Chapter XIV.—A warning appeal to the
Greeks.
It is therefore necessary, ye Greeks, that you
contemplate the things that are to be, and consider the judgment which is
predicted by all, not only by the godly, but also by those who are
irreligious, that ye do not without investigation commit yourselves to
the error of your fathers, nor suppose that if they themselves have been
in error, and have transmitted it to you, that this which they have
taught you is true; but looking to the danger of so terrible a mistake,
inquire and investigate carefully into those things which are, as you
say, spoken of even by your own teachers. For even unwillingly they were
on your account forced to say many things by the Divine regard for
mankind, especially those of them who were in Egypt, and profited by the
godliness of Moses and his ancestry. For I think that some of you, when
you read even carelessly the history of Diodorus, and of those others who
wrote of these things, cannot fail to see that both Orpheus, and Homer,
and Solon, who wrote the laws of the Athenians, and Pythagoras, and
Plato, and some others, when they had been in Egypt, and had taken
advantage of the history of Moses, afterwards published doctrines
concerning the gods quite contrary to those which formerly they had
erroneously promulgated.