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Therefore they could less believe it to be the book of their statutes, and the standing law of the land, which they had all along received, and by which they had been governed.

Could any man, at this day, invent a book of statutes for England, and make it pass upon the nation, as the only book of statutes, that ever they had known? As impossible was it for the books of MOSES (if they were invented in any age after MOSES) to have been received for what they declare themselves to be, viz. the statutes and municipal law of the nation of the Jews; and to have persuaded the Jews, that they had owned and acknowledged these books all along from the days of Moses to that day, in which they were first invented; that is, that they had owned them, before they had ever heard of them. Nay more, the whole nation must, in an instant, forget their former laws, and government, if they could receive these books, as being their former laws; and they could not otherwise receive them, because they Vouched themselves so to be. Let me ask the Deists one short question; was there ever a book of sham laws, which were not the laws of the nation, palmed upon any people, since the world began! If not, with what face can they say this of the book of laws of the Jews?

Why will they say that of them, which they confess impossible in any nation, or among any people?

But they must be yet more unreasonable. For the books of Moses have a farther demonstration of their truth, than even other lawbooks have. For they not only contain the laws, but give an historical account of their institution, and the practice of them from that time ; as of the passover in memory of the death of the first-born in Egypt; and that the same day all the first-born of Israel both of man and beast were by a perpetual law dedicated to God; and the Levites taken for all the first-born of the children of Israel. That Aaron's rod, which budded, was kept in the ark, in memory of the rebellion, and wonderful destruction of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram; and for the confirmation of the priesthood to the tribe of Levi. As likewise the pot of manna, in memory of their having been fed with it forty years in the wilderness. That the brazen serpent was kept (which remained to the days of Hezekiah, 2 Kings xviii. 4.) in memory of that wonderful deliverance, by only looking upon it, from the biting of the fiery serpents. Num. xxi. 9. The feast of Pentecost,

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in memory of the dreadful appearance of GoD upon mount Horeb, &c.

Beside these remembrances of particular actions and occurrences there were other solemn institutions in memory of their deliverance out of Egypt in general, which included all the particulars. As of the Sabbath; their daily sacrifices, and yearly expiation; their new moons, and several feasts and fasts. So that there were yearly, monthly, weekly, daily remembrances and recognitions of these things.

Not only so, but the books of the same MoSEs tell us that a particular tribe was appointed and consecrated by GoD, as his priests; by whose hands, and none other, the sacrifices of the people were to be offered, and these solemn institutions celebrated; that it was death for any other to approach the altar; that their high priest wore a glorious mitre, and magnificent robes of God's own contrivance, with the miraculous Urim and Thummim in his breastplate, whence the divine responses were given; that at his word the king and all the people were to go out, and to come in; that these Levites were likewise the chief judges, even in all civil causes, and that it was death to resist their sentence. Now, whenever it can be supposed, that these books of MOSES were forg

ed in some ages after Moses, it is impossible they could have been received as true, unless the forgers could have made the whole nation believe that they had received these books from their fathers, had been instructed in them, when they were children, and had taught them to their children; moreover, that they had all been circumcised, and did circumcise their children, in pursuance of what was commanded in these books; that they had observed the yearly passover, the weekly sabbath, the new moons, and all these several feasts, fasts, and ceremonies, commanded in these books; that they had never eaten any swines' flesh, or other meats prohibited in these books; that they had a magnificent tabernacle, with a visible priesthood to administer in it, which was confined to the tribe of Levi; over whom was placed a glorious high priest, clothed with great and mighty prerogatives; whose death only could deliver those, that were fled to the cities of refuge; and that these priests were their ordinary judges, even in civil matters; I say, was it possible to have persuaded a whole nation of men, that they had known and practised all these things, if they had not done it? Or, secondly, to have received a book for truth, which said they had practised them, and ap

pealed to that practice? So that here are the third and fourth of the marks above mentioned.

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But now let us descend to the utmost degree of supposition, viz, that these things were practised, before these books of Moses were forg; and that these books did impose upon the nation only in making them believe that they had kept these observances in memory of such and such things, as were inserted in those books.

Let us then proceed upon this supposition, (however groundless) and will not the same impossibilities occur, as in the former case? For, first, this must suppose that the Jews kept all these observances in memory of nothing, or without knowing any thing of their original, or of the reason, why they kept them. Whereas these very observances did express the ground and reason of their being kept; as the Passover, in memory of God's passing over the children of the Israelites in 'that night, wherein he slew all the first born of Egypt, and so of the

rest.

But, secondly, let us suppose, contrary both to reason, and fact, that the Jews did not know any reason why they kept these observances; yet was it possible to put it upon them, that they had kept these observances in memory of what they had never heard of before that day,

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