Chapter XXXV.—Appeal to the Greeks.
The time, then, ye men of Greece, is now come, that ye,
having been persuaded by the secular histories that Moses and the rest of
the prophets were far more ancient than any of those who have been
esteemed sages among you, abandon the ancient delusion of your
forefathers, and read the divine histories of the prophets, and ascertain
from them the true religion; for they do not present to you artful
discourses, nor speak speciously and plausibly—for this is the
property of those who wish to rob you of the truth—but use with
simplicity the words and expressions which offer themselves, and declare
to you whatever the Holy Ghost, who descended upon them, chose to teach
through them to those who are desirous to learn the true religion. Having
then laid aside all false shame, and the inveterate error of mankind,
with all its bombastic parade and empty noise, though by means of it you
fancy you are possessed of all advantages, do you give yourselves to the
things that profit you. For neither will you commit any offence against
your fathers, if you now show a desire to betake yourselves to that which
is quite opposed to their error, since it is likely enough that they
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themselves are now lamenting in Hades, and repenting with a too
late repentance; and if it were possible for them to show you thence what
had befallen them after the termination of this life, ye would know from
what fearful ills they desired to deliver you. But now, since it is not
possible in this present life that ye either learn from them, or from
those who here profess to teach that philosophy which is falsely so
called, it follows as the one thing that remains for you to do, that,
renouncing the error of your fathers, ye read the prophecies of the
sacred writers,25852585 not requiring from them
unexceptionable diction (for the matters of our religion lie in
works,25862586 not in words), and
learn from them what will give you life everlasting. For those who
bootlessly disgrace the name of philosophy are convicted of knowing
nothing at all, as they are themselves forced, though unwillingly, to
confess, since not only do they disagree with each other, but also
expressed their own opinions sometimes in one way, sometimes in
another.