"If [said he] these
bodies had power of their own, they would certainly take care of their own
regular motions; but since they do not preserve such regularity, they make it
plain, that in so far as they co-operate to our advantage, they do it not of
their own abilities, but as they are subservient to Him that commands them, to
whom alone we ought justly to offer our honor and thanksgiving."
For which doctrines, when the
Chaldeans, and other people of Mesopotamia, raised a tumult against him, he
thought fit to leave that country; and at the command and by the assistance of
God, he came and lived in the land of Canaan. And when he was there settled, he
built an altar, and performed a sacrifice to God.
2. Berosus mentions our
father Abram without naming him, when he says thus:
"In the tenth
generation after the Flood, there was among the Chaldeans a man righteous and
great, and skillful in the celestial science."
But Hecatseus does more than
barely mention him; for he composed, and left behind him, a book concerning
him. And Nicolaus of Damascus, in the fourth book of his History, says
thus:
"Abram reigned at
Damascus, being a foreigner, who came with an army out of the land above
Babylon, called the land of the Chaldeans: but, after a long time, he got him
up, and removed from that country also, with his people, and went into the land
then called the land of Canaan, but now the land of Judea, and this when his
posterity were become a multitude; as to which posterity of his, we
relate their history in another work. Now the name of Abram is even still
famous in the country of Damascus; and there is shown a village named from him,
The Habitation of Abram. "
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