31. It now remains that I debate with Manetho about Moses. Now the Egyptians acknowledge him to have been a wonderful and a divine person; nay, they would willingly lay claim to him themselves, though after a most abusive and incredible manner, and pretend that he was of Heliopolis, and one of the priests of that place, and was ejected out of it among the rest, on account of his leprosy; although it had been demonstrated out of their records that he lived five hundred and eighteen years earlier, and then brought our forefathers out of Egypt into the country that is now inhabited by us. But now that he was not subject in his body to any such calamity, is evident from what he himself tells us; for he forbade those that had the leprosy either to continue in a city, or to inhabit in a village, but commanded that they should go about by themselves with their clothes rent;and declares that such as either touch them, or live under the same roof with them, should be esteemed unclean; nay, more, if any one of their disease be healed, and he recover his natural constitution again, he appointed them certain purifications, and washings with spring water, and the shaving off all their hair, and enjoins that they shall offer many sacrifices, and those of several kinds, and then at length to be admitted into the holy city; although it were to be expected that, on the contrary, if he had been under the same calamity, he should have taken care of such persons beforehand, and have had them treated after a kinder manner, as affected with a concern for those that were to be under the like misfortunes with himself. Nor ;was it only those leprous people for whose sake he made these laws, but also for such as should be maimed in the smallest part of their body, who yet are not permitted by him to officiate as priests; nay, although any priest, already initiated, should have such a calamity fall upon him afterward, he ordered him to be deprived of his honor of officiating. How can it then be supposed that Moses should ordain such laws against himself, to his own reproach and damage who so ordained them? Nor indeed is that other notion of Manetho at all probable, wherein he relates the change of his name, and says that "he was formerly called Osarsiph;" and this a name no way agreeable to the other, while his true name was Mosses, and signifies a person who is preserved out of the water, for the Egyptians call water Moil. I think, therefore, I have made it sufficiently evident that Manetho, while he followed his ancient records, did not much mistake the truth of the history; but that when he had recourse to fabulous stories, without any certain author, he either forged them himself, without any probability, or else gave credit to some men who spake so out of their ill-will to us.
同类推荐
热门推荐
日本童话集
本书中的童话和传说故事来源众多,其中数篇选自日本神话集《古事记》,另有多篇记载着每代人的童年时光,由保姆或学生凭着依稀记忆诉说而成。书中诸多人物已成为日本艺术舞台上倍受欢迎的形象。在本书完成汇编前,多篇童话已被译为英文,经由多种形式流传。其余童话可能较晚进入英文读者的视野。格雷丝·詹姆斯,作家,1882年生于日本东京,1965年卒于意大利罗马。作品以儿童文学及日本民俗为主。除了《日本童话集》之外,还著有《约翰与玛丽》儿童冒险系列。写给孩子的世界地理
西尔耶《写给孩子的世界地理》像是一本“历险”之作。在本书中,作者就像是一位经验颇丰、风趣幽默的环球导游,边走边以优美、富有童趣的语言给孩子们讲解各地的风土人情、山川河流。在作者笔下原本枯燥乏味的地理常识变得鲜活生动、兴味盎然。读完这本书,如同跟作者进行了一次轻松愉悦的环球之旅。前世今生(全集)
《前世今生:生命轮回的启示》这是一本神奇的书,描写的是发生在20世纪80年代的真实事件:一位普通病人凯瑟琳因焦躁来到魏斯医生处治疗,却在被催眠后惊现86次生命轮回!这一事实不仅改变了病人,也让心理催眠师的生活发生了天翻地覆的变化。此后,信奉科学的医生甘冒职业风险,记录此书,透露生命的不朽与真义。《前世今生2:总有奇迹降临》魏斯和他的女儿艾米跟我们共同分享了发生在现实生活中许多不同寻常的故事,为我们揭示了前世回溯即通往灵性目标的神秘之处。