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[17]
Now there was one Aristeus, who was among the king's most intimate
friends, and on account of his modesty very acceptable to him. This Aristeus
resolved frequently, and that before now, to petition the king that he
would set all the captive Jews in his kingdom free; and he thought this
to be a convenient opportunity for the making that petition. So he discoursed,
in the first place, with the captains of the king's guards, Sosibius of
Tarentum, and Andreas, and persuaded them to assist him in what he was
going to intercede with the king for. Accordingly Aristeus embraced the
same opinion with those that have been before mentioned, and went to the
king, and made the following speech to him: "It is not fit for us,
O king, to overlook things hastily, or to deceive ourselves, but to lay
the truth open. For since we have determined not only to get the laws of
the Jews transcribed, but interpreted also, for thy satisfaction, by what
means can we do this, while so many of the Jews are now slaves in thy kingdom?
Do thou then what will be agreeable to thy magnanimity, and to thy good
nature: free them from the miserable condition they are in, because that
God, who supporteth thy kingdom, was the author of their laws as I have
learned by particular inquiry; for both these people, and we also, worship
the same God the framer of all things. We call him, and that truly, by
the name of GREEK, [or life, or Jupiter,] because he breathes life into
all men. Wherefore do thou restore these men to their own country, and
this do to the honor of God, because these men pay a peculiarly excellent
worship to him. And know this further, that though I be not of kin to them
by birth, nor one of the same country with them, yet do I desire these
favors to be done them, since all men are the workmanship of God; and I
am sensible that he is well-pleased with those that do good. I do therefore
put up this petition to thee, to do good to them."
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