacob was buried. It is therefore more probable, that the Threfhing-floor of Atad where they flopped the ProcefH- on, and kept the ceremonial Form offeven Days Mourn- ing for the old Patriarch, according to the Cuftom of the Hebrews, 1 Sam. xxxi. 13. Job ii. 13. Judith xvi. 24. was near the Cave of Machpelah, where he was buried. Which Mournings being ended, they buried him in the Cave which is in the Field of Machpelah, which is before ' {t) Herod. !. 2. ' (f) Died. I. 1. c. 3. Mamre> 2 o6 The Chronology of the A.P.D. Ma-wrc, which Abraham bought fey a Pcfl'eJJwn cf a Bury- f", ing-place, of Ephron the Hittke, before Mamre, Gen. 1. f, 13. St. Luke, Ads vii. 15, 16. makes St. Stephen fay, that Jacob went down into Egypt, and died, he and our Fa- thers, i.e. the Sons of Jacob; (See ver. 12, 15.) and they, i.e. Jfph and his Brethren the Sons of Jacob, were ear* ried ever into Sychem, and laid in the Sepulchre that A- braham bought J or a Sum of Money of the Sons of Emmor tlje Father of Sychem. Now Jacob- was without doubt- bu- ried at Mamre \ but Jofeph was buried at Sychem, Gen. 1. 26. Jofh. xxiv. 32. And probably at the fame Time the Embalmed Corpfes of his Brethren were brought out of E- gypt, and buried along with him. However it is manifeft, that this Purchafe at Sychem was not made by Abraham, but by Jacob, Gen. xxxiii. 18, 19. and we may fuppofe the Word Abraham to have been inferred into St. Luke's Text by fome Tranfcriber, fince it is not necefTary to complete the Conftruction j the Name Jacob, or the Ar- tice He of the preceding Verfe being underftood in this Place. 605. BALEUS, King of Babylon died, after a Reign of fifty-two Years, and was fucceeded by Altades, Berof. 6,- ALTADES died after a Reign of thirty-two Years, and was fucceeded by Mamitus. Berof £ JOSEPH died being one hundred and ten Years of Age, and they embalmed him, and put him into a Cof- fin in Evxpt, Gen. 1. 22 — 26. Hebrew Bible vindicated. ?&f A.P D. MAMlTUS, King of Babylon died after a Reign of 667- thirty Years, and was fucceeded by Manacleus. Eercf. MANACLEUS died after a Reign of thirty Years, 697, and was fucceeded by Spberus. Bercf. \_ AARON was born eighty-three Years before the 7*5- Exodus of the Children oflfrael out of Egypt. For he lived an hundred twenty three Years, and died forty Years after the Exodus, Num. xxxiii. 38. 39. Which agrees exactly with the Account given by Alexander Polyhijlor from De- metrius of the Birth of Aaron ; for he fays, that Levi at fixty Years of Age begat Clath or Ccrath ; that Clath when forty Years old begat Amram\ and that Amra?n when fe- venty-five Years old begat Aaron. Now Levi was. the third Son of Jacob who was married, An. p. Dil. 536 -y fo that if we fuppofe Levi born in the Year five hundred and forty, and add thereto the Ages of Levt\ Coratb and Am- ram at the Time of4 the Birth of their Sons, then thefe two Accounts will exactly agree (g). About fixty-three Years after the Death of Jofeph and of 7 1 6'. his Brethren (£), there arofe up a new King over Egypt who knew not Jofeph, that is, had no regard for Jofepb j for in this Senfe the Word know is fometimes made ufe of in the Scriptures ^ as for Example, when David fays, that God khowetb the Way of the Righteous (/), that is, regardcth it, and loveth it. And Pharaoh having obferved (as Abime-. (*)■ 540+60+404-7 5=7 1:5- (b) ExicxJ. 1. 1. &c. («) Pral. i. 6. leek. 208 The Chronology of the A.P.D. lech did before of Ifaac with regard to the Philijiines, Gen. 716. xxvi. j 0> ) that f& Children of Ifrael were more and mightier, that is, were more prolifick and encreafed more in Num- ber proportionably than the Egyptians ; he ordered the Male-children to be deftroyed by the Mid wives j and char- ged two of the principal of the Egyptian Midwives, Zi- phrah and Puah with the Care of having this Command executed : But the Midwives, being unwilling to execute fuch cruel Orders, pretended that the Ifraelitifj Women were brought to-bed without their Help before they could get to them. For the Egyptians lived at Zoan, and the Israelites in the Land of Gofien, which was about fix Miles distant from Zoan, where Pharaoh kept his Court > and probably as they were moftly Shepherds they lived in Tents and Hutts. To remedy therefore this Inconveniency he made them Houfes, that is, Pharaoh ordered the two Cities of Pit horn and Raamfesy or Ramefes to be built that the Hebrew Women might be nearer one another, and nearer Help on particular Occafionsj and ordered alfoHou- fes to be built therein for the Midwives. For what the Englijh Tranilation renders Treafure-Cities fignifies no more than ufeful and convenient Cities : The Vulgar Latin therefore renders it Cities of tabernacles, the Sep- tuagint, walled Cities, and the Arabick and Syriack ' Ver- iions, Granaries. All which it may fignify and more ; being derived from the Verb pD which Buxtorf tran- slates Prof nit, and in which Senfe it is ufed, Job xv. 3. xxxv. 3. In Pf. exxxix. 3. and Job xxii. 21. it fignifies being acquainted with a Perfon, and Numb. xxii. 30. be- iug accujhmed to do a Thing. So that really it fignifies properly Hebrew Bible vindicated. 2 09 properly Cities which were ufeful for their Neighbour- A. P. "D. hood and Acquaintance. Pharaoh therefore employed 7J6. the Ifraelites in making Bricks, and building theie Ci- ties, in which there were Houfes allotted for the Midwives. I am not ignorant, that becaufe the fore- going Words arc, Becaufe the Midwives feared God, he built them Houfes, therefore fome learned Men have fup- pofed the Word He, to refer to God ; and that the Ex- preflions of building Houfes fhould be underftood of God's encreafing their Families, in which Senfe this Phrafe is manifeftly made ufe of Deut. xxv. 10. Ruth iv. 11. i Sam. ii. 35. 2 Sam. vii. 27. But as I always pre- fer the literal Tranflation where it can be rendered con- fident with the Context ; and find that the Ifraelites were forty Years after employed in making Bricks and building Cities ; Exod. i. 1 1 ; v. 7, 8, &c. therefore I choofe to interpret this Paflage of Pharaoh's building Houfes for the Midwives, becaufe they feared God, and did not as the King of Egypt commanded but faved the Men-chil- dren alive ; faying, that the Hebrew Women were deli- vered e're the Midwives came in unto them, Exod.'i. 17 — 21. that is, that they might have no more Excufes of that Kind. T he exact Year when this Order was published can- not be fixed, but certain it is, that it could not have if- lued long, that is, not above three Years, before the Birth of Mofes j becaufe we do not hear of any Diffi- culty the Parents of Aaron had in faving his Life, who was but three Years older than Mofes. E e SPHERUS, ■I i o The Chronology of the A.P.D. 7*7« S PHE R US King of Babylon died after a Reign of twenty Years, and was fucceeded by Mamelus. Bcrof. *!g, MOSES was born eighty Years before the Exodus of the Children of If rati out of Egypt, A vvard of the Mount, and that the Entrance into it lies open to the North-Eaft. Whence it appears, that that Part of the Land of Midian, in which Jethro lived, lay fomewhere Eaftward of Mount Sinai, and was proba- bly fituated where Sharme ftands now, which according to Dr. Pocock (p) is about a Day and a half's Journey South-Eaft from Mount Sinai j from whence the Monks of Mount Sinai are chiefly fupplied with Fifh. And fioffibly it might be from this Situation by the Sea- more, that the Family of Jethro were called Kenites (q)-, tlie Word Ken in Hebrew fignifying a Neft, a Hole, or (0) Shaw's Trav. p. 350. (/>} Pocock's Trav. p. 137. J Ifdg. 1. 16; 4. ir, 17. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 215 zCave 5 and therefore Balaam, when he was blefTing the A.P. D. Ifrc •elites, and looked upon the Kenites, who were a- 75"- mongft them, took up his Parable and laid, Strong is thy Dwelling-place, and thou putt ejl thy Nejt in a Rock, Num. xxiv. 20. I N the thirty- fourth and thirty-fifth Years of Sparetus, 78 1, there happened a great Flood in Thefaly. Berof. Which agrees exactly with the common Computation of the Flood of Deucalion. And immediately after this Flood there happened an Earthquake, and an Eruption of Fire in the fame Country under a King whofe Name was Phaeton. Berof. Of which Conflagration, under the Reign of Phaeton, Plato takes notice in his Timteus. From whence have probably arifen all the fubfequent Mythologies of Phae- ton's borrowing the Chariot of the Sun from his Father Apollo. SPARETUS King of Babylon died, after a Reign of 787, forty Years, and was fueceeded by Afcatades. Berof. In the eighth Year of the Reign of Afcatades, Can- 794 > cres King of Egypt being overcome by the Magic of the Hebrews perifhed in the Sea, and left Acherres .behind him his SuccefTor in Egypt. Berof. And it came to pafs in Procefs of Time that the King tf Egypt, who fought to flay Mofes, dkd, Exod, ii. i$< And 2 1 6 "The Chronology of the And the Children of Jfrael fighed by Reafon of the Bon- dage, and they cried j and their Cry came up unto God, by Reafui of the Bondage. Where it is to be obferved, that here is an Hiatus in the Life of Mofes of forty Years j during which Time, it is probable, that he fpent near thirty-eight Years by himfelf; for as he had but two Children by Zipporah before his Return to Egypt, and one of them but juft old enough to be circumcifed j it is probable, that he had not been long married. During which thirty-eight Years, I think it more than probable, that he had learned, by Revelation from God, the Art of literary Writing ; and compofed then the Book of Genefis ; for as this has the feweft Diflocations in it, of any of the Books of Mofes, I fuppofe it to have been compofed by him, when he had the greateft Leifure. And that he was acquainted with the Art of literary Writing before the Receiving of the Law from God on Mouitf Sinai, is plain from Exod. xvii. 14. Where Mofes after having been attacked by the Amakkites in his PaiTage from E^ypt to Mount Sinai, is commanded to write this for a Memorial in a Book. And it does pot appear, that the Art of literary Writing was pracYifed, or known, in Egypt, till many Generations afterwards. But it feems more prob.ible on the contrary from the great Ignorance we are in about the antient Hiftory of Egypt, that this Art was quite unknown there, till a little before the Reign of Sffoffris. For according to Hero- dotus, Sefoflris at his firft going out of Egypt, when he went into Pale/line, which was the Beginning of his Conquefls, left Pillars behind: him as Memorials of his Victories, Hebrew Bible vindicated, 2 1 7 Vi&ories, which had Infcriptions upon them mixed with A.P.D. fymbolical or hieroglyphical Marks j whereas upon his 794- Return from Greece, he left Statues of himfelf behind him, in Ionia with only Infcriptions engraved on them, in what Herodotus calls the facred Letters of Egypt. And what adds to this Reafoning is, that the Hiilory of He- rodotus, which is the only prophane Hiftory of antient Egypt, that can be with any Certainty relied on, gees no further back than the Tranflation of the Egyptian Em- pire to Memphis by Menes, about two Generations be- fore Sefoftris. For he fays the Priefts informed him, that before that Time Egypt was governed by the Gods. And I take it for granted, that, when any Nation or People are forced to go to the Gods for their Origin, at that Time, the People of that Nation were ignorant of the Art of literary Writing; and thereby incapable of preferving their true Hiftory. Four hundred and thirty Years (r) after the Promife 79?- made to Abraham at his firft. Entrance into the Land .of of Canaan, and when Mofes was eighty Years of Age (j), and had been forty Years out of Egypt, he kept {t) the Flock of Jethro his Father-in-law ; and he led the Flock to the Back-fide of the Defert, and come to the Moun- tain of God, or the great Mountain («), even unto Horeb; (>) Gal. 3. 17. Exod. 12. 40, 41. (5) Exod. "7. 7. Acls 7. 30. (() Exod. 3. 1, &c. (u) For fo this Phrsfe is often made ufe of, Gm?zy 6.- where a mighty Prince is called, a Prince of God. And^ Gen. 30. 8. great Wreftlings are called, the Wreftlings of God, fcrY. F f which 2 i 8 77je Chronology of the A. P. D. which fignifies the Mountain by Way of Excellency, that 79?- beinor much the largef! Mountain thereabouts. And the Angel of Jehovah appeared unto him in a Flame of Fire out of the midft of a Bum, and Mofes faid, I will now turn afide, and fee this great Sight, why the Bu/Ij is not burnt. And when Jehovah faw, that he turned afide to fee, God called unto him out of the midjl of the Bufi and faid, I am the God of thy Father, the God of Abraham, the God of Jfaac, and the God of Jacob. Come now therefore and I will fend thee unto Pharaoh that thou mayeft bring forth my People the Children of Ifrael cut of Egypt. Where it is to be obferved, that the Perfon here who appeared unto Mofes is called an Angel, Jehovah and God. Then Mofes faid unto God, Who am I, that IJkould go unto Pharaoh, and that Iftould bring forth the Children of Jfrael out of Egypt ? And God faid certainly I will be with thee -, and thisfhallbe a Tcken unto thee, that I have Cent thee, when thou haft brought forth the Children of Ifrael out of Egypt, ye ftallferve God (x) upon this Mountain. Here Almighty God for a Trial of the Faith of Mofes referred him to a very diftant Sign, that is, the Event. Go, fays he, and try and you mail find by the Event that I have fent you. Then, fays Mofes, though I believe thou art God and wilt perform thy Word, yet how mall I be able to convince the Children of Ifrael of this, and perfuade them to follow me ? For when I come to the Children of Ifrael, and mail fay unto them, The God of your Fathers hath fent me unto you j and they jh all fay unto me, What is his Name ? What fiall I fay unto them ? {*) Exod- 3. II, 12. Whence Hebrew Bible vindicated. 2 1 9 A.P.D. Whence it appears, that the Children of Jfrael were 79°- by this Time very much corrupted with the Idolatry of Egypt (_)'), where the Worfhip of feveral Gods with different Names was the univerfal Practice. The Ifrac- lites might therefore naturally afk what God was it that fent him unto them. To which the Angel fpeaking in the Perfon of God who fent him anfwered and faid, / am that I am. Thus therefore {halt thou fay to the Children of Ifrael, lam hath fent me unto you. From which Paflage in the Writings of Mofes it is probable, that Plato borrowed his Nation of the Name of God, when he afferts, that the Word to "Eg-i, Eft, is folely applicable to the eternal Nature of God. And from him it alfo probably was, that the Word E?*, i. e. Thou art, was all that was written upon the Door of the Del- phic Temple : Upon which Plutarch remarks, that this Word is folely applicable to God j fince that which tru- ly is mufl be fempiternal. And hence it was, that Nu- menius the Pythagorean Philofbpher alferted, that if he was to give a Name to the great incorporeal Being he would call it, To ov, Id quod eft (z). But lead: the If raelites fhould not thoroughly underftand the true Import of this Name, God further faid to Mofes, You are to fay moreover to the Children of Ifrael, The Lord God of your Fathers ; the God of Abraham, the God of Ifaac, and the •God of Jacob hath fent me unto you. This is the Name which you mufl principally infiit upon, as it is the Name (y) Jofli. 24. 14. Lev. 17. 7. Ezek. 20. 8; 53. 3. (z) See Eufeb. Pncp. Ev. 1. n.c. 9, 10, xi £ & 1. 15. c. 1J7. F f 2 they 220 7/Jj Chronology of the A. P. D. they will beft underftand j for this is my Name for ever 79 2. by which I will be known unto them j and my Memorial unto all Generations. But, fays Mofes, how fhall I be able to convince them of this ? For they will fay, 'The God of our Fathers hath not appeared unto thee. Then the Lord empowered him to work three different Sorts of Miracles to convince them of the Truth of what he afferted (a). But Mofes being afraid, and unwilling to go on fo dangerous an Errand into a Country where he was fo well known, and had fo many Enemies; where he had already experienced the Envy and Treachery of his own People, and knew that Pharaoh fought to flay him, Exod. ii. 14, 15. made a further Excufe and faid,, 0 Lord I am not eloquent, but am flow of Speech, and of a (low Tongue: Send therefore I pray thee by the Hand, of him whom thou Jhoiddft fend, that is, fome more proper Per- fon. And the Anger of the Lord was kindled againft Mofes, and he faid, Is not Aaron the Levite thy Brother ? 1 know that he can [peak well. And alfo behold he cometh forth to meet thee. Go, therefore, return into Egypt, for all the Men are dead thatfeek thy Life (b). And Mofes went and returned to Jethro his Father-in- law, and faid unto him, Let me go I pray thee, and return unto my Brethren, which are in Egypt i and fee whether they be yet alive. And he faid, Go in peace. Mofes how- ever delayed fo long after this before he fet out on his Journey, that his Brother Aaron reached Horeb, which the Children oiJfrael were between two and three Months (a) Exod. 4. 1. {b) Exod. 4. 10. See alfo Ex. 2. 23. in Hebrew Bible vindicated, %%i in arriving at, by the Time that Mofes had reached it; A. P.D* though it was but two Days Journey from that Land of _ 79^ Midian where Jethro lived : And a common Traveller cannot conveniently make the Journey from Ramefes, or Grand Cairo, to Mount Horeb in lefs than a Fortnight, though he be carried on the Back of a Camel ; Dr. Po- cock (c) having left Grand Cairo on the twenty-eighth of March, and not arriving at Mount Sinai till the e- leventh of April, The Lord therefore appeared again to Mofes when he was in the Land of Midian, and commanded him to go and return into Egypt-, and affured him a fecond Time, that all the Men were dead who fought his Life (d). Upon which Mofes took his Wife and his Sons, and fet them upon an Afs, in order to return to the Land of Egypt. What it was that detained Mofes fo long before he fet out on his Journey is no where faid ; but it is proba- ble, that it was not only his Fear for his Life, but alfo his extraordinary Fondnefs for his Wife and his Children ; and that he waited till his Wife was brought to-bed, that he might bring her and her Children, along with him. For when he fet out upon his Journey his youngeft Son had not been circumcifed. When he was therefore arri- ved at the nrft Stage after his Departure from Jethro's Habitation which, as was obferved, was probably at or near where Sharme now llands, about a Day and a half's (c) Pocock's Trav. (d) E*od. 4. i9. Journey 2 2 2 Tfje C II R onology of the A.P.D. Journey from Mount Sinai j Jehovah (e) met him in the 79^- ( inn> aml being angry with h'nn fought to flay hint. Which is probably to be underftood of the fame Angel's meeting him, which had been before fpoken of under the Cha- racter of Jchcviih, and afflicting him with fome violent Sicknefs, or Diibrdcr. And to prevent him from car- rying his Wife and Children any further, and incum- bering himfelf with fuch Luggage, when fent upon fo important a Meflage ; he commanded him to circum- cife the Child, which Office Mofes bein^ unable to per- form, probably by Reafon of his Sicknefs, it was perform- ed by Zipporah ; who took a fharp Stone and cut off the Forefkin of her Son, and it fell to the Ground. Tlrt; Englifi Tranflation fays, and caft it at his Feet ; but the Hebrew literally fignifies, and made it touch his Feet. Then faid Zipporah to her Son, A bloody Relation, or Child, thou art to me. And me departed from Mofes faying to her Son, A bloody Child thou art -> becaufe of the Circumcifon. The Word \Dtl * Chat an y which in the Englijh Tranflation is rendered a Hufband, fignifies almoft any Manner of Relation -, and, according to R. Kimchi, and other learned yews, was particularly ap- plied to a new circumcifed Infant. Some learned Com- mentators fuppofe thefe Words pronounced by Zipporah to be the cuftomary Form of Words ufed at Circumci- fion, becaufe Aben Ezra on this Text fays, that the Child on the Day of his Circumcifion was called Chat an j (e) Exod. 4. 24. * |Dn Affinitatem iniit, contraxit vel junxit, affinitate fe junxi* vel conjunxit, affinitate jun&us fuit. Buxtorf. becaufe Hebrew Bible vindicated. 223 becaufe he ivas then frjl joyncd to tie Pec fie of 'God, ar.d A.V.T). as it were efpoufed unto God. Certain it is, that the 79^- Word Chat an might fignify a Spoufe, as it might be ap- plied to any other Relation. But the Reafon why I do not believe that this-ts-fhe Meaning of the Words, is be- caufe of the additional Words to me. A bloody Hufband, or a Hufband of Blood, thou art to me. For if the Words pronounced by Zipporah had been only, A Huf- band of Blood thou art ; then indeed this might have re- ferred to the Church, to which the Child was dedicated or efpoufed ; but the Addition of the other two Words feem tome to overturn Aben Ezra's Exposition. Thofe Words which we render, So he lei him go, may be equally rendered, and He or She departed from him j and are accordingly tranflated by the Septuagint3 Kcu uttijxSev ocar civ™ j & recefft ab eo. I think them therefore more properly applicable to Zipporah, who was fent back to her Father from hence, than to any one elfe j becaufe of the Repetition of the Words, A bloody Relation, or Child, thou art to me, which me repeated again to her Son, after me had departed from the Prefence of her Huf- band Mofes. Efpecially if we confider, that the Circum- cifion of the Child was the Caufe of her being fent back from Mofes to her Father Jethro. For as it was dan- gerous to carry the Child aay further, in thofe Cir* cumftances, the Inflammation rifing to its Heighth on the third Day after Circumcifion, Gen. xxxiv. 25. There- fore Mofes (f) fent Zipporah with her Little- ones im- (/) Exod. 18. bu mediately 224 The Chronology of the A.P.D. mediately hack to her Father Jethro, where flic might 79^- . arrive before Night. And Mofes being recovered from his Diforder pur- fued his Journey' towards Egypt, and met his Brother Aaron at Mount Horeb, from whence he and Aaron went together into Egypt and gathered together all the' Elders of the Children of Ifrael. And Aaron fpoke all the Words which the Lord had fpoken unto Mofes, and did the Signs in the Sight of the People. And the People believed, Exod. iv. 29, 31. Then afterwards Mofes and Aaron (g) and all the El- ders of Ifrael went in and told Pharaoh ; thus faith the Jehovah God of Ifrael, Let my People go that they may hold a Feaft to me in the Wildernefs. And Pharaoh faid, Who is -Jehovah, that I fliould obey his Voice to let Ifrael go ? I know not Jehovah, neither will I let Ifrael go. And the King of Egypt faid unto them, Wherefore do ye, Mofes and Aaron, let the People from their Works? Get you unto- your Burthens. Whence it is more than probable that Mofes and Aaron when they went this Time to wait upon Pharaoh went attended by the Heads of the Houfes of Ifrael-, as mentioned Ex. vi. 14 — 27. Though it is not mentioned in this Place, that any more than Mofes and Aaron went in to Pharaoh. For other- wife why fliould Pharaoh fay, Wherefcre do you let the People from their Works ? Get you unto your Burthens. And he commanded the fame Day the Taik-mafters of {g) Exod. 5. 1. the Hebrew Bible vindicated. 225 the People, and their Officers, faying, Ye fhall no more A. P. D. give the People Straw to makeBrick, as heretofore: let them 79°* go and gather Straw for themfelves. And the Ifraelites who had come from their Works, and (g) flood in the Way, met Mofes and Aaron as they came forth from Pharaoh-, and being informed of what Pharaoh had faid unto them, they faid unto Mofes and Aaron, Jehovah look upon you and judge ; becaufe you have made our Savour to flink in the Nofe of Pharaoh, and in the Nofe of his Servants, to put a Sword in their Hands to flay us. Which accordingly happened, for the Officers of the Children of Ifrael whom Pharao/fs Tafk-mafters had fet over them, were after this beaten ; it being demanded of them, wherefore have ye not fulfilled your Tafk both Yefterday and to-day, as heretofore ? Then the Officers of the Children of Jfrael, that is, the Elders of the Chil- dren of Ifrael, Numb. xi. 16. came and cried unto Pha- raoh, faying, Wherefore dealeft thou thus with thy Ser- vants? There is no Straw given unto thy Servants, and yet the Tafk-maflers fay to us, Make Brick ; and behold thy Ser- vants are beaten; but the Fault is in thy own People. Put he faid, Te are idle, ye are idle : therefore ye fay, Let us go and do Sacrifice unto the Lord. Go therefore now and work : for there fhall no Straw be given you, yet fiall you deliver the Tale of Bricks, Exod, v. 14—18. (g) The Words in our Tranflation are : And they met Mofes and Aaron, whojhod In the Way as they came forth from Pharaoh ; Where- as they ought to have been placed thus : And they, who flood in the Way, met Mofes and Aaron as they came forth from Pharaoh. Exod. v. 20. G g But 2 26 Tht Chronology of the A.P.D. 798- But in the mean Time M?,fo having returned with the Children of Ifrael to Ramefes where they lived and ap- plied himfelf by Prayer unto God : God fpake unto Mofes, and faid unto him, / am Jehovah, and I appeared unto Abraham, unto Ifaac,. and nnto Jacob, by the Name of God Almighty, and by my Name Jehovah teas not I known to them (h) f Thefe Words in our Tranflation run thus ;. And I appeared unto Abraham, unto Ifaac, and unto Ja- cob, by the Name cf God Almighty j but by my Name Je- hovah I was not known to them. Which cannot be the true Reading; becaufe it is manifeft, that Almighty God was known to every one of them, that is, to Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob, by the Name Jehovah : This being the general Word, that is made ufe of by Mofes in the original Hebrew to exprefs the Name of God, whenever he fpeaks of him, from the Beginning of Ge?iefs to the End of it, &c. To which it may be objected, that this is only to be attributed to the Incorrectnefs of the Stile of Mcfes, who was well acquainted with the Name of Je- hovah ; and made ufe of that Word inftead of Adonai or Saddai, &c. But in anfwer to this, it may be obferved, that though this Objection may hold in many Places, yet it will not hold in all the Places wRere Jehovah is mentioned. And in particular where God is faid to be called upon by the Name of Jehovah. As for Example, when Abraham came firft into the Land of Canaan, it is faid that he builded an Altar unto Jehovah ; and called upon the Name cf Jehovah (i). In like manner when he (;*) Gen. 12. 8» returned Hebrew Bible vindicated. 22^ eturned out of Egypt to the Place of the Altar, which A.P. D. he had made at the fiifc, there Abraham is faid alio to t ' have called on the Name of Jehcvah (k) ; and that when he removed to Beerjheba, he planted a Grove in Beer- fieba, and called there on the Name of Jebcvab, the ever- lafiing God (/). And when Abraham gave a Name to the Mount where he went to offer up his Son Jfaac, he is poiitively faid to have named it, Jehovah, Jireh (m) which fignines, in the Mount of Jehovah it mall be feen. Ifaac in like manner, is faid to have builded an Altar in the Land of the Philiftines, and to have called there on the Name of Jehovah (n). And when Jacob fell afleep at Bethel in his Road between Beerjheba and Haran, and faw the Angels afcending and defcending on a Ladder, it is faid, that Jehovah flood above it and faid, / am the Jehovah God of Abraham thy Father, and the God of Ifaac, See. Gen. xxviii. 13. So that if the Ori- ginal Word tfb Lo, in the Hebrew be tranflated by the Greek Word 'Ou%*, or the Latin Word Nonne, inftead of Non, as it is, Dent. iii. 11. 2 Chron. xx. 6. Hab. ii. 6. & alibi ; then the whole Verfe when rendered in Engli/7:, will run thus ; And I appeared unto Ahraham, unto Ifaac, and unto Jacob, by the Name of God Almighty ; and by my Name Jehovah was not I known unto them ? Which will be equivalent to faying, that by his Name Jehovah he was known unto them. Mr. La Cene, and the Au- thor of the EfTay for a New Tranflation of the Bible, who owes moft of his Remarks to Mr. La Cene, though (k) lb. 13. 4. (/) Gen, 21. 33. (?>?) lb. 22. 14. («) lb. 26. 25. C e 2 he 228 The Chronology of the A. P. D. ne nas not the Ingenuity to acknowledge it, have taken t_y^l_, Notice of feveral other ParTages in the Scriptures which would be mended by having a Point of Interrogation put at the End of the Sentence ; in fome of which they are in the right, and might have fpecified feveral more ; but I cannot fay, that I approve of all the Inftances they have quoted. The rendering however of this PafTage in the Septuagint Verlion without putting a Point of Inter- rogation at the End of the Sentence, probably milled Jofephus (0) to affert, that this Name was never difco- vered to Men before. And "Jehovah faid further unto Mofes ; Say unto the Children of Ifrael, I am Jehovah, and will bring you out from wider the Burthen of the Egyptians, and I will rid you of your Bondage. And Mofes fpake fo unto the Chil- dren of Ifrael j but they hearkened not unto Mofes for Anguifh of Spirit. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes fay- ing, Go in fpeak unto Pharaoh King of Egypt, that he let the Children of Ifrael go out of his Land. And Mofes fpake before Jehovah, faying, Behold the Children of Ifrael have not hearkened unto me ; how then fhall Pharaoh hear me, who am of uncircumcifed Lips ( p), that is, as he exprelTed it before, / am not eloquent, but- flow of Speech (f). Where it is to be obferved, that the Jews made ufe of the Term Uncircumcifed, to denote any Thing that was not applied, or was not applicable to the Ufes for which it was defigned. Thus the Pro- phet Jeremiah fiys of the Jews, that their Ear is uncir- (0) Jof. Ant. I. 2. c. 12. f. 4. (/>) Exod. 6. 30. {q) lb. 4. 10. cum-* Hebrew Bible vindicated, 229 cumcifed (r) j and immediately adds the Explanation of A. P. D. it by faying, and they cannot hearken. And again he fays, 79° that all the Houfe of Ifrael are uncircumcifed in Heart (s) ; meaning thereby, that they would not apply their Hearts to feek Knowledge. This Word was alfo ap- plied to inanimate Things : As for Example, when the Fruit of Trees which was not to be eaten, is faid to be, as uncircumcifed (t). And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, See I have made thee as a God to Pharaoh (u) : Or, as it was faid before with re- gard to Aaron, 'Thou fialt be to him injlead of God (x). In the Original it is as in our Tranflation ; See I have made thee a God to Pharaoh ; it being common among the Hebrews to leave out the Particle As. For Exam- ple, it is faid of Nabal, 1 Sam. xxv. 37. that his Heart died within him, and he became a Stone, inftead of, as a Stone. See alfo Gen. xix. 26. Mofcs therefore was to be as a God to Pharaoh endowed with the fupernatural Power of working Miracles ; and Aaron was to be his Prophet (y), that is, was to fpeak to Pharaoh from Mofes, as by Authority from God. For as Mofes had complained, that he was of uncircumcifed Lips, that is, flow of Speech, therefore Aaron was appointed to fpeak for him ; or as Mofes otherwife expreffeth it, to be in- (r) Jer. 6. io. (s) lb. 9. 26. (t) Lev. 19. 23. («) Exsd. 7. 1. (x) lb. 4. 16. (y) The Word in the Original which is here tranflated a Prophet, properly fignifies an Orator, or Spokefman, being derived from the He- brew Verb 2*0 Eloqui, to fpeak. Head 230 The Chronology of the A.V.D.ficad (f a Mcutb to him (z). And (aid Jehcvah unto 79^- AlfcsyThou fhalt {peak all that I command thee; that is, thou {halt fpcak by thy Prophet Aaron all that I com- mand thee: And Aaron thy Brother {hall fpeak unto Pha- raoh that he fend the Children of Tfrael out of his I/ind. And / will harden Pharaoh's Heart (a), and multiply my Signs and my Wonders in the Land of Egypt. Where we mutt obferve, that the Expreflion of God's harden- ing Pharaoh's Heart is by no Means to be literally un- derftood ; but only that God permitted Pharaoh to con- tinue in hardening his own Heart (£), or as St. Paid expreffeth it (c), that God willing to Jhew his Wrath, and to make his Power known, endured with much Long- jttffering this Veffel of his Wrath fitted to DtftruBion. It being a common Method of ExprefTion among the He- brews to attribute the doing of an Action to the Perfon who permits it to be done. Thus Jofeph is faid to do whatever the Prifoners did in the Prifon of which he was the Keeper ; becaufe he permitted them to do it. For thus Mofes pofitively fays, Gen. xxxix.22. that what- ever they did there, he (Jofeph) was the Doer of it. Of which Manner of fpeaking numberlefs Inftances might be produced. And therefore in other Places it is plainly faid, that Pharaoh hardened his own Heart. As for Example, Exod. viii. 1 5. it is faid, when Pharaoh faw there was Refpite, he hardncd his Heart, and hearkened not unto them. So alfo Exod. viii. 32. ix. 34. and 1 Sam. vi. 6. (z) Exod. 4. 16. [a) Exod. 7. 3. (b) lb. ver. 22- [c) Rom. 9. 22. And Hebrew Bible vindicated, 231 A.P.D. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes, and unto Aaron fay- J^z^ ing, When Pharaoh mall fpeak unto you. laying, £/^™ # Miracle for you 5 that is, to prove that God fent you : Then thou {halt fay unto Aaron, Take thy Rod, and caft it before Pharaoh ', and it fhall become a Serpent. And Mofes and Aaron went in unto Pharaoh, and they did fo as Jehovah had commanded. Then Pharaoh alfo called the Wifemen and the Sorcerers ; and the Magicians of Egypt did in like manner with their Enchantments. For they cafl down every Man his Rod, and they became Serpents ; but Aaron"?, Rod fwallowed up their Rods, Exod. vii. 1 — 12. And Pharaoh however hearkened not unto them, as Jehovah had faid. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Pharaoh's Heart is hardned, he refufeth to let the People go. Get thee unto Pharaoh in the Morning, la, he goeth out unto the Wa- ter, (probably to bathe himfelf, as his Daughter had done before Exod. ii. 5. and as it was the Cuftom of the Egyptians to do very frequently;) and thou fhalt frand by the River's Brink, againft he come : And thou fhalt fay unto him ; Thus faith Jehovah, In this /halt thou know that I am Jehovah, Behold I will fmite with the Rod that is in mine Hand, upon the Waters which are in the River, and they fhall be turned to Blood : And the Fifli that is in the Rivers mall die, and the River fhall ft ink. And Mofes and Aaron did fo, as Jehovah commanded. And the Magicians did fo with their Inchantments, and all the Egyptians digged round about the River fcr Wa- ter 232 The Chronology of the A.P D. ter to drink; for they could not drink of the Water of 79°' J the River. Whereas Jofphus obferves, that in the Land of Gofken, where the Hebrews dwelt, the River- water continued fweet and fit for drinking ; he like- wife fays, that when this was done, the Magicians not being able to reftore the Water again to its natural Co- lour, Pharaoh applied to Mofes and promifed to let the Israelites depart, if 'Mofes would change the Water to its natural Colour and Tafte ; Which when Mofes had per- formed, and Pharaoh faw that there was refpite, he har- dened his Heart, and turned, and went into his Houfe, neither did he fet his Heart to this alfo ; fo as to be pre- vailed upon thereby to let the Ifraclites go. And feven Days were fulfilled after that Jehovah had fmitten the River. And Jehovah fpake unto Mo- fes (d), Go unto Pharaoh, and fay unto him, If thou refufe to let them go, behold I will fmite all thy Bor- ders with Frogs. And Aaron ftretched out his Hand over the Waters of Egypt, and the Frogs came up and covered the Land of Egypt. And the Magicians did fo with their Inchantments, and brought up Frogs upon the Land of Egypt. But when the Frogs continued to infefh the Land of Egypt and the Magicians (e) were not able to deftroy them 5 then Pharaoh called for Mofes and Aaron, and faid, Intieat Jehovah that he may take {d) Exou. 7. 25 ; 8. 1. (e) There is no Mention made of this Circumftance in the Books of Mofes, that the Magicians were not ahle to remove the Frogs, but the Context plainly fhews it to be an Omiflion. away Hebrew Bible vindicated. 233 away the Frogs from me, and I will let the People go, A. P. D. that they may do Sacrifice unto Jehovah. And Mofes 79 8- faid unto Pharaoh, Glory over me, or Have this Honour over me, as it is in the Margin of our Bibles, that is, Have the Honour to command me : It being a common Method of Expreffion even to this Day in Italy, when one Perfon afketh a Favour from another, for the Per- fon who grants it to fay, Lei e Padrono. Ton are Ma- jler ; Tou command me. Then Mofes faid, when mall I intreat for thee, and for thy Servants to deftroy the Frogs from thee ? And Pharaoh faid, Againil to Morrow. And he faid, Be it according to thy Word. And Jehovah did according to the Word of Mofes. But when Pharaoh faw that there was Refpite he hardned his Heart, and heark- ned not unto them. , And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Say unto Aaron, Stretch out thy Rod, and fmite the Dull: of the Land that it may become Lice throughout all the Land of Egypt. And he did lb. And the Magicians did fo with their Inchant- meats to bring forth Lice, but they could not. Then the Magicians faid unto Pharaoh, This is the Finger of God. The two principal Perfons concerned in thefe extra- ordinary Operations were Jann:s and Jambres, 2 Tim. iii. 8. who are in the Hiftcry of Mofes comprehended under the general Name of Wifemen, Sorcerers and Ma- gicians. Thefe were a Sort of Men whofe Employment feems to have been of fome itanding in Egypt -y for fo H h long 234 Tie Chronology of the A. P.D. long ago as the Time of Jofeph, when Pharaoh dreamed 79%' his Dream of the fat and lean Cows, and the full and thin Ears of Corn (/), he fent and called for all the Ma- gicians of Egypt, and all the Wife-men thereof; and Pharaoh told them his Dreams, but there was none that could interpret them to Pharaoh. It mould feem there- fore, that thefe Perfons, who went under the Denomina- tion of Wife-men and Magicians, though they did not always fucceed, yet were well known in Egypt, and probably were erected into a Kind of Society ; they were fo readily fent for upon all Occaiions. And it is manifeft, that in the Kingdom of Babylon, in the Time of Daniel, they were erected into a Sort of College ; be- caufe Daniel was appointed by Nebuchadnezzar to be cheif of the Governours over all the Wife-men, and Ma- gicians and Aflronomers, and Chaldeans, and Soothfay- ers, of Babylon (g). Which Station probably was filled by Ja?ines and Jambres in Egypt. As to the Term of Wife-man, this was only a technical Word given by Way of Diftin&ion to thofe People who took upon them to interpret Dreams (hj, difcover ftolen goods (z), or tell Fortunes (£), by the Aififtance of fome pretended Form of Divination. In which Senfe the Word Cunning-man is often made ufe of in Engl/fh. The Word Magician is much of the fame Import with that of Wife -man ; being borrowed from Perjia, the (/) Gen. xli. i — 8. {g) Dan. ii. 48. iv. 9. v. 11. (b) Gen. xli. 8. (i) lb. xliv. 5, 15. (&) Ezek. 21. 21. Word Hebrew Bible vindicated. 235 Word Magus in the Perfian Tongue fignifying a Wife* A.P.D. man. For Cicero fpeaking of the Magi fays, Quod genus 79* Sapientum & Doctor urn habetur in Per/is (k). And as' Chaldea was alfo famous for Judicial Aftrology, hence it came to pafs, that in Babylon at the Time of Nebuchad- nezzar, a Chaldcean fignified the fame thing as a Magi- cian or AJirologer (/). For as Cicero fays, when fpeaking of the Affyrians, ®ua in gente Chaldai, ?ion ex Art is fed Gentis wcabulo nominati, diutiima obfe?~vatio?ie fyderum% Scientiam putantur cjfecijje, ut pradici poffit, quid cuique eventurwn, & quo quifque fato natus (ni). And as Chal- dea was at firft, fo Egypt became afterwards famous for the fame Kind of Knowledge; and therefore Cicero like- wife fays, Eandem etiam artem JEgyptii lo?igin quit ate tern- porum innumerabilibus pene feculis confecuti putantur (77). I t is certain, that Egypt was fo famous for this Art in Ho7ner's Time (0), that he makes Proteus, who was King of Me7nphis at the Time of the Trojan War, and probably famous for the Encouragement of Magicians and Art Magick, the God to whom Me7iclaus applied for Inftruction and Affiftance in releafing him and his Ships, from thofe Inchantments, by which they were detained at the Iiland of Pharos. And Die dor us fays (pj, that that Potion which according to Ho7?ier (q) was given by Helen to Telemachus, to mike him forget every Thing that was pair, and was compofed by Poiydama the Wife of Thonis at Thebes, was ufed by the Women of that (/-) Cic. de Div.il. 1. (/) Dan. ii, 2, JO- v. 7. ix. i. (m) Cic. Tbid. \n) Ibid. {0) Hom.t'QdjC 1. 4. (/») Diod. 1. 1. c. 6. fyj Horn. Odyf. 1. 4, H h 2 Countrv 236 The Chronology of the A.P.D. Country to h s Time for the obliterating of Grief. And 79^ hence it comes to pufs that line Egyptiemic fignifies at pre- fent the fame Thing in French^ and a Gypfy (or an E- gypHan) in EngUfl.\ with a Magician, or a Fortune- teller. The original Word which is here rendered Magicians is CV^'j^n Cberetmim, which is derived from the radi- cal Word Din Cheret, a Style, or Inftrument for writ- ing with or engraving: Something like which it is more than probable thefe Magicians carried in their Hands by way of Diftinction. For Cicero obferves {q)t that among the Romans the Augur carried a particular Sort of a Wand in his Hand as a Mark of Diftinc'tion j which by them was called Lituusy and was in Practife as long ago as the Days of Romulus. Which Lituus was a flender Wand with a gentle Inflection towards the Top : And as. it is more than probable, that Romulus was not the Inventor of this Cuftom, I fuppofe that the Egyptian Augurs or Ma- gicians may have carried fuch a wand in their Hands, which in their Language being called 01V\ Cheret, from thence the Perfons, who carried this Mark of Diftinction, might be called t3*EEnn Cheretmim (r). And in Con- firmation of this Opinion, Strabo (s) fpeaks of Wands, or Rods, which the Peril an Magi held in their Hands du- ring the religious Ceremonies performed by them about their facred Fire. From whence this Denomination may have been given to. them; it being a general Term made ufe of to denote thofe Perfons. who fet up for the Practice (q) Cic. de Div. 1. 1. (r) %uafi D»DV D"|H i. e. the People with the Wand, is) Strabo, 1. 4. of Hebrew Bible vindicated. 237 of any Branch of Art Magick, of which there were ma- A.P. D. ny Species, Gen. xli. 8, 24. Exod. vii. 11. Dan. i. 20 -, 7Q' il 2, 273 iv. 9 i v. 11. For thefe Magicians are in this Parage of the Book of Mofes called alfo Sorcerers, as well as Wife-men. And it is manifeil from the Directions given to the Ifraelites be- fore they entered into the Land of Canaan, that there were feveral Kinds of magical Arts then practifed, which, had fpread even as far as the Land of Canaan. For Mo- fes fays to them, When thou art come into the Land which the Lord thy God giveth thee, thou fhalt not learn to do after the Abomination of thofe Nations. There mail not be found among you one that nfeth Divination, or an Obferver of Times, or an Enchanter, or a Witch, or a Charmer, or a Conf niter with familiar Spirits, or a Wi- zard, or a Necromancer, Deut. xviih 10, 11. Here then wc find eight feveral Species of the magi- cal Art enumerated, into which it may not be improper to make a more particular Enquiry, to find if we can from thence, how it was that thefe Egyptian Magicians, who were fent for in Oppofition to Mofes, performed thofe wonderful Works reported of them. m A s to the firfr, he that ufeth Divination, this is in the Original expreffed by D'EDp DDp Divinans Divi- nationes. Which Expreflion though it is frequently ufed to denote the Practice of Art Magic in general, yet in this Place it is ufed only to denote one particular Species thereof; which 238 1'he Chronology of the A.P.D. which might be diftinguifhed by the Name of Conjuring. 798. Which Species of the Art Magic though it is generally applied to the foretelling only of future Events, yet it alfo figniries the difcovering of any thing which is a Secret to other People, whether relating to Things pafit prejent, or to com:. And in this Senfe the Word Prophefy is alfo made ufe of by thofe who fmote Jesus with the Palms of their Hands, faying, n^o^reviroy, Prophefy unto us, thou Chrift, who is he that fmote thee, Mat. xxyi, 67, 68. This Word EDDp> is alfo made ufe of not only to exprefs the telling thofe Events, which the conjectural Trials of Art Magick are able to difcover ; but alfo the forming fuch Conclufions upon any difficult Affair whatfoever as human Sagacity is able to deduce. For thus mull be un- derstood thofe Words of Solomon when he fays, Divinati- on is in the Lips of the King : his Mouth tranfgreffeth not in ^Judgement (xj. This Word is alfo applied to fuch as are miftaken in their Conjectures, as well as to thofe who guefs right. Thus it is made ufe of by the Prophets J'e- remiah and Ezekiel to denote thofe who divine Lies. And it is alfo applied to thofe Diviners among the Phi- Mines who advifed the reftoring of the Ark of God to the People of Jfrael; who though at that Time they happen- ed to divine aright ; yet it is plain from their Method of Divination, that the Event, when God did not think pro- ber to interpofe, entirely depended upon Chance, 1 Sam. v^ j — j^. It is alfo applied to the Woman at Endor, 1 tarn, xxviii. 8. who though at that particular Time, when Saul confulted her, (lie was enabled to raife Samu- \x\ I'rov. xvi. ic. el Hebrew Bible vindicated. 239 f/by Permiffion from God j yet at other Times her pro- A. P. D. phetical Spirit feems to have depended on the conjedtu- 79°* ral Impofitions of Art Magick. This Word is alfo ap- plied to Balaam, Jofli. xiii. 22, who though at the Time when Balak confulted him, he was infpired by God ; yet it is manifeft that, when God did not vouchfafe to inter- pofe, he made ufe of "Enchantments, Numb. xxiv. 1. For there Mofes particularly fays, And when Balaam faw that it pleafed the Lord to blefs Ifrael, he went not as at other Times, to feek for Enchantments. It is alfo made ufe of to ex- prefs that Kind of Divination, which the Prophet Ezekiel defcribes the King of Babylon practiiing, in order to in- form himfelf whether he mould go up to attack Jerusa- lem, or not. For the King of Babylon, fays he, flood at the parting of the Way, at the Head of the two Ways, to ufe Divination ; He ?nade his Arrows bright, he confulted the Images (Teraphim) he looked in the Liver. And at the right Hand was the Divination for Jerufalem, to appoint Captains, to open the Month in the Slaughter, to lift up the Voice with flouting, to appoint battering Rams againft the Gates, to caft a Mount, and to build a Fort : and it fiall be a falfe Divination in their Sight to them that have /worn Oaths. Ezek. xxi. 21, &c, The laft part of this Paffage is all that is difficult, which is exprefTed in the Hebrew tyW2W W2& Jura?ites Juramcnta-, by which I fuppofe is meant the Invocation of their falfe Gods, or as it is exprefTed in Englifi, by the Word Conjured, from Conjuro to Swear, or Adjure j with which Interpretation the Targum of Jonathan feems to 3 -V-O The Chronology of the A. P. D. to agree. For with regard to the former Part of this Pa£- 79$- fage it is plain, that the King of Babylon with his Divin- ers, or Conjurers, went into the High-way where two Roads met, and that their Determinations depended upon the Chance or Lot falling on the right-hand Road, if he was to undertake his Defign againft Jerufalem j and that in rinding this out, the Diviners made ufe of bright Ar- rows (or any weapons fuch as Knives or Swords, &c.) which were thrice brandifhed in the Air before they were thrown ; for in this Chapter where the Prophet al- ludes to this Method of Divination, God is reprefented as fpeaking to him and faying, Son of man prophefy, and fmite thine Hands together, and Jet the Sword be doubled (or brandifhed J the third Time, Ezek. xxi. 14. It like- wife appears, that they confulted their Terafhim, or little Images of their Gods ; and that they infpected the En- trails of the Beafts, that were offered up in Sacrifice, at the Time of this Divination,, to fee whether the Liver and the reft of the Entrails were entire, and were well-colour- ed or not ; which Method is well known, becaufe it was continued down to very late Ages, both by the Greeks and Romans, as one of the conftant Practices made ufe of by their Harufpices at the Time of their declaring War. For as Cicero obferves, Quis Rex unquam fuit, ant quis Populus, qui mn liter etur Pradiclipne divina ? Neque fo- lum in Pace, fed in Bello etiam multo magis : in quo maju^ erat cert amen & difcrimcn falutis. Omitto no/iros, qui ?ii- hil in bello fine extis agunt, nihil fine aufpiciis domi habcnt. (f). Which Methods of Divination, along with all the (5) Cic. d.e Div.h 1. . reft Hebrew Bible vindicated. 241 reft of the pretended Arts of magical Invention made ufe A.P.D ©f by the Heathen, were frequently looked upon by the ^JjH, fenlible Part even of the Heathen World, as fraudulent Practices, depending entirely either upon Accident or Chance; or the cunning Management of defigning Men, when they had an Intention to impofe upon the Vulgar. Of which I need not give a flronger Proof than the Sen- timents of Cicero, which he delivers in the Words of£#- niiiSy towards the latter End of his firft Book of Divinati- on. Nunc ilia tefiabor, non me Sort i legos, neque eos, qui Quajlus caufa hariolantur ; ne Pfychomantia quidem ag- nofcere. Non va/ws Harufpices, non de Circo Aftrologos, Non Ifiacos conjeBores, ?ion interpretes Somnium : Non enimfunt ii aut Scientia, aut Arte divini, Sed fuperjlitiofi Vates, impudent efque Harioli, Aut inertes, aut infani, aut quibus egejlas imperat : Qui fibi Semi tarn non fapiunt, alter i monftrant Viam: Quibus dhitias pollicentur, ab iis drachmam ipji petunt. To all which I mall only add, that this Word DDp is never applied in the Language of the Scriptures to the prophetical Difcoveries of God's Prophets; but to the Divinations of thofe, who practice the delufivc Tricks of Art Magick. The next Species of thefe magical Devices, as men- tioned by Mofes, and againft the Practice of which the Ifraelites are cautioned, is that of being Obfervers of I i Times, 242 The Chronology of the A. P. D. 'Times. They are called in the Original \ytyfc which 790. worci is derived from \\y Tempus. Thefe are often men- tioned in Scripture as Deceivers of the People, and join- ed with Enchanters and Sorcerers, Lev. xix. 26. 2 King. xxi. 6. 2 Chron. xxxiii. 6. As alfo in Jfaiah. ii. 6. and Mic. v. 12. For what in the Englift: Tranfla- tion is there rendered Soothfayers, ought to be rendered Obfervers of Times. This Art confuted only in telling the People what Months, and what Days of the Month, were lucky or unlucky. Hefwd has written a Poem on this Subject, which he has entitled 'H^*/, Days; where- in he fets forth what Kinds of Works were to be enter- ed upon, on the particular Days of the Month; and which of them are lucky or otherwife. Thefe are the fame Sort of Deceivers with thofe who in Ifaiah xlvii. 13. are called Monthly Prognojlicatorsy and are manifeftly Cheats and Impofers on the Ignorant. The third Species is that of Enchanter. The Origi- nal is J£T0D tranflated by Bifhop Walton in his Polyglot, Augur ', and by the Septuagint, oiuvigopevoi; but it proper- ly fignifies one that divines by making any Sort of conjectural Trial ; being derived from tyro conjeBavit* expertus eft: And is the fame Word which Mofes make s ufe of to exprefs the conjectural Divination, which Jo- feph pretended to have made in order to find out his Cup, when he had a Mind to frighten and impofe upon his Brethren, Gen. xliv. 5, 15. It is likewife the fame Word which is made ufe of to exprefs thofe Enchantments, which Balaam made ufe of when he attempted to divine without Hebrew Bible vindicated. 243 without the Afiiftance of God} as is particularly mention- A. P. D cd Num. xxiii. 23. xxiv. 1. And it might be likewife ap- 79°« plied to thofe Diviners among the Philiftines,. who turn- ed the Cart loofe, and left it to the two Cows to deter- mine the Event. 1 Sam. vi. 7, 8, 9. As alfo to thofe Di- viners employed by the King of Babylon, Ezek. xxi. 21. who determined their Predictions by throwing of Knives or Swords where two Roads met. All which Species of Diviners are well expreffed in Latin by the Name oiCon- jeffores. Which Word was commonly ufed among the Romafis to denote any Perfon who pretended to a Skill in Art-magickj and therefore Cicero fays, Be7ie qui co?ijicieti Vatem hunc perhibeto optimum; though this Appellation is particularly applied in the Verfes of Ennius above quoted to the Egyptian Magicians, and is properly enough ex- prefTed in Englifi by the Word Sorcerers, which denotes a Perfon that is governed in his Determination per Sort em, by Lot or Chance. For as Cicero fays, when fpeaking of thofe Kinds of Impoftors who pretended to divine per Sortes, Quid enim eft Sors ? idem propemodum quod mi~ care, quod tabs jacere, quod tejferas, quibus in rebus teme- ritas & cafus, non ratio nee conftlium valet (t). So in all o- ther conjectural Devices, whether it be the Interpretation of Dreams, the Infpection of Entrails, or the Judgements formed from thePicking or Flight of Birds, 6cc. which de- pend upon the Fancy and Imagination of the Diviner, the Perfon s pretending to a Skill in thefe Sciences may equal- ly be called D>£>m ConjeBores, with thofe who deter- (/) Cic. de Div. 1. 2. I i 2 mined 244 The Chronology of the A.P.D. mined their Predictions by Lots. And hence Quintilian 798- ^fays, Ccnjefiura dicta eft a ConjeBu : wide etiam Somnio- rum Gf Monjirorum interpret es ConjeBores vocamus (uj. The fourth Kind are thofe which we tranflate a Witch, but which mould be rendered a Jugler. The original Word is v\W2£, by Bifhop Walton tranflated maleficus, and by the Septuagint }yT, which Bifhop Walton properly renders Sciolus, that is, a Pretender to Knowledge, being derived from yT to know. And it is not much to be wondered at, if in thofe ignorant Ages a Perfon endowed with the uncommon Faculty of Gajlriloquy fhould be looked upon, and 248 The Chronology of the A. P. D. and efteemed by the Vulgar, as a Perfon of more than or- 79°* dinary Knowledge ; it is therefore well rendered in En- glifh by the Word Wizard or Wife-ard. And that this was the fame Sort ©f Perfon with one who pretended to have a familiar Spirit, is plain from hence, that they are always joined together, as Lev. xix. 3 j . xx. 6, 27. Deut, xviii. 11. 1 Sam. xxviii. 3, 9. 2 Kings xxi. 6. xxiii. 24. 2 Chron. xxxiii. 6. Ifaiah viii. 19. xix. 3. As alfo from hence, that Ifaiah defcribes the Wizard 'in the fame Man- ner as he does the Perfon that hath a familiar Spirit ; for when he fays, And when they fl: all fay unto you ; Seek unto them that have familiar Spirits, and unto Wizards that whisper and mutter, Ifaiah. viii. 19. he makes ufe of the fame Word P)¥B¥, which he does when he is defcribing the Speech of one that hath a familiar Spirit, Ifaiah: xxix.4. which Word properly fignifies fpeaking in a thin fmall Voice like the Chirping of a Bird; or as the fame Prophet otherwife exprelTeth it, like the Chattering of a Crane, or a Swallow, Ifaiah x. 14. xxxviii. 14. The eighth, and laft Species of Magicians mentioned by Mofes in Deut. xviii. 1 1 . is the Necromancer. Which in the Original fignifies one that enquires from the Dead. Of one Species of which we have an Account given us by Herodotus (z) as practiced by the Bara?a?2s that where Inhabitants of Libya, who, he fays, when they would di- vine, go to the Tombs of their Anceftors, and after cer- tain Prayers they lie down to deep ; and ground their (z) Heroc!. Melp. Predictions. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 249 Predi&ions upon the Dreams they have at thofe Times. A. P. D. But the Generality of Necromancers, I take to have been 79 8. of the fame Nature with thofe who had the Talent of Gajlriloquy, or fet up for Wizards, Becaufe according to the Defcription given by Ifaiah {a) the Perfon who pre- tended to have a familiar Spirit, or fet up for a Wizard* threw his Voice in fuch a manner as to make it feem to come out of the Ground. And therefore when in another Place he fays, And when they mail fay unto you, Seek unto them that have familiar Spirits, and unto Wizards that peep and mutter j he adds, Should not a People feek unto their God? Ought they to feek for the Living to the Dead? Ifaiah viii. 19. It is probable therefore, that for the greater Solemnity fome of thefe Gaflriloquijls might frequent the Places where Perfons were buried, and pretend to confult the Dead, and by anfwering them- felves low out of the Dujl, might fcem to receive Anfwers from thence. Whence this Method, or Art of Divina- tion, was called by the Greeks, Pfycomantia quaji tyvx^v puvjeicc, animarum Divinatio-, & Necromantia quafi NeKguv pccvjeix, Mortuorum Divinatio. And therefore Horace when he is defcribing the Practices of the two Witches, Canidia and Sagenay fays : — — Cruor infoffam confufus, ut inde Manes elicerent, animas refponfa daturas. Hor. Sat. 1. 1. f. 8. The only Inftance we have indeed of any Perfons confult- ing the Dead, and receiving real Anfwers from thence, {a) Ifaiah 29. 4. K k is 250 The Chronology of the A. P. D. is in the Cafe of Saul, who confulted the Woman at En- 798. dor^ who had a familiar Spirit, or the Power of Gajlri- loquy. For when Saul is reprefented enquiring for a Perfon that hath a familiar Spirit, the original Expref- iion is mtt rhvi Dominam Pythonis, as Bifhop Walton tranflates it, but the Septuagint renders it "EyFocg-^vB^-, and it properly fignifies one that is Mailer or Miftrefs of Ob, or the Art of Gajlriloquy. And when Saul's Ser- vants anfwered, that there was fuch a one at Endor, the Expreffion in the Hebrew is the fame. And when Saul fpoke to her, he faid, I pray thee divine unto me mtt3 Ex "centre-, or according to the Septuagint, 'Eu tu> eyFa- zgipMu. But the Difficulty is to account for her actually raifing Samuel from the Dead, or producing a Spirit to reprefent him, which is the fame Thing. In anfwer to which it is to be obferved, that this was a very un- common Events and one that fhe herfelf did not expect -, for when the Spirit appeared unto her, fhe herfelf was fur- prized ; and when fhe faw Samuel, fhe cried with a loud Voice, 1 Sam. xxviii. 12. It is likewife to be obfervedr that when Balak (b) fent for Balaam to come to him and curfe the Children of Ifrael, an Angel fent from God appeared unto him, Numb. xxii. 5. 9. And when Balak would have had Balaam curfe the IJraelites, he went to try what he could do by the Power of his En- chantments ; which being over-ruled by the Influence of Almighty God, when he found upon the fecond Trial that inftead of Curfes, God put the Words of Bleffing in bis Mouth ; having no Bower at all left in himfelf, to fay (h) See Remarks ia Part II. on Numb. 22. 1, &c. any Hebrew Bible Vindicated. 251 any thing of his own, he was obliged to acknowledge A. P. D. that no Enchantment could prevail againfl 'Jacob, neither ^ 79^ any Divination againft Ifrael, Numb. xxii. 19, 38 ; xxiii. 3, 15, 23. And upon the third Trial when he found that God ftill forced him to blefs the Ifraelites, inftead of curfing them; then it is obferved, that he went not as at other Times to feek for Enchantments, Numb. xxiv. 1 . Whence it appears that Balaam was a profefTed Magician, and from Verfe the feventh it appears, that he practifed the diabolical Arts of Divination for Reward. See alfo 2 Pet. ii. 15. Jude 11. It does indeed appear through the whole Hiftory of Balaam, that he was a bad Man j for when God ordered him to go with the MeiTengers of Balak, provided the Men came to call him again the next Morning, Numb. xxii. 20. he neverthelefs went of himfelf porhbly without being called; but certainly with an evil Intent to comply with Balak's Requeft. And the Angel of the Lord therefore food in the Way as an Adverfary againft him-, becaufe he went, i. e. with fo much Eagernefs to obtain the Honours oromifed by Ba- lak for curfing the Children of Ifrael, Numb. xxii. 22.- And after he had departed from Balak, he did not go and join the Children of Ifrael^ but went among the Moabites and Midianites, and advifed them to feduce the Children of Ifrael to Fornication and Idolatry, Numb, xxxi. 16. Rev. ii. 14. and was himfelf ilain by the If- raelites among the Worfhippers of Baal-Peor, Numb. xxxi. 8. Jofh. xiii. 22. And yet it is manifeft never- thelefs, that God was pleafed upon an extraordinary Occafion to manifeft himfelf unto him ; and to make K k 2 uTe 252 The Chronology of the A. P. D. ufe of him as an Inftrument to reveal his Will unto 79?. Balak. O f the fame Kind alfo we may look upon this Wo- man at Endcr to be, who had a familiar Spirit, or the Power of Gajlrilcquy. And when any one confulted her, if it did not pleafe God to intcrpofe after an extraordinary Manner, me then had Recourfe as at other Times to her Enchant?nents or Conjectures, and pretended to convcrfe with the Dead, by the Power of her Voice, which an- fwered out of the Ground ; and was in reality a Cheat as well as Balaam, though upon this extraordinary Occafion it pleafed God to aflift her, as he did Balaam, by a miracu- lous Interpofition, to inform Saul of his approaching Fate, Now of all the various Species of Divination or En chantment here enumerated, there is none that feems like- ly to be the Method pra&ifed by thofe Egyptian Magici- ans, who were fent for to vie with Mofes, except it be that of the fourth Species. Thofe who poneffed it are by Mofes called t^DEOa, which the Engli/h Tranflation renders Sorcerers, but which ought to be tranflated Juglers j be- caufe that their Enchantments are called DiTD1? Hidings or Juglings. But when I confider, that the Magicians are faid to have caft down their Rods, which became Serpents y and to have turned the Water of the River into Blood ;> and to have brought forth Frogs ; as well as Mofes and Aaron : And when I likewife confider, that Mofes is faid to have been brought up in all the Learning of the Egyp- tians, of which this of the Art- Magic feems to have beert the Hebrew Bible vindicated. 253 the principal Excellency, fince their Wife-men took their A. P. D, Denomination from thence; it fcems to me more than 79°- probable, that Mofes would have detected them, if what they performed had depended purely upon Jugling. I cannot help therefore being of Opinion, that they were affifted in their Juglings by fome invifible Beings. For had their Operations depended only on the flight of Hand, I can fee no Reafon why they might not have produced Lice as well as Serpents, or Frogs. But if we fuppofe them to have been aflifted by fome invifible Being, we may then account for the Ceffation of their Miracles by afcribing it to the over-ruling Power of God, who thought proper to reftrain them from having any further Afliltance. Had thefe Magicians not been flopped in the Performance of thefe ftupendous Works till Mofes had taken the Dufl of the Earth, and made it a Boil and a Blane on Man and Beaft ; there might have been fome Reafon to fufpect that the producing of Serpents, Frogs and Lice, Animals with which the Land already abounded, might have been the Effect of fome jugling Power, and the Slight of Hand. But God does not permit them to go even fo far as this; nor docs Mofes give the leaft Hint as if they were only Deceivers, and were not afMed by fome fupcrnatu- ral Power ; but only fhews that the fupernatural Power by which he acted was a fuperior Power to that of the Egyptian Magicians. And therefore Jethro, when Mofes informed him afterwards of the Miracles he had perform- ed, and of the wonderful Means by which he procured the Deliverance of the Ifraelites, rightly argues from thence, and fays, Now I know Jehovah is greater than all Gcds : 2 c 4 ^^ Chronology of the A.P.D. Gods: for in the 'Thing wherein they dealt proudly he iva 79^- above them, Exod. xviii. u. Upon which it may be obferved, that in thofe early Ages of the World, when the Almighty was pleafed to communicate himfelf to Mankind in a more imme- diate, free, and fenfible Manner, than he has in later Ages been pleafed to do ; in Dreams j and Virions j and Prophecies j and the viiible Appearance of Angels ; he was at the fame Time pleafed to permit evil Angels to exert themfelvcs alfo in a more vifible, powerful, and extraordinary Manner, than they have been indulged in of later Years : In order to try Mens Faith, and to prove them, to know whether they love the Lord their God, or have Pleafure in Unrighteoufnefs. But at the fame Time God left not himfelf without Witnefs; and therefore though he was pleafed fometimes to fend his own Angels, and fometimes to permit evil Angels (c) to affifl: wicked Men in foretelling fome particular E- vents, or performing fome wonderful Works : Yet thefe when they are compared with the prophetical Powers of God's true Prophets, or the wonderful Works per- formed by them, always appeared as nothing in the Eyes of the unprejudiced By-ftander. Of which many In- Itances may be given, befides this which is before us. And therefore the Magicians themfelves, when they found that they could not bring forth Lice, immediately cried out that this was the Finger of God, Exod. viii. 18, 19 : Though Pharaoh who was a prejudiced Perfon, and (f) See Deut. 13. 1, 2. Mat. 24. 24. 2 Thef. 2. 9. had Hebrew Bible vindicated. 255 had no mind to part withfuch a Number of Slaves, hard- A.P.D. ened his Heart, and would not yet believe. _ 79 8. Hence alfoitcame to pafs that when God withdrew the immediate Communication of his prophetical Spirit from the Children of Ifrael, as he feems to have done at the Death of Malachi ; he likewife at the fame Time retrained the prophetical Power of the Teraphim, Hof. iii. 4. and likewife took from the Heathen World, even that little Degree of prophetical Affiftance, which he had permitted evil Angels to fupply them with. For to this Purpofe Cicero makes his Brother remark, when fpeaking of the Delphic Oracle he fays, Nunquam Mud Oraculum Delphis tarn celebre & tarn clarum fuifet, ne- que tantis donis refertum cm?iium popular um at que Regum, nifi omnis atas oraculorum illorum veritatem effet experta. lam diu idem nonfacit (d). And Plutarch in his Trea- tife de Defeclu Oraculorum makes the fame Remark ; which he attributes partly to the Abfence of thofe demo- nical Spirits, which, according to his Philofuphy, might die or change their Place of Abode j either exiled by others more potent or upon feme other Dijlike-, and partly tofome Alteration in the Soil, which might not yield Ex- halations of fo divine a Temper, as in former Ages they had done. Which laft feems alfo according to Cicero to have been the common Opinion, for he makes his Brother Quintus, when arguing upon this Topick, to fay, Potejl autem of only to denote a PermiiTion to take, as the Word Harden was before, Exod. vii. 3, &c. made ufe of only to denote a PermifTion to be hardned. For Mofes only defired Leave to take their own Cattle along with them. And therefore fays, Our Cattle alfo fhall go with us ; there mall not an Hoof be left behind : For thereof muft we take to ferve Jehovah our God. And Pha- raoh faid unto him, Get thee from me, take heed to thyfelf, fee my Face no more : for in that thou feeft my Face, thou malt die. And Mofes faid, Thou hafl fpoken well, I will fee thy Face again no more (/). But before the laft Miracle was performed, which prevailed on the Egyptians to drive the Jfraelites out of Egypt, God faid unto Mofes, Speak now in the Ears of the People, and let every Man borrow of his Neigh- bour, and every Woman of her Neighbour, Jewels of Silver and Jewels of Gold. And the Lord gave the People Favour in the Sight of the Egyptians, fo that they lent unto them, and they fpoiled the Egyptians, Exod. iii. 21, 22 ; xi. 2, 3 ; xii. 36. Where it is to be obferved, that what the Englifi Tranflation renders borrowed, may as well be rendered ajked, or begged, in which Senfe the original Word is made ufe of, Prov. xx. 4 ; and therefore Buxtorf renders this Verb ^tfty rogavit, petiit, mendicavit. It is accordingly tranilated (/J Whence it appears that Mofes before he parted from Pharaoh told him of the next Plague that was to be inflicted on the Firft-born Sons of the Egyptians ; tho' it is not mentioned till the following Chapter. Excd. xi. 4 — 8. lent, Hebrew Bible vindicated. 265 Ivy the Septuagint, uirycrccTu, pet at \ and to the fame A. P. D. Purpofe it is rendered in the Arabick and Syriack Ver- 7°"- fions, and the Targum of Onkelos. And what we render lent, is the fame Word with that v/hich was tifed before for borrowing, which is fometimes ufed by the Hebrews to denote afking till one obtains, in which Senfe this Word is ufed, 1 Sam. xx. 28. Nehem. xiii. 6. And there- fore this Part of the Verfe mould be rendered, So that they obtained what they ajked : And they fpoiled the E- gyptians, that is, they looked upon this as fo much Spoil taken from an Enemy ; in which Senfe this Word is made uleof, 2 Cbron. xx. 25. Certain it is, that the Egyptians were greatly afraid of them, and glad to get rid of them at any Rate ; they therefore gave them whatever they ajked, left their Refufal mould be a Means of detaining them, and bringing more Plagues upon themfelves. JEHOVAH having informed Mofes of the laft Plague which he intended to inflict upon Pharaoh, and declared that about Midnight, on the fourteenth of this Month, he would deftroy all the nrft-born both of Man and Beaft in Egypt, Exod. xi. 4; xii. 12, 17. He therefore in iti- tuted the Feaft of the PaiTover, which was to be obferved for the future on the fourteenth day of the Month Abib {/), which Month had from the Creation of the World to this Time been reckoned as t;he feventh Month of the Year, but from this Time forward was to be accounted as the firft Month ; in Commemoration of this Deliver- ance (m). The Obfervation of which Feaft principally (/) Exod. xii. 1 — 2.7. (m) Exod. xii. 2. xiii. .4. xxiii. 15= xxxiv. 1 8. M m confifted 266 Tlie Chronology of the A. P. D. confifted in taking a Lamb on the tenth of this Month, 79°- raid keeping it unto the fourteenth Day of the fame Month, and killing it between the two Evenings, and eat- ing it roafted that very Night. Then they were com- manded to take fome of the Blood of the Lamb, and fliike it on the two Side-ports, and on the upper Door- pofts of the Houfes, wherein they mould eat it j that the deftroying Angel, who came to kill the Firft-bora of the Egyptians, might not come into their Houfes to fmite them. Whence it appears, that this Direction was given to Mofes fome time before the tenth Day of this Month, that the Ifraelites might have Time to prepare their Lamb y as alfo to borrow, or rather beg, Jewels of Silver, and Jewels of Gold from their Neighbours. And hence alfo it appears, that the Paifover mould be eaten on any Time of the Night on the fourteenth Day of the Month Abib. The Precept is plain and pofitive : Ye mall keep it untill the fourteenth Day of the fame Monthy and ye jhall kill it in the Evening, or rather as it is in the Original, between the two Evenings, and ye fiall eat the Fief j in that Night. For as the Jews reckoned their ci- vil Day confuting of twenty-four Hours from Sun-fet to Sun-fet, Lev. xxiii, 32. each Day confifted of two Evenings, one Night and one Day, properly fpeaking. It was therefore ordered to kill the pafchal Lamb between the two Evenings, but they were to eat it that very Night. As foon therefore as the firft Evening commenced which was at Sun-fet, the Lamb ought to be killed, and if it was to be eaten that Night it ought to be roafted imme- diately, and then eaten y which the Ifraelites accordingly did,. Hebrew B i b l e vindicated. 267 did, for they had eaten the PafTover before their Depar-A.P.D. ture from Ramefes, and yet they departed on the Night of 79 8. the fourteenth Day.— Whence it is alfo manifeft, that our Saviour eat the PafTover according to the Form pre- fcribed by the Law of Mofes ; for he eat it on the Night of the fourteenth Day of the Month, before he was betray- ed by Judas, and taken Prifoner ; but the Jews, milled by their Traditions, did not eat it till the Evening fol- lowing : And this is the Reafon of that feeming Difficul- ty, how it came to pafs that after our Saviour had eaten the Paffover with his Difciples, and had been taken Pri- foner in the Night, yet early in the Morning, when he was brought to Pilate, unto the Hall of Judgment, the Jews would not enter into the Judgment-Hall, left they mould be defiled ; but that they might eat die PafTo-* ver, John, xviii. 28. fince any Defilement would have hindred their eating it for a Month, Numb. ix. 6 — 1 1. On the Night therefore of the fourteenth Day of the Month Abib towards Midnight Jehovah fmote all the Fir/t- horn in the Land of Egypt, from the Firft-born of Phara- oh, that fat on the Throne, unto the Firfl-born of the Cap- tive that fat in the Dungeon. Then Pharaoh rofe up in the Night, he and all his Servants, and all the Egyptians, and he called for Mofes and Aaron by Night, and faid, Rife up, and get you forth from among my People, both you and the Children of Ifraely Alfo take your Flocks, and your Herds, as ye have faid and be gone, Exod. xii. 29- — 32. Upon all which I mall only remark, that when M m 2 Abraham 268 The Chronology of the A.P.D. Abraham came into Egypt, Pharaoh difmhTed his Wife 79^« Sarah upon the firft Notice from God in a Dream, that me was a married Woman. That two hundred Years afterwards, when Jofeph came into Egypt, and inter- preted Pharaoh's Dream, He immediately cried out, This is a Man in 'whom is the Spirit of God, and promoted him inftantly in his Kingdom, although the Egyptians were at that Time fo far corrupted with Superftition and Ido- latry, as to refufe eating with the Hebrews > becaufe that was an Abomination to the Egyptians. But now in the Time of Mofes, which was about two hundred Years after this Tranfaction of Jofeph, Pharaoh and the reft of the Egyptians were fo far hardned in their idolatrous Su- perftitions, and their Confidence in the Power of Art Ma- gick was rifen to fuch a Height, as to refift the Admoni- tions of God, till Pharaoh and the reft of his Servants be- gan to feel the Power of the Almighty, as it were, in their own Perfons, by the Lofs of their Firft-born. Then indeed did Pharaoh fend them away, and with a Jirong Hand did drive them out of the Land, as the Lord had promifed to Mofes, Exod. iv. I. For the Egyptians were urgent that they might be fent cut of the Land, in hafle; for they [aid, we be all dead Men, Exod. xii. 33. This Event came to pafs on the fourteenth Day of the firft Month Abib, foon after Midnight, Exod. xii. 2 — 18 5 four hundred and thirty Years after the Pro- mife made by God to Abraham, Exod. xii, 40, 41.. And when Mofes was eighty Years of Age, Atts vii. 23x 3°- Now Hebrew Bible vindicated. 269 Now in order to underftand rightly the Progrefs ofA.P.D. the Children of Ifrael out of Egypt, it will be neceffary to 79°- take Notice, that the Requeft, which Mcfes made unto Pharaoh, was to permit the Children of Ifrael (n), their Wives, and their little Ones, together with all the Cattle that belonged to them, to go (0) by the way of three days Journey into the Wildernefs, to facrifice unto the Lord their God. Pharaoh would have permitted them to have facrificed (p) in the Land, but faid Mcfes, It is not meetfo to doj for we mail facrifice the (q) Abomination of the Egyptians to the Lord our God : Lo, mail we fa- crifice the Abomination of the Egyptians before their Eyes and will they not ftone us f Whence it appears that this Wildernefs unto which Mofes defired leave to con- duct the Children of Ifrael to facrifice to Jehovah, was not deemed to be in the Land of Egypt : But, being the Boundary between Judea, Arabia, and Egypt, was rather confidered as belonging to Arabia. I T likewife appears, that this three Days Journey was to be fpent in arriving at the Wildernefs, becaufe Pharaoh when he had confented to give them leave to go by the Way of three Days Journey into the Wildernefs, yet ex- prefly objected againft their going (r) very far away, that is, after they had arrived in the Wildernefs, that they fhould not go very far away in the Wildernefs, be- fore they performed their Sacrifices. Since had Pharaoh («) Exod. v. 3. x. 9, 25, 26. [0) So it is in the Hebrew. (p) Ex. viii. 25. {q) i. e. what the Egyptians abominate to have facrificed, that is, Sheep and Oxen, \r) Exod. viii. 27, 28. underfloodt jq The Chronology of the A.P.D. underftood the meaning of their Requeft to be, to imp at 79°- the End of three Days Journey and to facrifice, there had been no Reafon for this Salvo of Pharaoh's, that they fhould not go very far away. A n d as ( s) Dr. Poccck abferves, that there are four fe- veral Roads which lead from Cairo to the Wildernefs, which City of (t) Cairo was probably the very City of Rarnefes, that was inhabited by the Ifraelites ; fo is it probable that one of thefe Roads was then known by the Appellation of the Way of three Days journey into the Wildernefs. For though the Wildernefs was at no very great Diftance from Ramefes, yet as People in thofe hot Climates, where there were no publick Inns, could not poffibly travel faft, being obliged to carry all their Pro- vifions along with them, as well as Water to quench their Thirft; fo they frequently for the fake of meeting with Water, efpecially if the Number of Travellers were large, and they had Children and Cattle along with them, would chofe to go about, rather than take the fhorteft Road. And as in one of thefe Roads there is a large Lake of Water at about ten Miles Diftance from Cairo, fo it is more than probable that for thefe Reafons, it was that Road, though fomething about, by which Mofcs chofe to lead the ifraelites to the Wildernefs of Etham. For as the Number of People which fet out with Mofes was very great, amounting to fix hundred thoufand Men of Jfrael, be fides Children («), who had alfo with (*) Poo Trav. p. 154. (/) Shaw's Trav. p. 343. (w) Exod. xii. 37, 38^ them Hebrew Bible vindicated. £fi them a mixed Multitude of Strangers that had married A. P. D. into their Tribes, or were Siaves to the richer Ifraelites , 79 8« befides Flocks and Herds, and very much Cattle : So, if we compute the whole Number of Ifraelites, Male and Female, adult Perfons and Children, according to the ordinary Proportion allowed in other Nations (x) of four to one between the Number of the whole People m a Nation, and thofe Men fit to bear Arms ; then the Number of the Ifraelites alone, of all Ages and Sexes, which went out of Egypt along with Mofes t will amount to two Millions four hundred thouftnd Souls, which makes it reafonable to believe, that Mofes chofe to take this Lake in his Road to the Wildernefs. It was about Midnight, on the fourteenth Day of the Month Abib, when the Ifraelites were ordered to depart from Ramefes ; they mull: have therefore had fome Place of Rendezvous appointed for them to meet at, the next Day. And tho' Mofes does not mention every Sta- tion where the Ifraelites halted, yet he generally men- tions thofe of the greater! Note. He obferves therefore, that the Children oflfrael journeyed from Ramefes to Suc- coth (y), which fignifies only a Place of Tents ,which Name might have been given to feveral different Places, that were fit for that Ufe ; fome of thefe, according to Dr. Shaw (z), being at fifteen or twenty Miles diftance from Grand Cairo, and now called Dowars. The Author of the Journey from Cairo to Mecca obferves (#), that (x) See Templeman's Tables. (y) Exod. xii. 37. (z) Shaw's Trav. p. 344. Alfo Poc. Trav, p,- 155, {a) Rauwolfs Trav, thofe 272 77je Chronology of the A.P.D. thole Perfons, who fet out in the Caravans to go towards 79^- Mecca, generally allemble at one of thefe Succoths, or Dorcars, which is about ten Miles, or five Hours Diftance from Cairo. And it is by no Means improbable, that it was at this very Succotht it being near the Lake already mentioned, that Mofes appointed the general Rendezvous of the Ijraelites. I t is likewife obferved by Mofes, that the Children of Ifrael went up harneffed out of Egypt (b), which in the Margin of our Englifh Bible is faid to mean by five in a Rank. But Dr. Focock, who was formerly ProferTor of the Oriental Tongues in Oxford, in his Mifcellaneous Notes, obferves, from the Cufloms of the Arabians, that the original Word tPEH, which literally fignifies Five, rather denotes their being divided into five feveral Bodies, than their marching five in a Rank (c) j fo that the whole Corps was compofed of an Advanced Guard, the Right Wing, the Left Wing, the Rear Guard, and the Main Body, in the midft of which the Women and the Cattle were conducted. And it is more than probable that it was at this very Succoth, that Mofes began to bar- nefs, or marmal his Armies or his Hofis, as thefe People are iuftly called, Exod. vi. 26 ; vii. 4; xii. 41, 51. For it is to be obferved, that they are only faid to have (d) journey- , Exod. xiii. 1 8- (t) Five in a Rank is much too fmall a Num- ber to fuppofe an Army of 600,000 Men could poflibly march in ; for at that Rate it we allow the Ranks to be but 3 Feet afunder, and z Mile to confift of 2C00 Yards, the Front and the Rear of the Army would be 60 Miles diftant the one from the other. {'I) Exod. xiii. 20- ed Hebrew Bible vindicated. 273 from Ramefes to Succoth, but that when they (f) took A. P. D. their 'Journey from Succoth, they encamped in Etham at 79° the Edge of the Wildernefs, before which Time being marfhalled into fome Order, they were enabled when they arrived at Etham to form a regular Encampment. A.T which Station being now arrived in the Wilder- nefs, it is probable, that they retted themfelves, and kept their Feajl, and offered Sacrifices unto Jehovah their God; as they had asked Leave of Pharaoh to do. But when this was over, inftead of returning back again to Egypt, or going ftraight forward in the common Road from Ra- mefes to Mount Sinai, to which Place God had told Mo- fes (g) that he would bring the lfraelites-t they received frefh Directions from God, who fpake unto Mofes, fay- ing, Speak unto the Children of Ifrael, that they turn and encamp before Pihahiroth, between Migdol and the Sea, cver-againfi Baalzephon : before it ye Jhall encamp by the Sea (h). The exact Situation of which Places cannot pofi- tively be determined, but certain it is, that they were fome where near the Sea. Dr. Shaw rightly obferves, that Pi- hahiroth in Hebrew fignifies the Mouth of Hiroth, as it is tranflated alfo by the Septuagint, To g-o^a, 'Et^9 (i). It probably therefore was fituated at the Entrance into fome Opening j as a Door in Latin is called Opium from Os a Mouth, becaufe of its Opening ; and as the Town fitu- ated at the Mouth of the tfyber was called Ofiia, becaufe the River there opened into the Sea 5 and therefore I fup- (/) Exod. xiii. 20. Num. xxxiii. 6- (g) Exod. iii. 12. (h) Ibid. xiv. 1. (/) Numb, xxxiii. 7. N n po& 274 I7je Chronology of the A. P. p. pofe this Place of Hirotb to have been fituated where the 798. ^ Town of Clyjma afterwards flood (k), on the Sea-Coaft, at the lower End of a large Glin, or Opening, between the two Mountains (/) of Jcbel Attaka on the North, and Jebel Gewobce on the South -> and from which Town of Chfma, Philojhrgius fays ( m) it was, that the Ifrae- lites panned over on dry Ground to the oppofite Shore. The Entrance into which Glin, or Opening, from Egypt, fuits very well with the Information given by God to Mofes, when he ordered him to turn and encamp before Pihabiroth. For Pharaoh will fay of the Children of If- rael they are entangled in the Land, the Wildernefs hath fut them in : The Entrance into this PafTage between the two Mountains before-mentioned, being on the Right- hand of the common Road from Ratnefes to Mount Si" naiy about Mid- way {11) between Ramefes and theRed-fea. And as this Road led them through a Valley between two Ridges of Mountains which terminated at the Red-fea^ when the Spies were returned to Pharaoh which he fent to watch them, and it was told the King of Egypt that the People fled () Shaw's Trav. p. 346. N n 2 ven 276 The Chronology oj the A. P. D. ven to one of thefe Mountains, iignifies Deliverance as if 79_ t it was called the Mountain of Deliverance from the won- derful Eicape which the Ifraelites there met with from the Indignation of Pharaoh. And more than probable it was, that this Alteration of their Courfe towards this Road was undertaken early in their Flight, that Pharaoh might have Time enough, as foon as he was informed of their Flight, and of the Road they had taken, to purfue them and overtake them, according to the Purpofe of God, by the Time they had arrived at the Red-Sea. And though Mofes and Aaron had gone to and fro from Egypt to Mount Sinai by the common Road, but were unacquainted with this Road by which God defig- ned to work their Deliverance, it was therefore neceffary that fome Perfon mould be fent to conduct them ; and as Pharaoh was potent in Horfes and Chariots, and thefc fix hundred thoufand Men with their Women and Chil- dren were all to march on Foot ; it was neceffary for them to march Night andDay, in order to efcape fromPharaoh, and to reach the Red Sea before they were overtaken by him j and for thefe Reafons it was that Jehovah fent his (q) Angel to go before them by Day in a Pillar of a Cloud ; and by Night in a Pillar of Fire to give them Lights to lead them the Way^ to go by Day and Night. (r) AND when it was told the King of Egypt that the People fed : the Heart of Pharaoh and of his Servants was turned againft the People, and they faid, Why have we done (cj) Exod. xiii. 21 j xiv. 19. (r) Ibid. xiv. 5,. 6, 7. this, Hebrew Bible vindicated. 277 this, that we have let Ifrael go from ferving us? And /^A.P.D, made ready his Chariot \ and took his People with him; and 79 °« he took fix hundred chofen Chariots, and all the Chariots of Egypt and Captains over every one of them. Sir Ifaac Newton in his Chronology of the Greeks, where he is comparing the Forces of the Philifines againll Saul with thofe employed by Pharaoh againfl Mofes, fays, and yet in the Days of Mofes all the Chariots of Egypt, with which Pharaoh purfued Ifrael, were but fix hundred. Whereas this feems to be fuch a Miftake, as is not com- mon with that great Author, for the fix hundred Chariots mentioned by Mofes are particularly fpecified to have been chofen Chariots, which probably were only his Body Guard, and the reft were divided into Troops and Com- panies with Captains over them ; with which Pharaoh having purfued the Ifraelites, he (i) overtook them encamp- ing by the Sea, befide Pihahiroth before Baalzephon. Now though the Front of the Army may be fuppo- fed to be encamped on the Sea-more before Baalzephon, the Rear of the Army mull: be greatly behind ; and could not well be fuppofed to have been at lefs than ten or twelve Miles Diftance from the Front. An Encamp- ment for two Millions four hundred thoufand People re- quiring a Space of Ground of near twelve Miles Square. And in marching, if we fuppofe the Front-line to confifl only of an hundred Men, they will take up at leafl twelve Miles in Depth. The Ifraelites therefore, when they found themfelves flopped by the Sea in their Front, (t) Exod. xiv. 9. and 278 "The Chronology of the A. P. D. and purfued by the Egyptians in the Rear, were afraiii 79^- and cried out unto Jehovah [t). And Jebovahfaid unto Mo- les, Lift up now thy Rod, andjlretch out thine Hand ovt r the Sea and divide it, and the Children of Ifrael Jl:all go on dry Ground through the midft of the Sea. And the Angel of God which hitherto- went before the Camp cf Ifrael \ re- moved and went behind them. And the Jfraclites went in- to the midft of the Sea, upon the dry Ground ; and the Waters were a Wall unto them on their right Hand and on their left (u). "Which is a demonstrable Proof, that their PafTage was not owing to an extraordinary Ebbing of the Tide ; as Jofephus and from him Sir Walter Raleigh fup- pofeth it to have been j becaufe in that Cafe it would not have been as a Wall on either Side of them. AND the Angel (x) of God which went before the Camp of Ifrael, removed and went behind them j and the Pillar of the Cloud went from before their Face, and flood behind them. And it came between the Camp of the Egypti- ans and the Camp of Ifrael; and it was a Cloud and Darknefs to them, that they came not near the Ifraelites all the Night, ncr faw them moving away from before them: but it gave Light by Night to thefe, fo that they were ab!e to purfue their Journey crofs the Sea. But as the Red Sea is (y) ten Miles acrofs at this Place, where the Ifraelites are fuppofed to have pafTed, that is, from Clyfma to the Springs of Mofesyvf\\\c\\ Dr. Pccock(z) fays lie directly over againft one another, the Rear of the Army had twenty (t) Exod. xiv. 10, 15, 19. (//) Ibid. xiv. 22, 29. (x) Ibid. x.v. 19, 20. (;') Shaw's Trav. p. 348. (--) Pee. Trav. P- J38- or Hebrew Bible vindicated. 279 or twenty-two Miles to march before it could arrive fafe A.P.D. on the oppofite Shore j and as this could not poffibly be t 79_ be effected in one Night's Time, therefore when ( a) the Morning Watch came 'Jehovah looked unto the Hoft of the Egyptians, and broke their Chariot-wheels , Jo that they drove them heavily ; till the Tfraelites were arrived fafe on the oppoiite Shore. The Egyptians however continuing the Purfuit went in after them, to the midji of the Sea, e- ven all Pharaoh's Hc?fes and Chariots and Horfemcn. And Jehovah f aid unto Mofes, Stretch out thine Hand over the Sea, and the Sea returned to its Strength when the Morn- ing appeared {b). Which muft be underftood of the fecend Morning after the Ifraelites had entered upon paffing the Red Sea ; for then the Ifraelites will have had the Time of two Nights and one Day in which to pafs the Red Sea, before it clofed on the Hoft of Pharaoh : For it is plain from Exod. xiv. 20. that they entered it by Night ; and when Pharaoh faw the Rear of the Ifraelites moving in the Morning he purfued them ; but God broke his Cha- riot-wheels, fo that he could not overtake them before Night ; and the fecond Morning Pharaoh being entered into the Red Sea, having probably ventured to purfue the ! Ifraelites before it was Light, then the Sea returned to its ! Strength as foon as all the Ifraelites were fafe on more : ' And Jehovah overthrew the Egyptians in the midji of the Sea j and Ifrael faw that great Work which Jehovah did upon the Egyptians : and the People feared Jehovah, and believed Jehovah and his Servant Mofes. {a) Exod, xiv. 24, (b) Exod. xiv, 23—31, I KNOW 280 7%e Chronology o/A A.P.D. 798. j know of no Heathen Writers who acknowledge the Destruction of the Egyptian I loft in the Red-fea, ex- cept it be Bercfus, and Artapanes, as quoted by Eufrbi- us (q). Diodurus indeed fays(r), that there was an anti- cnt Tradition among thofe, who live near the IBhuophagi, or FiJh-eaterS) on this Coaft of the Red-fea; that a Part of this Sea was once laid fo dry by a great Reflux of the Sea, that the Bottom of it was quite bare, and re- mained fo till the next Influx of the Tide. Which, on Account of the great Depth of the Sea in thofe Parts, could not poflibly have been effected by natural Caufes ; and therefore this Tradition muft have arifen from this remarkable PalTage of the IJraelites. Which Fact, according to Berofus as before- men- tioned, came to pafs in the eighth Year of Afcatadesi A. P. D. 794. But according to the Account left us thereof by Mofesi it was A. P. D. 798, that is about four Years later than Bercfus's Account. And indeed I can- not but think it fomething very extraordinary to find the Chronology of the Hebrew Bible, and the Heathen Chro- nology of Berofus, agree fo nearly with Regard to the precife Time of this Event. Confidering, that the Time of the Reigns of the Kings of Babylon is fet down by Berofus, and the Lives of the Patriarchs by Mofes, accord- ing to the round Number of Years, without mentioning the odd Months j which in the Space of near eight hundred Years may very well be allowed to make a Dif- [q) Eufcb.Pfjep. 1. 9. c, 27. (r) Diod. 1. 3. c. ?. ference Hebrew Bible vindicated. 281 fcrence of four Years, between the Calculation of Bero- A. P. D. fus, and the Mofaical Computation. 79° I likewise cannot but think, that the Acknow- ledgment of this Fact by a Heathen Writer, who fays, that he compiled his Book out of the antient Records of Chaldea, though he attributes the Drowning of the £- gyptiam to the Power of Art-magic, is very extraordina- ry, and adds no fmall Weight to the Teflimony of Mo- fes. It is likewife very remarkable that Artapanes, as quoted by Eufebius fays (<:), that the People of Memphis reported, that Mofes being well fkilled in the Situation of the Coafts, and the ebbing, and the flowing of the Tides, took that Opportunity of carrying the Jfraelites over the red-fea ; but that the People of Heliopolis relate this Fact quite otherwife : That Mofes being divinely infpired {truck the Sea with a Rod, whereupon the Wa- ter gathering in a Heap on either Side he led his Forces dry through the Sea : But that when the Egyptians at- tempted to follow them, the Sea returning to its former Courfe entirely overwhelmed them. Now the People of Heliopolis who lived where thefe Wonders were perfor- med, and who were themfelvs Sufferers by the Event, were much more likely to know the Truth of this Affair, then the Memphites, who lived on the other Side of the River Nile, and at a confiderable Diflance from the Scene of Action. But though no Heathen Authors, except Berofus and (<.-) Eufcb. Prarp. Ev. I. 9. c. 27. O o Arid' 282 Tie Chronology of the A.P.D. Art a fanes, mention the Deftruction of Pharaoh in the 79''- Red-Sea : Yet feveral of them take Notice of the Depar- ture of the IfraeRtes cut of Egypt about this Time. For (d) jfuftin in particular mentions from Trcgns Pomptius that when the Egyptians purfued the Ifraelites, who were conducted by Mofes, they were forced by TcmpefU to return home again. Which porTibly might be true with regard to thofe in the Rear of the Egyptian Army who might efcape. And Tacitus (e) fays, that in the Reign of Jfis a Multitude of Jews left Egypt, and were conduct- ted into a neighbouring Country, under the Command of Hicrofolymus and Judeus : But that others faid, they were driven out for being Lepers, and were conducted in their Journey by Mofes who was one of the Exiles. Di- cdorus fays (f) in his fortieth Book, that in Egypt there were formerly Multitudes of Strangers, who ufed foreign Rites and Ceremonies in worfhipping the Gods, for which they were expelled Egypt 5 and under Danaus, and Cad- mus, and other fkilful Commanders, after great Hard^ iVips came into Greece, and other Places ; but the greater! Part of them came into Judea, not far from Egypt -, a Country then uninhabited and defert, being conducted thither by one Mofes, a wife and valiant Man, who after he had pofTeiTed himfelf of the Country, among other Things built Jerufalem and the Temple. Lyfimachus a- nother Heathen Writer, as quoted by Jofephus (g) gives us this Account of the Fact ; " That in the Time of " Bocharis there were a Number of impure, and impi- {d) Jnft. 1. 36. c. 1. (e) Tacit. Hift. 1. 5. (/) Diod. apud Photium in Biblioth. (g) Jof. cont. Ap. 1. 1. f. 34. " ous U a Hebrew Bible vindicated. 8 3 4C ous People in Egypt; and that the King was advifed A.P.D * by the Oracle of Jupiter Amnion to expel thefe Perfons, 7 9 8. " and drive them into defert Places. That thefe People ' ~* u thus ordered to Destruction, aflembled themfelves to- gether ; and took Counfel what they mould do, and determined -that as the Night was coming on, they would kindle Fires, and Lamps and keep Watch. — That " on the next Day there was one Mofes who advifed " them, that they mould venture upon a Journey 5 and " go along a certain Road till they mould come to Places " fit for Habitation. That he advifed them to have no " kind Regards for any Man j nor give good Counfel to , (b) they gathered up the Weapons of the Egyp- tians (c) that were brought to more by the Waves of the Sea. And Mofes compofed a Song of Thankfgiving for this wonderful Deliverance, which according to Jo- fephus was in Hexameter Verfe. The IJraelites therefore being now fafe from the Pur- fuit of the Egyptians, and having retted and refreshed themfelves, and furnimed themfelves with Water at thofe Springs which have fince been called from thence the Springs of Mofes ; near which Place it was, according to the Tradition of the Inhabitants of that Country (d), that the Ifraelites landed. Then Mofes brought Ifrael from the Red-Sea, and they went out from the Coaft of the Sea, into the Wildemefs of Shur (e). Which Wildernefs of Shur, or Sdnr, as it is now called, is alfo the fame Wil- dernefs with that into which the Egyptians entered at E- tham, at the End of their three Days Journey from Ramefes, and was therefore called by Mofes, Num. xxxiii. 8. the Wildemefs of Etham. Which Wildernefs is of vaft Extent, and had feveral Denominations given it ac- cording to the different Places of Note on which it bor- dered, for it not only furrounded the northern Point of the Weftern Gulph of the Red-Sea ; but was alfo the Boundary between Egypt, Fakfline, and Arabia Petrwa. That this Wildernefs of Shur or Etham bounded on E- (b) Exod. 14. 30. (c) Jof.A'nt. 1. 2. c. 16. (d) Pocock. Traw p. 156. (0 Exod. 15. 22. P p 2 292 TIjc Chronology of the gypt is plain, not only from what has been already faid j but alfo, becaufe this Wildernefs is defcribed by Mofes, Gen. xxv. 18. under the Denomination of Shur, that is before Egypt. And by Samuel (j ) it is called Shur that is over againfl Egypt. That it extended near Palefline is plain from Hagar's being found by the Angel (g) foon af- ter flic had left her Miftrefs at Beerfteba, in the Wilder- nefs by the Fountain in the Way to Shur. That it not on- ly bordered, but penetrated into Arabia Petraa, is plain from the Ifraelites going into it fo foon after their landing on the Eaftern Shore of the Red-Sea j and from the De- fcription given of it by Dr. Pocock, (hj who fays, that 96 the Wildernefs of Shur might be the South Part of the " Wildernefs of Etham, for about fix Hours from the " Springs of Mofes, (where according to the Tradition of the Country the Children of Ifrael landed, being directly over againft Chfrna, or Pihahircth,} " is a Winter Torrent called Sedur (or Sdur) and there is a Hill higher than the reft, called Kala Sedur, (the Fortrefs of Sedur) from which this Wildernefs might have its Name. It was al- fo called the Wildernefs of Edom, becaufe it bordered all along on the Northern Limits of the Land of Edom, which was part of Arabia Petrtea, even as far as the Coaft of the Afphaltic Gulph, or Dead Sea : As appears from the Obligation the Kings of Judah, Samaria and Edom were under to take a Compafs offeven Days Journey through the Wildernefs of Edom (/'), when they went to / (f) 1 Sam. 15. 7. (g) Gen. 16. 7. (h) Poc. Trav. p. 156. {j) 2 Kings 3. 8, 9. attack Hebrew Bible vindicated. 293 attack the King of Moab, who inhabited the Eaftern. Coafl of the Dead Sea. And now the Ifraelites being conducted by Mofes into the Wildernefs of Shur -, they went, fays he, (k) three days in the Wildernefs and found no Water. And when they came to Mar ah they could not drink cf the Waters of Marah, for they were bitter , therefore the Name of it was called Marah. Not that we are to conclude from hence, either that the Ifraelites reached Marah in three Days af- ter they arrived in the Wildernefs of Shur j or that they met with no Water till they came to Marah; (/) Marah being forty Miles from their landing Place : which is too great a Journey for fo numerous an Hofr. to march in three Days, unlefs in a Cafe of Life and Death, when they were purfued by an Enemy, and marched Night and Day. But that they marched three Days in the Wilder- nefs, where they found no Water, which Wildernefs reached about 15 Miles {m) South from the Place of their landing: which is as much as fuch a Hoft could well march in three Days Time. And («) Dr. Pocock obferves (k) Exod. 15. 22. (/) Pocock. Trav. p. 156. fays, that Le Marah is fixteen Hours South of the Springs of Mofes. {m) Dr. Pocock calls it fix Hours travelling from the Springs of Mofes to the End of the Wildernefs, p. 156. And Dr. Shaw in his Preface to his Travels takes Notice, that " theHorfes and Camels of " thofe Countries generally keep one conftant Pace, the latter at the " Rate of two Miles and a half, the other of three geographical Miles « an Hour." And Dr. Pocock travelled on a Camel, p. 130, 138. (*) Ibid. p. 139. that 2 Q4- The Chronology of the that in about an Hour's travelling, after he had got out of the Wildernefs of Shur, he came to a Place full of Shrubs j and in an Hour after came to the Bed of a Win- ter Torrent, called Ouardan, about a quarter of a mile Weil from the Road. In which Torrent is the Spring of Ouardan where if they dig a Hole three Feet deep, the Water comes plentifully into it, probably, fays he, from the Sea : The Water feemed rough, but not Salt. Here therefore we may fuppofe, that Mofes certainly encamped in order to refrefh and water his Army. And from thence marched on afterwards towards Mar ah about the Diftance of eight Hours or twenty miles, Southward from the Tor- rent Ouardan. Where Dr. Pccock fays («), there is a Mountain known to this day by the Name of Le Mar ah, and towards the Sea is a Salt Well called, Birhammcr . Which is probably the Place where the Ifraelites found the bitter Water mentioned by Mofes • the original Word Mar ah fignifying any Kind of difagreeable Tafte. AND the people murmured cgainjl Mofes, faying, What fi all we drink? And he cried unto Jehovah, and fehovah fcewed him a Tree, which when he had caft into the Waters the Waters were made fweet (o). The Author of the Book of Ecclefiafticus feems to think, that this was a natural Effect of the Wood of that Tree; for fays he (p), was not the Water made Sweet with Wood that the Virtue thereof might be known? Whereas this Operation of the Wood upon the Water feems rather to have been Super- natural j Since it is obferved by Mofes (q), that God made («) Poo Trav.p. 156. (0) Exod. 15. 24. (p) Eccluf. 38. 5. {q) Exod. 15. 25, 36. a Hebrew Bible vindicated. $ 95 a flatute and an Ordinance there with the Children of If- raely and proved them j and faid if thou wilt diligently hearken to the Voice of Jehovah thy God, and wilt do that which is righteous in his Sight, and will give Ear to- his commandments, and keep all his Statutes j I will put: none of thofe Difeafesupon thee, which I brought upon the Egyptians: For I am Jehovah that healeth thee. Whence it is more than probable, that this wras a mira- culous Operation wrought in Confirmation of the Cove- nant made between God and his People; and was given as an Earneft of the Healing Power of Jehovah. Jofe- phus, who is not overfond of Miracles, fays, that Mofes purified the Water by obliging the ftrongeft of the Ifrae- lites to drain the Well -, and told them that when the greateft Part was drawn up, the Remainder would be fit to drink. As if the Bitternefs or Saltnefs of the Water was owing to its ftagnation, and not to the Soil or the natural Tafte of the Mineral through which it paffed. But in this as in many other Cafes he fpeaks without Founda- tion ; for certain it is, that in many Places of that Coun- try the Water is always bitter, let the Paffengers draw it as often, or as much at a Time, as they pleafe. As for Example at Suez, and Adjeroute (/>), and from the Ca- ttle of Nahhal to Abiar Alaina (g)3 which lies in the PafTage between the two Gulphs of the Red-Sea, there is no Water to be found, but what is bitter or brackim. AND they removed from Mar ah y and came unto Ji- ll m -j and. in. Elim were twelve Fountains of Water, and (p) Poe. p. 132, 133. (q) Journey to Mecca, ihrcefcore 296 The Chronology of the thrtefccre and ten Palm trees-, and they pitched there (r). " Now Dr. Peccck obierves (sj, that about four Hours, " or ten Miles, South of Mar ah is the Winter Torrent of Corondel, in a very narrow Valley, full of Tama- riik Trees, and that there is tolerable Water about half a Mile Weft of the Road. Beyond this, fays he, about half an Hour, or little more than a Mile, is a Winter Torrent called Dieb Sal/neb, and an Hour or two fur- ther, i. e. about three or four Miles, is the Valley or Torrent of Wonjfet, where there are feveral Springs of Water that are a little Salt. I am inclined, continues " he, to think that one of them, but rather Corondel, is Elim, becaufe it is faid afterwards, they removed from Elim and encamped at the Red-Sea (/)j and the Way from Corondel to go to the Valley of Baharnm is Part iC of it near the Sea ; where I was informed there was IC good Water, and fo probably the Ifraelites encamped cf there." But Dr. Shaw (11) fuppofes tc Elim to have been upon " the Northern fkirts of the defert of Sin, two Leagues " from 'Tor, and near thirty from CorondeL Where " he faw no more than nine of the twelve Wells that are " mentioned by Mofes, the other three being filled up by " thofe Drifts of Sand which are common in Arabia. " Yet this Lofs, fays he, is amply made up by the great " Encreafe of the Palm Trees, the Seventy having been " propagated into more than two thoufand. Under the (r) Num. 33. 9. Exod. 15. 27, (s) Poc. Trav. p. 350. (/) Num. 33 10. («) Shaw's Trav. p. 156. " Shade cc cc cc cc Cl cc cc w? *n"< T'^y 'l^*'*1*' Portenduntur in Regionc montcs, qui Nigri appellantur, a Sinu qui juxta Pharan eft quafi ad Judasam. C^q 2 times goo The Chronology o//& times the Wildernefs of Kadeflb; becaufe thofe two Places were both fituated in it. That this Wildernefs of Zin extended itfelf over the whole Promontory is plain from hence, that the Ifraelites now in their Paffage along the South- weft Part of it; that is, between Elim and Mount Sinai, patted through a Part of the Wildernefs of Zin. It like wife appears, that when the Ifraelites were in Kadeflj, towards the North-weft Part of the Pro- montory, they were alfo faid to be in the Wildernefs of Zin ; as for Example, when the Spies were deputed to go from Kadeflj to fearch out the Land of Canaan, it is faid, So they went up, and ft arched the Land, from the Wildernefs of Zin, unto Rehob (e). Again; Near forty Years after this when the Children of Ifrael in their Wanderings came from Eziongeber to Kadeflj, Mofes fays, 'They came from Eziongeber, and pitched in the Wil- dernefs of Zin, which is Kadeflj (f). And when at the fame Time the People of Ifrael rebelled againft Jehovah at Kadeflj becaufe they wanted Water, it is faid, Then came the whole Congregation into the Defert of TLin in the firft Month, and they abode in Kadeflj ; and there was no Water for the Congregation (g). And when Jehovah is afterwards recapitulating this Affair, he fays, For ye re- belled againft my Commandment {in the Defert of Zin, in the Strife of the Congregation) to fanclify me at the Wa- ter, before their Eyes ; that is, the Water of Mcribah in Kadeflj in the Wildernefs of Zin (h). And that this Wildernefs of Zin ftill extended further Eastwards than (e) Num. 13. 21. (/) lb. 33. 36. (g) lb. 20. 1, 2. (b) lb. 20. 12 ; 27. 14. Kadefh Hebrew Bible vi7tdicated, 30 r Kadejh is manifeft from the Defcription given of the South Border of the Children of IJrael by Joflma, who fays, And their South Border was from the Shore of the Salt Sea, from the Bay that looketh Southward. And it went out to the South-fide to Mahaleel-Accrabim (/), that is, the Mountains of Accaba, on the North End of the Elanick or Eaftern Gulph of the Red-Sea, and faffed along to Zin, and afcended up on the South-fide to Kadejh Barnea. Whence it is plain, that Zin, probably the Town of Zin from whence this Wildernefs took its De- nomination, lay between Accrabim, and Kadefi Barnea. And therefore this Wildernefs mull have extended quite crofs this Promontory, one Part of it not being far from Accaba and Eziongeber at the North-eaft Part of the Promontory, and another near Elim : And Dr. Shaiv obferves (k), that the Wildernefs about Tor, which is fituated on the South-weft Corner of it, is called by the Inhabitants to this Day, the Wildernefs of Zin. The Ifraelites (/) therefore having arrived on the fifteenth Day of the fecond Month after their Departure out of Egypt, in that Part of the Wildernefs of Zin which is between Elim and Sinai. The Provisions which they brought with them out of Egypt began to fail them ; And the whole Congregation murmured again/1 Mofes and Aaron, and f aid, Would to God we had died by the Hand of Jehovah in the Land of Egypt ; for ye have brought us forth into this Wildernefs to kill this whole AJJembly (1) Jofh. 15. 2, 3. (&) Shaw's Tray. p. 35c. .(/) Exod. 16. 1, &c. witjb 3 6 2 TJje Chronology of the with Hunger. And Mofes fpake unto Aaron, Say unto all the Congregation of the Children of TJrael, Come near before Jehovah : For he hath heard your Murmurings. And it came to pafs as Aaron fpake unto the whole Con- gregation of the Children of Ifracl, that they looked to- wards the Wilder nefs ; that is, towards the Head of the Camp, or Southward, which Way the Wildernefs ex- tended, they having but juft entered it 'from the North, and behold the Glory of Jehovah appeared in the Cloud. Whence it is apparent, that the Angel of Jehovah ftill continued to conduct the Ifraelites in the Form of a Cloud by Day, and a Pillar of Fire by Night. It being cuitomary for Travellers in that Country to travel as well by Night as by Day, and indeed principally by Night (;//), not only for the Sake of Safety from Enemies, but alfo for Comfort and Refrefhment to avoid the Heat of the Sun by Day. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes faying ; I have heard the Murmurings of the Children of Jfrael ; fpeak unto them, faying, At Even ye fall eat Flejh, and in the Morning ye fhall be filed with Bread. And ye fall know that I am Jehovah your God. And it came to pafs At Even the Quails came up and covered the Camp. Now as this Fact happened in the Middle of the fecond Month jfter their Departure out of Egypt, which fecond Month correfponds to our April-, about which Time thofe Birds a*e acknowledged by all Travellers to fly out of Egypt crofs the Red- Sea in vaft Quantities (;/) ; the Exrraordi- narinefs of this Miracle feems to confift, in God's direct- (;;/) The Caravan from Cairo to Mecca travels always by Night and lefts by Day. («) Univ. Hift. I. I. ci. ing Hebrew Bible vindicated. 363 ing the Quails to fly to this particular Spot, and obliging them to fall about the Camp in that very Evening, ac- cording to the Promife made by his Servant Mofes. And when the Dew fell upon the Camp in the Night, the Man- na fell upon it [0) along with the Dew. So that in the Morning the Dew lay round a hut the Hojl. And when the Dew that lay was gone up, behold upon the Face cf the Wilder nefs there lay a fmall round Thing, as fmall as the Hoar Frojl on the Ground. And when the Children of Ifrael faw it, they faid one to another, What is this f For they wifi not what it was (p). And the Houfe of Ifrael called the Name thereof Manna (q), or Man , that is, What? or, What is this f From the many Queftions that was afked about it, for they wijl not what it was. Which has led the Tranflators of our Englijh Bible into a feeming Blunder, who have tranflated the above quoted Verfe, Exod. xvi. 15. And when the Children of If- rael faw it they faid one to another, It is Manna -f for they will not what it was. But in the Margin of our Bible, and in the Septuagint, and all other Verfions, as well as the Targum of Onkelos, it is rightly tranflated* Which Manna was like Coriander Seed white, and the Colour thereof was as the Colour of Pearl (r). Where the Englijh Tranflation is again faulty, for it is there ■ rendered, And the Colour thereof was as the Colour of Bdellium. But the original Word Bedolach among the Jews iignifies a Pearl. It was therefore properly com- pared to Hoar-Frojl, Exod. xvi. 14. The Septuagint (0) Num. xi. 9, (p) Exod, xvi. 13. (q) lb. ver. 31. (r) Num. xi. 7. has 304 7%? Chronology of the has accordingly in this Place rendered it Cryjlal, and the Syriack Verfion calls it white like Cryftal. With which Mofes agrees in the thirty- firft Verfe of this Chapter, for there he poiitively fays, that it was like Coriander Seed white) whereas the Colour of Bdellium is blackifh. A n d it came to pafs on the fixth Day that they ga- thered twice as much Manna as at other Times j for Mofes faid unto them, To-morrow is the Reft of the Holy Sabbath unto Jehovah j bake that which ye will bake to-day, and feeth that which ye will feeth j and that which remaineth over, lay up for you to be kept until the Morning. Which is the firft Time that we meet with any Notice being taken of the Obfervation of the Sabbath, fince the firft Appointment of it at the Cre- ation. For on the feventh Day preceding this, that is, on the fifteenth Day of this Month, the Israelites arrived in the Wildernefs of Zin (s) : So that they had travel- led upon that Day, but were now ordered to reft from all 1 ft Year, Labour on the twenty-fecond, that is, on the feventh 2d Mon. T-k r 11 • f 22dD.y.DayfollowinS- And they took their Journey out of the Wildernefs of Sin, and encamped in Dopkah (t). A n d they departed from Dopkah, and encamped in Alujh. And they removed from dlufi, and encamped at if) txod. 16. 1. (/) Num. xxxiii. 12, 13, 14. Rephidim. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 305 Rephidim. And there was no Water for the People to drink. And Mofes cried unto Jehovah, faying, What mall I do unto this People, they be almoft ready to flone me. And the Lord faid unto Mofes, Take thy Rod wherewith thou fmoteft the River, and thou malt finite the Rock) and there mall come Water out of it that the People may drink j and he called the Place MaJJdh, that is, Temptation-, and Meribah, that is, Chiding. The De- fcription of which Rock, as it is to be feen at this Day, is thus given us by Dr .Shaw : " After we had defcen- ded, with nofmall Difficulty, down the Weftern Side of this Mountain, we came into the other Plain that is formed by it, which is Rephidim, Exod. xvii. 1. Here we Hill fee that extraordinary Antiquity, the Rock of Meribah, Exod. xvii. 6. which hath continued down to this Day without the lean: Injury from Time or Ac- cidents. It is a Block of Granate Marble about fix Yards fquare, lying tottering as it were and loofe in the Middle of the Valley, and feems to have formerly be- longed to Mount Sinai, which hangs in a Variety of Precipices all over this Plain. The Waters which gufi- ed out, and the Stream which flowed withal, Pfalm vii. 8, 21. have hollowed acrofsone Corner of this Rock, a Channel about two Inches deep and twenty wide, appearing to be incruftated all over, like the Infidc of a Tea-Kettle, that hath been long in Ufe. Befides fe- veral molfy Productions, that are ftill preferved by the Dew, we fee all over this Channel a great Number of " Holes, fome of them four or five Inches deep, and one " or two in Diameter, the lively and demonftrable To- R r " kens cc cc &c. Pf. lxxviii. 15. a cc cc CI (C C( cc cc cc and confcquently were enabled to follow the Rear of the Ar- my of the Ifraelites, and diftrefs them in their March : and, as Mofes defcribes it, to finite the Hindmojt (b) even all that were feeble j that is, all that were obliged to lag behind, when they were faint and weary. Which Succefs encouraged them to hope for more Plunder by the Destruction of the whole Army, if they could over- come them in Battle j which they might be encouraged to hope for, by finding that the Ifraelites were but very indifferently armed, not having any offenfive Weapons along with them, but thofe few, which might have float- ed on Shore from the Hofl of the Egyptians, who were drowned in the Red-fea. By the Time therefore, that the Ifraelites had arrived at the Valley of Rephidi?n7 the Amalekites, having collected their whole Forces, came in a Body to attack them j and but for the Interpofition of God would probably have defeated them ; made their Wives and Children Prifoners, and have extirpated the whole Race of Jfrael. For when Mofes did but fo much as drop his Hands from praying unto God, then the A- malekites prevailed : Infomuch, that Mofes, being at length tired, was forced to get Aaron and Hur to hold up his Hands, the One on the one Side, and the Other on the other Side, until the going down of the Sun. During all which Time the Ifraelites difcomfited Ama- leck and his People with the Edge of the Sword. Nor was the Wrath of God even yet appeafed againft them for their unprovoked Malice in purfuing the Ifraelites, and {b) Deut. xxv. 1 8. attempting Hebrew Bible vindicated. 309 attempting to deftroy a Number of innocent People, who had never done them any Mifchief, nor given them the leaft Caufe for this purpofed and wicked Attempt upon their Lives. And therefore Jehovah laid unto Mofes, Write thisjor a Memorial in a Book [c) ; that I will utter- ly put out the Remembrance of Amaleck from under Heaven. Where it is to be remarked, that this is the firfl Time that there is Mention made of any fuch Thing as writings and yet it is here fpoken of as if it was a cuftomary Thing j and what Mofes was well acquainted with, even before he received the two Tables of the Law from God on Mount Sinai. ON the fifteenth Day of the third Month, when the ift Year Children of Ifrael were gone forth out of the Land of E- 3d ^^th gypt , the fame Day came they into the Wildernefs of Si- nai, and there Ifrael encamped before the Mount, in order to facrifice to Jehovah as they were promifed to do, Exod. iii. 17. Where it is to be obferved, that this is the firft Time that this Wildernefs is called the Wildernefs of Si- nai 3 for Exod. iii. 1. it is called the Defert of Horeb. It is probable herefore, that this Part of Mount Horeb before which the Ifraelites were encamped was called Mount Si- nai, i. e. the Mount of the Bufh, on Account of the Bufh that grew on it, in which the Angel of Jehovah appeared to Mofes in a Flame of Fire : The Hebrew for a Bufi being Sene. So that Horeb may be looked upon as the general Name of the whole Mountain ; but Sinai as the particular Name for one of its Summits j which Mofes gave it for Diitinction fake when he returned to .this Place. A NJJ (t) Exod. xix. 1, 2. 3 i o The Chronology of the A N d when Jetbro (c) the Prieft, or Prince of Midian, Mofes Father-in-law heard of all that God had done for Mofes, and for If ael his People; then he took Zip por a h Mofes Wife, and her two Sons Gerfhom, and Eliezer, and brought them unto Mofes in the Wildernefs, where he encamped at the Mount of God And fent a MefTenger beforehand to fay unto him, / thy Father-in-law a?n come unto thee; Where the Hebrew Copy fhould be rectified by the Sepiuagint Verfion; for in the Hebrew Jethro is repre- fented as fpeaking to Mofes as from himfelf before Mofes went out to meet him; whereas thofe Words, ver. 6. muft be underftood to be only the Words of a MefTen- ger, who was fent by Jethro to Mofes. The Septuagini Verfion accordingly fays, And it was told Mofes, fixing, jfethro thy Father-in-law comcth unto thee. And Mofes went out to meet his Father-in-law, and told him all that Jehovah had done unto Pharaoh and to the Egyptians for Ifrael's Sake, and all the Travel that had come unto them, by the Way, and how "Jehovah delivered them. Where the original Word which wc render travel properly fignifies Labour attended with Dif- ficulty and Affliction, in which Senfe it is ufed, Lam. iiie 5. Mai. i. 3. Ujker and Sclden fuppofe this Meeting not to have been till after the Promulgation of the Law, taking Hcbab and Jethro to be the fame Perfon. Whereas Hobab is pofitively faid to be the Son of Raguel the Midi anite, Mo- fes Father in law, Num. x. 29. And in Ex. ii. 19, 18. the Prieft of Midian who was Father to Mofis Wife is called RucU (c) Excd. xviii. 1 Hebrew Bible vindicated. 3 i 1 Reuciy or Raguel, as he is called Jofephus, for the Hebrew may be pronounced either Way, and it is accordingly tran- flated Ragml, Num. x. 29. But it is moil probable, that Jctbro's Arrival in the Camp, was icon after the Battle between the Ifraelites and Amalekitcs: Becaufe that M$$ makes no Mention of any of the Appearances of Jehovah on Mount Sinai, and therefore it is probable, that Jethro came to Mrfes immediately upon his Arrival at Mount Sinai. And Jethro faid, Bleifed be Jehovah, who hath delivered ycu out of the Hand of the Egyptians, and out of the Hand of Pharaoh j Now I know that Jehovah is greater than all Gods ; For in the 'Thing wherein they dealt proudly he was above them,: And Jethro took a Burnt-of- fering, and Sacrifices for God: And Aaron came and all the Riders of Ifrael to eat Bread, with Mofes Father-in-law^ before Gcd. Now if we may judge of thefe Sacrifice* here mentioned by the fubfequent Practices of the Ifrae- lites both before and after the giving of the Law, that Part of the Offering which is here fpecified under the Ap- pellation of Sacrifices ; was the fame with thofe that were afterwards called Fe ace-offerings (e) which were defio-n- ed for feafting (f) thofe that attended the Sacrifices, and' therefore it is obferved, that Aaron came, and all the EL ders of Ifrael to eat Bread, that is to partake of the Feafr probably at the Invitation of Jethro, who as Prince of the Country likewife performed the Office of the Priefthood • for Mofes fays, that it was Jethro who took the Burnt -offe- ring and Sacrifices for God. Which Sacrifices or Peace- Offerings, were offered up either on an Aitar of Earth or (e) Exod. xxiv. 5. (f) Exod, xxxii. 6. Cawl, 1 i 2 72* Chronology of the Stone, 22jm/. xx. 24. And only the Kidneys and the Cawl (g)t and all the Fat that was on the Entrails, and the Cawl of the Liver was to be burnt upon the Altar j But if it was a Lamb that was offered up as a Peace-offer- ing then the Rump alio was to be burnt (h). But the reft was to be feafted on by thofe invited to the Sacrifice > Which Feaft might, according to Jofephus, be continued for two Days, and what remained then uneaten muft be burnt. But among the Heathen, what was more than neceffary for the Feaft, was frequently carried off, and afterwards fold in the Shambles, 1 Cor. x. 25, 27, 28. See alfo Baruch. vi. 28. A N D it came to pafs on the Morrow, that Mofes fat to judge the People j and the People ftood by him from Morning to Evening (/). And Jcthro faid unto him Thou wilt furely wear away, both thou and this People that is ith thee: for this Thing is too heavy for thee; (2) 'Lev. iii. 3.) (I/, It isobferved, that the Sheep in Arabia, and about Judea, are very remarkable for large Tails ; according to Mr. Rouwalf half a Span thick, and one and a half broad ; and very fat ; Rouiualf, Trav. p. 234. which is the Rcafcn that the Rump is here particularly fpecified to be ^aid Hpon the Altar along with the reft of the Fat. lam not Phyfician enough to affirm ; that Fat as well as Blood is unwholfome in thofe hot Climates ; but poffi'oly this might be one, if not the chief Reafon why the one was ordered to be fpilt before the Altar, and the other to be burnt : Since the Fat as well as the Blood is claimed as belonging to Jehovah^ Lev. iii. 16, 17. vii. 23, 25. — See a!fo Ex. xxix. 22. Lev. iii. 9, vii« 3. viii. 25. ix. 19. — (i) Exod. xviii. 17 — 27. thou Hebrew Bible vindicated. 3 1 3 thou art not able to perform it thy felf alone. Be thoa for the People to God-ward, or as it is in the Hebrew, be- fore God, that thou mayeft bring their Words unto God. And thou malt teach them Ordinances and Laws, and malt (hew them the Way wherein they muft walk, and the Work that they muft do. Moreover, thou malt pro- vide out of all the People able Men, fuch as fear God, Men of Truth, hating Covetoufnefs; and place fuch o- ver them, to be Rulers of Thoufands and Rulers of Fifties and Rulers of Tens ; and let them judge the People at all Seafons ; and it fhall be that every great Matter they mall bring unto thee, but every fmall Matter they &a\\ judge. fo it fhall be eafier for thyfelf, and they mail bear the Burthen with thee. To which fofephus adds, that fe- thro advifed him to choofe fuch Perfons as the whole Mul- titude have tried and do approve of. Which Piece of Ad- vice it is more than probable Jethro did give to Mofes, becaufe we find that this was the Method which Mofes put in Practice upon this Oceafion ; for in the Book of Deuteronomy (I) it is ebferved, that Mfes fumrooned the Congregation of the People at this Time, and fays he to them, Take ye Wifemen and known among your Tribes and I will make them Rulers over you. Which Advice the People approved of, and therefore Mofes adds : And ye anfwered me and faid, The Thing which thou haft fpoken is good for us to do. Where it ought alfo to be obferved, that thefe fudges were not inftituted fo as to form any one general Council, Aflembty or Congregation, nor is their Number afcertained ; but were appointed to (/) Deut. i. 13, 14, S f be 3 1 4 The Chronology of the be Rulers of Thoufands, and Rulers of Hundreds, and Rulers of Fifties, and Rulers of Tens, in their particular Tribes and Diflridts. And were only to judge in fmall Matters ; in Affairs relating to their particular Tribes or Jurisdictions; but the great Matters, fuch as might con- cern the Nation in general, or more Tribes than one, they were to bring to Mofes \ the Determination of which great Matters, was afterwards referred by the Apr pointment of God to a general AfTembly of Congregation of feventy Elders, Num. xi. 16, 24. So Mofes hearkned unto the Voice of his Father-in-law, and did all that he faid. And Mofes let his Father-in-law depart ; and he went away into his own Land. And Mofes [m) went up the Mount unto God, and Jehovah called unto him out of the Mountain, faying, , Thus fhalt thou fay to the Houfe of Jacob, Now therefore if ye will obey my Voice, and keep my Covenant, then mall ye be a peculiar Treafure unto me above all People. And Mofes came and called for the Elders of the People, and laid before their Faces all thefeWords which Jehovah commanded him,, And all the People a?ifwered together, and faid, All that Jehovah hath fpoken we will do. Whence it appears, that there was at this Time a plain and manifeft Covenant entered into between God and the Jfraelites; wherein he promifed to be their God, if they v would engage to be his People : Which when they had affented unto, then faid Jehovah unto Mofes, Lo, I come unto thee in a thick Cloud, that the People may (m) Exod. xix. 7, near , Hebrew Bible vindicated. 31$ hear when I fpeak unto thee, and believe thee for ever 3 and 'Jehovah faid, Go unto the People, and fanctify them to-day, and to-morrow, and let them warn their Cloaths and be ready againft the third Day ; for the third day Je- hovah will come down in the Sight of all the People on Mount Sinai. And thou lhall fet Bounds unto the Peo- ple round about, faying, Take heed to yourfelves, that ye go not up into the Mount, or touch the Border of it. Where it is to be obferved, that the People having ente- red into Covenant with God are ordered to fanclify and warn their Cloaths ; that is, to wafh and be clean, or to fan&ify themfelves by Baptifm,and by Change of, or warn- ing their Cloaths, as was ordered to Jacob and his Family when they renounced their ftrange Gods, Gen. xxxv, 2. And on the third Day («) in the Morning there were Thunders and Lightnings, and a thick Cloud -upon the Mount, and the Voice of the Trumpet exceeding loud. And Jehovah called Mofes up to the Top of the Mount, and Mofes went up. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Go down, charge the People^, left they break through unto Jehovah to gaze and many of them perifh. And let the Priefts alfo wThich come near unto Jehovah % fanctify them- felves, left Jehovah break forth upon them. And Mofes faid unto Jehovah, the People cannot come up to Mount -Si- nai ; for thou chargedft us faying, Set Bounds about the Mount, and fan&ify it. And Jehovah faid unto him, Thou and Aaron mall come up : but let not the Priefts and the People break through. (n) Exod. xix. 16. S f 2 Wh E RE 3 1 6 The Chronology of the Where it may be remarked, that there was an Order before given for the People in general to warn and fanc- tify thcmfelves; and here now is a particular Order for the Pricjis (o) to fandify themfelves; who are called the Priefts which come near to the Lord; becaufe they come (p) 7icar unto the Altar of the Lord to minijler unto him-, ..nd approach him byfacrificingunto him. Which Words Mofes feems to havemiftaken,as if God had thereby order- ed the Priefts to come near unto him, that is, to advance up the Mount. Now it is alfo to be obferved, that at this Time there was no regular Order of Priefthood inftituted, but that every Head of a Family was the Prieft of that Fami- ly; and therefore Mofes fays again unto God -, the People cannot come up to Mount Sinai ; for thou chargedft us, faying, Set Bounds about the Mount and fanctify it. And if all the Priefts, that is, if all the Heads of every Family had come up, then fo many would have advanced of courfe, that Mofes may very well be excufed for calling thzm the People. God therefore in anfwer thereto fays Thou fhall come up, thou and Aaron with thee, but let not the Priefts, and the People break through, Exod. xix. 24. And all the People faw the Thundrings and Light- ni ngs, and the Noife of the Trumpet and the Mountain fmoaking ; when Jofephus fays, that the Ifraelites were much frightned, and thought Mofes had been deftroyed ; (0) Exod. xix. 22 (/») Exod, xxviii. 43, 30, 20. Num. xvi. 5, 40. Ezek. xl. 46. xliv. 15. but Hebrew Bible vindicated. 317 but when they faw him return they were much rejoiced ; and that Mofes then informed them in general, that God had fuggefted to him a happy Method of living for the Ifraelites, and an Order of political Government. And they faid unto Mofes (q), Speak thou with us and we will hear; but let not God fpeak with us left we die. And Mvfes faid unto the People, Fear not ; for God is not ctfme to deftroy you, but is come to prove you, and that his Fear may be before your Faces, that you fin not. And the People flood afar off, and Mofes and Aaron drew near to the thick Darknefs where God was. And God fpake to them, and dictated the Ten Commandments, and particularly recommended a fecond Time the Obfer- vance of the fecond Commandment, and prohibited the erecting any Altars of hewn Stone. He likewife gave fe- veral Laws {r) about Men-Servants (*), and Women fer- vants, concerning Man-flaughter and Curfers of Parents. &c. Of Theft (t)y of Damage, ofTrefpafs, of Borrow- ing, of Fornication, of Witchcraft, &c. of Slander and falfe Witnefs («), of the Sabbath, and of Idolatry j and promifed a Reward to the Obedient (at), and in particular the Inheritance of the Land of Canaan. {q) Exod. xx. 19. Deut. v. 22 — 27. (r) Whoever has a Mind to be more fully informed of the particular Reafon for the Eftablilhment of thofe Laws which were by God to the Jewifh Nation, may confult Spencer de Legibus Hehraorum with re- gard to the Ceremonial and Religious Part ; and Harrington's Oceana and Lawman on the Civil Government of the Hebrews with regard to the political Part. (s) Exod.xxi. (/) Exod, xxii, (a) Exod, xxiii. (a-) ExQd, xxiii, 31, And 3 1 8 The Chronology of the And (y) God faid unto Mofes, Come up unto Jeho- DaU, thou and Aaron, and Nadab, and Abihu, and feven- ty of the Elders 01 Ifrael, and worfhip afar off; and Mo- fes alone mall come near "Jehovah ; hut they mall not come nigh; that is, not as near as Mofes-, neither fliall the People come up with him; (that is, even fo far as Aaron, or Nadab, Abihu, and the Elders,).. And Mofes came and told the People all the Words of the Lord, and all the Judgments : And all the People anfwered with one Voice and faid ; All the Words which Jehovah hath faid> will we do. So that the People did not only affent at firft to the Covenant in general, but alfo renewed their Affent after they had been informed of the Particulars. AND Mofes wrote all the Words of the Law (z). Which is the fecond Mention that is made of Wri- ing, before God wrote on the Tables of Stone. 'O' And Mofes rofe up early in the Morning, and builded an Altar under the Hill, and erected twelve Pillars in a Circle about it according to the twelve Tribes of Ifrael. - And he fent young Men of the Children of Ifrael, which offered Burnt-offerings, and facrificed Peace-offerings of Oxen unto Jehovah. The Chaldee Paraphraft calls thefe young Men Firfl-born, who till the creeling of the Levi- tical Prieflhood were by Right the Priefts of the Family. Cajlellus in his Lexicon renders the Word "lyj here made ufeofby Mofes 3 Piter, and adds,»S7V dicitur qui e moUiorc pa-- (y) Exod. xxiv. i. (z) Exod. xxiv. 4, Szc. reritum Hebrew Bible vindicated. 319 rentum cur a excutitur ad Minijlcrium aliquod, & opus fa- ciendum, donee ad cam cetatem pervenerit, qua fit fui 'Ju- ris. Which agrees very well with the Notion of the Pa- raphrafe of Onkehs, where this Word is interpreted Jirjl born Sons. But it is manifeft, that this Word was not re- ftrained to Perfons under Age, fince Jojlwa when he was upwards of forty Years old is called by this Name, Exod. xxxiii. ir. And therefore Jofiua was probably a/r/ born, or eldefl Son, as well as the reft of thofe young Men who were here fent by Mofes to offer up Sacrifices to Jehovah. And he took the Book of the Covenant, and read in the Audience of the People, and they faid, All that Jehovah hath faid will we do, and be obedient. And Mofes made a Sacrifice, and he took half of the Blood and fprinkled on the Altar, and the other half he fprinkled on the People, (a) and faid, Behold, the Blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made- with you con- cerning thefe Words. Then went' up Mofes and Aaron, and Na dab, and Abihu, and feventy of the Elders of Ifrael : And they faw the God of Ifrael -, and they faw God, and did eat and drink ; that is, they lived to eat and drink. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Come up to me into the Mount and be there j and I will give thee Tables of Stone, and a Law and Commandments which / have () golden Calf out of their Ear-Rings . And when Aaron had made it, he built an Altar before it and made Proclamation and faid, To morrow is a Feaft to jfebovab and they rofe up early on the Morrow, and offered burnt Offering and peace Offerings ; and the People fat down to eat and drink, and rofe up to play. (/) Ex. xxxi. j 8. (m) In the fecond Commandment where it is Yard, Vifiting the Ini- quity of the Fathers upon the Children, the Propofition 73> which we render upon, according to its general Signification, may alfo be tran- flated by, as it is rendered, Gen. xxvii. 40 Which will remove the Objection made by fome Perfons againfl the Equity of that Sentence, and reconcile it with thofe other Texts of Scripture, where it is de- clared that the Fathers Ihall not be put to Death for the Children, nei- ther fhall the Children be put to Death for the Fathers : Every Man (hall be put to Death for his own Sin. Deut. xxiv. 16. See alfo, 2 King, xiv. 5, 6. Gen. xviii. 25. &c. &c. («) Ex. xxxii. 16. (0) Ex. xxxii. 1. (p) Jofephus takes no Notice of this Tranfa&ion, Where 326 The Chronology of the Where it is obferved, that this idolatrous Worfhip is called, a Feaft ofJehovahy that is, this Worfhip was pre- tended to be ultimately defigned for him, though it was vifibly payed to the golden Calf. Which is the common Excufe of all Idolaters. For thus it is, that ' Cicero (q) apologizes for the Worfhip paid to Images in his Days ; thus Julian (r) endeavours to excufe his own Idolatry ; and by this very Argument it is, that the Bifhop of Meaux (s) endeavours to evade the Charge of Idolatry, which is made by Proteftants againft the Image- Worfhip of the Church of Rome. And (t) Jehovah laid unto Mofes, Go get thee down, for thy People have corrupted themfelves. And when Mofcs follicited God to pardon them ; Jehovah faid unto him, Let me alone that I may confume them, and I will make of thee a great Nation. But Mofes neverthelefs flill periifled in entreating Forgivenefs for them, till Jehovah repented of the Evil that he thought to do unto his Peo- ple. Upon which it may be remarked, as Jofephus does upon another Occafion, that Mofes in preferring the Good of the Jfradites, to the Promotion of himfelf and his Fa- mily fhewed a great Difmtereftednefs. And indeed it feems very remarkable, that Mofes, who through this whole Tranfaction was God's principal Minifler, mould obtain no extraordinary Mark of God's Favour to be conferred on any one of his own Defcendants; but that the high Priefthood mould be given to his Bro- [q) Cic. dc Nat. Deor. (r) Ju»\ Fragm. Orat. five Epift. p. 292. f.f) Papift Rep. and Mifrep. (?) Ex. xxxii. 7. ther Hebrew Bible vindicated. 327 ther Aaron and his Defendants ; while the Children of Mofes were left upon the common Rank with the Reft of the Ifraelites. Which certainly would not have hap- pened had Mofes been left to act according to the com- mon Rules of human Prudence ; and had not been over- ruled by the Power of God j than which I do not know a ftronger Proof that can be affigned of the Divinity of his Miffion. And Mofes turned and went, and the two Tables of Testimony were in his Hands. And it came to pafs as foon as he was come nigh unto the Camp, that he few the Calf and the Dancing : And Mofes' s Anger waxed hot, and he call the Tables out of his Hands, and broke them beneath the Mount. And when Mofes faw that the Ido- laters were naked and unarmed, for Aaron had fuffered them to be naked, that is unarmed, to their Shame a- mongft their Enemies, then Mofes flood in the Gate of the Camp, and faid who is on Jehovah's Side ? Let him j come unto me. And all the Sons of Levi gathered themfelves unto him. And he faid unto them, Put' every Man his Sword by his Side, and go in and out from Gate to Gate throughout the Camp, and flay e- very Man his Brother, and every Man his Companion, and every Man his Neighbour, that he finds worfhip- ping this golden Calf 5 that Jehovah may beflow a Bkfjing upon thee. And the Children of Levi did ac- cording to the Word of Mofes 3 and there fell of the Peo- ple that Day about three thoufand Men. And hence it appears, that the Zeal which the Levites fhewed upon this Occafion, was the Foundation of that extraordinary Bleffing 2 2 8 The Chronology of the (;•) Blejfing or Favour which was conferred on the Levites, in feperating them from among the Children of Ifrael to minifter unto Jehovah. Num. viii, 5. — 19. Dent. x. 1. 8. And accordingly in the Blemng which Mofes gives the Children of Ifrael before his Death, in that Part of it which refers to the Tribe of Levi, he mentions this Transaction, as the principal Reafon of God's conferring on them the Privilege of confulting him by Urim and Thummim. And of Levi he faid, let thy Thummim and thy Urim be with thy holy one, whom thou didft prove at Maffah, and with whom thou didft ftrive at the Waters of Meribah. Who faid unto his Father and his Mother, I have not feen him, neither did he achioivledge his Brethren, nor knew his own Children : For they cb- ferved thy Word and kept thy Commandment, Deut. xxxiii. 8, 9. And Mofes took the Calf which they had made, and burnt it in the Fire, and ftamped it, and ground it to Pow- der, and ftrowed it upon the Water, and made the Chil- dren of Ifrael to drink of it. Which was no very diffi- cult thing to be done, fince daily Experience convinces us, that Gold may be beaten fo thin as to float in Water ; and to become drinkable. But it may be obferved that in the Book of Deut. ix. 21. Mofes fays to the Ifraelites that he caft the Duft of this Calf which they had made into the Brook that defended out of the Mount. Which Brook (r) The original Word fignifies a Prefent, or any Favonr conferred, as well as a Blefling, for in that Senfe this fame Word is made Ufe of, Gen. xxx. II. 1 Sam xxv. 27. it Hebrew Bible vindicated. 329 it is more than probable was occasioned by the Continua- tion of the running of the Waters out of the Reck in the Valley of Rephidim-, for I do not find any Brook men- tioned by Travellers, as now running near Mount Sinau The Continuation of which during their Abode in this Part of the Wildernefs, might occafion the Tradition a- mong the Jews, of this Waters following them where- ver they went during the forty Years of their Wandring $ and might be the Foundation of that Exprefiion of St. Taul'Sy 1 Cor. x. 14. when fpeaking of the Ifraelites^ he fays, And they did all drink the fame J'piritaal Drink : for they drank of that fpiritaal Rock that followed them , and that Rock was Chrijl. And accordingly thofe Levites who proved themfelves upon this Occafion, by flaying their idolatrous Brethren are laid to have ftrcve uit the Waters of Merib ah > Deut. xxxiii 8. And now Mofes having been inftru&ed by God, in the Form and Manner of making the Tabernacle, Exod. xxv. 8, 9. He fet about numbering the People in order to get half a Shekel apiece from every one that was twenty Years old and upwards, as directed, Exod. xxx. n, &c. And having found this Number to amount to (s) fix hundred three thoufand five hundred and fifty, he thereby raifed the Sum of one hundred Talents, and one thoufand {even hundred feventy-five Shekels, at the Rate of three thou- fand Shekels to the Talent. And immediately employ- ed Bezaleel and Aholiah as commanded, Exod. xxxi. 2. (j) Exod. xxvviii. 26. U 11 in 330 77je Chronology of the in the Work of the Tabernacle. For as there is no particular Time fpecified when Mcfes numbered the Peo- ple, therefore it is probable, that it cculd not have been deferred any longer than now; fince the next Time that Mofes returned to God, he fpent forty Days more upon the Mount, which would have retarded the Work of the Tabernacle too long, if the numbering of the Peo- ple, and the collecting of the Poll-Tax had not been over before his Return. And ifwefuppofe Mofes to have al- ready fpent two Months in the Wildernefs of Sinai, where he arrived the fifteenth Day of the third Month after his Departure out of Egypt ; and lefs Time cannot well be allowed, confidering that he had juft fpent forty Days upon the Mount with God ; then we may fuppofe, i ft Year, that he fet about numbering the People about the fif- 15th D. teenth Day of the fifth Month after the Exodus. Which numbering of the People, and gathering the Poll-Tax may have lafted a Fortnight j and then Mofes might have fet Bezakel and Aholiah, &c. about the Work of the Ta- iA Year, berna.cle, about the firft Day of the fixth Month. Which ^J1 Mo. agrees exactly with Jofephus, who fays, that the Work- men were occupied feven Months in finishing the Taber- nacle with all its Appurtenances ; which was not finifhed and com pleated till the latter End of the twelve. Month. And Jehovah (t) having now plagued the People be- caufe they made the Calf which Aaron made. It came to pafs that Mofes in fome Time after faid unto the Peo- (r).Exod. xxxii. .35.. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 331 pie, Ye have finned a great Sin ; and now I will go unto Jehovah », perad venture I fhall make an Attonement for your Sin. The Expreffion in the Hebrew as well as in our Tranflation is, And it came to pafs on the Morrow that Mofrs, &c. Exod. xxxii. 30. which Word does not always fignify the Day immediately following, but is fre- quently ufed to fignify only fome Time to come. As, Gen. xxx. 33. where the Hebrew fays, So mall my Righteoufnefs anfwer for me to morrow; our Tranflators have juftly rendered it, So mall my Righteoufnefs an- fwer for me in Time to come. See alio Exod. xiii. 14. Deut, vi. 20. Jojh. iv. 6, 21. and xxii. 24. where this Word is made ufe of in the fame Senfe. And Mofet returned unto Jehovah and prayed for Aaron at the fame Time, for the Lord was very angry with Aarcn to have deftroyed him, Deut. ix. 20. and faid, Oh this People have finned a great Sin, and have made them Gods of Gold 5 I befeech thee however to forgive their Sin j and if my Life will be any Atonement for them, Blot me I fray thee out of thy Book which thou haft written. Which Expreflion fhews, that it was then cufromary for Kings to keep Regifters of their Subjects, and to ftrike out their Names, when they died, or were ordered to be put to Death. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes^ Whofoever has finned againfl; me, him will I blot out of my Book. Therefore now (w), Go, lead the People unto the Place of which I have fpoken unto thee. And I will fend an An- gel before thee, and I will drive out the Canaanite and {u) xxxii. 34. U u 2 the 3 3 2 Tloe Chronology of the the Amcrite, &c. for I will not go up in the midft of thee, for thou art a ftiff- necked People; left I confume thee in the Way : But in the mean Time command thou the People to keep a Faft, and humble themfelves, and to put off their Ornaments; that I may Judge by their Behaviour, what mail I do unto them, Exod. xxxiii. t;. And (x) Mofes faid unto Jehovah, See thou fayeffc unto me, Bring up this People ; and thou haft not let me know whom thou wilt fend 'with me. Tct thou haft faidy I know thee by Name, and thou haft found Grace in thy Sight. Where it is to be obferved, that to know a Man by Name did then not only fignify what it does now, viz. to know its Name, but it fignified alfo being acquain- ted with his Nature and good Qualities. For to under- ftand this literally, as if Mofes had found Grace in the Sight of God, becaufe God knew his Name to be Mofes would be abfurd. But if it be underftood of his natural Difpofitions and good Qualities, then it will be very rea- fonable to fuppofe that God might grant a Favour to Mo- fes, or that Mofes might find Favour in his Sight, becaufe God was acquainted with the Goodnefs of his Heart. The Septuagint renders this, I know thee above all, and the Arabick VerfiOn, renders it, I have ennobled thy Name*. But it feems to me to fignify, that I know thy good Dif- pofitions or good Qualities, becaufe of the following. Words, And thou haft found Grace in my Sight. For as it was ufual in the Eaftern Nations to give Perfons Names fignificant either of their good or bad Qualities, when they were remarkable for either ; hence I fuppofe that [x) Exod. xxxiii. I2> knowing Hebrew B i b l e vindicated. 333 knowing a Perfon by Name came to be an equivalent Ex- preflion for knowing their natural Difpofitions or Quali- ties. See. Exod. xxxiv. 14. Thus Adam firft called his Wife Woman, Gen. ii. 23. but afterwards, probably not till flie had born fome Children, he called her Eve, which in Hebrew fignifies caujing to grow j becaufejhe was the Mother of all living. Gen. xxx. 20. Abram upon the Promife given him by God of having a numerous Pofle- rity, had his Name changed when he was ninety-nine Years old to Abraham, which is a Contraction of Ab- Rom-Hammon, which literally figniiies the high Father of a Multitude, becaufe he was to be the Father of many Na- tions, Gen. xvii. 4. 5. And Jofeph at thirty Years of age was called Zapnah-Paancah, which fignifies a Revealer cf Secrets, as it is rendered by the Arabick Verfion and the- Targum of Onkelos. In fliort it would be endlefs to enu- merate all the Inftances of this Kind which are to be found in the Scriptures. And it is more than probable that Mofes had an Hebrew Name that was given him by his Parents, which denoted fome good Quality, as well as his Egyptian Name, of Mofes, which fignified only his been drawn out of the Water : Gen. ii. 10. Though in writing his own Hiflory he has only mentioned the Name that he was principally known by. In like manner when God gratified Mofes in the requeit here mentioned he fays, that he will Proclaim Jehovah by Name before him, Exod. xxxiii. 19. xxxiv. 3. but how does he perform this? Why by proclaiming his Nature. For it is faid, that Jehovah paffed by before him, and he proclaimed Je- hovah, Jehovah God merciful and gracious, long- fuffering in 334 llfc Chronology of the in Goodnefs and Truth, keeping Mercy for thoufands forgiving Iniquity, and Tranfgreffions and Sin, and that will by no means clear the Guilty, vifiting the Iniquity of the Fathers on the Children, and upon the Childrens Children unto the third and unto the fourth Generation • See alio Ifaiah. ix. 6. where the Prophet in defcribing the Mejjiah fays, and his Name mall be called Wonder- ful, Counfeller, the Mighty God, the everlafting Father, the Prince of Peace, of the Increafe of his Government and Peaee there fhall be no End, upon the Throne of David and upon his Kingdom, to order it, and to efla- blifli it, with Judgement and with Juflice from hence forth even for ever. Now therefore, fays Mofes I pray thee, if I have found Grace in thy Sight, Shew me now thyfelf (y)t that I may know thee, that I may find Grace in thy Sight : and confider that this is thy People. Where it muft be remarked that God had before this told Mofes feveral Times that he would fend his Angel before him, to drive out the Canaanite, and the Amorite and the Hittite, &c. Exod. xxiii. 20. xxxii. 34. xxxiii. 2. But Mofes being defirous of knowing who this Angel was, Begs of God that he may fee who this Perfon is, that he may know him. Which Perfon is here called by the Name of Gods (;>) In the original it is (hew me thy Way which Word is ufed in the old Ttflament in a great Variety of Significations the Septuagint there- fore render this Pa-fTage, Jhew me now thy Self, which feems much coun- tenanced by the following Words, that 1 may knew thee. Way Hebrew Bible vindicated, 335 Way and his Prefence, and his Glory, and his Goodnefs. And Gcd faicl, A/y Pre fence mall go with thee, and I will give thee Reft. And he faid unto him, If thy Pre- fence go not with me carry us not up hence : For where- in mall it be known here, that I and thy People have found Grace in thy Sight ? Is it not in that thou goeft with us ? So mall we be feperated, I and thy People, from all the People that are upon the Face of the Earth. Arrfrthe Lord faid unto Mofes, I will do this Thing alfo ■ that thou haft fpoken : for thou haft found Grace in my Sight, and I know thee by Name. And he faid, I be- feech thee fliew me thy Glory. And he faid, I will make all my Goodnefs pafs before thee, and I will pro- claim Jehovah (z) by Name before thee ; and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious, and will mew Mercy on whom I will fhew Mercy. And he faid, Thou canfl not fee my Face : for there fiall no Man fee me, and live. The Difficulty here is to reconcile this with fome of the preceding ParTages in the Books of Mofes, for it is before obferved of Abraham , that he ate and drank and converfed with Jehovah in the Shape of a Man, and addrefted him under the Character of the Judge of the whole Earth, Gen. xviii. 1 — 25. And when Jacob wreftled with an Angel under the Appea- rance of a Man, when he difcovered who this divine Perfon was, then it is faid, that Jacob called the Name of the Place Peniel: For, fays he, I have feen God Face (2) The Words in the Original are, " I will proclaim Et£0 by ** Name Jehovah :" And not, I will proclaim the Name of Jehovah, as we have tranflated it. fa- 336 T7je Chronology of the to Face, and my Life is preferred, Gen.xxxii. 24 — 3 c And in Exod. xxiv. 9, 10, 11. it is faid, that Mofest and Aaron, Nadab, and Abiku, and feventy of the Elders of Ifrael, faw the God of Ifrael; and there was under his Feet, as it were a paved Work of Sapliire-ftone, and as it were the Body of Heaven in Clearnefs. And upon the Nobles of the Children of Ifrael, he laid not his Hand: Alfo they faw God, and did eat and drink .*Lthat is, and their Lives were preferved, as Jacob expreneair. Which can only be accounted for by obferving, that St. Stephen fays, Acls vii. 38, 53. The Law was given by the Difpofition of Angels, and that it was an Angel who fpake to Mofes in Mount Sinai : And yet it is mani- feft, that that Angel fpoke in the Name and Character of God faying, I am Jehovah thy God, &c. In the fame Senfe of the Word Angel it may therefore be faid, that it was an Angel alfo which fpoke to Mofes in this Place, fpeaking in the Name and Character of Jehovah ; and that it was alfo an Angel that was made vifible to him un- der the Title of Jehovah ; and that was called the Way, the Prefence, the Glory, the Goodnefs of Jehovah ; as alfo, that it was an Angel that appeared to Mofes, and Aaron^ and Nadab, and Abibu, and the feventy Elders, who is nevertheless called the Gcd oflfrael. But that when it is faid, There /hall ?io Man fee my Face and live. This muft be undeiftood of the (a) Great God, of God the Father, who is therefore called the Invifible God, 1 Tim. i. 17. or as St. Paul exprefleth it, Whom no Man hath feen,, or (a) Tit. ii. 13. Rev. xix. 17. can Hebrew Bible vindicated. 337 can fee, 1 Tim. vi. 15, 16. For, fays St. John, No Man hathfeen God at any 1imey John i. 18 j vi. 46. And "Jehovah faid, Behold there is a Place by me, and thou malt ftand upon a Rock. And it (hall come to pafs, while my Glory pafleth by, that I will put thee in a Clift of the Rock j and will cover thee with -my Hand while I pafs by. And I will take away mine Hand, and thou fhalt fee what followeth me [b) : but my Face mail not be feen. Where it is to be obferved, that the Origi- nal Word, which our Englifi Tranilation renders back P^rts, is made ufe of to denote any Thing, or Perfon that is behind or followeth another, in which Senfe it is ufed, Gen. xviii. 10. Jofh. xvi. 3. 2 Sam. x. 19. 2 Chron. xiii. 14, &c, &c. So that probably, that Perfon who followed, and which Mofes was fo Defirous to fee was that Angel which is here called by the Name of the Pre- fence ', the Glory, and the Goodnefs of God. Which An- gel is by the Prophet Ifaiah, called the Angel of God's Prefence, Ifaiah lxiii. 9. And therefore it is obferved by Mcfes in the following Chapter when God comes to put this Promife in Execution, that Jehovah proclaimed the Name of Jehovah : And Jehovah palfed by before him, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, Exod. xxxiv. 5, 6. A n d Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Hew the two Tables ef Stone like unto the firft, ; and I will write upon thefe Tables the Words that were in the firft Tables which thou brakefr. And be ready in the Morning, and come up in the Morning unto Mount Sinai, and prefent thy X x fclf _(£) Exod. xxxiii. 23. 338 The Chronology of the felf there unto trie, in the Top of the Mount. And no Man fhall come up with thee, neither let any Man be feen throughout the Mount. And Mofes when he return- ed told the People what Jehovah had faid unto him* And when the People heard thefe evil Tidings they Mourned : and no Man did put on his Ornaments. For Jehovah had faid unto Mr:fe>> Say unto the Children of Jfrael, ye are a liiff-necked People; I will come up in the midft of thee in a Moment, and confiime thee: therefore now put off thy Ornaments from tli^e, and humble your.- fehes, that I may know what to do unto thee. And the Children of IJrael ftript themfelves of their Ornaments by the Mount Horeb. And Mofes hewed two Tables of ftone (c) like unto the firft ; and rofe up early in the Morning, and went up unto Mount Sinai,, as Jeh vah had commanded him>. and took in his Hand the two Tables of Stone. And Jehovah defcended in the Cloud, and flood with him there, and proclaimed the Name of Jehovah, or pro- claimed Jehovah by Name; and Jehovah, as he had pro- mifedy paffed by before him, and proclaimed Jehovah, Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, long-fuffering, and abundant in Goodnefs and Truth, keeping Mercy for Thoufands, forgiving Iniquity and TranfgrefTion and Sin, and that will by no Means clear the Guilty, vifiting the Iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children, and upon, the Chiidrens Children, unto the third and fourth Ge- neration. And Mofes made hafte and bowed his Head (<•) Exod, xxxiv. 4. towards Hebrew Bible vindicated, 339 towards the Earth, and worshipped. And he fard, If now I have found Grace in thy Sight, O Lord, let my Lord I pray thee go amongft us, (for it is a ftiff-necked People) and pardon our Iniquity and our Sin, and take us for thine Inheritance. And he faid, Behold I make a Covenant before all my People, I will do Marvels-, fuch as have not been in all the Earth, nor in any Na- tion ; and all the People among which thou art, mail fee the Work of Jehovah : for it is a terrible Thing that I will do with thee. Obferve, thou that which I com- mand thee this Day : Behold I drive out before thee the Amorite, and the Canaanite, and the Hit the, and tiie Perizzite, and the Hivite, and the Jebufte. Take heed to thyfelf left thou make a Covenant with the Inhabi- tants of the Land whither thou gcefl, left it be for a Snare in the midft of thee : For thou malt worfhip no other God : For Jehovah (*/), whofe Name is Jealous, or who in his Nature is jealous of his Honour, is a jealous Cod. JEHOVAH then proceeded in giving feveral Ordi- nances about the Obfervance of the three great Feafts, and the Obfervation of the Sabbath; and the feperating of the Levites : For Jehovah (e) fpake unto Mefts faying, Take the Levites from 2mong the Children of Ifrad, and cleanfe them. And thou flaalt bring the Levites before the Tabernacle; and thou mall gather the whole AJfemii of the Children of lfrael together: and thou malt bring the Levitts before Jekvab, and the Children of lfrael {d) Exod. xxxiv. 14. (e) Num. viii. 5—19. Dci;t. >:. I, S, 10. X X 2 fa// 3 4-0 The Chronology of the Jhall put their Hands upon the Levites, and Aaron mall offer the Levites before Jehovah, for an Offering of the Children of Ifrael • that they may execute the Service of Jehovah , that is, inftead of thofe Firft-born who ufed formerly to execute it. And the Levites, fays he, mall be mine ; for they are wholly given unto me from among the Children of Ifrael; inftead of fuch as open every Womb, even inftead of the Firft-born of all the Children of Ifrael. For all the Firft-born of the Children of If- rael are mine, both Man and Beaft; on the Day that I fmote every Firft-born in the Land of Egypt, I fancli- fied them for myfelf. Where we may obferve, that although Almighty God has an undoubted Right of declaring who he will be feryed by as a publick-ofnciating-Minifter ; yet be- caufe the firft-born Sons of every Family had hitherto claimed it, and poffeffed it as their Birth-right to offici- ate as Prieft of the Family, and offer up the Sacrifice; Yet now when they were going to be deprived of this Right, and to have the Levites appointed in their ftead; to execute the Service of Jehovah ; God does not infift: upon his natural Right, but upon the Right of Purchale, when he protected the Firft-born of the Ifraelites from being deftroyed along with the Firft-born of the Egypti- ans,. And therefore he likewife requires the Ifraelites to make a formal Renunciation of this Part of their Right of. Primogeniture, by putting their Hands upon the Levites ; and offering them up to Jehovah as an Offering of the Children of Ifrael ; that they may execute the Service of Jehovah 5 Hebrew Bible vindicated, 341 Jehovah j inftead of the Firft-born in Ifrael. And hence it is, that to diftinguifli between thefe new Priefts, and thofe who were formerly fo called, thefe new Priefts are frequently called the Priejls, the Levites, Deut. xxii. 9 ; xxiv. 8. one part of whofe Office it was to read the Law unto the People, to teach Jacob the Judgments, and Ifrael the haw, as well as to put Incenfe, and whole Burnt-Sa- crifices on the Altar, Deut. xxxiii. 10. Which was one Reafon why Levi was for the future to have no Part nor Inheritance with his Brethren, Deut. x. 9. that is, that theLevites were to have no Portion of Land afiigned them as a Tribe in the Land of Canaan ; but were to be dif- perfed and feperated among the Reft of the Tribes ; that they might be at Hand to inftrucl: the People. And hence it comes to pafs, that thefe Priejls, the Levites, are Perfons referred to along with the Judge in the De- termination of Caufes both Civil and Criminal ; they being to be confidered, as Counfellors and Advifers, but not as Magiftrates. And God faid unto Mofes write thou thefe Words : for after the Tenour of thefe Words I have made a Covenant with thee and with Ifrael. And he was there with Jehovah forty Days and forty Nights -} he did neither eat Bread nor drink Water : and he wrote upon the Tables the Words of the Covenant, the Ten Commandments. Where it is obferved, that Mofes is pofitively laid in this Place to have hewn the two Tables of Stone, and when he went up into the Mount to have taken in his Hand the two Tables of Stone 5 Exod. xxxiv, 4, And to have written . « 4 2 7 % Chronology of the d written the Words of the Covenant, the Ten Command- ments thereon, Exod. xxxiv. 28. Whereas the firft Ta- bles of the Ten Commandments are pofitively faid to have been given to Mcfcs by God, and to have been written with the Finger of God, Ex. xxxi. 18. And in Ex. xxxii. 16. It is pofitively faid, that the Tables were the Work of God, and the Writing was the Writing of God graven on the Tables 5 fo that it is probable the firft Tables were written by God, but the fecond by Mofes. And though Mofes in fpeaking of thefe fecond Tables, makes Jehovah fay, Exod. xxxiv. 1. I will write upon thcfe Tables the Words that were in the firft Tables which thou breakeft, and in Deut. x, 4. again fays, that Jehovah works on the Tables according to the firft Writing, the Ten Com- mandments, and gave them unto him. This wemuft fup- pofe to be laid to be God's doing, becaufe Mofes did it by the Command of God j (for Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Write thou thefe Words, Exod. xxxiv. 27.) as it is laid, Exod. xxxii. 35. that Jehovah plagued the People, be- caufe they made the Calf which Aaron made : And as it is faid of Jofeph with regard to the Prifoners that were un- der his Charge, Whatsoever they did there, he was the Doer cf 'it, Gen. xxxix. 22. And it came to pafs when (f) Mofes came down from Mount Sinai that Mofes wift .not that the Skin of his Face {hone. And when Aaron and all the Children of Tfraei faw Mofes, behold the Skin of his Face fhone, and they were afraid to come nigh him, Mofes therefore till he (f) Exod. xx'.v. 29. had Hebrew Bible vindicated, 343 had done fpeaking with them put on a Veil ; and called unto them j qxl& Aaron and all the Rulers, returned unto him : And Mofes talked with them. And afterwards all the Children of Ifrael came nigh, and he gave them in Commandment all that Jehovah had fpoken with him in Mount Sinai. And now Mofes having been forty Days abfenr, found' upon his Return a good Progrefs made in the Work of the Tabernacle: and the Ornaments and Utenfils belonging thereto j and as foon as the Wood-work of the Taberna- cle was finiihed, he ordered it to be put together ; fo- Mcfes (g) took the Tabernacle, and pitched it without the Camp, afar off from the Camp, and he called it the Tabernacle of the Congregation. And it came topafs, as Mfes entered into the Tabernacle, the cloudy Pillar de- scended and flood at the Door of the Tabernacle, and "Jehovah talked with Mofes. And all the People faw the cloudy Pillar fland at the Tabernacle-door : and all the People rofe up and worshipped, every Man in his Tent- door. And Jehovah fpake to Mofes Face to Face, as a. Man fpeaketh unto his Friend. And he turned again un- to the Camp y but becaufe the Tabernacle neither had a Door to it, nor were the Hangings of the outer Court finilhed, therefore Jofcua, the Servant of Mofes, the Son of Nun, a young Man departed not out cf the Taber- nacle (j&), but remained there to preferve it from bein°- polluted. Which abiding of Jcfiua in the Tabernacle (g) Exod. xxxiii. 7. {h) -1J7J. Probably therefore zfirjl- born Son.. See Remarks on Exod.xxiv. 7. fliewfe 344- I,je Chronology of the fhews plainly,that this erecting of the Tabernacle was dif- ferent from that mentioned, Excd. xl. 17, 18. Into which Mofcs himfelf could not enter for fome Time, be- caufe the Glory of Jehovah filled the Tabernacle, Exod. xl. 35. And into which Jofoua never entered till after the Death of Mofes, when he went along with the High Pried to confult God, after the Judgment of Urim, Numb, xxvii. 21. * Now though this erecting of the Tabernacle is men- tioned, Exod. xxxiii. 7. before the fecond Time that Mofcs went up and ftaid forty Days in the Mount, it is plain, that it muft have been a Diflocation. Becaufe that it was but at the firft Time of his being fo long in the Mount that he received Directions about building the Tabernacle ; Exod. xxv. 8, 9. and upon his Return to the Camp ; he found the Ifraelites committing Ido- latry ; on Account of which God plagued the Ifraelites, Exod. xxxii. 35. to make an Attonement for which, was the Occafion of Mofes his going up the fecond Time : So that the Space between thefe two Times cannot well be fuppofed to be longer than necefTary, or that Avould be fufhxient for obeying the Orders given him by God, of Numbering the People, gathering the Poll- Tax, and fetting the People about the Work of the Tabernacle : But by no Means for finishing the Taber- -nacle. Which we cannot fuppofe could well take up lefs then three or four of the feven Months that were fpent in compleating it, and all its Utenfils and necei- fary Furniture, So that if we fuppofe Mofes to have fet Hebrew Bible vindicated. 3 4. j let the Men to work about the Beginning of the fixth Month we may fuppofe this erecting of the Tabernacle lft Y^ar» to have been about the Beginning of the ninth Month, ift Day. At which Time Mofes found upon Enquiry that the Poll-tax which was raifed of an Half-fhekel upon each Perfon upwards of twenty Years of Age was not fuffi- cient for finifhing the Work. And as there happened about this Time a Man to have been found (/) gathering of Sticks on the Sab- bath day, they brought him unto Mofes and Aaron, and •unto all the Congregation -, and they put him in Ward,, becaufe it was not declared what ftould be do?iQ unto him. So Mofes returned unto the Lord, and put the Vail from ' off his Face when he went in to fpeak with him, Exod. xxxiv. 34. And Jehovah (k) fpake unto Mofes faying, 'Speak thou unto the Children of Ifrael faying, Verily my Sabbaths thou malt keep ; for it is a Sign between me and you, throughout your Generations; that ye may know that I am Jehovah, that doth fanclify you. Ye fhall keep the Sabbath therefore : for it is holy unto you. Every one that deflleth it mail furely be put to Death , for whofoever doth any Work therein, that Soul mail be cut off from amongft his People. Six days may "work be done but in the feventh is the Sabbath of Reft, holy to Jehovah: whofoever doth any Work in the Sabbath-day, he mall furely be put to Death. Where- fore the Children of Ifrael mall keep the Sabbath, to -ebferve the Sabbath throughout their Generations, for (/) Num. xv. 32. {k) Exod. xxxi. 12— -17. Yj a 3 4-6 The Chronology of the a perpetual Covenant. It is a Sign between me and the Children of Ifrael for ever : for in fix Days Jehovah made Heaven and Earth, and on the feventh Day he refted, and was refrefhed. And when Mofes had re- ceived thefe Inftruclions he then departed from the Pre- fence of Jehovah. And (m) Mofes when he returned having gathered all the Congregation of the Children of Ifrael together, he faid unto them, Thefe are the Words which Jehovah hath commanded that ye mould do them ; Six Days fhall Work be done but on the feventh there ihall be to you an holy Day, a Sabbath of Reft unto Jehovah : whofoever doth Work therein mall be put to Death. Ye mail kindle no Fire throughout your Habitations up- on the Sabbath-day (n)i The Man fall furely be put to Death ; all the Congregation fhall ftone him with Stones without the Camp. And all the Congregation brought him without the Camp, and ftoned him with. Stones, and he died,. I t is manifeft, that thefe three Paffages in Exoa. xxxh Exod. xxxv. and Numb. xv. belong to one and the fame Event. Since if the Punifhment againft Sabbath-brea- kers had been denounced at the Time mentioned, Exod. xxxi. when the two Tables were firft delivered unto Mofes, then it could not have been faid afterwards, as it is mentioned Numb. xv. that Mofes and Aaron and the whole Congregation of Ifrael put the Man in Ward. (m) Exod. xxxv. i. (n) Num. xv. 35. till; Hebrew Bible vindicated, 347 till the Mind of Jehovah was known, bccaufe it was not declared what Jhould be done unto him. And the kft Sentence of the Anfwer mentioned in Exod. xxxv. mews plainly that it was given upon the Occafion of the Man's gathering Sticks upon the Sabbath-day as mentioned Numb, xv j for, fays Jehovah, ye fhall kindle no Fire throughour your Habitations on the Sabbath-day. It is likewife probable, that Mofes at the fame Time received the reft of the Directions, which are given in the fif- teenth Chapter of Numbers concerning feveral Kinds of Offerings, and the Fringes of their Garments, becaufe they are mentioned at the fame Time with this of the Sabbath-breaker, and come in very abruptly in the Placf where they are mentioned. I t is alfo more than probable, that Mofes took this Opportunity alfo of enquiring and receiving Inftructions concerning what he was to do about proceeding with the Work of the Tabernacle, lince the three Thoufand Talents, and the one Thoufand feven Hundred feventy- five Shekels were found to be infufiicient for finifhing the whole ; in anfwer to which he was ordered to pro- claim a free-will-Offering. And therefore (0) Mofes fpake moreover unto all the Congregation of the Chil- dren of Ifrael faying, Take ye from amongft you an Of- fering unto Jehovah : Whofoever is willing of Heart let him bring an Offering to the Lord, Gold and Silver, and Brafs, and Blue, and Purple, and Scarlet, &c5 And they came every one whofe Heart furred him up, and (0) Exod. Xxxv. 4. Y y 2 ever j 348 TZi Chronology of the every one whom his Spirit made willing, [and they brought Jehovah's Offering to the Work of the Taber- nacle of the Congregation, and for all his Service and for the holy Garments, &c. And Mofcs (/>) called Be- zakel and Aholiab, and every wife-hearted Man in whofe Heart Jehovah had put Wifdom, even every one. whofe Heart ftirred him up to come unto the Work to do it. And they received of Mofes all the Offering which the Children of Ifrad had brought, for the Work of the Service of the Sanctuary. And they brought yet unto him free Gifts every Morning. And all the Wife- men that wrought all the the Work of the Sanctuary, came every Man from the WTork which they made ; and they fpake unto Mcfes (aying, The People bring much more than enough for the Service of the Work which Jehovah commanded to make. And Mofes gave Commandment, and they caufed it to be proclaimed through the Camp, faying, Let neither Man nor Wo- man make any more Work for the Offering of the Sanc- tuary. So the People were retrained from bringing 1 for the Stuff they had was fufficient for all the Work, and too much. And all the Gold (q) that was occupied for the Work, even the Gold of the Offering was twenty- nine Talents, and {even thoufand and thirty Shekels. And the Silver was an hundred Talents, and one thoufand feven hundred threefcore and fifteen Shekels. And the Brafs of the Offering was feventy Talents, and two thou- fand four hundred Shekels. And therewith they made the Sockets to the Door of the Tabernacle, and the brafen (p) ExoJ. xxxvi. 2. (q) lb. xxxviii. 24. Altar Hebrew Bib^e vindicated, 349 Altar and the brafen Gate for it, and all the VeiTels of the Altar : And the Sockets of the Court round about ; and the Sockets of the Court Gate, and all the Pins of the Tabernacle, and all the Pins of the Court round a- bout. And (r) of the Blue, and Purple, and Scarlet they made Cloaths of Service to do Service in the holy Place, and made the holy Garments for Aaron, as the Lord commanded Mofes. And when they had finifhed (s) their Work Mofes did look upon all the Work, and behold, they had done it as Jehovah had commanded, even fo had they done it, and Mofes bleffed them. A n d it came to pafs in the firfl Month (t) in the fe- , Ye cond Year on the firfl Day of the Month, that the Ta- iftMo.' bernacle was reared up. And he took and put the Tef- lft Day' timony in the Ark, and he brought the Ark, and the Table, and the Candleftick, and the golden Altar, and fet them in the Tabernacle. And fet up the Hanging at the Door of the Tabernacle. And he put the Altar of Eurnt-ofFering by the Door of the Tabernacle ; and he fet the Laver between the Tabernacle and the Altar. And he reared up the Court round about the Taberna- cle and the Altar, and fet up the Hanging of the Court- gate : So Mofes finimed the Work. It is an Obferva- tion made by Dr. Pocock («) that near the South Weft Corner of that Part of Mount Sinai, which is called Mount Epijieme there is a little Hill called Araone by the Arabs, and by the Greeks the Tabernacle of the (r) Exod. xxxix. 1. (s) lb. ver. 43. (/) lb. xl. 17—33. {it) Pocock Trav. p. 147. Teilimonyy 50 7Zj Chronology of the Teftimonyj where they fay Aaron was confecrated, and firft performed the Offices of the Prieflhoood j fo that if there be any Dependance on this Tradition, it is pro- bable that on this Hill was placed the Tabernacle of the Congregation, which Mofes was ordered to place without the Camp afar off. Then a Cloud (x) covered the Tabernacle, or the Tent of the Teftimony, or Tent of the Congregation, which was over the Tabernacle ; and the Glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle j fo that Mofes for fomeTime was not able to enter therein. And at Even there was upon the Ta- bernacle as it were the Appearance of Fire, until the Morn- ing. So it was alway, the Cloud covering it by Day, and the Appearance of Fire by Night. From hence for- ward therefore Mofes, as Jofephus obferves, went no more up to Mount Sinai to confult with God ; but Jehovah called unto Mofes and fpake to him (y) out of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and dictated all thofe Laws, concerning Burnt-offerings, and Meat-of- ferings, of Flour with Oyl and Incenfe : Where it mould be obferved that the Word Meat having been by Ufe appropriated to fignify generally either Flefh or Fim, this Kind of Offering, which was of Flour, wTould be better called in our Language a Bread-offering. It ought likewife to be remarked, that the Hebrew Van is frequently ufed as a disjunctive Particle as well as a co- pulative, and therefore what we render, Lev. vii. 10. Every Meat-offering mingled with Oyl, and dry, fiall (x) Exod. xl. 34. Num. ix. 15,16. {y) Lev. i. r, &c. the Hebrew Bible vindicated* 351 the Sons of Aaron have, ought to be rendered, Every Meat-offer i 11 g mingled 'with Oyl, cr dry, &c. as it is in the Septuagint Verfion. Then 'Jehovah proceeded in giving Directions about the Firft-Fruits in the Ear -} and the Salt of the Meat-offering. And the Peace-offering, And the Sin-offering of Ignorance for the Prieir, for the Congregation, for the Ruler, or for the People. And for one that concealeth his Knowledge in touching an unclean Thing, or in making an Oath ; or for Sacrilege and for all Sins of Ignorance. And the Trefpafs- offe- ring for Sins done willingly. And the Offering at the; Confecration of the Priefts. With further Directions- concerning the Trefpafs-offering, and the Peace-offering j whicli are contained in the feven firft Chapters of Leviti- cus. But at the End of the fifteenth Verfe of the feventk Chapter the Samaritan Pentateuch has a Remark inferted that, this is the Middle cf the Law.. Upon which Dr. Wall makes this jure. Obfervation in his critical Notes, that this fhews of how late a Date that Copy muff be ; fince the Ni- cety of numbering the Words was but a late Practice. And at the fame Time we are to fuppofe, that God di&ated al- fo thofe Laws which are contained in the fifth, fixth, and the four firfl Verfes of the eighth Chapter of the Book of Numbers, concerning Reftitution, the Trial of Jealoufy3 the Law of the Nazarites, and the Form of blefling the People ; which muff have preceded the actual giving the Blefling itfelf as mentioned Lev. ix, 23., And now it may be taken for granted, that the Ta- bernacle being fully reared, and Mofes having received his- 352 Tlje Chronology of the his full Inftructions he would as he was commanded, Excd. xl. 2 — 1 6. immediately fet about (z) dedicating and Anointing the Tabernacle and its Utenfils; and con- fecrating rhe Priefts and Lcvitcsy according to the Forms prefcribed Exod. xxix. i — 2>7' xxx* 22 — 3°- x^ 9 — J5* Numb. viii. 5 — 22. which Ceremony took up feven Days Excd. xxix. 35 — 37. Lev. viii. 33. ix. 1. 2] Year, And on the (a) eighth Da'y Mofes called Aarcn and 0 . v^?\ his Sons, and commanded them to officiate publickly by Offering up a Sin-offering and a Burnt-offering for himfelf, and his Sons and the Elders of Ifrael; and ano- ther Sin-offering, and a Burnt-offering for the People. Which when Aarcn had done Mofes and Aarcn went into the Tabernacle. And the Lord fpake unto Mofes and to Aarcn, and gave them directions concerning Meats clean and unclean; about Womens Purifications and Offerings ; of the Tokens to difcern a Leprofy, of the Rites and Sacrifices in cleanfing the Leper ; about the Signs of Leprofy in an Houfe, and the cleanfing of that Houfe : About Uncleanncfs by Iffues, and their Clean- fing : As they are contained in the eleventh, twelfth thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth Chapters of Leviticus. Which were given both to Mofes and to Aaron, Chap. xi. 1. xv. 1. And when Mofes and Aarcn came out they (2) Bifhop Ujhcr, &c. fuppofes this Dedication to have been deferr'd to the fecond Month ; I fuppofe becaufe the Levites were not number'd till then; but their Scperation and their Numbering were two different Tranfaclior.s. And Cahnet fixes it to the fifth Day of the fecond "Month, but I cannot tell why. [a) Lev. ix. 1 — 24. fcleffed Hebrew Bible vindicated. 3 5 3 bleffed the People (b) and the Glory of the Lord ap- peared unto all the People. And there came a Fire out rom before the Lord, and confumed upon the Altar, the Burnt-offering j and the Fat of the Sin-offering, Now during this Tranfaction (c) Nadab and Abihu the Sons of Aaron, feeing the Sacrifices laid upon the Altar, and no Fire ready to burn them with all, took ei- ther of them his Cenfer and put Fire therein, and put Incenfe thereon, and offered ftrange Fire before "Jehovah. And there went out Fire from Jehovah and devoured them. And when Aaron began to lament for the Lofs of his Sons, Mofes faid unto him, Jehovah fpake, faying, I will be fanctified in them that come nigh me, and be- fore all the People I will be glorified ; thou fhalt neither mourn nor weep, neither mail thy Tears run down (dj. And Aaron held his Peace. And Mofes called Mifiael and Elzaphan the Sons of Uzziel the Uncle of Aa- ron, and faid unto them, Carry your Brethren from before the Sanctuary out of the Camp. And Mofes faid unto Aaron, and unto Ekazar and Ithamar his Sons that were left, Uncover not your Heads, neither rend your Cloaths, that is, do not mow any Signs of Mour* ning or Lamentation, left you die : but let your Brethren the whole Houfe of Ifrael bewail the Deftruction, which Jehovah hath made by burning Nadab and Abihu with Fire ; For the anointing Oyl of Jehovah is upon yon. Which fhews that the feven Days of Confecration were not paffed, when this Event happened. {b) Lev. ix. 23, 24. (), and the Day of Attonement. Where it ought to be remarked, that the fifteenth Day of the Month Jbib, was a fixed Sabbath let it happen on what Day of the Week it would. As appears from collating the fourth, fifth, fixth, feventh, eighth, eleventh and fifteenth Verfes of this Chapter: And regulated the Sabbaths for feven Weeks, which pofllbly might ferve inftead of an Intercalation whereby to regulate the Jewifh Year. And (q) the Son of an Ifraelitifi Woman whofe Father was an Egyptian, having blafphemed the Name of Jehovah and curfed j they brought him unto Mofes; that the Mind of Jehovah might be fhewed them. And Jehovah, ordered him and all Blafphemers to be put to Death. The Jews from this Text pretend that the Name Jehovah cannot be pronounced without Blafphemy ; becaufe the Original will bear that Interpretation, Lev. xxiv. 16. But it mould be obfer- ved, that the Original Word 3p3 fignifies to curfe as well as barely to name or pronouce. As it is rende- red, Numb, xxxiii. u. 13, 25, 27. xxiv. 10. and Job.'nu 8. Where it will bear no other Interpretation. Then Jehovah (r) gave Directions concerning the Jubilee, and Oppreflion, and ordered them to be companionate. He condemned Idolatry (s), and promifed a Bleffing to the Obedient, and threatened the Difobedient with a () lb. xxiii. (q) lb. xxiv. 10. (r) lb. xxv. (;) lb. xxvi. Curfe 1 Hebrew Bible vindicated. 357 Curfe ; gave Laws concerning Vows («). Ordered that no devoted Thing may be redeemed. Appointed the Payment of Tithes, and prohibited the Tithe from being changed. Where it is to be obferved, that although this is the firft Time that Tithes are fpoken of in the Levitical Law, yet that it is here fpoken of as a Practice well known amongft the Ifraelites, and that flood in need of very little Explanation. It is therefore more than probable, that as the Children of Levi were ta- ken by God to minifter unto him, inftead of the firfl- born Sons of all the Tribes, who till that Time were the Priefts in their own Families, and miniftred unto God : So thofe Tithes which were now transferred to the Sons of Levi, had till this Time been paid to the Prieft, or Prince, or firfl-born Son, who was Head of the Family. And during thefe Tranfactions, fome Time to- wards the Beginning of the Month, (that is before the fourteenth) (x) Jehovah enjoined the Obfervation of the Paflbver on the fourteenth Day of the Month ; ac- cording to all the Rites and Ceremonies thereof as pre- 2d Year, fcribed, Exod. xii. -i — 27. And they kept the Paffo- lftMo- 1 * th Day ver on the fourteenth Day of the firft Month, at Even. And there were certain Men that were defiled by the dead Body of a Man, that they could not keep the Paf- fover on that Day. And Jehovah ordered that they mould keep it on the fourteenth Day of the fecond Month. (u) Lev. xxvii. (*) Num. ix. i- And 3 5 3 Tie Chronology of the *J \^r' A n d on the (;-) firft Day of the fecond Month of the J^Da/ fecond Year, after they were come out of the Land of Egypt, Jehovah fpake again unto Mofes out of the Ta- bernacle j and ordered him to number the People a fe- cond Time, from twenty Years old and upwards, all that were able to go forth to War. And appointed every Tribe to be numbered diftinctly, and to be ranked under thole Princes or Heads, who had brought up the OfFe- rings to the Dedication of the Altar. Which Numeration when Mofes had compleated (2), the Number of the whole was found to be fix hun- dred three thoufand, five hundred-fifty, which is exact- ly the fame Number with that which was made at coL lecting the Poll-Tax for building the Tabernacle, Excd. xxxviii. 26. With this Exception, that the (a) Levites were not now numbered ; fo that juft fo many Perfons muft have arrived at the Age of twenty among all the reft of the Tribes, as the whole Number of Levites that were then upwards of twenty amounted to. Then Jehovah appointed the Order of Encampment for the (J>) Levites, and commanded them to pitch about Tabernacle ; and to take charge thereof both when it was erected, and when it was to be removed. Then he ordered (c) the Tribes of Judah, Iffhcbar, and Ze~ bidun to encamp on the Eaft-fide. But they as well as (y) Num. i. 1. Here begins the Book of Numbers. («) Num. i. 46. (a) lb. i. 47 j ii. 33. {b) lb. i. 50. (0 lb. if. 1, &c. the Hebrew Bible vindicated, 359 die reft of the Tribes were to pitch at a Diftance from the Tabernacle, becaufe the Levites were to pitch between them and the Sanctuary to take Charge thereof : And the Tribes of Reuben, Simeon , and Gad to pitch their Tents on the South-fide : And the Tribes of E- phraim, Menajfeb, and Benjamin to encamp on the Weft-fide : And the Tribes of Dan, Jfier, and Napb- tali on the North : Every one by his own Standard, with the Enfign of his Father's Houfe. By which means the Tabernacle was now pitched in the Center of the whole Camp, which when it was firft reared, was pit- ched without the Camp, far of from the Camp, Exod,. xxxiii. 7. And the (e) Lord fpake unto Mofes in the Wildernefs of Sinai y faying, Number the Children of Levi (f) after the Houfe of their Fathers by their Families j every Male from a Month old and upward : Now the Sons of Levi were GerJhonr Robatb, and Merarai. And Mofes numbered them according to the Word of the Lord, and thofe that were numbered of the Family of Gerfion, were feven thoufand five-hundred, who were appointed to pitch the Taberrnacle, and to take care of the covering of the Tabernacle, and the Hanging for the Door, and the Hangings of the Court, and the curtain for the door of the Court. Thofe of the Family of Rabat h that were numbered amounted to eight thoufand fix-hundred, who were appointed to pitch on the South- fide of the Taber- (e) Num. iii. 14—37. (f) They had been emitted at the lad- Numbering of the Tribes, Num. ?. 47. nacle. 360 The Chronology of the nacle and their charge was the Ark, the Table, the Can* dleftick, the Altars, and the VefTels of the Sanctuary. Whence it appears that the Dedication of the Temple muft have been over before this Numbering, becaufe Nadab and Abihu were now dead : Eleazar the third Son of Aaron being made Prefident over all the Levites Numb. iii. 32. Thofe of the Family of Merarai a- amounted to fix thoufand two-hundred, who were to pitch Northward of the Tabernacle -, and had given into their cuftody the Boards of the Tabernacle, and the Bars, and the Pillars, and the Sockets, and the Pillars of the Court round about. So that the whole Number of Le- vites when fummed up together amounted but to twenty-two thoufand three hundred, which feems a very fmall Number in Proportion to the reft of the Tribes, when we confider that the Tribe of Judah num- bered feventy-four thoufand fix hundred -, and the reft one with another, each about forty thoufand, and none fo few as thirty thoufand. Whence it fhould feem as if thofe Idolaters who had been flain for worfhipping the golden Calf had been all of the Tribe of Levi, of whom three thoufand were flain in one Day, and ma- ny others died of the Plague, Exod. xxxii. 28. 35. And what confirms this Opinion, is that when Mofes called out, and afked, Who is on Jehovah's Side f No Perfons are faid to have come to him but of the Tribe of Levi, ver. 26. And then he fays to them, Put every Man his Sword by his Side; (for Aaron had made them na- ked to their Shame among their Enemies) and go in and out from Gate to Gate through the Camp, and fay every Man Hebrew Bible vindicated. 361 Man his Brother, and every Man his Companion, and e- very Man his Neighbour, i. e. that is not on Jehovah's Side. And when Mofes is blefling the Tribe of Levi be- fore his Death, and praifing them for their Behaviour in this Tran faction, he fays, Who /aid unto his Father, and to his Mother, I have not feen him, neither did he acknow- ledge his Brethren, nor knew his own Children, Deut. xxxiii. 9. Which Affair, not having happened above fix Months before this numbering, might occafion the Deficiency of Males in this Tribe. And to the (g) Eaft of the Tabernacle Mofes and Aaron and his Sons, were ordered to pitch their Tents, keeping the Charge of the Sanctuary. Then God ordered Mofes to number (h) all the Firft- born of the Males in the reft of the Tribes, and to re- deem them by taking the Levites inftead thereof as far as^they would go, and for the Remainder to take five Shekels apiece by the Poll. Now the Number (i) of the Firft-born among the reft of the Tribes was found to amount to twenty-two thoufand two hundred feventy- three 5 and the Number of Levites (k), as before men- tioned, amounted to twenty-two thoufand three hundred. But if we fuppofe three hundred of thefe to be firft-born Sons, and of Confequence to belong already to the Lord ; then there will remain but twenty- two thoufand [g) Numb. iii. 38. [b] lb', ver. 40. (/*) lb. ver. 43. .(/-) 7500+8606+6200=22300. Numb. iii. 22, 28, 34. A a a Levites. 3 6 a TAe Chronology of the Lcvites (I) to be taken in Redemption ; which being de- ducted from twenty-two thoufand two hundred feventy- three, the Number of the firft-born Males in the reft of the Tribes, there remained two hundred feventy-three (mj to be redeemed with' Money at the Price of five She- kels apiece, which amounted to the Sum of («) one thou- fand three hundred fixty-five Shekels. I t is certain, that this Number of three hundred firft-born Levites, which is here deducted, is exceediug fmall, in Comparifon of the whole twenty-two thoufand three hundred ; if we fuppofe every firft-born Child of every Woman to be included in this Number ; fince at this Rate every married Woman having probably one firft-born Son, there would then be but three hundred Families in the whole Tribe confifting of twenty-two tnoufand three hundred Males upward of one Month old. In like manner the Number of firft-born Males in the reft of the Tribes is alfo comparatively very fmall j for as the whole Number of the reft of the Tribes, who were upwards of twenty Years of Age, and were able to go forth to War, amounted to fix hundred three thou- fand five hundred and fifty ; if according to Mr. Temple- man's Calculations, (who reckons the Number of Per- fons m a Nation that are able to go to War to be but one fourth Part of the whole Nation,) we multiply this Number of fix hundred three thoufand five hundred and fifty by four, in order to bring the reft of the Tribes upon a Level with the Levites, who were reckoned from {I) Num. iii. 39. (w) lb. ver. 46. (») lb. ver. 50. one Hebrew Bible vindicated. 363 one Month old and upwards ; then the whole Amount of the Souls in the reft of the Tribes will be two Mil- lion four hundred fourteen thoufand two hundred, which being divided by twenty-two thoufand two hundred feventy-three, the Number of Firft-born, this will pro- duce a Quota of one hundred and eight, for the Number of Perfons in each Family confifting of a Man and his Wife and the Children born immediately from them ; which is not to be fuppofed to be a reafonable Al- lowance. But if we allow the Title of Firft-born to be- long only to that Perfon in a Family confifting of a Fa- ther, Grandfather, or Great Grandfather, if alive, who had a Right, during his Life-time, to be the Prieft of the whole Family, which feems to have been the Ufe and Intent of this Numbering, then thefe Calculations will not be fo unreafonable. Which likewife mews, that the Levites were not taken in lieu of the firft-born Son, but of every firft-born Son, who had a Right to the Priefthood. Then Jehovah ordered Mi tfesy to number thofe Le+ vites (0) over again who were from twenty -jive to fifty Years of Age, and to appoint them in a particular Man- ner to the Service of the Tabernacle -, and to afiign each of them their particular Province. Where it is to be ob- ferved, that in the third Verfe of this Chapter both in die Hebrew Bible and the Englijh Tran nation, Mofes is or- dered to number the Levites from thirty to fifty Years of Age j but in the eighth Chapter of Numbers, and twen- [0) Numb. iv. 1 — 49. A a a 2 ty-fourth « 64. The Chronology of the* ty-fourth Verfe it is faid, that from twenty and five 'Years, old the Levites (kail go in to wait upon the Service of the Tabernacle. Which, as it agrees with the Number of Vears afllgned to the Levites by the Septuaghit. Verfion in both thefe Places, is therefore probably the right one. . To Aaron and his Sons, was allotted the Charge (p) of taking down the Sanctuary, and its Veflels, and the put- ting them up j and delivering them covered up to the Kohat bites, who were to carry them. And therefore as thefe were looked upon as Things more holy than the reft, and were not very burthenfome, the Koathites had no Waggons (q) delivered to them out of the Offerings made by the Princes on the Day of the Dedication, but were appointed to bear them on their Shoulders. And Eleazar [r) the Son of Aaron was appointed to prefide over them. The Sons of Gerfion (s) were appointed, to take Care of the Tabernacle, and the Tent of the Congrega- tion, the Covering thereof, and the Hanging for the Door of the Tabernacle, and the Hangings of the Court and the Cords, and all the Inftruments for their Service : And Itkamar (t) the younger Son of Aaron was appoin- ted to prefide over them. And to them were given two Waggons {u) and four Oxen out of the Offerings made by the Princes at the Dedication of the ^Tabernacle to carry thefe Things in whenever they decamped, and moved from one Place to another. [p) lb. ver. 5 — 16. (q) Num. vii. 9. (r) lb. iii. 22. iv. 16. -j)T {$) lb. ver. 25, 26. lb. iv. 22—28. (/) lb. iv, 28, (y) lb. vii. 1 — 8. The Hebrew Bib^e vindicated. 365 The Sons of Merarai {x) had given to them in Charge the Boards of the Tabernacle, and the Bars there- of, and the Pillars thereof, and Sockets thereof, and the Pillars of the Court roundabout, and their Sockets, and Pins and Cords, and all the Instruments and VeiTels thereof. Which being the mod cumberfome, they had four Waggons (y)y and eight Oxen delivered to them out of the Offerings of the Princes on the Day of De- dication. And Ithamar (z) Karons younger Son was. appointed to prefide over thefe alfo. MOSES '(a) therefore having numbered them ac- cordingly found thofe of the Family of Kokath, who were from twenty-jive to fifty Years of Age to amount to two thoufand (even, hundred and fifty ; thofe of the Family of Gerfion to amount to two thoufand fix hun- dred and thirty j and thofe of the Family of Merarai to three thoufand two hundred. The Sum total of which amounted to eight thoufand five hundred and . eighty. . Now during all thefe Tranfa&ions fince the compleat creeling of the Tabernacle j the Cloud covered it by Day and a Pillar of Fire by Night. And Jehovah (b) gave this as a Signal to Mofes when the Ifraelites were to reft, and when they were to journey^ that whether it were one Day, ,of two Days, or a Month, or a Year, that the Cloud . (x) lb. iii.33— 37. lb. iv. 29—33. \y) lb. vii. 8. im. iv. 33.* (0)%. ver. 34—48, ')- lb, i*. 15—23. tarried 366 The Chronology of the tarried upon the Tabernacle, the Children of Ifrael (liould abide in their Tents, and journey not, but when it was taken up they mould journey. A little before the Receiving of which Inflruc- tions, I fuppofe it was that Hobab, the Son of Raguel the Mid'umite Mofes's Father-in-law, came to pay him a Viiit in the Camp; and Mofes faid unto Hcbab, We are journeying, or as the Arabick Verfion has it, We are a- bout to journey unto the Place of which Jehovah faid, I will give it you ; come thou with us, and we will do thee Good ; for Jehovah hath fpoken Good concerning Ifrael. And he faid unto him, I will not go ; but I will depart to mine own Land, and to my Kindred. And Mofes faid, Leave us not I pray thee, forafmuch as thou knoweft how we are to encamp in the Wildernefs, and •thou mayeft be to us i?ijlead of Eyes, Numb. x. 2, 9. 'Whence it is plain, that God had not at that Time in- formed Mofes of the Method he intended to take in conducting him through the Wildernefs : Since there would then have been no need for Mofs to have defired Hcbab to go along with them as a Guide through the Wildernefs. But Mofes being unwilling to break in up- on the Thread of his Narration, deferred the Mention of this private Traniaction to the latter End of the next Chapter ; as he had done before in the Cafe of Keturah, Gen. xxv. j. And though Hobab at iirfl feems to have refufed to go along with Mofs, yet it is more than probable, that he changed his Mind afterwards 5 becaufe we find mention made of his Family having obtained a He3rew Bible vindicated. 367 a Settlement along with the Tribe of Judah, on the firft Conqueft of the Land of Canaan, Judg. i. 1 6. iv. ii, 17. ) Jehovah fpake unto Mofes faying (c\ Make thee tw .umpets of Silver j that thou mayeir. ufe them for calling the Affemblies and Journeyings of the Camps. And when you make ufe of both of them, then mall all the ; :lmbly or Congregation of the People afTemble themielves to the?, at the Door of the Tabernacle of the Congregation j butifycu blow but with one Trumpet only, then the Princes which are the Heads of the Thou- fands of Ifrael mail gather themfelves unto thee, Where it is to be obferved, that here are two Sorts of Congregations mentioned : One of the Princes only, but the ether of the Princes and the People. And when you go out to War j or when the Camps are to move then you mall blow an Alarm with both the Trumpets. And upon the blowing of the firft Alarm, thofe Tribes of Judah, Iffachar, and Zebulun, which lie on the Eaffc Parts mail go forward, and the Sons of Gerfion and Merarai fhall follow bearing the Tabernacle ; and when you blow an Alarm the fecond Time then the Tribes of Reuben , Simeon, and Gad, which lie on the South-fide, fhall take their journey j And the Koathites fhall follow bearing the Sanctuary, that the Sons of Gerfkom and'Mr- rarai may have the Tabernacle erected againfl they come, in which the Sanffuary, or the Ark and the Vef- (c Num. x. 1, &c. fib 368 The Chronology of the fels of the SancJuary, were to be placed, Numb. iv. 4— 15 j x. 2r. And when you blow the third Alarm then (hall the Tribes of Ephraim, Manaffeh, and Benjamin, which lie on the Weft-fide, fet forward. And when you blow the fourth Alarm then mall the Tribes of Dan, Afler, and Naphthali, which lie on -the North- lids, fet forward. And in the Day of your Gladnefs, and in your folemn Days, and in the Beginnings of your Months, ye fhall blow with both the Trumpets over your Burnt-offerings, and over your Peace-offerings, 2d Year, A n d it came to pafs on the twentieth Day of the fe- 2oth D conc* Month, in the fecond Year (e), that the Cloud was taken up from off the Tabernacle. And the Children of Ijrael took their Journies out of the Wildernefs of Sinai-, and departed from the Mount of 'Jehovah three Days Journey : And the Cloud which ufually refted on the Ark of the Covenant of Jehovah, went before them in the three Days Journey ; to fear ch out a refling Place for them. * MO S E S indeed fays, that the Ark of the Covenant of Jehovah went before them; but it is plain from Dcut, i. 33. that it was the Cloud of the Ark of the Covenant, or the Cloud which during their Encampments refted on the Ark, and not the Ark itfelf that went before them.: For the Ark was carried by the Kohathites in the very Middle of the Camp, Numb. ii. \y ; iv. £ — 15 j x. 21. AND the Cloud (f) refed in the Wilder 7iefs oj Varan, which Wildernefs of Paran is the fame with that which ;V) Num. x. j 1, 33. Dcut. i. 31, 33. (/) Num. x. 12^ Hebrew Bible vindicated. 3 69 which, was before called the Wildernefs of Zin ; as ma- tiifeftly appears from the Account which Mofcs gives of the Return of the Spies, who were fent to fearch out the Land of Canaan ; for, fays he, they went and came to Mofes and Aaron, and to all the Congregation of the Children of Ifrael, unto the Wildernefs of Paran, to Ka- defo (g). Whereas Kadefj is frequently declared to be fituated in the Wildernefs of Zin (h) ; but this Wilder- nefs is here called the Wildernefs of Paran, becaufe the Town of Paran was fituated on the Borders of it, and becaufe this Town lay on that Part of it, which was next to Mount Sinai, therefore Mofcs, when he fpeaks of this Wildernefs after his leaving Mount Sinai in his Way to the Land of Canaan, frequently mentions it by the Name of the Wildernefs oi : Paran (/). Dr. Shaw cbferves, that in travelling from Mount Sinai to Cor on del by the Midland Road you enter into the Wildernefs of Paran, as it is now called, about the Half-way betwixt Sinai and Corondel : In one Part of which about ten Leagues to the Northward of for, there are feveral Paiins parti- cularly of a Greek Convent called the Convent oi Paran. But Ptolemy places the Situation of the Town of Paran m the Longitude of fixty-five Degrees, and in the latitude of twenty-eight, thirty; that is, about one Desree Weft- ward and three Degrees Southward of Jemfalem. And new the Ifraelites having marched three Days and three Nights without pitching their Tents, many of ( g) Num. xiii. 26. [V) See lb. xx. i, 2. xxvii. 14. Deut. xxxii, .15. (/) See Num. x. 12; xii. 16; xiii: 26. B b b then* j 7 o 77je Chronology of tie them began to be tired and complain againft Mofes, And Jehovah (i) heard it, and his Anger was kindled, and cmfumed thoje that were (k) lagging or loitering in tie utter -mo ft Parts of the Can;/'. And he called the Name cf the place Taberah ; which iignifies Burning; becaufe the Fire of "Jehovah burnt among them. It is probable, that this Encampment might have been at El-paran (/), or the Plain of Par an, which is by the JVildernefs, and that Mofes had not Room to form an Encampment before on account of the Hills and the Inequality of the Ground between this Place and the Wildernefs of Mount Sinai, And the People cried unto Mofes ; and when Mofes pray- ed unto Jehovah, the burning Wind funk (ni) away, and he called the Name of the. Place Taberah, which fig- - niries Bur ni fig. And from Taberah they journeyed to Kibroth-Hattaa- vah before where they were long refted, the Ifraelitesy be- ing excited thereto by the (n) mixed Multitude of Strangers . and Egyptians that were among them, fell a lufling, and . faid (p) who mall give us Flefh to eat ? We remember the Fifh that we did eat in Egypt freely 5 the Cucum- bers, and the Melons, and the Leeks, and the Onionsa and the Garlicks. And Mofes heard the People complain every, Man in the Door of his Tent. And Mofes faid unto Jehovah , I am not able to bear all this People alone;, „ (/) Num. xi. 1. {k) So the Syriack Verfion renders it. (/) Gen. xiv. 6. {m) For fo the original Word fignifies. (n) Num. xi. 4. Sec alfo Excd. xii. 38. and Lev. xxiv. 10. {0) See Pfalm Ixxviii. 18 — 29, becaua Hebrew Bible vindicated. 371 becaufe it is too heavy for me. And Jehovah faid, Gather unto me feventy Men of the Elders of Ifrael whom thou knoweji to be Elders of the People, and Officers over them ; bring them up to the Tabernacle of the Congrega- tion, that they may ftand there with thee. And I will come down and talk wTith thee there ; and 1 will take of the Spirit which is upon thee, and I will put it upon them ; and they mall bear the Complaints and Burthen of the People as well as you, that thou bear it not thy felf alone. And I will give you Meat to fuffice not only for one Day, or two Days, or live Days, or ten Days, or twenty Days ; but even for a whole Month. Where it is to be obferved, that in Exod. xxxiv. 29. when Mofes came down from Mount Sinai it is faid, that the Skin Of his Face mone, and therefore that the People were afraid to come nigh him : Wherefore Mofes put a Vail on his Face, till he had done fpeaking with them, But when Mofes went in before Jehovah to fpeak with •vhim, he took the Vail off, until he came out. And when he came out and fpake unto the Children of Ifrael that which he was commanded; the Children of Ifrael faw the Face of Mofes, that the Skin of Mofes Face mone; and Mofes put the Vail upon his Face until he went in to fpeak with God. This Spirit therefore which God declares he will take fome of from Mofes and impart to the feventy Elders, was probably a Portion of that lucid •flaming Appearance which mone upon the Face of Mofis, which God communicated in fome Degree to the feventy ."•Elders, that, as it is afterwards faid of Jof.ua (o), all the (e) Num. xxvii. 20. B b b 2 C), they fang prophetick Hymns, and praifed the Lord* But there remained two of thofe, who were written down or fummoned by Mofes> in the Camp ; and came not to the Tabernacle becau.-i they were unclean or had touched fome unclean Thing (q), which difqualined them from approaching the Tabernacle ; and the Spirit refted upon them and they prophefied in the Camp. It appears that Mofes had according to the Advice of jfethro fome Time ago (r) appointed Rulers of Thou- fands, and Rulers cf Hundreds, and Rulers of Fifties,, and* Rulers of Tens, who were to judge in fmall Mat- ters j but the determination of great Matters Mofes refer- ved to himfelf. Whereas God now erects feventy Elders into a (s) Shanedrim, or the fupreme Council of the Nation, without whofe Advice Mofes was to do nothing which regarded the Publick; and therefore, whenever (p) See I Sam. x. 5, 10. 2 Kings iii. 15 — 20. (q) See Num. ix. 6. 1 Sam. xx. 26. Jer. xxxvi. 5. Lev. xi. 24 — 43. Num. xxxi. 19 — 24. (>•) Exod. xviii. 1 — 26. (s) See Remarks on ExoaY xv iii. 1.7* an£ Hebrew B i b le vindicated. 373 any Thing was done that difpleafed the People, thefe El- ders were to bear tbe Burthen, or Blame of it, as well as Mofes. It is probable therefore, that as thefe feventy El- ders were to be fuch as Mofes knew to be Elders cf the People, and Officers over them, that they were by Birth Men of the highefl Station, and Rank among the Ifrae- lites. And as we find, that there were twelve Heads of Tribes nominated, who were to be the (/) Captains of each Tribe, or Princes of Ifrael, as they are ftiled Numb.. vii. 1? — 78. And, upon the next Numbering of the Peo- ple after this, we find, that the Heads of the Families in each Tribe, who were next in Rank to thefe twelve fii- preme Heads amounted exactly to the Number Fifty- eight (u). It is therefore probable, that this Council was compofed of thefe twelve fupreme Heads of Tribes and thefe Fifty-eight fecondary Heads of Familysj which make up the exact Number of Seventy.. Which. Aflembly was appointed to be fummoned by Sounding only one Trumpet to call together the Princes Pleads of the Thoufands of Ifrael. Numb. x. 4. And of Confe- quence we find, that they were afterwards frequently confulted, whenever Matters of Moment to the Publick either Military or Civil did arife : And are diftinguifhed by the Title of the Princes of the Congregation-, as when the Tribes of Reuben and Gad defired to have their Por- tion afligned them on the other Side of Jordan. Fo£ [ (t) Num. ii. 3 — 25 ; x. 14 — 28. («) Reuben, 4. Simeon, 5. Gad, 7. Judah, 5. IiTachar, 4,. Zabulon, 3. MenafTeh, 8. Ephraim, 4. Benjamin, 8. Dan, i> Afher, 5. Naphtali, 4. Sum Total, 58. Num. xxvi. 5 — 50. they 574 ?%e Chronology of the they came to Mofes and to Elcazar the Prieft, and uitto the Princes of the Congregation, faying, &c. Numb, xxxii. 2. And when the Ifraelites made peace with the, Gibeonites it is obferved, that the Princes of the Congre- gation fvvare to them. Jofi.ix. 15. And in the Deter- mination of a Difpute about the Right of Inheritance, the Daughters of Zelophehad came near before Eleazar the Prieft, and before Jofhua the Son of Nun, and before the Princes faying, &c. Jofi. xvii. 4. See alfo Numb. xxvii. 2, 31, 26. xxxvi. 1. (u) And there went forth a Wind from Jehovah, and brought Quails from the Sea, that is from Egypt over the Red-Sea, and let them fall by the Camp, as it were a Days Journey on this Side, and as it were a Days Jour- ney on the other Side, round about the Camp; and they lay as it were two Cubits, or a Yard high, in fome Pla- ces on the Face of the Earth, And the People flood up all that Day, and all that Night, and all the next Day, and they gathered the Quails : he that gathered the leaft gathered ten Chomers ; and they fpread them all abroad for themfelves round about the Camp. Now it appears, •that this Tranfa&ion happened towards the latter End of April, it being on the twenty-third Day of the fecond Month which anfwers to our April that the Ifraelites en- xamped in the Wildernefs ofParan ; and it was about the fame Time in the preceeding Year that God relieved the Ifraelites in the fame Manner, by fending Quails to them, when they were in the Wildernefs of Sin, where they (•*•) Num. xi. 31. .had Hebrew Bible' vindicated* 375 had arrived on the fifteenth Day of the feeond Month, Excd. xvi. j, 13. So that this Miracle confided not only n directing the Quails to fall about the Camp of the If- raelites, as they did the foregoing Year j but alfo in the vaft Number of them that fell in that cne Spot ; fince each Perfon gathered enough to fatisfy him and his Fa- mily for a Month. He therefore that gathered the leaft gathered ten Chomers, which Meafure is in our Tranfla- tion fpelt Homer, i. e. the fame Way with the Meafure. mentioned, Exod. xvi. 16. whereas this mould be fpelt a Chomer or Chor : and was one hundred Times as large as the Homer. For a Bath, or an Ephah, was the tenth Part of a Chomer, "sjyr\ Ezek. xlv. 1 1, 14, . And an Homer *ioy was only the tenth Part of an£~- fhah, or Bath, Exod. xvi. 36. To prefer ve which Food from Putrefaction after they had killed them they fpread them abroad in the Sun a- - bout the Camp. But it feems to me more than probable, notwithftanding that Jofephus, and all the Verfions agree in calling thefe Creatures Quails, which the Hebrew calls Salav ; that they were rather a Species of Locufts, than of Quails. Mr. Ludolf in his Ethiopick Hiftory, Li.c. 3. takes a great deal of Pains to (hew, that Mofes did not here mean Quails, but Locufts ; becaufe it was a Wind that brought over thefe Animals j that they were gathered in Chomers ; and were fpread abroad a- bbut the Camp to be dried : All which Expreffions a°ree better with Locufts than Quails. Certain it is, that all Travellers both ancient and modern allow that Locufts ara 376 "The Chronology of the are frequently eaten in the Eaft ; and that they pafs from one Country to another in inumerable Quantities. It is alfo certain, that feveral Kinds of Locufts are allowed by Moj'es to be eaten, Lev. xi. 22. though he there calls none of them by the Name of Salav. But what princi- pally weighs with me to think this Salav was a Species of Locufts is the Sentiments of the Author of the Book Wifdom (a-) ; who fpeaking of this TranfacYion fays, that God dealing gracioufly with his own People prepared Meat for them of a flrange Tafte, even 'Oojvyoprrjox, which is the Word by which the Septuagint renders the Salav of Mo]es% to ftir up their Appetite : to the end that they defiring Food, might for the ugly Sight of the Beafts lent among them, loath even that whicli they muft needs deiire. Which defcription does by no Means a- gree with Quails, though it is thus rendered in our Eng- HJJj Tranflation j but agrees very well with the ugly Af- pearance of a LocufL AND (j) while the FleJJj was yet between their Teeth , 'ere it was chewed^ the Ifraelites having again murmured for Want of Variety of Food -y the Wrath of Jehovah was kindled againft them, and Jehovah fmote the People with a very great Plague. And he called the Name of that Place, Kibroth-TIattsiavah ; or the Graves cf Litft, be- caufe they buried the People there that Luffed, after the Food, which they had left behind in Ley ft. I fuppofe thefe Places of Tuber ah and Kibrcth-Llctlaavoh, to be two different Stations 3 becaufe they had different Names ;\) Vv rifJom xvi 2. y ) Num. xl 23. given Hebrew Bible vindicated. 37 7 given them, which would hardly agree to one and the fame Station. Though the Story is told in the Book of Numbers, xi. 3, 34. without taking Notice of this Cir- cumstance. But in the Book of Deut. ix. 22, I'aberah and Kibroth-Hattaavah are mentioned as two different Stations. And the People journeyed from Kibroth-Hattaavah unto Hazeroth, and abode fome Time at Hazercth. And Miriam the Sifter of Aaron having had a Quarrel with Zipporab the Wife of Mcfes, who was a Cujkite (z) Woman, fpake againft Mofes, and faid, Hath Jehovah indeed fpoken only by Mofes f Hath he not fpoken alfo by Aaron my Brother ? And Jehovah heard it. Where it is to be remarked, that Mofes did not make the Com- plaint to God ; but God is faid to have heard it of him- felf : And therefore probably JofJ.ua when he revifed thefe Works of Mofes, added in the following Obfervation, Now the Man Mofes was very meek, above all the Men which were upon the Face of the Earth, Numb. xii. 3. And Jehovah fpake fuddenly unto Mofes, and unto Aaron, and unto Miriam, Come out vou three unto the Taber- nacle of the Congregation. And they three came out. And Jehovah faid, If there be a Prophet among you, I Jehovah will make myfelf known unto" him in a Vifion, and will fpeak unto him in a Dream : But my Servant Mofes is not fo, with him have I fpoke Mouth to Mouth, (z) In our Translation it is rendered an Ethiopian, but the Original is CuJJjtte, and it is plain (he was born at Midi&n in Arabia, and not in Ethiopia. * C c c and * j8 I7je Chronology of the and the Similitude cf Jehovah hath he beheld. Where- fore then were ye not afraid to fpeak againft my Servant Mofcs. In cur Tranflation this Pafllige is rendered, And the Similitude cf the Lord fall he behold. But the Force of this Argument requires it to be be tranflated thus : And the Similitude of Jehovah hath he beheld; wherefore then were ye not afraid to fpeak againft my Servant Mo- fes. For it would be no Crimination of the People ©f Ifrael not to pay an extraordinary Degree of Refpect or Obedience, to a Perfon whom God had only defigned in Time to come to Honour. But the Crime was, that fince God had already diftinguifhed him with this ex- traordinary Mark of his Favour, yet that the People were not afraid to fpeak againft him j and accordingly the Septuagint and Syriack Verfions of the Bible render this PaiTage, And the Glory of Jehovah he hath feen, as the O- riginal properly fignifies. But the Queflion is, What this Similitude is which Mofs faw, that other Prophets did not, and were not to fee. The original Word which we tranilate Similitude, is TOftD which in this Paffage,. and in Pfal. xvii. 15. is tranflated in the Septuagint Ver- fion by the Word Aofa, Glory. In the fourth Chapter of Job, and fixteenth Verfe it is made ufe of to denote the Image, or Appearance of a Spirit, which came to him in a vifible Form ; and in the twentieth Chapter of Exodus and the fourth Verfe this fame Word is made ufe of to exprefs that Likenefs, which the Ifraelites were pro- hibited from making of any Thing in Heaven above, or in the Earth beneath. And therefore in the fourthChapter of Deuteronomy , when the Prophet is enforcing this Com- mandment, Hebrew Bible vindkalecl, 379 mandment, he fays (b), And 'Jehovah fpake unto you out of the Midft of the Fire; ye heard the Voice of the Words, but faw no roiDD Similitude, only ye heard a Voice. Take ye good heed unto yourfelves, (for ye faw no Manner of Similitude on the Day the Lord fpake unto you in Horeb out of the Midft of the Fire) left: ve corrupt yourfelves, and make a graven Image. Now then if there was no Similitude feen at the Gi- ving of the Law, where and v/hen was it, that Mofes faw this Similitude of Jehovah f In anfwer to which it may be obferved, that there are two Times fpecified when Mofes faw the Similitude, or Appearance of a Perfon, un- der the Character, and as the Reprefentative of Jehovah, The one Time when Mofes, and Aaron, and Nadab, and -Abihu (c), and Seventy of the Elders of Ifrael were or- dered to come up a Part of Mount Sinai by themfelves; For when they went up, it is faid, They faw the God of Ifrael; and there was under his Feet as it were a paved Work of a Sapphire-ftone, and as it were the Body of Heaven in his Clearnefs. And upon the Nobles of Ifrael he laid not his Hand, /'. e. to deftroy them 5 Alfo they faw God, and did eat and drink, /'. e. and lived after- wards to eat and drink. For they apprehended that no one could fee God, and live. But it is plain, that this could not be the Time alluded to in the Verfe before us j becaufe Aaron, and Nadab, and Abihu, and Seventy of the Elders of Ifrael faw the God of Ifrael at that Time as well as Mofes t {b) Deut. iv. 12, 15. (c) Exod, xw. 9—; — H. C c c 2 The ?8o 7?je Chronology of the o The other (dj Time was, when Mofes was ordered to "o and brine: up the People out of the Wildernefs, and lead them towards the Land of Canaan j though God had declared that he himfelf would not go up in the Midft of them, becaufe they were a ftiff-necked People. Upon which Mofes applied himfelf to Jehovah, and laid, See thou fayeft unto me, Bring up this People j and thou haft not let me know whom thou wilt fend with me. Now therefore I pray thee, if I have found Grace in thy Sight fhew me thy Way, that I may know thee. And he faid my Prefehce mail go with thee. And he faid un- to him, If thy Prefence go not with us, carry us not up hence. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, I will do this Thing alfo that thou baft fpoken. And Mofes faid, I befeech thee fhew me thy Glory. And he faid, I will make all my Goodnefs pafs before thee,, and I will pro- claim the Name of Jehovah- before thee -3 and he faid. Thou canft not fee my Face and live ; for there mail no Man fee my Face and live. But behold there is a Place by me, and thou malt ftand upon a Rock j and it (hall come to pafs, while my Glory pafleth by, that I will put thee in a Clift of the Rock ; and will cover thee with my Hand while I pafs by ; and I will take away mine Hand, and thou fhalt fee what followeth me $ but my Face mall not be feen . And [/) the next Day when Mofes returned again to Mount Sinai, Jehovah defcended in the Cloud, and flood (d) Exod, xxxiii, r, 3, 12. &c. (e) Exod, xxxiv. I— with Hebrew Bible vindicated. 381 with Kim there, and proclaimed the Name -of Jehovah. And Jehovah pafTed by before him, and proclaimed Je- havahs Jehovah God, merciful and gracious, long-fuffe- ring, and abundant in Goodnefs and Truth. And Mofes made hafle, and bowed his Head toward the Earth, and worfhipped, and faid, If now I have found Grace in thy* Sight, O Jehovah, let my Lord, I pray thee go amongffc us (for it is a ftiff-necked People) and pardon our Ini- quity, and our Sin, and take us for thine Inheritance. It muft therefore be this fecond Jehovah which followed the firft Jehovah, and which the Apoftle to the Hebrews calls (f), the Brightnefs of his Glory, and the exprefs Image of his Perfon, that was the Similitude of Jeho- vah, which God refers to, as a Proof of the fuperior Favour that Mofes was in, with regard to any other of the Prophets, or even with Regard to Aaron. And the Anger of Jehovah was kindled ; and behold Miriam became leprous white as Snow > and Aaron faid unto Mofes, Alas! my Lord, I befeech thee lay not the Sin upon her, wherein me hath done foolifhly, and wherein ihe hath finned. Let her not be as one dead. And Mofes cried unto Jehovah faying, Heal her now, O God, I befeech thee. And Jehovah faid, Let her be fhut out from the Camp feven Days, and after that let her be received in again. And Miriam was fhut out from the Camp feven Days j and the People journeyed not, till Miriam was brought in again, (/) Heb, i. 3. Where 382 77:e Ghronologv of the Where it is to be obferved, that although this Story is told in the plural Number, as if both Aaron and Mi- riam had been guilty j yet that the Fault was only Mi- riam's, me only having been punifhcd for it. And the Mention which is made of the Wife of Mojcs in the Be- ginning (hews the whole Difpute to have arifen from fomc Quarrel between Miriam and Zipporah, (g) AND afterward the People removed from Haze* roth, and pitched in Rithmah, in the Wildernefs of Par an. Now as it was from this Station in the Wildernefs of Pa- ran, when they removed from Hazeroth, that the Spies were fent out to view the Land of Canaan, Numb. xiii. 1. it is manifeft, that this Station was alio known by the Name of Kadefj, and KadcJJj-Barnea -y becaufe the Spies are faid Nitmk. xxxii. 8. Deut. ii- 19. fof. xiv. 7. to have been fent out from Kadefi-Bamea to fearch the Land of Canaan. And when they returned, it is faid, Numb, xiii. 26. that they came to Mofes and Aaron, and to all the Congregation of the Children of Jfrael, unto the Wildernefs of Paran, to Kadejlo. So that this Station, which is called Rithmah in Numbers xxxiii. 18. is plainly the fame with KadrJJj, or Kadefh-Barnea, in the Wilder- nefs of Paran, or Zin : Not that we are to fuppofe, that the Jfraelites made no more Encampments between Ho* reb and Kadtfi than thofe already mentioned ; for fays Mofes (h), it is eleven Days Journey from Horeb to Ka- dejh in the Way to Mount Seir (/) : But thofe particular (g) Num.xii. 16 ; xxxiii. 18. [h) Dent. i. 2, (i) So this Verfe ought to be tranflated, and not by theJVay of MamtScir as in ourVcrfion. Stations Hebrew Bible vindicated. 383 Stations are mentioned becaufe they were remarkable for the Events which happened there. For they were three Days in arriving at Taberah in Parant which was their firft Stage, then they removed to Kibrcth-Hattaavah j where on Account of gathering and drying their Locufts, they muft have ftaid feveral Days -, and from thence they removed to Hazeroth, where they muft have {laid up* wards of feven Days at leaft upon Miriam's Account : fo that eleven Days and more were fpent before they left Hazercth. It is likewife to be obferved, that they left Mount Sinai on the twentieth Day of the fecond Month, . which anfwers to our April; and they did not arrive at Kade/h, till about the Time of the jirft ripe Grapes, Numb. xiii. 20 5 which could not well be, even in that Country, till fome Time in the Months of July or .Auguji, As to the Word Rithmah, or Rethmah, or Rethemah, for the Hebrew Word may be read any of thofe Ways, I take it to fignify no more than the Defert, or Wildernefs y the Word Rethem (k), according to Cajlellus fignifying Locus defolatorius, Defertum : And for this Reafon I iup- pofe that Station which in Numbers xxxiii. 18, 19. is (<£) A Defert may be called Rethem in Hebrew, as fome uncultivated . Places in England have obtained the Name of Heaths ; from a Plant. of that Name which thrives beft in fuch Grounds. For the Word Re- them kerns properly to be the Name of a particular Plant, which thrives in fandy defert Grounds. See i Kings xix. 4, 5 ; where Elijah is re- prefented as fleeping under a Rethem, which we tranflate a Juniper Tree in the Wildernefs ; and Job xxx. 3, 4. where the Rethem, or as we tranflate it, the Juniper-Tree, is reprefented as producing Food in the Wildernefs. called 3 8 4 He CmoNOLOCY of the called Rithmah, is the fame Place with Kade(h% which Is often fpecified by Mofes as being in the Wildernefs. And which is a Station of too great Significancy to have been omitted by Molls in his Recapitulation of their Journey- ings, Numb, xxxiii. As to the Name of Kadejh, this Part of the Wildernefs was formerly called En Mifipat, Gen. xiv. 6. which fignifies the Fountain of Judgment, and thence poflibly might be called by the Ifraelites Kadejl\ which in the Hebrew Tongue fignifies the Holy ; it was from the Ifraelites alfo that this Station obtained the Name of Kadefi-Barnea, which is the fame as to lav, Kadefh the Sen of Wandering, for fo the Hebrew Word Bar-nea literally fignifies, becaufe it was at this Place that the forty Years Wandering was denounced againft them by God, Numb. xiv. 3 3 . And to- this Place they returned thirty-eight Years after their firft Departure from it, Numb, xxxiii. 36, 37. A s to the particular Situation of this Place, I am forry that I cannot pofitively determine it. But I think it here neceffary to take notice, that this Station of KadeJJj to which Mofes now brought the Ifraelites, is not that Ka- drjh near which Abraham lived for fome Time in the Land of the Philiflines, Gen. xvi. 14; xx. 1 ; but ano- ther Town of the fame Name, for God declared to Mo- fes that he would not lead the Ifraelites through the Land of the Philiftims, although that was near, Exod. xiii. iy. And for this Reafon it probably was, that this Kadefi is rierally diftinguifhed by the Name of Kadejb-Barnea, or Kadejh in the Wildernefs of Z///, or in the Wildernefs of Hebrew Bible vindicated, 385 of Par 'an. It is plain from all the Circumftances in the Hiftory of Mofes, that it was not far from Mount Hor ; Since it was from this Station that the Ifraelite Spies were fent to view the Land of Canaan, and Mofes before he fent the Spies faid unto the Ifraelites, (I) Te are come un- to the Mountain of the Amorites. Which Mountain of the Amorites is undoubtedly the fame Mountain with Mount Hor, or Mount 'Serf. That it is the fame with Mount Seir is plain from hence ; becaufe upon the Re- turn of the Spies, when they had difcou;aged the Ifrae- lites fo much by the Report they gave of the Strength arid Number of the Canaanites, that they being frightned, were for returning again to Egypt, and faid, (m) Let us make a Captain, and return into Egypt : Jehovah being wrathfully difpleafed at them declared, that they fhould for a Punifhment waiider in the Wildernefs forty Tears, So that not one of ' thefe Men of this evil Generation Jhatt fie this good Land-, Deut. i. 35. By which Threatnings they were fo much rouzed from their Fear, that they refolved mftantly to go, and take Poffemon of the Land of Ca- naan by force 5 And fays Mofes (»), they rofe uy early in the Morning and gat them up into the Top of the Mountain, faying, Lo -we be here, and will go up into the Ploce which the Lord hath promifed. But as the Lord had declared that they fhould wander, and periiTi in the Wildernefs ; Mojes informed them that this their Attempt fiould not profper. Ncverthelefs, fays Mofes, they prefumed to go up unto the Hill Top j and the Amorites which dwelt in that (I) Deut. i. 20. (w) Num. xiv. 4. (») lb. xlv. 40. Deut, t 43- Odd Mountain* J 386 The Chronology of the Mountain, came cut againft them and chafed them as Bees, and dcflroyed them in Seir, even unto Hormah (0). Whence it is manifeft, that this Mountain of the Amo- rites to which the Jjraclites were come when they fent out the Spies, and where they remained till they return- ed, was called Mount Seir. But we ought to take care not to confound this Mount Seir with another Mountain of the fame Name in the Land of Mcab, where Efau the Brother of Jacob dwelt, on the Eaft-fide of the River Jordan almoft over againft Jericho. For RauwolJ in his Travels fays (/>), that beyond the River Jordan which feparateth Arabia from Judea lie the high Hills Abarim and NcbOy over againft Jericho, whence Mofes had a full Profpecl of the Land of Canaan, promifed to Abraham and Jacob ; one may fee them thence ('that is, from Je*- richo) fo plainly, as alfo Mount Seir which toucheth them beyond the Dead Sea, in the Land of the Moabites, and Ammonites, that one would almoft think they were very near. Which Mountain was fo called probably on Ac- count of Efau's Hairinefs (qj, the Word Seir in Hebrew Signifying Hair, or Hairy. But the Children of Efau when they encreafed in Number, to one of which the Name of (rj Seir was given, having warred againft the Inhabitants of this other Mountain Seir, which was at that Time called Mount Hor, and its Inhabitants Horites or Horims, and prevailed againft them (s) ; the Children of Efau fucceeded them when they had defircyed them, and dwelt in their Stead. Whence it came to pafs^ that this (0) Deut. i. 44. (P) Rauw. Trav. p. 234. (q) Gen. xxvii3 11, 16, 23. (r) Gen. xxxvi. 20. (s) Deut. ii. 8, 12. Mountain Hebrew Bible vindicated. 387 Mountain was afterwards frequently called Mount Seir, as well as Mount Hor, and that Son oi-Efau who con- quered it, was for Diftinction fake called (t) Seir the Horite. For that this was the fame Mountain with Mount Hor is plain from hence ; that fome Years after this, when the forty Years wandering in the Wildernefs" •Was near expired, and the Children of Ifrael were again returned to this fame Station of Kadefi at the Foot of the Mountain of the Amorites, and were moving towards the Land of Canaan, then fays Mofes (u), The Children of If~ rael, even the wbok Congregation, journeyed from Kadejh, and came unto Mount Hor. And when King Arad (x) the Canaanite which dwelt in the South (i. e. of the Land of Canaan,) heard tell that Ifrael came by the Way of the Spies, or the Way which the Spies had gone formerly, then he fought againjl Ifrael, and took fome of them Pri- Jbners-, and he called the Name of the Place Hor m ah. Whence it is manifeft, that the Spies had before gone ■over Mount Hor ; and that the Israelites were aeain dri- ven back to the fame Place on Mount Hor, which they had been driven to, formerly when they afcended (x) Mount Seir, that is even unto Hormah. Whence it is alfo manifeft, that Kadejh lay fome- where not far from the Foot of Mount Seir, or Mount Hor, and that this Mountain was between the Ifraclites and the Land of Canaan. Which plainly proves that Dr. Straw's AfTertion in his Supplement, p. 106. cannot be (/) Gen. xxxvi. 20, («) Num. xx. 22. (x) lb. xxi. 1, 3. (y) Deut. i. 44. Ddd 2 true, 3^8 The Chronology of the true, viz. that Kadejh was ft ua ted upon the mojl advan- ced Part of Mcunt Seir, towards the Land of Canaan,. and that it was their mcjl Northern Station, before they, turned off to the North Eaft, towards the Land of Moab. Whereas it was in Reality the mo ft Southern Station*, they had, after they had fent of their Spies. For other- wife when the Spies had returned ; and they on their Repentance were refolved to go and take PorXbmon of the Land of Canaan, what need was there for them to go back, and attack the Amorites on Mount Hor, if the. Israelites had been between them and the Land of Cana- an? See. Numb. xiv. 40. Dent. i.41. See alfo Ezek. xlvii. 19. xlviii. 28. Or indeed if KadcJJj had been filia- ted upon the molt advanced Part of Mount Seir, towards the Land of Canaan, as Dr. Shaw aiTerts, what need would there have been for Mofes to have fent Meffengers from Kadejh to the King of Edom, Numb. xx. 14. to de- fire his Leave to pafs through bis Country, in their Way to the Promifed Land? Whereas if Kadejh be fuppofed to lie in the uttermojl of ths Border of Edom Southward, then fuch a. Requeft will feem reafonable. It is like wife further to be obferved, that Kadejh is reprefented Numb. xxxiii. 35 — 37. as lying between Eziongeber and Mount Hor ; and therefore according to Dr. Shaw's own Ac- count of the Situation of Eziongeber, KadeJJj muft lie to. the South of Mount Hor. Dr. Pocock fays (z), that this Station of Kadefi is fuppofed to be eight hours North, or North North Weft of Mount Sinai, which may be com- puted to be about twenty Miles, And in another Place (z) Pocock Trav, p. 157. he. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 389 ne fays (*), that he was credibly informed that it was a- bout fixteen Miles from the Convent (on Mount Sinai) to the North Weft. I cannot however but obferve that (b) Dr. Pocock, in his Journey from Sinai to Suez, was near three Days in getting from Mount Sinai to the Fooc of Mount Hor ; for he left Sinai on his Road to Kadcfi April the twenty-third, cut travelled only two Hours that Day, and he did not arrive at the Foot of Mount Hor or JebelTe, as this Mountain, or rather this Chain of Moun- tains, is now called, till April the twenty-fixth, though he mentions no Stops that he met in the Way. So that I apprehend KadeJJj to be further diftant from Mount Sinai than thefe Accounts of Dr. Pocock's fuppofe it to be ; efpecially if we confider, that the Ifraelites made' (c) eleven Days Journey to it, and two Miles a-day is rather too little for a Day's Journey, though certain it is that they could not move far, with fuch an Incum- brance of Women, and Children, and Cattle, In the Book of Jojhua this Station of Kadejb is men- tioned as being the moft Southern Part of the South Boundary of the Children of Judah ; for, fays Jofiua, (dj and their South Border was from the Shore of the Salt Sea, from the Bay that looketh Southward. And it went out to the South-fide to Maaleh-acrabbim fnow AccabaJ and pajfed along to Zin, and afcended on the South-fide to Ka- dejfh-barnea j and paffed along to Hezron, and went up to Adary and fetched a Compafs to Karkaa, from thence it {a) Pocock Trav. p. 146. (b) lb. p. 158. [c) Dent. i. 2. faffed W) Jofh, xv, 2. See the Map, 390 TIjc Chronology of the pa fed toward Azmon, and went cut to the River of Egypt" And the Goings-out of that Coajl were at the Sea. Which Border is in the Book of Numbers (e) {aid to along by the Coajl of Edom. And as the Account given of this Border began by proceeding from the Eaft by the South towards the Weft, that is, from the Salt Sea to Egypt, it is mani- feft that Kadcf lay Weftward of Acrabbim and Eaflward of Azmon which Station or Town, as being the lafl men- tioned before the going out at the River of Egypt, proba- bly flood near the Borders of the Defert of Shur already mentioned j which feperated this Part of Arabia from E- gvpt ; and lay fomewhere between the Weflern End of Mount Hor, and the Northern End of the Heroopolitick, or Weflern Gulph of the Red Sea. The fixing of which Stations of Azmon and Kadefi will be of great Ufe in the determining the future progrefs of the Children oilfrael during there forty Years wandering in this Wildernefs j becaufe it will (f) appear that they fet out by moving Weftwar from Kadejh towards Azmon, and then return again Eaflward from Azmon, to Eziongeber ; and after- wards came back again from Eziongeltr through Kadefo to Azmon, before they fet out, towards the Clofe of the forty Years, in their direct Journey from Azmon for the Land of Moab over againfl Jericho. And being now come to Rithmah or Kadejh, ye, fays Mofes, came unto me every one of you, and faid, We will fend Men before us, and they fhall fcarch us out the Land, and bring us Word again by what Wray we (c) Num. xxxiv. •?. (f) Seethe Map. fhall Hebrew Bible vindicated. 391 iliall go up, and into what Cities we mall come j And the faying pleafed me well. Deut. i. 19 — 23. Whereas in the Book of Numbers it is faid, that Jehovah fpake un- to Mofes faying, Send thou Men that they may fearch the Land of Canaan ; and Mofes by the Commandment of Jehovah fent them from the Wildernefs of Par an : Numb. xiii. 3. The matter of Fact therefore feems to be this, that Mofes fummoned an AfTembly of the People, wherein it was propofed to fend Men out to fearch the Land j Which Mofes having cenfulted God a- bout, it was approved of by him; and Mofes was accor^ dingly commanded to fend them. It is likewife to be remarked, that in the Speech which Mofes is faid by (g) Jofephus to make to the People upon this. Occafion, he lays, " that of the two Things which God determined " to beftow upon them, Liberty and the PofFefTion of " an happy Country j they were already Partakers of the "one, by the Gift of God, and the other they mould i ' quickly obtain:" The civil Government of the He- brews, being the beft Form that was ever yet eftablimed for the Prefervation of the Liberty of the People j as Mr. . Lowman in his Treatife thereon has fully proved. . So (h) Mofes took twelve Men, one out of every Tribe ; among which were Jojhua or Hofea the Son of Nun, of the Tribe of Ephraim, and Caleb the Son cf Jephunnah, of the Tribe oijudah; And Mofes fent them , to fpy out the Land of Canaan, and faid unto them, Get (g) Jos. Ant. I. 3. c 14. [b) Deut, i. 23. Numb, xiii, 4,-16, you 2 9 2 The Chronology of the you up from the South, or (i) by the South, and go up into the Mountain, and fee the Land what it is. Now the 'Time was the Time of the firjl ripe Grapes : Whence it appears that thefe Spies were fent out fome Time to- wards the latter End of July, or the Beginning of Auguft* For the Spies were forty Days abroad, and when they re- turned they brought with them a large Bunch of Grapes remarkable for its Size ; as alfo fome Pomegranates and Figs : So that it is probable, that their Return was about the Time of the Gathering in of the Grapes, and the reft of the Fruits of the Earth that are flow in coming to Maturity. And as the fifteenth Day of the feventh Month Tifri, which anfwers to our September, was the Day appointed by God for the Feaft of Tabernacles -, Lev. xxiii. 34, 39. Which Feaft was to be obferved foon after they had gathered in the Fruit of the Land ; Lev. xxiii. 39. and for that Reafon was alfo called the Feaft of In-gathering, which is in the End of the Tear, when they had gathered in the Labours out of the Field ; Exod. xxiii. 16. When they had gathered in not only their Corn but their Wine, Deut.xvi. 13. If we there- fore fuppofe the Spies to have returned on or about the fixth or feventh of September, and deduct forty Days from thence, this will bring us to the latter End of July as the Time of the fir ft ripe Grapes, when the Spies were fent forth. And the Reafon why I pitch upon the (/) Num. xiii. 17. itil ', for thus it ought to be tranflated, as this very Word L rendered ver. 22. and pot Southward, as it is in our Tranflation, and almcfl all others, for they muft go Northward to enter into the Land rm this lllll.-rr.rfs. fixth Hebrew Bible vindicated. 393 fixth Day of September is becaufe the Jews obferve tliat Day as a Fafl in their Calendar, in Remembrance of the Sentence then palled on them to wander forty Years. Where it ought to be remarked, that the In-gathering is faid to be in the End of the Year, Exod. xxiii. 16. And yet the Feaft of Ingathering, when they had gathered in the. Fruit of the Land, is commanded to be kept on the fifteenth Day of the feventh Month. Lev. xxiii.; 34, 39. To reconcile which it mud be obferved, that the Jews had two Methods of reckoning the Commencement of the Year; the one called the Civil Year, and the other the Ec» clefiaftical Year; the one in Practice from the Commence- ment of the Word to the Exodus, when the Month of their Departure, which in Truth was the feventh Month of the Year, was from thence forward commanded to be reckon- ed as the firft Month of the Year, Exod. xii. 2, 18. Lev. xxiii. 5. Num.xxvm. 16. xxxii. 3. By which means there came to be exactly fix Months Difference between the Commencement of the Civil and the Ecclefiaftical Year. And of Confequcnce, the feventh Month of the Ec- clefiaftical Year, at which Time was the In-gathering of the Fruits of the Earth, was the End or lafl Month of the Civil Year. So the Spies went np and fearched the Land, from the Wildernefs of Zin, unto Rehob, as Men come to Hamalh; and they afcended by the South, and came unto Hebron 1 and they came unto the Brook or Valley of Efchol, and cut down from thence a Branch with one Clufter of Grapes, and they bare it between two upon E e e a f\ 94 The Chronology o/A a Staff, and they brought of the Pomegranates, and of the Figs. And they returned from fearching of the Land after forty Days : And they came to Mofes, and to Aaron> and to all the Congregation of the Children of Ifracl un- to the Wildernefs of Far an unto Kadcft \k). And they told him, and faid, We came unto the Land whither thou fenteft us, and furely it floweth. with Milk and Honey : and this is the Fruit of it. Nevertheless the People are Strong that dwell in the Land, and the Cities are walled, and very great. And all the People, we faw in it, are Men of great Stature; fo that we be not able to go a- gainft this People, for they are Stronger than we. And all the Children of Ifrael lifted up their Voice and cried, and they faid one to another, Let us make a (I) Captain, and return into Egypt. Which mews that this Kadejh here mentioned was the fame Place with KadeJJj-Barnea, from whence the Spies where alfo fent out to view the promifed Land, as mentioned Dent. ii. 19. Jo/Jj.xiv.j. becaufe Mofes fays, Numb, xxxii. 8,-^-n. that it was at Kadrfi-Barnea that Jehovah's Anger was kindled againft them, faying, Surely none of the Men that came up out of Egypt , from twenty Years old and upward mail fee the Land which I fware unto Abraham: And here in the thirteenth and fourteenth Chapters of Numbers this invent is faid to have happened at KadefJo. And (m) Jofua and Caleb fpake unto the Children of Ifraely faying, The Land which we parTed through to ■earch it, is an exceeding good Land. If Jehovah de- (A) Num. xiii, 26. (/) Nehcm. ix. 17. (m) Num. xiv. 6. light- Hebrew Bible vindicated* 3 9 J fight in us, then he will bring us into this Land, and give it us j only rebel ye not againft Jehovah, neither fear ye the People of the Land, for they are Bread for us j their Defence is departed from them, and Jehovah is with us ; Fear them not. But all the Congregation faid, Stone them with Stones. Then Mofes and Aaron fell on their Faces before all the ArTembly of the Congre- gation (m) of the Children of Ifrael : And the Glory oi Jehovah appeared in the Tabernacle of the Congregation before all the Children of Ifrael. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, How long will this People provoke me ? I will fmite them with the Peftilence, and will difmherit them, and v/ill make of thee a greater Nation than them Where it is to be obferved, that this is the fecond Time that Mofes refufed this Proffer. And Mofes faid unto Jehovah (;z), Pardon I befeech thee the Iniquity of this People, according unto the Greatnefs of thy Mercy, and as thou haft forgiven this People from Egypt until now. And Jehovah faid, I have pardoned according to thy Word. But becaufe all thofe Men which have-feen my Glory, and my Miracles which I did in Egypt, and in the Wildernefs, and have tempted me now thefe ten Times j furely they mail not fee the Land which I lware unto their Fathers, their Car*, cafes (hall fall in this Wildernefs, and their Children mall wander in the Wildernefs (0) forty Years, after the Number of Days in which ye fearched the Land ; each (7/2) Or an Afiembiy of the Princes and People which were fummoned by the Sound of two Trumpets. («) Num. xiv. i .. ,; ) lb. ver. 32. E e e 2 Day 39& The Chronology of the Day for a Year, fliall you bear your Iniquities j fave Caleb the Son of Jcphunneh, and Jofhua the Son of Nun. Which Number of Years commence from the Time of their leaving Egypt, of which one Year and a half was. fpent already. And it cannot be denied, that the in- flicting of this Punifhment was both Juji and Wife j fince it was found by Experience that thefe People, who had been bred in Egypt, were perpetually upon the leaft Difficulty, or Difguft, for returning into Egypt -t and had manifestly difcovered a Tendency towards that Idolatry of the Egyptians, whom they had been bred up among j it was therefore probable, that had they come foon into Canaan they would either have fled into Egypt upon the. fir ft Defeat, or would have fubmitted to join with the Canaanites in the Worfhip of their Idols. Then faid Je-* hovah unto them, But as for you (p), turn you, and get into the Wildernefs towards the Red-Sea or, by the Way that leads to the Red-Sea. Where it is to be obferved that our Englifh Tranflation only fays, by the Way of the Red- Sea -y which is a doubtfull Exprefiion, and might be. mifunderftood as if. the Red-Sea lay betwixt them and the Wildernefs : Whereas they were already in the Wil- dernefs, and were ordered only to take the Road which. Leadeth towards, or by the Way to the Red-Sea, as the- original Word often fignifies. Then the Children of (q) Ifrael anfwered and faid,. We have finned againft Jehovah, we will go up and fight according to all that Jehovah commanded us. But fays ( p) Num. xiv, 25. Deut. i, 40. (?) Deut. i. 4.1. Num. xiv. 40. Mofe\ Hebrew Biblp, vindicated. 397 Mofes unto them (r), Go not up for Jehovah is not a- mong you. Neverthelefs they would not hear but went prefumptuoufly up into the Hill of Seir , although Mofes with the Ark of the Covenant departed not out of the Gamp. And the Amalekites and Amorites who dwelt in that Mountain chafed them, and deftroyei them in Seir, even unto a Place that was afterwards called Hormah, or Chormah (s). But the Difficulty here is to account for this Hill being called the Hill of the Amo- rites, Dent. i. 20, 44. To which the Anfwer is, that the Amalekites or Hcrites were the original Inhabitants ; and that the Edomites had gotten PoiTeffion of it by Con- quer!:, and therefore it is alfo called the Land of Edom, Num. xxxiii. 37. But that although it really and truly does not ever feem to have belonged to the Amorite^ they are here mentioned as dwelling therein , and being the Proprietors thereof 3 becaufe they came, as Allies and Affiftants to the Amalekites , to defend this Pafs againfl the Ifraelites , for the Amorites were Inhabitants of the South-parts of the Land of Canaan; Gen. xiv. 7. and feem to have come upon this very Occasion to aflifl the Amalekites ; and therefore Mofes fays to the Ifraelites ; when they attempted this Time to force their Paffage over this Mountain, 7*he Amalekites and the Canaa?iites are there before you, and ye fhall fall by the Sword. See alfo Num. xxi. 1, &c. T h e n the Ifraelites returned, and wept before Jeho- vah , but Jehovah would not hearken to their Voice ia (r) Nuna, xiv. 4?,, Deut. i. 43. (s) Num. xxi. 3. permitting 398 The Chronology of the permitting them to go now and take PofTeiTion of the Land of Canaan, fo they abode in KadeJJj many Days, according unto the Days, that they abode there, Deut. i, 45, 46. that is, according to the Days appointed by "Jehovah. Now during their Abode here it probably was, that the Rebellion of Corab, Dathan and (/) Abiram happened during the Infancy of the Adminiftration of Aaron and Mofes ; And foon after the late Defeat j it being a good Obfervation which Jofephus makes on this Occafion, that great Armies, efpecially upon ill Succefs, are hard to be pleafed, and are governed with Difficulty. For as Corah the Son of Levi feems to have aimed at depriving Aaron of the Ecclefiaftical Jurifdiction ; fo Dathan, and Abiram, andO/z the Sons of Reuben feem to have had a Mind to fupplant Mofes in the civil Ad- miniftration. Corah therefore with his two hundred and fifty Princes, all Sons of Levi famous in the Congrega- tion, Men of Renown, and Dathan, and Abiram, and On with their Partifans gathered themfelves together a- gainft Mofes and againft Aaron, and faid unto them, Ye take too much upon you, feeing all the Congregation are lioly, and Jehovah is among them : Wherefore then lift ye up yourfelves above the Congregation of the Lord, And Mofes fpake unto Corah, and all his Company, fay- ing, Even to-morrow Jehovah will mew who are his, and who is holy. This do, take you Cenfers Korah and all his Company ; and put Fire therein, and put Incenfe in them before Jehovah to morrow every Man his Cen- fer, two hundred and fifty Cenfers ; thou alfo and Aaron (t) Num. xvi. r. each Hebrew Bible vindicated. 399 each of you his Cenfer: Numb, xvi. 5, 17. And it fhall be that the Man whom Jehovah doth chofe, he mail be holy. And on the Morrow they took every Man his Cenfer and put Fire in them, and laid Incenfe thereon, and flood in the Door of the Tabernacle. And Mofes fent to call Dathan, and Abiram, the Sons of Reuben : And they faid we will not come up : Is it a fmall Thing that thou haft brought us up out of a Land flowing with Milk and Honey , to kill us in the Wilder- nefs, except thou make thyfelf altogether a Prince over us ? Moreover thou haft not brought us into a Land that iloweth with Milk and Honey j or given us Inheritance of Fields or Vineyards : wilt thou put cut the Eyes of thefe- Men, that is, by keeping them here in a fandy Defert y We will not come up. Then Corah gathered all the Congregation againfl Mofes and Aaron, unto the Door of the Tabernacle. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes and unto Aaron faying, Separate yourfelves from among this Congregation, that I may confume them in a Moment. And there came out a Fire from Jehovah, and confu- med the two hundred and fifty Men that offered Incenfe, And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes faying, Speak unto Elea- zar, the Son of Aaron, that he take up the Cenfers out of the Burning, for they are hallowed, let them be made into broad Plates for a Covering of the Altar : for they offered them before Jehovah, therefore are they hallowed. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes, faying, Get you up from about the Tabernacle. The Hebrew Copy lays in this Place, ver. 24. Get you up from about the Tabernacle of Corah, Dathan, and Abiram , which cannot be right, becaufe 400 T/je Chronology of the becaufe Dathan and Ablram had refufed to come up, ver. 12. And in the Verfe following Mofes is faid to have rifen up, and went unto Dathan and Abiram. The Septuagint Verfion therefore feems to be in the right in this Place, where Mofes only fays to the People, Get yen upfront about the Affembly of Corah, So Mofes rofe up and went unto Dathan and Abiram-, and the Elders of Ifrael followed him. And he fpake unto the Congregation laying j Depart I pray you from the Tents of thefe wicked Men, and touch nothing of theirs, left ye be coniumed in all their Sins. And Da- than and Abiram came out, and flood in the Door of their Tents, and their Wives, and their Sons, and their little Children. And Mofes faid hereby ye fhall know that Jehovah hath fent me to do all thefe Works. Whence it appears that the Sedition of Dathan and Abi- ram, &c. was directed againft Mofes, as that of Corah was againfl: Aaron, for fays Mofes, I have not done them of mine own Mind ; as Dathan and Abiram would per- iwade you. If thefe Men die the common Death of all Men, then Jehovah hath net fent me. But if Jehovah make a new Thing and the Earth open her Mouth, and fwallow them up ; then ye fhall underftand that thefe Men have provoked Jehovah. And it came to pafs as he made an End of fpcaking, that the Ground clave afunder that was under them j and the Earth opened her Mouth and i wallowed them up ; they and all that appertained to them, went down alive into the Pit, and the Earth do- d upon them. And Hebrew Bible vindicated. 40 1 ■ And in fome Time («) after all the Congregation of the Children of Ifrael murmured againft Mofes and Aa- ron faying, Ye have killed the People of 'Jehovah ', Num. xvi. 41. And it came to pafs when the Congregation was gathered againft Mofes and againft Aaron, that they look- ed towards the Tabernacle : And behold the Cloud cove- red it, and the Glory of Jehovah appeared. And Mofes and Aaron came before the Tabernacle : And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes faying, Get you up from among this Congregation, that I may confume them as in a Mo- ment. And Mofes and Aaron fell on their Faces, that is, to intercede with Jehovah for the People. And Mofes faid unto Aaron, Take a Cenfer and put Fire therein from of? the Altar, and put on Incenfe, and go quickly into the Congregation, and make an Attonement for them : for there is Wrath gone out from Jehovah, the Plague is begun. And Aaron did as Mofes commanded him ; and run into the midft of the Congregation, and ■■flood between the Dead and the Living, and the Plague was flayed. Now they that died in the Plague were •fourteen thoufand feven hundred, befide them that died about the Matter ofKorah, Numb. xvi. 41 — 50. And (x) Jehovah fpake unto Mofes faying, Speak unto the Children of Ifeael, and take of every one of them a Rod, of all the Princes according to the Houfe of their Fathers twelve Rods : and write thou every Man's Name upon the Rod of Levi. And thou fhalt lay them up in the ''Tabernacle, before the Ark of the Teftimony. And («) Hebrew, To Morrow. [x] Nlhi. xvii. -I. F f f it 40 3 He CiiRONoiocy of the xtihall come to paft that the Man's Rod whom I (hall chofe mall bloffomj And I will make to ceafe from mt the Murmuring* of the Children of JfraeL And Mftes fpake unto the Children of Jfrael, and every one of the. Princes gave him a Rod apiece. And Mofes laid up the Rods before Jehovah in the Tabernacle. And it came to pafs that on the Morrow Mofes went into the Taber- nacle, and behold the Rod of Aaron for the Houfe of " Levi was budded, and brought forth Buds, . and bloomed Bloffoms, and brought forth Almonds. And Mofes brought out all the Rods from before Jehovah, unto all the Children of If r a el, and they looked and took every Man his Rod. And Jehovah laid unto Mofes, bring Aa-. ron's Rod again before the Ark of the Teftimony, to be.. kept for a Token againft the Rebels j and thou malt thereby take away their Murmurings from me that they. die not. Which Punilhment. of Corah, Dathan, and A- - biram, with the Plague, together with this open and pub-, lick DeciliOfl of God in Favour of Aaron^ fo effectually quieted the Murmurings of the Children of Ifrael that we hear no more Complaints or Diflurbances amongft them, till they wanted Water in this very Station about thirty- . tight Years afterwards. And therefore God at this Time to prevent any fur-. ther Difputes (v), repeats to the Priefts and Levites their feveral Charges, and appoints their feparate Offices: And gives them their feveral Portions, and appoints their. Maintenance. He like wife defcribes the Method of ma- { y) Num. xviii. j, king Hebrew Bible vhillkaiccL 403 king the Water (z) for Purification from Shi j fcftd of -ufing it in purifying the Unclean, A n d when the Ifraelites had remained at Kadejh as long as Jehovah thought convenient, Dent. i. 46. By the abiding of the Cloud upon the Tabernacle, they "were at laft directed by the Removal of the Cloud from off the Tabernacle, and going before the Hofl of the Ij- raelites to turn and take their Journey into the Wil- dernefs toward the Red Sea (a). And when they departed from KadejJj, or (b) Rithmah, they pitched at Rimmon Parez. Which pofilbly was that Ri?nmoh that was afterwards on the Conquest of Canaan given to the Tribe of (c) Judah, along with Kadejh. Which is a further Proof, that Rithmah and Kadejh were one and the fame Place. And from Rlnitmn Parez, they pitched in Libnah^ ^vhich City was on the Conqueft of Canaan given to the Tribe of Judah 5 Jojh, xv. 42. And was by them given as a City to the Sons of Aaron to reiide in amongft them, 1 Chron. vi. $j. And from Libnah they pitched at Rijfah. And from Rijfah they pitched at Kehelathah, And from Kehelathah they pitched in Mount*Sfcr- pher. Ff?2 And (z) Num. xix. 1. (a) Dcut. ii. 1. Num. xxxiii. i3. (l>) lb. ver. 19. (c) Jem. xv. 23, 32. 404 The Chronology of the And from Sbaphar they encamped in Haradeth. And from Haradath they pitched in Makeloth. And from Makeloth they encamped at Thahath. And from Thahath, they pitched at far ah : proba- bly the Tharabafa of Jofephus, which he fays the j^ictf tcok from the Arabians. And from far ah they pitched in Mi the ah; A-n d from Mithcah they pitched in Hajlmonah, pro- . bably the fame with Azmon which was appointed as the South Weft Boundary of the Children of Ifrael between, the Wildernefs of Zin an d Egypt. This Place oiHaJh- monah as well as the Azmon of JoJJjua being both rende- red in the Septuogint Selmon,. Jofa. xv. 3. Numb.. xxxiii. 29- And having gone thus far towards the Red Sea Weftr ward they now departed from Hajhmonah or Azmon, and returned back again, towards Mount Hor, and encamped at (e) Bceroth belonging to the Children of Jaakan, up- on the Mountain Hor, where Aaron (f) afterwards died, and was buried. That (e) Dcut. x. 6. (/") It is a very common Thing in the Tie to Language cf the Old Teitament to mention an Action before it came H'E'B r e w Bible vindicated. 405 ^ That Moferotb, Numb, xxxiii. 30, 31. or Mofrat Deut. x. 6. is a Part of Mount Hor feems plain to me from hence j firfl becaufe Mofes is faid to have died there -, and fecondly becaufe Mount Hor lies directly in the Paffage from Hajhmonah, Numb, xxxiii. 30. to Ezi~ ongeber, two Places whofe Situations we cannot well be miftaken in. And as Mofes fays in the Book of Numbers that the Ifraelites travelled from Hafbmonab to Moferotb from thence to Benjaakan, and from thence to Hor-ba- gid-gad, and from thence to Jodbatbah in the Way to EztQ?jgeber ; and as it is faid, in Dent. x. 6. That from Beerotb, belonging to the Children of Jaakan, or Bene -Jaakan, they came to Moferotb were Aaron after- ward died, and from thence journeyed to Gudgodah, and from Gudgodah to Jotbah, a Land of Rivers of Waters. I therefore take both thefe Itineraries to refer exactly to the fame Time and Places. I fuppofe, therefore, thffc . Betroth might belong to Bene- Jaakan, or the Chil- dren of Jaakan ; though the Place where they them- felves lived might be a little further to the Eaftward. And that the Ifraelites did not arrive at the Habitation of Bene- Jaakan till after they left Moferotb, and from thence went to Hcr-ba-Gidgad, i. e. Gidgad or Gudgodah, which was upon Mount Hot\ And they departed from Moferotb y and travelling ftill further Eaftward, they encamped at Bene- Jaakan, or the to pafs without fpecifying the Word aftenuards. As in Gem x. i r, where AJhur is faid to have gone out and built Cities ; before his Birth is mention'd, which is not till ver. 22. Habi- 406 The Chronology of the Habitation of the Sons ofjaakan, which the Septuagint Ycriion calls Bami. And from B(nr-'jaakany ox Banco, they encamped at Gidgad, or GudgoJab (g), as it is called in all the reft ■ of.the Veriions, but as being on the Borders of Mount Hor, which was a long Chain of Mountains reaching al- moft from the Hcroopolitick Gulph of the Red Sea to within thirty Miles of Accaba on the North End of the Elanick Gulph, it was therefore called Hor-ha-Gidgad^ or Gidgad on Mount Hor, And from Hor-ba-Gidgad they pitched in (h) Jot- bafbab, a Land of Rivers of Waters. And therefore probably by the Sea Coaft. The Septuagint renders it, Etebatba which I take to be Elatb, that being mentioned as in a Plain, Deut. ii. 8. and i Kings ix. 26; as being befide Ezio?j-Gcber, on the Shore of the Red Sea, that is, on the Shore of the Elanick Gulph of the Red Sea, And from Jotbatbab they encamped at Ebrona, or Acrcnay as it is called in the Arabick Verfion. And from Ebrona they encamped at Ezion-Geber a Port on the Elanick Gulph, famous for being that Port whence Solomon fent his Ships for Gold to Opbir, 1 Kin. ix. 26. 2 Chron. viii. 17. 18. Which Port is now pro- (g) Dent. x. 6. (b) In our Engtijb Tranflatiorj this Word is r' !r ■,:-'~!'' \n N iii. 33. and Dent. x. 7. but in the Ori- ihe Word is the Tame, bably Hebrew Bible vindicated. 40 7 the fame with that which is called by the y£- 1 Dfahab, the Pert of Geld, and is in the Boook o\ ~ \. 1. called Dizahab which (lands upon the Shore of the Arabick Gulph at two Days Diftance according to (/<:) Dr. Shaw, but at three Days Diflance according to (/) Dr. Poco .;, from Mount Sinai. And From Ezion-Geber they men turned back again; 40th "^ and travelled Weft ward towards the Delert of Z*#, or KadeJJo, and pitched in (/») Kadefh ; in the firft Month of the fortieth Year after they had left the Land of Egypt. At which Time it probably was that the Israelites gave this Place, at their Return to it again, the Name of Ka- defi-Barnea, or Kade/li, the Son of Wandering, as the Word literally imports j having wandered about the Wildernefs from the Time of their firft leaving this Sta- tion till their Arrival at it again, the Space of thirty-feven Years and a half. For they had now fpent thirty-nine Years compleat fince they left Egypt •> which they left in the Month of March j and the firft Time they left Kadefi was in the Autumn of the Year following.; And while the People abode this Time in Kadefh, (n) Miriam the Sifter of Aaron died there, and was bu- ried. And this Station being fituated in a fandy Defert, , there was no Water for the Congregation ; And they ga- thered themfelves together againft Mofes and againft Aa„ _ rcn, faying, Would to God that we had died when our/ (k) Shaw's Travels, p. 356. (/ ) Pocock's Travels, p. 137. [m) Num. xxxiii. 365 xx» 1. (w) Ibid. Brethren.. 408 The Chronology.o//^ Brethren died before Jehovah. And why have -ye brought up the Congregation o£ Jehovah, that we and our Cattle fliould die here. And Mofes and Aaron went from the Erefence of the Affembly unto the Door of the Tabernacle, and they fell upon their Faces j and the Glory of Jehovah appeared unto them. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes faying, Take the Rod, and gather thou the Affembly together, thou and Aaron thy Brother, and (peak ye unto the Rock before their Eyes, and it (hall igive forth its Water, and thou flialt bring forth Water tu them out of the Rock. And Mofes took the Rod from before Jehovah j and, .as it is probable that this was the fame Rod with which Mofes performed his Wonders in Egypt as well as that with which he ftruck the Rock in Rephidim, it there- fore appears that this Rod was laid up in the Ark of the Covenant, according to the Tradition of the Arabians, as well as that of Aaron which budded, Numb. xvii. io# ■Heb. ix. 4. though there is no Mention made thereof in Scripture. Or poffibly it might have been one and the fame Rod, with which all theie Wonders were perfor- med. And Mofes and Aaron gathered the Congregation together before the Rock, and he faid unto them3 Hear now ye Rebels ; muft we fetch you Water out of this .Rock ? And Mofes lift up his Hand, and with his Rod he fmote the Rock twice : and the Water came out abun- dantly, and the Congregation drank, and their Beafts alio. N o w Hebrew Bible vindicated. 409 Now it is to be obferved, that in this Tran&dfcion Mofcs and Aaron difpleafed God fo much, that they were both excluded from entring into the Land of Pro- m-ife upon that Account. For fays (0) Jehovah unto Mofes and Aaron, becaufe ye believed me not, to fanSfi- fy me in the Eyes of the Children of Ifrael; therefore ye mall not bring this Congregation into the Land which I have given them. And again Jehovah faid unto (/>) Aa- ron, Aaron fhall be gathered unto his People for he (hall not enter into the Land which I have given unto the Chil- dren of Ifrael, becaufe ye rebelled againft me at the Wa- ters of Meribah. And after the Death of Aaron God faid unto Mofes (g), Thou (halt be gathered unto thy People as Aaron thy Brother was gathered. For ye rebelled againft my Commandment (in the Defert of Zin, in the Strife of the Congregation) to fanBify me at the Water, before their Eyes ; that is, the Water of Meribah in Kadefh^ in the Wildernefs of Zin. And a little before his Death God faid unto Mofes, Becaufe ye trefpaiTed a- gainft me among the Children of Ifrael, at the Waters of Meribah-Kadefb, in the Wildernefs of Zin j becaufe ye fanclifsd me not in the midft of the Children of Ifrael '-, thou {halt fee the Land before thee, but thou malt not go thither unto the Land which I give the Children of Jfrael, Deut. xxxii. 51, 52. The holy (r) Pfalmiji gives this Account of this Tranfaction, that the Ifraelites anger- ed Jehovah alfo at the Waters of Strife, fo that it went ill with Mofes for their Sakes j becaufe they provoked ( and they utterly deftroyed them and their Cities : And he called the Name of the Place Hormah, or Chormah, that is, Devoted to DefiruBion j that Word being derived from the Hebrew Word Cher em, which fignifies an Anathema, or Curfe. And they journeyed from Mount Hor (£), by the Way which leadeth towards the Red Sea, to compafs the Land of Edom ; and the Soul of the People was much difcouraged becaufe of the Way ; the South-fide of Mount Hor (e) being a fandy Defert. And the Peo- ple fp-ike/againft: Mofes, Wherefore have ye brought us up out of E^ypt to die in the Wildernefs ? For there is no Bread, neither is there any Water, and our Soul (n) Num. xxi. I ; xxxiii. 40. {l>) Ibid. xxi 4, (c) Pocock Trav. p. 187. loathed 4 r 4, The Chronology of the loatheth this light Bread, this Manna. And Jehovah fent fiery Serpents id) among the People, and they bit the People, and much People of Ifrael died. Wherefore the People came to Mofes, and faid, We have finned, for we have fpoken again ft Jehovah, and againft thee ; pray unto Jehovah that he may take away the Serpents from us. And Mofes prayed for the People : And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Make thee a fiery Serpent, and fet it upon a Pole ; and it mall come to pafs, that every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, mall live. And Mofes made a Serpent of Brafs, and put it upon a Pole, and it came to pafs, that if a Serpent had bitten any Man, when he beheld the Serpent of Brafs he lived. And die Children of Ifrael (kcunJ<; with LizarJs and Vipers, Trav. p. 350. (e) Num. xxxiii. 41. (J) Sec Reland's Pal. p. 605. where fpeaking of Azmon, he fays, Zi'j j'.JMcl Icgitur in quihufdara Codicibus Guccis. fcribed Hebrew Bible vindicated. 415 fcribed Num. xxxili. will find thefe three Names agree to one and the fame Place ; and that the Ifraelites were only then traverflng the utmofl Boundary that was amgned to them Southward. For, fays God to Mofes, your South Quarter (b) (hall be from the Wildernefs of Zin, along by the Coaft of Edomy and your South Border mall be the utmoft Coaft of the Salt Sea Eaftward (c). And your Border mall turn by (e) the South to the Afcent of A- krabbim, and pafs on to Tan, And the Going-forth thereof mail be by the South to Kadcjh Barnea, and mail go on to Hazar-Adary and pafs on to Azmon : And the Border mall fetch a Compafs from Azmon to the River of Egypt. And the Out-goings of it mall be at the Sea. And that by this River of Egypt is meant the Pelufiac Branch of the River Nile is plain from hence, becaufe Herodotus (e) calls Mount Ca/ius, the Foot of which extended to Pehtfium, the Boundary be- tween Egypt and Paleftine. And Pliny (f) places the Boundary of the two Kingdoms near the fame Place, that is, at the Out-going of the Sarbomc Lake, for fays he, Mox Idumtfa incipit & Palejlina ab emerfu Sarbonis (b) Num. xxxiv. 3, &c> (c) In Jojkua it is, From the Bay that looketh Southward ; which agrees alfo with the Situation of this Bay, it being fituated at the South-Eaft Corner of the Salt Sea, JoJJ). xv. 2. (dj In our Englijh Tranflation it is, From the South, which cannot be the Meaning of Mofes when he is defcribing this Southern Border. And the Hebrew will bear being render'd, By the South, or, In the South, as well as, From the South. (e) 'A7ro Kan's c^i^ ra ogi£ovl(&> 'At^uV7ov rs xj Zvo'uv. He- rod. 1. 3. c. 5, (/) Plin. Nat. Hill. 1. 5. c, 13. Lacus. 4 i 6 The C i-ironology of the Lacus. Which was only on the other Side of Mount Cqfius towards the Eaft, as Pelufium w^s on the Weft. Which fhews that Dr. Pccock (g) cannot be right when he places the River of Egypt at Rhinocolura. Now whoever will confult the. Maps will find that that there is a Bay which projects towards the South- Eaft Corner of the Salt-Sea, or Dead-Sea ; and that this Bay lies lbmewhat to the Eaftward of the Elanick, or Eaftern Gulph of the Red Sea, near the North End of which are the Mountains of Accaba which in Arabick fignifies the Afcent, which Place I fuppofe to be the fame with the Accrabim of Mojes, and which is therefore called the Afccnt of Accrabim. This Border therefore was to afcend by the South, or Southward, from the Dead-Sea to Accrabim. And then to pafs on to the Defert of Zin, Par an or Kad£Jh. And then to proceed ftili by the South till it came to Kade/h-Barnea, and from thence to pafs along to Hezron, and then to go up to Adar, and from thence to fetch a Compafs to Karkaa^ and from thence to pafs towards Azmc?i, and thence to fetch a Compafs to the River of Egypt. Now in the Journey ings of the Ifraclites it is plain, that they went from Sinai to Kadejh, and that from Ka- defi they went towards the Red Sea, and came to Hajb- mona, Selmona, or Azmon. Which probably flood fome- where between the End of the Heroopolitick Gulph of the Red Sea and the Weftern End of Mount Hor, or (£) Pocock Tr.iv. Vol. I. p. 1 8. Jebel Hebrew Bible vindicated. 4 1 7 Jebel Te. And from thence they returned frill, keeping on the South-fide of Mount Hor or Jebel Te on the Edge of the Coaft of Edom, to Moferoth the Place where Aa- ron afterwards died on Mount Hor, and going on by the Road of Bene-Jaakan to Eziongebcr on the Northern End of the Elanick Gulph j they from thence returned back again to Kadejh, and fet out from thence to Mount Hor, where they fought with King Adar, and from thence by the Way of the Red Sea returned the fecond Time to (g) Azmon. Where we left them at prefent. By which means they had literally compafled one Part of Mount Hor, or Mount Seir many Days, Deut. ii. 1, 3. having fpent upwards of thirty-feven Years in travelling from the South to the Weft, and from the Weft by the South to the Eaft, and from the Eaft back again to the Weft of this Mountain. And now the Ifraelites being arrived at Azmon, ha- ving travelled from Mount Hor into the Wildernefs by the Way of the Red Sea, Deut. ii. 1 : After they had compaiTed Mount Seir many Days ; Jehovah fpake un- to Mofes faying, Ye have compafTei this Mountain long enough : turn you Northward, and command thou the People faying, Ye are to pafs through the Coaft of your Brethren the Children of Efau, which dwell in Seir, and they fTiall be afraid or' ycu / take ye good heed of your felves therefore. Meddle not with them; for I will not give you of their Land, no not fo much as a Foot breadth, becaufe I have given Mount Seir unto £- ( g) Num. xxxiii. 41. H h h fan 4 1 # foe Chronology of the fau for a PofTemon j ye fhall buy Meat of them for Mo- ney, that ye may eat ; and ye mall alio buy Water o* them for Money ; thai ye may drink, Deut. ii. i — 6. So they journeyed from Zalmonah, or Azmon, and paf- fing through the Land of Edomt they pitched in Punon, Numb, xxxiii. 42. At which Time the Edomites did not come againft them as they did formerly with a ftrong Hand, and much People, Numb. xx. 20. But let them pafs quietly paying for what they eat, or what they drank, Deut, ii. 28, 29. For Jehovah had made them a- fraid of them, Deut. ii. 4. The Word Ptinon, or Pi- nony in Hebrew fignifles a Jewel ; and was a Name gi- ven to one of the Sons of Efau, as mentioned Gen. xxxvi. 41. from whom this Place was probably fo called, as being the chief Seat of the Refidence of Duke Pinon, or Punon -, but where fituated I cannot be pofitive. This however is certain, that before the Ifraelites departed this Time from Zalmuna, they had only travelled on the Edge of the Land of Edom, but now they were comman- ded to turn Northwards, and to pafs through the Country paying for what they mould eat and what they mould drink ; they were therefore probably led by this Road Northward of Petra, (i) which was only at the Diftance of ten Roman Miles from Elath, or the North End of the Elanick Gulph, at which Place they had been in the firft Courfe of their Peregrination. And Eufebius (k) fays, that Punon lay between Petra and Zoar ; fo that it muft have been fomewhere more Northward or farther of from the Red Sea than Petra. (/) Rel. ?<£. p. 929. (k) Id. ibid. p. .71. AND Hebrew Bible vindicated, 4. 1 <) AND they departed from Punon, and pitched in O- both. Ptolomy mentions three Places in Arabia Petrau which he calls Calguia, Maliatha, and Eboda, which laft by his Calculations lay half a Degree Weft of Petra ; but as the Numbers mentioned by Ptolomy are in many Places manifeftly and demonstrably corrupted there is no relying upon any of his Calculations j for had Oboth lain fo much to the Weft of Petra the Ifraelites muft have come to Oboth before they arrived at Punon, their Jour- nies from Zahnuna to the Country of the Moabites lying moftly North-Eaftward. Stephanus (q) in Ethnicis, men- tions a Place called Oboda in the Region of the Nabathce- ans, where, according to Uranius, King Obodes was bu- ried, whom the Nabathceans worfhipped with divine Ho- nours. Now Strabo (rj mentions one King Obodes who lived in the Time of Augujlus Ccefar when JElius Gallus was fent on an Expedition againft the Arabians, and that JElius pafTed through the Territories of Obodes in his Ex- pedition againft Arabia Felix, and that in his Return he came to a Place called Caalla, then to Malotha which lay- near a River, and then to Neraboma or the black Village in the Country of Oboda or Oboth, which lay upon the Sea. So that it is probable, that this Oboda of Stephanus \ and the Eboda of Ptolomy are the fame Place with the O- both of Mofes j and that the Name of Obodes was a Name borrowed by their Kings from great Antiquity, and that the Territory of Oboth extended in After-ages as far as the Elanick Gulph : And therefore it is reafonable to (?) Reland. Pal. p. 91. (r) Strabo 1. 16. p. 780. H h h 2 think 420 The Chronology oj the think that the City of Oboth did not lie very far from the Sea j but might lie on the Northern Boundary of the Plains of Eloth and Eziongeber. And hence it came to pafs, that when the Ifraelites journeyed towards Moab, they are fa id to have pajfed by from their Brethren the Children of Ffau, which dwelt in Seir, through the Way of the Plain from Eloth and Eziongeber (s). Which plainly mews, that they did not go at any very great Difiance from the Ela?iick Gulph of the Red Sea. Now it is to be obferved, that the Mountains of Accaba, which in Arabic fignifies an Afcent> and which in the Books of Mofes and Jcfiua are called the Afcent of Acrabbim, and which lie at the End of the Elanick Gulph j are according to Dr0 Poccck (t) at thirty Miles Diftance from theEnd of Mount Hor, or Mount Seir; which Space probably compofed the Plains of Eloth and Eziongeber. How far this Plain ex- tended up into the Country is not mentioned, but proba- bly it muft have reached as far as Oboth, becaufe that in pamng from Punon and Oboth towards the Wildernefs of Mcab, Mofes fays, the Ifraelites pajfed through or by the Way of the Plain of Eloth and Eziongeber, («) AND when they departed from Oboth they pitched n Jim or Jie-abarim, in the Border of Moab {x), in the Wildernefs which is before Moab towards the Sun-rifng. And when they were in fie^Abarim fehovah repeated the fame Commands to them with Regard to the Moa- Intes which he had done with Regard to the Edomites^ (s) Deut. ii. 8., (t) Pocock Trav. p. 137.. («) Num. xxxiiL 44-.J 451 (x) lb. xxi. 11. Judges xi. 18. that Hebrew Bible vindicated. 421 that they fhould not diftrefs them, nor contend with them in Battle (y) -t Mofes therefore probably fent the fame MeiTage to them, that he had done to the Edomites in Mount Seir-} to defire Leave to pafs through their Land, by the King's high Road paying for what they fhould eat, and what they fhould drink. To which having received a favourable Anfwer, Deut. ii. 29. Then faid Mofes to the Children of Ifrael (z), Now rife up and get you over the Brook Zered, fo they removed from thence, and pitched in the Valley of Zered (a). And the Space in which they came from Kadefh-Barnea, until they were come over the Brook Zered was thirty and eight Tears j which is a plain Proof that KadeJJj in the Wildernefs of Par an, Numb. xiii. 26. from whence they fent out the. Spies to view the Land of Canaany and to which the Spies returned, was the fame Place with Kadeftj-Bamca, though feveral Authors have fuppofed them to be two different Places. And as they left Egypt on the fourteenth. Day of the firfl Month about Midnight ; and left Mount Sinai on the twentieth Day of the fecond Month in the. next Year j and the Spies returned to them at Kadejl:-Bar- nea in Autumn in the fame Year 5 . fo if you add thirty- eight Years thereto, this will make thirty-nine Years and a half from their Departure out of Egypt , till their pafhng the Brook Zered. Which they did not pafs (b) until all that, Generation of the Men of War which came out of Egypt, fave Caleb and Jojkua (c), were wafted oat from among the Hofi, as the Lord fw are unto them. Upon which Oc- casion it was that Mofes compofed that Song, or Pfalrr., (y) Deut. ii. 9, 18. (z) Ibid. ver. 13. (a) Num. xxi. 12. \b) Deut. ii. 14. M lb. i. 36, 38. concerning 422 The Chronology of the concerning the Shortnefs of human Life, which is infer- ted among the Pfalms of David, wherein Mention is made of the Reduction of human Life to the Period of fourfcore Years (d). And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes (e) faying, Thou art to pais over through Ar, the Coaft of Moab this Day, and when thou Cornell: nigh over againft the Children of Amnion, diftrefs them not, nor meddle with them, for I will not give thee of the Land of the Children of Am- nion any Poflefiion. Having therefore removed from the Valley of Zered, and parTed quietly through Ar on the Coaft of Moab (f), they pitched on the other Side of Ar- non. Where it is to be obferved, that Mofes calls the South-fide of Arnon, the other Side of Anion; whence it appears, that Mofes mull have been on the North-fide of Anion, when he wrote this Part of the Hiftory. For as Mofes had not yet entered on the Territories of Sihon, King of the Amorites, nor alked his Leave to pafs through his Territories, this Encampment mull have been in the Land of the Moabites, which was on the South-fide of Anion. For Anion, lays Mofes, is the Border of Moab between Moab, and the Amcrites, Numb. xxi. 13, It is therefore more than probable, that this Part of the Hifto- ry was not written till Mofes had been fome Time in the Plains of Moab ; and had written the Book of Deutero- nomy, to which Book I apprehend he refers, when he fays, in the next Verfe : Wherefore it is faid, in the Book of the Wars of Jehovah y what he did in the Red Sea> (d) Pfal. xc. {e) Dent. ii. 17, 18, 19. (y")Num. xxi. 12, 13. an) Num. xxi, 261 the Hebrew Bible vindicated. 42 7 the above Quotation was a Song, that was made by fome of the Conquerors, in Memory of the Victory of Sihon over the Mcabites; which is here called a Proverb, or Parable, as this fame Word is rendered in Mich. \u 4. upon much the fame Occafion, the Word Majhat fignifying any iliort Narrative or fententious Speech. And therefore the Prophecies of Balaam, Num. xxiii. 7, 18, &c. the Reafonings of Job, Job xxvii. 1. the Prophecies of Ezekiel in the Old Teftament, Ezek. xvii. 2. xx. 49. xxiv. 3. and the Inftruclions of our Saviour in the New Teftament are call Parables, not only on Account of their metaphorical Expreftions, but alii^ of . their Comprehenfivenefs (£),.. Then the Ifraeliies (I) turned, and went up the Way to fight againft Og the King of Bajhan,. who had . joyned with Sihon againft them. Deut. xxix. 7. And Og the King of Bajhan went out againft them j he and all his People to Battle at EdreL And Jehovah delivered into their Hands Og alio the King of Bajl:an, and 'all his Peo- ple. And they took at that Time out. of the Haiid of the two Kings of the Amor it es, (that is, from Og and Sihon) all the Land which belonged to them on this Side Jordan, from the River of Arnon unto Mount Herman inclufive (m). Thefe Words according to the Original fhould be tranflated thus: And they took at that Time the Land out of the Hand of the two Kings of the Amoriies, which on this Side Jordan from the River of Arnon unto Mount Hermon (n).„ Now as there is no Verb in the Original J i i 2 after » (&) See Pfal. Ixix. n, 12. (I J Deut, iii, i, i) Jofh xiii, 3 j j 12. («) Deut, iii. 8. 428 Yhe Chronology of the its the Pronoun ivhich, this may be fupplied3 either ith the Verb ivere, or avtfSu If the Word mas be jn- ferted, then it will relate to the Land, but if the Verb were be inferted, then it will refer to the two Kings of the Amorites ; and may have been inferted to diftinguiih thefe Kings of the Amorites from thofe that were on the Weftern Side of Jordan (m); in which Scnfe the Septuagint, Samaritan and Syriack Verfions, as well as the rfargum of Onkelos have rendered this Text, And indeed there is a NecefTity for its being fo tranfla- ted j becaufe it is not true that they took from thefe two Kings all the Land which was on this Side 'Jordan : Since it is pofitivc'iy afferted, that (n) unto the Children of Ammon they came not, nor unto any Place of the River Jab bock, (for Jabbock (0) was the -Border of the Chil- dren of Ammon) nor unto the Cities cf the Mountains, nor unto what/sever Jehovah their God had forbid, them. And in another Place it is laid, that after Ifrael had fmote Si* hoh with the Edge of the Sword they (J>) poflefled his Land from Anion unto Jabbock, even unto the Children cf Ammon, for the Border of the Children of Amimn was lirong, i. e. defended with Mountains between them and the Amorites. Now in order to reconcile thefe laft Paf- figes with the Vulgar Tranflation of the above Paffage in Z)eiit.t'm. 8. as alio with what is faid Jof.x'i. 22. that the Ifraelites poffefled all the Coafts of the Amorites, from Anion even unto Jabbock, and from the Wildernefs even unto Jordan-, Mr. Re/and {.q) fuppofes, that the Land (m) Gen. xiv. 7, ] 3 ; xlviii. 22. Num. xiii. 29. {n) 'Dcut. ii. 37. [b. 1 j if, (p) Num. xxi. 24. (?) Reland. Pal 1. 1. c. 2 1 . • of Hebrew Bible vindicated, 429 the Ammonites was to the Eaft of thofe Lands of the Am 0- rites, which were at this Time conquered by thelfraelites' Which however is impoflible ; for had they been to the Eail: of thefe Countries then the Land of the Ammonite* would have been abfolutely excluded from having any Thing to do with the River fabbock, which was a Brook that emptied itfelf into the River 'Jordan (m). And the Land to the Eaftward of the Country of Sibon betwixt it and the River Euphrates, was a Wildernefs, known by the Name of the Wildernefs of Kedemoth, See Dent, ii* 26, and compare with Jofi. xiii. 18. I n order therefore to remove thefe Difficulties it is to be remarked, that the Moabites, Ammonites, and Midia~ m'tes were at this Time to be confidered as one Peoplea united in League under one Prince, Balak, the Son of Zipper (»). That the Moabites and Midi amies were at that Time one People under Balak their common Prince appears from hence, that whereas it is faid by Mofes, that Balak, the Son of Zippor, fent MeJJengers ■unto Baalom, thefe MelTengers prove to be the Elders of Moab, and the Elders of Midian j for, fays he, And the Elders of Moab and the Elders of Midian departed with the Rewards of Divination in their Hands ; and they came unto Balaam, and fpake unto him the Words of Balak (0). And that the Moabites and Ammonites were alfo one People under Balak King of Moab, is plain from hence, that Mofes only takes Notice of Leave being granted un- (w) Gen. xxxii. 10. compared with Gen. xxxii. 22, 23. («) Num. xxii. 4. (0) Ibid. ver. 7. to 43° The Chronology of the to him by the Moabites (p) to pafs through the Coafts of Ar ; which Coafls of Ar were inhabited by the Am- menites as well as the Moabites, as appears from the Charge given by Jehovah to the Jfraelitei when they came upon thefe Coafts : For, fays Jehovah unto Mofcs% diftrefs not the Moabites (q), neither contend with them in Battle ; for I will not give thee of their Land for a Poffeflion, becaufe I have given Ar unto the Children of Lot for a Poffeflion. Now the Children of Lot were Moab (r) and Ben-Ammi, who was the Father of the Children of Amman. The Ammonites therefore were re- ferved by this Prohibition, from being diftreffed by the Ifraelites, as well as the Moabites ; which appears (til!, plainer, by the fecond Repetition of this Charge given by Jehovah to Mofes, according to the Words of Mofes, when he fays (s), The Lord fpake unto me, ffying, Thou art to pafs over through Ar, the Coafl of Moab, this Day. And when thou comefi nigh over againjl the Children of Ammon, diflrefs them not, nor meddle with them ; for I will not give thee of the Land of the Children of Ammon any Foffeffion, becaufe I have given it unto the Children of Lot for a Foffefjion. Whence it appears, that the Land of Ar, was poffeffed both by the Moabites and Ammonites. Which Coafts of Ar begun at the Brook Ze- red (t), and continued the whole Way from thence by the Side of Jordan, and the Afphaltic Lake, even unto the Brook Jab bock, for Jab bock (u) was the Border of ;he Chil- dren of Ammon whofe Territories extended Eaftward as far ( p) Dcut. i\. 29. (q) Ibid. ver. 9. (r) Gen. xix. 37, 38. (s) Dcut. ii. 17, 18, 19. (/) lb. ver. 13. (u) lb. iii. 16. as Hebrew Bible vindicated. 43 1 as the River Euphrates : Which is therefore called the River of the Children cf Amnion, Num. xxii. 5. For fo this Verfe ought to be tranflated. It appears further, that the Land of Ar, and Border of Moab lay upon the Coaffo of the Afphaltkk Sea and the River Jordan ; becaufe the River Arnon emptied itfelf into them, and this River is defcribed by Mofes, as going down to the Dwelling of Art and lying upon the Border of Moab, and probably fepara- ted the ancient and true Boundaries between the Nor- thern Territories of Moab and the Southern Territories of Am?non. And as the Ifraelites are pofitively faid to have (z) come by the Eajl Side of the Land of Moab j fo when they were come to the River Arnon, they would have continued to have gone along in the Territories of the Moa bites, or of the Ammonites, if Sihon King of the Amor it es had not deprived the Ammonites (a) of this Part of the Country of Ar, by taking from them Hcfibon and all the Villages thereof even unto Dibon, and laying them wafte even unto Nophah, which reacheth unto Medeba, Which was. about (b) half the Land of the Children of Ammon ; by a Diviiion made from North to South, that is, by drawing a Line along the Valley at the Back of the Hills Abarim, &c. from the Eaftem End of the River Jabbock to Arnon. By which means one (c) half of the Valley and all the Mountains belonged /till to the Ammo- nites, and the other half of the Valley to the Eaftward belonged to the Amorites. And therefore the Ifraelites when they had conquered Sihon, and taken from him Ja- (x) Judg. xi. j 8. {a) Num. xxi. 26, (b) Jofh, xiii. 25, (<) Deut. lit. 16. See Jolh. xii. 2, kaz 43 2 7^ Chronology of the haz and Jaazer, and the City Hefhbon even unto Dibcn, yet (d) came not at this I'ime into the Land of the Children of Ammon, nor unto any Place of the River Jabbock, nor wito the Cities of the Mountains, which lay on their left Hand, nor unto whatfoever of Ar, i. e. whatfoever Cities of Ar, the Lord their God forbid them to meddle with (ej. They therefore left one half of the Valley (f) unmoleft- ed, that is, the Border even unto the River Jabbock, the , Plain alfo and Jordan, and the Coajl from Chinnereth even unto the Sea of the Plain, even the Salt Sea, under Afdod Pifgah Eafivard, which was the Border of the Children of Ammon. Which Words are fo placed both in the Original, and in all the Verfions as to feem to refer only to the River Jabbock, but it is manifeft from the Context that they mutt alfo refer to the reft of the Quotation, or there will be no poflible Place of Habitation near the River Jabbock left for the Children of Ammon. As therefore the Israelites had not come unto any Place of the River Jabbock (g), it is to be obferved, that when they went to attack Og King of Bajhan (h), they turned and went up the Way to Bajhan : Gilead, which belonged unto Og King of Bajhan, lying to the North of the River Jabbock, not far from the River Jordan ; and the Lake of Gennefareth. And as Jabbock was the Border of the Ammonites, whom the Ifraelites were forbidden to di- flrefs i they therefore turned from them, to go and attack (J) Deut. ii. 37. (0 lb. ix. 18, 19. (/) -Deut. iii. 16, 17. Jofh.xii. 2, 3. (g) Deut. ii. 37. (*>) Num. xxi. 33. the Hebrew Bible vindicated. 433 the, King of Ba/han. And Og the King of Baflian came out againft. them, he and all his People to Battle at Ed- rei. (h) And they fmote him till none was left remain- ing; and they took all his Cities, threefcore Cities, all the Region of Argob, the Kingdom of Og in Bafhan. All thefe Cities were fenced round with high Walls, Gates, and Bars, befide unwalled Towns a great many. And they took at that Time out of the Hand of the two Kings of the Amorites, (i. e. from Og and Sihon) all the Land, that was in their PofTenlon (*'), on this Side Jor- dan from the River of Arnon unto Mount Hermon. All the Cities of the Plainy or of the Valley, from Arnon to Mount Gilead, and all Gi lead, and all Bafhan, unto Shal- chah and Edrei, Cities of the Ki?jgdo?n of Og in Ba~ jharu And now (k) the Children of Reuben (I), and the Children of Gad (m), and the half Tribe of Maizaffeh, Deut. ii. 13. Num. xxxii. 33. having a very great Mul- titude of Cattle, when they faw the Land of Jazer, [h) Deut. iii. 3, &c. (/) So is Jo(h. xi. 22. to be underftood. (k) Jofephus places this Tranfac~tion after the Conquefl of Moab and Midian, but I think it more natural to place it here immediately after the Conquefl of that Country, as it is placed both in the Books of Numbers and Deuteronomy, rather than to leave this Country quite unpoffefTed by the Ifraelitesy and to fuppofe the Tribes of Reuben, Gad, and Memjfeb returning by themfelves to leave their Wives and Chil- dren in the walled Towns ; becaufe of the Inhabitants of the Land, Num. xxxii. 17. (1) Num. xxxii. 1. Deut. iii. 12. (m) Thefe Words are inferted in the Samaritan Pentateuch, and ought manifeftly to have been in the Hebrew Copy. K k k and 434 r^>e Chronology of the and of Gilead that the Place was a Place for Cattle, they fpake unto Mofcs and to E/eazar, the Priejl, and unto the Princes of the Congregation, faying, If we have found Grace in (») thy Sight, let this Land be given unto thy Servants for a PofTemon. And Mofcs faid, Shall your Brethren go to War, and you fit here ? And they came near and faid, We will build Sheepfolds for our Cattle, and Cities for our little Ones ; but we ourfelves will go ready armed before the Children of Ifrael, until we have brought them into their Place : And our little ones fhall dwell in the fenced Cities, becaufe of the Inhabitants of the Land, Num. xxxii. ly. Which plainly mews, that all the Inhabitants were not quite extirpated ; and of Confe- quence what Allowance is to be made for the Strength of the Eaftern Method of Speaking, when it is faid, as it was of this very Country : And we utterly dejiroyed them, as we did unto Sihon King of Hejhbon, utterly dejiroying the Meny Women and Children of every City, Deut. ii. 24. iii. 36. And they further faid, We will not return un- to our Houfes, until the Children of Ifrael have inherited every Man his Inheritance. And Mofes faid unto them, If ye will do this Thing, if ye will go armed before fe~ hovab to War, then this Land fhall be your PofTemon. And they faid, Thy Servants will do as my Lord com- mand eth. So concerning them Mofes and Eleazar the Prieft, and Jojhua the Son of Nun, and the chief Fathers of the Tribes of the Children of Ifrael commanded, or («) This Difcourfe though fpoken to Mofes and Eleazar, and the Congregation of the Prinees, is directed to Mofes as Prefident of the Aflembly. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 435 decreed, That they might have their Requeft. For fo this Verfe ought to be tranflated, and not, So concerning them Mofes commanded Eleazar, &c. as in our Tranflation, Num. xxxii. 28. For the Application was made not to Mofes only, but unto Mofes, and unto Eleazar, and unto the Princes of the Congregation, coer. 2. And in general, it is to be obferved, that Mofes is faid to have done, and commanded many Things, which were done and com- manded by the AfTembly of the Congregation, becaufe he was the Prefident, or principal Perfon ; as for Example, it is faid after this, ver. 33, that Mofes gave unto the Children of Gad, and to the Children of Reuben, &c. the Kingdom oiSihon King of the Amorites, &c. And becaufe the Children of Machir (0) the Son of Manaffeh had gone up againft Gilead and taken it, and difpofled the Amorite that was in it ; Mofes gave half Gilead (f) and all Bajhan, unto Machir the Son of Ma- najfeh and he dwelt therein-, that is, he gave it unto the Children of Machir ; for Machir having had Children born to him before the Death of Jofeph (q) rnuft. have been dead long ago : But in the Eaftern Stile it is very (a) Num. xxxii. 39. (p) Deut. iii. 12, 13. Jofh. xiii. 31. Mofes fays neverthelefs that he gave Gilead to Machir, the Son of Menajfeh, Deut. : iii. 15. Num. xxxii. 39. And Jo/hua fays, that Mofes gave all the Cities of Gilead to the Children of Gad, Jofh. xiii. 25. that is, all the Cities of their Half of Gilead. For he pofitively fays, ver. 31. that half Gilead was given to Machir' the Son of Menajfeh. Which (hews however with what a Latitude thefe Expreflions are to be inter- preted. (?) Gen. 1. 23. K k k 2 common 436 The Chronolgg. tht common to exprefs the Pofterity of any Perfon 1 .ider the Denomination of the Perfon himfelf, as ljrael is in num- berlefs Places put for the If aelitcs. An 1 becaufe Jair, (q) the Son of Mat:ajfeki had been infirm ::ental in taking the Region of Argob (r) and the Towns thereof, therefore Mofcs gave the Region of Argob in Baflian, and the Towns thereof, threefcore great Cities with Walls, and' brazen Bars to the Children ofjair, and he called them after his own Name Bafian-Havoth-fair , that is, the Villages of fair in Bajhan. Then Mofes returned back again and pitched at Di- bon-Gad fs), on the Northern Border ft) of the Terri- tories of Sihon King of the Amc?'ites ; and diftributed the reft of the conquered Lands among the Gadites and the Reubenites. And put the Gadites in Poneffion of the other Half of Gilead fujj from Ramath Mizpeh (x) or Ramath-Gilcad and- Mahanaim, where Jacob wreftled with the Angel, unto the Border of Debir, and unto the Edge of the Sea of Chinnereth, on the other Side of Jordan Eafiward (y). And in the Country of Sihon (9) Jair was tne Son of Segub) the Son of Gilead, the Son of Macbir, the Son of Manajfch, i Chron. ii. 21, 22. (r) Num. xxxii. 41. Deut. iii. 14. Jofh. xiii. 30. 1 Kings iv. 13; 1 Chron. ii. 21, 22. (s) Num. xxxiii. 45. (/) See Num. xxi. 30. where the Territories of Sihon are faid to. extend from Hejhbon even unto Dibon. (u) Deut. iii. 12. (x.) Jofh. xiii. 26, 30 ; xxi. 38. Gen. xxxi. 48, 49. (y) Jofh. xiii. 27. where it fhould be remarked, that the Book of; Joflw was written on the Weft Side of Jordan, the Hebrew Bible vindicated. 437 the Amorite, he gave them Bibon (y), thence probably called Bibon-Gad, to difcnguifh it from another Bibon given to the Rcubenites (z), and Ataroth and Aroer, (not Aroer upon Anion, as mentioned Dent. ii. 36. for that belonged to the Tribe of Reuben ; but Aroer that was before Rabbath, as mentioned Jc/h. xiii. 25. and Atrcth and Shophan and Jaazer, and Jcgbebab, and ife//&- nimrah, and Bethharan, fenced Cities, which they re- paired afterwards and rebuilt. Then Mofes removed from Bibon-Gad and encamped in Almon-Biblatbaim {a), or Diblab on the Edge cf the Wildernejs (b). And put the Reubenites in PoiTefTion of HeJJjbon, and Elealcby and Kirjatbaim, and Arf^, and Baalmeon, and Shibmab, &c. even unto Aroer on the. Banks of the River Anion () Here the Angel of Jchcvah is called Jehovah. (q) God may as well fpeak out of the Mouth of an Afs to -Balaam, as out of a Cloud, or out of a fiery Bufh to Mofes ; or out of Fire to the Peo- ple of Ifrael, Deu:. iv. 12. Jehovah Hebrew Bible vlndkatx 44. i Jehovah opened the Eyes of Balaam, and he law the An- gel of Jehovah ftanding in the Way, and his Sword drawn in his Hand ; and he bowed down his Head and fell flat On his Face, and faid unto the Angel of Jehovah, I have finned; for I knew not that thou flooded: in the Way a- gainft me ; Now therefore if it dijpleafe thee, I will get me back again. From which Exprefiion, it feems rea- fonable to think, that Balaam was confcious to himfelf of having been too officious in going with the Princes of Moab; and that he rofe in the Morning without be- ing called, or follicited to go along with them. And the Angel of Jehovah faid unto Balaam, Go with the Men ; but only the Word that I mail fpeak unto thee, that thou fhalt fpeak: So Balaam went with the Princes cf Balak. And when Balak heard that Balaam was come, he went out to meet him, unto a City of Moab, which is in the Border of Anion, in the utmojl Coa/2-, that is, of the Kingdom of 'Moab. And Balak faid un- to Balaam, Did I not earnestly fend unto thee to call thet? wherefore cameft thou not unto me ? Am not I able to promote thee to Honour ? And Balaam faid, Lo, I am come unto thee, have I now any Power at all to lay any Thing? the Word that God putt eth in mv Mouth, that mall I fpeak. And it came to pafs on the Morrow that Balak took ^Balaam, and carried him up into the high Places of Beer, that thence he might fee the utmoft Part of the People. And Balaam (r) laid unto Balak, Build me here kvtn (r) Num. xxiii, i, Szc. L 1 1 Altars ; 44-2 The Chronology of the Altars j and ftand by thy Burnt-offering, and I will go perad venture Jehovah will come to meet me ; and what- foever he fheweth me, I will tell thee. And he went to an high Place, or as the Original properly fignifies, he went folitary, or by himfelf : Where it is to be obferved, that Balaam retired by himfelf, to try his Enchantments ; Qhqp, xxiv. i. But God, or the Angel of God, which had before fpoken unto him, met Balaam, and Jehovah put a Word in his Moutb, and faid, Return unto Balak, and thus malt thou fpeak. And he returned and took up his Parable, and faid, How fhall I curfe, whom God, hath not curfed ? Or, How (hall I defy, whom God hath not defied ? &c. And Balak faid unto Balaam, what haft thou done unto me ? I took thee to curfe mine Enemies., and behold thou haft bleffed them. And he -anfwered and faid, Muft I not take heed to fpeak that which Jehovah hath put in my Mouth? And Balak faid unto him, Come I pray thee with me unto ano- ther Place, from whence thou mayeft fee them j thou Jkalt fie but the outmojl Part oj them, and thou Jim It not fee them all; and curfe me them from thence. And he brought him into the Field of Zophim, to the Top of Pifgah (sjt And he faid unto Balak, Stay here by the Burnt- offering, while I meet Jehovah yonder. And Jehovah met Ba- laam, and put a Word in his Mouth, and faid, Go again (i) This fhews that the lfraelites were not then in the Valley of Moab near Jordan, but in the Valley on the Eaft of Mount Abarim or Nebo, becaufe this being the Place where Mofes was brought to have a View of the Land of Canaan, Deut. xxxiv. i. muft of Courfe have fully overlooked the Valley of Mgab by Jordan near Jericho. unto. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 443 unto Balak, and fay thus. And he took up his Parable, and faid, Behold I hcve received Commandment to blefs ; and he hath blerTcd, and I cannot reverfe it. He will not behold Trouble in Jacob, or Affliction in Jfrael. Surely ■there is no Enchantment againil: Jacobs neither is any Divination that will take Place againil Ifracl. Our Tran- flation renders thefe Words thus : He hath not beheld Iniquity in Jacob, neither hath he feen Perverfenefs in Jfrael: Which was undoubtedly not true. See Exod. xxxii. 9. But the Septuagint renders it more properly. Since the original Word ptf, which we tranflate Iniqui- ty fignifies Trouble, as well as Iniquity. And the Word *?fty, which we render Perverfenefs, undoubtedly figni- fies Labour and Trouble, being derived from the Verb h'OVi which Buxtorf renders Laboravit, Molefiia qffe- cit3 &c. And Balak faid, Neither curfe them at all, nor blefs 'them at all. But Balaam anfwered and faid, Told not I •thee, faying, all that Jehovah fpeaketh, that I muft do ? And Balak faid, Come I pray thee, I will bring thee unto another Place ; peradventure it will pleafe God, that thou may eft curfe them me from thence. And Balak brought Balaam to the Top of Peer, that looketh to- wards Jefliimon, or the Wildernefs ; for fo it is rendered in all the Verfions, Syriack, Arabick and Samaritan-, and not Jeflrimon as in the Englijh. Which alfo mews that the Ifraelites were encamped on the Eaft of the ivloun- •tains of Moab, during this Tranfaction, the Wildernefs LIU of 43-4 ^je Chronology of the of Kedemoibj lying Eafhvard, Numb. xxi. n. Dene. ii. 26. And when Balaam ft) faw that it pleafed Jehovah to hlefs Ifrael, he went not out as at other Times, to feek for Enchantments, but he fet his Face towards the Wil- dernefs, and faw Ifrael abiding in his Tents j and the Spirit of God came upon him ; and he fell into a Trance and faw a Vifion. And when he was recovered, he took up his Parable, and faid, Balaam the Son of Beor hath faid, and the Man (u) wkofe Eyes were Jhut, that is, in a Trance or Vifion, but are now open, hath faid, He hath faid, which heard the Words of God, which few the Vifion of the Almighty falling into a Trance, but having his Eyes open : How goodly are thy Tents, O Jacob, Sec. BlefTed is he that blerTeth thee, and curfed is he that curfeth thee. Then Balaam (x) being divine- ly infpired, took up his Parable and faid, I fall fee himy hit not now ; If all behold him but not nigh -, there (y) (r) Num. xxiv. I. (u) So in the Hebrew, but in the Englijh Tranflation it is, Whofe Eyes are open, Num. xxiv. 15. (x) Num. xxiv. 17. (y) Heb. Is come. It being common in the prophetic Stile to exprefs future Things as already in Being ; becaufe the Prophet faw them as at that Inftant in View. Thus the Sybijl Prophetefs in Virgil fpeaking of future Times, fays : Bella, horrida "Bella •> Et Tyberim multo fpumantem j anguine cerno. Virg. JEn. 6. 1. 86. And it fliould be remarked, that Balaam is reprefented as having ften $is in 0 Fifiont Num. xxiv. 16, SHALX Hebrew Bible vindicated. 445 shall come a Star out of Jacob, and a Sceptre flail rife out of Ifrael, and Jhall finite the Corners (or (j) Princes) of Mo ah, and defiroy all the Children of Seth. Which Prophecy is generally underilood to refer imme- diately to fome one Perfon of the Seed of Jacob, who mould in Procefs of Time be a great Conqueror; and mediately or myftically to refer to the MeJJiah, who was to be of the Seed of that Conqueror, and mould re- claim thole Countries here mentioned, to the Wormip of the true God, by deftroying and rooting out Idolatry. And therefore in the Targum of Onkelos, this Parage is rendered thus : There fliall co?ne a Ki?ig cut of Jacob-, and Chrift Jl:all be anointed in Ifrael, &c. But as it is not the Deiign of thefe Papers to enter into the Expla- nation of thefe Prophecies ; or the Application of them to the Event 5 I mall at prefent confider this PaiTage, no further than to enquire what is meant by that Part of the Prophecy which fays, And Jhall deftroy all the Chilr- dren of Seth. The Generality of Commentators, follow- ing the Targum of Onkelos, have interpreted this of all Mankind, fuppoiing Seth the Son of Adam to be put for Adam. But I cannot help thinking this Interpreta- tion to be exceeding flat ; becaufe the Prophet is in this PaiTage particularizing feveral Places which bordered on the Land of Canaan, and in particular mentions Moah, Edom, and Seir. And therefore as this ExpreiTion is no where elfe to be met with in the whole Scriptures, R, Nathan (z) fuppofes Seth to be the Name of fome. re- (y) As it is in the Margin of our Bible, (z) Drufius in fee. uwrkablc. 446 ^ Chronology of the markable City in the Country of the Moabites puy Grotius (a) fuppofes it to be the Name of fome Moabife Prince. But in my Opinion it is the Egyptians^ that are meant by the Children of Seth ; who as well as the Mvabites, and Edomitcs bordered alfo on the Land of Canaan : Set bos or Seth being probably at the Time of this Prophecy the reigning King in Egypt. For (b) ac- cording to Manet bo, Mcfes was expelled Egypt in the -Life-time of Amenophis, the Father of Sethos, when Se~ /fei'was eighteen Years of Age j which Sethos, or Seth, was known by the Names of Ramefes or Egypt us, as well as that of Sethos. It is alfo manifeft, that Sethos had a Brother whofe Name was Danaus, and that thefe two Brothers, who were Princes in the Upper Egypt, quar- relled about the Throne j and that Egyptus or Sethos get- ting the better of his Brother Danaus obliged him, toge- ther with his Uncle Lynceus, to fly into Greece. Now as thefe Perfons had no Way of getting at the Mediter- ranean Sea, but by going through the Lower Egypt, it is probable that Danaus firft fled from his Brother for Pro- tection to Acherres, who lived at Zoan in the Lower Egvpt-, which Kingdom having been greatly weakened by the immenfe Lofs of Troops and Chariots and Horfes which they had lately fuffered in the Red Sea, when Cenchrcs was drowned ; Acherres was not able to fup- port Danaus againfr. the conquering Army of Sethos, who having purfued him thus far and obliged him to quit that Kingdom ; probably took the Advantage of the; Weaknefs of Acherres to feize upon this Kingdom ; and, (a) Grot, in loc. {b) See Part I. p. 285, united Hebrew Bible vindicated. 447 united the Upper and Lower Egypt under one Domi- nion, and communicated the Name of Egypt, to both, thofe Kingdoms of the Upper and Lower Egypt, which before were known by the diftinct Names of Chamia and Mefire, by which alfo they are called by the Ara- biafis to this Day, when fpoken of feperately, but have ever fince this Conqueft, when fpoken of together, been generality called by the Name of the Kingdom of Egyp- tus, or Egypt. Which when Egyptus had effected, and had repeopled the City of Ramefes that had been defert- ed by the Ifraelites, with a Colony of hi$ own People from the Upper Egypt, he might thence obtain the ad- ditional Title of Egyptus Ramefes. And as the Word Seth according to Plutarch (cj fignifies the Bower that over- turns all Things, or that overleaps all Bounds, He might alfo have obtained that Name on Account of this very Tranfaclion. And as this Prophecy of Balaam was de-_ livered about forty Years after the Deftruction of the Egyptians in the Red Sea, here was full Time for this Revolution to have taken Effect, and for the Report of this Tranfaclion to have reached the neighbouring King- doms of Pale/line and Mefopotatnia. And as Egyptus was , Undoubtedly known by the Name of Seihos, or Seth, as well as of Egyptus, I am inclined to think it is the Egyptians that are here meant in this Prophecy of Ba- laam, by the Children of Seth. And I am confirmed in this Opinion by a Prophecy in the Book of Ifaiah (d) relating to the Days of the MeJJiah, in which among (c) Plutar. de Ifid. & Ofir. f. 49. (d) Ifa. xv. 1, &c. xviii. 3, &c. xix. ii kc. xxi. 11. other. 44 8 The Chronology c/ the other Places, that Hull be affected thereby, with regard to the Deftrudtion of their Idolatry, that Prophet parti- cularly fi 3 the Kingdom of Egypt, as well as the Kingdoms of Moab, and Edom. And Balak's Anger was kindled, and he fmote his Hands together, and faid unto Balaam, I thought to pro- mote thee unto great Honour, but lo, Jehovah hath kept thee back from Honour. And Balaam rofe up and re- turned to his Place ; and Balak alfo went his Way. Not that Balaam returned then to Mcfopotamia, but that he and Balak parted only at prefent j for he never rea- ched Home, but abode among the Moabites^ and in or- der to engratiate himfelf with the King, and acquire Ho- nour he gave them this Advice, that if he had a Mind to deftroy the Ifraelites^ he mould not attempt it by open Force, but by feducing them to Idolatry and Fornication, which would incenfe Jehovah againfr. them, and deprive them of the Protection of their God. Which Advice the Moabites having purfucd, did indeed excite the Anger of God againft thofe Jfraelites that were guilty ; but much more againfl the Moabites who had enveighled them ; and therefore he afterwards ordered Mofes to extirpate them. I t is plain from this whole Story that Balaam was a Diviner, and received the Rewards of Divinatio?i, or di- vined for Hire (e) : And it appears from this Part of the mat even when Jehovah lent his Angel to fpeak with him, that he was too fcllicitous to recommend him- Sce 2 Pet. ii. 15. Jude 11. feif Hebrew Bible vindicated. 447 felf to the Favour of Balak, and when he came to Balak, pretended to acquire his Information by the Virtue of fome Enchantments, that he made ufe of. And I make no doubt that he tried all the Art he was Matter of, to comply with the Defires of the King of Moab ; but God was too ftrong for him : And therefore he was forced to cry out j that there was no Enchantment againft Jacob, nor Method of Divination that would take Place a^ainfl Ifrael (f). And it appears plainly from the whole Purport of this Part of the Hiftory of Mofes j that the Reafon why Almighty God was pleafed to interfere fo much in this Tranfaction between the King of Moab and Balaam, was becaufe he had a Mind to preferve the Moa bites from Deftruc~tion : He had before declared to Mofes , and the Children of Ifrael, that he did not in-' tend to give them any Part of the Land of Moab for a PorTeffion, and therefore he abfolutely prohibited them from contending with them in Battle ; Dent. ii. 9, 19, And to keep Balak and the People of Moab quiet from rnolefting the Jfraelites, he feems to have taken this Opportunity of informing them of his Defigns,' in Fa- vour of the Ifraelites by one of their own Diviners whom they put the greateft Confidence in; and therefore alfo iri the. End of Ba/ak's Prophecy, which he makes by Infpi- ration from God, he concludes with mentioning the fad Catafirophe which was to happen to the Amalekites, who being, the jirfi of the Nations, that took Arms againft the Ifraelites (g)_, his latter End fhoidd be that1 he per if j for (/)' See "Num. xxiii. 23. and the Notes thereon in Part I. p. 250. (g) 1 Sam. xv. 2. * M m m ever 44.8 72* Chronology of the ever (h). Which indeed feems to have quieted the Mcahites, as to taking up Arms againft Ifrael; but not againft endeavouring their Deftru&ion by feducing them to eat Things facrificed unto Idols, and to commit Forni- cation; according to the private, but pernicious Advice 5 that was given them by Balaam,, Rev. ii. 14. Numb, xxxi. 16. A n d Ifrael (i) abode in Shittim and the People be- gan to commit Whoredom with the Daughters of Moab\. and they called the People. to the Sacrifices of their Gods* And the People did eat of their Sacrifices and bowed down to their Gods ; and Ifrael' joined himfelf unto 1 Baal-Peor. The Pfalmijl (k) fays, that they eat the Sacrifices of CtfriBL Metim, which our Tranilation with that of the Samaritan, Arabic, Syriac, &c. renders, The Sacrifices of the Dead. Whereas I am inclined to think it mould be rendered, They ate the Sacrifices of Harlots. For, though the. beft Commentators fuppofe ihis to allude to their worshipping of dead Heroes ; yet I, cannot agree therewith, becaufe I do not apprehend that the deifying of dead Heroes was yet brought into . Practice. The Aborigines Egyptians, according to He- rodotus (/) never worshipped dead Men. The Romans were not yet in Being : And it is very remarkable, that when Romulus (m) firft instituted his Religion in Romes t that he prohibited the Ufe of any Images whatfoever in Temples, And among the Grecians the worshipping of, (b) Num. xxiv. 20. (/) Num. xxv. 1. (k) Pfal. cvi. 28. (1) Herod. Euterpe, (m) Eufeb, Pr*ep. p. 78, 410. deified; Hebrew Bible vindicated. 449 deified Heroes was not introduced till the Time of Or- pheus, at the fooneft, who lived but two Generations before the War of Troy, and his Plan was not reduced into Form till about the Time of Hefiod and Homer-, and therefore Herodotus fays (ri% that he is of Opinion, thai Hejiod and Homer, who lived not above four hundred Years before his Time were the Perfons who introduced $he Genealogy of the Gods among the Grecians, impo- sed Names upon each, afligned their Functions and Ho^ nours, and clothed them in their feveral Forms. It is certain, that at this Time the Moabites worfhipped the God Moloch, 1 Kings xi. 7. and Chemojh, Num. xxi. 29. as well as Baal-Peor, But the bell Criticks (0) fuppofe thefe two Gods Moloch and Chemojh to be only Emblems of the Sun. It is moll; probable, that the Sun, the Moon, the Planets, the Heavens, and the Earth were the firft Ob- jects of Idolatry : "To which we may add this of Baal- Peor, which they worfhipped not as the Reprefentative of any particular Perfon, but as being the Emblem of Fertility (p) and Generation ; as his Name fufficiently -denotes, which literally tranflated fignifies the Naked God And therefore Mofes obferves, that as foon as the IJrae* lites joined themfelves to Baal- Peer, they began to com- (») Herod. Euter. See alfo Eufeb. Prap p. «j-g. { 54- M m m 2 irix 45° ^je Chronology of the mit Whoredom with the Daughters of Moab. And the Prophet Ifaiah, fpeaking of this Defection of the Ifrae- fites, fays, they went to Baal-Peor, and feperated them- ielves to that Shame -, and their Abominations were as they loved (q). And as Mofes pofitively declares, that the Women of the Moabites caufed the Children of Ifrael through the Counfel of Balaam, to commit Trefpafs a- gainft 'Jehovah in the Matter of Peor (r). Arfd as St. John in the Book of Revelations (s) declares, that this Stumbling-block which Balak caft before the Ifraelites, by the Advice of Balaam, confifted in eating Things ia- crificed to Idols, and committing Fornication. Therefore I mould apprehend, that this Word tDT)E mould rather be derived from nrD which fignifies the fame with the Latin Word Homo, a Man, or Woman, than from DYE which fignifies to die. And that this Expreffion of the Pfalmijl is equivalent to that of the Prophet Hofea, when he fays, they feperated tbemfehes with Whores, and facrifice with Harlots, Hof. iv. 1 4. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes (t), Take the Chiefs of the People, and call an AfTembly, and hang up the Offen- ders before Jehovah, againft, or in the Face of the Sun, that the fierce Anger of Jehovah may be turned away from Ifrael. Our Translation renders this Verfion thus ; Take the Heads of the People, and hang them up before the Lord againjl the Sun. Which is flicking too literally to the Words of the Hebrew, becaufe the Expreffion of Heads is very ambiguous. But the Targum of Onkelos^ explains {q) Hof. ix. ic. (r) Num. xxxi. 16. (s) Rev. ii. 14, Num. xxv. 4.. Hebrew Bible vindicated. ^.$1 explains it as above, which Interpretation is fully confir- med by the following Verfe. And Mofes faid unto the Judges, (that is, the Chiefs or Heads of the Tribes, whom he had affembled), Slay every one his Men that werejoyned to Baal-Peor. Which when they had ac- cordingly done j while they were weeping before the Door of the Congregation, behold one of the Children of Ifrael came and brought unto his Brethren a Mocbitifi Woman in the Sight of Mofes, and in the Sight of all the Congregation of the Children of Ifrael; and when Thineas. the Son of Eleazar the Prieft faw it, he rofe up from amongft the Congregation, and took a Javelin in his Hand; and he went after the Man of Ifrael into the Tent, and thruft both of them through. And the Slaugh- ter (tj was flayed from among the Children of Ifrael; all the Men, that followed Baal-Peor, having been de- ftroyed from among them. Deut. iv. 3. Our Tranfla- tion renders this Part of the Verfe, So the Plague was ftayed from the Children of Ifrael. But there was no Mention before of any Plague. The Offenders indeed were ordered to be put to Death, to be flain, by 'the Judges, or Magistrates, ver. 5. But the Word which in the Englifh Verfion is rendered a Plague, may as well be rendered either Slaughter, or any other Kind of De- ftrudtion ; being derived from the Verb fpj which k tranflated by Buxtorf, Cecidit, Percufflt, Ferberavit, Plaga affecit, item Offendit, Impegit : And is ufed by Mofes to denote all thofe various Kinds of Vexations, and Definitions with which God plagued the If/adkes, (0 Num. xxv. 8, Exod, 452 Tlje Chronology of the Exod. ix. 14. And in 2 Sam. xvii. 9. this very Word is tranflated Slaughter 3 as it mould have been in the Verfe before us. And (u) they that died in or by the Slaughter were twenty and four thoufand. Whereas St. Paul (x) makes them but twenty and three Thoufand, which mult be a Miftake in one of the Tranfcripts : And ieems to be in that of the New Teftament, becaufe the Septuagint Verfion, which is generally quoted by St. Paul agrees with the Hebrew. And it came to pafs after the Slaugh- ter that Jehovah (y) fpake tmto Mofes, and unto Eleazar the Prieft faying, Take the Sum of all the Congregation of the Children of Ifrael, from twenty Years old and up- wards, all that are able to go to War. And "when they were numbred they were found to amount to fix hundred and one thoufand feven hundred and thirty. And Jehovah (z) fpake unto Mofes, faying, Unto thefe ihall the Land be divided for an Inheritance, accor- ding to the Number of Names : To many thou ihalt give the more Inheritance, and to few thou malt give the lefs Inheritance. Notwithstanding the Land mall be divided by Lot j according to the Names of the Tribes of their Fathers, they mall inherit. And thefe mall be your Borders. Your South Border mall be from the i>hore of the Salt Sea, from the Bay that looketh South- Eail-ward {a) to Maakh-airabbim, or the Afcent of A- crabbim, (u) Num. xxv. 9. (*) 1 Cor. x. 8. (y) Num. xxvi. 1. Num. xxvi. 52. (tf) In the Book of Jojhua it is Southward* but Hebrew Bible vindicated, 453 orabbim, (now Ace aba) and pafs on to Zin\ and afcend up on the South-fide unto Kadejh-Barnea ; and pafs a- long to Hezron, and go up to Adar and fetch a Compafs to Karkaab, and from thence pafs on towards Azmon (b). And the Border fhall fetch a Compafs from Azmon unto the River of Egypt, and the Goings-out of it fhall be at the Sea. Compare Num. xxxiv. 3 — 5. with Jojh. xv< 2, 3, 4. And as for the We iter n Border, you fhall have the great Sea, or the Mediterranean Sea (which was called the great. Sea in comparifon with the Sea of Tiberias, or the Salt Sea) for a Border. This fhall be your Weflern Border,. Num. xxxiv. 6. And for your Northern Border,, from the Great- Sea. you fhall point out the Mountain-Mountain 5 or the Great Mountain, that is, Mount Libanus ; and from the Mountain-Mountain, or Mount Libanus, you fhall point out your Border to the Entrance in of Hamath, and from thence by Zedad, through Ziphron to Hazar-Enan3 which lies at the North End of Jordan, to the Border of Damafcus Northward. Compare Num. xxxiv. 7, 8, with Ezek. xlviiii. i» Where I cannot but remark, that. but in the Book of Numbers it is Eajiward ; fo that it may properly be faid to be South- Eajiward. (J>) This Word Azmon is in- this Place tranflated by the Septuagint Jfmon, though in Jojh. xv. 4, the fame Word in the Hebrew is tran- flated Selmon 3 which fhews A%m) Low. DifT. p. 311. N n 11 2 eight 4 5 S 'The Chronology of the eight Cities : Whicli would in general amount to four Cities a Tribe j but as fome Tribes were larger and fome lefs; therefore God commanded Mofes, that from them that had many, he mould give manyj but from them that had few he mould give few. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofes (/'), faying, Speak unto the Children of Ifrael, and fay, When ye be come over Jordan, into the Land of Canaan, then ye mall appoint you Cities, to be Cities of Refuge for you > that the Slay- cr may flee thither which killeth any Perfon at unawares. Ye mail give three Cities on this Side Jordan, and three- Cities, mail ye give in the Land of Canaan, which mall be Cities of Refuge. And at the fame Time, God gave feveral Rules for the Conduct of the AlTembly of the Con- gregation in judging between the Slayer and Revenger. of Blood. Then Mofes (k) fevered three Cities on this Side Jordan, towards the Sun-riiing, that the Slayer might flee thither, which mould kill his Neighbour unawares, and hated him not in Times paftj and that fleeing unto one of thefe Cities he might live. Namely Bczer in the Wildernefs in the plain Country, of the Reubcnites ; and Ramoth in Gilead of the Gadites; and Golan in Bajhan of the Manafjites. Which City of Bezer as it is now pointed in the Hebrew Copy is in the Scptnaghit, and in the reft of the Verfions called Bofor, and therefore ought probably to be read in the fame manner in the He- {>) Num. xxxv, 8— 34, (k) Deut. iv, 41—43. brew, Hebrew Bible vindicated, 459 brew. Which City is Gen. xxxvi. 33. Jfa. xxxiv. 6. lxiii. 1. Jer. xlix. 7, 13, 22. Amos 1. 11, 12. faid to be- long to Idumcea or the Territory of Edom. But in Jcr. xlviii. 24. it is defcribed as in Deut. iv. 43. to belong to the Country of the Moabifes, and as it was given into the Poffenion of the Tribe of Reuben, it muft of Confe- quence have been fituated Northward of the River Arnon^ which was the Southern Boundary of that Tribe, JoJJ\ xiii. 15. Which mews manifeftly, that Edom or Efau was at firft fettled on the Eaft-Side of Jordan, in that Country which was, at the Time of Mofes, pollened by Sihon King of the Amorites; though his Poflerity af- terwards removedr and went and took PonerTion of Mount Hor bordering on the Wildernefs of Kadejht Zint or Pa- ran. Then came the Daughters (k) of Zckpbehad, the Son of Hepher, the Son oiGilead, the Son of Machir, the Son of Manajfeh, of the Families of Manajfeh, the Son of Jo- feph ; and they flood beforeMc/^, and before Eleazar, and before the Princes, and before all the Congregation, by the Door of the Tabernacle, faying, Our Father died in the Wildernefs, and he was not in the Company of them that gathered themfelves together againft Jehcvah, in the Company of Korab, but died in his own Sin, and had no Sons j why mould the Name of our Father be dimi- nifhed away, from among his Family, becaufe he hath no Son? Give unto us therefore a PonefTion among the Brethren of our Father. And Mcjes brought their Caufe (£) Num. xx\ii. 1 — ir. before 460 7%e Chronology of the before Jehovah. Where it fhould be obferved, that the Daughters of Zelophehad brought their Caufe before Mo- fes, and before Elcazar, and before the Princes and all the Congregation ; but as this was a new Cafe, concern- ing which they had received no Directions from Jehovah ; Mofcs went into the Tabernacle to confult Jehovah, and he laid the Caufe before Jehovah : And it is probable, that he received the Anfwer from Jehovah, in the fame manner as he had formerly done upon the Dedication of the Temple > when he heard the Voice of one f peaking wito him from off the Mercy -feat that was upon the Ark of the Teftiniony from between the two Cherubim s, Num. vii. 89. And Jehovah faid, The Daughters of Zelophehad fpeak right. Thou fhalt furely give them a PoiTeffion among their Fathers Brethren. And he faid, Let this be a Statute unto the Children of Ifracl, that if a Man die and have no Son then ye fhall caufe his Inheritance to pafs unto his Daughters : And if he have no Daugh- ters, unto his Brethren i and if he have no Brethren, then unto his Kinfman, that is next to him of his Family. And the chief Fathers of the Families of Gilead, the Son of Machir (/) came near, and fpake before Mofes, and before the Princes and before the chief Fathers of the Children of JfracL And they faid, Jehovah com- manded my Lord to give the Land for an Inheritance, by Lot to the Children of Ifrael: And my Lord was com- manded by Jehovah, to give the Inheritance of Zelophe- had our Brother unto his Daughters. And if they be (/) Num. xxxvi. i. married Hebrew BibL£ vindicated. 461 married to any of the Sons of the other Tribes of the Children of IJrael', then fhall their Inheritance be taken from the Inheritance of our Fathers. And when the Ju- bilee (m) of the Children of Jfrael mail be, then mall their Inheritance be put unto the Inheritance of the Tribe whereunto they are received : So fhall the Inheritance be taken away from the Inheritance of the Tribe of our Fa- thers. And Mofes commanded the Children of Jfrael according to the Word of 'Jehovah, i. e. as he had done in the preceeding Cafe, by laying it before Jehovah, and then reporting the Anfwer from Jehovah; and faid, Let the Daughters of Zelophehad marry to whom they think befl ; only to the Tribe of their Father fhall they marry : So fhall not the Inheritance of the Children of Jfrael, re- move from Tribe to Tribe ; for every one of the Chil- dren of Ifrael fhall keep himfelf to the Inheritance of the Tribe of his Fathers, &c. Which Determination, tho' it feems to be confined to Women who were HeirefTes ; but not to oblige other Women to marry within their own Tribe ; yet I apprehend it virtually included it : becaufe an Eflate might fall to a Woman after fhe was married, who was no Heirefs at the Time of her Mar^ riage. (m) The Reafon of this was, that by the Law of the Jubilee efta- blifhed, Lev.xxv. 10 — 17. the Lands of the Ifraelites were unalie- nable for more than forty-nine Years at moft; but if fold, or any o- therwife difpofed of, they muft be returned to the original Owner at the next Jubilee. And 462 The Chronology of the And Jehovah (n) fpake unto Mofes, faying, Vex the Moabitcs, and finite them ; for they vexed you with their Wiles, wherewith they have beguiled you in the Matter of Peer : Avenge the Children of Ifrael of them j af- terward thoii fi:alt be gathered unto thy People (0). And Mofes fpake unto the Children of Ifrael, faying, Arm fome of yourfelves unto the War, and let them go a- gainfl the Mcabites, and avenge Jehovah of Mcab ; of* every Tribe a Thoufand throughout all the Tribes of If rael mall ye fend to the War. And Mofes fent them to the War, a Thoufand of every Tribe, them and P tineas the Son of Eleazar the Prieft with the holy Inftrument?, r.nd the Trumpets to blow in his Hand. Which is the only Inftance of any Mention of the holy Injlriiments that were fent out to Warj the Generality of the Jews, a- mong which is Aben-Ezra underhand it of the Ark ; -and Jonathan the Chaldee Paraph raft, of the Urim and Thummim : But other Commentators underftand thefe Words to refer only to the Trumpets, which were al- ways to be blown by fome of the Sons of Aaron, Num. x. 8. and that Phineas was therefore fent upon that Ac- count. As to my own Opinion, I think the Expreflion of the holy Jnftruments cannot poftibly refer to the Urim and Thummitn j for then the High Prieft muft have gone himfelf, and not his Son, the Breaft-plate of Judgment being a Part of his Drefs when he confulted God by Urim and Thummim, Exod> xxviii. 22—- -30. Nor do I think («) Num. xxxi. 1 ; xxv. 16. (0) The Inferting thefc Words by Mofes is the Reafon why I defer this Tranfa&ion to the laft, it He brew Bible vindicated. 463 it refers to the Trumpets, becaufe the Words of the O- riginal are, And Mofes fent Phineas the Son of Eleazar the Prieff, to the War, and the holy Inftruments and the Trumpets, &c. i. e. both with the holy Inflxuments and the Trumpets. Certain it is, that the Ark was carried in the Midft of the Army of the Ifraelites, when they en- compaffed Jericho, Jofh. vi. 1 — 16. But this was not to a Field-battle, but in order to fhew the Power of God in deflroying the Walls of Jericho. What there- fore weigheth moil with me to fuppofe thefe holy Initru- ments to refer to the Ark, is the Refolution which the Ifraelites came to when diftreffed by the Philijlines, of fending for the Ark into the Camp : Let us., fay they, fetch the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord out of Shiloh unto us, that when it cometh among us, it may fave us- out of the Hand of our Enemies, 1 Sam. iv. 3. Now they would not have faid this, if they had not had fome Experience, or at leaft Tradition, of the Ark of the Lord having produced this Effect; and as I do not recoiled: that the Ark is ever faid pofitively to have been carried where there was a Field-battle, but in this Fight of the Ifraelites againfl the Philijlines ; therefore I fuppofe this Battle of the Ifraelites againfl: the Moabites where twelve Thoufand Men engaged the numerous Forces of Moabt defeated them, and utterly deftroyed them, without loof- ing one fmgle Man on the Side of the Ifraelites, muff have laid a Foundation for the fubfequent Expectation of the Ifraelites in their Battle againfl: the Philijlines : And *of Confequence that the Ark of the Covenant was in- cluded in the ExprefTion of the holy Inftruments % the Ark O o o being 464 The Chronology of the being a Part of the Burthen of the Kohathites, which they were to carry covered up along with the holy In- struments and VefTels of the Sanctuary, Num. iv\ 4 — A N d the twelve Thoufand JfraeJites flew, befide the fell: of them that were (lain in Battle, Evi and Rekem, and Zur, and Hur, and Reba, five Kings of Moab -} Ba- laam alfo the Son of Beor (p) they flew with the Sword. And they took the Women of Moab Captives and their little ones, and took the Spoil of their Cattle, and all their Flocks, and all their Goods. And Mofes> and Eleazar, and all the Princes of the Congregation, went forth to meet them without the Camp. And Mo- fes was wroth with the Officers of the Hoft, and faid unto themr Have ye faved all the Women alive ? Be- hold thefe caufed the Children of Ifrael, through the Counfel of Balaam to commit Trefpafs againft Jehovah- in the Matter of Baal-Peor. Now therefore kill every Male that is grown up to Puberty, and every Woman that hath known Man by lying with them. The Reafon for which feems to be this : Becaufe this Baal-Peor, this Naked God, was probably the lame infamous Deity, that was afterwards worshipped by the Greeks under the Cha- racter of Hermes, and by the Latins under the Character of PHapus. It might therefore be very prudent to de- stroy thofe lewd Creatures, whether Male or Female, who* '' p) St. Pihr calls him Balaam the Son of Bofor, which muft be a Miftake in the Tranfcript, 2 Pet. ii. 15. fince all the Verfions unani- Ujoufly agree with the Hebrew. had Hebrew Bible vindicated. 465 had fo far loft their Shame, and their Modefty, as to ^vorfliip fuch a Deity ; left as they had hitherto beguil- ed the Ifraelites with their Wiles in the Matter of Baal- Peorx they mould continue to fpread their Abominations in the Camp of Ifrael. In our Tranflation3 and in all the Verfions the Words are, Every Male among the little ones ; but the Hebrew fays only, every Male, ^tOS which literally fignifies, In Pube •, and therefore this Sentence may be rendered, Every Male that is arrived at Puberty For that all the Males wrere not deftroyed is manifeft from the Directions afterwards given Deut. xxiii. 3. not to ad- mit a Moabite into the Congregation of Magiftrates, till the tenth Generation 5 which would have been needlefs had the Males been all deftroyed. And if any were fpa- red furely it mud have been the little ones. Then God commanded thofe who had been in the Battle to abide without the Camp feven Days j and whofoever had killed any Perfon, and whofoever had touched any flain, to purify both themfelves and their Captives, on the third Day, and on the feventh Day, And, fays he, purify all your Raiment, and all that is made of Skins, and all Work of Goat's Hair, and all Things of Wood. Only the Gold, and the Silver, the Brafs, the Iron, and the Lead ; every Thing that may abide the Fire, ye mall make it go through the Fire, and it mail be clean ; neverthelefs it mall afterwards be purified with the Water of Separation : See Num. xix. 9, 7. and all that abideth not the Fire ye mall make go through the Water. And ye fhall wafh your Cloaths O o o 2 _gn 466 77je Chronology of the on the feventh Day, and ye mall be clean, and after-- wards ye iliall come into the Camp. And Jehovah fpake unto Mofesi faying, Do thou, and Efcazar, and the chief Fathers of the Congregation divide the Prey into two Parts between them that took the War upon them, and the reft of the Congregation. And levy a Tribute unto Jehovah : Out of the Portion of the Men of War which went out to Battle, take one Soul of five. Hundred both of the Perfons, and of the Beeves, and of the AfTes, and of the Sheep, and give it to Eleazar the Prieft, for an Heave-offering to Jehovah : And of the reft of the Children of Ifrael's Portion thou malt take one out of Fifty j and give them unto the Levites, which keep the Charge of the Tabernacle . And the Officers (q) which were over Thoufands of the Hoft, the Captains of Thoufands, and Captains of Hun- dreds came near unto Mofes, and faid, Thy Servants have taken the Sum of the Men of War, which are un- der our Charge, and there lacketh not one Man of us. We have therefore brought an Oblation for Jehovah, out of (r) what every Man hath gotten, of Jewels of Gold, Chains, and Bracelets, Rings, Ear-rings, and Tablets, to make an Atonement for our Souls before Jehovah. And Mofes and Eleazar took the Gold of the Captains of. Thoufands, and of Hundreds, and brought it into the. [q) Num. xxxi. 48. (r) In the Original and all the. Transla- tions it is, What every Man hath gotten ; but it is plain, that it was a Tiibutc of a fiftieth, and five hundredth Part out of what they had. gotten. See ver. 28 and 30. Tabe^ Hebrew Bible vindicated. 467 Tabernacle, for a Memorial for the Children of Ifrael before Jehovah, And now Mofes being fettled at quiet in the Plains of Moab, Jofh. xiii. 32. made a further Distribution of all thofe Lands which were conquered from the King of Moab, and the Princes of Midian, Evi, and Rekem, and Zurt and Hur, and Rebay Num. xxxi. 8. Jofh. xiii. 32. So that Jordan now became their Border to the Weft, Jofh. xiii. 23. from the Edge of the Sea of Chin- nereth Eaftward, Jofh. xiii. 27. Num. xxxiv. 11. that is, from the South-Eaft Corner of the Sea of Chinnereth a- long the River Jordan to the Goings-out of the Salt Seay i.e. to the End of it, Num. xxxiv. 12. So that the River Jabbock was now a Part of their Territories, which till the Moabites had excited God's Wrath againft them they were prohibited from touching, Deut. ii. 37; iii. 8. Which new Conquefts were diftributed between the two Tribes of Reuben and Gad -3 Half of the Land of the Children of Amnion being given to the Tribe of Gad, Jofh. xiii. 25 ; and the Remainder to the Reube- nites, Jofh. xiii. 15 — 28. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes (j), Get thee up into this Mount Abarim, and fee the Land which I have gi- ven to the Children of Ifrael. And when thou haft feen it, thou alfo {halt be gathered unto thy People, as Aaron thy Brother was gathered s for ye rebelled agakft my Commandment at the Water of Meribah in Kadejh. (5) Num. xxvii, i 2, a. 46 8 tte Ckiokology of the in the Wildcrnefs of Zin. And Mofes fpake unto Jd vabt laying, Let Jehovah the God of the Spirits of all Flefh, fet a Man over the Congregation, who may go out before them, and go in before them ; that the Con- gregation of Jehovah be not as Sheep that have no Shepherd. Which Expreffion of going in and out be- fore them , is borrowed from the Practice of the Shep- herds in the Eaftcrn Countries, who walk before their Flocks, when they lead them, either to their Paflure, or from their Paflure towards their Sheepfolds : And is fre- quently applied metaphorically to the Government of Princes over the People, either when they led them ot t to War, or conduced them otherwife by the Civil Ad- miniftration of Juflice. See Dent, xxvii. 6 j xxxi. 2. Judges ii. 15; xi. 3. 2 Sam. iii. 25. 2 Chron. i. 10, Pfal. lx. 10, &c. &c. And Jehovah faid unto Mofes, Take thee Jojlnia the Son of Nun, a Man in whom is the Spirit, and lay thine Hand upon him. And fet him before Eleazar the Prieft> and before all the Congregation; and thou malt put fome of thine Honour upon him, that all the Congrega- tion (/) of the Children of Ifrael may be obedient. And lie ihall fland before Eleazar the Priefl, who jhall ajk Counfelfor him, after the Judgment of (■«) Urim before Jehovah '(/) The Congregation, i. e. not only the People, but alfo the Af- fembly of the Congregation of the Princes may acknowledge him for their Preiident. See Note .on Deut. xxiii. - This Ihews the Difference there was between the Adminifhation ef Hebrew Bible vindicated. 469 Jehovah. At his Word they mail go out, and at his Word they fhall come in, even all the Congregation. I have mentioned before, that I do not think there can poffibly be a ftronger Proof of the divine MhTion of Mo- fes, than the Appointment of Aaron and his Sons, to the high Priefthood, which is ftill further confirmed by this Appointment of Jofiua to be the Succeffor of Mofesy as to the Temporal Government, for had not Mofes been under the Influence of a fuperior Power, it is impoiTible but he muft have had fome Regard for his own Family j whereas his own Children feem to have been utterly difregarded by him, and left entirely upon a Level with the reft of the Levites : Without one Foot of Poffeffion, in the Land of Canaan, and even without the leaft hono- rary Diftinction, to put them above any one Perfon in the whole Tribe, And Jehovah (x) fpake unto Mofes, and gave him feveral Inftructions concerning the Forms to be obferved jn making of Offerings, as well Burnt-offerings, as Meat- offerings, and Drink-offerings : And at what Time the of Mofes, and that of Jofvua, or any of his Succeflors, to whom* God fpake Face to Face, as a Man fpcaketh to his Friend, Exod. xxxlii. 11. But there arofe not a Prophet iince in- Ifreel like unto Mofes, whom "Jehovah knew Face to Face, Dent, xxxiv. 10. Inaf much as the Anfwer of God to the Queflions propofcd vvas now no more to be given to any one but to the High Prieft, who was always to be prefent when Jcfiua had any Queftion to propofe to Jehovah^. and was indeed to ask Counfel for him. (.v) Num. xxviii. i — 31 ; xxix, 1—40; xxx. 1 — .16. general 4 ] o The Chronology of the ge neral Publick Offerings were to be made; as alio con- cerning Vows : which are fet down at large in the twenty-eighth, twenty- ninth, and thirtieth Chapters of Numbers. And now Mofcs (y) knowing that he muft foon die, though his Eyes were not dim, nor his natural Force abated, Dcut. xxxiv. 7. having revifed his former Works, and put his laft Hand to them ; drew up a fum- mary Account of the whole Proceedings of the Ifraelites, from their Arrival -at Mount Sinai, till his Departure from them; in which he mentions feveral Particulars omitted in his former Writings, as well as recapitulates the Laws already given, which is on that Account cal- led the Book of Deuteronomy that is, the fecond Law, This Book begins therefore with faying, Thefe be the Words which Mofes /pake to Ifrael on this Side Jordan in the Wildernefs, in the Plain over againjl the Red Sea, be- tween Par an and Tophel, and Laban, and Hazeroth, and Dizahab. Where it is manifeft, that there is fome great Mi- fbike, the Wildernefs of Moab being always called the II rildet nefs en this Side Jordan ; and the Wildernefs in the Plain over againjl the Red Sea} being always underftood to denote the Wildernefs of Par an, Zin, or Kadejh, which lay between Paran, and T'ophcl, and Hazeroth, and Dizahab. To rectify which Mjftake, Onkelos in his 7 argum oxCkattee Paraphrafe has rendered it thus : Thefe (>•) Deut. i. 3, be Hebrew Bible vindicated. 47 1 be the Words which Mofes fpoke to all Ifrael on this Side Jordan, Repremanding them for the Offences com- mitted in the Wildernefs over againfl the Red- Sea, &c. But the Commentators feem terribly puzzled about the Names of the Places here mentioned; fome of the Names not having been before fpecified. It is however to be remarked, that Places at that Time, and in that Part of the World, not having obtained any fixed Name of their own; were denominated either from fome ad- joining Mountain, or Vale, or Winter Torrent, or Spring, or from fome other remarkable Circumftance; and hence it comes to pafs that the fame Place might ob- tain feveral Names. But of all thefe Places, fo it hap- pens, that there really is but one of them whofe Situa- tion cannot be fixed almoft to a Demonftration. The Situation of Hazeroth (z) cannot be difputed, as lying be- tween Mount Sinai and Kadefi in the Defert of Par an ; and probably not far from it, as being the laft Stage men- tioned, before the Arrival of the Ifraclites at Kadcfi, in the Wildernefs of Par an. Nor can the Situation of Pa- ran be well difputed, there being a Convent now exit- ing which is called the Convent of Par an, towards the South-Eafl Corner of the Wildernefs ; but the great Dis- putes are about Topbei, and Laban, and Dizahab. As to the Situation of Tophel, I allow the fixing of that to be conjectural ; but as Taberab, and Kibrotb-Hattaavab [a) are Names that were undoubtedly given to Places, on Account * of what happened to the Ifraclites in thole (z) Num. xi. 35 ; xii. 16. [a) Ibid. xi. 3, 34. P p p Places ; 4.72 The Chronology of the Places j fo I mould apprehend that the Word Tepbe^ which fjgnifies Infpid might have been given to that Station of the Jfraclites where they complained of theif Manna ; that their Souls loathed that light Bread (#), as we tranflate it. The Difagreeablenefs of which Food X mould rather apprehend to have been its Injipidnefs, than its Lightnefs; for its T'afte was as the Tafle of frejlj Oil, Num. xi. 8. And it may be obferved, that Job makes yfe of the Word b^T) Tophel, to denote Bread, that is injipid, and that cannot be eaten without Salt. Which the Septuagint renders, "Afi®» <&v$v dxog, and is compared to the Tafte of the White of an Egg, Job. vi. 6. And as the Name of that Station where the Israelites com- plained of their infipid Bread, is not mentioned by Mofes, I am inclined to think that Station was called Tophel, but this I acknowledge to be fo far conjectural. Which Conjecture will however be ftrengthened when we come to confider the Situation of the Places. As to Laban e-r very one who underftands Hebrew muft know that the Radical Letters in Labanx and Libnah, are exactly the fame j and that the Hebrews originally, having written their Words without Vowels, this Word might with e-* qual J u face be either read Laban, or Li ben, or Lebon, and the Septuagint reads Libnah, mentioned Num. xxxiii. 20. AejGwi/, Lebon , the Samaritan Lebon, the Arabic, Sy- riac, and Targum of Onkelos, Lebna. So that I appre- hend the Laban in Deut. i. i . to be the fame with the Libnah of Num. xxxiii. 20, 21. which was not far far from Rithmah, or Kadejh; and as for the Termina- (%) Num. xxi. 5 tion Hebrew Bible vindicated. 4^3 tion Ah, that is of no Manner of Confluence ; the H at the latter End of a Word being by the Hebrews either added, or omitted ad Libitum. So that Place which in jfojh. xv. 3. and Num. xxxiv. 4. is written Azmcnah, is in the following Verfe, Num. xxxiv. 5. written Azmon, So that Village which in Jofti. xv. 3. is called Chazar Addarah, the Village of Addarah is JM5r». xxxiv. 4, writ- ten Addar. It is likewife to be obferved, that if the Name of a Place ended with a Confonant, when the He- brews fpoke of going to that Place^ they frequently added an H to the End of it. An Example of which is me itio- ned above Num. xxxiv. 4, 5. As for Dizahab that is cer^ tainly the fame Place with Ezkngeber, which is at this Day called by the Arabs, Dfahab, or Meenah el Dfahab-, i. e. the Port of Gold. In the Hebrew what we. tranflate Dizahab, is only Zahab which literally fignifies Gold> and agrees exactly with the Name Dfahab now given the Port of Eziongeber by the Arabians. And if we come to confider the Situation of all thefe Places here mentioned, we mall find it exactly to agree with the De- scription given of the Wildernefs of Paran by Mofes, when he calls it, the Plain of the Red Sea, between Pa~ ran, and Tophel, and Laban, and Hazeroth, and Diza- hab. For Dizahab is manifeitly on the Eaft of the Wil- dernefs of Paran, on the Borders of the Elanick and Ea- ftern Gulph of the Red-Sea. Paran Was fituated towards She Southern Part of it, not far froth Mount Sinai. Ha- zeroth lay not far from Paran. Laban, or Leb- nab, lay between Kadejh or Rithmah, and Hajhmonah, er Azmcnah, which was towards the North- weft Corner P p p 2 of 474 ^je Chronology of the of the Wildernefs; and therefore probably lay upon the Weftern Border of the Wildernefs. And as for Tophet, if we fuppofe it to refer to that Station of the Ifraelites where they [a) complained of their infipid Manna, this Station was in the Road between Mount Hor, and Az- mon, or Hajkmonah, or Zalmo?iay as plainly appears by comparing Num. xxi. i — 5, with Num. xxxiii. 37 — 41. which muft have been on the North-fide of the Wilder- nefs. So that thefe Towns between which the Plain of the Red Sea is faid to have flood, Deut. i. 1. were mani- feftly fituated in the Wildernefs of Paran, towards its Eaft, Weft, North, and South Borders. But in my humble Opinion, thefe two firft Verfes of the Book of Deuteronomy mould not be looked upon as a Part of the Book, but rather as the Title of it j either written by Mofes, or fome Tranfcriber by way of Memorandum, and afterwards by Miftake, inferted in the Body of the Book: And that the Book of Deuteronomy really begins only at the third Verfe. 40th Y, On the firft Day (b) therefore of the eleventh Month Ift ifc1 of the fortieth Year Mofes fPake unto ^ Children of Ifraely according to all that Jehovah had given him in Commandment. And began with refrefhing their Me- mory with a fhort Recital of what had pafTed ever fince their Departure from Egypt , till their Arrival in the Plains oi Moaby which is contained in the four firft Chapters of the Book of Deuteronomy, The laft of which Chap- ters ends in this Manner; And this is the Law which (rt) Num. xxi. 5. {i) Deut. i» 3. Mofes Hebrew Bible vindicated. 475 Mofes fet before the Children of Ifrael: Thefe are the Teftimonies, and the Statutes, and the Judgments, which Mofes fpake unto the Children of Ifrael, after they came forth out of Egypt. On this Side Jordan, in the Val- ley over again ft Beth-Peor, in the Land of Sihon, King of the Amorites, who dwell at Hefibon, whom Mofes and the Children of Ifrael fmote after they were come forth out of Egypt, and they pofTefted his Land, and the Land of Og King of Bafjan, two Kings of the Amorites, which were on this Side Jordan, towards the Sun-Rifing fromAroer which is by the Bank of the River Arnon, even unto Mount Sirion (for fo it mould be written, as it is in the Syriac Verfion, and not Sion: See Deut. iii. 9.) which is Hermon. And all the Plain on this Side Jordan Eaftward, even unto the Sea of the Plain under the Springs ofPifgah, Deut. iv. 44-49. Now it is manifeft, that the Valley over- againft Beth-Peor in the Plain on this Side Jordan Eaft- ward, which reached even unto the Sea of the Plain, or the Salt Sea, Deut. iii. 1 7. under the Springs of Pifgah, was not in the Land of Sihon King of the Amor ites j as is above faid, but in the Land of Balak King of the Moabites, wherefore this Place is called the Plains of Moab by Jordan near Jeri- cho, Num. xxxiii, 48, 49. xxxv, 1, And therefore this PafTage ought to be rectified, in Imitation of the firft Verfe of this Book in this Manner : This is the Law which Mofes fet before the Children of Ifrael : Thefe are the Teftimo- nies, and the Statutes, and the Judgments, which Mofes fpake unto the Children of Ifrael, after they came forth out of Egypt, on this Side Jordan, in the Valley over again ft Beth-Peor, after they had conquered j the Land of Sihon King of the Amor ites, &c, In 476 77:eC hronology of the I N the fifth Chapter Mofes repeats the Covenant thai was made in Horeb at the Giving of the Ten Command- ments. And in the fixth Chapter gives them an Exhor- tation to Obedience. In the fourth Verfe of which Mo- fes fays, Hear O Ifrael, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah And thoujhalt love Jehovah thy God with all thine Heart '; and with all thy Soul, and with all thy Might. And thefc Words which I command thee this Day, Jliall be in thy Heart. And thoujhalt teach them diligently unto tby Chil- dren, and Jhalt talk of them when thou fitteft in thine Houfe, and when thou walkefl in the Way, and when thou liefl down, and when thou r if eft up. And thou Jhalt bind them for a Sign upon thine Hand, and they ft: all be as Frontlets between thi?ie Ryes. And thou f:alt write them upon the Pofts of thy Houfe, and on thy Gates, &c. Which Paflfage of Scripture the Jews interpreted lite- rally and thought themfelves obliged thereby to repeat it twice every Day, that is, when they were about to lie down at Night, and when they rofe in the Morning, and thereto they added, Deut.xi. 13. 21. and Num.xvc 3 7 — 4 1 . Which Form of Devotion was called the She- ma from the firft Word of it, Hear, which in Hebrew is VStP Shema. They likewife wrote thefe Words in Pie- ces of Parchment, and literally wore them as Frontlets on their Foreheads, and as Bracelets on their Arms, and nailed them to the Pofts of their Doors. So careful were they to obferve the Letter of the Law. It is however very remarkable, that when one of the Scribes came to our Saviour, and afkcd him, which is the firft Command- ment Hebrew B i b l e vindicated. 47 7 ment of all, Pie anfwered him out of this Pailage in Deuteronomy », and fard unto him, The firft. of all the Commandment is, Hear 0 Ifrael, the Lord &ur God is one Lord. And thou fiah love the Lord thy God with all ' thy Heart, and with ail thy Soul, and with all thy Mind, and with all thy Strength: This is the Jirft Co7?imandment ; Mar. xii. 28 — 30. probably becaufe this PaiTage of Scrip- ture, from the frequent Repetition of it, was fo well known unto them. In the feventh Chapter Mofes gives them a Charge againft entring into a Compact and Alliance with the Canaanites, and worihipping their Idols, when they were to take PofTeffion of that Land. In the eight Chapter exhorteth them to obey this Command by reca- pitulating God's Mercies towards them. And in the ninth he endeavours to difiwade them from attributing their Succefs to their own Righteoufnefs, or their own Might, by recapitulating the many Diftrefles they fuffered on Account of their frequent Rebellions. In the tenth he mews neverthelefs that God is merciful, as well as juft, and that upon their Repentance he renewed the broken Tables of the Commandments, and granted them many other Favours. In which Chapter there is a manifeft Di- flocation of the iixth and feventh Verfes, which are wrong placed i and feem to be fo very imperfect, that they ought only to be looked on as a fmall Part of a large Hiftory of the Journey of the Israelites. In the eleventh Chapter he exhorts them to Obedience, by mewing that a Blefling and aCurfe is fet before them: In the tenth and eleventh, Verfes of which Chapter, Mofes has inferted this beauti- tiful Defcription, and Companion of the two Countries. of 47 8 The Chronology of the of Egypt and Canaan, For, fays he, the Land whither thou goeft topojjrfs it, is not as the Land of Egypt, from whence ye came out, where thou fowejl thy Seed, and watered/} it with thy Foot, as a Garden of Herbs ; but the Land whi- ther ye go to pojfefs it, is a Land of Hills and V allies, and drinketh Water of the Rain of Heaven. Egypt is remarka- ble for being free from Rain : And therefore for want of Rain, the Egyptians are obliged to depend upon the Over- flowings of the Nik, for fructifying their Grounds in ge- neral, at the Time of its periodical Return. But at all other Times, they are obliged to have Recourfe to Art and to raife the Water out of the River, and fome deep Pits by the Help of Machines ; which Water is after- wards directed in its Courfe by little Chanels cut in the Ground, which convey the Water to thofe Places were ]t is wanted; and when one Part of the Ground is fuf- ficiently watered, they then flop that Chanel, by thruft- ing fome Earth into the Entrance of it with their Foot and then alfo with their Foot open a Paflage into the next Chanel, and fo on; which is here meant by the Expreflion of watering a Garden with the Foot. A Cu- flom that is well known to thofe who have lived any Time in hot Climates. I n the twelfth Chapter Mcfes informs them, that all Places of idolatrous Worfhip are to be defhoyed. And that all their Sacrifices fhall be made in a certain Place which God will appoint, and no where clfc : And pro- hibits the eating of Blood at the Time of Sacrificing, as the Heathens did, kfl they Jhould be fared by following them : Hebrew Bible vindicated. 479 hem : To which Num. xxv. 2. probably refers alfo. In the thirteenth Chapter he informs them, that all Diviners and Idolaters, or Enticers to Idolatry, are to be put to Death : And in the fourteenth, that they ought not to disfigure themfelves in their Mournings after the Manner of the Heathens j becaufe they were a holy People, cho- fen to be a peculiar People unto Jehovah himfelf (c ) j that they ought not to feed upon unclean Meats, which he numbereth unto them : And hi the latter End of this Chapter there is a new Kind of Tithe ordered to be be paid, which was not to be given to the Levite foi his Maintenance ; but was Year by Year, for two Years together, to be brought to Jerusalem, either in Kind, if near, or in Value, if at a Diftance; which might be laid out in '-purchasing whatfoever they delighted in; in Ox- en, or Sheep, or Wine, or ftrong Drink, or whatfoever their Soul defired ; and mud; be eaten there before Jeho- vah, that the Perfon who brought it, and his Houficld might rejoice. But every third Tear this Tithe of their Increafe the fame Year was to be laid up within their Gates, and fpent in Hofpitality and Charity at Home ; which is in the Septuagint Verfion on Dcut. xxvi. 12, called their Second Tithing, and was to be offered up to God with a fet Form of Prayer, and then given to the Levite, and the Stranger, and the Fatherlefs, and the Widow, that thole who were within their Gates mielit eat, and be fatisfied. Now it is to be obierved, that this is, becaufe the Judges fat in the Gates of the Cities for the Diftribution of Juftice, Deut. xxi. 29. as it is practifed in Barbary and Arabia to this Day. And hence "Jeremiah complaining of the Want of Juftice fays, the Elders have ceafed from the Gate. Lam. v. 14. In the feventeenth Chapter Mofes informs them, that who- ever will not be governed by the Determination of the Magiftrates mall be put to Death. And gives them Ad- vice in the Choice of a Supreme Magiftrate, whom he here calls a King (e) ; that mufl: be chofen from among themfelves. In the eighteenth Chapter he informs them, that the Priefls and Levites (hall have no Inheritance, but that Jehovah will provide for them : And that if any Diviner or Enchanter comes among them they mail not liften unto him : For that Jehovah will raife them up Prophets, and in particular one like unto Mofes, and will put his Word in his Mouth, according to their own Re- quefl at Mount Horeb, when they defired not to hear the Voice of Jehovah any more, but begged of Mofes to mediate between God and them. Exod. xx. 19. Deut. v. 23 — 27. In the nineteenth, he reminds them of ap- pointing three Cities of Refuge -, and appoints the Pu- nifhment of falfe Witneiles. In the twentieth Chapter, (e) Deut. xvii. 14, &c. Q^q q 2 4# 2 7?je Chronology of the he fettles the Method and Form of thofe Speeches which \ were to be made to the People by the Prieft and the Of- ficers before they enter into Battle. And tells them how they are to treat thofe Cities which accept or refufe thePro- elamation of Peace. In the twenty-flrft, he fettles what is to be done when a Murder is committed, and it be not known who hath committed it : And orders, that if a Man have two Wives he fhall not difinherit the flrft- born Son out of Favour or Affection for the other Wife ; but that a fhibborn and difobedient Son mould be ftoned to Death. In the twenty-fecond Chapter, he recom- mends Humanity in general to be fhewed both to Man and Beaft : With feveral other ufeful Laws. In the twenty-third Chapter Mofes declares^ that he that is wounded in the Stones, or hath his Privy. Member cut off, fhall not enter into the Congregation of Jehovah, that is, fhall not be elected as a Member of the Affem- bly of the Congregation, or of the Affembly of Elders i Since it cannot be fuppofed, that fuch a Misfortune mould be a fufficient Caufe for being excommunicated, and being deprived of all the Benefits of Society : See on the contrary, Jfa. lvi. 3, 4, 5 ; but enly that fuch mould not be chofen to be Judges and Magiflrates ; be- caufe every Body knows that the Lois of Courage, fo ne- ceffary in Magiftrates, is the general Confequence of fuck a Misfortune. Befides it is manifeft, that the Expreffion of the Congregation is frequently made ufe of to denote, not the whole Body of the Ifraelites, but the Affembly, of the Elders, and Magiflrates, as appears from Num. x. Hebrew Bible vindicated. 483 27; xxxv. 12, 14, 25. JcJJj. xx. 6, where ^ Congre- gation is fpoken of as judging, or fitting in 'Judgment. See alfo Z>u.. viii. 3. where Mofes is commanded to ga- ther all the Congregation together : And in the Verfe fol- lowing it is faid, that Mofes did as Jehovah commanded him, and the AJjembly was gathered together, &c. And Lev. ix. 1. this AJfembly is defcribed to confift of Mofes and Aaron, and his Sons, and the Elders of Ifrael. To which Prohibition Mofes adds, that a Bajlard, or a Mo- abite, or Ammonite fhall not be chofen into the Aflembly of the Congregation, even to his tenth Generation. The Reafon for the excluding of Baflards, feems to be for the Difcouragements of fuch unlawful Progenies : And the excluding of Moabites and Ammonites feems to be on Ac- count of the vicious Habits they may have acquired from their Parents, who were Worfhippers of Baal-Peor. In the twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, and twenty-fixth Chapters Mofes gives them feveral Laws with regard to Divorces, Pledges, Manflealers, Leprofy, the Hire of Servants, and the Gleaning of Harvefl : That the Num- ber of Stripes given to an Offender fhall not exceed forty. That the Ox which treadeth down the Corn ought not to be muzzled : Of raifing Seed to a Brother : Of unjufl Weights j and reminds them that the Seed of Amelek is to be blotted out : And appoints the Form of ConfefTion at the Time of offering the Bafkets of Firft-fruits. In the twenty-feventh and twenty-eighth Chapters Mofes commands the Elders of Ifrael that as foon as they pafied ^$4 ^je Chronology of the pafled over Jordan (V), and were come to Mount Ebal-, they fhould fet up great Stones, and plaifter them with Plaifter, and write upon them all (f) the Words of this Law; and there build an Altar of unchifled Stones: Then he appoints the Form of BlefTing and Curfing which was then to be read publickly againfl the Difobedient, and in Favour of thofe who obferved this Law. In the twenty-ninth and thirtieth Chapters he delivers to them an Exhortation to Obedience, from the great Miracles they had feen wrought by God in their Favour ; and the continued Protection afforded them, for forty Years to- gether in the Wildernefs, where neither their Shoes, nor their Cloaths waxed old ; neither did they want Meat or Drink : As well as from the extraordinary Succefs they fince met with in their Battles againft the Amorites. That neverthelefs God will not fpare the Guilty, but not feparate evil unto him, according to all the Curfes of the Covenant that are written in this Book : And that they that err muft be inexcufable becaufe their Duty is plainly laid before them, and they have either Death or . Life in their own Choice. (e) The Words in the Original are : And it fhall be on the Day when you {hall pafs over Jordauy &c. unto the Land which 'Jehovah thy God giveth thee ; that thou {halt fet thee up, 13c. But it is plain from ver. 4. and from Jojh. viii. 30, 32. that this was not done till they came to Mount Ebal. ( f) Joftpbw feems to think, th it thefe Words referred only to the BleHings and Curfes ; which is moft probable. J of. Ant. I. 4. c. 8. But Jofephus ftems to be under a great Mifbke m this Part of his Book, and to confound the Altar which Jojbua afterwards built as di- rected, with one built in the Land of Moab by Mcfts. And Hebrew Bible vindicated, 485 And now Mofes having fpent about thirty Days in 40th Y. this Work, on the firft Day of the twelfth Month of JjJ^ the fortieth Year, he fummcnrd all Ifrael together ; re- signed his Charge to JoJhua) and fetting him before £- kfizar and all the Congregation ; he gave him a Charge in their Sight. . And he laid his Hands upon him, and imparted to him fome of that vifible Illumination with which Mofes himfelf had been honoured (g), that the Children of IJrael might be obedient unto him. Then he delivered this Book of Laws, which Mofes had writ- ten, unto the Priefts the Sons of Levi -, commanding them to read it before all Ifrael at the End of every feven Years. Which Book of Laws Jofephus (h) fays, Mofes delivered to the Ifraelites when forty Years were complea- ted within thirty Days; at, which Time Mofes gathered the Congregation together near for dan, and there made his laft Exhortation to them, and died on the firft Day of the Month Adar. And he commanded them to take this Book of the Law and put it by the Side of the Ark of the Covenant, that it might be there for a Witnefs againft them (#). Our Englifh Tranflation renders it, And put it in the Side of the Ark of the Covenant, The Hebrew may be rendered either Way ; but as the Septuagint Ver- fion fays, *TL& whuylm, by the Side, I prefer that Tran- flation, (g) See Exod. xxxiv. 29. Num. xi. 17; xxvii. 17 — 23. Deut> xxxi. 32, 33; xxxiv. 9. (b) Jofeph. Ant. 1. 4. c. 8, {i) Deut. xxxi. 26. . , Then. •, 4 84 The Chronology of the Then Mofcs compofed a Song, which Jofepbus (It) fays, was in Hexameter Verfe, fetting forth the Mercies and Vengeance of God in a ftrong and fhort Light. The eighth and ninth Verfes of which Song, according to the Hebrew Text, run thus : Remember the Days of old, confider the Years of many Generations: Afk thy Father, and he will mew thee, thy Elders, and they will teli thee j when the moft High divided to the Nations their Inheritance, when he feperated the Sons of Adam^ he fet the Bounds of the People, according to the Number of the Children of Ifrael. For Jehovah'.* Portion is his People : Jacob is the Lot of his Ifjheritance. Which has puzzled the Commentators to reconcile with Matter of Fact, and to make the Number of the various Nations upon Earth, agree with the Number of the Children of Ifrael. For if the Number of the Children of Ifrael be only computed by the Number of his immediate Depen- dents, which were only thirteen, viz, twelve Sons and one Daughter j this Number would be too few for the Number of Nations diiperfed over the whole Earth : And if all the Dependents of Ifrael are taken into the Account, then the Number will be infinitely too large. I apprehend therefore there is fomeMiftake in the Hebrew Copy which is come to our Hands ; and that it ought to be rectified according to the Septuagint Verfion, which runs thus, Remember the Days of old, confider the Years of many Generations: Afk thy Father, and he will mew thee, thy Elders, and .they will tell thee : when the mod High divided to the ('•) Jof. Ant, I. 4. c 9 Nation-: Hebrew Bidle mncRcail .'. %\ Nations their Inheritance, when he feperated the .Sons of Adam, he fet the Bounds of the Nations, according to the Number of the Angels of God; and Jehovah's Por- tion is his People "Jacob », the Line, or (/) Boundary, of I Inheritance Ifrael. With which the wife Son of" Sirach alfo agrees when he fays (m), For in the Divijion of the Nations, of the whole Earth, God fet a Ruler, (or go^ verning Angel) over every People; but Ifrael is the Lord's Portion. Which Sentiment feems to be (Irons;! v fupported by fome Exprefnons in the Book of Daniel, where the Angel Gabriel is fent to him to make him tm- derftand the Vifion [n). And to give him Skill and Un- der/landing (o). And he faid unto him, Fear not Da- niel; for the fir f Day that thou didjl fet thine Heart to un- derfiand, and to chafien thyfelf before thy God, thy Words were heard, and I a?n come j or thy Words. But the Prince ■■ (or ruling Angel) of the Kingdom of Per fa withfcood me one and twenty Days; but lo, Michael the first Prince (or chief ruling Angel) came to help me (j>). And again -he faid, - And ?iow will I ret-urn to fight with the Prince (or ruling Angel) ofPerfia: and when lam gone forth, lo, ^Prince (or ruling Angel) of Grccia fall come, Bui I will f hew thee that which is noted in the Scripture of 'Truth : and there is r.one that holdeth with me in thefe Things, ^//Michael your Prince (q). And fpeaking of thofe Days, when God ihall plant the Taber- nacles of his Palace between the Seas, that is, between the (/) See i Cor. x. 16. (m) Eccluf. xvii. 17. (h) Dan. vi.il. 16. '. (*) Ibid. ix. 21, 22. (/>) Ibid. x. 12, i$. (q) Ibid. x. 2d, it. R r r J-- 4-88 Tide Chronology of the Mediterranean and the Lead-Sea, in the glorious holy Mountain, or ztjerufalem, belays, And at that 'Time Jhall Michael ftand up the great Prince (or ruling An- gel) THAT STANDETH FOR THECHILDREN OF Is&A>:L. And there J/:all be a Time of Trsulie fucb as never was fnce there was a Nation, even to that fame Time (r), &c. Whence it appears that God did appoint ruling Angels- to prefide over every People-, and that as the Name of Gabriel which fignifiesthe Strength, or Power ffGod, was for Diflinction Sake given to that Angel, who wasfent to Daniel to make him underfand the Wijion, and to give him Skill and Under (landing: So the Name of Michael, which fignines, who is like to God, or who is the Simili- tude of God, was given to that Great, or firfi Prince who Jlandeth for the Children of Ifrael. As therefore the reading of this Text according to the Septuagint Verfion is fupported not only by that Paffage quoted out of the Book of Bcciefiajlicus, but alfo.by other Parts of the Old Teftament ; and correfponds with the general Opinion?. of the mod learned ancient Jews (s) : I am inclined to prefer the Septuagint Verfion of this Text, to the prefent Reading in our Hebrew Bible. And what adds no fmall Weight with me in this Affair, is an Expreflion made ufe of by St. Paul in his Epiftle to the Hebrews, where fpeaking of the fecond Coming of our Saviour, when he mall appear in a State of Glory manifeftly fuperior to Angels (t), he fays, For unto the Angels hath he not put in Subjeclion the World to come whereof we fpeak («),. (r) Ibid. xii. I. {s) Eufeb. Praep. Ev. 1. 7. C. 15. (t) Hcb. i. 3, 4, 9. [u) Ibid, ii. 5. Whence Hebrew Bible vindicated. 480 Whence it feems to appear, that it was St. Paul's Opi- nion, that this prefent World had been put in Subjection to Angels. And in the 1 aft Verfe of this Song, according to the Septuagint Verfion, are thofe Words which are quoted by St. Paul in his Epiftle to the Hebrews, and by him ap- plied to Jefus Chrifl, on his Exaltation to the right Hand of God, And let all the Angels cf God worfiip him: Heb. i. 6. which have probably been omitted out of the Hebrew Copy by fome Miftake, and mould there- fore be reftored. Then Mojes being put in Mind by God, that he mull: now go up to Mount Nebo and die (#) ; before his Departure from them, he gave his Bleffing to all the Tribes j among which the Bleffing which was given to the Tribe of Simeon is not in the Hebrew Copy; but the Septuagint Verfion mentions it to this Purpofe> a?id le.t Simeon be many in Number, Deut. xxxiii, 6. The Blef- fing of ^>«r, runs thus, Let him, or. rather, he Jlmll dip his Foot in Oil, his Shoes JJiall be Iron, and Brafs$ and as his Days Jo Jlmll his Strength be ; Deut. xxxiii. 24, 25. Which alludes to his Lot in the Land of Canaan, that was to be in a plentiful Country, where according to the Prediction of his Father Jacob, his Bread was to be Jat, and he was to enjoy Royal Dainties ; Gen. xlix. 20. Which is further alluded to in this Prophecy of Mojes, (*) Deut. xxxii. 48. R r r z b 3V y 4Q o The Chronology of the I y defcribing his Situation in a Country, abounding with Olives, where the Oil fhould be fo plentiful as to run out of the Prefs upon the Ground, fo that he mould tread, or dip his Foot in it. The fecond Part of this Prophecy, bis Shoes Jhall be Iron and Brafs, fhould be rendered, bis Bars, or his Belts, fhall be Iron and Brafs ; in which- Senfe the Word byi is rendered Nehem. iii. 3. Cant. v. 5. and alludes to the Security of his Borders, or Frontiers. And therefore follows, and as his Days fo fhall his Strength, or rather his Reft, be : For fo the Word *]&!*! which we tranfiate Strength, ought to be rendered, the radical Word NIH fignifying Quievit, ac- cording to Cuftellus. The Meaning of which is, that from the Security of his Frontiers, which were guarded by the Sea on one Side, and high Hills^ on all the ref}\ this Tribe. mould enjoy conftant, and perpetual Peace. And Mofes being one hundred and twenty Years of Age (y), went up to the Top of Pifgah, to fee the Land of Canaan, and then to die; as is fully fet forth in the thirty-nrft, thirty-fecond, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth, Chapters of Deuter onomy. But it muft beobferved, that the two laft ChapterSj and the nine lafr. Verfes of the thirty-fecond Chapter, from the Clofe of the Song of Mofes, are not to be fuppofed to have been written by Mofes ; becaufe he had not Time to do it before his Death, and had already delivered his Books to the Le- vites, Deut. xxxi. 26. It ought likewife to be remarked., {y) Dsut. xxxi. :/,, that Hebrew Bible vindicated. 49 r dlat Mofes is, "Dent, xxxiii. 5. filled King in Jejhurm\ or Ifrael, which is a Title that he never gave himfe.'f • and therefore probably is added in by Jojhua : But which however accounts for an ' Expreflion made ufe of by Mofes in Gen. xxxvi. 31. when fpeaking of the Progeny of Efau, he fays, Thefe are the Kings that reign- ed in the Land of Edom, before there reigned any King over the Children of Ifrael. Which Expreflion hath oc- cafioned Sir Ifaac Newton (z) to imagine, that the Book of Gene/is was not written entirely in the Form now ex- tant, before the Reign of Said; whom he fuppofed to be the firfl King that reigned over the Children of Ifrael. But had that great Author recollected that the Title of King was not only given to Mofes in this Book of Deu- teronomy, but alfo is applied to the fudges, who ruled irr Ifrael long before the Time, of Saul, he would hardly have fuppofed, that the finishing of the Book of Gene/is could have been deferred fo long. For that the Judges were fometimes called Kings is manifeffc from hence, be- caufe in feveral of the Tranfaclions which are mentio- ned in the Book of Judges, as coming to pafs during the Interregnum of the Judges; the Author of that Book fpeaking of thofe Tranfaclions fays, they came to pafs, When there was no King in Ifrael (a) : that is, in the In- terim between the Reign of the Judges, when there was no particular Judge appointed to reign over them, as frequently happened. And fince we find that Jojljua^ the SuccefTor ©f Mofes, wrote an Account of his Tran- (s) Newton on Dan,_P. I. c. i, [a) Judges xvii. 6; xviii. i ; ^ six, i j xxi. 25. .taction^ 4.Q 2 TheC HRONOLOGY of thl factions, and entered them in the Book of the Law of God, which Book was written by Mcfes, and delivered by him to be kept by the Priefb and the Levites, Deut. xvii. 18; xxxi. 25. It feems more reafonable to think that the Book of Genefis, which was alfo written by Mo- fes, fp.ould be revifed by Jeffrua at the fame Time that he entered the Account of his own Tran factions in the Book of the Law of God; and that Jcfiua added in at the fame Time a few of the laft Chapters to the Book of Deuteronomy ', where there is Mention made of the Blef- fings which were prophetically fpoken by Mofes, and delivered extempore by him to the feveral Tribes, jufl before his Death ; as alfo of his Death, and of the Chil- dren of Ifrael weeping for him thirty Days, which ex- actly compleated the fortieth Year of the Journeyings of the Ifraelites ; than to fuppofe them left unfinished to the Days of Saul. And with regard to the Dislocations, which have fince happened, this is not to be wondred at, if we confider the early Age of the World, in which thefe Books were written ; that it was before the Invention either of Paper or Parchment; when the Art of literary Writing was in its Infancy; and the Scribes were obliged to make ufe of the Leaves or Bark of Plants or Trees, which could not be fo compleatly tacked together, but that the Ligatures would eafily fail. And indeed in fuch a Multitude of detached Pieces, as thefe Books of Mofes muft have been compofed of, and which of Confequence were very lia- ble to be put into Diforder, it is wonderful that at the recovering Hebrew Bible vindicated. 493 recovering them by Ezra, at the Re do ration of the Jcivi/h Temple, after they had been miffing for fo long a Time, they mould be found fo compleat even as they were. Whereas now fince the Art of making Paper and of binding Books, aid of Printing has bra\ difcove- red, the Peruial of thefe Works of Mofes hath been fo. common, and the collating of the Paflages, by the Help of Concordances, hath been made fo eafy, that the leaft Blemifh, the leaft Failing may be readily difcovered And as for the Repetitions, and feeming Want of Con- nexion, which are to be obferved in the Books of Mofist we fhall find that beautifully accounted for by the Prophet Jfaiahy when we coniider the Theocracy of the Ifraelites, as then in its Infant State, under the Adminifiration of God; and that therefore the Ifraelites were not then to be treated as Perfons living under an antient and eftablifh- ed Form of Government, but as Children in the Hands of a Schoolmafter (b)> who were to be inflrucled by Pre- cept upon Precept, Precept upon Precept , Line upon Line* Line upon Line-, here a Little and there a Little \ Ha,, xxviii. 9, 10, 13. (b) Gal. iii. 24. FINIS. E R RAT A, PAge 9. 1. 6. for it, r. them; p. 56. 1. 6. add one; ib. 1. 7. dele one i p. 62. 1.21. for where he, r. who ; p. 76. Margin, for 190, r. 187 ; p. 79. marg./