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<h3> CHAPTER 8. The Polity Settled By Moses; And How He Disappeared From Among Mankind. </h3>
<p>1. When forty years were completed, within thirty days, Moses gathered the
congregation together near Jordan, where the city Abila now stands, a
place full of palm-trees; and all the people being come together, he spake
thus to them:—</p>
<p>2. "O you Israelites and fellow soldiers, who have been partners with me
in this long and uneasy journey; since it is now the will of God, and the
course of old age, at a hundred and twenty, requires it that I should
depart out of this life; and since God has forbidden me to be a patron or
an assistant to you in what remains to be done beyond Jordan; I thought it
reasonable not to leave off my endeavors even now for your happiness, but
to do my utmost to procure for you the eternal enjoyment of good things,
and a memorial for myself, when you shall be in the fruition of great
plenty and prosperity. Come, therefore, let me suggest to you by what
means you may be happy, and may leave an eternal prosperous possession
thereof to your children after you, and then let me thus go out of the
world; and I cannot but deserve to be believed by you, both on account of
the great things I have already done for you, and because, when souls are
about to leave the body, they speak with the sincerest freedom. O children
of Israel! there is but one source of happiness for all mankind, the favor
of God <SPAN href="#link4note-15" name="link4noteref-15" id="link4noteref-15"><small>15</small></SPAN>
for he alone is able to give good things to those that deserve them, and
to deprive those of them that sin against him; towards whom, if you behave
yourselves according to his will, and according to what I, who well
understand his mind, do exhort you to, you will both be esteemed blessed,
and will be admired by all men; and will never come into misfortunes, nor
cease to be happy: you will then preserve the possession of the good
things you already have, and will quickly obtain those that you are at
present in want of,—only do you be obedient to those whom God would
have you to follow. Nor do you prefer any other constitution of government
before the laws now given you; neither do you disregard that way of Divine
worship which you now have, nor change it for any other form: and if you
do this, you will be the most courageous of all men, in undergoing the
fatigues of war, and will not be easily conquered by any of your enemies;
for while God is present with you to assist you, it is to be expected that
you will be able to despise the opposition of all mankind; and great
rewards of virtue are proposed for you, if you preserve that virtue
through your whole lives. Virtue itself is indeed the principal and the
first reward, and after that it bestows abundance of others; so that your
exercise of virtue towards other men will make your own lives happy, and
render you more glorious than foreigners can be, and procure you an
undisputed reputation with posterity. These blessings you will be able to
obtain, in case you hearken to and observe those laws which, by Divine
revelation, I have ordained for you; that is, in case you withal meditate
upon the wisdom that is in them. I am going from you myself, rejoicing in
the good things you enjoy; and I recommend you to the wise conduct of your
law, to the becoming order of your polity, and to the virtues of your
commanders, who will take care of what is for your advantage. And that
God, who has been till now your Leader, and by whose goodwill I have
myself been useful to you, will not put a period now to his providence
over you, but as long as you desire to have him your Protector in your
pursuits after virtue, so long will you enjoy his care over you. Your high
priest also Eleazar, as well as Joshua, with the senate, and chief of your
tribes, will go before you, and suggest the best advices to you; by
following which advices you will continue to be happy: to whom do you give
ear without reluctance, as sensible that all such as know well how to be
governed, will also know how to govern, if they be promoted to that
authority themselves. And do not you esteem liberty to consist in opposing
such directions as your governors think fit to give you for your practice,—as
at present indeed you place your liberty in nothing else but abusing your
benefactors; which error if you can avoid for the time to come, your
affairs will be in a better condition than they have hitherto been. Nor do
you ever indulge such a degree of passion in these matters, as you have
oftentimes done when you have been very angry at me; for you know that I
have been oftener in danger of death from you than from our enemies. What
I now put you in mind of, is not done in order to reproach you; for I do
not think it proper, now I am going out of the world, to bring this to
your remembrance, in order to leave you offended at me, since, at the time
when I underwent those hardships from you, I was not angry at you; but I
do it in order to make you wiser hereafter, and to teach you that this
will be for your security; I mean, that you never be injurious to those
that preside over you, even when you are become rich, as you will be to a
great degree when you have passed over Jordan, and are in possession of
the land of Canaan. Since, when you shall have once proceeded so far by
your wealth, as to a contempt and disregard of virtue, you will also
forfeit the favor of God; and when you have made him your enemy, you will
be beaten in war, and will have the land which you possess taken away
again from you by your enemies, and this with great reproaches upon your
conduct. You will be scattered over the whole world, and will, as slaves,
entirely fill both sea and land; and when once you have had the experience
of what I now say, you will repent, and remember the laws you have broken,
when it is too late. Whence I would advise you, if you intend to preserve
these laws, to leave none of your enemies alive when you have conquered
them, but to look upon it as for your advantage to destroy them all, lest,
if you permit them to live, you taste of their manners, and thereby
corrupt your own proper institutions. I also do further exhort you, to
overthrow their altars, and their groves, and whatsoever temples they have
among them, and to burn all such, their nation, and their very memory with
fire; for by this means alone the safety of your own happy constitution
can be firmly secured to you. And in order to prevent your ignorance of
virtue, and the degeneracy of your nature into vice, I have also ordained
you laws, by Divine suggestion, and a form of government, which are so
good, that if you regularly observe them, you will be esteemed of all men
the most happy."</p>
<p>3. When he had spoken thus, he gave them the laws and the constitution of
government written in a book. Upon which the people fell into tears, and
appeared already touched with the sense that they should have a great want
of their conductor, because they remembered what a number of dangers he
had passed through, and what care he had taken of their preservation: they
desponded about what would come upon them after he was dead, and thought
they should never have another governor like him; and feared that God
would then take less care of them when Moses was gone, who used to
intercede for them. They also repented of what they had said to him in the
wilderness when they were angry, and were in grief on those accounts,
insomuch that the whole body of the people fell into tears with such
bitterness, that it was past the power of words to comfort them in their
affliction. However, Moses gave them some consolation; and by calling them
off the thought how worthy he was of their weeping for him, he exhorted
them to keep to that form of government he had given them; and then the
congregation was dissolved at that time.</p>
<p>4. Accordingly, I shall now first describe this form of government which
was agreeable to the dignity and virtue of Moses; and shall thereby inform
those that read these Antiquities, what our original settlements were, and
shall then proceed to the remaining histories. Now those settlements are
all still in writing, as he left them; and we shall add nothing by way of
ornament, nor any thing besides what Moses left us; only we shall so far
innovate, as to digest the several kinds of laws into a regular system;
for they were by him left in writing as they were accidentally scattered
in their delivery, and as he upon inquiry had learned them of God. On
which account I have thought it necessary to premise this observation
beforehand, lest any of my own countrymen should blame me, as having been
guilty of an offense herein. Now part of our constitution will include the
laws that belong to our political state. As for those laws which Moses
left concerning our common conversation and intercourse one with another,
I have reserved that for a discourse concerning our manner of life, and
the occasions of those laws; which I propose to myself, with God's
assistance, to write, after I have finished the work I am now upon.</p>
<p>5. When you have possessed yourselves of the land of Canaan, and have
leisure to enjoy the good things of it, and when you have afterward
determined to build cities, if you will do what is pleasing to God, you
will have a secure state of happiness. Let there be then one city of the
land of Canaan, and this situate in the most agreeable place for its
goodness, and very eminent in itself, and let it be that which God shall
choose for himself by prophetic revelation. Let there also be one temple
therein, and one altar, not reared of hewn stones, but of such as you
gather together at random; which stones, when they are whited over with
mortar, will have a handsome appearance, and be beautiful to the sight.
Let the ascent to it be not by steps <SPAN href="#link4note-16"
name="link4noteref-16" id="link4noteref-16"><small>16</small></SPAN> but by
an acclivity of raised earth. And let there be neither an altar nor a
temple in any other city; for God is but one, and the nation of the
Hebrews is but one.</p>
<p>6. He that blasphemeth God, let him be stoned; and let him hang upon a
tree all that day, and then let him be buried in an ignominious and
obscure manner.</p>
<p>7. Let those that live as remote as the bounds of the land which the
Hebrews shall possess, come to that city where the temple shall be, and
this three times in a year, that they may give thanks to God for his
former benefits, and may entreat him for those they shall want hereafter;
and let them, by this means, maintain a friendly correspondence with one
another by such meetings and feastings together, for it is a good thing
for those that are of the same stock, and under the same institution of
laws, not to be unacquainted with each other; which acquaintance will be
maintained by thus conversing together, and by seeing and talking with one
another, and so renewing the memorials of this union; for if they do not
thus converse together continually, they will appear like mere strangers
to one another.</p>
<p>8. Let there be taken out of your fruits a tenth, besides that which you
have allotted to give to the priests and Levites. This you may indeed sell
in the country, but it is to be used in those feasts and sacrifices that
are to be celebrated in the holy city; for it is fit that you should enjoy
those fruits of the earth which God gives you to possess, so as may be to
the honor of the donor.</p>
<p>9. You are not to offer sacrifices out of the hire of a woman who is a
harlot <SPAN href="#link4note-17" name="link4noteref-17" id="link4noteref-17"><small>17</small></SPAN>
for the Deity is not pleased with any thing that arises from such abuses
of nature; of which sort none can be worse than this prostitution of the
body. In like manner no one may take the price of the covering of a bitch,
either of one that is used in hunting, or in keeping of sheep, and thence
sacrifice to God.</p>
<p>10. Let no one blaspheme those gods which other cities esteem such; <a
href="#link4note-18" name="link4noteref-18" id="link4noteref-18"><small>18</small></SPAN>
nor may any one steal what belongs to strange temples, nor take away the
gifts that are dedicated to any god.</p>
<p>11. Let not any one of you wear a garment made of woolen and linen, for
that is appointed to be for the priests alone.</p>
<p>12. When the multitude are assembled together unto the holy city for
sacrificing every seventh year, at the feast of tabernacles, let the high
priest stand upon a high desk, whence he may be heard, and let him read
the laws to all the people; and let neither the women nor the children be
hindered from hearing, no, nor the servants neither; for it is a good
thing that those laws should be engraven in their souls, and preserved in
their memories, that so it may not be possible to blot them out; for by
this means they will not be guilty of sin, when they cannot plead
ignorance of what the laws have enjoined them. The laws also will have a
greater authority among them, as foretelling what they will suffer if they
break them; and imprinting in their souls by this hearing what they
command them to do, that so there may always be within their minds that
intention of the laws which they have despised and broken, and have
thereby been the causes of their own mischief. Let the children also learn
the laws, as the first thing they are taught, which will be the best thing
they can be taught, and will be the cause of their future felicity.</p>
<p>13. Let every one commemorate before God the benefits which he bestowed
upon them at their deliverance out of the land of Egypt, and this twice
every day, both when the day begins and when the hour of sleep comes on,
gratitude being in its own nature a just thing, and serving not only by
way of return for past, but also by way of invitation of future favors.
They are also to inscribe the principal blessings they have received from
God upon their doors, and show the same remembrance of them upon their
arms; as also they are to bear on their forehead and their arm those
wonders which declare the power of God, and his good-will towards them,
that God's readiness to bless them may appear every where conspicuous
about them. <SPAN href="#link4note-19" name="link4noteref-19"
id="link4noteref-19"><small>19</small></SPAN></p>
<p>14. Let there be seven men to judge in every city, <SPAN href="#link4note-20"
name="link4noteref-20" id="link4noteref-20"><small>20</small></SPAN> and
these such as have been before most zealous in the exercise of virtue and
righteousness. Let every judge have two officers allotted him out of the
tribe of Levi. Let those that are chosen to judge in the several cities be
had in great honor; and let none be permitted to revile any others when
these are present, nor to carry themselves in an insolent manner to them;
it being natural that reverence towards those in high offices among men
should procure men's fear and reverence towards God. Let those that judge
be permitted to determine according as they think to be right, unless any
one can show that they have taken bribes, to the perversion of justice, or
can allege any other accusation against them, whereby it may appear that
they have passed an unjust sentence; for it is not fit that causes should
be openly determined out of regard to gain, or to the dignity of the
suitors, but that the judges should esteem what is right before all other
things, otherwise God will by that means be despised, and esteemed
inferior to those, the dread of whose power has occasioned the unjust
sentence; for justice is the power of God. He therefore that gratifies
those in great dignity, supposes them more potent than God himself. But if
these judges be unable to give a just sentence about the causes that come
before them, [which case is not unfrequent in human affairs,] let them
send the cause undetermined to the holy city, and there let the high
priest, the prophet, and the sanhedrim, determine as it shall seem good to
them.</p>
<p>15. But let not a single witness be credited, but three, or two at the
least, and those such whose testimony is confirmed by their good lives.
But let not the testimony of women be admitted, on account of the levity
and boldness of their sex <SPAN href="#link4note-21" name="link4noteref-21"
id="link4noteref-21"><small>21</small></SPAN> Nor let servants be admitted to
give testimony, on account of the ignobility of their soul; since it is
probable that they may not speak truth, either out of hope of gain, or
fear of punishment. But if any one be believed to have borne false
witness, let him, when he is convicted, suffer all the very same
punishments which he against whom he bore witness was to have suffered.</p>
<p>16. If a murder be committed in any place, and he that did it be not
found, nor is there any suspicion upon one as if he had hated the man, and
so had killed him, let there be a very diligent inquiry made after the
man, and rewards proposed to any one who will discover him; but if still
no information can be procured, let the magistrates and senate of those
cities that lie near the place in which the murder was committed, assemble
together, and measure the distance from the place where the dead body
lies; then let the magistrates of the nearest city thereto purchase a
heifer, and bring it to a valley, and to a place therein where there is no
land ploughed or trees planted, and let them cut the sinews of the heifer;
then the priests and Levites, and the senate of that city, shall take
water and wash their hands over the head of the heifer; and they shall
openly declare that their hands are innocent of this murder, and that they
have neither done it themselves, nor been assisting to any that did it.
They shall also beseech God to be merciful to them, that no such horrid
act may any more be done in that land.</p>
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