Chapter XXVI.—Contrast Between Hebrew and Greek Writings.
Hence one can see how our sacred writings are shown
to be more ancient and true than those of the Greeks and Egyptians, or
any other historians. For Herodotus and Thucydides, as also Xenophon,
and most other historians, began their relations from about the reign
of Cyrus and Darius, not being able to speak with accuracy of prior and
ancient times. For what great matters did they disclose if they spoke of
Darius and Cyrus, barbarian kings, or of the Greeks Zopyrus and Hippias,
or of the wars of the Athenians and Lacedæmonians, or the deeds
of Xerxes or of Pausanias, who ran the risk of starving to death in the
temple of Minerva, or the history of Themistocles and the Peloponnesian
war, or of Alcibiades and Thrasybulus? For my purpose is not to furnish
mere matter of much talk, but to throw light upon the number of years from
the foundation of the world, and to condemn the empty labour and trifling
of these authors, because there have neither been twenty thousand times
ten thousand years from the flood to the present time, as Plato said,
affirming that there had been so many years; nor yet 15 times 10,375
years, as we have already mentioned Apollonius the Egyptian gave out;
nor is the world uncreated, nor is there a spontaneous production of all
things, as Pythagoras and the rest dreamed; but, being indeed created,
it is also governed by the providence of God, who made all things; and
the whole course of time and the years are made plain to those who wish
to obey the truth.688688 Lest, then, I seem to have made things plain up
to the time of Cyrus, and to neglect the subsequent periods, as if
through inability to exhibit them, I will endeavour, by God’s
help, to give an account, according to my ability, of the course of the
subsequent times.