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[112]
When God had given him this charge, he came to Balak; and when the
king had entertained him in a magnificent manner, he desired him to go
to one of the mountains to take a view of the state of the camp of the
Hebrews. Balak himself also came to the mountain, and brought the prophet
along with him, with a royal attendance. This mountain lay over their heads,
and was distant sixty furlongs from the camp. Now when he saw them, he
desired the king to build him seven altars, and to bring him as many bulls
and rams; to which desire the king did presently conform. He then slew
the sacrifices, and offered them as burnt-offerings, that he might observe
some signal of the flight of the Hebrews. Then said he, "Happy is
this people, on whom God bestows the possession of innumerable good things,
and grants them his own providence to be their assistant and their guide;
so that there is not any nation among mankind but you will be esteemed
superior to them in virtue, and in the earnest prosecution of the best
rules of life, and of such as are pure from wickedness, and will leave
those rules to your excellent children; and this out of the regard that
God bears to you, and the provision of such things for you as may render
you happier than any other people under the sun. You shall retain that
land to which he hath sent you, and it shall ever be under the command
of your children; and both all the earth, as well as the seas, shall be
filled with your glory: and you shall be sufficiently numerous to supply
the world in general, and every region of it in particular, with inhabitants
out of your stock. However, O blessed army! wonder that you are become
so many from one father: and truly, the land of Canaan can now hold you,
as being yet comparatively few; but know ye that the whole world is proposed
to be your place of habitation for ever. The multitude of your posterity
also shall live as well in the islands as on the continent, and that more
in number than are the stars of heaven. And when you are become so many,
God will not relinquish the care of you, but will afford you an abundance
of all good things in times of peace, with victory and dominion in times
of war. May the children of your enemies have an inclination to fight against
you; and may they be so hardy as to come to arms, and to assault you in
battle, for they will not return with victory, nor will their return be
agreeable to their children and wives. To so great a degree of valor will
you be raised by the providence of God, who is able to diminish the affluence
of some, and to supply the wants of others."
Flavius Josephus. The Works of Flavius Josephus. Translated by. William Whiston, A.M. Auburn and Buffalo. John E. Beardsley. 1895.
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