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<TEI.2><text n="AJ"><body><div1 type="Book" n="1" org="uniform" sample="complete"><milestone n="205" unit="section" /><p>But his daughters, thinking that all mankind were destroyed, approached
to their father, <note anchored="yes" resp="ed" place="unspecified">I see no proper wicked intention in these daughters of Lot, when in a case
which appeared to them of unavoidable necessity, they procured themselves
to be with child by their father. Without such an unavoidable necessity,
incest is a horrid crime; but whether in such a case of necessity, as they
apprehended this to be, according to Josephus, it was any such crime, I
am not satisfied. In the mean time, their making their father drunk, and
their solicitous concealment of what they did from him, shows that they
despaired of persuading him to an action which, at the best, could not
but be very suspicious and shocking to so good a man.</note>
though taking care not to be perceived. This they did, that human kind
might not utterly fail: and they bare sons; the son of the elder was named
Moab, Which denotes one derived from his father; the younger bare Ammon,
which name denotes one derived from a kinsman. The former of whom was the
father of the Moabites, which is even still a great nation; the latter
was the father of the Ammonites; and both of them are inhabitants of Celesyria.
And such was the departure of Lot from among the Sodomites.</p>
<milestone n="12" unit="Whiston chapter" />
<note anchored="yes" type="sum" resp="ed" place="unspecified">CONCERNING ABIMELECH; AND CONCERNING ISMAEL THE SON OF ABRAHAM;
AND CONCERNING THE ARABIANS, WHO WERE HIS POSTERITY.</note>
<milestone n="1" unit="Whiston section" /></div1></body></text></TEI.2>